Bulletin Daily Paper 03-22-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 75

SATURDAY March 22,2014

Qt;Q $mmQ(ef $ $ m/ e$ Qge Prepround up SPORTS • C1

COMMUNITY LIFE• D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD 'Ijnlebbyiata' —Some former Obama administration officials are skirting the rules on political influence.AS

What the nose khOWS —Hu-

mans haveevolved to smell at least 1 trillion different odors, a newstudy claims.A3

oca e icai enro men Sur e By Elon Glucklich

the number the county first

The Bulletin

anticipated for all of 2014. The

A surgein new Medicaid patients has caught Deschutes

new enrollments are part of the federal reforms, which took

County and state health offi-

effect Jan. 1, raising the income

cials by surprise. More than 10,000 Deschutes

ceiling for Medicaid eligibility. Local health officials say the surge isn't a bad thing: The whole thrust ofhealth care reform is to lower costs for ev-

County residents joined the

Oregon Health Plan in January and February, nearly twice

eryoneby reducingthe number the county's behavioral health of emergency room visits by division, said Thursday. Local uninsured patients. governments have taken on But the numbers are proving more Medicaid patients in reto be a logistical headache. centyears as private clinicians After hiring two temporary ¹i have grown more hesitant to

going to meet the community need," Carr said. Across the board, demand

nicians in January, Deschutes

appointments is on the rise, as

County is looking to hire four more in the next few months, D eAnn Carr, deputy director of

accept them as patients — a national trend.

"We've been doing additional planning around how we're

for services such as mental

health assessments, youth wellness checks and dental more local families get health SeeMedicaid/A4

Plus: The face —Expressions of disgust and surprise may once havebeennecessary to our survival.A3

MORTGAGES

Rising rates chill housing market

Indigenouspeople —Bra-

zil's efforts to preserve land for Amazon tribes havedrawn the ire of its rural citizens.A4

Marijuana researchScientists say theU.S.government is stingy with its stash.A4 NAMAS ' CITYIIALL

Crimea —As Russia finalizes its annexation, border troops have the U.S.concerned. A2

By Dina EIBoghdady

I l6 I -.

The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — The

And a Web exclusiveHawaii law lets police havesex with prostitutes — andofficers want to keep it that way. beetlbelletie.cem/extras

lglge - • "'s ' '

super-lowmortgage rates that tens of millions of Americans locked in during the refinancingboom are now discouraging many

.: ~N ,I •

of theseborrowers from

buying another home and givingup those loans.

EDITOR'SCHOICE

The multiyear refinancBulletin file photo

Sergeant missing since 1964 gets funeral By Elena Schneider New Yorh Times News Service

ARLINGTON, Va.-

Nearly 50 years after Army Staff Sgt. Lawrence Woods

disappeared while fighting in the Vietnam War, a funeralservice was held for him at Arlington National

Cemetery.

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

ing craze, which included some of the lowest rates

By Scott Hammers

ever recorded, freed up cash

The Bulletin

for borrowers to sink into the economy. But refinancing activity began receding last spring, and rates have been rising since. The average rate on a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage hit 4.32

T

hreatened with

demolition as recently as December,

the97-year-oldformer Jefferson County Courthouse has won a reprieve

and is undergoing major renovations.

percent this week, up from

3.54percent a year ago, accordingto mortgage-fi-

Located on D Street

a half block east of the northbound lanes of U.S. Highway 97, the old courthouse was declared surplus by Jefferson County commissioners in September, citing engineering reports suggesting it was

nance firm Freddie Mac.

The higher rates, soaring home prices and a tight inventory have kept potential buyers on the sidelines, hurting the sales of previously owned homes and undermining the recovery of the housing market, a

unsafe and impractical to

repair. No bidders made an offer on the building,

huge contributor to eco-

Woods and an Air Force

but inDecember, Steve

nomic growth. Homeowners who are reluctant to

and Army crewwere on a plane that was shot down

Jansen offered $10,000

move and lose their low

to take it off the county's

overVietnam on Oct.24,

hands. Jansen, 68, said he'd had his eye on the building

rates could slow the churn of homesalesacrossthe

1964, during a resupply mission. Capt. Valmore Bourque, 1st Lt. Edward Krukowiski, 1st Lt. Robert

for some time, and had

Armstrong, Staff Sgt. Er-

fixable when others said it was not. A telephone com-

nest Halvorson, Staff Sgt.

Theodore Phillips, Airman 1st Class Eugene Richardson and Pfc. Charles Sparks were killed, andtheir remains were recovered by

U.S. forces in 1964, accordingto the Defense Depart-

he doubts he'll ever make any money off the building despite the rock-bottom purchase price — but, he

history and age on it to let that happen," he said.

"but his individual remains

Hall sign at the top of the building, it never actually

Melissa Bohan, a spokes-

woman for Arlington ¹ tional Cemetery. See Burial /A4

$'

Mostly sunny High 52, Low 23 Page B6

in retirement, Jansen said

linda Morgan, spokeswoman for the Defense POW/ Missing Personnel Office,

servicemen were given an "active-duty funeral," said

TODAY'S WEATHER

'lgt',4t't;:.Q

pany employee who turned to fixing up rental houses

may just be able to save it.

at Arlington, where the

See Housing /A5

become convinced it was

ment. But Woods remained missing. "We know that he was part of the crew that crashed," said Lt. Col. Me-

were never identified." On Friday, dozens of relatives of the eight soldiers attended theburial

country.

I vAI'

s

INDEX p

"The next step would have been the wrecking

ball, and it's got too much it il

Despite the Madras City

Dear Abby D6 Horoscope D6 Local/State Bt-6 Obituaries B5 Sports Ct-4 N/Movies D6

The Bulletin

served asthe base of city

government, Jansen said. As the story goes, the building was completed shortly after Madras was

An Independent Newspaper

t

1

41

Vol. 112, No. B1, 32 pages, 5 sections

Q l/l/e use recycled newsprint

selected as the permanent county seat, and county

governmentrelocated

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

there from Culver.

See Courthouse /A5

I'

Business C5-6 Calendar B3 Classified Ft-8 Comics F3-4 Comm. LifeDt-6 Crosswords F4

I

Steve Jensen opens the door of the old jail, which sits behind the historic Madras courthouse building. Jansen has purchased the old courthouse and is remodeling it.

I

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TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014

The Bulletin

NATION Ee ORLD

HOW to reaCh US

MiChigan Same-Sex marriage dan —Michigan's banon gay marriage is unconstitutional, a federal judge said Friday, striking down a law that waswidely embraced by voters a decadeago in the latest in a series of similar decisions across the country. But unlike cases in other states, U.S. District Judge Bernard Friedmandid not suspend his decision while the Michigan attorney general pursues an appeal. That meansclerks could start issuing licenses Monday unless a higher court intervenes. Friedman released his 31-page ruling exactly two weeksafter a rare trial that mostly focused onthe impact of same-sex parenting on children.

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TalidalI hOtel attaCk —The luxury hotel was considered one of the safest spots in the Afghancapital. Yet four gunmenwalked in, proceeded to the restaurant and pulled out pistols hidden in their shoes. They killed nine people, including a journalist for a French news agency, his wife andtwo children whowere shot in the head. One child survived but wasseriously wounded. TheTaliban boasted that the assault Thursday night shows they canstrike anywhere, and Afghan officials issued astring of conflicting statements as they scrambled to explain how theattackers penetrated the Serena Hotel's tight security.

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Ukrainian airmen sit at the Belbek air base, outside Sevastopol, Crimea, Friday. The base commander, Col. Yuliy Mamchur, said he was asked by the Russian military to turn over the base but is unwilling to do so until he receives orders from the Ukrainian defense ministry. Meanwhile, Russia is massing troops on the border of southeastern Ukraine, in what it says are training exercises.

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By Mark Landler New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON

-

The

White House cast doubt Friday on the Kremlin's claims that

thousands of troops massing on the border of southeastern Ukraine are merely involved in training exercises, deepening fears that Russian aggression will not end in Crimea. "It's not clear what that sig-

nals," the national security adviser, Susan Rice, said to

reporters in a briefing at the White House. But she added, "Obviously given their past practiceand the gap between what they have said and what they have done, we are watch-

AllhSXltiOh —President Vladimir Putin of Russia on Friday formally completed the annexation of Crimea, signing into law bills passed by parliament reclaiming the contested province from Ukraine. Hours earlier, Ukraine's acting prime minister signed a political association agreement with the European Union. The pact hasbeen bitterly opposed byMoscow, and its rejection in November by the Ukrainian president prompted the uprising that led to his overthrow in February. — New YorkTimes News Service

ing it with skepticism." At the Pentagon, senior of-

against further incursions after its annexation of Crimea. Rice's comments, which set the stage for Obama's trip to

Europe next week, suggested that the tensions between the United States and Russia

were continuing to intensify. Asked if the U kraine crisis

was prompting a "fundamentalreassessment" ofAmerica's relationship with Russia, she

answered in a single word: jc Yes Her comments were among

the bluntest of any ranking administration official since the crisis began, and were even more stri king because they came hours after Putin signaled that he w anted to halt the cycle of tit-for-tat ret-

ficers and analysts said they were watching the Russian

ribution between Moscow and Washington.

infantry, airborne, air defense reinforcing and bulking up and o t he r r e i n f orcements along the eastern Ukrainian

is paying less attention to Pu-

with growing alarm, unclear

tin's words than to the move-

of President Vladimir Putin's ambitions.

m ent of his troops,described

lieve that a new Russian move they choose to do that, we just into U k raine i s i m m i nent. wouldn't have much warning."

cials also worry about clashes

But one of their big worries is

are increasingly agitated. "This is obviously a very worrying and fragile situa-

border," a Pentagon official said. "Our view is they're preserving all their options, inPentagon officials do not be- cluding going in, absolutely. If

that U.S. and NATO officials would have virtually no time

President Barack Obama cited the t roop m ovements

to react if it did happen. All

Thursday in announcing new sanctions against officials

told, officials said, there are

with ties to Putin and in open-

more than 20,000 troops near the border. "The Russian forces are

The White House, it seems,

as a mix of infantry, motorized and airborne forces. Offiwith Ukrainian soldiers, who

tion," Rice said, "but we have

been very much admiring of ing the door to broader mea- the posture that the Ukrainian sures against key industrial people and government have sectors. He w a rned Russia been taking."

FBI ShOOtihg —The FBIagent who fatally shot a Chechenman in Orlando, Fla., during an interrogation in Mayabout the Boston Marathon bombing suspects has beencleared of wrongdoing by a prosecutor in Florida and anFBIinternal review, according to law enforcement officials. Another review, bythe Justice Department, which is almost complete, is expected to conclude that the agent followed proper guidelines on theuse offorce when hekilled Ibragim Todashev, according to the officials. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity becausethey did not want to jeopardize their access to classified information. N.C. SPill —The federal Environmental Protection Agency will join North Carolina regulators in addressing potential violations of the Clean Water Act at DukeEnergy power plants, including a massive spill of toxic coal ash last month in the DanRiver, state officials said on Friday. Thesecretary of the state's Department of Environment and Natural Resources, John Skvarla, invited the federal agency's "participation and coordination" in a March 14letter to the head of its regional office, the state department said in astatement. The regional administrator, Heather McTeer Toney, accepted the offer Monday. VOtihg rIIISS —Alabama says it plans to move aheadwith a requirement for potential voters to show concrete proof of citizenship, in the first sign of a wider impact from a court decision Wednesday ordering a federal elections agency to help Arizonaand Kansasenforce their own such requirement. Alabama isone of thefour states that have adopted theextra layer of proof for people registering to vote. With such rules under alegal cloud, it held off carrying them out. Now that maychange.The ruling, by a district court in Wichita, Kan., is all but certain to beappealed, parties in the case said. Thai eleCtiOII —Thailand's Constitutional Court annulled the country's February general election Friday, throwing a murky political situation into further doubt. Theelection was called by Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra in response to months of demonstrations in Bangkok. Protesters havebeencalling for Yingluck's ouster and for Thai politics to be rid of the influence of her brother Thaksin Shinawatra, a billionaire ex-prime minister. Because of disruptions by protesters and theabsence of candidates in the southern districts, voting could not be heldeverywhere in the country on the sameday, as required by Thailand's constitution. GSZ8 tUhhel —The Israeli military announced Friday that it had uncovered asophisticated tunnel that stretched hundreds of yards into its territory from the GazaStrip and could have beenused to attack or kidnap Israelis. Lt. Col. Peter Lerner, a military spokesman, told reporters that fresh footprints and tools found inside the tunnel from southern Gaza suggested it had been worked on even "in the last few days." Hamas, the militant Palestinian faction that controls the GazaStrip, played down the tunnel's significance. TurkiSh Twitter ban —Turkey's attempt to block access to Twitter appeared to backfire on Friday with manytech-savvy users circumventing the banandsuspicions growing that the prime minister was using court orders to suppress corruption allegations against him and his government. Turkey's telecommunications authority said it had blocked access to the social media network hours after Prime Minister RecepTayyip Erdogan threatened to "rip out the roots" of the website. Tweets haveproliferated with links to recordings that appear to incriminate him andother top officials in corruption. — From wire reports

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MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawnFriday nightare:

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2weeks later,nationsstart to collaborate in planesearch By Michelle lnnis and Chris Buckley

New YorJz Times News Service

SYDNEY — China, Japan and Britain joined the search

bardier Global Express and planes would help scour the a Royal Australian Air Force area, alongside a U.S. P8-A P-3 Orion. The planes left Poseidon aircraft, P-3 Orions Perth for the search site early from Australia and New ZeaSaturday. land and other aircraft and Hishammuddin H ussein, vessels.

for the missing Malaysia Airlines jetliner in the southern the defense minister of MaIndian Ocean on Friday, while laysia, which is in charge of Australian search aircraft the overall search, said Friday used human spotters to scan that it was "very, very" diffi-

He said that Britain would

Cmdr. William Marks, the spokesman for the 7th Fleet of

dar detecti ons yesterday, we have replanned the search to

be visual," Young said Friday the U.S. Navy, said in an email in a video posted online by the that the U.S. Poseidon aircraft Maritime Safety Authority.

would continue to search us-

Young is general manager ing radar and other electronic of the agency's emergency re- sensing devices. sponse division. "The aircraft are spaced more closely together, and we

send a naval hydrographic survey ship, the Echo, and that Japan would send two more the waters for floating debris cult to talk with the families Orions. The Chinese govern- will need more aircraft for a that might be wreckage from of those on the plane about the ment said it would send three search of that type," he said. the plane. possibility that the 227 pas- military aircraft to Australia, "Although this search area is The expansion of the mulsengers and 12 crew members joining a Chinese polar ex- much smaller than we startt inational operation i n t h e had died. Their most import- ploration vessel and merchant ed with, it nonetheless is a big remotestretch of deep ocean ant question — where are their ships that are already on the area when you're looking out illustrated how the i ncreas- loved ones? — cannot be an- way. the window and trying to see "This crisis has put a heavy something byeye.We may ingly bleak search for the jet swered, he said at a news conwas prompting some Asian ference near Kuala Lumpur burden on Asian countries have to do this a few times to nations to set aside regional

International Airport, where

to cooperate," said B r idget

tensions. China and Japan

the plane took off for Beijing early on March 8.

Welsh, a political scientist at age of that search area." Singapore Management University. "But there's still the issues of wariness and lack of trust between them and some

are locked in a dispute over islands in the East China Sea,

but their forces will work in tandem in the search for Ma-

Australian Prime Minister

Tony Abbott, speaking from Papua New Guinea, where he is holding wide-ranging

laysia Airlines Flight 370, along with ships and planes talks with Prime Minister Pefrom Australia, New Zealand ter O'Neill, said Friday that he and the United States. had spoken by telephone with Scrutiny of an area about President Xi Jinping of China, 1 ,500 miles s o uthwest o f whom he described as devasPerth, the capital of Western tated, "as are so many people Australia, intensified after sat-

ellite images during the week appeared to show large pieces of floating debris there. Nothing had been found by early this morning, two weeks after the plane disappeared.

and rescue efforts, including He added, "This has been a remotely operated vehicles for gut-wrenching business for so deep-ocean salvage." many people, not least those John Young, the Australian who are charged with the re- official directing the search sponsibility of keeping their in the southern Indian Ocean, citizens safe."

said that the Australian search

H ishammuddin, who i s planes would, for the moment, Safety Authority, coordinat- also Malaysia's acting trans- abandon radar scanning and ing the search of the southern port minister, called the sat- rely instead on human spotIndian Ocean, said today that ellite images of the indistinct ters, a method he said was a private jet, a Gulfstream floating objects the best lead slower but more likely to yield G5, had been commissioned available and announced that results. "Noting that we got no rafor the search, joining a Bom- more shipsand surveillance The Australian M a ritime

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SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 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, March 22, the 81st day of 2014. Thereare 284 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS Mlchelle Odama — The first lady will make aspeech at Peking University as her visit to China continues.

HISTORY Highlight:In1934, the first Masters Tournament opened under the title "Augusta National Invitation Tournament," which was won threedays later by Horton Smith. In1312, PopeClement V issued a papal bull ordering dissolution of the Order of the Knights Templar. In1638, religious dissident AnneHutchinsonwasexpelled from the Massachusetts Bay Colony for defying Puritan orthodoxy. In1765,the British Parliament passed the StampAct of1765 to raise money from theAmerican colonies, which fiercely resisted the tax. (The Stamp Act was repealed ayear later.) In1820, U.S. naval hero Stephen Decatur was killed in a duel with Commodore James Barron nearWashington, D.C. In1894, hockey's first Stanley Cupchampionshipgame was played; hometeam Montreal defeated Ottawa, 3-1. In1933,during Prohibition, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signeda measureto make wine and beercontaining up to 3.2 percent alcohol legal. In1943, the Khatyn Massacre took place during World War II as Germanforces killed 149 residents of the village of Khatyn, Belarus, half of them children. In1958, movie producer Mike Todd, the husband ofactress Elizabeth Taylor, and three other people were killed in the crash of Todd's private plane near Grants, N.M. In1963,The Beatles' debut album,"PleasePleaseMe," was released in the United Kingdom by Parlophone. In1978, Karl Wallenda, the 73-year-old patriarch of "The Flying Wallendas" high-wire act, fell to his death while attempting to walk acable strung between two hotel towers in San Juan, Puerto Rico. In1984,seven people were indicted on charges of sexually abusing children at the McMartin Preschool in Manhattan Beach,Calif. (Charges were later droppedagainst five defendants; school administrator Peggy McMartin Buckey was acquitted at trial, while her son, Raymond Buckey,was acquitted of 40 counts, and a jury deadlocked onanother eight counts against him in a second trial.) Ten years ngo:Hamasspiritual leader Sheik AhmedYassin was killed in an Israeli airstrike in GazaCity, enraging Palestinians. Terry Nichols went on trial for his life in the Oklahoma City bombing. (Nichols, already serving a life sentence for his conviction on federal charges, was found guilty of 161 state murder charges, but was again spared thedeath penalty when the jury couldn't agree on his sentence.) Five years ngo: A single-engine turboprop plane headed to a Montana ski resort nosedived into a cemetery short of a runway in Butte, killing all 14 aboard, including seven children. The Mount Redoubt volcano in Alaska beganerupting (it took about six months to settle down). One yearngo:Anxious to keep Syria's civil war from spiraling into evenworse problems, President BarackObamasaid during a visit to Jordan that he worried about thecountry becoming a havenfor extremists when — not if — President Bashar Assadwas ousted from power.

BIRTHDAYS Composer-lyricist Stephen Sondheim is 84. Actor William Shatner is 83. CNNnewscaster Wolf Blitzer is 66. Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber is 66. Sportscaster BobCostas is 62. Actress Reese Witherspoon is 38. — From wire reports

TRENDING

STUDY

ew LiniverSi 0 :

i i e i an

The University of California, Berkeley, has hired its first Wikipedian-in-residence to help professors and students make their mark on the online encyclopedia. By Katy Murphy

Facesof fear, disgust alded our survival

San Jose Mercury News

BERKELEY, Calif. — Cit-

By Monte Morin Los Angeles Times

ing Wikipedia in a research paper may still be a huge faux pas, but for a growing number

Why do our eyes open wide when we feel fear or

of college students, the on-

narrow to slits when we ex-

line encyclopedia is now the assignment.

press disgust'? According to new research, it has to do

Enter 2 4-year-old K e v in Gorman, the new Wikipe¹i

with survival.

In a paper in the journal Psychological Science, re-

an-in-residence at the University of California, Berkeley. In January, the campus hired the Wikipedia devotee (interests: wild mushrooms, women in philosophy) to coach studentsand adviseprofessors on the deceptively complex task of editing articles for the user-generated encyclopedia

searchers concluded that

expressions of fear and disgust altered the way human eyes gather and focus light. They argued that these changes were the result of evolutionary development and were intended to help humans survive, or at

nn

that gets 500 million monthly visitors. "The goal of cultural institutions is in large part to share

least detect, very different

threats. To test their hypothesis, study authors examined

knowledge, to make their in-

KristopherSkinner/ MCT

f ormation accessible to t h e

Kevin Gorman, left, who hns turned his Wikipedin-editing obsession into n lob ns UC Berkeley's first general public," Gorman says. Wikipedian-in-residence, works with undergraduate students Shawndeez Jadali, right, nnd Annie "I think it would be really, real- Gordon on their Wikipedia projects. ly cool to get that information

online one way or another so its access will no longer be limited to people at Berkeley who have Berkeley credentials."

'The fuel ofWikipedia'

dergraduate geography major. "I have no idea why someone chose to call me that a couple of years ago," he said. Aside from interviews -

Rather than write term pa- news about the position caught pers to be read by a professor the attention of reporters in and forgotten, students at UC Germany and Spain, he said Berkeley and elsewhere are — Gorman has spent his first being asked to make their weeks on the job training stumark on the site. More than 150 universities nationwide

— including the University of San Francisco and California Maritime Academy — have

dasses producing content for the encyclopedia, according to Wiki Education, a foundation

created in July to support such projects. " Students ar e

t h e fue l

of Wikipedia," said Frank Schulenburg, who directs the foundation. The university is the first in America to create a position devoted to improving the site

— and getting its own rarefied scholarship out to the public.

Some museums around the world have Wikipedians and Harvard's Houghton Museum last week advertised for one.

"The goal of cultural institutions ts in large part to share knowledge, to make their information accessible to the general public. I think it would

be really, really cool to get that information online one way or another so tts access will no longer be limited to people at Berkeley ..." — Kevin Gorman, UC-Berkeley's Wikipedian-in-residence

dents, teaching assistants and

The students will tackle ex-

Gorman has edited WikiGorman and Schulenburg pedia obsessively since his say college students bring undergraduate days. But don't needed racial and gender dicall him a "WikiGnome," as versity to a site dominated by UC Berkeley did in a 2012 young whitemen, many of headline about the 6-foot-5 un- them computer programmers.

graduate students with stan-

dard eye-exam equipment, and asked them to mimic expressions of fear and revulsion. Researchers found that when the students widened their eyes, their corneas admitted more light

and expanded their field of vision. When they wrinkled their noses in disgust, their

eyes narrowed. This had the effect of blocking out more

light but sharpening focus on a specific point, authors wrote.

professors how to produce and While the site has more than source Wiki articles, a more 4.5 million entries, the inforcomplicated task than it might mation tends to be skewed to seem. their topics and perspectives. Changes need to be exSearch for a battleship or plained, and they often are sports car and the resulting ardiscussed with other editors ticle will likely be "gorgeous" at length, in an article's "talk" in its detail, Schulenburg said. page. Subjective or weakly "But as Gorman has pointsourcedentries may be delet- ed out, articles about female ed, something junior Katrina philosopherswere decidedly Anasco hopes doesn't happen lacking." to her group project on the Gorman has filled some of Toxic Substances Control Act. those gaps himself. And now, "It definitely opened my editing Wikipedia articles is eyes to how much work it is part of the curricula in ento actually get an edit into a vironmental justice and culpage," said Anasco, a student tural studies courses taught in professor Dara O'Rourke's by O'Rourke and Victoria environmental justice class. Robinson.

Filling thegaps

two dozen volunteer under-

been fined for failing to report hazardous waste spills. However, Gorman says, "all Wiki-

Although some scientists have proposed that emotional expressions are in-

troversy is a paragraph that

tendedprimarily to communicate information, study

almost looks like it was writ-

authors argued that expres-

tenby a PR person for the toxic waste dump." ("The company is an important employer and donates significant funds to the local community, including

sions of fear and disgust seem to perform different

pedia has about the entire con-

Kettleman City

visual functions.

"Eye widening may improve detection and local-

E l ementary

ization of a potential threat

School," it says in part.) Even before Gorman became Cal's official Wikipedian, a job funded by grants, he volunteered. With his help,

that requires enhanced vigilance, which would be

Robinson said, her students

Anderson, aprofessor of human development at Cornell

published information from peer-reviewed sources about public interest topics such as

isting articles on air pollution, incarceration alternatives and urban agriculture, hydraulic three strikes laws. "There's a sense of great fracturing (also known as "fracking") and a toxic waste pride that they've contributed dump near Kettleman City, to public knowledge," RobinCalif., south of Fresno. son said. "Oh, my God, now The Kettleman City site has the world can see their work."

consistent with the hypoth-

esized function of fear, " wrote senior author Adam University. The

r esearch

was conducted by Anderson and his colleagues at the University of Toronto.

"Conversely, eye narrowing may improveperceptual discrimination to discern different kinds of

threats, such as disease vectors and contaminated

foods, avoidance of which is a hypothesized function of disgust," Anderson and his colleagues wrote.

STUDY

Visit Central Oregon's

HunterDoullas By Debornh Netburn

how many different smells we

was different. The test sub-

about our capacity to smell,"

can access until now. Breathe in deeply and feel An influential study pubthe power of your nose. If lished in 1927 suggested that your sense of smell is firing humans could smell about on all cylinders, you can dis- 10,000 different smells, but tinguish among a dizzying while that number was widearray of I t r illion different ly circulated, it had never odors, according to a new been tested. To see if it was study in the journal Science. anywhere near accurate, AnBad perfume, baby skin, dreas Keller, a research assolavender rubbed between ciate in Vosshall's lab, decidyour fingers, real apple pie in ed to investigate. "We really have to give the oven, and apple-pie-scented candles — the diverse credit to Keller," said Vossworld of odor is yours for the hall. "He is in the business smelling. of challenging ideas that are "Our sense of smell is accepted ascommon knowlamazing," said Leslie Voss- edge and debunking them." hall, who studies olfaction at The experiment involved the Rockefeller University in gathering 128 different odorNew York City. "The whole ant molecules including citpoint of this study is that rus, tobacco, mint and garlic humans are much better at and combining them in ransmelling than we thought." dom mixtures of 10, 20 or 30 When it comes to the sens- until they became unfamiles, smell often g ets short iar and weird. The resulting shrift. Scientific research has smell was not exactly terrible, shown humans can distin- but not pleasing either. guish between 2.3 million and The smells were placed in 7.5 million colors. It has also glass vials and given to test

jects were asked to identify which vial had the different

said Vosshall. "I think everyone should go outside right now and pick things up and smell them. "Feel the power of being

Los Angeles Times

shown we can hear 340,000 different tones. But no one had taken the time to learn

subjects three at a time. Two of the v i als contained the

same concoction; a third vial

smell. Each volunteer made 264 comparisons.

The researchers tallied how often the test subjects were able to correctly identi-

able to smell a trillion differ-

ent things," she said.

fy which of the vials smelled different. From there they e xtrapolated t ha t

h u m ans

could differentiate among at least I trillion different smells made of mixtures that include

up to 30 different odorant molecules.

Plan Well, Retire Well

"To be clear, we didn't test I

trillion smells," said Vosshall. "We tested a small sampling

that the estimate of I trillion

see C ~S J C COVERINGS

of them. But p eople were much better at this than we

thought they would be." The study's authors note

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smells is actually quite cons ervative. Th e

n u mber o f

smells we can sense is much higher if you add smells made of even more molecules. For example,thescentofa rose is made of275 components. "I think the whole thing is

a feel-good message that we don't have to be so insecure

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014

TODAY'S READ:INDIGENOUS PEOPLE

Braziian overnment raws a or evictin armers to save Amazon tri e Photo courtesy of the University of Mississippi School of Pharmacy viaMCT

Marijuana plants grow inside the Coy W. Waller Laboratory Complex at the University of Mississippi in Oxford, which provides the nation's only truly legal supply of marijuana. Last year, the National Institute on Drug Abuse paid the university nearly $847,000 to produce and distribute the drug, which is used mainly for research.

overnment ee s t contros on mariuana researc By Rob Hotakainen McClatchy Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — As the

12-acre fenced garden on the

P"'"PP "

is shippedto Research Triangle Institute in North Carolina, where it's rolled into cigarettes,

all at taxpayer expense. Even though Congress has long banned marijuana, the operation is legitimate. It's run

jjr ~

by the National Institute on

'jtj ~

Drug Abuse, part of the U.S. Department of Health and Hu-

TotalfundIng in millions

'03 ~ '04 ~ '05 ~ '06 ~ ~

$6.0 8.7 9.8 '

11.5 2L3 19.9

3s/5

man Services, which doles out

the pot for federally approved Source: National Judy Treible Institute on Drug Abuse © 2014 MCT researchprojects. While U.S. officials defend their monopoly, critics say the theproject approved. government is hogging all the For critics, the process is far pot and giving it mainly to re- too slow. In the fight to sway searchers who want to f i nd public opinion, the research harms linked to the drug. battleshave assumed a sense Officials say the federal of urgency, with opponents government must be the sole and proponents of legalizasupplier of legal marijuana in tion scrambling to find more order to comply with a 1961 evidence to advance their drug-control treaty. But they positions. admit they've done relatively For opponents, it m e ans little to fund research looking trying to link pot use to such for marijuana's benefits, follow- things as increased highway ing their mandate to focus on deaths, student dropouts and abuse and addiction. emergency hospital admis"We've been studying mar- sions. That could help defeat a ijuana since our inception. Of plan to legalize pot for recrecourse, the large majority of ational use in Alaska, set for an that research has been on the August vote. deleterious effects, the harmful For supporters, it means tryeffects, on cognition, behavior ing to find new ways to use pot and so forth," said Steven Gust, to treat diseases. That could get special assistant to the direc- voters in more states to approve tor at the National Institute on medical marijuana; 20 states Drug Abuse, which was creat- and the District of Columbia aled in 1974. ready have done so, and Florida could join the list in November. Changing attitudes Dan Riffle, director of fedWith polls showing a major- eral policies for the Marijuana ity of Americans supporting le- Policy Project, a pro-legalgalization, pot backers say the ization group, said President government shouldtake amore Barack Obama should end evenhanded approach. The ¹ the National Institute on Drug tional Institute on Drug Abuse Abuse's monopoly and remove and theWhite House drugczar allother research barriers.The have become favorite targets legalization of marijuana "is into accuse of bias, with both

evitable" and more studies are

prohibited by Congress from spending money to do anything to promote legalization. Some critics hope the situation will change; federal officials last week approved a University of Arizona proposal that will let researchers try to

needed, he said. "That is exactly why federal

determine whether smoking

law and policies shouldn't tie

the hands of scientists by favoring certain kinds of research over others," Riffle said.

Instit ute's response The national institute's Gust

or vaporizing marijuana could said the federal government is help veterans with post-trau- open to the idea of looking for matic stressdisorder. The re- more medical applications for searchers got the green light to marijuana and that it's a "red provide the equivalent of two herring" to say that his agency jointsperday for50veterans. is blocking research. "This is an untruth that's It was a longtime coming. Suzanne Sisley, clinical as- been put out there by certain sistant professor of i nternal groups, and quite frankly I medicine and psychiatry at the wonder if it's not having the University of Arizona's medi- perverseeff ectofactually decal school, said the Health and creasing the amount of applicaHuman Services Department tions and interest in research," waited more than three years Gust said. to approve the project after National Institute on Drug it was first sanctioned by the Abuse officials said they gave Food and Drug Administra- more than $30 million in govtion. She said the extra feder-

ernment grants to finance 69

al review should be scrapped marijuana-r elated research and that approval by the FDA projects in 2012, a big jump should be sufficient for a study from the 22 projects that reto proceed. ceived less than $6 million in "Nobody could explain it2003. While the institute would it's indefensible," she said in an not provide exact figures, Gust interview. "The only thing we said it has funded at least five to can assume is that it is politics 10 projects examining possible trumpingscience." medical applications. After the long delay, Sisley The institute also provides said she's excited to get started marijuana for privately fundand hopes to launch the proj- ed projects approved by the ect late this spring or early this Health and Human Services summer, after getting the mar-

ijuana from the National Insti-

Department. Of the 18 research

applicants who requestedmarijuana from 1999 to 2011, 15 got pressure by veterans helped get approval, officials said.

tute on Drug Abuse. She said

the eviction operation the final

RIO DE J A NEIRO Carlos Reis took photos the

go-ahead. "The process is very slow," Travassos said.

day government officials knocked down his house of 20 years and seized his land. "We lost our things," said

area, 263 have been cleared or knocked down, and seven of

Reis, who now lives in a tent with his wife and two sons.

been deared. Travassos said he is confident that the govern-

Of the 427 houses in the 16 cattle-rearing areas have

"It is a very sad business." Reis and hundreds of oth-

ment can prevent settlers from

returning. More than half of the fam-

er poor farmers in the state of Maranhao in northeast

Brazil are amongthetargets

ilies have registered with the >/ ,/

of a government operation

to dear a reserve in the Amazon for the Aw, an isolated tribe. Activists say the plan

could save the tribe from extinction.

Eraldo Peres /The Associated Press file photo

A man from the Pataxo tribe stands outside the Planalto presidential palace in Brasilia, Brazil last week. Tribal members were in the capital for meetings with government officials to discuss health issues and the legalization of indigenous lands.

Brazil has long faced international criticism for its failure to protect the Am- a municipality in a semiarid azon and it s t h reatened area 250 miles away that they have been a public relations

The number of marijuanarelated grants funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the nation's only legal

From there, part of the crop

December that a judge gave

Special to The Washington Post

tribes. But what should

Federal grants to studyyot

nation's only truly legal supplier of marijuana, the U.S. government keeps tight control of its stash, which is grown in a campus of the University of Mississippi in Oxford.

By Dom Phillips

victory for the government is in danger of backfiring

saylacks infrastructure. "How can we go there, if there is no house for us, no

school for us, no health center, of Indian affairs. Four or five and we can't work with agricul- uncontacted Aw family groups ture?" Oliveira said. "It doesn't also roamthe area. are being evicted from their rain there. There are only casThirty percent of the forest land. cavel snakes" — South Ameri- in the reserve had been illegalHundreds of s oldiers, can rattlesnakes. ly cut down by loggers capitalpolice and government emBrazil's powerful rural lobby, izingon valuable hardwoods. ployees began evicting fam- the National Confederation of "These were criminal organiilies from a 448-square-mile Agriculture, also has attacked zations that took control of the area late last month. the operation. Its spokeswom- area. There is a lot of money in"If this was a government an, Sen. Ktia Abreu, has called volved," Travassos said. with heart and a sense of for the equal treatment of inLoggers were within a few community, it would not digenous and nonindigenous miles of some Aw villages usiana Oliveira, 39, who was evicted from her small farm. She and her family are staying with her sister in the nearbytown of Sao Joao

Brazilians. The Aw were nomadic hunt-

contacted Aw in Brazil, most

Under the Brazilian constitu-

tion of 1988, all land in Indian reserves belongs to the Brazilian state, said Lus Pedrosa, an

attorney for the rural workers union. "It is a logic that recognizes that they (the tribes)were there before the Portuguese colonization of Brazil." Weverton Rocha, a member

of Brazil's Chamber of Deputies, the legislature's lower house, said the issue is not the

when the government opera-

Aw's right to the reserve but the

tion began, according to Sur-

treatment of the people who are being evicted. "We cannot let

er-gatherers in the area when vival, a British organization they were first contacted by a that campaigns for indigenous government mission in 1973. people."The situation had beSince then, loggers, farmers come really critical," said Sardo Caru, where Reis and his and settlers have decimated ah Shenker, a campaigner with family also are living. the wild forests where they live the group. Oliveira and Reis, who in small communities or in noBrazil's Justice M i n istry both spoke by phone, are madic groups. firstdedared the reserve the refusing the government's Today, there are about 400 permanent possession of the offer of land in Parnarama,

in Maranhao. Houses, power,

water and roads will be provided, he said. "Inside the area we are going in three reserves in Maranhao, to create a temporary campsite, said Carlos Travassos, gener- a provisional campsite, and al coordinator for isolated and guarantee basicfood baskets recently contacted Indians at for these families," Rodrigues the government's department SBld.

as criticism grows over the treatment of farmers who

have done this," said De-

government land reform agency Incra, which means they can moveto land being offered in Parnarama, said Jos Rodrigues, the agency's president

Aw in 1992. But it was only in

the rights of the Indians violate the rights of rural workers," he safd. Madalena Pinheiro, an expert at the Indigenous Mission-

ary Council, a group in Maranhao, said that if the poor farmers are not resettled properly,

"they will certainlyreturn."

Burial Continued fromA1 Three rifle volleys were fired to honor the men.

In December 2009 and January 2010, a joint team from the United States and V ietnam e x cavated t h e site where the plane most

likely crashed. They uncovered human remains but were unable to identify them.

"Therefore today, they

w ere all

b u ried i n t h i s

one ceremony to include Wood," Morgan said. The remains were buriedin a

single coffin. Woods' children, Steven Woods and Lisa Szymanski, and other soldiers' relatives accepted a folded

American flag while the Air Force band played. Steven Woods clutched a framed picture of his father

during the service. "What drives all people

Gabriella Demczuk/New YorkTimes News Service

Steven Woods mourns Friday at a group burial service for his father, Sgt. Lawrence Woods and the seven other servicemen who died after their plane was shot down in action over Vietnam in1964, at Arlington National Cemetery. The Department of Defense says 1,642 American service members from the war in Vietnam remain unaccounted for.

crazy is the uncertainty," said Ann M i l ls-Griffiths, c hairwoman of t h e N a - sonnel Office usually identitional League of POWi fies 60 to 80 missing veterans MIA Families, an advocacy in ayear.

Missing Personnel Office has had successive directors that focus more on micromanaggroup. Her brother, Navy But Defense Secretary ing operations than providing Cmdr. James Mills, also Chuck Hagel last month called statement. policy guidance to the governwent missing during the for a complete review of the M ills-Griffiths m e t w i t h mental community." Vietnam War, in 1966. "The department's ope r ations, Hagel in December to de- Hagel's review is expected devastation becomes an in- "to maximize the number of tail her concerns about the to be completed in April. ternal debate of when and identifications, improve trans- department. For now, there are still 1,642 "It's dysfunctional," she Vietnam War veterans unacwhere you give up." parency for families, reduce The POW/Missing Per- duplicative functions and es- said. "The Defense POWi counted for.

Medicaid

Oregon Health Policy Board time," said Patty Wentz, an found the CCOs reduced Oregon Health A uthority costs by 1 percentage point in spokeswoman.

Continued fromA1 To reduce health care costs, 2013. the state set up 17 coordinated Health officials said they care organizations — region- were optimistic the cost-saval coalitions of public health ing trend would continue. But officials and private physi- that hinges on educating peocians. The idea is to get pa- ple about where to go when tients medical attention at the health problems flare up. primary care level, whether It's a tougher challenge than it's with a physician or den- most might think. tist, rather than waiting until Local physicians have a the conditionneeds emergen- handful of Deschutes County cy care. residents are known to visit O regon G o v . Joh n the emergency room dozens Kitzhaber has bet big that of times eachyear. At a health the CCO model will reduce care forum in Bend last week, health care costs. The state Kat Mastrangelo, executive received $2 billion in federal director at Volunteers in Medfunds to set up the CCOs. But icine Clinic of the Cascades, the state will have to repay the money over time unless

the CCOs reduce the increase in Medicaid costs by 2 percentage points by the end of this year. A February report by the

tablish a system for centralized, complete, fully accessible personnel case files for missing personnel," Hagel said in a

said one patient has visited

the emergency room 100 times in a single year. "A lot of people who have health care now have maybe never had it before, or maybe not had it in a long

Deschutes County Commissioner Tammy Baney is chairwoman of the Cen-

tral Oregon CCO's governing body. Baney said she's i s, and how m uch o f t h e pleased with the region's state's health care coordina- results so far. County health tion efforts are still aimed at staffers are already doing Wentz emphasized how

young the CCO model still

education. The uninsured tend to wait

more healthassessments and

follow-up visits for uninsured until a condition reaches the children and outreach to papoint at which emergency tients with mental illness. care, rather than a basic docThe hope is for the intor's visit, becomes necessary. creased assessments and fol" The health s y stem a s low-ups to improve access to it's built now is not built on care beforesmall issues behealth, it's built on quanti- come majoremergencies. ty," Wentz said. "Every time

someone goes to the emergency room, that's a visit everyone pays for. What the government is trying to do with the coordinated care

" In the short r un, I

see

positive r esults," B aney said. "We're breaking down c ommunication

barr i e r s

model is to change that, and make it so that the delivery

and aligning care better. The proof will be in continuing to track our progress and benchmarking our

system is designed to deliv-

outcomes."

er better health care, not just

more care."

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


SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Courthouse

Obama administration alumni join ranks of 'unlobbyists' in D.C.

Continued fromA1 After the completion of the current courthouse in 1961,

the courtroom on the top floor of the building was vacated. Various county offices and the Oregon State University Ex-

By Mike Dorning

exert behind-the-scenes in-

tensionService have occupied

Bloomberg News

the building since, and from the 1970s through last year, it

WASHINGTON — Th e O bama a d ministration i s

fluence and how to approach them. They can offer intel-

housed the Jefferson County

breeding new power players d eliberations stand, w h a t for Washington's influence the dividing lines are among industry. Just don't call them competing camps and which lobbyists. officials are persuadable, all Five years after President gleaned from talking with Barack Obama issued an ex- ex-colleagues. ecutive order barring appoinThe migration at this stage tees from lobbying the execu- of an administration is fative branch for the rest of his miliar to veteran Washingpresidency, administration ton lobbyists such as Tom officials are increasingly de- Korologos. "Five minutes after inauparting to join the advocacy industry. guration for the second term, The new twist: Many ar- you start trying to figure out en't registering as lobbyists, your exit strategy from the acting instead as "strategic White House," said Koroloc onsultants" a n d "policy gos, who was U.S. ambassaadvisers." dor to Belgium under Presi"The influence industry is dent George W. Bush and is moving underground," said now a strategic adviser for Sarah Bryner, research direc- DLA Piper, a law firm with a tor of the Center for Respon- government-affair s practice. This is the moment of sive Politics, a government O bama administration o f watchdog group. The center counts among ficials' "maximum v a lue," the officials who have left he said. "They want to take

Historical Society's museum. Touring the building on Friday, Jansen showed off the work he's already done, shoring up nearly half of the

~IIW

deteriorating foundation, and

Ofj]

ripping out aged drywall and ceiling panels. Heading up

e

the stairs, he paused to shine

his flashlight at a row of dec-

,[

orative brass elements where the staircasemeets the wall,

then bounded up a few more steps and launched into a story about the layout of the old

courtroom. "The building's not that de-

crepit, it just looked bad," he said. "Most of it was superficial, but it's a lot of work."

Jansen said he's heard some criticism that the county essentially gave the building away for free, but insists it was

a better deal for the county than it was for him.

Photos by Andy Tullis /The Bulletin

Steve Jansen plans to repair the crumbling concrete foundation

Demolishing th e b u i ld- facade on the historic Jefferson County courthouse soon. Below, ing would have been costly, Jensen shows foundation work he hes already completed. he said, and public bidding processes would have made ™~~~®W it nearly impossible for the ~

county find a

c o st-effective

way of renovating it. "If they would have paid

Q~

iuaew

~%

8 $W I

me $10,000 to take it off their

hands, it still would have been too expensive," he said. "I'm already into this three times

what I paid, and I'm just getting started." The building's basement has revealed a cache of oddSociety vacated the place, put-

day wantthem back.So far he's located — among other things — a vintage medical breathing apparatus, a leg brace he suspects belonged to

small two-man cells, a single

hopes to have it cleaned up

toilet and w o od-fueled fur-

and restored to allow for tours.

nace, and a small perch above At the courthouse building, the cells where the jailer slept. work is proceeding briskly. As best as Jansen has been able to determine, the histor-

ic jail and the current courthouse across the street are

If Jansen stays on track with

mostly cosmetic repairs like pulling out the old carpet and restoring the wood floors, he expects to have it ready

linked through one of Central Oregon's most infamous to market as office space in crimes, the 1961 murder of two about a month. The upstairs a polio victim, and a massive children who were thrown off eventually will be restored to iron bell that most likely came the Crooked River Gorge. how it looked when it served from an old schoolhouse in The children's mother, Ger- as a courtroom, he said, and Madras or Ashwood. trude Jackson, and her lover offered as a daily rental for The basement also revealed and accomplice, Jeannace weddings o r co m munity two large iron doors, once F reeman, were the last i n - events. used to sealthe safes used mates housed in the historic Outside on the courthouse by the sheriff and the court. jail and the first tried in the lawn, Jansen glanced across With great difficulty and a lit- then-new courthouse, Jansen the street to the current county tle help, he brought the doors said. Freeman was the first courthouse — itself scheduled upstairs and put them back in woman sentenced to death in for replacement sometime in place. Oregon, but had her sentence the next few years — shook "It took four of us, and we reduced to life when voters his head, and wondered how all threw our backs out," Jan- repealed the death penalty. it's possible his building could sen said, fingering the combi- She was paroled in 1985, but outlast the one built to replace nation lock on the safe door was back in prison when she it. "This building, I'm only once used by the Sheriff's Of- died in 2003. Jackson testified fice. "It's about 400 pounds, I against Freeman, and was re- shootingforanother 97years, figure." leasedfrom prison after serv- if it doesn't make it, sue me," Jansen's purchase also in- ing seven years. he said. "Of course, as old and cludes the first Jefferson CounFor now the jail is well down cantankerous as I am, I may ty jail, located just north of the list of renovations Jansen still be alive." the courthouse. Built in 1918, still has to tackle, but by the — Reporter: 541-383-0387, the tiny building contains two

Housing

Obama at least 86 "unlob-

Madras centennial in 2017, he

rates, Lore said. The couple refinanced into a loan with a 2.8 percent rate in 2012. Now, with

Continued fromA1 A healthy turnover of homes a new loan, they'd get a 4.25 is critical to a robust housing percent rate. "At some point I thought: sector, enabling critical firsttime homebuyers to enter the 'I don't know whether we're market and existing home- going to go ahead with this,' " owners to move or trade up. Lore said. "We're leaning toBut housing experts worry that ward buying, but I'm just not interest rates, which are expect- sure. ed to gradually rise to nearly Their real estate agent, Joan 6 percent by late next year, Caton Cromwell of McEnearwill chill enthusiasm for home ney & Associates, said that she purchases. They say they're expects the issue to surface already seeing signs of that, with other potential buyers as most recently among existing interest rates edge upward. "I don't think people are gohomeowners. It's too early to quantify the ing to give up these interest impact of t h e p h enomenon rates easily, particularlyyoungeconomists call "interest-rate er people," Cromwell said. lock-in." But it's happened be- "Buyers who are under 40 have fore and could happen again, lived through a period of very say researchers who have stud- low rates. It scares them more ied the effects of rising rates on than somebody who bought a housing turnover. Statements house in the '80s, for instance, by Federal Reserve Chair Janet and remembers when rates Yellen this week sparked inves- were close to 20percent." tor fears that the agency could The interest rate lock-in efsoon begin allowing a key in- fect took hold back then, acterest rate to rise, helping push cording to research by the Inmortgage rates even higher. stitute for Housing Studies at Ella Lore said she and her DePaul University. Between husband are fence-sitting. Now November 1978 and November that their daughter is studying 1981, when the average monthabroad, they would like to sell ly rateon a 30-year, fixed-rate their D.C. home, buy a two-bed- mortgage jumped from 10.1 room condo and rid themselves percent to 17.8 percent, sellers of the hasslesand costs of retrenched. Household mobilmaintaining a large home. ity fell by 15 percent for every But when they did the math, 2 percentincrease in rates,acthey discovered that they cording to the study. would be paying about the Patric Hendershott, one of same amount each month for the study's co-authors, said that considerablyless space part- a significant uptick in mortgage ly because of rising mortgage rates in coming years could

shammers@bendbulletin.com

have the same effect, especially in areas with strong housing markets that are teeming with

people who had enough equity to refinance their homes during

the past three to fiveyears. "An increase of one percentage point is going to affect a fewpeople at the margin," Hendershott said. "But if you start talking two or three points, if rates hit 6 or 7 percent, I think

that certainly would have a big effect." At Freddie Mac, which has

tracked interest rates for decades, economists expect that

the average rate will climb to just shy of 5 percent by year's end on a 30-year, fixed-rate

mortgage and hit nearly 6 percent by the end of 2015. "I don't see sharp jumps," said Frank Nothaft, Freddie

Mac's chief economist. "I predict the Fed will move gingerly and continue to promote a lower interest rate environment." Still, Jim Peterson can't bring

himself to buy another house anytime soon. Peterson, a Marine based

in Quantico, Va., has been ordered to move to San Diego for

recruiting school. He's decided to sell his home in Fredericksburg, Va., give up his 3.25 percent interest rate mortgage and

rent. He figures that a monthly mortgage payment will be neck-and-neck with monthly

rent in most areas. "When interest rates go up, I'm pretty confident that mort-

gage payments will surpass rent," he said.

medical devices maker. The former officials and their spokesmen denied that

they're trying to reap gains from t h ei r ties.

a d m i nistration

Nadia Mostafa, a spokeswoman for Johnson & Johnson, said Fowler "does not en-

gage in lobbying, and strictly abides by her legal and regulatory responsibilities." Rouse and Mark Patterson, a former Goldman Sachs lobbyist who was chief of staff to

Treasury secretaries Timothy Geithner and Jacob Lew, last month joined the law firm

Perkins Coie to lead a new Washington "public and strategic affairs practice." Rouse

and Patterson didn't respond to requests for comment. Dunn's

c l i ent li s t

at

SKDKnickerbocker includes TransCanada Corp., which is trying to build the Keystone XL pipeline. Shawn Howard, a TransCanada spokesman,

office to get clients and to get said Dunn has done work settled in their job before they developing ad c ampaigns

byists," which it defines as

people not registered as lobbyists who work for business start worrying about what units devoted to influencing the next administration is gogovernment policy. The list ing to be." The exodus from the adis culled from media reports, pressreleases and directories ministration includes some and probably understates the of its most senior figures: Pete number, Bryner said. Anoth- Rouse, Obama's former Sener 46 are registered lobbyists. ate chief of staff and a memThe center doesn't have ber ofhis inner circle;former comparable data for the same White House communica-

and marketing in favor of the

pipeline yet doesn't lobby the administration. One former

a d ministra-

tion official said an example of astrategic adviser's work was when he counseled a client that, if he wanted to try to

blunt the impact of a proposed regulation, he should make the case to Valerie Jarrett, a

tions director Anita Dunn; Jim Messina, Obama's for-

"We still have many people leaving government and taking jobs that in the past

ting its collection in storage

items should the museum one

advantage ofthe three years that the president is still in

the executive branch under

cy" in the government affairs group for Johnson & Johnson, the pharmaceutical and

ligence on where internal

point in the Bush or Clinton administrations.

i ties left b ehind w hen t h e Jefferson County H i storical

until a new museum can be constructed. As he worked his way through the basement, Jansen said he plans to hold onto the

A5

mer deputy chief of staff and manager of his re-election campaign, and Robert Gibbs, would have resulted in them the former White House press registering as lobbyists," she secretary. Among the others are Elizsaid. Now, they are "skirting abeth Fowler, a White House the disclosure requirements." The advisers can avoid reg- aide who helped implement istering by not having direct the president's health care communication with officials law and left her job shortly af-

senior Obama adviser whose duties include serving as a liaison withbusiness leaders. The adviser suggested to the client that the way to

persuade Jarrett would be to have high-level executives of major companies speak with her and offer examples of job cuts or business losses they would sustain, said the advis-

ter Obama's re-election. Her they may provide clients de- next stop: a senior-level post

er, who asked not to be identified in discussing private

tailed maps of which officials

conversations.

on behalf of clients. Instead,

BI T

leading "global health poli-

N

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Calendar, B3 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014

BRIEFING Man sentenced to Syears inprison A man who in February 2013 led police on a high-speed chaseand threatened to kill offi-

cers pleaded guilty and was sentenced Friday to more than eightyears in prison. Michael LeeHanson, 35, pleaded guilty in Deschutes County Circuit Court to several counts of identity theft,

two counts of attempting to elude police in a vehicle and onecount each of perjury, unlawful use of a computer and unauthorized use of a weapon. On Valentine's Day

en counci ac s o usin ro ram By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

The city of Bend is poised to make permanent the affordable housing program it launched nearly a decade ago at the height of the housing boom. Affordable housing is once again a hot topic, because rents have risen and housing prices are onthe rebound inCentral

Oregon. Yet the city's program actually won some of its supporters when housing prices

guilty in that case to 48

counts of identity theft, one count of first-degree theft and fraudulent use of a credit card. Nore briefing, B3

In a story headlined "3 solutions to Mirror Pond issue presented, discussed," which appeared Friday, March 21 on PageB1, Bend City Councilor Victor Chudowsky's position on the future of the Mirror Pond damwas misstated.

Chudowsky and other members of the council have committed to preserving Mirror Pond but want to keep thecurrent dam only if viable. Additionally, panelist David Blair is not a member of the Bend Paddle Trail Alliance, and while the idea ofan alternative water retention structure to preserve Mirror Pondwas largely the work of Bend Paddle Trail Alliance members, the group has not formally endorsed the proposal. The Bulletin regrets the errors.

manager, said the city used its affordable housing fund as leverage to secure $39million

Gary Firestone said at a City

The city has lent out $5.8 million in revolving funds for affordable housing since the programbegan in2006.

Council meeting this week.

The city raises money for the

the Central Oregon Builders

Association, which opposed

Andy High, staff vice president of government affairs for the

programwith a fee equalto one-fifth of 1 percent of the

ing for housingprojects. A majority of city councilors said at a meeting Wednesday

the creation of the affordable

Central Oregon Builders As-

estimated value listed for every

theywant to makepermanent

buildingpermit it issues. The fee was originally one-third of

the affordable housing fee. City Manager Eric King said he will schedule a councilvote in April on language to remove the sun-

gram," Assistant CityAttorney

housing program in 2006, used sociation, said the city should loans from it to keep some of its keep a sunset on the affordable members working during the housingprogram to force ofdownturn. ficials to evaluate it every five "Particularly in the econom- years. "It allows us to make

reduced it when it renewed the program for three years

ic downturn, these were some

sure we're collectingthe dollars

in the summer of 2011. Jim

of the only projects going, with

appropriately," High said.

Long,Bend affordablehousing

1percent, but the City Council

:: I''itI."

in federal, state and other fund-

set dause from the affordable

housing program. SeeHousing/B5

Mountain View hosts annualFFA convention By Megan Kehoe

ff

The Bulletin

Spring Break may have officially started for Bend schools, but the hallways and

corridors of Mountain View High School were bustling Friday evening as a swarm of students in blue and gold corduroy jackets descended upon the building. "The students are really proud that the convention

•( h

1

is at our school this year,"

said Traci Dulany, Mountain View High School agriculture teacher. "Everyone's been

working so hard this week to get the school ready for it." The annual FFA convention

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Middle school musicians from West Village Magnet School in Bend play together as the WVMS Roots Rock Band. Some members of the group will play in concert again March 30 at Parilla Grill in Bend. See morephotos ofthe musi cians as they practice on Page B2.

kicked off at the high school Friday and is being attended by nearly 2,500 high school students and agriculture teachersfrom around the

state. The four-day event gives students a chance to participate in competitions, FFA student board elec-

tions and workshops with like-minded students. FFA, formally known as Future

BEND

Crook Coun set An attemptedmurder to receive money suspect returns towork to addresswolves By Shelby R. King The Bulletin

Settlemier was scheduled

for a jury trial earlier this month. Ward said in court

A Bend man facing attempted murder charges is now

Wednesday that because the

releasedfrom daytime house arrest and can return to work

state keeps delayingthe trial, Settlemier should be allowed

from 8 a.m. to 8p.m. Theodore Settlemier on

Wednesday had the terms of his conditional release altered by Deschutes Circuit Court

Correction

projects that had at least partial funding through this pro-

|' SC OO 1OC S OW

2013, Hanson tried to

elude police, who had been attempting to arrest him on afelony warrant for coercion. Officers tried to pull over Hanson in his Chevy Suburban, but he refused to stop, first heading west out of Redmond, but then heading back toward Redmond onOregon Highway126. Hanson pointed a gun atofficers several times during the chase andhadtold officers when they contacted him about the arrest warrant he was "heavily armed" and wasn't"going to go down without a fight," according to court testimony from Oregon State Police Sgt. Mitchell Meyer. Hanson admitted to stealing money market checks from a Redmond resident who hadhired him to detail her car. He stole several thousand dollars from her money market account, according to court testimony. Defense attorney Owyhee Weikel-Magden requested JudgeBarbara Haslinger suspend 40 months of Hanson's 100-month sentence, but Haslinger elected to impose the full sentence asked for by Deputy District Attorney Eric Marvin. Haslinger said Hanson will be eligible for alternative incarceration for the last 20 months of his sentence. This is not Hanson's first trip to prison. In 2002, he wassentenced to three years after being caught with more than 900 stolen credit card numbers belonging to Eagle Crest Resort visitors. He pleaded

were lower, after the real estate bust. During the recession, the program was a rare source of financing for construction projects. A nonprofit arm of

off house arrest to get back to

work. In court was Hallie Dew, principal broker and owner of New Day Realty, whom Ward said is holding a job for Settle-

Judge Beth Bagley to allow him to return to work as a real estate agent.

"The continued conditions of his release are preventing him from earning a living," said defense attorney Erick Ward. "He is at risk of losing

realty business. Settlemier

In a T h u rsday

mier will be acquitted, though she declined to say exactly

child support."

what that evidence was.

cion and attempting to elude

"Ted is not my friend, he's just somebody who hangs his license in my office. It's just appallingto me the way this has been handled," Dew said. "Just because people like to read bad stories about people who used to be successful doesn't

police in a vehicle, according

mean they're true."

to court records. The indictment, filed May 29, 2013, states that on or about May 2, Settlemier tried to kill

Dew said she does notbelieve Settlemier is a threat to anyone and said, if she did, she would not allow him in her office or around her other real

block her nose and mouth.

Ward said on Friday he is confident Settlemier will be

estate brokers.

"I'm asingle female and I

don't hold out alot of charities

acquitted when the case goes

for people who are abusive, andif Ibelieved anyof that, he

to trial. He said he is readyto present his case, and the pros-

wouldn'tbe in myoffice," she said."Ithinktherehasbeenan

ecution is the reason the trial

injustice donetohim." SeeSuspect/B5

continues to be delayed.

attract wolves.

if he continues as a broker at her

and could lose his real estate license because he owes back

his then-girlfriend Natalie Nicholson by using a pillow to

to spend on removing piles of cattle bones that could

the state's effort to prevent

that leads her to believe Settle-

fourth-degreeassault,menacing, strangulation, interfering with making a report, coer-

set to receive state money

show properties

he can't pay the premiums

of a weapon, two counts of

Crook County is again

mier, but needs him to be able to

his health insurance because

trial on charges of attempted murder, unlawful use

The Bulletin

The Oregon Department of Agriculture has tentatively approved a $3,000 grant for the rural Central Oregon county as part of

phone call, Dew said she has seen evidence

Settlemier, 45, is awaiting

By Dylan J. Darling

"The emphasishas been on preventing wolf depredation." — Bruce Pokarney, Department of Agriculture

spokesman

Farmers of America, is an organization geared toward educating students about agriculture and also provides ways for them to gain leadership skills. "This convention is another way for FFA to be rec-

ognized," Dulany said. "So many times, people think the organization is just about

showing animals at the fair. But there's this whole other leadership side to it that you see at an event like this. There

are no animals here this weekend."

Students from most of the state's 115 FFA chapters attended the convention. This

is only the second time that Bend has hosted the gath-

ering in the organization's 86-year-history; the last time

state-sponsored hunts in the mid-1900s. Since being reintroduced into Idaho

was in 2006. Bend's local

and respond to wolf attacks on livestock. "The emphasis has been on preventing wolf depre-

and Yellowstone National Park in the 1990s, wolves

of whom helped raise $35,000 this past year through community donations for the

dation," said Bruce Pokar-

Department of Fish and

have spread west. The latest estimate by the Oregon

chapter is made up of 65 Mountain View students, all

convention. "It's been a lot of work, but

Wildlife shows at least 64 wolves in eight packs The c o unty r e c eived around Oregon, mostly in the same amount last fall the northeast corner of the during a s u pplementalstate. Lone wolves, young

we're very proud of it," said

round of funding, but sent it back to the state after

males looking for new ter-

the Crook County Wolf

Central Oregon in recent

Committee wasn't able to

years. The grant for Crook

Bend chapter, said he's participating in several events this weekend, including a public speaking competition. He's also running for district

ney, a Department of Agriculture spokesman.

organize a program and spend the money by a state deadline. The goal of the program last fall was to rem ove bonepiles,or places

ritory, have passed through

County comes as part of $150,000 in Department of

Agriculture grants to counties to contend with wolves

will be used for the same

this year, Pokarney said. Eight counties are receiving grants — Crook, Baker, Malheur, Morrow, Uma-

purpose, said Seth Crawford, a Crook County com-

tilla, Union, Wallowa and Wheeler.

missioner and a member of

Most of the money is going to counties in north-

where ranchers dispose of

cattle carcasses. The new grant probably

the county Wolf Committee. The original plan was to remove20 bone piles by either hauling them to the landfill or burying them. Wolves were w i p ed out in Oregon following

eastern Oregon, and more than two-thirds of it will go

toward preventing wolf attacks on livestock. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com

Shea Booster, 16. "The setup

has been incredible." Booster, a sophomore who is the president-elect of the

office.

"A lot of my friends might think it's stupid to spend some of my spring break doing this, but it's worth it to me," Booster said. "I love FFA."

"There are so many people here from towns I've never heard of before," said Cody Schumacher, 16, a junior at Mountain View. "I saw some with jackets that said 'Phoenix,' and at first I thought,

'You guys came all the way from Arizona?' I didn't know there was a Phoenix in

Oregon." SeeSchool /B5


B2

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014

Mark Ransom, an artist-in-residence who facilitates the Westside Village Magnet School Roots Music Program, center, gives some vocal hints to the singing section during practice.

Photos by AndyTullis • The Bulletin

The WVIVIS Roots Music Program began in 2007 as a grassroots effort by some involved parents to grow performing arts education in Bend. During the last seven years, local musicians Patrick Pearsall, Shireen Amini and Mark Ransom have helped develop a music culture at Westside Village Magnet School, teaching classes in percussion and hand drumming, voice and choir, guitar, songwriting and ensemble performance.

Student musicians in the WVMSRoots Music Program rehearse a classic rock songtogether, playing in harmonyduring their morning meeting time before class.

The program's different components often come together during a WVMS Roots Rock Band show — a rock 'n' roll orchestra of middle school singers and players. Some members of the WVMS Roots Rock Band will perform a free show at 7 p.m. March 30 at Parilla Grill in Bend.

+ Chandler Brown,12, strums a colorful acoustic guitar.

Grace Cooper, 13, left, and Kailash Moore, 14, play a keyboard

together. Noah Lancaster, 13, right, joins in on the vocals while

Y playing guitar.

/ ),/' „, I .a


SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

IfS

ermi elll S

Of O S O S OB ICBIl

• Certificates would still be superseded by local measuresbanning the establishments

borders, at least temporarilet them operate yet, but hold ly. The Medford City Council

visional licenses that do not

their applications open for 60

days so they can install security systems to complete the By Chad Garland fraction of the 288 applica- approvalprocess. The Associated Press tions the agency has received Those that have been fully SALEM — State officials since the state began taking cleared can begin operating granted the first crop of licens- online license applications legally as soon as they get es to Oregonians who want to

March 3.

"For the first time, a legal open medical marijuana dispensaries on Friday, even as and regulatory structure is in many cities and counties are place to govern the operation implementing or considering of dispensaries, " said Tom bans on the pot stores. Burns, director of p h armaThe Legislature last year cy programs forthe Oregon approved ameasure legaliz- Health Authority. ing the pot facilities that took Applications were denied effect this month. The dispen- for 22 facilities, because of sarieshad previously operat- incomplete applications or ed in a legal gray area. because the f acility's locaThe Oregon Health Au- tion was within 1,000 feet of a thority reported eight medical school or another dispensary, marijuana shops had been ap- the agency said. Another 20 proved by late Friday, a small facilities were granted pro-

EVZNT TODAY PANCAKE BREAKFAST:Featuring a pancake breakfast, eating contest, raffle and door prizes; proceedsbenefit the La PineSkate Park; $6-$7; 9-11:30 a.m.; La PineCommunity Center, 16405 First St.; 541-536-2170. SOLAR VIEWING: Observe the sun; free; 11a.m.-2 p.m.; Sunriver Nature Center &Observatory, 57245 River Road;541-593-4394 or www. sunrivernaturecenter.org. SPAGHETTIFEEDFUNDRAISER:A spaghetti dinner to raise funds for a caretaker's trip as part ofthe Honor Flight of Eastern Oregon;$10donation suggested;4 p.m.; Elks Lodge,151 N. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-5451. MIDDLEEASTERNDANCE SHOWCASE: Dancersfromthe High Desert Belly DanceGuild perform; free; 6 p.m.; BendCircus Center,911 S.E. Armour Road;541-728-3598 or www. highdesertbellydance.org. THE TRAILRUNNING FILM FESTIVAL:A screening of full length and short films about trail running, with live music; $10; 6p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 orwww. volcanictheatrepub.com. BEND COMMUNITYCONTRADANCE: Featuring caller ChelaSloper, with music by theBetsy Branch Trio; $8 at the door; 7 p.m. beginner's workshop, 7:30p.m. dance;Boys 8 GirlsClub of Bend, 500 N.W.Wall St.; 541-3308943 or www.bendcontradance.org. "FUNNYMONEY":Acomedy about a mild-manneredaccountant accidentally picking upa briefcase full of money andtrying to explain himself to a police detective; $19,$15seniors, $12students;7:30 p.m .;Greenwood

their permits in the mail, said

Karynn Fish, the agency's spokeswoman. That's only if they aren't barred by local authorities.

v oted Thursday to ban t h e

facilities permanently, and Hermiston enacted a perman ent ordinance to ban t h e

shops earlier this month. At least one of the approved facilities is in Hermiston.

Draft ruleswere released earlier this week that would

allow facility owners to get a refund of the application fee if a moratorium blocks them

from opening, but those rules lature gave cities and counties will not go into effect until the power to block the facili- next week, Fish said. ties within their communities Hermiston Mayor D ave until May 2015, though local D rotzmann s ai d t h e C i t y Earlier this month, the Legis-

officials had asked forauthority to enact permanent bans.

Nearly two dozen local governments have already passed or are considering ordinances to block the shops within their

Council has

doorsopen8p.m.;DominoRoom, 51 N.W.GreenwoodAve., Bend; 541408-4329 or www.facebook.com/ actiondeniroproductions. JOYCUT: The Italian electro-pop band performs; $5; 9 p.m.;TheAstro Lounge, 939 N.W.BondSt., Bend;541388-0116or www.astroloungebend.

com. KNIGHTRIDERZ:Electronic music from Edmonton, Albera, with DJPaul, Matt Waxand Lyfe; $5;10:30p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116 orwww. facebook.com/stilldream.festival.

SUNDAY SOLARVIEWING:Observe the sun; free; 11a.m.-2 p.m.; Sunriver Nature Center 8 Observatory,57245 River Road;541-593-4394 or www. sunrivernaturecenter.org. MUSICINPUBLIC PLACES: Musicians from theCentral Oregon Symphony perform featuring The Bend Cello Collective; free;1 p.m.; Crook County Library, 175N.W. Meadow LakesDrive, Prineville; 541317-3941 or www.cosymphony.com. SljNRIVERMUDSLINGERSPRING

BREAK MUDRUN:A non-competi tive, non-timed run for theentire family plus a timed, competitive run opento the first100registrants age16and older, with prizes andbeverages; free for spectators, $12-$30 early bird registration, $15-$35 preregistration, $18-$30 event day;1 p.m.,11:30 a.m. registration; Sunriver Resort Marina, 57235 River Road;541-585-3145 or www.sunrivermudslinger.com. "FUNNYMONEY":Acomedy about a mild-manneredaccountant accidentally picking up a briefcase full of money andtrying to explain himself to a police detective; $19,$15seniors, $12 students; 2 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend;541-389-0803or www. cascadestheatrical.org. MUSIC IN PUBLIC PLACES: Musicians from theCentral Oregon Symphony perform featuring The Bend Cello Collective; free;4 p.m.; Redmond Airport, 2522 S.E.Jesse Butler Circle; 541-317-3941 or www.

cosymphony.com.

FRANKIEBALLARD:TheMichigan country artist performs; $16 plus fees; 9-11:30 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar & Grill,20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend;541-325-1886 or www. maverickscountrybar.com. PAPADOSIO: The North Carolinabased electro-jam-rock band

performs;$10plusfeesin advance, $13 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open8 p.m.;Domino Room,51 N.W. GreenwoodAve., Bend; 541408-4329 or www.facebook.com/ slipmatscience.

MONDAY SOLARVIEWING:Observe the

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 DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at 2:44 p.m. March 9, in the 500block of Southeast Woodland Boulevard. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 12:33 p.m. March12, in the 3100block of Northeast Weeping Willow Drive. Criminal mlschlef —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 11:35a.m. March17, in thearea of Rae Road andPaulina Lane. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at11:42 a.m. March 17, in the 2700 block of Northeast Sedalia Loop. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at12:31 p.m. March 17, in the 60900 block of GraysonWay. Criminal mlschlef —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 11:04 p.m. March17, in the areaof Fargo Laneand PinehavenAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:54 a.m. March18, in the 61500block of Admiral Way. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:35 a.m. March18, in the 61400 block of South U.S. Highway97. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 8:30 a.m. March 19, in the 21300 block of Pelican Drive. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 6:44 p.m. March 19, in the1800 blockof Northeast Providence Drive.

Theft —A theft was reported at 9:48 a.m. March 18, in the 500 block of Southwest Industrial Way. Theft —A theft was reported at10:46 a.m. March19, in the1200 blockof Northeast Dawson Drive. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 9:46 p.m. March 19, in the 200 block of Northwest Riverside Boulevard.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2:59 a.m. March 20, in thearea of Northeast Third Street.

Filed March 7 14CV0170 —State FarmMutual Automobile Insurancev. Robert L. Heuett, complaint, $10,055.31 14CV0171 —3rd Street Investment LLC v.Terry Taylor andTracySavage, complaint, $162,538.51pluscosts and fees 14CV0175 —CachLLCv. Jeffrey T. Moore, complaint, $14,134.29 14CV0176 —CachLLCv. Bonnie Swearingen,complaint, $10,391.64

Filed March 10 14CV0178 —Onewest BankFSBv. Jason L. Lark,UnitedStates ofAmerica and State ofOregon, complaint, $143,154.71plusinterest, costs andfees 14CV0179 —U.S. BankN.A., astrustee for Citigroup MortgageLoanTrust Inc. 2006-AR7,MortgagePass-through certificates, series2006AR-7,v. LeeJ. Tolzman, Lisa M.Tolzmanand Mortgage Electronic Registration SystemsInc., solely asnomineefor Mortgageit Inc., complaint, $226,300plus interest, costs

andfees 14CV0180 — Wells FargoBankN.A.v. Holly G.Hamilton, OregonAffordable Housing AssistanceCorporation and Citibank SouthDakotaN.A.,complaint, $274,357.74plusinterest, costs andfees 14CV0181 —LesSchwab Warehouse Center Inc.v. Flat IronTire Center Inc., Mark L Sullivan, RebeccaJ.Sullivan, Ross Fratzkeand DeboraFratzke, complaint, $335,182 14CV0182 —Directors Mortgage Inc. v.T. GaryTurner, dbaTurner Appraisal Group, complaint, $385,000 14CV0183 — National Collegiate Student LoanTrust2006-3, etal, a DelawareStatutory Trust, v. Cynthia Derrickson, complaint, $27,534.35 Filed March 12 14GV0184 — Saint ThomasCatholic Church ofRedmondInc.v.JamesL. Ramsey,DickRobertson, co-trusteesof the Lillian F.RamseyIrrevocable Trust 8, DeschutesCounty, complaint, at least $354,427 14CV0185 —Portland Local 8Federal Credit Union v.Erick S.Trachsel and Jaime K.Trachsel, complaint, $13,832 14CV0186 — Stacy Allstot v. Charlie P. Ercolin, complaint, at least$150,000 Filed Marc:h 13 14CV0187 —RayKlein Inc., dba Professional CreditService, v.Tamra A. Huffsmith andBradley J. Huffsmith, complaint, $14,486.07 14GV0189 — Marie Kaiserv.Rebound Physical TherapyLLC,complaint, at least $36,000 14CV0193 —Lilian Tisiot v.J.C. Penney Corporation Inc., complaint, at least $15,000 Filed March 14

14CV0194 — OSUFederal Credit Union

accused ofsexuallyabusing oneof the youngvolunteers theytrained to help in searchand rescueoperations in MarionCounty. Authorities said 33-year-old Casey Wenger and31-year-old RosaWenger werearrested Thursday onchargesofsexabuseandencouragingchildsexabusehaving child pornography.Deputy ChiefJeff Kuhnssaid analleged victim, a girl, made astatement that led tothe investigation. DeathrOW kidheif —Aman who's beenstanding alongthe state highway inhis townwith asign pleadingfor akidney donorsays he'snot so desperatehe'daccept an organfrom a manonOregon's death rowfor killing his wifeandthree children. KevinGray,of Newberg, wasdiagnosed withkidneyfailure inMay.Lately, he's beenbeside Highway99Westwith asign reading: "Living KidneyDonor Needed.Pleasehelp." Fromdeath row in Salem,Christian Longo sawa report this weekabout Grayand offered akidney. POSSible 3rd COugar —Oregon wildlife officials have removed a cougar trap from aEugenepark, eventhough trail cameras have shown a third cougar in the area.Twoother cougars were earlier trapped and killed after recent livestock kills. Fish andWildlife Department spokeswoman Michelle Dennehysaidcougarsroam widelyand the third cat may befar from Hendricks Park in south Eugene. The department trapped cougars in the samelocation on March 12and March14. Both the adult female and a6-month-old male were later killed. Goats andchickens living near the park were said to havebeen taken by cougars. — From wire reports

changes to its ordinance. He said he thinks the council wants more time and infor-

mation before changing its position.

KEIZER

sun; free; 11a.m.-2 p.m.; Sunriver Nature Center 8 Observatory,57245 River Road; 541-593-4394 or www. sunrivernaturecenter.org. "E.T., THEEXTRA-TERRESTRIAL":A screening of the1982 film (PG)about a troubled child helping a friendly alien escapeEarth; free, refreshments available;1 p.m.; RodriguezAnnex, Jefferson County Library,134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www. jcld.org. "KISSME -W ITH EVERY HEARTBEAT":A screening of the 2011 film about anengaged young woman in an affair with her stepmother's lesbian daughter; presentedby the LGBTQStars and Rainbows; $5; 7 p.m., 6 p.m. doors; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com.

The Associated Press

2 teens aresuspected in slaying of aparent SALEM — The killing of a Keizer woman was a plot

TUESDAY SOLARVIEWING:Observe the sun; free;11 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sunriver Nature Center 8 Observatory,57245 River Road; 541-593-4394 or www. sunrivernaturecenter.org. LATE MODELRACE CAR VIEWING: View a racecar signed byCentral Oregon veterans or sign it if you area veteran; T-shirt sales benefit race car maintenance; free; noon; Izzy's Pizza, 810 S.W.11th St., Redmond; 541-4475304 or kim.phillipp©co.crook.or.us. OREGON ENCYCLOPEDIAHISTORY NIGHT:"Finding Fremont: Pathfinder of the West" presented by Loren Irving; free; 7 p.m., doors open at6 p.m.; McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com.

v. Joseph M.Eilers andJane P.Eilers, complaint, $24,384.18 14CV0195 —Community West Bank N.A.v. M-PressPackaging Inc., Michael A. Lewis, Caprielle A.Lewis, Arrowood RedmondPartners LLC,Wells Fargo Financial Leasing Inc., NMHG Financial Services Inc., Firstlease Inc., MechelleF. Grayand Corporation Service Company, complaint, $141,152.85

Miller and agreed to pay him "money and things of value to unlawfully and intentionally

hatched by her teenage son cause the death of Michelle who agreed to pay a friend to Pearson." help him, a grand jury indictShe died of a g unshot ment says.

wound to the neck, an autopsy

The son and his friend are found. accused of aggravated murThe teenagers were arder and other charges in the rested after Keizer police redeath of Michelle Pearson, an sponded to an alarm March accountant for the state Department of Human Services.

Her husband, Wilfred Pearson, is recovering from multiple gunshot wounds. Salem Hospital reports him in good condihon. Brett Pearson and Robert Daniel Miller II, were ar-

raigned Thursday. Neither entered aplea. They are 17.

NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG

ReSCueWOrkerSaCCueedOfabuee — AKeizer couplehavebeen

no t d i scussed

ENm a Playhouse, 148N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend;541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. NIGHT VIEWING:Observe the night sky; $8, $6 for children ages2-12, free for members; 8-10p.m.; Sunriver Nature Center 8 Observatory,57245 River Road;541-593-4394 or www. sunrivernaturecenter.org. IAMSU!:The BayArea hip-hop artist performs, with P-Lo, Skipper,Jay Tablet and DJHarlo; $15plus fees inadvance,$20atthedoor;9 p.m.,

AROUND THE STATE

The indictment says that between Feb. 1 and March 5,

5 at the Pearson home. Police

said the alarm went off as the teenagers fled. Officers arrested Brett Pearson at a traffic

stop about an hour later and Milier after that at a motel.

The charges ~ the m require that they be tried as adults. There was n o

m e ntion

of a motive. And an affidavit about the case remains sealed, said Marion Coun-

the teenagers agreed on the ty Deputy District Attorney plot. It said Pearson solicited Brendan Murphy.

LOCAL BRIEFING Continued fiom Bt

Work coming toU.S. Highway 20 east of Bend The Oregon Department of Transportation will go to bid next week on a $2.1 million project to put sealant on U.S.Highway 20extending 50 miles east of Bend. Beginning at Horse FrontageRoad, chip seal, an oil and gravel mix, will be put on the roadwayand thenthe mix will be coated with a fog seal. For safety, center lane rumble strips also will be installed the length of the project. Shoulder rumble strips will be installed where the shoulder is wide enough. The project is the result of an ODOT study between 2008 and2012. During that time there were 52crashes, and morethan half occurred when vehicles ran off the road. Construction is set to begin this summer.

La Pine firefighters usingbusto practice rescues La Pine residents may recall seeing ayellow school bus behind La Pine Fire Department Station102 on South Century Drive in recent weeks. The bus is being used by LaPineand Sunriver firefighters as part of a joint heavy rescueextrication class today with the Oregon Department of Public Safety Standards andTraining. The training will give firefighters hands-on experience with a truck-like vehicle. Bus remnants will be removedand recycled into scrap metal after the training. — Bulletin staff reports

Filed March 17 14CV0196 — Ashley J. Kimler v. City of Bend, City of Lincoln City andLincoln City, complaint, $300,000 14CV0197 —RyanSnodgrass v. Richard Belz,dbaRodder's DreamsHot RodShop,complaint,$26,596.22 14CV0198 —Sixty Aviation LLCv. Leading EdgeAviation Inc., complaint, at least $250,000

Filed March18 14CV0200 —Carly Lueckv. Morning Star Christian SchoolandJoe Bales, complaint, at least $300,000

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Real Estate

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gREATS 711 SW10th • RedmOnd • (S41) 548-8616 www.redmondwindowtrests.com

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Filed March 19 14CV0190 —Springleaf Financial Services Inc., formerly knownas American GeneralFinancial Services Inc., dbaAmericanGeneral Financial Services Inc., v.HaloOwens-Ely, Samuel K.Ely, QuickCollect Inc., National CinemediaLLCand the State of Oregon, complaint, $427631.10 14CV0191 —PNCBank N.A.v. Estate of Normal T.Welch, unknownheirs andassignsofNormanT.Welch, Washington MutualBankFA,nka JPMorganChaseBank,complaint, $114,122.26 14CV0192 —Corinne Connerv. Terrafirma Foundation Repair Inc., complaint, at least $40,547

REDMOND

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B4

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014

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The Bulletin

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In overnance s the federal health care overhaul was rolled out over the last few years, Oregon was invariably the eager overachiever in the first row, waving a hand to volunteer. The governor, John Kitzhaber, a doctor who left the emergency room for politics, made health care his main issue. Fellow Democrats controlling the Legislature went along, embracing ambitious plans to extend insurance coverage and Medicaid to low-income residents. "Yet for all that, by some measuresOregon has among the most dysfunctional online insurance exchanges in the nation. Only about 50,000 people in O regon have signed up for a commercial insurance plan through the exchange, well below the state's goal, according to federal estimates. And almost all of those people enrolled using paper applications or with help from an insurance professional becausethe website had been so unreliable." That is the beginning of a New York Times news story published Friday. We don't think we could have put it any better. The report of the independent investigation commissioned by Kitzhaber into Cover Oregon's failures was released Thursday. It doesn't make the failures more acceptable. It makes Oregon's state government look more foolish. Kitzhaber spun the report this way: "What happened in Oregon is not a policy failure, it's technology failure." But it was a failure of policy. Policies the state had in place to pro-

tect the state in contracting were not followed. They were wriggled around. That is policy failure. The report highlights the lack of central control overseeing the program. Theinvolved agencies were competing and not cooperating. That may not be a policy failure. It

isperhaps a more damning governance failure. Oracle, the l ead technology contractor, obviously also failed to deliver a working product by the launch date. And there is much more that went wrong, all detailed in a 77-page report that reads like a guidebookinmisgovernance. Kitzhaber is trying to learn from the mistakes. Top officials at Cover Oregon areleaving or being asked to leave. There will be management reforms and procurement reforms and organizational reforms. But as was made clear in the report, one of the problems was that policies weren't followed. Cover Oregon is a governance f ailure. Kitzhaber failed to d o enough to ensure the interests of Oregonianswere protected.

Appeal processneeded for the secret no-fly list ecrecy is sovereign for the federal government's no-fly list. Who is onthe listis a secret. The standards for getting on the list are a secret. When people show up at the airport and are told they cannot fly, they are not told if it's because they are on the no-fly list. That is a secret, too. When the government is dealing with suspected terrorists and trying to keep it safeto fly, all of thatmakes sense. What doesn't make sense is that there is no meaningful way for a personto prove his or her innocence to correct a government mistake. The government does have a complaint form for people to fill out. But if that doesn't work, there is no objective, third party to judge

whetherthe government can reasonably deny an individual's ability to fly. A judge can't seriously review a case when the decision, facts and criteria are all secret. Citizens can only buy another ticket and try to board, again. Lawyers representing the government and plaintiffs who believe they are on the no-fly list were in federal court in Portland on Monday. The plaintiffs seek a better system to review the unclassified information that may have put them on the list or that attorneys be given security clearances to review classified information, according to The Associated Press. Neither solution is perfect, but American citizens need a reasonable method to remove themselves from the list.

M 1Vickel's Worth SupportPaychmk

using different rubber compounds opposite. and tread patterns for studded and

FaimessAct

The Bend Branch of the American Association of University Women

believes in equity in the workplace. In particular, we are concerned that on average an American woman is

paid77 centson thedollarcompared to what her male counterpart is paid. This 23 percent gap affects women of all ages, races and education levels and meanslessearned income for them and their families.

The 50-year-old Equal Pay Act was designedto help ensure equal pay, but needs updating. The pending Paycheck Fairness Act (S.84/H.R. 377) protects employees from retaliation if they share their wage information or ask about employers'wage practices. It would require employers to prove any pay difference is based on genuine business reasons, not gender.

Barnes apparently feels that re-

unstudded tires — or insufficient stud cent national polls indicating that protrusion. If the same tires are used, 55 percentdisapprove of President properly positioned studs will add Barack Obama's performance are traction. meaningless and Obama's tenure The costs of not running studs are has still been successful. To me, much higherthan the road damage successful means better than becaused.Property damage to vehides fore, and by almost any measure androadside structures, injuries, hos- this country is worse off today than pitalizations, emergency responses when Obama took office. Clearly, and deaths all increase as accident Republicans have been right all rates rise. Most people I know have along. Perhaps Barnes, if he cares been involved in at least one acci- about reality, should expand his indent with another vehicle sliding out formation sources. of control. The pregnant young lady Blahnik's article demonstrated an who hit me was not injured, because I

understanding of facts not only re-

steered away from her cab as she slid broadside. The girl who hit my friend

garding the Affordable Care Act but regarding Obama's general behav-

Gene died. Neither had studs, and it

ior as well. For example, confronted

cost them dearly.

with his own leadership incompe-

Conditions across the state vary

tence, Obama resorts to lying and,

widely on any day. Justbecause Bend as he sees fit, modification of writroads are good does not mean studs ten law, as he has done with ACA. In are not needed in Crescent, Burns,

addition, he has recently invoked a

Pendleton or on Mt. Hood. Many peo- spate of executive orders. concerned about pay equity — for ple must travel for work or business. I Liberals also tend to pick bits and themselves, for their families, for am one. Good quality studs enabled pieces of the ACA to judge its overall their daughters and for their grand- me to drive to Portland Feb. 6, move value. They ignore that health care daughters. Nothing will change until around town conducting business is a byproduct of the ACA. Control we unite in support of equal pay for until 10 p.m., then drive back to Red- is the motivation for the ACA; conequal work. Tell Greg Walden, Ron mond. The "major storm" that had trol health care and its wealth and Wyden andJeffM erkley to co-spon- most folks staying home was a minor you control the people. This notion, sor the Paycheck Fairness Act now inconvenience. by the way, is not generally disputed andhelp us workfor its passage. Looking at all the costs and ben- by liberals, but it also is not talked Mary Howard efits, not just road wear, studs are a about. Bend bargain. Liberals support Obama's behavMark Rubbert ior. Apparently, they feel that he, Redmond and themselves, know what's best Studded tires are abargain All women and men should be

As a mechanical engineer, it is

Be mindful of dictator-like control notions

obvious that adding studs to any

The articlesby Frank Barnes of

In response to "Get rid of studded tires," published March 11:

tire will improve traction in all fro- Feb. 20and by David Blahnik ofFeb. zen conditions, with the exception 22 bothcaught my eye:Barnes'for of soft snow. Studies can be rigged its inaccuracy and Blahnik's for the

for us all. And who cares if Obama's behavior is dictator-like?

Well — we all should care. Be

mindful of t h e d i ctator-like and c ontrol n o t ions, f r i ends. V o t e

accordingly. AI Phillips prineville

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 MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

Email: bulletin@bendbulletin.com

Property tax subsidy for OSU-Cascades hurts Bendites By Doug Williams for road maintenance, the city has not end property taxpayers should asked the university to pay for its fair not be required to subsidize shareofm unicipalservices. OSU-Cascades Campus. Since City staff suggested that tax reform the university is exempt from paying is needed to resolve the university subproperty taxes, the city should require sidy issue. Tax reform is code for sales the university to pay its fair share of taxes. Even if sales taxes were to pass the costs for municipal services, such muster with Oregon voters, as long as as fire protection, police protection (as- property taxes are paid by Bend taxsuming the university does not fund payers, the subsidy of OSU-Cascades a campus police department), transit would continue. and street maintenance. A Feb. 2 Bulletin editorial argued Property taxes contribute 65 per- that if OSU has to pay for municipal cent of revenue to the city's general services, other entities with tax exfund. In two fiscal years, police and emptions, induding nonprofits, should fire expenditures are budgeted at have to pay, too. Not so. Churches are $60.6 million, which account for about protectedby the U.S. Constitution. The 83percent of GF expenditures. Transit, park, library and school districts levy street maintenance, municipal court separatetaxes to serve our kids and and communitydevelopment make up area residents. The distinction is nonmost of the remaining expenses. profits on large tracts of tax-exempt Ironically, at the same time the city land such as COCC.

B

is asking us to increase the tax levy for

Simply put: The more land that is

fire protection services (which I sup- tax exempt, the higher the property port) and is starting a conversation re- tax burden on home owners and local garding the need for additional taxes businesses. For example Evanston, Ill.,

IN MY VIEW If OSU-CaSCades iS SuCCeSSful in finessing the city for this tax subsidy, Bend residents

will thce higher poperty taxes, as the fire chief, police chief, transit manager and public works director will need

add5onal resources ... (population 80,000) has a large percentage of tax-exempt land primarily due to Northwestern University. The

result has been very high property tax bills for private property ownersand Evanston also levies sales taxes.

Regarding COCC's tax exempt status, why should Bend taxpayers be required to subsidize two institutions of

higher learning? Isn't one enough?

If OSU-Cascades is successful in university refused. The city sued by finessing the city for this tax subsidy, contending that state law and the Bend residents will face higher proper- Washington Administrative Code rety taxes, as the fire chief, police chief, quired this fire protection payment. transit manager and public works di- The city won at the Circuit Court levrector will need additional resources el, but the Washington State Supreme to serve the university. Court ruled against the city by deterUnfortunately, higher taxes will hit mining that CWU was not required low and moderate income Bendites the to make these payments. If the city of hardest, because property taxes are Bend does not immediately require a regressive (i.e., lower income groups payment in lieu of taxes as part of the pay a higher percentage of their in- pending development agreements, the come for property taxes than wealthy city will have almost no chance of repeople). The unintended consequence quiring the university to make these of this public policy would be Bend's payments in the future. taking another step toward becoming Municipal service contracts are not less economically diverse. rocket science and are simply based The Bulletin editorial acknowl- on calls for service, value of buildings edged the OSU-Cascades proper- and population served. A contract ty-tax subsidy and suggested it should couldeasilybe negotiatednowwithrebe addressed at a later date. I disagree. openerseveryfew yearsasconditions It's now or never. In the 1980s, Ellens- change. If The Bulletin is concerned burg, Wash., asked Central Washing- about the immediate impact on OSU's ton University to pay for its fair share budget, the payments could be graduof fire protection services (CWU had allyphased in over severalyears. a campus police department). The — Doug Williams lives in Bend.


SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B5

CALIFORNIA NEWS

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Pivoyne Zenaida Castro Luna, of Bend Aug. 25, 1971 - Mar. 16, 2014 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471. Services: Bilingual Memorial Service, Bend Church of the Nazarene, Sat., Mar. 22, 2014 at 2:00 P.M. English Memorial Service, Victory Baptist Church, Sat., Mar. 29, 2014 at 11:00 A.M.

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld:

Zakka Iwas, 80: The Patriarch of the Syriac Orthodox

Church and leader of one of the world's oldest Christian sects was admitted into a hospital for treatment Feb. 20. Died Friday

in Germany. Patrick McGovem, 76: Became a billionaire as founder and majority owner of Boston-based technology publisher International Data Group. Died

Wednesday in Palo Alto, Calif.

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay 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 anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries mustbereceived by5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825

Email: obits©bendbulletin.com

Oakland settles with Iraq vet, shot

by policeduring anOccupyprotest $645,000 awarded to Kayvan Sabeghi, who suffered a rup-

By Matthew Artz The Oakland Tribune

OAKLAND, Calif. — The

tured spleen when an Oak-

city will pay $4.5 million to

land police officer struck him

settle a lawsuit brought by an

with a baton during a Nov. 2, 2011protest.

Iraqwar veteran severely injured by police during a 2011 Occupy Oakland protest. Scott Olsen, 26, suffered a

Including Olsen's case, Oakland has now agreed to pay out more than $6.3 million in Occupy-related lawsuits. Olsen said the police de-

fractuied skull and brain dam-

age when an Oakland police officer struck him in the head with a lead bean bag fired fitom

a 12-gauge shotgun. The shooting occurred during an Oct. 25, 2011, nighttime demonstration at Frank

Ogawa Plaza outside Oakland City Hall. Demonstrators were protesting the city's

evacuationof an Occupy encampment from the plaza earlier that day.

"After serving two tours of

duty as a United States Marine in Iraq, Scott Olsen could

never have imagined that he would be shot in the head

by an Oaklandpolice officer while he was peacefully exercising his First Amendment

rights in support of the budding Occupy economic justice movement," said his attorney

Fax: 541-322-7254

Rachel Lederman in a prepared statement.

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020

said, robbed him of a budding

Olsen's injuries, Lederman

partment's response to the

Occupy shooting had cost Oakland more than money. "If people can't speak out without

fear ofbeing shot, we don't really have democracy," he said. Beck Diefenhach/The Associated Press file photo Olsen's shooting, which Oakland Police arrest an OccupyOakland protester during an an- was captured on video and ti-police protest in 2012. The city has settled a lawsuit stemming uploaded online, generated from a shooting incident at a related protest dating to October outrage and turned many 2011. in the city against the police and the decision by city leaders to evacuate the Occupy career as a computer network the significant injuries Mr. Ol- encampment. and systems administrator. In sen sustained," she said in a As other protesters rushed a prepared statement, Olsen prepared statement. to aid Olsen, who was laysaid he had to relearn how to The city will pay $1.8 mil- ing on the ground bleeding, talk after the shooting. lion to Olsen; its insurance Oakland Police officer Robert "Part of m y b r a i n i s n't carrier will pay the remainder. Roche threw a flash-bang greworking anymore," he said. The settlement announced nade in their vicinity forcing City A ttorney Barbara Friday dwarfs others stem- them to scatter, Olsen's lawParker defended the settle- ming from Occupy-related yers said. The grenade exment saying that a jury might protests that flared up several ploded close enough to Olsen have awarded Olsen more times from late 2011 through that it burned his shoulder. money if the case had gone to the middle of 2012. The police department has trial. "This is a fair settlement The next biggest settlement sought to fire Roche, who is given the facts of the case and in anOccupy-related casewas contesting his dismissal.

Bend, OR 97708

— From wire reports

Suspect

WASHINGTON NEWS

FEATUREDOBITUARY

State demands feds take acti o n Walsh, a prosecutor, regarding leaking Hanford tank uncovered offenses

Continued from B1 Dew called into question Nicholson's reliability, saying she believes Nicholson's accusations shouldn't be trusted. Ward said the publicity surrounding Settlemier's pending trial could affect his employ-

in Iran-Contra case

gallons of liquid and sludge "In order to meet legal that is high in radioactivity The state on Friday demanded that the federal govern- requirementsand to pro- and requires cooling to conment begin removing ra- vide public health and en- trol waste temperatures, the dioactive liquid waste from vironmental protection, the state said. a nuclear waste tank at the state believes this leaking In 2012, nuclear waste Hanford Site by Sept. 1. double-shell tank must be was found in the space beThe Washington D e- addressed in the most ag- tween the two walls, which partment of Ecology's or- gressive manner possible," is called the annulus. No der requires pumping of Ecology Director Maia Bel- waste is thought to have esthe double-walled tank lon said. "Waiting another caped into the environment. to begin about 18 months two years, at best, to initiate But a leak in the primary sooner than what the U.S. actions to address this haz- tank creates concerns about Department of Energy has ardous condition is neither a failure of the waste-coolproposed. legally acceptable nor envi- ing system and an increased Hanford fo r d e cades ronmentally prudent." risk of a leak to the environmade plutonium for nuclear The Energy Department, ment, the state said. weapons and the site con- which owns Hanford, issued In the o rder, the state tains the nation's largest a statement saying it w as also demanded the Enersupply of radioactive waste. committed to the safe clean- gy Department submit a Double-walled Tank AY- up of the site. report within 90 days that "We are disappointed that evaluates the integrity of 102 was found to be leaki ng between its w alls i n the director of the Wash- the secondary c ontainOctober 2012. While many ington State Department of ment system; take monthly older single-walled tanks Ecology chose to send an ad- samples of liquid from the have leaked at H a n ford, ministrative order to pump tank's leak-detection pit to

According to a trial memorandum filed by Ward in Janu-

AY-102 without advanced notice to the department," the statement said. "The de-

to keep Settlemier on house

By Neil A. Lewis New York Times News Service

were pardoned by Reagan's successor, George Bush, who had been vice president during

Lawrence Walsh, a former federal judge and a mainstay the events of Iran-Contra. of the U.S. legal establishment Walsh belatedly tried to conwho as an independent coun- front his critics. Abandoning sel exposed the lawbreaking his earlier reserve, he called in the Reagan administration many Reagan administration that gave rise to the Iran-Con- officials brazenly deceptive. trascandal,died Wednesday at In a 1997 memoir, "Firewall: his home in Oklahoma City. He The Iran-Contra Conspiracy was 102. and Cover-Up," he concludHis family confirmed the ed that Reagan must have death.

known of the basic details of Few U.S. lawyers have had the Iran-Contra operation and

as long and varied a career

that the president's advisers had tried to shield him by conspheresas Walsh. Besides sit- cealing records and personal ting on the federal bench, he notes. That shield — a "firein both the public and private

was a prosecutor, corporate lit-

wall," as Walsh described it-

igator, counsel to Gov. Thomas was only reinforced by Bush's Dewey, of New York, deputy pardons. attorney generalunder Presi-

"What set Iran-Contra apart

dent Dwight Eisenhower and from previous political scana negotiator at the Paris peace dals," he wrote, "was that a talks duringthe Vietnam War. cover-up engineered in the But it was the Iran-Contra White House of one president s candal that put him i n t h e and completedby his succespublic eye as never before. Ap- sor prevented the rule of law pointed by the judiciary as an being applied to perpetrators independent counsel in 1986 of criminal activity of constituat age 74, Walsh, a lifelong Re- tional dimension." publican and an early supportThe l i nchpin o f the er of President Ronald Reagan, came out of retirement to un-

Iran-Contra scheme was Lt. Col. Oliver North, a 43-year-

ravel a complicated affair that

old Marineand member of

reached from the White House to Tehran to counterrevolution-

the White House's National

Security Council, who had ary strongholds in the moun- destroyed many documents tains of Nicaragua. and arranged for others to be At the heart of it were the smuggled out of the White dandestine efforts of Reagan House inthe undergarments of administration officials to sell

his secretary, Fawn Hall.

arms to Iran, ostensibly to help But appearing before Consecurethe release ofWest ern gress in the summer of 1987, hostages in the Middle East

erect in hi s

b eribboned ol-

and then use the profits to give ive-green uniform, North was covert support to Nicaraguan defiant, rather than contrite, rebel forces, which were try- arguing that his efforts had ing to topple the Marxist rulers been in the cause of freedom there known as Sandinistas. and anti-Communism. His tesCongress had prohibited aid to timony, on national television, the rebels, known as Contras. brought him instant, polarizWalsh spent more than six ing fame. His military bearing, years and about $37 million forthright manner and profeson the investigation, the du- sions of patriotism won many ration and expense of which admirers, but to his detractors b ecame ammunition for h i s

he was an arrogant lawbreak-

critics. They portrayed him as er seeking refuge behind a a relentless, stiff-necked pros- patriotic facade and a Marine ecutor who had applied to a uniform. highly political event the kind Brought to trial, North was of law-enforcement template convicted, along with Adm. he used when he was a rack- John Poindexter, a former naets-busting district attorney in tional security adviser. New York. Walsh's task had b een His supporters, however, greatly complicated by Consaw him as a model of recti- gress' eagerness to hold its tude, a public servant trying own investigation and offer to uphold the rule of law and immunity to witnesses. And demonstrate that even power- when North and Poindexter ful government officials were appealed their convictions, a not above it. In the end, he won convictions, but many were over-

court overturned them, saying

turned, and six defendants

ny before Congress.

the verdicts may have been tainted by witnesses' testimo-

The Associated Press

RICHLAND, W ash.

this is the first of the newer

double-walled tanks where leaks have been detected.

The Ecology Department said that after months of d iscussions, it's clear t h e

sult in fines for the federal government.

102 contains about 850,000

address potential leaks to the environment; conduct

weekly video inspections partment believes there are of leaks and monthly video risks associated with pump- inspections of the space be-

ary, Nicholson was the violent

person in the relationship who became belligerent and hostile when she drank alcohol.

When Nicholson was contacted by phone, she declined to give details of what happened the night of the alleged attempted murder. She said she is living in Boulder, Colo., and was forced to leave Bend because Settlemier violated the terms of the restraining

order she took out against him 113 times in one month.

Ward argued Settlemier should be released because Nicholson moved to Colorado,

so keeping him on house arrest to protect her is no longer an issue. P rosecuting attorney A n -

drew Moore said that should not be a f actor in

w h ether

arrest. "The victim was a member

of this community and relocatedbecause she didn't feel

tween the walls; initiate the removal of solid waste no later than Dec. 1, 2015; and

safe," he said. "The defendant

remove enough waste to alpublic or the environment low for an inspection to deposed by AY-102." termine the cause of the leak i strative order c ould r e Underground Tank AY- by Dec. 1, 2016.

to live in another state and

Energy Department is not willing to pump the tank in a timely manner.

ing Tank AY-102 at this time.

ment at New Day Realty.

The tank is not leaking into the environment, and there is no immediate threat to the

The agency said failure to comply with its admin-

School

including last year's held at office elections. "FFA is my life," said PayOregon State University in Continued from B1 Corvallis. ton North, 16, a Mountain "I always look forward to View junior. "I'd probably be Valerie Marshall, 18, a member of the Pendleton state, because it's so much spending part of my spring chapter, spent most of Fri- fun," Marshall, a senior at break in the (agriculture) day on a bus with other FFA Pendleton High School, said. room anyway. Being here is members traveling to the "It's fun traveling away from so much better than just sitconvention. She's been part Pendleton for a little while." ting at home doing nothing of her local organization for The convention is set to for thebreak." four years and has attend- wrap up Monday with the or— Reporter: 541-383-0354, ed three of the conventions,

ganization's district and state

mkehoe@bendbulletin.com

poses a risk. He has scared off a member of the public this means he is a risk to our community." Bagley granted Settlemier's request to modify the conditions of his house arrest, allowing him to leave home between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. She said she had no way to prove that Nicholson had left town,

because she feared for her safety. Settlemier is still on GPS

monitoring and must comply with other terms of his release,

including avoiding establishments that sell alcohol, remaining in Deschutes County and staying away from his ex-wife. Both his ex-wife and

Nicholson have restraining orders against him.

Housing Continued from B1 Mayor Jim Clinton said

Ward said in court that the restraining order taken out Barram said.

Bend households had house-

City Councilor Sally Rus- hold incomes of less than sell said it was interesting $50,000 a year in 2007. to learn how m any l ocal

Two city councilors quest ioned whether t h e c i t y

households have incomes under $50,000 a year, at a should continue to charge controversial, no question recent meeting on the city's the affordable housing fee. about it." However, Clinton plan to expand the urban City Councilor Scott Ramsaid the local construction growth boundary. "I think say said he does not like the industry benefited "all the it's really important going fee, because it makes homes way from site prep guys to forward that this communi- more expensive. Ramsay drywallers to painters," be- tyinvest in housing that peo- also said the city should cause the program brought ple in this community can maintain a sunset clause, in more money for projects. continue to live in," Russell because it forces city counMayor Pro Tem Jodie said, adding that the afford- cilors to periodically evaluBarram said the program able housing program is one ate the program. City Counhas proven its v alue, so tool the city can use. Senior cilor Victor C hudwosky the city should remove the planner Damian Syrnyk agreed with Ramsay that it sunset clause. Officials will wrote in an email that at the is important to maintain the always have the option of meeting Russell referenced, sunset clause. re-evaluating the program officials discussed the fact — Reporter: 541-617-7829, during budget discussions, that roughly 42 percent of hborrud@bendbulletin.com that when the city created the program, "it was

against Settlemier by his exw ife isdueto a messy divorce, not because she was ever in

fearofhersafety. In October 2013, while out of town, Settlemier violated the terms of his conditional

releaseby goingto bars,W ard said Wednesday in court. Set-

tlemier was placed on house arrest following this violation. Moore argued that Settle-

mier's violation of the original terms ofrelease was another reason not to alter the condi-

tions of his house arrest, but Bagley did not agree. Settlemier is scheduled to

be tried in front of a jury May 28. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, sking@bendbulletin.com


B6

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014

W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by WSI©2014

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5 6/39 pc 6 LOW M EpfIJM HlgH 5 5 /28 pc 58 / 3 9 s 0 2 4 6 8 10 5 9/27 pc 62 / 35 pc Mt. HoodMeadows.............2"....................111 61 /29 s Snow level and road conditions representing condiM t. Hood Ski Bowl............... 0" ...................... 26" 56/ 2 3 s tionsat5 pm. yesterday. Key: TT. =Traction Tires. T i m berline............................0"......................73" 59 / 2 9 s Willamette Pass................... 0"......................26" pass Cpndjtjpns 75 3 7 s 5 8/41 pc 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit.................. Carry chains / TT. 61 /40 s I-84atCabbage Hill......................Carrychains/T.T. p" Aspen Cp 6 0/34 pc Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass.............. Carry chains / TT. MammmpthMtn CA p' 4p 5 8 /34 pc Hwy.26 atGovernment Camp.....Carrychains/T T. Park «iiy, UT........................ 0" .................--. 80 618 9 p c 5$ 2 9 s Hwy. 26 at OchocoDivide.............Carry chains / T.T. S q uaw Valley, CA.................O" ......................16" S u n Valley, ID.......................O"......................41" 5 9/29 pc Hwy. 58 at Willamette Pass..........Carry chains/T T. 6 5 /38s Hwy.138 atDiamond Lake...........Carrychains/T.T. Taos, NM.............................0"......................52" 62 / 37 pc Hwy.242 atMcKenziePass. .........Closedforseason Vail, CO................................O" ...................... 67" 56 / 3 1 s For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: 6 2 /37 pc

ROAD CONDITIONS

www.tripcheck.com or call 511 www.onthesnow.com Luiend:W-weather,Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partial clouds,c-clouds,h-haze,shehowers,r-rain,t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries,sn-snow, i-ice, rs-rain-snowmix,w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace

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68I300.00 6$38 is 56I30 sh san Francisco, CA65/49 0.00 6OI51 pc 6551 I Washington, pC 57/44 0.06 68/36 pc 47/30 pc Billings, S47 33/23 0.06 27/18 sn 35/18 sn rndianapol>s, iu 68I360.00 4$25 pc 37/19 pc san lose, CA 70/46 0.00 71/47 pc 74/48 s Wichita, Xs 67/480.00 5528 pc 47/30 pc Birmingham,AL 72I35 0.00 71/45 is 55/36 sh Jackson,Sss 78I370.00 75/49 is SeaS r sanla Fe,Niu 64I33 0.00 62I31 pc 6530 pc Yakima, WA 54I23 0.00 56I26 pc 6535 pc Bismarck,uo 3$22 0.01 26n3 pc 35/20 pc Jacksonville, FL 75/51 0.00 7986 is 80/55 sb Savannah, 6A 72/43 0.00 78I56 sh 7$47 sh YuflQ,Az +0.00 83/56 pc 85/58 pc Boise, io 49/24 0.00 51/31 pc 57/38 pc Juneau,AX 38I250.00 3$77 pc 36/22 pc Boston, MA 45/36 0.00 51/25 ii 40I17 pc KansasCity, MO 64/480.00 45/24 pc m86 p Buffalo, uv 36I26 0.01 4cnz ii 22/12ii lansing, Ssl 43/190.00 3885 cd 2602 pc Amsterdam 53/41 O.OD 50/41 r 50/41 r Mecca 95/73 O.iN 93/71 s 95/75 s Burlinglnn, VT 39/31 0.00 3683 sn 25/2 pc ias Vegac NV 7%51 0.00 77/54 pc 78/53 pc Athens 64/48 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WHEN TO LOOK FOR IT: PUBllSHINGFIVEEDITIONSAYEAR • Friday, MarCh 28 (My OWn TWO HandS) • Friday, May 23 (SiSterS ROdeO)

• Friday, June 27 (Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show) • Friday, AuguSt 22 (Folk FeStival)• Friday, NOvember 14 (A COwbOyChriStmaS)

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 G o lf, C3 NHL, C2 NBA, C3 Sports in brief, C3 Preps, C4 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL: NCAA TOURNAMENT

ALPINE SKIING

Jitioff wins U.S. GS championshi p SQUAW VALLEY,

Calif.— Olympian Tim Jitloff won the giant slalom atthe U.S. Alpine Championship sby more

Small-schoolunderdogs

Ducksvs. Badgerswil

deserve morerespect

be a contrast of tempo

than1t/2 seconds Friday,

whenSochiGames gold medalist Ted Ligety failed to finish. Ligety was in third place after the opening run, but he skied out on the second leg. Jitloff earned his fifth national title, including a second consecutive in giant slalom. Healso won that event in 2008 and 2009, along with a combined title in 2009. Jitloff, who grew up in Reno, Nev., andused to go skiing in Squaw Valley as akid, finished Friday's two runs in 2 minutes, 22.45 seconds. Brennan Rubiewas nextin 2:24.06,turning in the fastest second leg to rise from sixth place. Jared Goldberg finished

s we watch one so-called favoriteafter another fall in the NCAA tournament, it's not really accurate to call

A

PAUL

NEWBERRY

them upsets anymore. The latest team to show how little the names on the front of

the jerseys matter these days is Mercer, a small, private school

his blue bloods from Durham,

from Middle Georgia that turned

postgame moves. Seriously, if "Dancing With The Stars"

storied Duke into one-and-done on Friday. Nothing fluky about this game. The Bears were simply the

both on the court and with their doesn't give a shout to Mercer's Kevin Canevari after his killer

rendition of the Nae Nae, there's no justice in this world.

SeeUnderdogs/C4

better team against Coach K and

Nextup No. 7 Oregon (24-9) vs. No. 2 Wisconsin (27-7) When:Today, 4:45 p.m.

By Genaro Armas

score in half court, they can

The Associated PRess

score in full court," Wisconsin coach Bo Ryan said Friday.

Up-tempo Oregon against efficient Wisconsin should make for an intriguing NCAA tournament

matchup today in Milwaukee. The seventh-seeded Ducks

TV:CBS

Inside • No. 14 Mercer pulls biggest upset of the round of 64, hands No. 3 Duke loss,C4

and second-seeded Badgers each pulled away for double-digit victories Thursday to advance to a West Region third-round game. Their Saturday night meeting figures to be much closer. "We have to face a team that

gets it up and down. They can

"They put a lot of pressure on

you." First, the Badgers thumped methodical American and its

Princeton-style offense 75-35 on Thursday. Now they're preparing for something completely different. Oregon likes to play in transition, and eight Ducks were on the floor for at least 11 minutes in the victory over BYU. See Ducks /C4

PREP BASEBALL

PREP BASEBALL:SEASON PREVIEW

third. — The Associated Press

Storm

COLLEGE BASKETBALL Mo perfect brackets left

sweep Eagle

The billion dollar dream is over. A second day of upsets endedanychance of someone having a perfect NCAAtournament bracket in Warren Buffet's $1 billion challenge. It was afavorite

Point Bulletin staff report

'L

EAGLE POINTSummit dominated

host Eagle Point in a nonleague baseball doubleheader Friday, rolling past the Eagles 14-1 in

that provided the first

blemish on the final three people's brackets in the Quicken Loans contest on theYahoo Sports website.

't'Y L.TIl ~

the first game before

posting a 15-0 shutout in the second contest.

All three had

Storm pitchers Eric

ninth-seededGeorge Washington beating Memphis. TheTigers won 71-66. It only took 25 games for everyone to be eliminated. Even though noone won the $1 billion, the top 20 scores will still each get $100,000.

Rutherford and Derrick Stelle combined to throw a no-hitter in the

opening game. Rutherford struck out nine batters in three innings

before Stelle came in and pitched the final two frames. The game ended early because of

— The Associated Press

NFL IIIFL faces another lawsuit LOS ANGELES-

The estate of NFLHall of Famer MikeWebster and dozens of former players suing the league over concussion injuries agreed Friday to pause their lawsuit to see if it will join other similar cases being reviewed by a federal judge for settlement. Webster's estate and 65 former players and their families sued the NFL inFebruary, claiming the leaguehid information about the seriousness of concussions and headinjuries sustained during their playing careers. Attorneys for the NFL and the plaintiffs filed a stipulation Friday to stay the case tosee if it should join other concussion lawsuits currently assigned to a judge in Pennsylvania. Webster, who played for the Pittsburgh Steelers for most of his career, was instrumental in four of the team's Super Bowl victories in the

the 10-run rule. Cal Waterman went

3 for 3 with two doubles Andy Tullis i The Bulletin

Sisters High School baseball players, from left, Joey Morgan, Justin Harrer, Jardon Weemsand Ben Larson.

• Sisters poised for fourth straight Sky-Emtitle and another deep run in Class4A playoffs Inside

ByGrant Lucan

• Previews for all the Central Oregon baseball teams,C4 • Mountain View rallies for baseball win,C4

The Bulletin

No way Steve Hodges could have predicted his team doing what it did last

season. Even withback-to-back Sky-Em League baseball titles in his pocket, the

season. "To be honest, we don't talk a lot

Sisters High coach believed there was plenty of work to be done with the 2013

about records or league championships or state playoff things. We just try to get better, identify goals." With major contributors returning

Outlaws.

A school-record 26 wins later, Sisters was in the Class 4A state semifinals for the first time since 2008. A 2-1 loss to

Henley denied the Outlaws their first trip to the state championship since 2002. "We just train to get better," says

Hodges, the eighth-year Sisters coach who guided his team to a 26-3 record last

from last season, the Outlaws are poised for a fourth straight Sky-Em title — and

perhaps a deeper run in the Class 4A state playoffs. "I have really high expectations for this team," says senior Joey Morgan, the reigning 4A player of the year. "Being a

really want to compare too much, but I really think this team has a good shot at going just as far, if not farther, as teams

Point to just one hit. Connor Olsen pitched

three innings to earn

rn the past."

Led by Morgan — Sisters' ace, standout catcher and effective corner infielder

who has committed to Oregon — the Outlaws enter this season having swept their 15-game conference schedule each

of the past two years. They are 44-1 in league play dating back to 2011 and have increased their win total each of the past

three seasons, from 23 in 2011 to 26 a year ago. SeeBaseball/C4

the win for the Storm while Albertazzi went 2 for 3 with three RBIs

to spark Summit's bats. Josh Cherry added three hits and two RBIs in the

game that went just five innings. Over the course of the two games, Summit outhit Eagle Point 24-1.

Dodgersseenasthe badguysin Down Under By Dylan Hernandez

excitement" about traveling to Aus-

Los Angeles Times

tralia. The Australian media picked

The lawsuit, like oth-

Rick Rycroft/The AssociatedPress

Los Angeles' Chone Figgins slides in safe at home as Team Australia's Matt Williams covers

Friday morning.

Diamondbacks officials have privately rejoiced in the Dodgers'

up the story, but failed to recognize that Greinke's problems were with

media misadventures,thinkingthis

side of the world, the Los Angeles Dodgers have been cast as the

the logistics of the trip, not the coun-

villains. The buildup to their season opener this morning against the Arizona Diamondbacks is reminiscent of the scenario the Dodgers faced when they played the St. Louis Cardinals last year during the National League Championship Series.

try. The Dodgers haven't been able to change the impression they don't

overseas followers. Diamondbacks President Derrick Hall went as far as to say he wanted his team to revisit the country on a regular basis.

SYDNEY — Even on the other

Six ofthe players included in the caseare deceased. The NFLdeclined to commentonthecase.

— The AssociatedPress

ally matches all their intensity. You don't

2-for-4 performances. The Storm (3-0) cruised in the nightcap as well, limiting Eagle

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

1970s. He died in 2002.

ers filed against the NFL, claims the leaguehid evidence of the long-term damage players faced due to concussions.

senior and seeing all the teams that have come through here, I think this team re-

and two RBIs to pace Summit at the plate in the first game. Matt Hicks added two hits and two RBIs, and Noah Yunker and Dylan Albertazzi each turned in

The narrative was set last month,

when the often-blunt Zack Greinke voiced the opinion of many of the players and said he had "zero

want to be here. Andre Ethier didn't help matters

could help their team gain some

Dodgersfirstbaseman Adrian this week by sarcastically reciting the Gonzalez said he and his teamcompany line. Without a trace of a

mates weren't concerned with how

smile, he said in a hostile tone, "Glad to be here. Funtrip. This is a good Australia. Happy to be here, guys." The implication was obvious: Ethier

they have been portrayed, but acknowledged it was unfortunate. "If people got to know us and hang out with us in the clubhouse, their perception would change,"

felt the exact opposite of what he said.

Gonzalez said.

time. Great for baseball. Good for


C2 T H E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014

COREBOARD ON DECK

Friday'sGame

Towson83, ETSU77

Today'sGames Today (25-10) atVMI(20-12) 10a.m. Basebal l:TheDagesWahtonkaatBend(DH),noon; IPFW Ridgeview vs. Estacada atVolcanoTournament in WrightState(21-14) atOhio(23-11) 11a.m. Keizer,4:30p.mc Madras at CrookCounty(DH), Yale(16-13)atHolyCross(20-13) 4p.m. EasternMichigan(22-14) atColumbia(20-12) 4p.m. 11a.m. SoflbaB: Bendat TheDalles Wahtonka(DH), noon; SanDiego(17-16)atSamHoustonState(24-10)5p.m. WestSalemat Redmond, 11a.m.; CrescentValey TexasAtkMC.C. (18-15) at Pacific (16-15) 7p.m. Monday'sGame at Redm ond,3 p.m4CrookCounty at Madras(DH), Nebraska Omaha(17 14)atMurrayState(1911),Bp m. 11a.m. Boys lacrosse:Bend vs. Centennial (Idaho)in Boise, 4p m.;MountainViewatPutnam,1 pmcRedmond Wo m e n's college vs. Skyview(Idaho) in Burns,noon;Glencoeat SisNCAATournament ters,11a.mcLibertyatSummit, noon All TimesPDT Sunday LincolnRegional Baseball:RidgeviewatVolcanoTournament inKeizer Today'sGames Boys lacrosse:MountainViewatHoodRiver Valley,2 At Durham,N.C. p.m. Duke(27-6)vs.Winthrop(24-8), 8a.m. DePaul(27-6) vs.Oklahoma(18-14),10;30a.m. PREPS At LosAngeles Nebraska (25-6) vs.FresnoState(22-10),1 p.m. Baseball N.C.State(25-7) vs.BYU(26-6), 3:30p.m. Sunday'sGames ClassBA At Storrs,Conn. Nonconference Georgia(20-11) vs.Saint Joseph's(22-9), 2:30p.m. First game U Conn (34-0) vs. PrairieView(14-17), 5p.m. (5 innings) At CollegeStation, Texas Summit 112 0(10) — 14 14 1 Gonzag a(29-4)vs.JamesMadison(28-5),2:30p.m. EaglePoint 001 00 — 10 1 TexasA8M(24-8) vs.NorthDakota(22-9), 5p.m. StanfordRegional Secondgame Today'sGames (5 iaaings) At Ames,lowa Summit 207 60 — 15 10 0 lowaState(20-10)vs.FloridaState(20-11),1 p.m. EaglePoint 000 00 — 0 1 2 Stanford(28-3)vs.SouthDakota(19-13), 3:30p.m. Sunday'sGames Class4A At Seaflle Nonconference SouthCarolina(27-4) vs. CalStateNorthridge (18Ridgeview (16)38 50 — 32 20 1 14), 2:30p.m. La Pine 010 00 — 1 4 8 MiddleTenn essee(29-4) vs. OregonState (23-10), 5 p.m. Nonconference At ChapelHill, N.C. Madras 100 010 0 — 2 4 2 MichiganState(22-9) vs.Hampton (28-4), 9:30a.m. Redmond 031 115 0 — 10 8 4 NorthCarolina(24-9) vs.UT-Martin (24-7), noon At StateCollege, Pa. PennState(22-7) vs.WichitaState(26-6), 9:30a.m. Softball Dayton(23-7) vs.Florida(19-12), noon Notre Dame Regional Nonconference Today'sGames (5 iaaings) At Toledo,Ohio Sislers 1 00 0 0 — 2 3 0 Summit 1(12)3 Ox — 16 19 2 Vanderbilt(18-12)vs.ArizonaState(22-9), 8a.m. NotreDam e (32-0) vs. Robert Morris (21-11),10;30 a.m. Nonconference At WestLafayette, Ind. Redmond 000 000 0 — 0 1 8 — 8 8 0 Oklahoma State(23-8) vs. FloridaGulf Coast(26-7), Madras 102 BBB x 8a.m. Purdue(21-8)vs.Akron(23-9),10:30 a.m. BASKETBALL At Lexington,Ky. Kentucky(24-8) vs.Wright State(26-8), 8a.m. Men's college Syracuse(22-9) vs.Chatanooga(29-3), 10:30a.m. At Waco,Texas NCAA Tournament Glance California(21-9) vs.Fordham(25-7), 1p.m. AN TimesPDT Baylor(29-4)vs.WesternKentucky(24-8), 3:30p.m. Louisville Regional East Regional Today'sGames SecondRound At Knoxville, Tenn. Friday'sGames Tennessee (26-5) vs. Northwestern State(21-12), 1 At Raleigh,N.C. p.m. Memphis71,GeorgeWashington 66 St. John' s (22-10)vs. SouthernCal (22-12), 3:30 Virginia70,Coastal Carolina59 p.m. At SanAntonio Sunday'sGames NorthCarolina79, Providence77 At CollegePark,Md. lowaState93, North Carolina Central 75 M aryl a nd (24-6) vs.Army (25-7), 9:30a.m. Third Round Texas(21-11)vs. Pennsylvania(22-6), noon Today'sGam es At lowaCity, lowa At Buffalo,N.Y. Louisville (30-4)vs.Idaho(25-8), 2:30p.m. Villanova (29-4) vs.UC onn(27-8), 6:40p.m. lowa (26-8) vs. Marist (27-6), 5 p.m. At Spokane,Wash. At BatonRouge, La. MichiganState(27-8) vs.Harvard (27-4), 5:40p.m. LSU(19-12) vs.GeorgiaTech(20-11), 9:30a.m. Sunday'sGames WestVirginia (29-4)vs.Albany(N.Y) (28-4), noon At Raleigh, N.C. Virginia(29-6)vs. Memphis (24-9),5:40p.m. Women'sNational InvitationTournament At SanAntonio AN TimesPDT lowaState(277)vs. NorthCarolina(24 9),215 pm. SouthRegional First Round SecondRound Friday'sGames Friday'sGames Michigan86, Stony Brook48 At St. Louis Duquesn e62,MountSt.Mary's52 Stanford58,NewMexico53 St. Bonaventure 81, Charlotte 62 Kansas (24-9) 80, Eastern Kentucky69 SouthFlorida56, NorthCarolina ABT50 Af SanDiego SaintMary's(Calif.) 75,CalState Bakersfield 68 StephenF.Austin 77, VCU75 UTEP74,ArkansasState64 UCLA76, Tulsa59 Washington67,Hawaii 50 Third Round SecondRound Today'sGam es Today'sGames At Buffalo, N.Y. Marquette(22-10) atIndiana(19-12), 4p.m. Syracuse (28-5) vs.Dayton (24-10), 4:10p.m. SouthernUtah(23-9) at Colorado (18-14), 6p.m. Af Orlando,Fla. Florida(33-2)vs.Pittsburgh(26-9), 9:15a.m. Sunday'sGames GOLF A'I SL Lellls

Kansas(25-9)vs.Stanford (22-12), 9:15a.m. Af SanDiego UCLA(27-8)vs.StephenF.Austin (32-2), 4:10p.m. MidwestRegional SecondRound Friday'sGames At Raleigh,N.C. Mercer78,Duke1 Tennessee 86,UMass67 At St. Louis WichitaState64,CalPoly37 Kentucky56, KansasState49 Third Round Today'sGam es Af Orlando,Fla. Louisville(30-5)vs.Saint Louis(27-6),11:45 a.m. At Milwaukee Michigan(26-8)vs.Texas(24-10), 2:15p.m. Sunday'sGames At Raleigh,N.C. Mercer(27-8)vs.Tennessee(23-12), 3:10p.m. At St. Louis WichitaState(350) vs.Kentucky(25-10),1145a m. West Regional SecondRound Friday'sGames At SanAntonio Baylor74,Nebraska60 Creighton76,Louisiana-Lafayette66 Af SanDiego Arizona68,Weber State59 Gonzag a85,OklahomaState77 Third Round Today'sGam es At Milwaukee Wisconsin(27-7)vs.Oregon(24-9), 4:45p.m. At Spokane,Wash. San Diego State (30-4) vs.NorthDakota State(26-6), 3:10 p.m. Sunday'sGames At SanAntonio Creighton(27-7)vs.Baylor (25-11),4:45 p.m. Af SanDiego Arizona(31-4)vs.Gonzaga(29-6), 6:40p.m. NationalInvitationTournament AR TimesPDT

SecondRound Friday'sGame Belmont 82, Robert Morris 71 Today'sGame Louisiana Tech(28-7) at Georgia(20-13),8 a.m. CollegeBasketballInvitational AH TimesPDT

Guarterfinals Monday'sGames PennState(16-17) atSiena(16-17), 4p.m. Radford(22-12)at OldDominion (17-17), 4 p.m. Texas A&M(18-15) atllinois State(17-15),5:05 p.m Princeton(21-8)at FresnoState(18-16), 7p.m.

CoNegelnsider.com Tournament AH TimesPDT

SecondRound

PGA Tour Bay Hill Friday Af BayHill ClubandLodgeCourse Orlando, Fla. Purse:S6.2million Yardage:7,419; Par:72 SecondRound

(a-amateur)

AdamScot J.B. Holmes ChessonHadley Francesco Molinari Keegan Bradley JamieDonaldson JasonKokrak BrandtSnedeker Morgan Hoff mann FreddieJacobson Matt Every RyoIshikawa lan Poulter JohnMerrick CharlesHowell III PadraigHarrington Erik Com pton AaronBaddeley HarrisEnglish SamSaunders Seung-YulNoh Pat Perez RyanMoore KevinChappell Chris Kirk StewartCink KevinNa

TrevorImmelman BrendanSteele ZachJohnson HenrikStenson DavidHearn Matt Jones Chris Stroud RusselKnox l LukeGuthrie PatrickReed Jhonattan Vegas GeorgeMcNeig WoodyAustin Martin Laird

DannyLee BrinyBaird GonzaloFdez-Castano DavisLoyeII CamiloVilegas GaryWoodland CharlieBeljan BrianDavis BrooksKoepka a-Zachary Olsen PeterHanson BryceMolder Billy Horschel NicholasThompson Cameron Tringale HunterMahan

62-68—130 68-69—137 69-68—137 67-70—137 71-67—138 67-71—138 67-71—138 67-71—138 67-71—138 71-68—139 69-70—139 65-74—139 68-71—139 65-74—139 68-71—139 70-70—140 72-68—140 70-70—140 69-71—140 69-71—140 72-68—140 70-70—140 68-72—140 71-70—141 69-72—141 71-70—141 70-71—141 69-72—141 68-74—142 71-71—142 69-73—142 70-72—142 71-71—142 73-69—142 71-71—142 71-71—142 69-73—142 70-72—142 71-72—143 72-71—143 71-72—143 71-72—143 72-71—143 66-77—143 70-73—143 71-73—144 73-71—144 72-72—144 70-74—144 74-70—144 73-71—144 75-69—144 72-72—144 70-74—144 71-73—144 70-74—144 70-75—145

GraemeMcDowell RetiefGoosen RodPampling MichaelPutnam LeeJanzen Vijay Singh GregOwen Tim Wilkinson MarcLeishman Will MacKen zie SeanO'Hair JasonBohn ChadCampbell Justin Hicks BrianStuard DavidLingmerth JohnSenden K.J. Choi LucasGlover PaulCasey Failed foqualify DavidLynn BrianHarman StuartAppleby AngelCabrera BenMartin DickyPride TyroneVanAswegen RodPerry Jim Renne r Tim Herron NicolasColsaerts DanielChopra RickieFowler RusselHenl l ey D.A.Points J.J. Henry KenDuke JustinRose DavidDuval DanielSummerhays BriceGarnet BooWeekley ChadCollins Scott Stallings LeeWestwood Billy HurleyIII GregChalmers RobertGarrigus Brendon Todd ScottBrown Matthew Fitzpatrick DarrenClarke PaulGoydos Hudson Swafford Sang-MoonBae WilliamMcGirt

68-77 — 145 70-75—145 73-72—145 70-75—145 72-73—145 72-73—145 76-69—145 71-74—145 72-74—146 71-75—146 71-75—146 73-73—146 69-77—146 78-68—146 72-74—146 75-71—146 72-74—146 70-76—146 72-74—146 67-79—146 72-75—147 71-76—147 74-73—147 71-76—147 71-76—147 72-75—147 73-75—148 76-72—148 74-74—148 80-69—149 74-75—149 74-75—149 73-76—149 76-73—149 73-76—149 74-75—149 72-77—149 71-79—150 75-75—150 75-76—151 73-78—151 73-78—151 75-76—151 73-78—151 75-76—151 74-77—151 77-75—152 76-76—152 79-73—152 73-79—152 71-81—152 75-78—153 73-80—153 73-81—154 76-78—154 76-78—154

LPGA Tou JTBCFoundersCu Friday At JWMarriott Phoenix DesertRidgeResort& re Spa, Wildfi GolfClubCourse Phoenix Purse:$1.5 miNio n Yardage :6,588; Par72 Second Round MirimLee 64-67—131 LydiaKo 67-66—133 SunYoungYoo 69-65—134 ChellaChoi 69-66—135 JessicaKorda 69-66—135 So Yeon Ryu 68-67—135 InbeePark 66-69—135 LizetteSalas 69-67—136 JodiEwartShadoff 67-6M)36 AmyYang 67-69—136 Eun-Hee Ji 66-70—136 MichelleWie 66-70—136 StacyLewis 66-71—137 KarrieWebb 66-71—137 MorganPressel 65-72 — 137 73-65—138 HeeYoungPark AnnaNordqvist 72-66—138 VictoriaElizabeth 71-67—138 70-68—138 JayeMarieGreen 70-68—138 CandieKung 70-68—138 BelenMozo 69-69—138 SarahJaneSmith Lexi Thomp son 69-69—138 HeatherBowieYoung 68-70—138 Mo Martin 67-71—138 67-71—138 HaruNomura 67-71—138 Pornanong Phatlum 66-72 — 138 Pernilla Lindberg 73-66—139 BeckyMorgan LineVedel 70-69—139 69-70—139 Ji Young Oh 68-71—139 LauraDavies 68-71—139 MeenaLee 68-71—139 MikaMiyazato 68-71—139 Azahara Munoz 68-71—139 JennyShin 66-73—139 GerinaPiler 72-68—140 KarineIcher

JeongJang Hannah JunMedlock Alex Stewa rt NicoleCastrale Ai Miyazato PaulaCreamer MinaHarigae PK. Kongkraph an DewiClaireSchreefel JenniferKirby KristyMcPherson LindseyWright KatieFutcher Hee-WonHan Suzann Petersen CatrionaMathew Se RiPak SandraGal BrittanyLang SeonHwaLee ShanshanFeng lheeLee MarinaAlex CarolineMasson EricaPopson AyakoUehara JenniferJohnson I.K. Kim

TiffanyJoh CristieKerr JennySuh JulietaGranada HeeKyungSeo MoriyaJutanugarn ChristinaKim AlisonWalshe Failed foquafffy Katie M. Burnet AustinErnst BrittanyLincicome AshleighSimon PazEcheverria KatherineKirk BrookePancake JeeYoungLee MariajoUribe Na Yeon Choi CarlotaCiganda MoiraDunn DaniegeKang MariaHernandez Cheyenne Woods ChristelBoeljon MindyKim SueKim Chie Arimura Sydnee Michaels NatalieGulbis Birdie Kim YaniTseng Pat Hurst PerrineDelacour Rebecca Lee-Bentham Cydney Clanton

72-68—140 72-68—140 72-68—140 71-69—140 71-69—140 70-70—140 70-70—140 70-70—140 70-70—140 69-71—140 69-71—140 69-71—140 68-72—140 68-72—140 68-72—140 66-74—140 75-66—141 72-69—141 72-69—141 72-69—141 71-70—141 71-70—141 70-71—141 70-71—141 69-72—141 69-72—141 68-73—141 67-74—141 73-69—142 73-69—142 73-69—142 72-70—142 71-71—142 70-72—142 69-73—142 68-74—142 74-69—143 74-69—143 73-70—143 73-70—143 71-72—143 71-72—143 71-72—143 70-73—143 70-73—143 73-71 — 144 73-71 — 144 72-72—144 72-72—144 71-73—144 71-73 — 144 70-74 — 144 69-75—144 74-71—145 73-72—145 73-72 — 145 72-73—145 72-73—145 71-74—145 70-75—145 68-77—145 68-77—145 75-71—146

GiuliaSergas HaejiKang MariaMcBride PaulaReto Juli Inkster PaolaMoreno ThidapaSuwannapura JaclynSweeney GiuliaMolinaro ChristineSong Kelly Tan Lisa McCloske y RyannO'Toole Kim Welch AmyAnderson JiminKang SandraChangkija Mi HyangLee Xi Yu Lin JenniferRosales MeganGrehan AlenaSharp IreneCoe Silvia Cavalleri AngelaStanford DanahBordner CindyLaCrosse KathleenEkey JacquiConcolino Mi JungHur VickyHurst

75-71—146 74-72—146 74-72—146 73-73—146 72-74—146 72-74—146 71-75—146 68-78—146 75-72—147 75-72—147 75-72—147 73-74—147 73-74—147 73-74—147 72-75—147 72-75—147 71-76—147 76-72 — 148 76-73—149 72-78—150 76-75—151 76-75—151 75-76—151 79-73—152 76-76—152 74-78—152 74-78—152 73-80—153 80-79—159 74 — WD 78 —WD

Cham pgons Tour Mississipp i Gulf Reso rl Classic Friday AfFallenOak Biloxi, Miss. Purs e: $1.6million yardage: 7,BBB;Par72 (36-86) First Round FredCouples 34-32—66 Jeff Magg ert 34-34—68 KennyPerry 34-34—68 DavidFrost 36-32 — 68 Jay Haa s 35-33—68 MichaelAllen 35-33—68 DuffyWaldorf 37-32—69 JohnRiegger 34-35—69 FredFunk 34-35—69 RogerChapm an 34-35—69 TomKite 33-36 — 69 36-33—69 ScottDunlap AndersForsbrand 35-34—69 Rick Fehr 37-33—70 Jim Thorpe 36-34—70 37-33—70 SandyLyle 34-36—70 MarkMcNulty 35-35 — 70 TomLehman 37-33—70 MarkO'Meara 37-33 — 70 Bart Bryant 34-36—70 Jeff Sluman 35-35—70 Olin Browne 36-35—71 Billy Andrade 34-37—71 ScottHoch 36-35 — 71 Bill Glasson 36-35—71 Colin Montgom erie 36-35—71 BernhardLanger 35-36—71 Esteban Toledo DanaQuigley 37-35 — 72 RodSpittle 37-35 — 72 Joe Daley 37-35 — 72 RoccoMediate 37-35 — 72 TomByrum 37-35 — 72 LorenRoberts 37-35—72 Kirk Triplett 35-37 — 72 RussCochran 36-36—72 TomPerniceJr. 36-36—72 MarkCalcavecchia 39-33—72 Bob Friend 37-35 — 72 BrianHenninger 39-34—73 GeneSauers 36-37—73 BobTwa y 37-36—73 WesShort,Jr. 38-35—73 BradBryant 38-35—73 SteveLowery 35-38—73 BobbyClampett 38-35 — 73 MikeGoodes 37-36—73 SteyePate 35-38—73 CraigStadler 35-38—73 BenBates 38-35—73 35-39—74 PeterSenior 38-36—74 Tommy Armour II 38-36 — 74 MarkMouland 37-37 — 74 JoeySindelar 36-38—74 MarkBrooks 39-35—74 BradFaxon 37-37 — 74 Nick Price 38-36—74 Mike Reid 39-35—74 Nick Faldo 38-36—74 Jim Rutledge 36-38—74 GregBruckner 38-36—74 FrankEsposito,Jr. 39-36—75 AndrewMagee 39-36 — 75 ScottSimpson Jim Gallagher,Jr. 39-36—75 Willie Wood 41-34—75 Kohki Idoki 36-39—75 SonnySkinner 38-37—75 Jeff Hart 39-36—75 LarryMize 38-38—76 CoreyPavm 37-39—76 BenCrenshaw 40-36—76 BobGilder 38-38—76 John Inman 40-37—77 DanForsm an 42-35—77 BobbyWadkins 39-39—78 LarryNelson 41-37—78 GaryHallberg 40-39—79 JoseCoceres 38-41—79 TomPurtzer 42-37—79 ChienSoonLu 40-40MO

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE

AN TimesPDT Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Boston 70 48 17 5 101 225 149 TampaBay 70 39 24 7 85 208 185 Montreal 71 38 26 7 83 182 180 Toronto 71 36 27 8 80 208 219 Detroit 69 32 24 13 77 183 194 Ottawa 69 28 28 13 69 198 234 Florida 70 26 36 8 60 173 225 Buffalo 70 20 42 8 48 136 206 MetropolitanDivision GP W L OT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 69 45 19 5 95 218 173 Philadelphia 69 37 25 7 81 199 197 N.Y.Rangers 71 38 29 4 80 188 175 Columbus 70 36 28 6 78 200 192 Washington 71 33 27 11 77 205 211 NewJersey 70 30 27 13 73 172 183 Carolina 70 30 31 9 69 174 198 N.Y.Islanders 70 26 35 9 61 195 239

Colorado Minnesota Dallas Winnipeg Nashville SanJose Anaheim Los Angeles Phoenix Vancouver Calgary

WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT Pis GF GA 69 47 15 7 71 41 15 15 71 44 21 6 70 36 23 11 69 32 26 11 71 32 30 9 71 30 31 10

PacificDivision GP W L OT 71 46 18 7 70 45 18 7 70 39 25 6

II I

I I I

II

WesternConference W 1 1 1

101 226 156 97 240 184 94 216 194 83 174 172 75 196 201 73 199 208 70 171 213

Pts GF GA 99 219 170 97 222 178

84 170 149 70 34 25 11 79 194 197 72 32 30 10 74 172 194 70 28 35 7 63 173 209

L T Pts 0 1 4 0 1 4 0 1 4 0 1 4 1 0 3 0 2 2 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 0

Vancouver ChivasUSA FC Dallas RealSaltLake 1 Seattle 1 Portland 0 SanJose 0 Colorado 0 Los Angele s 0 Today'sGam es Vancouver atNewEngland,10 a.m. Seattle FC at Montreal,1 p.m. Los AngelesatRealSalt Lake,1p.m. D.C.Unitedat TorontoFC,1:30 p.m. Portland at Colorado,3 p.m. Philadelphiaat Columbus, 3p.m. Chiva sUSAatFCDallas,5:30p.m. SanJoseatSporting KansasCity 530pm Sunday'sGame NewYorkatChicago,noon

GF 5 4 4 4 2 2 3 1 0

GA 2 3 3 3 2 2 3 1 1

BASEBALL SpringTraining AR TimesPDT

Friday'sGames

Detroit 3,Atlanta(ss) 0 St. Louis2,Washington 0 Philadelphi2, a Boston 2,tie,10 innings Miami 7,Houston 2 Toronto5,TampaBay0 N.Y.Mets9, Minnesota1 Baltimore 8, Atlanta(ss) 0 Texas 7, Milwaukee5

L.A.Angels7, KansasCity(ss) 3 Cincinnati9,KansasCity(ss) 3 Chicag oCubs7,ChicagoWhiteSox0 Cleveland14, Colorado3 N.Y.Yankees4, Pittsburgh 0 SanFrancisco3, Oakland0 San Diego 7,Seatle 2 Today'sGam es Detroit vs.Torontoat Dunedin, Fla., 10:05a.m. N.Y.Metsvs. Miami(ss) atJupiter, Fla.,10:05a.m. Miami(ss)vs.Washingtonat Viera,Fla.,10:05a.m. Bostonvs.Atlantaat Kissimmee,Fla.,10:05 a.m. St. Louisvs.Houstonat Kissimmee,Fla.,10:05 a.m. Baltimorevs.TampaBayat Port Charlotte, Fla.,10:05 a.m. N.Y.Yankeesvs. MinnesotaatFort Myers, Fla.,10:05 a.m. Philadelphiavs. Pittsburghat Bradenton, Fla.,10:05 a.m. Chicago WhiteSox(ss)vs. SanDiegoat Peoria, Ariz., 1:05 p.m. LA. Angelsvs.Milwaukeeat Phoenix,1:05 p.m. Colorado (ss)vs. Clevelandat Goodyear, Ariz.,1:05 p.m. Seattle(ss)vs.OaklandatPhoenix,1:05 p.m. Texas vs.KansasCity at Surprise, Ariz.,1:05 p.m. Cincinnatiys.ChicagoCubsat Mesa,Ariz.,1:05p.m. San Franciscovs. ChicagoWhite Sox(ss) at Glendale, Ariz.,1:05p.m. Seattle (ss)vs. Colorado(ss) atScottsdale, Ariz., 1:10 p.m.

College Pac-12Standings AR TimesPDT Oregon State UCLA

Conference Overall

Oregon Washington Washington State Stanford ArizonaState USC Arizona California

4 -0 3-1 3 -1 3 -1 3-1 1-2 1-3 2-2 1 -3 0-3 0 -4

Singles Men SecondRound DavidFerrer(4), Spain,def. TeymurazGabashvili, Russia,6-4,6-0. Kevin Anderson(17), SouthAfrica, def. Horacio Zeballos,Argentina,6-4, 6-3. RichardGasquet(9), France,def. AlejandroGonzalez, Colombia7-6 , (7), 6-4. FlorianMayer(30), Germany, def.Ivan Dodig, Croatia, 6-3,6-2. RogerFederer(5), Switzerland,def. IvoKarlovic, Croatia,6-4,7-6(4). TommyRobredo(16), Spain, def. Dominic Thiem, Austria,6-4, 7-6(8). ThiemodeBakker, Netherlands, def. FernandoVerdasco(28),Spain, 7-6(4),6-7(3),6-2. NovakDjokovic (2), Serbia,def.JeremyChardy, France,6-4,6-3. Grigor Dimitrov(15), Bulgaria,def. Albert Montanes,Spain,6-1,6-7 (5),6-3. FelicianoLopez(32), Spain,def. Jiri Vesely,Czech Republic,6-2, 7-6(3) AndreasSeppi (31), Italy, def. RadekStepanek, CzechRepublic, 7-6(8), 4-6, 6-4. JulienBenneteau, France,def. ErnestsGulbis (21), Latvia,6-4,4-6r7-5. Kei Nishikori(20),Japan,def. MarinkoMatosevic, Australia,6-4, 6-1.

MLB MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL

Utah

Eastern Conference

St. Louis Chicago

Edmonton 71 25 37 9 5 9 177 228 14. (18)KyleBusch,Toyota,185.314. NOTE: Two points for a win, onepoint for overtime 15. (88)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,185.29. loss. 16.31RyanNewman,Chevrolet,185.209. Friday'sGames 17. 41 KurtBusch,Chevrolet,185.166. N.Y.Rangers3, Columbus1 18.(47) A JAllmendinger,Chevrolet, 184.715. Chicago 3, Carolina 2 19.(55)BrianVickers, Toyota, 184.521. Boston 2, Colorado0 20.3) AustinDilon,Chevrolet, 183.96. Nashville 6, Calgary5 21. 43) AricAlmirola, Ford,183.955. Today'sGam es 22.(17)RickyStenhouseJr., Ford, 183.861. St. LouisatPhiladelphia,10 a.m. 23.(7) MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet, 183.491. Tampa Bayat Pittsburgh,10 a.m. 24.(16)GregBiffle, Ford,185.095. Detroit atMinnesota,11a.m. 25.(1)JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet, 184.525. Ottawa atDalas, noon 26. 5) Kasey Kahne,Chevrolet, 184.322. Floridaat LosAngeles,1 p.m. 27.(10)DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet, 184.299. MontrealatToronto,4 p.m. 28. (51)JustinAllgaier, Chevrolet,183.983. N.Y.RangersatNewJersey,4 p.m. 29.(38DavidGililand, Ford,183.922. 30. 27 MattCrafton,Chevrolet,183.641. Carolinaat Winnipeg, 4p.m. Bosto natPhoenix,6p.m. 31. (13)CaseyMears, Chevrolet,183.58. 32. (30)ParkerKligerman,Toyota,182.918. CalgaryatEdmonton, 7p.m. Washi ngtonatSanJose,7:30p.m. 33.(35DavidReutimann,Ford,182.219. 34. 26 ColeWhitt, Toyota,181.525. 35. (32)TravisKvapil, Ford,181.507. SOCCER 36. (36)ReedSorenson,Chevrolet,181.365. 37.(33BrianScott,Chevrolet, Owner Points. MLS 38. 98 JoshWise, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 39. (83)RyanTruex, Toyota, Owner Points. MAJORLEAGUESOCCER 40.23AlexBowman,Toyota, OwnerPoints. All TimesPDT 41. 34 DavidRagan, Ford, Owner Points. 42. (66)JoeNemechek, Toyota, OwnerPoints. EasternConference W L T PtsGF GA 43. (40)LandonCassrll, Chevrolet,OwnerPomts. Houston 2 0 0 6 5 0 Philadelphia 1 0 1 4 2 1 TENNIS Columbus 1 0 0 3 3 0 SonyOpen TorontoFC 1 0 0 3 2 1 Friday Chicago 0 1 1 1 3 4 Af TheTennisCenter at CrandonPark NewYork 0 1 1 1 2 5 KeyBiscayne,Fla. SportingKansasCity 0 1 1 1 1 2 Purse:Men,S5.65 million (Masfers1000); Montreal 0 2 0 0 2 4 Women, S5.43 million (Premier) D.C. 0 1 0 0 0 3 Surface:Hard-Outdoor NewEngland 0 2 0 0 0 5

19- 3 12- 8 15- 5 14- 5 9-9 8-1 0 10 - 10 11- 9 12 - 13 10 - 10 9-1 1

Friday'sGames Washmgton 8, Anzona7 Oregon1,Utah0 WashingtonState2, UCLAO Cal Pol4, y California1 Oregon State4, ArizonaState0 USC4, Stanford3 Today'sGam es ArizonaSt.atOregonSt.,1:35 p.m. Arizonaat Washington, 2p.m. Utah atOregon,2 p.m. WashingtonSt.at UCLA,2 p.m. USCat Stanford,3p.m. Californiaat CalPoly,6 p.m.

MarcosBaghdatis, Cyprus,def. Philipp Kohlschreiber(24),Germany, 3-6, 7-6(1), 7-6(5). Women SecondRound Li Na (2),China,def.Alisa Kleybanova, Russia, walkover. DominikaCibulkova(10), Slovakia, def.Yvonne Meusburger,Austria, 6-1, 6-2. ElenaVesnina(32), Russia,def.Alison Riske, United States,6-2,6-2. BarboraZahlavovaStrycova, CzechRepublic, def. Roberta Vinci(13),Italy, 6-4, 2-6,7-5. Elina Svitolina,Ukraine,def. EugenieBouchard (18), Cana da,1-6,6-1,6-2r Ajla Tomljanovic,Croatia,def.GarbineMuguruza (30), Spain3-6, , 7-6(6), 6-1. VarvaraLepchenko,United States,def.JelenaJankovic (7),Serbia,6-3,2-6, 7-6(2). Alize Cornet(22), France,def. AndreaPetkovic, Germany, 6-2, 6-7(0),6-4. MadisonKeys, UnitedStates,def. DanielaHantuchoya(31),Slovakia,6-4,6-2. Kaia Kanepi(24), Estonia,def. Christina McHale, UnitedStates,7-6(5), 7-6(0). CaseyDelacqua,Australia, def.SimonaHalep(6), Romania6-4, , 1-6. AgnieszkaRadwanska (3), Poland,def. Romina OprandiSwi , tzerland,6-0, 6-4. Carla SuarezNayarro (15), Spain, def.Chanelle Scheepers,SouthAfrica, 6-4, 6-1. SloaneStephens(17), UnitedStates,def. Zarina Diyas,Kazakhstan, 7-5,6-3.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague CLEVELANDINDIANS — Granted RHP David Aardsmahis release. LOSANGELES ANGELS — Acquired LHPJose AlvarezfromDetroit forINFAndrewRomine. MINNESOTA TWINS — Announced RHPVance Worleyclearedwaiversandwassent outright toRochester(IL). SEATTLE MARINERS—Named Chris Prietoquality controlcoach. TEXASRANGERS— OptionedRHPRomanMendez toFrisco(Texas). NationalLeague ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS — Placed LHP Matt Reynol dsandOFCodyRossonthe15-dayDL,retroactiveto March19. LOSANGELES DODGERS — Placed RHPJosh Beckett,RHPChad Bilingsley andOFMatt Kempon the15-day DL,retroactiveto March19. PlacedOFCarl Crawfordonpaternity leave.Optioned CTim Federowicz toAlbuquerque(PCL). PITTSBU RGH PIRATES — Optioned RHPPhil Irwin, INFChris McGuinessand INFBrentMorel to Indianapolis(IL). Reassigned RH PJakeBrigham, INF Chased'Arnaud,RHPCody Eppley,RHPJosh Kinney and LHP Yao-HsunYangtotheir minorleaguecamp. BASKETB ALL

NationalBasketballAssociation CHARLOTTE BOBCATS— SignedFDJWhiteto a10-daycontract. CLEVELANDCAVALIERS— Signed G SethCurry to a10-day contract. FOOTBAL L NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE BALTIMOR ERAVENS—Agreedto termsSDarian

MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR SprintCup Auto Club 400 After Fridayqualifying; race Sunday At AutoClubSpeedway Fonfana,Calif. Lap length:2miles

Stewartonaone-yearcontract. CAROLINA PANTHERS— SignedCBAntoineCasonandQBJoeWebbtoone-yearcontractsandWR TiquanUnderwoodto atwo-yearcontract. CINCINN ATI BENGALS — Signed OTMarshal Newhouse.WaivedQBGregMcElroy. MINNE

(Car num berinparentheses) 1. (20)MattKenseth, Toyota,187.315 mph. 2. (2)BradKeselowski, Ford,187.105. 3. (48)JimmieJohnson,Chevrolet,186.935. 4. (4) KevinHarvick, Chevrolet,186.901. 5. (15)ClintBowyer, Toyota,186.461. 6. (24)JeffGordon,Chevrolet,186.384. 7. (22)JoeyLogano, Ford,186.273. 8. (9)MarcosAmbrose,Ford,186.013. 9. (99)CarlEdwards,Ford,185.878. 10. (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet,185.792. 11. (42)KyleLarson,Chevrolet,185.773. 12. (78)MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet,185.725. 13. (11)DennyHamlin,Toyota,185.323.

Bruins pushwin streak t011 with victory over Avalanche The Associated Press DENVER —

P a t rice B ergeron

playoffs. It is the longest run for the Bruins

and Carl Soderberg each had a goal, since a 13-game winning streak in Chad Johnson stopped 31 shots for the 1970-71 season. They pushed their his third career shutout, and the Boston Bruins beat the Colorado Ava-

lanche 2-0 on Friday night for their

point totalto 101, the 21st time the team

has reached the 100-point threshold. Colorado pulled goalie Semyon

11th win in a row. Boston became the f i rst t e am

Varlamov for an extra attacker with

to clinch a spot in the Stanley Cup

avert its first shoutout of the sea-

five minutes remaining but couldn't

NHL ROUNDUP

Johnson was atthe center of the

effort, turning away one scoring opson. The Avalanche had scored at portunity after another. least once in 80 straight games since Also on Friday: their previous shutout last April 6 at Phoenix. Colorado, which handed Boston its only shutout of the season on Oct. 10,

LUMBUS, Ohio — Derick Brassard and Derek Stepan scored third-pe-

riod goals, and Henrik Lundqvist made 25 saves to lead the New York

Predators 6, Flames 5: CALGARY, Alberta — Shea Weberscored twice,

Rangers over Columbus. Blackhawks 3, Hurricanes 2:

including the go-ahead goal late in

CHICAGO —

the third period, and Nashville es-

short-handed breakaway goal early in the third period snapped a tie, and Chicago edged Carolina.

was the last NHL team to be blanked caped with a victory over Calgary. this season. Rangers 3, Blue Jackets 1: CO-

Jo n athan T o ews'


SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

ON THE AIR

GOLF ROUNDUP

TODAY SOCCER EPL, Chelseavs. Arsenal EPL, Cardiff City vs. Liverpool EPL, West HamUnited vs. Manchester United MLS, Seattle at Montreal

MLS, Los Angeles atReal Salt Lake MLS, Portland at Colorado A-League, Melbourne vs. Central Coast

Times TV/Radio 5:45 a.m. NBCSN 8 a.m. NBCSN 10:30a.m. NBCSN 1 p.m. Roo t 1 p.m. NBCSN 3 p.m. Roo t 9 p.m. FS2

BASKETBALL

Men's college, NIT:LouisianaTechat Georgia Women's college, NCAA Tournament NCAATournament, Florida vs. Pittsburgh Women's college, NCAA Tournament, Notre Damevs. Robert Morris Women's college, NCAA Tournament NCAATournament, Louisville vs. Saint Louis Women's college, NCAA Tournament NCAA Tournament, Michigan vs.Texas NCAA Tournament, San Diego State vs. North Dakota State Women's college, NCAA Tournament NCAA Tournament, Syracusevs. Dayton NCAA Tournament, Wisconsin vs. Oregon NCAATournament, Michigan State vs. Harvard NCAATournament, Villanova vs. Connecticut

8 a.m. 8 a.m.

E S PN ES P N2

9:15 a.m. CBS 10:30 a.m. ESPN

10:30a.m. ESPN2 11:45 a.m. CBS 1p.m. E SPN2 2:15 p.m. CBS 3 :10 p.m. T NT 3:30 p.m. ESPN2 4 :10 p.m. T B S 4:45 p.m. CBS 5:40 p.m. T NT 6 :40 p.m. T BS

Scott continues to cruise at Bay Hill The Associated Press

son and Andy Bean in 1981. Palmer was in a cart to greet Founders Cup leaderboard

ORLANDO, Fla. — Adam Scott keeps putting his name in the Bay Hill record book,

And his seven-shot margin at the halfway point shattered

the previous record held by each round moving him clos- Tiger Woods in 2002 and Paul er to another handshake with

Azinger in 1988.

The King. Scott sounds like he's not One day after Scott opened the least bit satisfied. "The challenge might be with a record-tying 62 in the Arnold Palmer Invitational, he just to start again and try and hit his stride around the turn play a great 36 holes," he said. Friday with five birdies in an "Start fresh and try to be the eight-hole stretch to leave ev- leader after the next 36." eryone else far behind. Even That would merit a v i sit with a three-putt bogey on with Arnold Palmer, the tourhis final hole, Scott still had nament host known simply a 4-under 68 for a seven-shot as "The King" in golf circles. lead. Scott has spoken glowingly He was at 14-under 130, all week about his first invitamatching the 36-hole record at tion to Bay Hill when he was Bay Hill first set by Tom Wat- 20. Walking off the first green,

him with a handshake, and Scott was amazed that Palmer

an player shot a 5-under 67 to take a two-stroke advantage pion, and the 33-year-old Aus- over 16-year-old Lydia Ko into tralian is playing like one. the weekend at Desert Ridge's J.B. Holmes (69), Chesson Wildfire Golf Club. Hadley (68) and Francesco Couples takes lead at Fallen Molinari of Italy (70) were Oak: SAUCIER, Miss.— Fred tied for second at 7-under. Couples shot a 6-under 66 to Keegan Bradley had the low take a two-shot lead after the score of the blustery second first round of the Mississippi round with a 67, putting him Gulf Resort Classic at Fallen in a group at 138 that included Oak. The 54-year-old Couples Brandt Snedeker (71) and Ja- continued his run of good play mie Donaldson of Wales (71). after winning the Toshiba Also on Friday: Classic in Newport Beach, CaMiram Lee leads Found- lif., last weekend. He has also ers Cup: PHOENIX — Mirim had recent success at Fallen Lee remained atop the JTBC Oak, winning in 2012. Now he's the Masters cham-

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings

NASCARSprint Cup, practice 9 :30 a.m. F S 1 NASCARNationwide, qualifying 10:30 a.m. FS1 NASCAR Sprint Cup, final practice 12:30 p.m. FS1 NASCAR,Nationwide, Treatmyclot.com 300 2 p.m. E S PN GOLF PGA Tour, Arnold Palmer Invitational 9:30 a.m. Golf PGA Tour, Arnold Palmer Invitational 11 a.m. NBC, Golf Champions Tour, Mississippi Gulf Resort Classic 2 p.m. Golf LPGATour, JTBCFounders Cup 4 p.m. Golf

AH TimesPDT

EasternConference x-Indiana x-Miami d-Toronto Chicago Brooklyn Washington Charlotte Atlanta NewYork Cleveland Detroit Boston Orlando Philadelphia Milwaukee

BASEBALL

1:35 p.m. 940-AM 5:30 p.m. ESPNU 7 p.m. MLB

HOCKEY

College, HockeyEast Tournament, final, UMass-Lowell vs.New Hampshire

4 p.m. N BCSN

SUNDAY SOCCER EPL, TottenhamHotspur vs. Southampton EPL, Aston Villa vs. StokeCity

I

I

4

Times TV/Radio 6:30 a.m. NBCSN 9 a.m. N BCSN

App~~~'

BASKETBALL

Men's College, NIT, lllinois at Clemson NCAATournament, Kansasvs.Stanford Women's College, NCAA Tournament NCAA Tournament, Wichita St. vs. Kentucky Women's College, NCAA Tournament Men's College, NIT,Saint Mary's at Minnesota Men's College, NIT,Southern Miss at Missouri NCAATournament, lowa St. vs. North Carolina Women's College, NCAA Tournament NCAA Tournament, Tennesseevs. Mercer NCAA Tournament, UCLAvs. Stephen F.Austin NCAA Tournament, Creighton vs. Baylor Women's College, NCAA Tournament, Connecticut vs. Prairie ViewA&M Women's College, NCAA Tournament, Oregon State vs. Middle TennesseeState

8 a.m. E S PN 9:15 a.m. CBS Nathan Denette/The Canadian Prese 9:30 a.m. ESPN2 Oklahoma City forward Kevin Durant, left, steals the ball from Toronto forward Amir Johnson, right, during overtime of Friday 11:45 a.m. CBS night's game in Toronto. n oon ESP N noon E S P N2 2 p.m. E SPNU 2:15 p.m. CBS 2:30 p.m. ESPN 3 :10 p.m. T NT 4 :10 p.m. T B S 4:45 p.m. TruTV 5 p.m.

E S PN

5 p.m. ESPN2, 940-AM

NCAA Tournament, Virginia vs. Memphis NCAA Tournament, Arizonavs.Gonzaga

5:40 p.m. T NT 6 :40 p.m. T BS

PGA Tour, Arnold Palmer Invitational 9:30 a.m. Golf PGA Tour, Arnold Palmer Invitational 11 a.m. NBC, Golf Champions Tour, Mississippi Gulf Resort Classic 2 p.m. Gol f LPGATour, JTBCFounders Cup 4 p.m. Golf AUTO RACING

NASCARSprint Cup, Auto Club400

11:30 a.m. Fox

BASEBALL

College, Arizona State atOregonState HOCKEY

NHL, Minnesota at Detroit

Durant's 51points leads Thunderpast Raptors inovertime

The Associated Press

NBA ROUNDUP

noon

rant has played in plenty of exciting, amazing and memorable games. This one topped them all.

ADELPHIA — Amare Stou-

demire had 22 points and 10 rebounds, Carmelo Antho-

ny scored 21 and New York won its eighth straight game, game I've ever been a part sending Philadelphia to its of," Durant said after his 23rd straight loss. go-ahead 3-pointer with 1.7 Pacers 91, Bulls 79: INDI" That was t h e craziest

seconds left in the second

ANAPOLIS — L uis Scola

P a c-12, overtime helped the Okla- had 19 points and Lance Ste940-AM homa City Thunder beat the phenson finished with 15 to Toronto Raptors 119-118 on lead Indiana over Chicago. Friday night. Nets 114, Celtics 98: NEW 4:30 p.m. NBCSN

Listings are themostaccurateavailable. TheBu/letinis not responsible for latechangesmadeby TI/or radio stations.

Durant had 51 points and 12 rebounds and A l l-Star

YORK — Joe Johnson hit six 3-pointers in his 27 points,

guard Russell Westbrook limped off in the third quar-

Mason Plumlee added 18 points, and Brooklyn won its

ter as the Thunder rallied in

11th straight at home, beat-

the final minute of the sec-

ing Boston.

ond extra session to win an eventful, emotional affair.

Heat 91, Grizzlies 86: MIAMI — Ray A l len scored "Down eight with (49 sec- 18 points to lead Miami to

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL BeaVerS ShutOutSun DeVilS — Senior Ben Wetzler pitched seven shutout innings for his fourth win andGabeClark drove in two runs as OregonState blankedArizona State 4-0 on Friday night before a crowd of 2,792 atGossStadium in Corvallis. It was the 11th win in a rowfor the Beavers (4-0 Pac-12,19-3 overall), who also improved to10-1 at homeand15-1 in their past16 games. Arizona State (1-3, 10-10) has lost four of five. Wetzler stretched his personal winning streak to 14consecutive games, dating back to a March 30, 2013 loss to SanDiego. Heallowed two hits, struck out eight, walked one and lowered his ERA to 0.59. Theseries resumes at1:35 p.m. today at GossStadium.

Wild PitCh leadSDuCkSOVerUteS — Pinchrunner NickCatalano scored from secondbaseoff a wild pitch in the bottom of th eighth inning to leadOregon to a1-0 Pac-12Conferencevictory over Utah in Eugene onFriday night. TheDucks' TommyThorpewon the pitcher's duel as hethrew eight innings, recording five strikeouts while giving up three hits. Utah's Mitch Watrouswentthe distance but took the loss. Oregon (3-1Pac-12,15-5) was led atthe plate byTyler Baumgartner who had two of theDucks' four hits, including adouble. TheDucks and Utes play thesecond gameof their three-game series today at 2p.m. at PK Park. Theseries concludes onSunday starting at11 a.m.

FOOTBALL JetS Sign ViCk and releaSe SanChez — TheNewYork Jets signed quarterback Michael Vick and releasedMark Sanchezon Friday. Vick was afree agent after spending the past five seasons with the Philadelphia Eagles. He will be reunited with Jets offensive coordinator Marty Mornhinweg, who helped thequarterback havethe best season of his career in Philadelphia in 2010. — From wire reports

onds) to go, and I missed a a comeback victory over free throw late in the game, Memphis. and we won?," Durant said. Pelicans 111, Hawks 105: "Two guys foul out, Russell ATLANTA — Anthony Dais out, back-to-back if you vis had 34 points and 11 rewant to add everything into bounds, New Orleans took it. Craziest game."

Reggie Jackson had 25 points and 12 rebounds and

the lead with a 12-0 run that began at the end of the third

quarter and the Pelicans

Serge Ibaka scored 13 as the Thunder won their fourth

beat Atlanta.

straight and finished off a

106: DALLAS — Monta El-

Mavericks 122, Nuggets

lis scored 26 points, Dirk cluded wins at Chicago and Nowitzki added 21 and DalCleveland. las pulled away from Denver The Thunder are 12-2 on in the fourth quarter. the road against Eastern Suns 98, Pistons 92: Conference opponents. PHOENIX — Eric Bledsoe DeMar DeRozan scored scored 15 of his 23 points in 33 points for Toronto and the fourth quarter and PhoeAmir Johnson had 25 points nix pulled out a victory over 3-0 road trip that also in-

and 12 rebounds in his 500th

Detroit.

career game. Kyle Lowry scored 25 and Greivis

RAMENTO, Calif. — Marco

Spurs 99, Kings 79: SAC-

a f t er Belinelli scored 13 of his 17 scoring 21. points in the fourth quarJohnson said trying to de- ter, Kawhi Leonard had 15 fend Durant was a constant points and seven rebounds challenge. and NBA-leading San Anto"It's tough," th e 6 -foot- nio eased past Sacramento 9 Johnson said. "He's my for its 12th straight win. height and he can shoot from Wizards 117, Lakers 107: Vasquez fouled out

half court. There isn't too

W L 51 18 47 20 38 30 38 31 36 31 36 33 33 36 31 36 29 40 26 43 25 43 23 47 19 50 15 54 13 56

Pct BB 739

W L 52 16 51 18 48 21 46 22 45 24 44 26 42 28 40 28 40 29 34 33 31 38 28 40 24 45 22 46 22 47

Pct GB 765

WesternConference

d-San Antonio d-Oklahoma City d-L.A.Clippers Houston Portland Golden State Dallas Memphis Phoenix Minnesota Denver

NewOrleans Sacramen to L.A. Lakers utah d-divisionleader x-clinched playoffspot

701 3 559 12'/r 551 13 537 14 522 15 478 18 463 19 420 22 377 25 368 25'/r 329 28'/r 275 32 217 36 188 38

739 9/r 696 4'/r 676 6 652 7r/r 629 9 600 11 588 12 580 12'/r 507 17'/r 449 21'/z 412 24 348 28'/z 324 30 319 30r/r

Friday's Games

Indiana91, Chicago79 NewYork93,Philadelphia 92 Oklahoma City119, Toronto118,20T Brooklyn114,Boston 98 Miami91,Memphis 86 NewOrleans111,Atlanta105 Dallas122,Denver106 Phoenix98,Detroit 92 SanAntonio99,Sacramento79 Washington117, L.A. Lakers107

Today'sGames

Portland at Charlotte, 4p.m. HoustonatCleveland430p m Philadelphiat a Chicago, 5p.m Indiana at Memphis, 5p.m Miami atNewOrleans, 5p.m

Orlandoatutah, 6p.m SanAntonioatGoldenState, 7:30p.m. Detroit atL.A.Clippers, 7;30p.m Sunday'sGames AtlantaatToronto, 10a.m. PhoenixatMinnesota,12:30p.m Washington at Denver, 2 p.m MilwaukeeatSacramento, 3 p.m. BrooklynatDalas, 4:30p.m Cleveland atNewYork,4:30 p.m OrlandoatL.A.Lakers, 6:30p.m.

Summaries

TORONTO — Kevin Du-

GOLF

in her third LPGA Tour start. The 23-year-old South Kore-

knew his name.

AUTO RACING

College, Arizona State atOregonState College, Mississippi State atVanderbilt MLB, Arizona vs. L.A. Dodgers

C3

L OS ANGELES —

John

much you can do but double Wall had 28 points and 14 asteam him." sists, leading Washington to Also on Friday: a heated victory over the Los Knicks 93, 76ers 92: PHIL- Angeles Lakers.

Friday's Games

Mavericks122, Ntlggets106 DENVER (106)

Chandler3-6 0-0 6,Faried2-10 2-2 6, Mozgo v 2-3 3-3 7, Lawson 6-12 2-3 17, Foye5-100-0 15, Hickson8-122-918,Randolph4-70-010,Arthur4-6 2-2 11,Fournier2-6 2-27, Brooks3-7 0-06, Miler 1-20-03. Totals 40-8113-21106.

J.Johnson10-16 1-1 27, Pierce 6-10 1-1 14, Plumlee6-7 6-618, Wiliams2-41-2 6, Livingston 1-1 2-2 4,Blatche4-10 2-310, Kirilenko3-4 0-26, Teletovic3-61-37, Thornton3-92-2 9, Gutierrez 5-6 0-010,Anderson0-20-00, Collins1-10-02,Teague 0-21-21. Totals 44-7817-24114. 28 26 22 22 — 98 Boston Brooklyn 34 30 28 22 — 114

Knicks 93, 76ers 92 NEWYORK(93)

Anthony5-169-1221, Stoudemire10-15 2-2 22, Chandler7-103-417, Felton2-8 3-47, Smith2-10 0-0 6,Shumpert 4-70-011, HardawayJr.3-110-16, Aldrich 1-20-0 2, Prigioni 0-1 0-0 0, Tyler0-2 0-0 0, Brown0-00-0 0, Murry0-01-21. Totals 34-82 18-26 93. PHILADELPHIA (92)

Anderson3-141-3 8, Young6-21 6-6 21,Sims

6-10 4-4 16,Carter-Wiliams10-210-0 22, Wroten 4-9 2-6 12,Varnado1-11-2 3, Wiliams1-2 0-02,

Thompson 1-4 0-0 2, Mullens1-50-0 3, Nunnally 1-40-03,Johnson-Odom 0-0 0-00.Totals 34-91 14-21 92.

New York Philadelphia

21 20 31 21 — 93 24 1 2 29 27 — 92

Pacers 91, Bulls 79 CHICAGO (79)

Dunleavy3-9 3-3 9, Boozer5-140-2 10,Noah 5-152-212, Hinrich3-60-07, J.Butler5-113-417, Gibson1-6 5-6 7, Augustin 6-14 5-717, Snell0-2 0-00,Mohammed0-00-00.Totals28-7718-24 79. INDIANA (91) George 3-133-410, West4-92-210, Hibbert3-10 6-6 12,G.Hil3-10 4-410, Stephenson7-11 1-1 15, Mahinmi0-24-4 4,Turner3-80-26, Scola9-121-2 19, Copeland 2-30-05, Sloan0-10-0 0,R.Butler 0-0 0-0 0.Totals 34-7921-2591. Chicago 23 20 19 17 — 79 Indiana 19 28 31 16 — 91

Slfns 98, Pistons92 DETROIT (92) J.Smith7-190-815, Monroe6-164-716, Drummond5-73-713, Jennings0-2 0-00, Singler 4-11 0-0 9, Bynum4-11 0-0 8, Stuckey 10-191-1 23, Caldwell-Pope 2-2 0-04, Jerehko1-32-3 4. Totals 39-9010-26 92. PHDENIX (98) Tucker4-82-313,Frye1-6002, Plumlee4-53-3 11, Bledsoe8166 923, Dragic6126-1020,Mark. Morris 6-9 3-416,Green4-12 3-412, Len0-2 0-0 0, MarcMorris0-31-21, ISmith 0-00-00. Totals 33-73 24-3598. Detroit 27 23 21 21 — 92 Phoenix 26 25 22 25 — 98

Spurs 99, Kings 79 SANANTONIO(99)

Leonard4-115-615, Duncan3-124-610, Splitter 5-81-1 11,Parker6-151-1 14,Green1-6 0-03, Ginohili 4-116-714, Diaw1-40-02, Belinelli 7-12 2-3 17, Mills 3-8 2-2 8,Baynes1-1 0-0 2, Bonner 0-20-00, Joseph1-21-1 3, Ayres0-1 0-00. Totals 36-93 22-2799.

SACRAME NTO(79) Gay 4-145-514, Evans1-3 0-22, Cousins7-18 1-215, Thomas7-174-718, McLem ore 4-7 0-09, Williams2-40-04, Outlaw5-91-213, Thompson0-2 000,Mccallum 26004,Gray00000,White00 0-00. Totals 32-8011-1879. BanAntonio 24 2 3 22 30 — 99 Sacramento 23 14 20 22 — 79

DALLAS (122) Marion7-110-014, Nowitzki9-152-321, Dalemhert1-6 2-2 4,Calderon4-9 0-010, Ellis11-142-2 26, Bla0-32-42, ir Carter5-120-013, Harris1-55-5 7, Crowder4-40-012, Wright 6-91-1 13, Ellington 0-10-00,Larkin0-00-00,James0-00-00.Totals 48-8914-17 122. Denver 29 24 25 28 — 106 Dallas 26 35 29 32 — 122

Iizards117, Lakers107

Thunder119, Raptors118 (OT)

Bazemore1-31-3 3,Gasol 6-142-514, Sacre5-8 1-1 11,Marshall2-8 0-04, Meeks7-175-6 21, Kelly 3-41-27,Henry6-100-012,Young7-163-421, Nash 2-40-05, Hill 4-71-29.Totals 43-9114-23107. Washington 33 25 30 29 — 117 L.A. Lakers 21 26 34 26 — 107

OKLAHOMA CITY (119) Durant15-3214-1951,Ihaka6-151-1 13,Adams 0-2 0-0 0,Westhrook 5-134-415, Roherson0-00-0 0, Thaheet 0-0 0-00, Butler1-91-2 4, Jackson7-15 10-1025,Collison1-21-23, Fisher3-90-08, Lamb 0-1 0-00. Totals38-9831-38119. TORONTO (118) Ross1-90-0 2, Johnson12-191-2 25, Valanciunas3-112-28, Lowry6-16 8-9 25, DeRozan 9-23 15-1633,Salmons0-4 0-20,Hanshrough1-52-24, De Colo0-30-0 0,Yasquez9-11 0-021, Novak0-0 0-0 0.Totals 41-10128-33118. OklahomaCity22 20 30 24 1112— 119 Toronto 20 2 625 25 1111 — 118

WASHING TON(117)

Ariza3-74-412,Booker4-62-310, Gortat5-123-4 13, Wall11-215-5 28, Beal5-134-618, Harrington 5-12 3-415,Webster 1-50-02, Gooden 5-81-1 11, Miller 3-31-28,Seraphin0-00-00, Temple 0-00-00, PorterJr. 0-00-00. Totals42-8723-29117.

L.A. LAKERS (107)

Leaders Through Thursday'sGames

Scoring

G FB FT PTB AVG Durant,OK C 67 698 584 2136 31.9 Anthony,NYK 65 650 381 1827 28.1 James,MIA 63 627 350 1699 27.0 Love,MIN 64 550 439 1698 26.5 Harden,HOU 60 450 436 1477 24.6 Griffin, LAC 69 628 413 1680 24.3 Curry,GO L 67 546 267 1577 23.5 Heat 91, Grizzlies 86 Aldridge,PO R 60 572 258 1405 23.4 DeRozan,TOR 65 504 412 1476 22.7 MEMPHIS (86) 58 460 371 1291 22.3 Prince0-20-0 0, Randolph12-201-2 25,Gasol Cousins,SAC 6-11 2-314, Conle4-12 y 4-5 12,Lee4-14 2-212, George,IND 68 504 345 1510 22.2 Nowilzki, DAL 67 523 286 1438 21.5 TAllen1-51-3 3,Calathes2 3 004, Koufos4 50 0 58 467 303 1239 21.4 8, Miller1-40-03, Johnson 2-31-25. Totals36-79 Davis,NOR 11-17 86. Jefferson,CHA 60 562 149 1276 21.3 Lillard, POR 69 481 315 1463 21.2 MIAMI (91) Fie Id Goal Percentage James7-141-215, Bosh4-15 2-211, Oden2-2 FG FGA PCT 1-1 5, Chalmers4-73-414, Wade5-11 4-414, An284 428 .664 dersen 2-41-1 5, R.Allen7-14 2-218, Haslem1-2 Jordan,LAC 0-02, Cole2-50-05,Battier1-10-02.Totals36-76 Drummond,DET 381 618 .617 14-16 91. Howard,HOU 448 761 .589 Memphis 22 21 25 18 — 86 James,MIA 627 1097 .572 Miami 15 30 23 23 — 91 Johnson,TOR 303 541 .560 Faried,DEN 341 610 .559 Diaw,SAN 258 466 .554 Peiicans111, Hawks105 Wade,MIA 384 702 .547 Lopez, PO R 293 541 .542 NEWORLEANS(111) Ihaka,OKC 443 818 .542 Evans7-127-821,Davis11-1912-1534,StiemsRebounds ma 0-01-21, Roberts4-128-816, Gordon1-20-0 G DPP DEF TDTAVG 2, Aminu1-32-24, Aiinca3-51-2 7, Rivers3 34 6 Jordan,LAC 69 277 673 950 13.8 10, Morrow1-60-02, Withey0-00-00, Miller1-2 Drummond,DET 66 352 491 843 12.8 0-03, Bahhitt4-60-011.Totals 36-7038-43111. Love,MIN 64 192 622 814 12.7 ATLANTA (105) H oward, HO U 66 221 596 817 12.4 Carroll 2-10 3-37, Milsap9-151-1 20, Antic Cousins,SAC 58 188 494 682 11.8 4-9 5-714,Teague8-16 8-1126, Mack7-11 0-018, CHI 66 237 506 743 11.3 Brand0-2 0-00, Wiliams1-4 0-02, Martin 0-22-2 Noah, ldridge,PO R 60 144 520 664 11.1 2, Scott 4 82310, Schroder2 5 004, Muscala1-3 A Y ucevic, OR L 51 163 389 552 10.8 0-02. Totals 38-8821-27106. Jefferson, CH A 60 118 508 626 10.4 New Drleans 20 2 4 28 42 — 111 Davis,NOR 58 193 409 602 10.4 Atlanta 16 28 27 34 — 105 Assists G AST AVG Nets114, Ceitics98 Paul, LAC 50 547 10.9 Lawson,DEN 5 4 486 9.0 BOSTON (98) Wall, WAS 6 8 598 8.8 Green6-15 3-3 16, Bass4-8 1-2 9, Humphries RubIo,MIN 6 7 575 8.6 4-114-412, Rondo 3-105-612, Bradley12-19 0-0 Curry,GO L 6 7 573 8.6 28, Bayless2-4 0-0 6, Sullinger2-6 4-6 8,Olynyk Jennings,DET 6 5 510 7.8 1-5 2-2 4,C.Johnson0-2 0-0 0, Pressey 0-10-0 0, Lowry,TOR 6 7 524 7.8 Anthony0-1 0-0 0, Babb1-10-0 3. Totals 35-83 Teague,ATL 6 3 441 7.0 19-23 98. Nelson,ORL 6 1 422 6.9 BROOKLYN (114) James,MIA 6 3 404 6.4


C4

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014

Prep dasedall, at aglance

PREP ROUNDUP

A look at the Central Oregon teamscompeting in baseball this spring:

Cougars rally pastSouth Eugene Bulletin staff report Casey Powell's first reaction

the next four in their nonleague victory over La Pine (1-3). The to his team's season opener: "It Hawks' Tucker Allen knocked in was nuts." La Pine's one run. The Ravens (1Fair assessment from the first- 0) were led by Kahl Malott, who year MountainView coach.

Trailing 11-7 heading into the bottom of the seventh inning, the Cougars put up five runs without recording an out to rally past visiting South Eugene 12-11 for a

hits. Ridgeview13, La Pine1: REDMOND — Sara McKinney and Rachel Collins combined to lim-

went 4 for 6 with two doubles.

it the visiting Hawks to just one hit en route to a season-opening

George Mendazonaalsowent 4

Class 4A nonconference victory

in five innings. The Ravens (1-0) umburg homered in the first in- pounded out 15 hits on the day ning for Ridgeview. and dealt La Pine (2-1) its first Redmond 10, Madras 2: RED- loss of the spring. MOND — The Panthers trailed nonconference baseball win on Madras 8, Redmond 0: MA1-0 after the first before rallying DRAS — Jasmyn Reese logged Friday. "It was good, just to see a lot for their first win of the season. 12 strikeouts and just three of smiles on the parents' faces Pitcher Clayton Aas led Red- walks while allowing one hit to and stuff like that," Powell said. mond (1-1), holding Madras (0-2) guide the White Buffaloes (2-0) "I told the kids, I was proud of to one run. Hunter Smith was 3 to a third straight nonconference the way they battled. Regardless for 3 for the Panthers, while his win. Reese was also 2 for 3 at if we would have pulled it out or brother Hayden Smith went 2 for the plate for Madras (3-0), and not, to chip away like they did in 3 with a double. Redmond's Josh Shelby Mauritson homered for the seventh, it says a lot about McElory got things going for the the second straight game. Hailey their character." Panthers in the second inning Burress recorded the lone hit for Brock Powell paced Mountain with abases loaded triple. Redmond, which dropped to 0-2 View (1-0) with a 3-for-3 perforSOFTBALL on the season. mance at the plate, including a Summit 16, Sisters 2:Morgan BOYSLACROSSE hit in the bottom of the seventh Watts went 4 for 4 with a douBend 10, Rockey Mountain that drove in the game-winning ble and a triple to lead a Storm (ldnho) 2: BOISE, Idaho run. Devin Haney homered for offense that pounded out 19 hits James Rockett, Cohl Johnston the Cougars, Derek Ostrom had against the visiting Outlaws. and Eli Pite each posted three a triple, and Ronnie Stacey went Summit, which won in five in- goals to lead the Lava Bears to 3 for 4 with a double. nings, exploded for 12 runs in their second straight nonleague In other Friday action: BASEBALL

for 6 with a double. Dakota Scha-

the bottom of the second. Alex

Popp added three hits and AuRidgeview 32, La Pine 1: LA brey Clemans registered a twoPINE — The Ravens kicked off run triple in Summit's noncontheir first game of the season ference victory. Jacqueline Manwith 16 runs in the first inning ley earned the win, striking out and added an additional 16 runs four while allowing just three

win. Rockett and Johnston also recorded two assistsapiece for

Bend (2-0). Quinn Fettig scored o nce and L ak e L a rsen w a s credited with nine saves in goal.

Chance Beutler added two assists fortheBears.

MEN'S COLLEGE HOOPS:NCAA TOURNAMENT ROUNDUP

No. 14 seedMercerpulls upset on Duke The Associated Press

Kansas 80, Eastern Ken-

RALEIGH, N.C. — Jakob Gol-

tucky 69:ST. LOUIS — Andrew

Wiggins scored 19 points, Jamari Traylor and Perry Ellis the NCAA tournament so far by had double-doubles for secknockingoffDuke 78-71on Fri- ond-seeded Kansas. day in the second round. Stephen F. Austin 77, VCU 75: lonscored 20 pointsand Mercer pulled off the biggest upset in

T he 14th-seeded an d

s e - SAN DIEGO — Desmond Hay-

nior-laden Bears scored 11 straight points during the late 20-5 run that clinched the big-

gest victory in school history. In other games Friday: Wichita State 64, Cal Poly 37:

mon scoredon an improbable four-point play with 3.6 seconds in regulation and hit a big 3-pointer in overtime to lead No. 12 seed Stephen F. Austin. UCLA 76, Tulsa 59: SAN DI-

Arizona 68, Weber St. 59: SAN DIEGO — Nick Johnson

scored 18 points and Aaron Gordon added 16 for top-seeded Arizona.

Gonzega85,Oklahoma St.77: SAN DIEGO — Kevin Pangos scored 26 points and Gary Bell

Jr. added 17 for eighth-seeded Gonzaga. The refs called 61 fouls, and five players fouled out. EAST REGIONAL

Virginia 70, Coastal Carolina 59: RALEIGH, N.C. — Anthony

ST. LOUIS — Cleananthony EGO — Jordan Adams scored Early had 23 points in an easy 21 points and Norman Powell

Gill scored 17 points to help No. 1 seed Virginia pull away late

win for unbeaten Wichita State.

and avoid an historic upset.

added 15 in his hometown to

Tennessee 86, UMass 67:RA- lead fourth-seeded UCLA. LEIGH, N.C. — Jarnell Stokes WEST REGIONAL scored a career-high 26 points Baylor 74, Nebraska 60: and grabbed 14 rebounds to lead SAN ANTONIO — Cory Jef-

77: SAN ANTONIO — James Michael McAdoo sank two free

Tennessee.

for No. 6 seed North Carolina.

ferson scored 16 points and Kentucky 56, Kansas St. 49: sixth-seeded Ba y l o r kep t

ST. LOUIS — Julius Randle had 11th-seeded Nebraska win19 points and 15 rebounds, and Aaron Harrison finished with 18

less in its NCAA tournament

North Carolina 79, Providence

CLASS SA Bend Head coach:Bret Bailey (third season) 2013 record:20-9 overall, 6-3 Intermountain Conference (second); lost in championship of Class 5Astate playoffs Outlook:Last season, the LavaBears went to the state championship for the first time since 1987 but fell short of the 5Acrown. Bend, which has advanced to the semifinals each of the last two years, will be without three all-state players and two additional all-IMC athletes. But with six seniors leading the way, including second-team all-conference infielder Dalton Hurd, the Bears have their eyesset on areturn trip to the state playoffs and perhaps their first IMC title since 2009. Mountain View Hend coach:CaseyPowell (first season) 2013 record:5-17 overall, 1-8 Intermountain Conference (fourth) Outlook:After15 years of collegiate coaching, Powell returns to his almamater as afirst-year high school coach. The1993 Mountain View alum takes over aclub that won just two of its last15 games last season. But with senior catcher Brock Powell andsenior outfielder Devin Haney returning, the Cougars arepoised to bounce back.

ton 66: RALEIGH, N.C. — Michael Dixon Jr. scored 19 points and hit four free throws in the

history. points for No. 8 seed Kentucky. Creighton 76, L ouisiana- final 10 seconds for Memphis. SOUTH REGIONAL Lafayette 66: SAN ANTONIO lowa St. 93, N.C. Central 75: Stanford 58, New Mexico 53: — Doug McDermott scored 30 SAN ANTONIO — Georges ST. LOUIS — Chasson Randle points and third-seeded Creigh- Niang scored 24 points to lead scored 23 pointsand Stanford ton got three huge 3-pointers third-seeded Iowa State, which won in its first NCAA appear- in the second half from Ethan had five players score in double ance since 2008. Wragge. figures.

season) 2013record:7-19overall, 6-9 Sky-Em League(third); lost in Class 4A play-in round Outlook:Each of the last three years, the Hawks have improved ontheir overall record, resulting in La Pine's first postseason appearancesince 2002lastseason.Despiteanew coach,who replaces Bryn Card, theHawksare aiming to improve on their third-place finish in the Sky-Em in 2013 and return to the postseason despite graduating nine senior's from last year's roster. Medres Headcoach:Sam McCormick (first season) 2013record:13-12overall,7-8 Tri-Valley Conference (third); lost in Class 4A play-in round Outlook:For the third time in as manyyears, the White Buffaloes have anew headcoach. Fortunately for Madras, McCormick wasan assistant in 2011and wasthe Buffs' coach this past summer, allowing a familiarity to set in. Madras, which will not field a senior, will be led by sophomore lefty Austin Rauschenburg on the pitching mound, while the offense will revolve around juniors CodyShepherd, EthanShort, Parker DominguezandAlec McDonald, aswell as sophomore BryceRehwinkel. That depth is what McCormick plans to paydividends in the long run.

Ridgeview Heed coach:Josh Davis (second season) season) 2013record:13-13overall, 3-0 2013 record:21-7 overall, 7-2 Special District1 (first); lost in Intermountain Conference Class 4A play-in round (first); lost in semifinals of Class 5A state playoffs Outlook:Tenof Ridgeview's13 players from last season's squad return for 2014, including six allOutlook:The Panthers graduated 12 seniors IMC players. As much asDavis wants to avoid from last season's team —including 5A pitcher of the year J.D.Abbas andsix other first-team cliches, the Ravens' approach is to take it one all-IMC players. Only three Panthers return from game and oneseries at a time. The motto "1-0" helped the Ridgeview football team to aClass the 2013 squad in sophomores DerekBrown 4A state title this past fall. Now, behind junior and Hunter Smith and junior BenBurroughs. While Redmondboasts ayoung roster (made up Collin Runge — anhonorable mention all-state catcher last year — andall-IMC senior Mitch mostly of sophomores), Steele sees a fire in his players that could allow the Panthers to continue Springer, the Ravensarelooking to experience their recent success on thediamond. similar magic. Redmond Hend conch:Mike Steele (first

Summit Hend coach:Alan Embree (first season) 2013 record:15-12overall, 4-5 Intermountain Conference (third); lost in Class 5Aplay-in round Outlook:Summit is young and inexperienced, but Embreesays they haveplayed together at the youth level enough to get to knoweachother and the Storm's coaching staff. Senior all-IMC pitcher Tyler Mullen will be sidelined with an injury he suffered during basketball season, but his presence around theteamcoupled with the return of all-conference players JoshCherry and Cal Waterman could makethe Storm a competitive team in the IMC.

throws in the final 3.5 seconds Memphis 71, George Washing-

Le Pine Head coach:Bo DeForest (first

Sisters Head coach:Steve Hodges (eighth season) 2013record:26-3 overall, 15-0 Sky-Em League(first); lost in semifinals of Class 4Astate playoffs Outlook:The last three Sky-Em titles have gone to Sisters — andthe Outlaws are ready to add another. With the reigning Class 4Aplayer of the year in Joey Morgan teamed upwith all-state players Justin Harrer andJardon Weems— and with the return of first basemanCody Kreminski — Sisters aims for a return trip to the state playoffs, and perhaps its first trip to the state championshi psince2002.

CLASS2A/1A CLASS 4A Crook County Heed conch:FrankMartinez (second season) 2013 record:8-18 overall, 0-3 Special District1 (second) Outlook:TheCowboys graduated just four seniors from last year's squad that finished with the program's fewest wins since 2010.Crook County's roster is lined with plenty of youth, but led by senior Dylan Blasius, junior Trevor Slawterand sophomore ChaseMcCall,theCowboys look to challenge conference foe Ridgeview for a chance at astate playoff appearance for the first time since 2004.

Culver Heed conch:Nick Viggiano (first season) 2013record:11-13overall, 6-10 Special District 2 (fifth) Outlook:Last season, the Bulldogs posted the program's most wins since 2008. Nowwith a solid group of seniors, including middle infielders Joe Daugherty andAdamKnepp, Culver is poised to continue the upward trend — perhaps even challenge theconference's top teams to earn a spot in the state playoffs for the first time since 2001.

Baseball

a freshman two years ago. That, Hodges says, is a huge asset. "We've got two guys on this team that started when they were freshmen, so they

Underdogs

ting payback in the A-Sun tour- up for it with experience and a nament byknocking offthe Ea- sense of togetherness that can't Continued from C1 gles on their home court. While be measured by the RPI. Plus, For now, let's focus on another Florida Gulf Coast settled for they tend to play with a chip on kind of justice. the NIT consolation prize, Mer- their shoulders, having been It's time for the selection com- cer and its five senior starters passed over by the big boys mittee to get with the times, to claimed their first NCAA berth during recruiting and eager to recognize how much the col- since 1985. show they would've fared just It's obvious they were both lege basketball landscape has fine in a p restigious league changed in the past decade or worthy of invitations to the Big such as t h e A t l a ntic C oast so. In this era of here-today, Dance. Conference. gone-tomorrow stars at so many This year and last. Count Duke coach Mike "There was no doubt in my Krzyzewski of the high-profile schools, the am o n g the out-of-touch group that decides mind that we were going to be converts. "They're not just experiwho gets an invite to its 68-team there and have an opportunity" party is leaving a LOT of deserv- to beat Duke, Mercer coach Bob enced,"he said of Mercer, the ing teams on the sideline. Hoffman said. "Everybody was only team in the NCAA field that Mercer is a good place to start. calling us underdogs. I told them has started five seniors all seaThe Bears actually won the before we ran out, 'Let's be super son. "They're good." Atlantic Sun Conference a year dogs. That was quite a change from ago, but were upset in the final There needs to be a change Krzyzewski's le s s-than-flatof their league tournament by in attitude, to acknowledge they tering assessment of another Florida Gulf Coast. Everyone play some pretty good hoops league that most people rank a knows the rest of the story. Mer- in conferences such as the Sun notch behind the power confercer was sent packing to the NIT, Belt, where Georgia State went ences but ahead of leagues such while Dunk City got the A-Sun's 17-1 in conference play, lost in as the Atlantic Sun. automatic bid and went on to be- overtime to Louisiana-Lafayette His season is over. come the darlings of last year's in the final of its league tournaNot so for Mercer and HarNCAAs with their thoroughly ment, and was probably never vard and North Dakota State. They'll be playing on the entertaining run to the Sweet 16. even considered for a spot in the This year, Mercer and Flori- NCAAs. weekend. da Gulf Coast tied for the conMaybe they are not quite as If there's any justice, more ference title with matching 14-4 talented and deep as the teams teams just like them will get records, but it was the Bears get- they're beating, but they make their shot next year.

Ducks

"Bo has always grinded it out, against American. They're stickpick the heck out of you," Ducks coach Dana Altman said. "It's a

Continued from C1 "Has anybody ever faced two physical game." more opposite teams in back-toLoyd said he will try to speed back games in the NCAA tour- up the Badgers and defend point nament?" Ryan asked reporters. guard Traevon Jackson the The tempo issue goes both length of the court, "make him ways. After contending with show his handles off and then BYU's zone, Oregon now must try to speed them as much as we face a Badgers team that just held

American to 34 percent shooting and 13 second-half points.

can."

Staying disciplined helped Wisconsin get over a first-half rut

ing to that plan on Saturday.

The balanced Badgers have shown they can score in transition, too, though that's not their

main philosophy. 'What we want to do is get a

good shot.... Sometimes it may happen early and sometimes it doesn't," Close said.

Oregon "preys on teams when (the opponent takes) bad shots early, then they can really run."

Continued from C1 "Considering this is going to be my junior year.. .and my record in league is 30-0not a lot of high school players get to have that record," says Justin Harrer, a returning all-state infielder and all-league pitcher for

understand that role," the Sisters coach

says. "That's good, because they can help mentor those young guys because they did it themselves."

Also valuable is the championship mindselves with what other schools are saying set that transitions from the soccer field to about us or what coaches and players are the diamond. saying. But we definitely do know that with Harrer, like several of his baseball teamthe Outlaws. "We try not to concern our-

a record like that, we're the team to beat."

Sisters returns all three of its top pitchers (Morgan, Harrer and senior Jardon Weems) from last year's squad that guided the Outlawsto a program-record 24-game

mates, was a part of the Outlaws' first boys soccer state title team this past fall. They

have tasted a championship. They remember the sensation of winning the final game of the season. And what Harrer felt at the

beginning of the soccer season is similar to all season. Add in second-team all-confer- what he feels now. "That feeling isn't saying, 'Oh, we're goence outfielder Ben Larson and the Outlaws have a stable of high-caliber talent. ing to win state this year,'" Harrer darifies. "Any time you put that type of experi- "It's more, 'Alright. We've got work to do. ence onthefield,and you havetheyounger We've got to improve. We've got to hone our players watch those guys perform each day, skills and figure out how to play as a team.' it's obviously great to have that in your pro- ... The feeling around here is not that we're gram," Hodges says. "That gives them a lot playing to win a state title. We're playing for of confidence too, knowing that those guys one game at a time. We're playing to win are ontheir team and wearing the same that one game." uniforms. It's pretty hard to replace that The bar has been set, and it is a lofty type of experience." height. Sisters heads into the season with The question mark, Hodges says, lies a fourth straight Sky-Em championship in with freshmen who will be stepping into sight. That is Step 1in the Outlaws' quest to key roles vacated by graduated seniors. become the kings of Class 4A. "We want to defend our league title. But early on, those newcomers have shown their worth — including Ryan That's our first goal," Hodges says. "Then winning streak and allowed just 79 runs

Funk, who will catch when Morgan pitch-

we just want to be a team that is competitive

es and play the field when Morgan goes at the end of the season. We want to look behind the plate. back and say we progressed as a team and "(The freshmen) have played a lot of put ourselves in a position to compete. I just baseball," Hodges says. "Now they just have want this team to realize its fullest potential, to adapt to the varsity level and the speed and that's how we approach it." "It is a very solid reputation here," Harrer of the game. Let things come as they come and try not to put too much pressure on adds. "It's something that definitely doesn't them and keep coaching." happen a lot. You want to maintain that and Sisters has been in this situation before. keep that tradition going." Joey Morgan is a four-year starter. Jus— Reporter: 541-383-0307, tin Harrer cracked the starting lineup as

glucas®bendbulletin.com.


C5 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014

O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugotin.com/business. Also sooarecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

B&P500

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U.S. sales of new homes bounced back strongly in January after slowing a month earlier. That raised hopes that the spring buying season would be off to a good start after a seasonal slowdown intensified by higher mortgage rates and severe winter weather. The Commerce Department reports on Tuesday how sales of new homes fared last month. Economists predict sales slowed from January's pace.

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HIGH LOW CLOSE C H G. 16456.45 16290.79 16302.77 -28.28 DOW Trans. 7588.57 7507.35 7515.18 -27.11 DOW Util. 526.22 517.32 521.66 + 4 .34 -8.48 NYSE Comp. 10481.91 10381.77 10392.22 NASDAQ 4344.39 4268.34 4276.79 -42.50 S&P 500 1883.97 1863.46 1866.52 -5.49 -1.86 S&P 400 1393.60 1379.12 1379.87 Wilshire 5000 20188.89 19979.74 20007.07 -63.39 -5.24 Russell 2000 1208.14 1192.80 1193.73

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The stock market finished lower Friday. All of the major indexes fell less than 1 percent. Early in the day the Standard 8 Poor's 500 index rallied to an all-time intra-day high, but momentum shifted downward. Health care stocks posted the steepest drop in the S&P 500; biotech companies were especially hard-hit. Four of the 10 sectors in the index fell. Shares of Nike weighed on the Dow Jones industrial average. The sports apparel maker had the steepest drop among the 30 stocks in the average. Investors sold off after the company issued disappointing guidance for this quarter. Despite Friday's losses, all of the major indexes moved up for the week.

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DRI

Close:$50.66L1.36 or 2.8% The restaurant operator said its fourth-quarter revenue slipped 1 percent, hurt by a sales drop at its Red Lobster chain. $55 50

Exelon

EXC

Close:$32.55 L1.18 or 3.8% Credit Suisse said the competitive power sector has reached a bottom and upgraded the energy provider to "Outperform." $35 30

D

J F 52-week range

$44.78~

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$26.45~

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Vol.:2.8m (1.9x avg.) PE: 1 8.7 Vol.:13.9m (2.0x avg.) PE: 1 6 .3 Mkt. Cap:$6.65 b Yie l d: 4.3% Mkt. Cap:$27.91 b Yie l d: 3.8%

Media General

MEG Nike NKE Close: $17.44%0.10 or 0.6% Close:$75.21 V-4.06 or -5.1% The company is buying fellow TV The athletic shoe and apparel maker broadcaster LIN Media in a deal warned that a stronger U.S. dollar worth about $1.6 billion in cash and will dampen its results this quarter. stock. $25 $80

Alaska Air Group A LK 50.31 ~ 93.95 90. 7 6 - 1 .66 - 1.8 V L L + 23. 7 +4 7 .7 92 2 1 2 1 . 00f Source: Facteet Avista Corp AVA 25.55 — 0 30.34 29 .90 + . 3 7 +1 .3 V L L +6.1 +15. 5 45 8 16 1. 2 7f Bank ofAmerica BAC 11 . 23 — o 18.00 17 .56 -.36 -2.0 L L L +12. 8 +4 0 .5142081 17 0 . 04 Barrett Business B B SI47 .20 ~ 102.2 0 61 . 5 1 -.63 -1.0 V V V -33.7 +2 3.7 8 7 26 0 7. 2 Underthe gun? Booing Co BA 8 3.80 ~ 144. 57 122.58 -1.15 -0.9 v w v -10.2 +47.5 7745 21 2.92f 20 75 GameStop's latest quarterly Cascade Bancorp C AC B 4 . 31 ~ 7.00 5.63 +.1 3 + 2 .4 L L L +7.6 -21.4 67 5 — o .06 -0.2 L L L +8 .1 +41 . 6 35 0 2 4 0 . 48f earnings should provide insight ColumbiaBnkg COL B 19.85 29.85 29 .73 D J F M D J F M ColumbiaSportswear COLM 55.58 ~ 8 8.2 5 82.57- 1.23 -1.5 T L +4.9 +43. 5 12 1 31 1. 1 2f into the increasingly competitive 52-week range 52-week range Costco Wholesale CO S T 101.01 ~ 1 26.1 2 11 3.83 + . 67 $.0.6 L L V -4.4 +11.0 3973 2 6 1 . 24 video game market. $5.40~ $23 .87 $57.87~ $ 80.26 B R EW 7.13 ~ 18.70 1 5. 5 9 -.21 -1.3 L W T -5.1 +110.7 4 2 cc The retailer's sales grow when Craft BrowAlliance Vol.:2.4m (7.4x a vg.) P E: . . Vol.:15.8m (4.2x avg.) PE : 2 5 .6 F LIR 23.00 ~ 35.44 35.1 8 +. 5 3 $ .1.5 L L L + 16.9 $. 3 4.5 1 775 23 0 . 40f new blockbuster video games hit FLIR Systems Mkt. Cap:$1.53 b Yield:.. Mkt. Cap:$53.21 b Yie l d: 1.3% — 0 32.41 31 .95 + . 4 7 +1.5 L Hewlett Packard HP Q 19 . 07 L L + 14.2 +39 .9 22223 12 0 .64f the market, such as last fall's Homo Federal BncpID HOME 11.54 — 0 16.03 15 .60 - .03 -0.2 L L L +4.7 $.3 0 .7 6 4 dd 0.2 4 "Grand Theft Auto V,0 which Symantec SYMC Tiffany & Co. TIF I NTC 20.75 ~ 27.12 2 5.1 7 -.26 -1.0 L L V -3.0 +24.3 52692 13 0 .90 helped GameStop reverse a loss Intel Corp Close: $18.20 Y-2.71 or -12.9% Close: $90.737-0.44 or -0.5% -.07 -0.5 L L L +7.0 +44 . 3 17953 15 0 . 2 2 Koycorp K EY 9 .29 ~ 14.58 1 4. 3 6 in the third quarter. The company Krogor Co The security software maker termiThe luxury jewelry company posted KR 3 1 .24 — 0 45.25 43 .97 -.02 . . . L L L +11.2 +40 . 0 5 3 53 1 5 0. 6 6 nated President and CEO Steve a loss for its fourth quarter, dragged reports fourth-quarter financial Lattice Semi LSCC 4.17 ~ 8.00 7.54 -.34 -4.3 w w L +37 . 3 + 4 2.5 1259 cc Bennett and named a temporary redown by a charge tied to an unfavorresults on Thursday. Investors will LA Pacific L PX 14.51 ~ 22.55 1 6. 5 8 -.24 -1.4 V V V -10.4 -24.1 2659 14 placement. able arbitration. be listening for what the company MDU Resources MDU 23 .37 ~ 3 5.1 0 33.75 +.16+0.5 W W L +1 0.5 +38.0 2012 23 0.71 $25 $95 says about Wal-Mart's plans to Mentor Graphics M EN T 1 7.06 ~ 24.31 2 2. 7 7 -.01 . . . L L V -5.4 +31.1 8 9 1 1 8 0 . 20f 90 expand its trade-in video game Microsoft Corp MSFT 27.81 ~ 40.6 5 4 0. 1 6 -.17 -0.4 L L L +7.4 +46. 0 75051 15 1 . 1 2 20 85 program to its stores. Nike Inc 8 N KE 53.53 ~ 80.26 7 5. 2 1 -4.06 -5.1 V V V -4.4 +4 6.2 15478 26 0 . 9 6 NordstromInc J WN 52.16 ~ 63.72 62. 5 0 +. 1 4 +0.2 L L L +1.1 +19 . 6 1 9 34 1 7 1 .32f BOD D J F M F M J Nwst Nat Gas N WN 39.96 ~ 45.89 42.9 1 +. 2 5 +0 .6 V L L +0.2 +0.9 212 2 0 1. 8 4 52-week range 52-week range PaccarInc PCAR 47.12 — o 67.41 67 .39 + . 45 +0.7 L L L +13.9 +3 7 .3 3 005 20 0 .80a $7 7.05 ~ $27.10 $67.80~ $04.88 Planar Systms P LNR 1.55 ~ 2.93 2.17 -.05 -2.4 T W T -14.6 -4.6 4 0 dd Vol.: 60.9m(7.3x avg.) PE: 14.8 Vol.:4.5m (3.8x avg.) P E: 25.1 i ' • Plum Crook PCL 41.21 o — 54.6 2 41 . 7 0 -.05 -0.1 v w v -10.3 -13.2 1454 31 1 . 76 i Mkt. Cap:$12.59b Yie l d: 3.3% Mkt. Cap:$11.62b Yie l d: 1.5% Proc Castparts PCP 180.06 ~ 274. 9 6 25 2.80 -3.37 -1.3 L V V - 6.1 +31.3 8 6 5 2 2 0 . 1 2 BafowayInc SWY 22.26 ~ 40.25 3 8. 0 1 -.06 -0.2 V L L +16. 7 +5 4 .5 5 446 3 0.8 0 Endocyte ECYT Visa V Schnitzor Steel SCH N 23.07 ~ 3 3.3 2 28.78 +1.69 + 6.2 L L V - 11.9 + 0. 3 5 9 1 d d 0 . 7 5 Close:$28.17%13.53 or 92.4% Close:$223.37Lt.SS or 0.7% Sherwin Wms SHW 162.22 ~ 208. 6 3 20 0.41 -1.71 -0.8 V L L + 9.2 +18 . 6 99 4 2 7 2 . 20f European Union regulators said the A federal appeals court ruled the StancorpFncl SFG 40.32 — 0 69.51 67 .71 -.27 -0.4 L L L +2.2 +63. 5 35 9 13 1. 1 0f drugmaker's Vynfinit should be apFederal Reserve was authorized to cap debit card swipe fees, a move BtarbucksCp SBUX 55.96 ~ 82.50 7 6. 7 1 -.25 -0.3 L L V -2.1 +35.6 8315 3 2 1 . 04 proved as a treatment for ovarian cancer. retailers oppose. Triquint Semi TQNT 4.51 — 0 13.62 13 .18 -.37 -2.7 V L L +58.0 + 1 88.9 6087 d d $30 $240 UmpquaHoldings UM PQ 11.45— o 19.65 19 .07 -.26 -1.3 L L W -0.4 +47.7 1083 21 0.60a — 0 43.00 43 .02 + . 1 2 +0.3 L L US Bancorp USB 31.99 L +6 .5 +29. 0 11831 14 0 . 9 2 230 Cash in, cash out 20 WashingtonFodl WAF D 15.79 — o 24.35 24 .03 -.04 -0.2 L L L +3.2 +38 . 7 54 3 1 6 0. 4 0 220 The Commerce Department Wells Fargo & Co WF C 3 6 .19 — o 49.36 49 .12 + . 0 9 +0.2 L L L +8.2 +34. 2 30220 13 1 . 2 0 reports Friday its latest figures on Woyorhaousar WY 26.38 ~ 33.2 4 29. 29 + . 01 .. . w w w -7.2 -4.0 3980 25 0 . 88 D J F M D J F M Americans'income and spending. 52-week range 52-week range Income grew 0.3 percent in $8.18 ~ $33 .70 $157.72~ $ 235 50 January after no increase in DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, I3utare not included. I3- Annualrate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. I - Current Vol.:16.0m (19.3x avg.) P E: . . Vol.:9.5m (3.1x avg.) PE:28.4 annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent December, while spending grew Mkt. Cap:$1.02 b Yield:.. Mkt. Cap:$112.65b Y i eld: 0.7% dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend 0.4 percent, with the increase announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash SOURCE: Sungard AP value on ex-distributicn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is 8 clcsed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. stemming from a surge in spending on heating bills during the harsh winter. Economists InterestRates NET 1YR forecast income growth eased TREASURIES YEBT PVB CHG WK MO QTR AGO slightly in February. That could 3 -month T-bill . 0 5 .0 5 Revenue of $2.23 billion was down 1 percent, L w .06 Qprnpany translate into slower spending, an Shares of Darden Restaurants rose Friday after the company reported a lower quarterly 6 -month T-bill . 0 7 .0 8 -0.01 V W .10 important driver of the U.S. $pntllght be low the $2.26 billion analysts expected. Sales profit that was in line with its previously at its struggling Olive Garden and Red Lobster 52-wk T-bill .12 .13 -0.01 L L W .12 economy. announcedestimates. chains dropped by 5.4 percent and 8.8 2-year T-note . 4 3 .42 + 0 .01 L L L .26 Personal income For the quarter ended Feb. 23, Darden percent respectively. The yield on the ~ 'I percent change, seasonally adjusted 5-year T-note 1 .71 1 .70 + 0.01 L L L .79 10-year posted a profit of $109.7 million, or 82 Darden also said it still expects its 10-year T-note 2.74 2.77 -0.03 L L W 1.91 0 4% Treasury note cents per share, matching its guidance. fiscal 2014 earnings to be down between 30-year T-bond 3.61 3.67 -0.06 L V W 3.13 fell to 2.74 That was down almost 23 percent from 15 percent and 20 percent from last 0.3 percent Friday. year-ago earnings of $134.4 million, or year. Revenue at stores open at least a est. Yields affect NET 1YR 0.2 $1.02 per share. Analysts expected year, a key sales metric, is expected to 0.2 rates on BONDS YEST PVB CHG WK MOQTR AGO earnings of 85 cents per share. fall 5.5 percent. consumer loans. Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 3.42 3.47 -0.05 L W W 2 .87 0.1 Total return * 1 0 - Y R* Y TD 3 - Y R Darden ReStaurantS (DRI) F r iday's ciose:$50.66 Bond BuyerMuni Idx 4.79 4.80 -0.01 w w w 4. 1 5 -5.8% 6. 9 10.3 35 Barclays USAggregate 2.44 2.43 +0.01 L L 1.89 52-wEEK RANGE P/E ratlo Dlv yleld PRIME FED Barcl S&P 500 1.8 15.5 7.6 aysUS HighYield 5.34 5.27 +0.07 L W W 5.64 $45 55 19 : 4.3% -0.1 RATE FUNDS S 0 N D .: J F Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.44 4.45 -0.01 L W W 3. 9 4 *Annualized AP T o t al returns through March 21 "Based on trailing 12 month results Source: FactSet '13: '14 YEBT3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.91 1.91 ... L L L 1.09 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Source: Factaet Barclays US Corp 3.17 3.17 . . . L L W 2.78 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 AmdFocus SelectedMutualpunds

Darden continues to struggle

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HIS

AP

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 BalA m 24.54 -.02 +1.0 +16.4 +12.2+17.1 A A A CaplncBuA m 57.79 +.01 +0.2 +10.5 +9.3+13.9 8 A C CpWldGrlA m 45.10 -.20 -0.1 +18.7 +10.5+17.3 C C D EurPacGrA m 48.15 -.12 -1.9 +15.4 +6.3 +15.2 A 8 C FnlnvA m 51.42 -.19 +0.2 +23.0 +13.2+20.4 C D C S&P500ETF 1401384 186.20 -.73 GrthAmA m 43.63 -.46 +1.5 +27.5 +14.9+20.3 C C D Cisco 836398 21.64 -.19 John Hancock LgcpEqA m TAGRX IncAmerA m 20.78 -.01 +1.4 +13.7 +11.1+16.9 8 A A iShEMkts 810991 38.98 +.24 InvCoAmA m 37.06 -.15 +1.4 +25.2 +14.2+19.2 8 C D Microsoft 750513 40.16 -.17 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m37.27 -.21 -0.8 +19.6 +11.4+19.1 8 8 C SPOR Fncl 646702 22.40 WAMutlnvA x 39.69 -.24 +1.1 +23.4 +15.6+21.0 8 A 8 SiriusXM 628376 3.35 -.01 iShJapan 626020 10.88 -.05 Dodge &Cox Income 13.8 1 + .03 +2.1 + 2.3 + 4.6 +7.6 A 8 B IShChioaLC 586754 33.95 +.95 IntlStk 42. 77 -.04 -0.6 +20.2 +8.5+20.0 A A A Symantec 579108 18.20 -2.71 Stock 171.5 1 - . 53 +1.6 +29.8 +17.1+24.9 A A A Fidelity Contra 97.37 - . 8 1 +2.3 +28.0 +16.1+21.5 B 8 C Gainers GrowCo 124 . 36 -1.91+4.3 +34.4 +18.2+25.4 A A A NAME L AST C H G %C H G LowPriStk d 49.99 +.01 +1.1 +24.6 +15.8+25.0 C A C Fidoli 8 artan 500l d xAdvtg 66.43 -.20 +1.4 +23.3 +15.3+22.0 C 8 B Endocyto 28.17 + 13.53 + 9 2 .4 MagneGsh 2 .40 +.90 +60 . 0 «C FrankTomp-Franklin Income C m 2. 49 +.01 +2.8 +11.7 +9.3+17.1 A A A Aastrom rs 6 .49 +1 . 5 2 +3 0 .6 53 IncomeA m 2. 4 6 ... +2 . 9 + 12.4 +9.8+17.6 A A A Lightbrdge 3 .56 +.78 +28 . 1 Oakmark Intl I 25.76 +.04 -2.1 +18.7 +11.5+23.0 A A A LIN Media 2 6.32 + 4 . 8 3 +2 2 .5 0O Opponhoimor RisDivA m 19 . 91 -.06+1.1 +19.2 +13.0+17.9 E D E VertexEn 5 .54 +.89 +19 . 1 RisDivB m 17 . 81 -.06+0.9 +18.0 +11.9+16.8 E D E Morhingstar OwnershipZone™ DexMedia n 9 .71 +1 . 5 0 +1 8 . 3 RisDivC m 17 . 70 -.06+1.0 +18.3 +12.1+17.0 E D E CombiM wt 2 .35 +.34 +16 . 9 OeFund target represents weighted SmMidValA m45.41 -.10 +2.6 +25.9 +11.5+21.8 B E E AlliancOno 3 .04 +.39 +14 . 7 average of stock holdings SmMidValBm 38.26 -.08 +2.4 +24.8+10.6+20.8 B E E ChiNBorun 3 .57 +.45 +14 . 4 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowo Price Eqtylnc 32.97 + .04 +0.4 +18.6 +13.4+22.0 D C B Losers CATEGORY Large Gro wth GrowStk 53.2 5 - . 66 +1.3 +33.3 +17.6+23.6 A A A NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGBTAR HealthSci 63.0 2 -1.71+9.0 +46.8 +31.2+31.9 B A A RATING™ * * N N N Newlncome 9. 4 1 +.02+1.8 -0.3 +3.6 +6.0 D C D -2.98 -28.8 IntrCloud n 7.35 InterCld wt 4.69 -1.81 -27.8 ASSETS $1,095 million Vanguard 500Adml x 172.03 1.29 +1.4 +23.3 +15.3+22.0 C 8 8 -.88 -26.7 IsoRay 2.42 500lnv x 172.04 1.24 +1.4 +23.1 +15.2+21.8 C 8 8 EXP RATIO 1.09% Zion8 wt18 4.33 -.92 -17.5 CapOp 49.08 -.82 +6.3 +33.9 +18.0+23.7 A A A MANAGER Walter McCormick -5.38 -16.9 DB AgriSh 26.40 Eqlnc 29.91 +0.5 +19.1 +16.3+22.1 D A A SINCE 2011-12-07 IntlStkldxAdm 27.32 -.03 -2.5 + 96 +40 N A D E RETURNS 3-MO +2.0 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 31.40 -.09 +4.7 +31.7 +18.6+28.1 A A A YTD +0.2 TgtRe2020 27.40 -.02 +1.1 +12.1 +9.0+15.4 A A B NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +24.1 Tgtet2025 15.90 -.02 +1.0 +13.5 +9.6+16.5 8 8 C Paris 4,335.28 +7.37 + . 17 3-YR ANNL +12.0 TotBdAdml 10.67 +.02 +1.6 -0.3 +3.4 +4.7 C D E London 6,557.17 +14.73 + . 23 5-YR-ANNL +19.0 Totlntl 16.33 -.02 -2.5 +9.5 +3.9+15.1 D E C Frankfurt 9,342.94 +46.82 + . 50 TotStlAdm 47.60 -.14 +1.9 +24.4 +15.5+23.0 8 A A Hong Kong21,436.70 +254.54 +1.20 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 47.57 -.15 +1.9 +24.3 +15.4+22.9 8 8 A Mexico 40,021.73 +405.54 +1.02 Amazon.com Inc 6.2 Milan 20,972.24 -1 22.25 -.58 USGro 29.25 -.32 +2.0 +28.1 +16.4+21.5 8 8 C 5.48 Tokyo 14,224.23 -238.29 -1.65 Apple Inc Welltn 38.46 -.01 +1.4 +14.3 +11.3+16.1 8 A 8 5.02 Stockholm 1,351.43 -1.04 -.08 JPMorgan Chase &Co Fund Footnotes: t$Fee - covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 4.55 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,354.00 +41.30 + . 78 Google, Inc. Class A Zurich 8,289.76 +28.07 + . 34 Qualcomm, Inc. 4.52 redemption fee.Source: Morningstac

John Hancock Large Cap Equity's 10-yr annualized returns FAMILY Marhetsummary AmericanFunds rank in the top 6 percent if its Most Active peer group, but the fund ranks NAME VOL (00s) LAST CHG near the bottom over the last five BkofAm 1420806 17.56 -.36 years.

Commodities

FUELS

The price of oil rose above $99 a barrel on Friday as the U.S. and European Union expanded sanctions against Russia and warned of possible penalties against its energy industry.

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

Foreign Exchange

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6495 -.0009 -.05% 1.5179 Canadian Dollar 1.1 2 10 -.0033 -.29% 1.0239 USD per Euro 1.3795 +.0015 +.11% 1.2922 -.25 -.24% 9 4.92 JapaneseYen 102.21 Mexican Peso 13. 2035 -.0581 -.44% 12.4027 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.4803 +.0047 +.14% 3.6653 Norwegian Krone 6 . 0543 -.0086 -.14% 5.8357 South African Rand 10.8923 -.0029 -.03% 9.3042 Swedish Krona 6.4 2 4 3 + .0046 +.07% 6.4839 Swiss Franc .8825 -.0013 -.15% . 9460 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.1004 -.0057 -.52% . 9569 Chinese Yuan 6.2253 -.0024 -.04% 6.2190 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7587 -.0064 -.08% 7.7634 Indian Rupee 60.920 -.435 -.71% 54.345 Singapore Dollar 1.2738 -.0044 -.35% 1.2489 South KoreanWon 1080.03 + .8 8 + .08% 1115.30 -.09 -.29% 2 9.84 Taiwan Dollar 30.59

The U.S. dollar rose against the pound, but fell against the Euro and the Yen. The ICE dollar index, which measures the strength of the U.S. currency against six currencies, declined.

55Q QD

METALS

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

CLOSE PVB. 99.46 99.43 2.86 2.82 2.92 2.92 4.31 4.37 2.91 2.90

%CH. %YTD + 0.56 + 1 . 1 +0.32 +49.6 -0.04 -5.1 - 1.28 + 2 .0 + 0.43 + 4 . 4

CLOSE PVB. 1336.00 1330.50 20.29 20.40 1436.00 1434.80 2.99 2.98 788.75 772.00

%CH. %YTD +0.41 +11.2 - 0.58 + 4 . 9 + 0.08 + 4 .7 +0.60 -1 3.0 +2.17 +1 0.0

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVB. %CH. %YTD 1.44 1.44 - 0.29 + 7 . 1 Coffee (Ib) 1.71 1.74 -1.72 +54.6 Corn (bu) 4.79 4.79 +0.10 +1 3.5 Cotton (Ih) 0.93 0.92 +1.23 +1 0.2 Lumber (1,000 hd ft) 335.00 340.40 -1.59 -7.0 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.53 1.54 -0.39 +1 2.1 Soybeans (hu) 14.09 14.34 - 1.74 + 7 . 3 Wheat(hu) 6.93 7.04 -1.49 +1 4.5 1YR.


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014

BRIEFING

e ascou u 0 S '

Drought declared in CrookCounty Gov. John Kitzhaber on Friday declared a drought emergency in Crook County. A thin snowpack and anticipated low stream flows prompted the county one month ago to seek adrought declaration, which the state Drought Council endorsed on March10. Kitzhaber's declaration makes anumber of relief measures available to farmers and ranchers, including temporary, expedited well permits, water-right transfers and changes in water-source rights. It's a first step in seeking federal assistance, as well. Ochoco and Prineville reservoirs are close to capacity, but without snowpack to refresh them, they will drop to lower-than-normal levels once irrigation season kicks in, according to county Emergency Manager MichaelRyan. — Bulletin staff report

By E.Scott Reckard Los Angeles Times

A Federal Reserve rule

allowing banks to charge retailers 21 cents to process deb-

it-card transactions has been upheld by a federal appeals panel, a blow to big merchants, such as Wal-Mart and Target. A lower court judge invalidated the fee cap in July, ruling that the Fed's formula included costs that weren't allowed under the Dodd-Frank

regulatory reforms that Congresspassed afterthefinancial crisis. But in a ruling Friday for a three-judge panel, Judge

firms said they were relieved.

David Tatel of the U.S. Court

Retail Federation said in a statement. But the National Associa-

shield debit card companies

"generally rest on reasonable

Dodd-Frank provision that

tion of Federal Credit Unions

constructions of the statute."

said the decision "mitigates

Merchants, who had argued pointment, while financial

— National Retail Federation statement

and bigbanks," the National

said the central bank's rules

lower cap, expressed disap-

'The Fed ignored congressional intent and worked to shield debit card companies and big banks."

"The Fed ignored congressional intent and worked to

of Appeals in Washington

that they were entitled to a

e eeS

the harm that would have been done by the district court ruling." The dispute stems from a

required the Fed to set the so-called interchange fees, known colloquially as swipe fees, at a level reflecting the actual processing costs.

The Fed's staff recom-

mended cutting the fee from 44 cents per transaction on average to just 12 cents. But

after heated protestsfrom the financial industry, the Fed in June 2011 set a cap of 21 cents

per transaction.

WHAT'S GOINGUP

Congress to hear GM CEO testimony

Tet6eeo~olf Club

P,and)CakGriig<

1 ETHE OW

,-lOdgeS +,s+' 46

gssc>

By Todd Spangler, Brent Snavely and Nathan Bomey

Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin

Detroit Free Press

BEST OFTHE

TETHERDWLODGES 61250 Skyline RanchRoad

BIZ CALENDAR TUESDAY • Social Securityand Your Retirement: Learn to maximizeyour Social Security benefits; registration suggested;6 p.m.; MidOregonCredit Union,1386 N.ECushing Drive, Bend;541-382-1795. • Professional Enrichment Series:Bend Chamber ofCommerce; learn trendshuman resourceswill encounter in 2014 concerningpaid sick leave, theAffordable Care Act, time off,social media ban, minimumwageand direct deposit; registration required; $25for members; 11:30a.m.; BendGolf and Country Club,61045 Country ClubDrive; 541-3823221 or www.bendchamber. org. WEDNESDAY • Business After Hours: Tower TheatreFoundation; celebrate the10th anniversary of theTower's reopening; registration required; free; 5p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835N.W.Wall St., Bend;541-382-3221or tNww.bendchamber.org. APRIL2 • Digital Liability ina RegulatedWorld: Risks and Solutions:Learn about thegrowing liability involved withaccessingand handling private information; registration required;free; 9-11:30a.m.; Mt.Bachelor Village ResortConference Center,19717Mount Bachelor Drive,Bend;541389-5900 orwww.westontech.com/seminar. • BusinessStartttp Class: Learn what it takesto run abusiness,howto reach your customerbase,funding options ,moneyneededto get started andlegalities involved; registration required; $29;6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. APRIL5 • BootCamp:Central Oregon RegionalCouncil of the CommunityAssociations Institute; Topics: impactsof the FederalFair HousingAct impactsonyour HOArules, the great reservedebate and runningyour board meetings accordingtothe law; registration required; $25formembers,$40for nonmembers; 8a.m.-noon; The OxfordHotel,10 N.W. MinnesotaAve., Bend; 541-382-8436, contactus© caioregon.org orwww. caioregon.org. APRIL19 • Marketing101:Learnto create aFacebookpageand use social mediato market your product; registration required; $50perfarm/ ranch, onetimefee; 9 a.m.-noon;Central Oregon Community CollegeCrook County OpenCampus,510 S.E. LynnBlvd., Prineville; 541-480-1340 ortcf© cbbmaii.com. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal

WASHINGTON — Mary Barra, just two months on the job as General Motors Co.'s

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Owner:Tetherow Architect:Darren ThomasArchitecture General Contractor:SunWestBuilders Details:After about ayear of construction, Tetherow resort expects to openTetherow Lodges next month. The $10 million hotel project consists of two buildings on Skyline RanchRoad,the 19,827-square-foot west building and the 21,067-square-foot east building. Together, they will supply the resort with 50 rooms, said Carrie Ramoz,marketing manager for Tetherow. RamozsaidTetherow expectsthenew ac-

commodations will boost business. "We had goodpartnerships with hotels in town where wewould send our golfers," she said. "But now we'll be able to be amuch more all-inclusive experience for people." Ramoz said the hotel is scheduled to open April 17, and it's already fully booked for several summer weekends. Jon Page, superintendent for SunWest Builders, said they areworking on the finishing stages of construction. "We're working on our final inspections, and the owners aregetting ready," he said Friday. "We're working on landscaping and exterior painting."

CEO, will testify before a congressional subcommittee April 1 about a widening safety recall that threatens to damage theautomaker'sresurgent

Page said eachroom is a luxury suite with its own fireplace andbalcony that overlooks the golf course to the north and provides views of Newberry National Volcanic Monument to the south. The lodges arethe next step in the overall development of Tetherow, said Chris vander Velde, general managerand managing partner for Tetherow. "Their design and location are very fitting for what Tetherow is all about — great Central Oregon views and aninviting landscape for the outdoor enthusiasts," he wrote in anemail.

reputation following its emer-

gence frombankruptcy. Late Thursday, the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which March 10

announced it would investigate GM's recall of 1.6 million vehicles because of an ignition-switch defect that may

—Reporter.541-617-7818, rreesrg/bendt/ullet/n.com

affect airbag deployment, announced Barra's appearance. The committee said it wants

to know if "this tragedy could havebeenprevented and what can be done to ensure the loss

Mt. Gox claimsfinding 114M in lost bitcoins By Rachel Abrams

represent about 24 percent of

it reported the discovery of

known as "hot" and "cold"

New York TimesNews Service

the coins that went missing

the coins to the bankruptcy

wallets. A "cold" wallet

when the site failed.

writing down a digital key to access one's bitcoin on a scrapofpaper forlateruse or storing data on a thumb

bitcoin exchange that collapsed and filed for bankruptcy last month, said it had

tomers' bitcoin holdings and

found 200,000 bitcoins that were held in an "old-format"

more than 100,000 of its own coins, or more than $450 mil-

court on March 10, and that it moved them to an offline site from March 14 to March 15. The latest announcement is likely to add to the questions about Mt. Gox's col-

wallet, or digital storage file. Mt. Gox's former chief

lion worth. Based on today's

lapse. Even the company said

rates, the found coins are worth about $114 million.

it was still uncertain about

Mt. Gox,the Tokyo-based

executive, Mark Karpeles,

Last month, Mt. Gox said it had lost 750,000 of its cus-

just this year when indications

of a problem — and hundreds of consumer complaints-

stretchedbackto 2003. The acting head of the National Highway Traffic Safety

drtve. Thieves can steal bitcoin

wallets that were used be-

money outside of the United

the company concluded in its

fore June 2011. That is when the company discovered

States. They also want a full

statement dated Thursday. Bitcoins can be stored

Administration, David Fried-

man, also is expected to testify before the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee about why federal regulators

materiaL

Many Bitcoin supporters

and theexact number of bitcoins which disappeared

have said that the collapse of

is still under investigation,"

online or offline, otherwise

House committee is investigating why the recall happened

by accessing it through a computer network, or by taking the physical storage

what led up to its failure. "Please note that the reasons fortheir disappearance

accounting of any assets Mt. Gox has left. Mt. Gox said

to 12 deaths and 31 crashes in 2005-07 Chevrolet Cobalts, 2003-07 Saturn Ions and several other pre-2008 models with the same ignition switch. The

can be nothing more than

issued a statement in JapaSince then, plaintiffs have nese and English on the com- filed a class-action lawsuit, pany's website, saying that seeking a temporary injuncafter it filed for bankruptcy, tion to keep Karpeles or his it began researching these companyfrom moving any

the 200,000 bitcoins, which

of life" doesn't happen again. GM has linked the defect

Mt. Gox is part of the shakeout of the early, less sophisti-

didn't move more quickly to

cated Bitcoin companies that

with ignition switches. NHTSA has launched its own inves-

contain the apparent problem

have lost ground to newer, more well-oiled businesses.

tigation as well

PEOPLE ONTHEMOVE

Boylen

Rees

J ohnson

Anderson

Long

Griffin

• John Boylenhas beenpromoted to retail relationship officer at Columbia Bank in Bend.Boylenhas 25 years of experience in banking and will focus on development and management of small business relationships. • Kris Reesis the top-seiiing agent at Coldwell Banker Mayfield Realty forFebruary. • Leanne JohnsonandCec DeClerckare the top listing agents at Coldwell Banker Mayfield Realty forFebruary. • Sophie Clarkhas joined the Event Divas team as an associate. Clark hasabackground in nonprofit work, with a focus in outreach, organization and development.

06C lerck

Wise

Clar k

Shropshire

Bar k er

Cook

Ferrara

Thomas

Forsey

Mozelle

Jim Tennant

Moiiie Tennant

DiTullio

Stephensott

Rinehart

Dempsey

Phelps

Rogers

• Lisa Shropshirehas joined the Event Divas team as anassociate. Shropshire has abackground in fundraising, nonprofits and startup companies. • Diana Barkeris the top listing agentfor the Windermere Redmond office for February. • Audrey Cookis the top-seiiing agent for the Windermere Redmond office for February. • Tom Ferrarais the branch manager of the newHomeStreet Bank HomeLoanCenter in Bend. Ferrara has experience as aloan originator, senior mortgage loan officer, certified builder rep andsales manager. • Rachelle Thomasis amortgage

loan officer at the newHomeStreet Bank HomeLoan Center in Bend. Thomas was previously an escrow officer and bankmanager. • Jennifer Forseyis a senior mortgage adviser at the new HomeStreet BankHomeLoan Center in Bend. Forsey hasover15 years of loan experience. • Naomi Mozelleis an executive assistant at the newHomeStreet Bank HomeLoan Center in Bend. Mozelie, a mortgage loan professional, has over10 years of loan experience. • Seth Anderson,principal architect of Ambient Architecture LLC, has earned alicense to practice architecture in Arizona. Anderson is additionally licensed in Oregon,

Washington, California andTexas. • Illlark Longis the top producer at Evergreen HomeLoansfor February. • Dan Griffin,principal broker at The Garner GroupRealEstate in Bend, has returned to his duties of being real estate broker after serving as office manager for several years. • Christina Wise,licensed broker at The Garner GroupRealEstate in Bend, has beenpromoted to the marketing department, specializing in new businessdevelopmentand special projects. • Jim and Moiiie Tennanthave joined TheGarner Group aslicensed brokers. Both haveprior real estate experience from LasVegas, where Jim also holds a real estate license.

• Ron DiTullio,account manager at Zolo Media, has joined theFamily Access Network Foundation board. • Sandy Stephenson,CFOat the Bend Chamber of Commerce, graduated from the three-year Academy program, a professional development program presented by the Western Association of Chamber Executives. • The RDP Team,(Cleme Rinehart, Patty DempseyandAndrea Phelps), is the top listing agent at the Windermere Bendoffice for February. • Gail Rogersis the top-seiiing agentat the Windermere Bend office forFebruary.


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Religious services, D2-3 Support groups, D4 Volunteer search, D5 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/community

SPOTLIGHT

sbePsWu

'L 4

e

Bend park and

rec sign-ups

Bend Park 8 Recreation District will begin

registration for summer programs starting Monday. Programdescriptions and campinformation will beavailable online at www.bendparksandrec.org. Outdoor and overnight camps, sports campsandclinics, arts and crafts classes, outdoor adventuresand much moreareavailable for sign-ups. Registration will begin atSundaynight at midnight at https://register.bendparksandrec. org and in personduring regular businesshours Monday: starting at 8 a.m. at thedistrict's main office (799 S.W.Columbia St.); 5:15a.m. at Juniper Swim &Fitness Center (800 N.E.6th St.); and 7:30 a.m. atBend Senior Center (1600S.E. Reed MarketRoad). Contact: 541-389-

@k

'

~

" ,

. t'jit'fI",

1

/

e

s r e

7275.

Bend wildlife rehad openhouse High Desert Wildlife Rescue 8 Rehabilitation (62410 EricksonRoad, Bend) will host afree open housefrom11 a.m.-3 p.m. March29. The event is being held in honor of the rescue andrehab's first anniversary of helping sick and injuredCentral Oregon wildlife get back on their wings or feetand

Photos by Andy Tullis /The Bulletin

Tim Cash of Far From Earth Films works on a project last week. The Central Oregon filmmaker, whose technology-rich studio is situated on his family's 2t/~-acre plot of land 5 miles north of Bend, recently produced the100th music video of his career.

returned to the wild.

Visitors will seethe facility, meet thestaff and learn how tohelp the wildlife of theHigh Desert. Contact: info©highdesertwildlife.org or 541241-8680.

Fundraiser for veteran is tonight The Prineville Band of Brothers is hosting a spaghetti dinner tonight (Saturday) to raise $1,300 to sendWorld War II veteranJackMarsicano andhis wife to Washington, D.C., onan Honor Flight. Mariscano served in the U.S.Navyfrom1935 to1955, and asa diver was sent out to find survivors following thePearl Harbor attack. His ticket on the HonorFlight is free, but his wife, whois also his caregiver, must pay her way onthe fourday trip. The fundraiser will take place at 4p.m. at the Elks Lodge,151 N.Main St., Prineville, andhasa suggested donation of $10. Peoplewhowant to make aseparate cash donation toward this effort should call BobErwinat

• Central OregOn filmmaker CelebrateSa mileStOne moment in hiscareer — his 100th musicvideo

Music video director Tim cssh of Fsr From Esdh Films Plsys guitsr inhis studio.

O

By David Jasper• The Bulletin

See Tim Cash's100th music video, plus others, on The Bulletin's website:bendbulletin.csm/timcash

Far From Earth Ranch

es, Virginia, they still make music videos. In fact, Central Oregon filmmaker Tim Cash has made a lot of them. Over the past several years, his company, Far From Earth Films, has produced videos for a

Actually, Cash stayed right at his home 5 miles north of Bend to make the video. Fittingly, he calls the 2 t/z-

acre spread, which he purchased for a song in fall 2010, Far From Earth Ranch. The family lives in a restored man-

variety of local, national and international music artists from

genres inciuding folk, rock and reggae. Which is why, when he recently shot the 100th music video of

ufactured home that was so dilapidated, Cash said, "My Realtor said, 'That thing's going to fall apart on you.'" Cash caredmore about the views of Smith Rock in the distance, and the potential of another building on the

hiscareer,Cash,36,knew he wanted to do something special. shooting, directing and editing a "fan video" for California folk-

property. It would eventually become his company's state-of-the-art studio, "(It) was just an empty shell ... but my brain was just like, 'Oh, that will be the studio one day!'" he said.

pop singerBrettDennen's"When We Were Young."

driveway from the home, has a

He enlisted his two kids and a family friend, and went to town

The studio, situated across the

500-square-foot sound stage, editing bay and a small band space, where the budding guitarist hasbeen known to jam with his boys, Kiran, 8, and Isa, 5.

"I have a piece of Central Oregon that I am never going to give up," Cash said."Our mortgage is half of what we were paying for rent in Bend. Even if business dried up and I had to go back to waiting tables — that's always an option — we could still afford it." Business drying up seems unlikely. Cash alsodoes commercial and documentary work, and he's at various stages of completing new music videos for artists including Marcio Andre Santos, of Brazil, Noah Undefeated (Costa Rica) Ju Drum (Nigeria) and Jah Sun (California). SeeCash/D5

541-447-5451.

Contact us! • Community events: Email event information to events©bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Contact: 541-383-0351. — From staff reports

Corrections A story titled "Bend-area buttes are beckoning," which ran March19 on PageD1, gave an incorrect name for hiker Kolby J. Kirk's employer. It is Vantage Clinical Solutions. In a Religious Services listing for Father's House Church, which appeared Saturday, March15, on PageD2, the pastor's title was incorrect. The correct title is Pastor RandyWills. The Bulletin regrets the errors.

More andmoremenare picking up knitting needles By Nicole Brodeur

National Endowment for the

The Seattle Times

Arts data shows that the num-

SEATTLE — Knitting is

supposed to be a calm and peaceful pastime. Unless you're a man.

e

"c

Every time Chuck

ber of needle arts participants went from 29.1 million to 31.5

"I feel like a piece to the

A few thousand of them

all do our part to make this

signed up to attend Vogue

industry what it is." Delmont's grandmother

overall puzzle," Delmont said millionbetween 2008 and 2012. of men in the industry. "We

Wilmesher pulls out his needles, someone notices,stares

Knitting LIVE at Bellevue, Wash.'s Meydenbauer Center

for a moment and asks, in so

last weekend. Sponsored by Vogue Knitting magazine, the event is

many words: What do you think you're doing? "Itdrives me crazy when

to a knitter what Oz was to

people act like they've never seen a man knitting before," said Wilmesher, 44, who lives in Kent, Wash. "I know so

many guys who knit. There was a male knitting retreat

and there were 48 guys there!"

Ellen M. Banner/ Seattle Times / MCT

knitted their own sweaters and hats until manufacturing

Dorothy Gale: An explosion of color and possibility and adventure. New this year was a panel

Chuck Wilmesher is director of new product research and develop- discussion called "Men at ment at the Skacel Collection Inc., a yarn distributor based in Kent, Work," where male knitwear Wash. "It's tricky when your hobby becomes your job," he said. designers and store owners "But it's my life." were to speak about toiling in

For hundreds of years, Wilmesher said, fishermen

a female-dominated field. The panel included Rob made it less a necessity than

a hobby.

That hobby — and the DIY culture — continues to grow.

lection Inc., a yarn distributor based in Kent.

Delmont, director of sales and

marketing at the Skacel Col-

taught him how to knit, but

he didn't take it up again until he started working at Skacel 16 years ago after a stint at Microsoft. "Knitting speaks to ev-

erybody differently," he said. "I love fiber, I love the creativity." Wilmesher was living in St.

Louis seven years ago when a male friend who was a knitter

offered to teach him. "I thought I wouldn't enjoy it," Wilmesher said, "and I fell m love with tt.e SeeKnitting /D4


D2 THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014

Religiousfamilies find calling infoster care By Annysa Johnson

,u ll

Milwaukee Journaf Sentinel

I 1'

MILWAUKEE — Charonne and Kevin Ganiere never re-

,~ : ; , ~ y t p,

"Children who come into foster care are there often because of abuse and neglect,

i

ally pictured themselves as foster parents.

They'd always talked about adopting, maybe when their

and I can't think of

',I II

anybody who needs love and hope more

/

i~" "

two small sons were older.

J

But they couldn't envision bringing children into their lives, loving them as their own and then letting them go — back to their biological par-

than they do." — Charonne Ganiere, foster parent

ents or an adoptive family. It

just seemed too painful. programs, clothing banks or

That was then. Today, the G anieres areparents to five

other initiatives that would be

children younger than 10, including three toddlers wel-

helpful to foster families. "Not everybody can fos-

Gary porter/Milwaukee Journal sentinel /Mc r

comed through the local fos-

Meals are hectic as Charonne Ganiere, center, whosolicit helps

ter a child. But everyone can

ter care system, with no guar-

from her children In preparation for dinner earlier thls month at their Germantown, Wls., home.

do something," said Ganiere,

antees that they will be able to adopt them.

Divinely inspired Devout Christians, the Ger-

a family gets a new placement, supplies or clothing dominated for years by international adoptions. However,

mantown, Wis., couple sees their change of heart as divinely inspired. Now they've launched a fledgling nonprofit aimed at encouraging

that has waned as criticisms arose about corruption, the

more Christians to open their

posing tighter restrictions. As international adoptions d eclined from a p eak o f

hearts and homes to children in temporary need of families and helping churches support their members who do so. "There are a lot of kids in the greater Milwaukee area

in need of a good, Christian home," said Charonne, who with husband Kevin is dual-li-

trafficking of children not truly orphaned and other concerns, and countries im-

24,000 in 2004 to 9,000 last

year, many Christian organizations turned their atten-

tion to children in their home countries. "In terms of

f o ster care,

there has always been a

censed to take children both Christian presence but what preapproved for adoption and we're seeing now is a sigthose who are not. nificant growth in the en"As we started going gagement of ordinary Christhrough the process, it just tians in f o stering, fosterstirred our hearts to the great- ing-to-adopt, mentoring and er need," she said. "Yes, there family preservation," said are kids who need to be ad- Jedd Medifind, president of opted. But there are also kids the Christian Alliance for who need a home for just a lit- Orphans, which promotes its tle while." annual Orphan Sunday in The Ganieres are founders churches around the country. of OneHope27,named for a A dvocates b e lieve t h a t Biblical passage that exhorts good people with the right C hristians to care for w i d motives and proper training ows and orphans. Theirs, and can help improve the lives of similar initiatives around the children and families in their world, are part of the larger own communities. "We've seen through Charso-called orphan care movement that has exploded in onne and our other faithsome Christian circles over based recruiters that there the past two decades. are a lot of great families out That movement had been there," said Laura Goba of

VOICES OF FAITH

What doyoutell your congregantswhoseteens don't believe inGod? The Kansas City Star

Take joy in God's presence. Don't berate God for human

Leadby example

failures. Rejoice in life giving

Rabbi Mark H. Levin, Congregation Beth Torah, Overland Park, Kan.:

credit to God, and your chil-

dren will be impressed with your joy in living.

Teenagers rebel in all culLook for causes tures and throughout time. But they are peculiarly The Rev. Betty Hanna-Withsensitive to hypocrisy and erspoon, Ebenezer A.M.E. observe their parents' actions Church, Kansas City,Mo.: closely. I don't worry about

There is no one first thing

teens who don't believe in God. The teenager's theolo-

that I say. I do, however, try to bring together what I know of the parents, the child, his age, the studies she may be pursuing and the family's grounding in their faith.

gy won't remain forever. But

teens require experiences of adults they admire who believe and act with sincerity. I

advise adults to act absoluteThen, I start at the informaly consistently according to tion gathering place, "What their cherished values. do you think is going on?" There's an old Aramaic Parents may be able to expression, "Tokho k'baro," share that a crisis has ocmeaning "His insides are curred, rocking the child's like his outsides": Performing faith foundation. Perhaps with integrity. new college studies have Well-meaning parents of- brought forth t hi s d eclaraten act hypocritically. Some tion. Difficult situations ofencourage education for their

"whether that is a meal when

ten cause all of us to raise the questions about the goodness

children but never pick up a book themselves. Some de- of God. mand children be friendly, Studies may lead to questhen criticize family m em-

tions about the unexplainable

bers unmercifully behind

miraclesofGod, orteenagers

Children's Hospital of Wis- donations, or just someone to consin Community Services, talk to when kids are running an agency that licenses foster around screaming and you families. need some sanity." "It's not about being a savFamilies that are licensed to ior to these kids. It's about accept children in foster care supporting the children and are limited in just how much their families," said Goba, religious influence they can whose agency is collaborat- exert. Judges and placement ing with OneHope27 on its agencies go out of their way recruitment efforts. "It's real- to place children raised in a ly about wrapping around the p articular tradition w it h a whole family, helping them family that holds similar beheal and helping the kids go liefs. Likewise, foster parents home." are prohibited from forcing At any one time, Milwau- their religion on children they kee County has about 2,000 bring into their homes. children in foster care, with The Ganieres understand fewerthan 700 licensed foster that and say it's not about families. strong-armed c o nversions but sharing the love of Christ

Pilot programs

whether that child embraces it or not.

The Ganieres, who attend Life Church in Germantown,

"Children who come into are piloting the program there fostercare are there often beand at two other sites — The cause of abuse and neglect, Ridge Community Church in and I can't think of anybody Greenfield and Christ Church who needs love and hope in Mequon. Andthey've commore than they do," Ganiere piled a list of about 25 other sald. "Are we ever going to sit a candidates, churches that have 30 or more foster fami- child down and say you must lies already in their pews. a ccept Christ or y o u'll n ot The program will differ move from that chair? No," depending on the site, but it she said. "That's not a relamight include informational tionship. It's about exposing sessions for families exploring them to the love and hope the possibility of foster care, of Christ, and hoping they get-togethers for foster fami- choose that for themselves latlies and their children, meal er in life."

Friars turn toonline'begging' to restore St.Francissanctuary By Alvise Armellini

cy last year.

dpa

St. Francis' cell — a small,

windowless room with an ars in Rome need $125,000 imposing altar that was to restore the cell where added in the 17th century their namesake saint once — has walls blackened by slept when visiting medie- smoke from candles and oil val popes and have turned lamps, falling plaster and a to online crowdfunding to ceilingdamaged by woodraise the sum. worms. It also needs new "For us, crowdfunding electrical an d v e n tilation is a form of modern beg- systems. ging," Friar Stefano TambuThe aim is to complete the ro, head of the Franciscan work by theend of Septemmonastery of St. Francis at ber so that the restored cell Ripa in Rome's Trastevere could be inaugurated Oct. neighborhood, said Friday. 4, St. Francis' feast day, at a Begging is a core Francis- ceremony to which the pope ROME — Franciscan fri-

can tradition. With that in mind, Tamburo said he made a con-

has been invited.

So far, the online appeal on Kickstarter, a popular crowdfunding p l a t form, has raised just more than $17,500.

scious decision not to seek any financial support from the Vatican or from the Italian state, which owns the St. Francis at Ripa church and

Friars need to hit $125,000 by April 10 or their online

is formally responsible for its upkeep.

endeavor will fail, forcing them t o

"We believe that public

s eek a l t ernative

our discussion, I ask parents

God with their own achieve-

money should be spent on social programs," he said.

is to make sure that the chil-

I ask the parents to make

tions and expects us to rise to God's expectations. Those who lead by example are most likely to pass their values on to others.

every effort to make sure the child encounters the great un-

Weekly Arts Sr Entertainment ••

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knowable God of true faith.

But finally, I concede no one can makeanother believe.

ANTIOCHCHURCH:Sr. Pastor Ken Wytsma; part of a series on the bookofJude,followed by Redux Q-and-A; 9:30 a.m. Sunday; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St., Bend. BEND CHURCH OFTHE NAZARENE: Pastor Virgil Askren; "Onething you will never buy atGoodwill" based on Lamentations 3:19-24; 9 a.m. (Hispanic) and10:15a.m. Sunday; 1270 N.E. 27th St., Bend. COMMUNITYBIBLE CHURCH AT SUNRIVER: Pastor Glen Schaumloeffel; "Coming Short of Rest," based onHebrews4:1-11 as part of the series, "Better: The Supremacy of Christ"; 9:30 a.m. Sunday; 1 Theater Drive, Sunriver; 541-593-8341 or www.cbchurchsr. org. COMMUNITY OF CHRIST: Elder Shawn Sahlberg; "ShareYour Story" based onJohn 4:5-42; 11 a.m. Sunday, 10:45 a.m. praise singing; 20380 CooleyRoad, Bend; 503-307-7083. COMMUNITYPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: Pastor Rob Anderson; "Where DoWeFind Living Water For aThirsty Soul," based onJohn4:1-17; 9 and11 a.m.Sunday; 529N.W.19th St., Redmond. CONCORDIALUTHERAN MISSION: The Rev.Willis Jenson; "The Loveof God Takesthe Form of the Cross," based on Romans5:8; 11 a.m. Sunday; "The NewSong Christ Sings isthe Gospel of HisSaving Righteousness of the Cross through HisWord and Sacraments,"based on Psalm 40:3; 11a.m. Sunday (Divine service);1 p.m. Sunday (Vespers Service); Terrebonne Grange Hall, 828611th St., Terrebonne. DISCOVERYCHRISTIANCHURCH: Minister DaveDrullinger; "Written onthe Heart," based onMatthew 5:14-20; 10 a.m.Sunday; Adult Bible study, 9 a.m.Sunday;334 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend;541-382-2272 or discoverychristianchurch.com. EASTMONT CHURCH:Pastor John Lodwick; "Will Jesus ReceiveEven Me?" part of "Jesus Journey: 40 Days in the Footsteps of Christ," based on Luke5:1-11; 9 (classic) and 10:45 a.m. (contemporary) Sunday; 62425EagleRoad, Bend; 541-382-5822. FATHER'SHOUSECHURCHOF GOD:GuestSpeaker Craig Gilbert from Colorado will speak; 9and 10:45 a.m. Sunday;Youth Group, 7 p.m. Wednesdays; 61690Pettigrew Road, Bend. THE FELLOWSHIPAT BEND:Pastor Loren Anderson; "WhenKarma Fails," based onEcclesiastes 7:1529:14;10 a.m. Sunday;Summit High School, 2855 N.W.Clearwater Drive, Bend. FIRST PRESBYTERIANCHURCH: Pastor Steven Koski; "Spacious Christianity: Wholeness"; 9 a.m., 10:45 a.m. and5:01 p.m. Sunday; Wednesday Lent dinner, teaching, discussio nandworship5:30-7 p.m .; 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend;541-3824401 or www.bendfp.org. FIRSTUNITED METHODIST CHURCH: TheRev.Thom Larson; The Deadly Sin ofEnvy," based on Ephesians2:4-10; 9a.m. (contemporary) and11 a.m. (traditional) Sunday;680 N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-382-1672. FOUNDRYCHURCH: MikeCoughlin; "The Story: A LifeChanging Conversationwith Jesus";10:15a.m. Sunday; 60N.W.OregonAve., Bend. GRACEFIRSTLUTHERAN CHURCH:Pastor Joel LiaBraaten; "What Are YouThirsty For" and "WalkingWet";9:30a.m.Sunday; 2265 N.W. Shevlin Park Road, Bend. GRACELUTHERANCHURCH AT EAGLE CREST: Pastor Randy VanMehren; "Jesus Christ Calls Sinners to Life Through Faith and Trust in Him"; Sunday at10:30 a.m.; 7525 Falcon Crest Drive, Redmond. JOURNEY CHURCH:Pastor Keith Kirkpatrick; "The Killer Commandment," concluding theTen Commandments series; 10a.m.and 6:30 p.m. Sunday; 70N.W.Newport Ave., Bend. NATIVITY LUTHERANCHURCH: Pastor Chris Kramer; "All Are Welcome"; based onExodus17:1-7, Psalm 95, Romans5:1-11 andJohn

EVENTS AND MEETIMGS MARCH 27 "SAVINGYOUR LIFE:FREEING THE DISTRACTED MIND": Michael Stevensexplores waysof relaxing into a moreauthentic way ofliving drawing uponBuddhist practices; $10donation suggested; 7 p.m., doors open 6p.m.; The Old Stone,157 N.W.Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-388-3352 orwww. naturalminddharma.org. APRIL 3 DARRELL EVANS:Participate in live worship, a discussion aboutworship, followed bymusic; $5, group of five for $20, reservations requested; 6-8 p.m.; Book& Bean,395N. MainSt., Prineville; 541-447-3778 or www. darrellevansbandb.eventbrite.com. APRIL M THE KNOX BROTHERS: Six brothers sing Southern gospel music; free, donations accepted; 6p.m.; RedmondAssembly of GodChurch, 1865 W.Antler Ave.; 541-923-0898 or sgm©bendbroadband.com. APRIL 14 PASSOVERCOMMUNITY SEDER: Afamily-friendly, festival Passover Seder led byRabbi Johanna Hershenson, with Sedercustoms; open to thepublic; $35,$15for children ages6-12, free for children age 5 andyounger, reservations requiredbyApril7 6pm doors open 5:15p.m.; St. Charles Bend conferencecenter, 2500N.E.Neff Road; 541-388-8826 orwww. bethtikvahbend.org.

The St. Francis at Ripa complex holds not only St.

Francis' cell but also works by Gian Lorenzo Bernilived in poverty and sought ni and Giorgio de Chirito clean up t h e C a tholic co and it gives shelter to Church from corruption. 18 young people, most of Pope Francis found him them migrants from Africa such an inspirational figure or Asia, whom friars help that he adopted his name find jobs or complete their when appointed to the papa- educations.

own. Their role as parents

a creator who watches our ac-

SERVICES

4:5-42; 9 (informal) and11 (formal) a.m. Sunday; Bible study,10a.m. Wednesdaysand 6p.m. Thursdays; 60850 Brosterhous Road,Bend; 541-388-0765. SHILOHRANCH COWBOY CHURCH:Pastor Jordan Weaver; 9 and10:30 a.m. Sunday, 7p.m. Monday; Me n'sBiblestudy7a.m. Thursday; TheRimRock Riders Equestrian Facility Cafe, Brasada Ranch, 17037S.W.Alfalfa Road, Powell Butte; Women's Bible101, 7 p.m. Thursday atJenay Brewer's home, 541-241-4220 for directions. SPRINGS OFLIFE MINISTRIES: Evangelistand Bible teacherEddie Cienda; 7 p.m.Wednesdays; The Sound GardenStudio, 1279 N.E. Second St., Bend. ST. PAUL'8ANGLICANCHURCH: Father JohnPennington;"DoesGod Have Fingerprints," based onLuke 11:14-28; Sundayat10:30a.m. (Third Sunday in Lent); 1108W.Antler Ave., Redmond. TRINITY LUTHERANCHURCH: Rev. David A. Carnahan; "Come to the Water," based on John 4:5-42; 8 a.m. (guitar-led worship) and 11 a.m. (organ/piano-led worship) Sunday; 2550 N.E. Butler Market Road; 541-382-1832 or www. trinitylutheranbend.org. UNITARIANUNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIPOF CENTRAL OREGON: Rev. Alex Holt; "Magical Thinking, Mental Health andUs"; 11 a.m. Sunday; at theOldStone Church,157 N.W.Franklin Ave., Bend.; 541-385-3908 or www. uufco.org. VERTICALCHURCH OF GOD: Pastor Jeremy Seibert; 10:30 a.m.Sunday;youthnight,6 p.m. Wednesdays; 52460 Skidgel Road, La Pine. WESTSIDECHURCH: PastorSteve Mickel; "Seven"; 6:30 tonight and 8, 9and10:45 a.m. Sunday; 2051 N.W. Shevlin Park Road, Bend. WESTSIDESOUTH CAMPUS: Pastor Steve Mickel simulcast; "Seven"; 10:30 a.m. Sunday; 1245 S.E. Third St., Bend. WESTSIDESISTERS CAMPUS: Pastor Steve Mickel simulcast; "Seven"; 10:30 a.m. Sunday; 442 Trinity Way, Sisters. WESTSIDEONLINE CAMPUS: Pastor Steve Mickel simulcast; "Seven"; 6:30 tonight and 8, 9 and10:45 a.m. Sunday; www. westsidelive.org. WESTSIDERADIO CAMPUS: Pastor Steve Mickel prior weekservice; "Cloud, Crowd,Community"; 8:30 a.m. Sunday;Heirborne radio show on KBND,AM1110. ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH:Pastor Eric Burtness; "How DoKnow I God is Good?" aspart of the series, "How Do I Know?"; 8:30 and11 a.m. Sunday; SoupSupperandLenten Vespers, 6:15 p.m.Wednesday; 1113 Black Butte Blvd., Redmond.

St. Francis of Assisi was a 13th-century monk who

to accept that their children must come to a faith of their

ments, praying in off moments dren are exposed to the great and modestly, and sacrificing minds of the faith, are enfor the sake of others without gaged in spiritual retreats expectation of reward. These and missions, always looking actions testify to our faith in for how God speaks to them.

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

sources of funding.

their b acks. Some e x pect may simply disagree with the children to believe in God, faith of their parents. After

but never pray, give to charity or lend a helping hand without being asked and thanked. Parents should try crediting

RELIGIOUS SERVICES

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SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN D 3 "Celtic Cross" Christianity

"The Wheel of Dharma" Buddhism

"Star of David"

Judaism

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1551 NW First St.• 541-382-6100

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH HOUSE OF COVENANT 230 NE Ninth, Bend is a member of the Messianic Synagogue (Across Ninth St. from Bend High) Union for Reform Judaism. Est. 1994 All Are Welcome, Always! (South of Portland Ave.) Our members represent a wide range of We provide a congregational setting Church Service8 Sunday School: Jewish backgrounds. Spacious Christianity 0 0 for Jews and Christians alike. If you're 10 am 0 We welcome interfaith families Preaching; Steven Koski Wed. Testimony Meeting: 7:30 pm interested in leaming the Bible from a Wholeness and Jews by choice. Childcare provided. Hebrew perspective, come join us at: Sunday, March 23 Our monthly activities include: Services, religious education for Reading Room: 9:00am contemporary Bear Creek Center children 8 adults, Hebrewschool, Torah 115 NW Minnesota Ave. 10:45am traditional study, social action projects and social 21300 Bear Creek Rd. Mon. through Fri.: I I am - 4 pm 5:01 pm relaxed activities Bend, OR. 97701 Sunday SchooL 3 years to 6th grade Sat. 12 noon-2 pm Nursery-care provided Our Shabbat Services are on Rabbilohanna Hershenson Saturday mornings at 10:00 a.m. Conversation with Marcus Borg ECKANKAR Our ministries include: »'»"v Sunday, March 30, 9:00 and 10:45am Annual Passover Community Seder Reiigilon of the Theologian and Jesus scholar Marcus Monday, April 14 at 6:00 pm Lightand Sound ofGod Borg and Intern Pastor Ran Wemer share • Davidic dance and worship For information 8 reservations: www. a conversation about scripture and its » » "Star F Crescent" Omkar» (Aum) Yin/Yang» Taoist! • Children's ministry and nursery Spiritual Experiences bethtikvahbend.org transformative ability. Hinduism Confumanism Islam • Hebrew classes Past Lives, Dreams, Soul Travel Introductory presentation 8 discussion Wednesday In Lent • Home groups Saturday, April 19 - 9:00 amPastor led teachings by Munch 8Torah Study • Teaching from the Torah and the Brit Steven Koski, Jenny Warner Saturday, March 22 Saturday, April 19 - 10:30 amHadashah (New Testament) and Ron Werner HOLY RKDKEMER CATHOLIC 3:00 pm at the East Bend Library FAITH CHRISTIAN CENTER Torah Services • Biblical Feasts Wednesdays March 19-April 16, PARISH 62080 Dean Swift Rd., Bend 1049 NE 11th St.• 541.382.8274 5:30.7:00pm Fr.Theodore Nnabugo,Pastor • Lifecycle Events Try a spiritual exercise, explore the Friday, April 25 - 7:00 pmSimple dinner, teaching, www.holyredeemerparish.net • End-times prophecy possibilities of learning from your discussion and worship. Kaballat Shabbat Services This Sunday at Faith Christian Center, Parish Office: 541-536-3571 dreams and past lives and leam what Adults and children welcome. Pastor Brian Mercer - interim pastor, will soul travel means. HOLY REDEEMER, LA PINK Visit us on the web at For the complete schedule of share his message titled "Mountain of 16137 Burgess Rd www.houseofcovenant.org Spacious Christianity essay collection Services 8 Events The Spiritual Laws of Life Disappointment" in the Sunday morning Tuesday, Wednesday F Friday Mass written by the pastors available as a or contact us at 541-385-5439 go to; www.bethtikvahbend.org Saturday, March 29th 9:00 am service beginning at 10:30 am. companion to the teachings. 3-4:30pm Sunday Mass• 10:00 am Find details a www.bendfp.org. LIVING TORAH FKLLOWSHIP Room 103 OSUCascades Building For information about our Religious Confessions: Saturdays -3:00-4:00 pm Childcare is provided in our Sunday Ci La Roca Church 2600 College Way Education programs, Wednesday HOLY TRINITY,SUNRIVER moming service. FCC Youth Ministries "We begin to have experiences in the 1155 SW Division, ¹D8, Bend call Kathy Schindel at 541-388-8826 Noon Worship followed by 18143 Cottonwood Rd. and Family Night is on Wednesdays at 7 Light and Sound of God, and thus we Saturday 12:00• 3:00 pm 12:30pm Contemplative Prayer Thurs. Mass 9:30 am; develop a greater understanding of the pm. A number of Faith Journey Groups All services are held at the Worship/Dance • Study • Sat. Vigil Mass 5:30 pm spiritual laws of life. Knowing these laws, Youth Events meet throughout the week in small First United Methodist Church Sunday mass 8:00 am Food/Fellowship then we can make our own life easier." http;//www.facebook.com/ 680 NW Bond Street groups, please contact the church for Confessions: Thurs. 9:00 - 9:15 am Hebrew Roots Fellowship bendyouthcoff ective Harold Klemp "The Dream Master 541-388-8826 details and times. worshipping in Spirit and Truth OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS, Mahanta Transcripts Book 8" Choirs, music groups, Bible study, The church is located on the corner of Giichriot 541-410-5337 feffowship and ministries every week 120 Mississippi Dr For More Information Greenwood Avenue and Children Welcome Sunday Mass - 12:30 pm CONCORDIA LUTHKRAN www.eckankar.org NE 11th Street. www.bendfaith.com Confessions: Sundays 12:00• 12:15 pm www.livingtorahfellowship.com 230 NE Ninth Street, Bend www.eckankar-oregon.org MISSION (LCMS) www.bendfp.org REDMOND ASSEMBLY OF GOD HOLY FAMILY, 541-728-6476 Themissionof theChurch isioforgive sins http://www.facebook.com/bendfp near Chrlotmas Valley 1865 W Antler• Redmond throughtheGospelandthereby 541 382 4401 57255 Fort Rock Rd BEND CHURCH OF THE NAZARKNK grant eternalJife. 541-548.4555 Sunday Mass - 3:30 pm TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH (St. John 20:22-23, Augsburg Confession 1270 NE 27 St.• 541-382-5496 SUNDAYS Confessions: Sundays 3:00-3:15 pm All are welcome through ourred doors XXVUI.8, 10 Senior Pastor Virgil Askren UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISTS Morning Worship 8:30 am 8 10:30 am Sunday Services OF CENTRAL ORKGON ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI 10 am Sunday School SUNDAY Life groups 9 am "Diverse Beliefs, One Fellowship" St. Helens Hall, 231 NW Idaho Ave CATHOLIC CHURCH I I am Divine Service 9:00 am Sunday School for all ages Kidz LIVE ages 3-11 10:30 am 8 am and 10:15 am We are a Welcoming Congregation Rev. Julian Cassar 9;00 am Hispanic Worship Service Evening Worship 6 pm The Rev. Roy D. Green, Interim Rector Rev. Joseph K. Thalisery Lent/Holy Week schedule: Concordia March 23 at I I:00am 10:15 am Worship Service www.trinitybend.org I 541-382-5542 541-382-3631 Lutheran Mission. Mail:469 NW Wall St WEDNESDAYS "Magical Thinking, Mental Health and NEW CHURCH Ma¹we haveeyestoseethat Nursery Care 8 Children's Church FAMILY NIGHT 7 PM Us" — Rev. Alex Holt, Interim Minister March 23: Vespers: I PM. novisitor arriveswithout a gift and 2450 NE 27th Street ages 4 yrs-4th grade during all Adult Classes March 30: Vespers; I PM. no guestJeaveswithout 4 blessing. Masses We are all prone to magical thinking Worship Services Celebrate Recovery April 6: Vespers; I PM. Saturday• Vigil 5:00 PM and living fantasy from time to time. "Courageous Living" on KNLR 97.5 FM Wednesday NITE Live Kids Sunday 7;30 AM, 10:00 AM Mental illness arises when we can no April 17: The Festival of Maundy 8:30 am Sunday Youth Group Domingo 12:30 PM• Misa en Espanol longer clearly understand what is real THE SALVATION ARMY Thursday, Divine Service: 7 PM. from what we imagine. How might we 541 NE DeKalb Ave., Bend Reconciliation understand mental illness as a gift as 541-389-8888 WEDNESDAY Pastor Duane Pippitt well as a curse in modem life? Saturday 3:00 PM - 4:45 PM April 18: The Festival of Good Friday, 6:30 pm Ladies Bible Study www.redmondag.com Divine Service: 7 PM. SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP THURSDAY In our Religious Education classes: HISTORIC DOWNTOWN CHURCH 541 NE Dekalb K-4 will be learning about acceptance 10:00 am 50+ Bible Study Corner of NW Franklin 8 Lava Sunday School 9:45 am The Rev. Willis C. Jenson, Pastor and love for everyone's unique gifts. Masses WEEKLY EASTMONT CHURCH Children 8Adult Classes 8286 11th St. (Grange Hall) Grades 5-8 class will focus on the Saturday 8:00 AM Life Groups "Displaying theRealit¹ of Christin Worship Service —11:00 am Terrebonne, OR lessons of growing up in preparation for Sunday 4:30 PM Please visit our website for a complete their next steps. UnderuableWays" Monday• Friday 7:00AM F 12:15 PM Major's Robert F Miriam Keene www.lutheransonline.com/ listing of activities for all ages. We also provide childcare for infants concordialutheranmission www.bendnaz.org 62425 Eagle Road, Bend Exposition F Benediction NKW HOPK EVANGELICAL and toddlers. Facebook: 20080 Pinebrook Blvd. • 541-389.3436 Monday-Friday 541-382.5822 Concordia Lutheran Mission after 7:00 AM Mass to 6:00 PM Meeting place: www.eastmontchurch.com Tuesday (Family Holy Hour) Celebrate New Life Phone: 541-325-6773 THE OLD STONE CHURCH SOVKREIGN GRACK CHURCH 5:00 PM• 6:00 PM at New Hope Church! 157 NW FRANKLIN AVE., BEND GRACE FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH Sunday Services Meeting at the Golden Age Club Mail:PO Box 428, Bend OR 97709 2265 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend Classic (Blended) Service 9:00 am 40 SE 5th St., Bend Reconciliation Saturday 6:00 pm www.uufco.org 382.6862 Tuesday 7:30 AM - 8;00 AM Sunday 9:00, 10:45 am, (541) 385-3908 Contemporary Service 10:45 am Just 2 blocks SW ofBend High School Hispanic Service 6:0 0 pm Sunday Worship 10:00 am ST. THOMAS CATHOLIC CHURCH Sunday Worship 9:30 a.m. Pastor Randy Myers 1720 NW 19th Street Sovereign Grace Church is dedicated (Child Care Available) FIRST UNITED METHODIST Redmond, Oregon 97756 For more information about weekly to worshiping God and teaching the CHURCH Sunday School 10:20 a.m. 541-923-3390 ministries for the whole family, Bible truths recovered through the (In the Heart of Downtown Bend) Education Hour 10:45 a.m. WKSTSIDE CHURCH Father Todd Unger, Pastor 680 NW Bond St. / 541.382.1672 contact 541-382-5822 or email Reformation. Call for information about Westside Church invites you to join us ~Mas S~he ~l: Eveil(one isWelcome! info@eastmontchurch.com other meetings at any of our weekend services. No Women's Bible Study, Weekdays 8:00 am matter what your expectations are, we Tuesday 9:15 a.m. 541-420-1667 (except Wednesday) Rev. Thom Larson FOUNDRY CHURCH hope your time spent with us brings Men's Bible Study, Wednesday 6:00 pm www.sovereigngracebend.com Sermon Title: "Deadly Sin of Envy" (FORMERLY FIRST BAPTIST) you a little closer to understanding, Scripture: Genesis 4:I•12, Saturday Vigil 5:30 pm Wednesday 7;30 a.m. »A Heart for Bend in the knowing and growing in a relationship Ephesians 2:4.10 First Saturday 8:00 am (English) • • I • with Jesus Christ. In our opinion, that's 9:00 am Contemporary Service Heart of Bend" Sunday 8:00 am, 10:00 am(English) Wednesday Lenten Service 6:30 p.m. CHRISTIAN LIFE CENTKR Sunday School during 9am service what really matters. 12:00 noon (Spanish) 60 NW Oregon, 541-382-3862 11:00 am Traditional Service Confessions on Wednesdays from 21720 E. Hwy. 20• 541.389.8241 Pastors Mike Coughlin8 Al Hulbert Pastor Joel LiaBraaten Childcare provided Contact us at 541.382.7504 or 5:00 to 5:45 pm Evangelical Lutheran Church and on Saturdays from 4:30 to 5:15 pm www.westsidechurch.org SundayMoming Worship 'During the Week; Women's Groups, in America SundaySchoolclassesare at9:00am Men's Groups, Youth Groups, Quilting, 8:45 am 8 10:45 am www.gracefirstlutheran.org and our Worship Service at 10:15 am March 228 23, 2014 at Westside Church Crafting, Music 8 Fellowship — WEST CAMPUS CHRISTIAN CHURCH OF REDMOND ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH ELCA Wednesday Mid-Week Service This Sunday at Foundry Church, 536 SW 10th, Redmond Open Hearts. Open Minds. Worship in the Heart of Redmond Pastor Steve Mickel will share the Children 8 Youth Programs 7:00 pm 541-548-2974 Open Doors. Mike Coughlin will be speaking from message "Seven" at 6:30pm on Saturday Rev. Thom Larson www.redmondchristian.org Nursery Care Provided for All Services TheStor(/: "Life-Changing Conversations and at 8, 9 and 10:45am Sunday Sunday Worship Services at firstchurch@bendumc.org Sunday Worship 9:00 am 8 10:45 am with Jesus." at Westside Church, 8:30 am 8 11:00 am Pastor Daniel N. LeLaCheur 2051 NW Shevlin Park Rd, Bend. Sunday School for all ages Sunday School for all ages 10:00 am For Kidztown, Middle School and 21720 E. Hwy. 20 541.389.8241 Kidmo• Junior Church High School activities www.clcbend.com Greg Strubhar, Pastor Wednesdays: Soup Supper 6:15 pm F Call 541-382-3862 Darin Hollingsworth, Youth Pastor Lenten Vespers at 7:00 pm www.bendchurch.org March 23, 2014 at Westside Church POWKLL BUTTK —SOUTH CAMPUS Children's Room available COMMUNITY PRESBYTKRIAN HIGHLAND BAPTIST CHRISTIAN CHURCH during services Cowboy Fellowship Saturdays CHURCH CHURCH,SBC Pastor Steve Mickel will share the Potluck 6 pm Come Experience a warm, 529 NW 19th Street 3100 SW Highland Ave., message "Seven" at 10:30am on Sunday Music and the Word 7 pm friendly family of worshipers. at the Westside Church South Campus, Redmond• 541-548-4161 (3/4 mile north of High School) Sunday Worship Services Everyone Welcome - Always. 1245 SE 3rd St., Bend. Redmond, OR 97756 8:30 am - 10:15 am - I I am A vibrant, inclusive community. A rich Effective May I, 2013 (541) 548-3367 Sunday Worship Services: Nursery F Children's Church and diverse music program for all ages Pastors: Chris Blair, Trey Hinkle, Ozzy 8:00 am, 9:30 am, 11:00 am Coff ee,snacksandfellowsfup 4 Saturdays and TMC: $115 Osbome and Glenn Bartnik Sunday Life Groups Rev. Rob Anderson, Pastor March 23, 2014 at Westside Church rrfter eachservice 13720 SW Hwy 126, Powell Butte 5 Saturdays and TMC: $138 9:30 am 8 11:00 am —SISTERSCAMPUS 541-548-3066 M-W-F Women's Exercise 9:30 am Saturday Worship 9:00 am Contemporary Worship www.powellbuttechurch.com Pastor Steve Mickel will share the Wed. Bible Study at noon 7:00 pm 9:00 am Nursery Care The Bulletin: message"Seven"at10:30am atthe REAL LIFE CHRISTIAN CHURCH 3rd Th. Women's Circle/Bible Study Dr. Barry Campbell, lead pastor 9:15 am Children F Youth Like Hymns? We've Got 'em! Westside Church Sisters Campus, I:00 pm Every Saturday on the church Sunday School at the RLCC Church, 2880 NE 27th 442 Trinity Way, Sisters. 3rd Tues. Men's Club 6:00 pm, dinner For complete calender: 9:30 am Adult Education Sunday Services 8 am page. $23 Youth and Family Programs www.hbcredmond.org (No child care) 11:00 am Traditional Worship Active Social Outreach 10;00 am Contemporary Copy Changes: Worship Service March 228 23, 2014 at Westside Church Youth Groups 1113 SW Black Butte Blvd. (Full children's ministry) —ONLINE CAMPUS by 5 PM Tuesday CALVARY CHAPEL BEND Redmond, OR 97756 - 541.923-7466 High School - Sunday I I:00am-12:30pm Sunday Night Church 6:30 pm 20225 Cooley Rd. Bend Middle School - Wednesday Pastor Eric Burtness For information, please call ... Join us at our online campus where CO Marketplace: Phone: (541) 383-5097 Senior Pastor - Mike Yunker• www.zionrdm.com 6:00-7:30pm Pastor Steve Mickel will share the 541-312-8844 message"Seven"at6:30pm Saturday Web site: ccbend.org The First Tuesday of each Associate Pastors and at 8, 9 and 10:45am on Sunday at Mondays Mike Sweeney 8 Jeff Olson Westside Church, 2051 NW Shevlin Park THK RIVER MENNONITE CHURCH Sundays: 8:30 8 10:30 am 6;30 pm Centering Prayer month. $23 "Loving people one at a time." Rd, Bend. Sunday, 3 pm at the Old Stone Church, Wednesday Night Study: 7 pm www.real-lifecc.org 157 NW Franklin Ave., Bend Copy Changes: by Monday YouthGroup: Wednesday 7pm Wednesdays Sunday School 2 years - 5th grade Child Care provided 5:30 pm Prayer Service I week prior to publication Nursery 0-2 years KASTMONT COMMUNITY SCHOOL March 23, 2014 Westside Church Visitors welcome "Educating and Developing the Whole —ON THE RADIO Women's Ministry, Youth Ministry are Small Groups Meet Regularly Child for the Glory of God" available, call for days and times. (Handicapped Accessible) Church Office: 541-389.8787 Pre K-5th Grade Pastor Steve Mickel will share the E.maiL theriver@mai)shack.com Please visit our website for a complete 62425 Eagle Road, Bend• 541-382-2049 message "Cloud, Crowd, Community" "Teaching the Word of God, listing of activities for all ages. Principal Lonna Camahan on the Heirborne radio show at 8:30am Send to: PO Box 808, Bend OR97709 plynch@bendbuljetin.com Book by Book" www.eastmontcommunityschool.com Sunday morning on KBND — AM 1110 www.therivermennonite.org www.redmondcpc.org TKMPLE BETH TIRVAH

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TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014

Knitting

COUPONING SECRETS

i artists noww ento u a oto somet in Ey Janet Patton Lexington (KyJ Heraid-Leader

Ever hear this piece of investment a d v ice, "You've

got to spend money to make money"? It's usually said by someone trying to sell you something. I have, and it goes against my every tight-fisted instinct.

such as the cost of a printer, re-

curring costs of paper and ink, and Internet access. Plus, coupon printing sites are notorious for gumming up laptops, according to com-

Sunday paper" kind of couponing. That's the basic idea, but

puter technicians. If you use

it's too small a scale to make

But to make this work you

need two things: 1. A good understanding of the market, so you know when

prices are right. 2. The ability to take advan-

tage of that price with flexibility in your budget. That's where spending money to make money applies. If you can afford to buy a lot of something, you might save in the long run. But you might have to sink capital in up front.

How tomaximize the deal Serious couponers maximize these deals with multiple

coupons and by timing their purchases just right, says Katie Fleck, an Ohio couponer who writes the blog "Kroger Krazy," which specializes in sussing out incredible deals at the grocery chain. "Most people that use cou-

pons casually get coupon inserts or print online, go to the store and buy th e p roduct.

What sets apart the serious couponers is when you use them and how many you get," Fleck said. For example, Fleck doesn't use a coupon as soon as it ar-

rives. She knows better. "You want to pair it w i th a sale, and you want to wait

noticed Brawny paper towels on sale for $1, "and there was a coupon for $2 off two ... so I ordered them on eBay. I ordered 20, and got 40 packages of paper towels.... So that's cut out of my weekly budget. You

things to consider here as well,

the "clip what comes in my

price just isn't good enough. This canreduce long-term costs if implemented properly. Instead of getting a great deal on 1 gallon of detergent, multiply it by 10. Now you've got that same great price on a year's worth of detergent.

A nother alternative is t o Redplum.com. But there are

This is exactly how you need to evaluate one common household money-saving strategy:couponing. I'm really not talking about

and sit on your hands when the

term deals. In other words, if you spend $100 on toilet paper, detergent and paper towels, that's $100 you won't have for the next great bargain. But there canbe an upside to stockpiling.

print coupons at home, from sites like Coupons.com or

How can I be sure that I will make back the initial outlay?

much difference in your annual household spending. I'm talking about strategic shopping, which can involve couponing on an industrial scale. Think of shopping as if your household goods are commodities, and you will buy at the bottom of the price cycle, meaning when it's cheapest,

you should always be wary of buying from an unfamiliar source. If someone is offering a coupon nobody else seems to have, ask yourself why. Coupon fraud is a crime, and stores will prosecute you for trying to use fakes.)

dggp~ ~i

~j Thinkstock illustration

until the coupon is almost ex-

stash.

pired, so you gotta hold out," But often the easiest way to Fleck said, "so you're getting get multiple coupons is to buy the lowest price you can pos- them. sibly get." You can buy multiple copies These deals are often cycli- of the Sunday paper, which cal, she said, so hang on until might be your only option if that magic moment when the you don't have regular comsale and the coupon align. puter access or a credit card. The deal gets even better if Sometimes it's cheaper to there is a bonus like a "Catali- order just the coupons through na" involved. a third-party seller, such as a (For the uninitiated, a Cata- coupon clipping service like lina is a kind of paper coupon Klip2Save or The Coupon that sometimes prints out with Clippers (among many othyour receipt when you check ers), set up a standing order out; it's named for the machine with an insert seller like Sunthat prints it out. It might be d ayCouponInserts.com, o r a coupon but often it's money buy a batch on eBay. off a future purchase of any Each of these has advantagkind. Usually items that will es and disadvantages: generatethese are marked in • Ordering specific coupons the store something like "buy is most efficient — but realthree and get $2 off future ly great deals might sell out. purchase.") Also, you have to be sure you With a Catalina, as long as will get them before the sale you follow the rules, you might ends, so factor in shipping actually cover an item's cost or time. • A standing order for whole even makemoney,Fleck said. For a super deal like that, inserts guarantees you lots of "you don't want just one cou- everything, including perhaps pon. You want several," Fleck coupons from other regions, sald. in a timely fashion — but there You can get coupons free if will be a lot you just don't you want to go through news- want. • Buying coupons on eBay paper recycling bins and take your chances. Another option can be as risky and price-prois setting up a coupon swap hibitive as buying scalped with friends. Maybe one of tickets — but sometimes that's you likes only Charmin toilet the only place you can find a paper, the other Cottonelle. Or really juicy coupon. cultivate your noncouponing (A caveat: There are counneighbors to give you their terfeit coupons out there, and

stockpile, and then you don't have to spend until it's on sale."

What is her weekly budget for her family, which includes one child?

a coupon site, practice good download hygiene to avoid costly repair bills. Also, keep in mind you can usually print a coupon only twice, so you may still need

"I buy a lot of organic items so my personal budget is higher than others. I try to spend $100 a week," she said.

another source if you want to

That's talent." Some of her tips for success-

buy a lot.

0$%

Fleck said that recently she

Stockpiling isgood, hoarding is bad

"Some of my readers have a

$30-a-week grocery budget. ful strategic shopping: • Have a dollar amount in

your week of what you're goStrategic shopping is most ing to spend on the stockpiling effective with nonperishable part of your budget, and the goods but it can work on a rest on your groceries. • Start small and don't do evsmaller scale with pantry items as long as you are vigi- ery single deal. "You're wastlant about using things before ing your money, especially if they go bad. you have to pay tax," she said. • Keep your storage in mind. If this sounds like a recipe for stockpiling, that's because If you're having to buy shelvitis. ing units, you need to factor Stockpiling has gotten a bad that in. "I'm looking at 10 cans name, particularly from TV of air freshener. We don't use shows like "Extreme Coupon- it, but it was free," she said. ing," that show people with gaThink about what y ou're rages and basements stuffed buying: Will you save enough full of "bargains." in the long run to justify the You have to know the differ- expense and effort (because it ence between stockpiling and is work) of monitoring the prichoarding, knowing when not es, gathering the coupons and tobuy. buying a dozen of something? If — once you factor in all That can be surprisingly difficult. the costs — you think it is Once you get into this style worth it, go for it. If not, save of buying, it is easy to look up your money for the next deal; one day and realize you have there will be one. enoughcerealtogetthrough a Homework zombie apocalypse. Here's some recommendWhen you come home from the store and don't have any ed reading. "How to Shop for place to put the stuff you just Free" by Kathy Spencer (Da bought, you've got a problem. Capo Lifelong Books, $14.95) Consider this: Companies is a useful primer on couponall over the world now maining at a variety of stores. It's tain v ery l o w in v entories, available at some public liswitching to "just in time" sys- braries,most booksellers and tems that ship goods to stores Spencer's website, Howtoonly to replace what was just shopforfree.net, which is upbought. Wal-Mart pioneered dated with daily deals. this concept, which saves on Katie Fleck's website, Krooverhead. gerkrazy.com, also has lots of Why turn your dining room useful tips on what's on sale at into Wal-Mart's or Kroger's Kroger and how to maximize warehouse? the deal with coupons. She You risk tying up your includes links to print out couworking capital in long-term pons, if you have a personal investments an d r e d u cing computer and printer, and to your flexibility for more short- electronic ones.

Continued from 01 At the time, he was work-

ing at a research company that contracted with television production companies

and networks, gauging viewers'responses. In late 2010, he attended a knitting retreat where he met Karin Skacel, the CEO of the Skacel Collection.

Wilmesher had just lost his mother and was looking for a change. He asked Skacel if she had any sales openings. She didn't, but a fter learning about h i s

background, Skacel made Wilmesher the company's director of new product re-

search and development. "It's tricky when your hobby becomes your job," he said. "But it's mylife." He's not kidding: Seven years after his first cast-on, Wilmesher owns a loom and a spinning wheel, and has had apattern for amen's curved-zipper c a r digan published in Vogue Knitting m agazine — amajorhonor. He's working on a dog sweater (even though he doesn't own a pet), a pair of socks, and a cardigan — all to try out a pattern or a new

yarn — and carries it all in a knitting bag designed by Tom Binh, of Seattle. Wilmesher attends two

men's knitting retreats a year (he estimates there are fourorfive aroundthe country) and belongs to Ravelry, the Facebook of knitting,

including groups with titles like "Jock Swap," "Men Who Knit" an d " Fellows Who Love the Fibers." "I don't know what it is," he said of the hobby, "but it's

relaxing and creative." Indeed, there is mounting evidence that knitting and

crocheting have therapeutic benefits.

The Mayo Clinic for the American Academy of Neurology credited knitting with a 40 percent reduced risk of memory loss. A Ha r v ar d Me d i cal School study found that the

repetitive motions and focus of needlework elicit "a relax-

ation response and a calming, meditation-like state" that causes heart rate and

bloodpressure to drop. "I think people should be more open to trying things because I would have never thought that this was going to be the thing that changed

the course of my l i fe," Wilmesher observed. His message to men:eGet over it and try it and who

cares what anybody thinks. I wish there was some way to make men know that it is

not a woman's sport."

SUPPoRT GRoUPs The following list contains support group information submitted to The Bulletin. Submissions must be updated monthly for inclusion. To submit, email relevant details to communitylife©bendbUlletin.com. ABILITREEPEER GROUP FOR PERSONSAFFECTEDBYA DISABILITY:541-388-8103. ABILITREEYOUNG PEER GROUP: 541-388-8103 ext. 219. ABILITREEBRAIN INJURY SUPPORT GROUP:541-388-8103. ADHD ADULT SUPPORTGROUP: 541-420-3023. ADOPTIVEPARENTSUPPORT GROUP:541-389-5446. ADULT CHILDRENOF ALCOHOLICS: 541-633-8189. AGE WIDEOPEN (ADULT GHILDREN SUPPORTGROUP):541-410-4162 or www.agewideopen.com. AIDS EDUCATIONFOR PREVENTION, TREATMENT, COMMUNITYRESOURCES AND SUPPORT(DESCHUTES COUNTYHEALTHDEPARTMENT): 54 I -322-7402. AIDSHOT LINE:800-342-AIDS. AL-ANON: 541-728-3707 or www. centraloregonal-anon.org. ALCOHOLICSANONYMOUS (AA): 541-548-0440 or www.coigaa.org. ALS SUPPORTGROUP: 541-977-7502. ALZHEIMER'SASSOCIATION: 54 I-548-7074. ALZHEIMER'SASSOCIATION CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 541-330-6400. ALZHEIMER'S/DEMENTIA CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-948-72 I4. AUTISM RESOURCEGROUP OF CENTRALOREGON:541-788-0339. BEND ATTACHMENT PARENTING: 54 I-385-1787. BEND S-ANONFAMILY GROUP: 888-285-3742. BEND ZENMEDITATION GROUP: 541-382-6122 or 541-382-6651. BEREAVEMENTSUPPORT GROUPS: 54 I-382-5882. BEREAVEMENTSUPPORT GROUP/ADULTSAND GHILDREN: 541-383-3910. BEYOND AFFAIRSNETWORK: A peer group for victims of infidelity,

baninbend@yahoo.com. (WOMEN'SCANCER SUPPORT GROUP):541-382-1832. BRAININJURY SUPPORT GROUP: 541-382-9451. CLAREBRIDGEOFBEND (ALZHEIMER'SSUPPORT GROUP): BRAINTUMOR SUPPORT GROUP: 541-385-4717 or rnorton1@ 541-350-7243 brookdaleliving.com. GANCER FAMILYSUPPORT GROUP: CO-DEPENDENTSANONYMOUS 541-706-5864. BEND:541-610-7445. GANCER INFORMATIONLINE: CO-DEPENDENTSANONYMOUS 541-706-7743. REDMOND:541-610-8175. CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: COFFEEAND CONNECTION CANCER 541-536-7399. SUPPORTGROUP:541-706-3754. CELEBRATERECOVERYBEND: Faith COMPASSIONATEFRIENDS (FOR Christian Center, 541-383-5801; THOSE GRIEVINGTHE LOSS Westside Church, 541-382-7504; OF A CHILD):541-480-0667 or centraloregoncr.org 541-536-1709. CELEBRATERECOVERYLAPINE: CREATIVITY& WELLNESS — MOOD Grace Fellowship, 541-536-2878; GROUP:541-647-0865. High Lakes Christian Church, 541536-3333; Living Waters Church, CROOKEDRIVER RANCHADULT 541-536-1215; centraloregoncr.org GRIEF SUPPORT: 541-548-7483. GELEBRATERECOVERY MADRAS: DEFEATCANCER: 541-706-7743. Living HopeChristian Center, 541DESCHijTESCOUNTY MENTAL 475-2405 or centraloregoncr.org. HEALTH24-HOUR CRISISLINE: 541-322-7500. CELEBRATERECOVERY REDMOND: Redmond Assembly of GodChurch, DEPRESSIONAND BIPOLAR 541-548-4555 or centraloregoncr.org. SUPPORTALLIANCE:541-549-9622 CENTRALOREGON ALZHEIMER'S/ or 541-771-1620. DEMENTIACAREGIVERS SUPPORT DEPRESSIONAND BIPOLAR GROUP:541-504-0571. SUPPORT: 541-480-8269 or CENTRALOREGONAUTISM suemiller92@gmail.com. ASPERGER'SSUPPORTTEAM: DEPRESSIONSUPPORT GROUP: 541-633-8293. 541-617-0543. CENTRAL OREGONAUTISM DIABETICSUPPORT GROUP: SPECTRUM RESOURCEAND FAMILY 541-598-4483. SUPPORTGROUP:541-279-9040. DISABILITYSUPPORT GROUP: GENTRALOREGON COALITION FOR 541-388-8103. ACCESS(WORKING TO CREATE DIVORCE CARE:541-410-4201. ACCESSIBLE GOMMUNITIES): DOUBLETROUBLE RECOVERY: 541-385-3320. Addiction and mental illness group; CENTRALOREGON DEPRESSION 541-317-0050. AND ANXIETYGROUP: DYSTONIASUPPORT GROUP: 541-420-2759 541-388-2577. CENTRALOREGON DISABILITY ENCOPRESIS(SOILING): 541-548SUPPORTNETWORK:541-548-8559 2814 or encopresis@gmail.com. or www.codsn.org. EVENINGBEREAVEMENT SUPPORT CENTRALOREGON FAMILIES WITH GROUP:541-460-4030 MULTIPLES:541-330-5832 or 541-388-2220. FAITHBASED RECOVERY GROUP: Drug and alcohol addictions; CENTRALOREGON LEAGUE OF pastordavid©thedoor3r.org. AMPUTEES SUPPORTGROUP (COLA):541-480-7420 Orwww. FAMILY RESOURCE CENTER: ourcola.org. 541-389-5468. GENTRALOREGON RIGHT TO LIFE: GAMBLERSANONYMOUS: Redmond 541-383-1593. 541-280-7249,Bend 541-390-4365. CHILDCAR SEAT CLINIC (PROPER GAMBLINGHOT LINE: INSTALLATIONINFORMATION FOR 800-233-8479. SEATANDCHILD): 541-504-5016. GERIATRICCARE MANAGEMENT: CHILDREN'SVISION FOUNDATION: Info@paulbattle.com or 541-330-3907. 1-877-867-1437. CHRISTIANWOMEN OF HOPE GLUCOSECONTROL LOW CARB

DIET SUPPORT GROUP:kjdnrcd@ yahoo.com or 541-504-0726. GLUTENINTOLERANCE GROUP (CELIAC):541-390-2399. GRANDMA'SHOUSE:Supportfor pregnant teensandteenmoms; 541-383-3515. GRANDPARENTSRAISING OUR CHILDREN'S KIDS:541-306-4939. GRANDPARENTSSUPPORTGROUP: 541-385-4741. GRIEFSHAREGRIEF RECOVERY SUPPORTGROUP:541-382-1832. GRIEFSUPPORT GROUP: 541-3066633, 541-318-0384 or mullinski@ bendbroadband.com. GRIEFSUPPORT GROUP: 541-548-7483. GRIEFSUPPORT GROUPS: Forthe bereaved; 541-771-3247. GRIEFSUPPORT GROUP: 541-447-2510. GRIEFAND LOSS SUPPORT GROUP: 541-508-4036 or www.gohospice. Com, GRIEFSHARE(FAITH-BASED) RECOVERY CLASS:541-389-8780. HEALINGENCOURAGEMENT FOR ABORTION-RELATEDTRAUMA (H.E.A.R.T.): 541-318-1949. HEALTHYFAMILIESOF THE HIGH DESERT:Homevisits for families with newborns; 541-749-2133 HEARINGLOSS ASSOCIATION: 541-390-2174 or ctepper©bendcable. com. HEARTS OF HOPE:Abortion healing; 541-728-4673. IMPROVE YOUR STRESS LIFE: 541-706-2904. INFERTILITYSUPPORT GROUP (RESOLVE):541-604-0861. LA LECHELEAGUEOFBEND: 541-317-5912. LIVING WELL(CHRONIC CONDITIONS):541-322-7430. LIVING WITHCHRONICILLNESSES SUPPORTGROUP:541-536-7399. LUPUS 5FIBROMYALGIA SUPPORT GROUP:541-526-1375. MADRAS NICOTINEANONYMOUS GROUP:541-993-0609. MATERNAL/CHILDHEALTH PROGRAM(DESCHUTES COUNTYHEALTHDEPARTMENT): 541-322-7400. MEN'SCANCER SUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-5864. MENDEDHEARTSSUPPORT

GROUP:541-706-4789. MISCARRIAGESUPPORT GROUP: 541-514-9907. MOMMY ANDMEBREASTFEEDINGSUPPORT GROUP: Laura, 54 I-322-7450. MULTIPLESCLEROSIS SUPPORT GROUP:541-706-6802. NARCONON: 800-468-6933. NARCOTICSANONYMOUS (NA): 54 I-416-2 l46. NATIONALALLIANCE ON MENTAL ILLNESSOF CENTRAL OREGON (NAMI):541-408-7779, 541-504-1431 or email: vonriedlpn@yahoo.com. NAMI BEND -EXTREME STATES:541-647-2343 or www. namicentraloregon.org NAMI BENDGONNECTIONS: 541480-8269, 541-382-3218 or www. namicentraloregon.org NAMI BENDFAMILY SUPPORT GROUP: whitefam©bendcable.com or www.namicentraloregon.org. NAMI MADRASCONNECTIONS: For peers, 541-475-1873 or NAMlmadras@gmail.com. NAMI MADRASFAMILY SUPPORT GROUP:541-475-1873 or NAMlmadras@gmail.com. NAMI MADRASFAMILY-FAMILY SUPPORTGROUP:541-475-3299 or www.namicentraloregon.org NAMI REDMOND FAMILYSUPPORT GROUP:namicentraloregon@gmail. Com. NAMI REDMOND CONNECTIONS: 541-382-3218 or 541-693-4613. NEWBERRY HOSPICEOF LA PINE: 541-536-7399. OREGON COMMISSIONFOR THE BLIND:54 I-447-4915. OREGON CURE:541-475-2164. OREGON LYMEDISEASE NETWORK: 541-312-3081 or www.oregonlyme. Org. OVEREATERSANONYMOUS: 541306-6844 or www.oa.org. PARENTS/CAREGIVERSOF CHILDRENAFFECTEDBYAUTISM SUPPORTGROUP:541-771-1075 or http://coregondevdisgroupaso.ning. com. PARENTSOFMURDEREDCHILDREN (POMC)SUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-410-7395. PARISH NURSESANDHEALTH MINISTRIES:541-383-6861. PARKINSON'SCAREGIVERS

SUPPORTGROUP:541-317-1188. PARKINSON'SDISEASE SUPPORT GROUP:541-280-5818. PARTNERS INCARE:Homehealth and hospice services; 541-382-5882. PAUL'SCLUB:Dads and male caregiver support group; 541-548-8559. PFLAG CENTRALOREGON: For parents, families and friends of lesbians and gays; 541-317-2334 or www.pflagcentraloregon.org. PLAN LOVINGADOPTIONS NOW (PLAN):541-389-9239. PLANNEDPARENTHOOD: 888-875-7820. PMS ACCESS LINE: 800-222-4767. PREGNANCYRESOURCECENTERS: Bend,541-385-5334; Madras,541475-5338; Prineville, 541-447-2420; Redmond, 541-504-8919. PULMONARY HYPERTENSION SUPPORTGROUP:541-548-7489. SAVINGGRACE SUPPORT GROUPS: Bend, 541-382-4420; Redmond, 541-504-2550, ext. 1; Madras, 541-475-1880. SCLERODERMA SUPPORTGROUP: 541-480- I958. SEXAHOLICSANONYMOUS: 541-595-8780. SOUPANDSUPPORT: Formourners; 541-548-7483. STEPMOM SUPPORTGROUP: 541-325-3339 or www. insightcounselingbend.com. SUPPORT GROUPFOR FAMILIES WITH DIABETICCHILDREN: 541-526-6690. TOBACCO FREEALLIANCE: 541-322-7481. TOPS OR:Bend, 541-388-5634; Culver, 541-546-4012; Redmond, 541-923-0878. TYPE 2 DIABETESSUPPORT GROUP:541-706-4986. VETERANSHOTLINE:541-408-5594 or 818-634-0735. VISION NW:Peersupport group; 541-330-0715. VOLUNTEERS INMEDICINE: 541-330-9001. WOMEN'S RESOURCECENTER OF CENTRALOREGON:541-385-0747 WOMEN SURVIVINGWITH CANCER SUPPORTGROUP:541-706-5864. YOUNG PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES PEERGROUP:831-402-5024. ZEN MEDITATIONGROUP: 541-388-3179.


SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

VOLUNTEER SEARCH Volunteer Search is compiled by the Department of HumanServices Volunteer Services. The organizations listed are seeking volunteers for a variety of tasks. To see full a list, and for additional information on the types of help needed, go online to www.bendbulletin.com/volunteer. Changes, additions or deletions should be sent to1300 N.W.Wall St., Suite103, Bend 97701, email Therese.M.Heltonlstate.or.us or call 541-693-8988.

SENIORS AARP:www.aarp.org/money/taxaide or 888-687-2277. ASPEN RIDGEALZHEIMER'S ASSISTEDLIVING AND RETIREMENT COMMUNITY: 541-385-8500. BEND SENIORCENTER: Kim, 541-706-6127. CASCADE VIEWNURSING AND ALZHEIMER'SCARECENTER: 541-382-71 61. CENTRAL OREGONCOUNCILON AGING(COCOA)AND MEALS ON WHEELS:www.councilonaging.org or 541-678-5483. LA PINESENIOR ACTIVITY CENTER: Karen Ward, 541-536-6237. LONG-TERM CAREOMBUDSMAN PROGRAM:Nancy Allen, 541-312-2488. PILOTBUTTE REHABILITATION CENTER:541-382-5531. PRINEVILLE SOROPTIMIST SENIOR CENTER:Melody, 541-447-6844. TOUCHMARK ATMT. BACHELOR VILLAGE: 541-383-1414. UNITED SENIORCITIZENS OF BEND (USCB):uscb©bendtel.net or 541-323-3344. VOLUNTEERSINACTION: 541-548-7018.

541-389-1813, 10a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday throughSaturday. DESCHUTESPUBLICLIBRARY SYSTEM:541-312-1032. FRIENDSOF THE BEND LIBRARIES: www.fobl.org or Meredith Shadrachat 541-617-7047. HIGHDESERT CHAMBER MUSIC: www.highdesertchambermusic. com or Isabelle Senger at info© highdesertchambermusic.com or 541-306-3988. HIGH DESERTMUSEUM: 54 I-382-4754. LA PINE PUBLICLIBRARY: Cindylu, 54 I-317-1097. LATINOCOMMUNITY ASSOCIATION: Brad, volunteer©latca.org or 54 I-382-4366. THE NATUREOFWORDS: www.thenatureofwords.org or 54 l-647-2233. REDMOND FRIENDSOFTHE LIBRARY:541-312-1060. REDMONDINTERCULTURAL EXCHANGE (R.I.C.E.): Barb, bonitodia@msn.com or541-447-0732. TOWER THEATREFOUNDATION: 541-317-0700.

HUMAN SERVICES

ABILITREE:volunteerlabilitree.org or 541-388-8103, ext. 217. AMNESTYINTERNATIONAL:Philip Randall, 541-388-1793. ASSISTANCE LEAGUEOFBEND: 541-389-2075. BEND COMMUNITYCENTER: volunteer©bendscommunitycenter. org or 541-312-2069. BETHLEHEM INN: www.bethleheminn. org or 541-322-8768. BRIDGINGGAPS:bendbridginggapsO gmail.com or 541-314-4277. CENTERFOR COMPASSIONATE LIVING (PREVIOUSLY PEACE AMIMALS AND CENTER OFCENTRAL OREGON): ENVIRONMENT www.compassionatecenter.org or Beth Hansen,541-923-6677. BEND SPAY & NEUTERPROJECT: CENTRALOREGONVETERANS 541-617-1010. OUTREACH: covo.orglgmail.com or BRIGHTSIDEANIMAL CENTER: 54 I-383-2793. volunteer@brightsideanimals.org or DEPARTMENTOFHUMAN 541-923-0882. SERVICES/VOLUNTEERSERVICES: CAT RESCUE,ADOPTION 8tFOSTER Therese Helton, Therese.M.Helton@ TEAM (CRAFT): www.craftcats.org, state,or.us or 541-693-8988. 541-389-8420 or 541-598-5488. DEPARTMENTOFHUMAN CHIMPS, INC.:www.chimps-inc.org SERVICES/VOLUNTEERSERVICES or 541-410-4122. CROOK COUNTY: Valerie Dean, 541DESCHUTESLANDTRUST: 447-3851, ext. 427. www.deschuteslandtrust.org or DISABLEDAMERICANVETERANS 541-330-0017. (DAV):Don Lang, 541-647-1002. DESCHUTESNATIONALFOREST: FAMILYKITCHEN:Cindy Tidball, Jean Nelson-Dean, 541-383-5576. cindyt@bendcable.com or EAST CASCADES AUDUBON 541-610-6511. SOCIETY:www.ecaudubon.org or FAMILYRESOURCECENTER: 541-241-2190. 541-389-5468. THE ENVIRONMENTAL CENTER: HUMANDIGNITYCOALITION: www.envirocenter.org or 541-385-3320. 541-385-6908. HUNGERPREVENTION EGUINEOUTREACHHORSERESCUE COALITION:Marie, info© OF BEND: www.equineoutreach. hungerpreventioncoalition.org or com or joan©equineoutreach.com or 541-385-9227. 541-419-3717. LA PINECOMMUNITY KITCHEN: HEALINGREINS THERAPEUTIC 541-536-1312. RIDING CENTER: Darcy Justice, NEIGHBORIMPACT: chrisqO 541-382-9410. neighborimpact.org or 541-548-2380, HUMANE SOCIETYOFCENTRAL ext. 106. OREGON: Jen, jennifer@hsco.org or 541-382-3537. PEACEBRIDGES, INC., BEND: www.abridgetopeace.org or JohnC. HUMANE SOCIETYOFTHE Schwechten at 541-383-2646. OCHOCOS: 541-447-7178. PFLAGCENTRAL OREGON: JUNIPERGROUP SIERRA CLUB: www.pflagcentraloregon.org or 541-389-9115. 54 l-317-2334. PRINEVILLEBLM:www.blm.gov/or/ districts/prineville/recreation/host.php RONALDMCDONALDHOUSE:Teresa, 54 I-318-4950. or 541-416-6700. SAVINGGRACE:541-382-9227 or STEWARDSHIPFOR SUSTAINABLE 54 I-504-2550. BAGGING: LexaMcAllister, Imcallister©cocc.edu or SOROPTIMISTINTERNATIONAL OF 541-914-6676. BEND:www.sibend.org, president@ sibend.org or 541-728-0820. SUNRIVERNATURECENTER& OBSERVATORY: 541-593-4442. ST. VINCENTDEPAULSOCIAL SERVICES: 541-389-6643. VOLUNTEERCAMPGROUND HOST POSITIONS:TomMottl, VOLUNTEER CONNECT: www. 541-416-6859. volunteerconnectnow.org or 541-385-8977. WINNINGOVER ANGER 8E HEALTH VIOLENCE: www.winningover.org or AMERICAN CANCERSOCIETY: Charlie 541-382-1943. Johnson, 541-434-3114. WOMEN'SRESOURCE CENTER OF AMERICANREDCROSS: CENTRALOREGON:541-385-0750. 541-749-4111. THE BLOOM PROJECT:www. HABITAT FOR thebloomproject.org or Heidi Berkman at h.berkman@thebloomproject.org or HUMANITY AND 541-241-8845. THRIFT STORES DESCHUTES COUNTYHEALTH DEPARTMENT: Tuesday Johnson, BEND AREAHABITATFOR Tuesday Johnson@co.deschutes. HUMANITY:jbarry©bendhabitat.org or 541-385-5387. or.us or 541-322-7425. HOSPICEOF REDMONDBRIGHTSIDEANIMAL CENTER SISTERS: www.redmondhospice. THRIFT STORE:541-504-0101. org or Volunteer Coordinator at HABITATRESTORE:Di Crocker, 541-548-7483. 541-312-6709. MOUNTAINVIEWHOSPITAL:JoDee HUMANE SOCIETYOF CENTRAL Tittle, 541-475-3882, ext. 5097. OREGON THRIFTSTORE: Jen, MOUNTAINVIEW HOSPITAL Ienniferlhsco.org or 541-382-3537. HOSPICE: 541-460-4030 or Tori NEAT REPEAT THRIFT SHOP:Peg, Schultz, tschultz@mvhd.org or 541541-447-6429. 475-3882, ext. 5327. NEWBERRYHABITAT FOR NATIONALALLIANCE ON MENTAL HUMANITY:541-593-5005. ILLNESS— CENTRAL OREGON: OPPORTUNITYFOUNDATION Eileen White, namicentraloregon@ THRIFT STOREOFBEND: gmail.com. 541-389-0129. NEWBERRY HOSPICE: 541-536-7399. OPPORTUNITYFOUNDATION PARTNERS IN CARE:www. THRIFTSTORE OF REDMOND: partnersbend.org or SarahPeterson at 541-548-5288. 541-382-5882. REDMOND HABITATFOR RELAYFORLIFE: Stefan Myers, HUMANITY:Scott or Warren, 541-504-4920. 54 I-548-1406. ST. CHARLESIN BENDAND REDMOND HABITATRESTORE: Roy, ST. CHARLES IN REDMOND: 54 I-548-1406. 541-706-6354. SISTERSHABITAT FOR HUMANITY: VOLUNTEERS IN MEDICINE: Kristi, 54 I-549- I193. 541-585-9008. ST. VINCENT DEPAUL— LAPINE: 54 I-536- I956. ARTS, MUSIC, ST. VINCENT DEPAULCULTURE AMD REDMOND:541-923-5264.

HERITAGE

88.9KPOV, BEND'SCOMMUNITY RADIOSTATION:info@kpov.org or 541-322-0863. ART COMMITTEEOF THE REDMOND FRIENDSOF THE LIBRARY:Linda Barker, 541-312-1064. ARTS CENTRAL STATION: 541-617-13 l7. CASCADES THEATRICAL COMPANY: 541-389-0803. CENTRALOREGON SYMPHONY ASSOCIATION: Julie, 541-383-7779. DES CHUTESHISTORICAL MUSEUM:

Cash Continued from 01

Getting creative Cash grew up in Jacksonville, Fla., wanting two things: to get out West and to become

With a greenscreen back-

a filmmaker. "I didn't fit in in high school, and was constantly looking to fit in, like everybody," he said.

drop behind him, Tim Cash of Far From Earth Films

"I wanted the social aspect,

puts away

but didn't fit in enough to get

lights in his studio in Tumaio.

it. It sort of led me into my own head and to try and become creative ... but I didn't know

Andy Tullie The Bulletin

how to do it yet," he said. After high school, he trav"want to see howmany friends eled and worked in places in- that big (dream)." cluding Bend. He met his wife, H e o c casionally h a s you have on Facebook. They Yuvia Storm, while traveling thoughts of f eature-length want to see what your videos in Laos. films, sometimes even pitch- look like. They just want to "I was walking down in ing to music artists ideas like a see infrastructure, like any this village, and this guy from 20-minute film bridging three company you'd want to invest Seattle who I'd met earlier in different videos. in. So if you think of it in that my travels was like, 'Hey Tim Two years ago, he started business-style ... t hat's the ... I'm hanging out with these shooting a documentary about waytogo. 'We're not just glued to girls who live in Bend, you the local music scene. "I got it should come say hi.'" to a rough-cut and then just MTV. Now we can type it in an Two years later, Cash and got busy and never finished it," gowatchit whenever we want." Storm met again when they Cash said. He tells the artists he works each took jobs on a train in His initial goal may not have with to think of the video as a Alaska. been makingmusicvideos, but commercial for their music. "That was serendipitous," for someone who wanted to be "When somebody sees it, as Cash said. After the season, a filmmaker, it's a fine niche. long as it looks totally profes"A lot of people, it's like, 'ah sional and legit, the first thing theywent to Nepal together. "We spent six months over ... gotta find that thing,' and I (they) think is, 'Whoa, they there, fell deeper in love, and feel like I just found it. I don't got signed, or they got a label then found outwe were having have that missing piece any- behind them. They made it.' That's the goal. a kid. And then it got serious," more," he said. "Because then you can take he said. "The honeymoon was over at that point, and (we) I want my MTV it and book a tour, and hit up came home and tried to figure Cash was an early MTV all these venues and say, 'This out what we were going to do enthusiast. is us.' As soon as (club pro"Even through third grade, I moters) see the video, they're with our life." In 2004, he and Storm came think, I was at this after-school like, 'These guys can probably back to Bend. Filmmaking care where they just had MTV draw an audience."' beckoned. on all day long. I remember beWhen he was startmg out, "I finally said, 'I'm going to ing5, 6years old andwatching it might have taken him a few try this film thing out because 'Smokin' in the Boys Room' weeks, even a month, to shoot I told everybody back then I and Video Killed the Radio and edit a video. was going to be a filmmaker Star,'" he said. "And now I look Now, "I've streamlined my one day,"' Cash said. He taught back and I think, 'Some of productionto where I canbasihimself to be a filmmaker, those were pretty intense vid- cally go out and shoot a video learning on the fly. His first eos for my age.'" in a day and edit it in a day," he film, the 35-minute "Skipping But he continues to be in- satd. Stones," was selected for the spired by MTV videos, "to the Several music clients have 2007 BendFilm Festival. point that now I do my little comeback for more videos. CaAs a fledgling filmmak- lower-third (text), with the nadian artist Pennan Brae will er, he wanted to direct fea- song, the artist, the directed come to Central Oregon, stay ture-length movies, "just like by Tim Cash at thebottom," he with the Cashes and knock out everybodyelse," he said. sald. severalvideos while intown. "My goal was to make a fea"They get addicted to the Though MTV long ago beture film, do something big. I came neglectful of the mini- music videos," Cash said. "I realized that's not very good film genre it spawned, the mu- think people get addicted to for your self-esteem. That's not sic-video business is far from seeing themselves bigger than very good for your confidence dead. life." "It's all about YouTube," as a filmmaker. Because you In fact, he's shot 20 videos do setyourselfup for failure; Cash said. Likewise Facebook. for Humboldt County, Caso many people go out with Promoters who book bands lif.-based reggae musician

'.

I •

I

Jah Sun. He and Jah Sun trav-

eled to Jamaica for their work together. "I've just created friend-

ships," Cash said.

The future On March 11, Cash completed and posted his Dennen fan video on his Yotflltbe channel. It stars Kiran as a drummer,

Isa as singer and their friend Ian Swett, 8, as bassist, the

three cutely miming their way through the four-minute pop song. Though she's not seen on camera, his wife, Storm, was

instrumental in keeping the kids motivated during the shoot, he said. Cash made the

videomerelyasan ardentfan of Dennen's, not a hired gun, but the skills he's honed over

99 previousmusic videos are in ample evidence. Though he had to usher his curious kids out of the studio during the interview, Cash is happy they're interested in what's goingon inside. 'When we talk about the future of Far F rom E arth,

it's these guys," he said. "My wife's already starting to do production management for me, and then these guys are so interested in how everything works that by the time Kiran's

12, I'm hoping he'll be coming

along with me on shoots, and then eventually it will be the

whole family traveling together and doing shoots. 'That'sthenewall-timegoal, whereas before it might have been like, 'I want a million dol-

lars to shoot a feature film!"'he added. "Now I'm 36 years old, and I love where life is." — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletfn.com

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MISCELLANY CENTRALOREGON LOCAVORE: www.centraloregonlocavore.com or Niki at info@centraloregonlocavore. com or 541-633-0674. HIGH DESERTSPECIAL OLYMPICS: 541-749-6517. OREGON ADAPTIVESPORTS: www.oregonadaptivesports.org, info©oregonadaptivesports.org or 541-306-4774. SACRED ARTOF LIVING CENTER: 541-383-4179.

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D6

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

'Ps c 'set orazom ie-i e series inae TV SPOTLIGHT

actually traveling through ple will be saying, 'Mentalist,' time, and that was the one

"Psych" Wednesday,9 p.m.,

parenthesis, serious version of

USA Network

By Kate O'Hare zrtp2it

In an upscale chain restaurant on a busy road in Manhattan Beach, Calif., not far

from the production offices of the USA Network come-

dy-drama 'Psych,' and roughly 1,286 miles from the show's filming location in Vancouver, British Columbia, star James

Roday and series executive producer Steve Franks get to-

Williams & Hirakawa IUSA Network

gether for lunch to discuss not staying too long at the party. "For a lot of people," quips Franks, "our second episode was too long at the party." Obviously not for everyone, because the show airs it eighth season — and series— finale on Wednesday, followed by the "Psych After Show," a onehour special hosted by Kevin Pereira ("Attack of the Show") and featuring a QgtA with the

"Psych"concludes it s eight-season run Wednesday on USA Network.

cast and Franks, in front of a live studio audience in L os

son, who directed the show's

On being outlived by "The

musical episode, which aired in December); and idiosyn-

Mentalist," w h ich f o l lowed "Psych" and wa s c r iticized

cratic Detective Carlton Las-

early on for having a very similar but far grimmer premise

Angeles. For those who need to go do

some binge viewing in a hurry, "Psych" features Roday (today sporting a full beard that's about a half-inch short of edging into Old Testament patriarch territory) as Shawn Spencer, a native of Santa Barbara, Calif., who uses his Sherlock Holmes-level powers of deduc-

can't do time travel without

Roday: "It'll just keep us in the zeitgeist with them. Peo-

tion to convince people he's a

crime-fighting psychic. At his side are his best friend from childhood, Burton "Gus" Guster (Dule Hill); his ex-cop dad, Henry (Corbin Bernsen); detective girlfriend Juliet (Maggie Lawson); Police Chief Karen Vick (Kirsten Nel-

siter (Timothy Omundson).

presidential term, i n h o tels and apartments without air

conditioning." Franks (who has been staring intently at the sound-level indicators on the smartphone

recording the conversation): "It also works as a hypnotist's device."

So without further ado, here are Franks and Roday on tak-

Roday: "They started after ing "Psych" out on a high note. us, and they had a zillion viewOn missing Vancouver ... ers a week." Roday: "I personally, am Franks: "Now, we want 'The not. I love Vancouver, truly, Mentalist' to go on for 20 more but I did spend, in all, four years. We want it to be the years over there — a whole 'Gunsmoke' of this era."

thing I couldn't reconcile."

'Psych.'" On "Let's Get Hairy," the Franks: "So we have noth- 2009 episode (co-written by ing but positive feelings." Roday) featuring "American Roday: "We got every drop Werewolf in London" star Daof milk out of that, that we vid Naughton ... possibly could." Roday: "The werewolf epiOn feeling good about the sode wasa guilty pleasure of end of it all ... mine. It probably wasn't the Roday: "We'reatpeace with best storytelling we've ever the decision to call it a show, done, but the fact that we got because honestly, I feel like we Josh Malina in a diaper, in a did everything we could think wheelbarrow, no less. That of, just about. I always make a was pure silliness." notebook every year of ideas Franks: "I'm just as happy that I want to do every sea- with an oddball, awkward, son. I went back, and the ones weird joke as I am with a big, we didn't do, I don't really feel ridiculous, silly set piece. But like, "Oh, dang, we didn't do silly is one of the many things that thing." we go to." Franks: "At the end of every On going to the zombie well year, James and I would get at the end ... together, and we would talk Roday: "Zombies was someabout how we were going to thing that was on our board push the boundaries of what forever, too. To be completely the show was allowed to do honest, a lot of us finally geteach year. And, if we couldn't ting to do zombies has to do figure out a way to push the with it being the final episode, boundaries any more, we both and me directing, and everysaid, 'OK, we'll be done at that body saying, 'OK, Roday, you point.' can have zombies.' "And this year, we're remak"We did nothave real zoming one of our own episodes, bies, but they looked awfully and James' zombie episode is good. What was cool about so — it's just so free. It's com- it was, it was a taste of zompletely free." bies. It was a kitchen-sink sort On why no time travel ... of horror episode, where we Franks: "I spun so many didn't hang the whole thing writers room wheels for so just on zombies. That probmany weeks each year, think- ably would have been a mising Ihad a new way tomake take. We gave you a little bit of it logical. But the thing is, you everything."

Strai t-A teen i tin e ression

MOVIE TIMESTODAY

Dear Abby: I'm a 15-year-old the issues you have that need lady I love dearly'? — Laid Back in Michigan boy in ninth grade. I have depres- resolving. sion, and I don't know what to I care about you, and I'm glad Dear Laid Back: One thing do. I always feel like I'm not good you asked me this question. Please comes to mind — you could shave. enoughforanything,even though don't postpone following my Dear Abby:I am a server in an I have had a 4.0 GPA since sev- advice. upscale restaurant. Part of my job enth grade. I have repeatedly cut Dear Abby: My wife and I are is refilling water goblets, which myself, but I wear a retired. Everything shouldn't be stressful except that bracelet so no one w as g r eat u n t i l almost all of our customers place can see it. a bout si x m o n t h s their smartphones right next to DEAR I don't want m y ago, when things their glasses. If I should make a ABBY family to find out be radically changed. slight mistake and accidentally

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 3DAYSTOKILL(PG-13)12:45,3:55,7:IO,IO • 12 YEARSASLAVE(R) 11:20a.m., 2:50, 6:05, 9:10 • 300: RISE DF ANEMPIRE (R) 3:15, 9:35 • 300: RISE OF ANEMPIRE 3-D (R) 12:35, 6:55 • DIVERGENTIMAX (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 3, 6:30, 9:45 • DIVERGENT (PG-13) 11:30 a.m.,12:30, 2:45, 3:45, 6:15, 7:15,9:30 • FROZEN(PG) 11:40 a.m., 2:30 • GOD'S NOTDEAD(PG) 11:15a.m., 2, 4:45, 7:30,10:15 • GRAVITY3-D(PG-13)740, 10:10 • THE LEGO MOVIE(PG) 12:05, 3:20, 6:25, 9:05 • THEMONUMENTS MEN (PG-13)1:IO,4:25,7:50 • MR. PEABODY tlt SHERMAN(PG) 12:15, 3:30, 6:40, 9:15 • MUPPETSMOSTWANTED(PG)11:55 a.m., 12:55, 3:10, 4:10, 6, 7, 9, 9:50 • NEED FOR SPEED3-D (PG-13) 12:20, 6:45 • NEED FOR SPEED(PG-13) 3:40, 9:55 • NON-STOP(PG-13) 1, 4:20, 7:25, 10:05 • SON OFGOD(PG-13) 1:15,4:35, 8 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies.

• There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

cause I'm afraid they w ill t r eat m e l i k e

The i ssue

is I

drip water on these expensive de-

a poor little kid who is too easily

stopped shaving ev- vices, you know what would hapery day. I did it when I was work- pen next. Please ask your readers

offended. I don't know what to do

ing, but I don't feel the need to do

or who I can go to for help. Thank you forany help you can giveme. — Drowning inDespair Dear Drowning:When a person is experiencing so much emotional pain that he (or she) is self-injuring, it's time to get professional help to deal with it. Ideally, you should be able to talk to your parents about the depth and duration of your depression. But because you feel you

it now. My wife strongly disapproves. She claims my unkempt appearance is a direct, negative reflection on her. I feel it reflects only on me.

can't, talk with a trusted teacher

or counselor at school about it, or an adult relative you feel close

enough to confide it to. Cutting is not the answer because it only brings temporary relief f r om

I have told her I will shave prior

you deal withthe unexpected.How you land is your call. You often trigger unpredictability without realizing it. A child or

lovedonecouldbeasourceofunusual happiness. M akeapointofdoing even more with this person. If you are single, a friendship could be involved in develop-

Dear Careful Server: I'm glad to ask, but many readers regard their smartphones as extensions

to any social engagement we both attend, as well as public events like civic club, etc. The guys I play cards with also go unshaven.

of themselves. Convincing them to cooperate would be like selling them on amputating a finger. Of course, the lesson would be My wife has threatened to can- learned if the diner accidentally cel card games with friends, can- tipped over a water or wine glass cel our weekend trip to her broth- because there would be no one er's birthday celebration, cancel else to blame. But in the meantime, our upcoming European river it's important that when you pour, cruise, refusestokissm eand said you do it VERY CAREFULLY. some things I can't repeat. Is there

anything I can do to appease this

— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.o.Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

your plans oncemore. Aclose loved

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014:This year

to keep their smartphones off the table! — Careful Server in Bethlehem, Pa.

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

distance, and know that you could be taken abackby thisperson'snews.Tonight: Return calls and check your email.

one or roommate could be unusually charming and forthright. Let the good times happen, and flex with the moment. Excitement surrounds a child. Tonight:

Say"yes" to anewopportunity. SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dsc. 21)

** * * * F eeling as good as possible will help you deal with a changeable ing a romance.A Starsshowthe kind friend could intro- ** * * You could be reacting to some- person and/or issue. The resolution could one's behavior, which would explain your be much easier than you might have " yy " " . high energy. Mobilize this reaction, and ** * * * D ynamic duceyoutoyour thought. Buy tickets to a play or concert. sweetie or a friend- use this newfound vitality in a way that Be entertained for a change — you don't ship might become benefits you. Make time for a favorite always need to be responsible. Tonight: more. If youare person. Together, you will determine your Justask. attached, make a * Difficult plans. Tonight: Dinner for two. point of breaking CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) past the doldrums LEO (July 23-Aug.22) ** * * Follow your instincts when mak** * * * A l low your imagination to add of a relationship. Re-enact your first few ing plans. Your choices will make others to the dimension of your day. A loved one dates or schedule a long-desired trip. smile. Whether you're out driving or putcould prove to be unusually demanding. LED knows how to trigger your temper. ting together a favorite meal, you'll want How youmanage a changeablesituation ARIES (March21-April 19) will depend on your resourcefulness. To- to put on some music. Play it low-key, ** * * Clear out any obstacles that night: Let your hair down to great music. and you will be far happier. Tonight: Take might prevent you from taking a day trip. a much-neededpersonalnight.

Invite a friendalong toexplore anewarea

CANCER (Juns21-July 22)

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

** * Honor an unexpected event. You might not want to deal with the situation, but ultimatelyyou'll see the benefits. A family member could add to the problem. Just don't interfere with this person's TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * Dedicate time to one person, as spontaneity, and everything should work you might not relate well in groups at the out fine. Tonight: At home. moment. Be willing to look at an issue LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22) from a different perspective. Ask for help ** * * * Y our popularity speaks for itself. As a result, a partner could behave in analyzing a situation. An older relative could give you some positive feedback. in a most unpredictable way. Try not to react, as you'll want to calm the situation Tonight: Togetherness works. down. Decide to go for a walk or choose a GEMINI (May 21-June20) different, relaxing pastime that you both ** * * Others will be more challengenjoy. Tonight: Where the fun is. ing than you might have expected. A friend could surprise you with his or her SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov.21) choices. Touch base with someone ata ** * * A llow your imagination to color of town or to head to the local casino. Be more open with a child or loved one. This person values your advice. Tonight: Cozy restaurant, new cuisine.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * You have put off a purchase for a while. If you decide to follow through on it today, use caution. There could be a hidden clause or an expectation that has not been aired out. You finally will be able tozero in onwhatyou want. Tonight: Where your friends are.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * You could be taken aback by a momentary situation that will force some quick thinking. Tap into your ingenuity, and solutions will appear. The question remains: Which resolution works best foryou? Someone observesand admires your responses. Tonight: Take the lead. © King Features Syndicate

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TV TODAY 5 p.m. on TCM, Movie: "The Pink Panther" —The title of this 1964 comedy actually refers to a very rare gem sought by a sophisticated international jewel thief. This "pink panther" turned into a cash cow for writer-director Blake Edwards, thanks to the magical alchemy that occurred when Peter Sellers was cast as bumbling Inspector Clouseau, a role originally intended for Peter Ustinov. David Niven andRobert Wagner also are featured, as is Henry Mancini's incomparable

score. 7p.m. onFX, Movie:"The Girl With the DragonTattoo"Rooney Mara earned anOscar nomination for her striking transformation in cinema's second run at the Stieg Larsson best-seller, about a decidedly unconventional computer hacker who helps a

disgracedreporter (Daniel Craig) probe a years-ago disappearance. Director David Fincher ("The Social Network") gives the result a haunting atmosphere, justifying this second screen variation. 8:15p.m.onHBD, Movis:"The Hangover Part III" —The third and final round of director Todd Phillips' comedy series also factors in some action-adventure, as Alan's (Zach Galifianakis) decision to go off his meds — with some drastic results — prompts his pals (Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms, Justin Bartha) to help him get back on track. None of them may survi vetosucceed,though,

when anenemy (JohnGoodman) of their associate Chow (Ken Jeong) puts them in his sights. 9 p.m. on DPBPL,"Austin City Limits" —The first jazz performer to win the best new artist Grammy and the youngest instructor in the history of the prestigious Berklee College of Music, Esperanza Spalding and her band, Radio Music Society, take the stage in this episode, performing selections from their self-titled album including "En-

dangeredSpecies," "Cinnamon Tree" and "Radio Song." 10 p.m. onHBD,"John Leguizamo's GhettoKlown" — In his fifth solo special for HBO the actor and comedian takes his audience on aroller-coaster ride through his life, from his childhood through his early days asan actor to his later success in films and television. Leguizamo doesn't shy away from the difficult parts, including his battles with negativity, self-doubtand depression, but he does it with a light touch that will keep you laughing. © Zap2it

EVERGREEN

t

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • AMERICANHUSTLE(R) 9:30 • THE HOBBIT: THEDESOLATIONOFSMAljG (PG-13) 5:30 • THE NUT JOB(PG) 11:15 a.m. • THE WINDRISES(PG-13) 2 • After 7p m.,showsare2fandolderonly.Youngerthan 21 mayattend screenings before 7 p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guadian.

In-Home Gue Servlces

Care for loved ones. Comfort for au. 541-389-0006

www.evergreeatnhome.com

mplements 1feras '3nksrie~a 70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeinteriors.com

r I Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • THEBROKEN CIRCLE BREAKDOWN (no MPAA rating)6 • THEGREAT BEAUTY (no MPAA rating)3,8:30 I

I

TOUCHMARK slNCE 1980

I

Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • 300: RISE DF ANEMPIRE (R) 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 • DIVERGENT(PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 9: I5 • MUPPETSMOSTWANTED(PG)11:15 a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • NEED FOR SPEED(PG-13) 1, 3:45, 6:30, 9:15 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • DIVERGENT (PG-13) 1:30, 4:30, 7:30 • HER(R) 7:15 • THE MONljMENTSMEN(PG-13) 2,4:30, 7 • MR. PEABODY Ili SHERMAN(PG) 1:15, 3:15, 5:l5 • MUPPETSMOST WANTED (PG)2:15,445,7:15

•3

p urc 6m/6 t"o.

>j B~ do Bend Redmond

t $• t

Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • DIVERGENT (PG-13) 12:40,3:40, 6:40, 9:35 • GOD'SNOT DEAD (PG) 1:50,4:20,6:50,9:20 • MR. PEABODY tit SHERMAN(PG) 1:05,3:10, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15 • MUPPETSMOST WANTED (PG)Noon,2:20,4:50,7:20, 9:40 • NEED FOR SPEED(PG-13) 1:35, 4:15, 7, 9:35 •

Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • DIVERGENT (Upstairs — PG-13) 1:10, 4:10, 7:15 • SDN OFGDD(PG-13) 1,4, 7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GD! Magazine

John Day Burns Lakeview

La Pine 541.382.6447

bendurology.com

REFRIGERATOR

s

lcENTRAL g

af

Ask about rebates, specials & close-outs.

0

BRoT H E Rs

TV.APPLIANCE


For homes online WW W be n d h o m e S . C O m

THE BULLETIN

SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014

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ADVERTISING SECTION E

Building On A Fun Foundation

Old Mill Area Starting Under$200,000

Welcome to a neighborhood that's built on the incomparable Tetherow Golf C lub and

Less than one mile from Bend'sOld Mill lies Hayden H o m es' newest community:

framed by the snow-covered Cascades. At

Gleneden II. With a variety of Iloor plans to suit families of all sizes, Gleneden is an excellent choice for everyone who enjoys an active lifestyle — river access, jogging trails

Tripleknot Townhomes, one and two-story

floorplans deliver the ultimate in elegance and the utmost in energy-efficiency, all just

moments from downtown Bend. Best of all, a

and dog parks are just minutes away. Visit our Model Home today on 6th Street and

maintenance-free lifestyle means chores never

get in the way of fun. Priced from the low $500,000s. Open house Saturday and Sunday,

Reed Market, or contact your Gleneden Community Manager to learn more about this exciting opportunity to find or build your new home today!

12-4. Take Century Drive to Tetherow, turn

right on Meeks Trail. Call Judy at 541-3901411 or Natalie at 541-508-9581.

CASCADE SOTHEBY'SINTERNATIONAL REALTY JUDY MCCOMBS NATALIE VANDERBORN, BROKERS TRIPLEKNOTTOWNHOMES.COM

HAYDEN HOMES WWW.HAYDEN-HOMES.COM 541-516-4324

Paid Advertisement

Paid Advertisement

Warning:These projects mayactually /

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by Metro Editorial, for The Bulletin Advertising Department

Home improvements are typically made to improve the functionality and look of a home, but renovations also can increase the value of a home. Certain changes to a home can make it more attractive to prospective buyers, while other renovations may make a home less appealing. For example, a complete overhaul of an outdated kitchen is often a smart financial move, while installing a pool or hot tub may not be worth the cost to homeowners. Separating the good from the bad renovations makes smart financial sense, and homeowners looking to improve their homes'resale values may want to avoid the following projects.

Bedroom and Garage Conversions Changing a room's traditional function often turns off buyers. For example, turning a garage into a home gym might seem like a great idea for you, but it may not be so appealing to prospective buyers. Buyers can certainly reconvert the space, but they would consider the costs of such a conversion when making their offers on the home.

L

Stylized Colors on Trims and Rooms Painting over unappealing colors is a project many homeowners can handle.However, some may be discouraged by a home thathas too many bright colors or textures on the walls and trims. Buyers often want homes that are move-in ready, meaning they can get settled in before undertaking large projects. A living room painted in purple or zebra print may not fit the design scheme of many buyers. Dark colors do not easily disappear, and taping off and painting trimwork or changing it entirely can be equally timeconsuming. Stick with neutral colors when selling a home, even if this means giving rooms a new coat of paint before putting your house on the market.

Removing Closets Closet space is often high on buyers'priority lists.'IIrrning closet space into an office or removing a closet to make a room bigger may be fine for those who are staying put. But these modifications can be a turn-off to prospective buyers.

Too Many Features In an effort to"keep up with the Joneses,"some homeowners will over-improve their home to the point that it outshines all others on the street. There is a case for having nice things, but homeowners may struggle to sell a home that is disproportionate to other homes in the area. Practice moderation when making improvements to attract more buyers. srs„E

These suggestionsare merely guidelines and should not replace the advice of a reputable real estate agent when marketing a home. Housing features and what buyers are interested in vary across the country. Some items may be desireable in specific areas but undesireable elsewhere. Making informed choices before renovating can help homeowners recoup the largest share of their investments.

$i-'

With a strong background in Sales and Marketing, Michelle Witt is an excellent addition to our team! M i c helle's insight is keen

and her people skills are unsurpassed in this marketplace. Her sense of adventure, style and charisma make her a client favorite wherever she goes! Michelle can be reached at 541.974.4750 "i am so happy to be affiliated with Windermere! The warm professionalism and commitment to excellence in this company was an immediate attraction for me...i cannot imagine any better environment that would offer me the opportunities to hone my skills and serve my clients in this manner! I am planting deep roots in this community and share this vision of service and integrity with my fellow Windermere Brokers!" Michelle Witt

After spending many years in the toy industry; Steve Walterscheid found himself desiring new direction...following his passion for people, sales and houses; Real Estate was a natural fit! Steve is an inventor. He has a naturally innovative approach to this business much the same as he had in his former company... his "outside of the box" thinking and limitless creativity bring a unique flair to all that he does! Buying or selling...contact Steve at 541.480.0376 "How exciting it is to bring aii of my past experiences into a new career! The training I have received at Windermere will serve me for years to come...i am amazed at the amount of activity in the market, and i am eager to put my skills, both oid and new to work for my clients! My creativity coupled with the strength of Windermere's technology are a winning combination ..." Steve Walterscheid •

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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 730

732

New Listings

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i

!

RENTALS

603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - Roommate Wanted 616- Want To Rent 627- VacationRentals & Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condominiums & Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634- Apt./Multiplex NE Bend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638- Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640- Apt./Multiplex SW Bend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for Rent General 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652 - Houses for Rent NW Bend 654- Houses for Rent SE Bend 656 - Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664- Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space 682 - Farms, Ranches and Acreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713- Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740 -Condominiums 8 Townhomes for Sale 744 - Open Houses 745 - Homes for Sale 746- Northwest Bend Homes 747- Southwest Bend Homes 748 - Northeast Bend Homes 749 - Southeast Bend Homes 750 - Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757 - Crook County Homes 762 - Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational Homes and Property 764 - Farms and Ranches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land 648

Illltn High - Willow Creek i $310,000 VILLAGE PROPERTIES • 1894 sq.ft. Sunriver, Three Rivers, • 2 bedroom, large den, La Pine. Great Selection. Prices range 2 bath $425 - $2000/mo. • Private lot on golf course View our full • MLS 201401639 inventory online at Julia Buckland, Village-Properties.com Broker, ABR, ALHS, 1-866-931-1061 CRS, GRI 541-719-8444 671

I

3 bdrm 2 bath, $700/mo 1st mo rent + dep. 541213-0488 /541-555-7535

604

Storage Rentals For rent, 8'x20' container in secure facility. Dry, clean, only $90/mo. Call 9th Street RV Storage Center, 541-420-6851. 632

Apt./Multiplex General CHECKYOUR AD

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809 634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris 8 Stevens, Inc.

MORRIS REAL ESTATE

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NE Bendi $265,000 • 1710 sq.ft. craftsman • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath • Hardwood floors IA ~ dy~ M Op wl • MLS 201401161 MJ DeWolf, Broker, Fenced storage yard, ARB, CNHS,RCC building and o ffice 541-420-7080 trailer for rent. In convenient Redmond location, 205 SE Railroad Blvd. Reduced to $700/mo. Avail. now. 541-923-7343. MORRIS REAL ESTATE For Lease $6930/month • 6300 sq.ft. restaurant NW Bend i $319,500 • 28 ft. & 12 ft. hoods • 2080 sq.ft. • Busy Bend intersec- • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath tion • Covered front porch • MLS 201310861 • MLS 201401314 Lisa Campbell, Broker Mark Valceschini PC, 541-419-8900 Broker, CRS, GRI 541-383-4364 MORRIS REAL ESTATE

RRRI

EiR RR MORRIS REAL ESTATE

MORRIS REAL ESTATE

BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of Office space a v ail. classified advertising... 300-500- sq. ft., pri- real estate to automotive, vate bath and confer- merchandise to sporting ence room, all util. goods. Bulletin Classifieds paid. $300-$450 mo. appear every day in the + dep. C all Jim at print or on line. 541-480-4744 Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com

BsnU IRe ©nlh

The Bulletin

sernng central oregon s>nce19e

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Very motivated seller. Beautiful home in SW Redmond with very motivated seller. This 4 bedroom, 2 bath home is ready for its new owners. Small shop with hot tub and gazebo in backyard. MLS 201308103 John L. Scott Real Estate 541-548-1712 Beautiful log home with Cascade views, $329,900 • 2500 sq.ft., large open living spaces/flex space, 1.87 acre, low maintenance, secluded • Deck, shop, 2 car carport • Master suite with sauna & balcony Gail Rogers, Broker 541-604-1649 or 541-388-0404 Windermere Central Oregon Real Estate Too many upgrades to list! in this 1946 sq. ft.

Updated! Owner w i ll carry - 3 b d rm, 2 bath, 1440 sq.ft., on .34 acre. Large deck and oversized garage/ shop. $119 ,900. MLS¹ 201 3 08373 Pam Lester, Principal Broker Century 21 Gold Country Realty, Inc. 541-504-1338 Wonderful Bend home and awesome mountain views. Ad¹2002 TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449

www.BendOregon RealEstate.com Awbrey Butte Fine living and big Cascade

views! Ad ¹1292 TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www. BendOregon RealEstate.com The perfect 3 bdrm, 2 bath starter home with views. Ad ¹1172 3 b d rm, 2i/~ bath TEAM Birtola Garmyn home. Landscaped, High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 f enced, in a qu i e t cul-de-sac. $239,900. www.BendOregon MLS 201 3 'I 0535. RealEstate.com Pam Lester, Principal Broker, Century 21 3 Bdrm, 2 bath home on Gold Country Realty, 4.89 acres in the high desert. Ad ¹1282 Inc. 541-504-1338 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Nearly 1/2 acre, 3 bdrm, High Desert Realty 2 bath, view of Black 541-312-9449 Butte. AD¹1082 www.BendOregon TEAM Birtola Garmyn RealEstate.com High Desert Realty 755 Acres of Wild 541-312-9449 Loveliness. $650,000 www.BendOregon • Off-grid living solar set RealEstate.com

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Tumalo Home on 5 AC, • 1600 SF home, 3 bed, Incredible Mtn Views! 2 bath, built in 2004 AD¹1042 • 60X40 metal shop & TEAM Birtola Garmyn corrals High Desert Realty • Ride for miles, 25 min. 541-312-9449 to Bend www.BendOregon Kathy Neal, Broker RealEstate.com 541-923-4663 or 541-420-4978 NEW CON S T RUC TION! Split m aster Windermere Central Oregon Real Estate floor plan, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1640 sq.ft., tile SW Bend single level floors/backsplash. RV on almost as parking. $ 1 79,900. ranch acre. Ad ¹1192 MLS¹ 2013 0 1880 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Pam Lester, Principal High Desert Realty B roker Century 2 1 541-312-9449 Gold Country Realty, www.BendOregon Inc. 541-504-1338 RealEstate.com Bend's exclusive mtn 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, Almost high community. 1600 sq.ft. Nestled in Ad ¹1622 the Pines, AD¹1672 TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon www.BendOregon RealEstate.com RealEstate.com Needs some TLC! 3/2, Check out the 1136 sq. ft . s i ngle classifieds online story home on almost 1/3 acre lot (.30), vi www.bendbulletirLcom nyl windows, dbl. ga Updated daily rage, plenty of room for RVs. $99,900. Stunning Panoramic MLS 201310719. Pam Views, $333,000 Lester, Principal Bro • Immaculate, 2350+ ker, Century 21 Gold sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2.5 Country Realty, Inc. bath 8 separate bed 541-504-1338 floorplan acre corner lot, Immaculate and well • 0.23 landscaped cared for 2000 sq.ft. • Composite decking ranch rambler. • 3 car garage & shop Ad ¹1072 area TEAM Birtola Garmyn Gail Rogers, Broker High Desert Realty 541-604-1649 or 541-312-9449 541-388-0404 www.BendOregon Windermere Central RealEstate.com Oregon Real Estate Corner lot 1380 sq. ft., 3 River view Condo. Mt. bdrm, 2 bath, vaulted Bachelor Village. ceilings gas heat and 20% Equity share. double car garage. Ad ¹1552. $156,900. MLS TEAM Birtola Garmyn 201309158 High Desert Realty Pam Lester, Principal 541-312-9449 B roker Century 2 1 www. BendOregon Gold Country Realty, RealEstate.com Inc. 541-504-1338

NW Bend i $390,000 PUBLISHER'S • 2062 sq. ft. NOTICE • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath All real estate adver• .33 acre low maintetising in this newspanance yard per is subject to the • MLS 201401593 F air H o using A c t Shelly Hummell, Broker, which makes it illegal 726 CRS, GRI, CHMS to a d vertise "any 541-383-4361 preference, limitation Timeshares for Sal or disc r imination based on race, color, 2 D e e ded we e ks, French Polynesia on religion, sex, handicap, familial status, Moorea (Tahiti), dues marital status or na- $ 945 p e r wee k . MORRIS tional origin, or an in- $5000. Pics and info REAL ESTATE tention to make any call 541-447-8629 or IM~ e~ ~ Op «0 such pre f erence, 541-419-4221. limitation or discrimiNW Bend Lot i nation." Familial sta- $5000-$35,900 Enjoy $169,000 tus includes children Eagle Crest all year • .23 acre view lot under the age of 18 as a fractional owner. • RM zoned living with parents or Benefits of being an • Just blocks to downlegal cus t odians, Eagle Crest Owner at town pregnant women, and a "fraction" of the cost. • MLS 201400932 people securing cus- Home-ID FRAC Dawn Ulrickson, Broker, tody of children under Eagle Crest Properties CRS, GRI, CHMS 18. This newspaper 866-722-3370 541-610-9427 will not knowingly accept any advertising 201208716. for real estate which is Clyde Browning, in violation of the law. Principal Broker, O ur r e aders a r e 2.2 Acres in NE Bend MORRIS 541-480-4520 hereby informed that $395,000 REAL ESTATE Eagle Commercial TOUR OUR HOMES all dwellings adver- • 1967 sq. ft. I~ ~ ~ Op m 1 Real Estate tised in this newspa- • 2 bedroom, 2 bath per are available on • Artist studio/shop SAT 1PM-4PM 732 People Look for Information an equal opportunity • MLS 201401494 About Products and Commercia!/Investment basis. To complain of Lynne Connelley, Services Every Daythrough d iscrimination ca l l HOSted by: Properties for Sale Broker, CRS HUD t o l l-free at The Bulletin Classrfieds 541408-6720 1-800-877-0246. The PRIME COMMERCIAL The Brokers toll f ree t e lephone PROPERTY. Charm In the beautiful city of number for the hearing updated Madras La Pine in Central Oring im p aired is building, located on egon, this 9 unit moAt 1-800-927-9275. Hwy. 97, Cat 5 wire tel is a great investMORRIS ment with chance to P R O P E R T KE S system, h a r dwood REAL ESTATE Eagle Crest Properties exp a nd. floors & off s t reet grow & l~ ~ d Op mB Just bought a new boat? parking. $ 1 39,900. Beautiful m t n & Sell your old one in the ¹ 201305319 Pam meadow views. 2 of For Lease classifieds! Ask about our Lester, Principal Bro the units are bachelor $1.25/sf/month Super Seller rates! ker Century 21 Gold u nits rented o n a • Downtown Redmond 541-385-5809 Country Realty, Inc. weekly or m o nthly TOUR OUR HOMES hosted bythe BROKERS at EAGLE CREST PROPERTIES. • 3 rentable spaces 541-504-1338 rate. Owner is in pro• 2007 built cess of putting in new Multiple open houses on tour each Saturday. It's as easy as 1, 2, 3. • MLS 201401320 654 ommercial bldg f o r carpet & l i n oleum. Rookie Dickens, Broker, Csmall business, 432 Right on the busiest Houses for Rent 1. Stop by the Eagle Crest Properties offfces at GRI, CRS, ABR sq. ft., with golf course hwy in Oregon. Lots 541-815-0436 SE Bend view, paved d rive, of parking & next to all 8300 Cooper's Hawk Drive. spacious parking, i/2 conveniences. A must N ewer 4 b d r m S E , acre lot. $ 1 29,950 see for the serious inmaster main l evel, ¹ 201300318 Call vestor. $ 1 ,250,000. 2. Enter weekly to win prizes. 2100 SF, large yard, Nancy Popp, Princi MLS 2712469. Casvery n ice. $ 1 595. MORRIS pal Broker, cade Realty, Dennis 3. Pick up your tour guide and map. • QIRl NOUSINO 541-480-9200 O P P 0 iI V NI I1 REAL ESTATE 541-815-8000. Haniford, Princ. BroCrooked River Realty ker 541-536-1731

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I T HUR - S U N 12PM - 4PM

THURS. - SUN. 12PM - 4PM B eautifu l P a h l i s c h H omes c o m m u n i t y f eaturin g a m a z i n g n ei g h b o r h o o d a menities: pool, h o t tub, clubhouse, sports 20862GoldenGatePlace,Bend center, gym, game room Direrfioes: from Iheparkuay, east and more! Come tour a Market,south on 15th,then variety of single level on Reed and 2-story floor plans. follow signs.

Hosted 6 Listed by: TEAM DELAY

RHZI

NE Bendi $205,900 • 1321 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • Private .18 acre lot Commercial Building • MLS 201401365 Darryl Doser, $1.80/sf Broker, CRS • Excellent visibility 541-383-4334 • 2700 sq.ft. • Bank, credit union or fast food • MLS 201310084 Paula Vanvleck, Broker 541-280-7774 MORRIS REAL ESTATE

Houses for Rent General

.00

Mobile/Mfd. for Rent

745

Commercia!/Investment Commercial/Investment • H o mes for Sale Properties for Sale Pro p erties for Sale Single level on almost 1/2 acre. Won't last Commercial LandInvestor O p portunity! long! Ad ¹2102 La Pine Six rented homes plus • Dillon/Box Way 1.29 2 lots in La Pine, OR. TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty acres, $84,000. MLS $179,000. High Lakes 541-312-9449 ¹201107218 Realty & Pr o perty www.BendOregon • Bluewood Pl . 61 Management RealEstate.com acres next to Bi-Mart, 541-536-0117 $185,000. MLS Remarkable Deschutes 738 ¹201301353 River & Canyon • Highway 97/Rosland- Multiplexes for Sale Views! AD¹1222 . 85 acres next t o TEAM Birtola Garmyn Gordy's, $325,000 Duplex on large lot and High Desert Realty MLS ¹2900977 adjacent duplex for 541-312-9449 • Spring River Rd Fusale too. ¹1382 www.BendOregon ture develop potential, TEAM Birtola Garmyn RealEstate.com 17 acres, $500,000 High Desert Realty One level ranch home MLS 201310960 541-312-9449 on 9 acres, $339,000 Clyde Browning, www. BendOregon • 3-4 bdrm 8 2 full baths Principal Broker, RealEstate.com • 1959 sq.ft. 8 covered 541-480-4520 front porch Eagle Commercial Find exactly what • Craftsman, rustic Real Estate you are looking for in the design interior • 36X28 3-bay shop C ommercial Lots I n CLASSIFIEDS Crooked River Ranch: building • Lots of room to park Great opportunity to 2 Bdrm, 2 bath start a business or equipment Duplex unit on Dave Disney, Broker relocate an existing large lot. Ad ¹1392 410-8557 business. Near res- TEAM Birtola Garmyn Windermere Central t aurants, hotel a nd High Desert Realty Oregon Real Estate golf course. Owner 541-312-9449 terms avail. Business Complete 2008 remodwww.BendOregon Circle, Lot 82:- 1.05 eled canal home on RealEstate.com acres, $25,000. Lot 50 1/3 acre. AD¹1132 -1.30acres & Lot51- This is the only duplex TEAM Birtola Garmyn 1.23 acres, still avail- in Gilchrist townsite High Desert Realty able at $35,000 each and has been very 541-312-9449 or purchase both for well maintained. 4 www.BendOregon $60,000. Juniper Re- bdrms, 1 bath each RealEstate.com alty 541-504-5393 side, plus living room, Complete Tumalo kitchen, laundry area Commercial P a r cel, and bonus room up Package, $700,000 Wickiup Junction • 3645 sq.ft. custom stairs. Single car ga Great co m mercial home on small acrerage, fenced b ack age parcel ready to ex- yard, covered patio pand. Has rental in- and mtn views & lan d scaping.• Stunning come and Hwy 97 easy care property frontage. Great future $179,999 • Commercial green location fo r a n t ici-Cascade Realty, Den house & pond Haniford, Princ. • Detached pated La Pine expan- nis office buildBroker 541-536-1731 sion. Many a c tive ing & hobby building businesses on front- 2 Unit duplex in NW Rinehart, Dempsey 8 age road, tire center, Phelps, Broker Bend. Ad ¹1332 restaurant, sp o r ts TEAM Birtola Garmyn www.rinehartdeplsey.com pub, bowling alley, Windermere Central High Desert Realty motel, pizza parlor, Oregon Real Estate 541-312-9449 mini mart/gas station. www.BendOregon Wonderful single level Property includes 4 RealEstate.com on large fenced lot! tax lots. Easy access AD¹1232 f rom Hwy 9 7 vi a 740 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Wendy Rd & Pam Ln. High Desert Realty Condo/Townhomes $265,000. 541-312-9449 MLS2013'I 0830 for Sale www.BendOregon Clyde Browning, RealEstate.com Principal Broker, Redmond Townhome541-480-4520 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1887 Almost 1800 sq.ft., 4 Eagle Commercial sq ft, jetted tub, Brabdrm home in south Real Estate zillian Cherry floors, Bend. d ouble gara g e . Ad ¹1472 Fishing/Hunting Areai MLS201400831 TEAM Birtola Garmyn $235,900 $134,900. Pam Lester, High Desert Realty • Turn-key business op- Principal Bro k e r, 541-312-9449 portunity C entury 2 1 Gol d www.BendOregon • 2 bedroom, 2 bath livCountry Realty, Inc. RealEstate.com ing quarters 541-504-1338 Commercial property • Hwy 97 frontage with tons of exposure • MLS 201203037 744 Hwy 97. AD¹1202 Rookie Dickens, Broker, Open Houses TEAM Birtola Garmyn GRI, CRS, ABR High Desert Realty 541-815-0436 Open House 541-312-9449 11am-2pm www.BendOregon 60826 ScoftsBluff Pl., RealEstate.com Bend. $399,999 Energy efficient SE MORRIS Bend Home on 3 REAL ESTATE Acres. Ad ¹1142 l~ y~ ~ Op d TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty Great location with es541-312-9449 tablished tenants in 2-Story H e n drickson www.BendOregon the heart of d own- Home in D e sirable RealEstate.com town La Pine. Newer River Rim. 2110 Sq.ft. Wonderful Awbrey built strip mall with 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath. Oftenants plus 960 sq ft 3 Butte Home, fice/Den could be 4th $619,900 house built in 1930 3 Car tan- • 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 2963 which has been con- bedroom. dem garage. sq.ft. verted to commercial Marci Ward,Broker • Concrete & butcher u se an d i s als o HighLakes Realty block counters rented. 16 p a rking & PropertyMgmf • Large upstairs with spaces with easy ac541-480-4954 bonus room cess to Hwy 97. Located on busy HunPREVIEW SUNDAY • Flat lot 8 wrap-around deck tington Rd, close to 3/23 1 1-2PNI Ace Hardware, 61885 Walter Court, • Offers the best of NW Bi-Mart, South Valley Bend living! Bend,97702 Bank. Tenant opera- Chris Sperry, Broker Grant Ludwick, Broker 541-388-0404 or tions include Sandy's Cascade Sotheby's 541-633-0255 Hair Design Salon, International Realty Windermere Central DMV o ffice, r e t ail 541-550-4922 space & real estate Oregon Real Estate office, all busy tenants. $499,000. MLS

Homes Starting Mid-$300s

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Hosted Saturday by: JIM HINTON PrinciPal Broker

EDIE DELAY

RHIANNA KUNKLER

Hosted Sunday by:

541-420-2950

Broker

BRUCE DUNLAP

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541-306-0939

SAT. R SUN. 1PM - 3PM

Location-Iocation-Location! Located in such a terrific IOCATION - dose to the NW Canyon with various views available - as new homes will surround this new construction home. Single level with 2020 SF and triple cal garage - what a nice floorplan - very open with great 3088NW17th St., Redmond mom and kitchen to the eating bar and nook. Kitchen has large walk- INrsctiorrsrNorth on Huy 97, left in pantry, corner sink, wrap amund on QuinceAoa, right on NW 10th eating bar with knotty Alder natural cabinets. There is full landscaping St, left on NW SpruceAve, righ! and a fenced yard. on 17th St. House on right past

Hosted & Listed by:

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SAT. 12-3 PM SUN. 12-3 PM

Principal Broker

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Hosted 6 Listed by DAVE DUNN

Teakwood.

$2$7,000

541-420-6229

R E A 1

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PrinciPal Broker

541-604-4200

4671 sq. ft, of t~ ow ood finishes, 4 bedrooms, 3.5 bathrooms, gourmet kitchen, beauuful drmog area office media/family room, wine cellar, and a 3-car garage. AHS warranty.

Al 3419 NW Fairway Heights Dr. DirectloesrTake /Ift. Wmhington to Fainuay Heights Dr,go to end of street on theleft.

$8$7,000

541-390-8465 CENfRAL OREGON READT GROUP, ILC,

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THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY MARCH 22 2014 E3

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 745

Homes for Sale

.54 Acre overlooking Farewell Bend Park. Ad ¹1012 TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www. BendOregon RealEstate.com Residential or Commercial. Possibilities, $269,900. AD¹1162 TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com Centrally Located. $224,900 • 1796 Sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 bath, forced air, AC, Built 1999, updated mfg. • Attached double garage • Fenced 8 landscaped • Gated com. pool, court & spa Mike Everidge, Broker 541-390-0098 or

745

745

Homes for Sale

• H o mes for Sale •

Home s for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

1.36 Acres In La Pine j $62,000 will buy this Beautiful Lodge Brasada Ranchj Custom with Cascade one level M adras Style Estate views, Corian, Vac, $269,900 $429,000 • 1731 sq.ft., 3 bedroom home. 3 b d rms, 2 • 5 acres with Cascade • 1711 sq.ft. furnished bayed wind o ws, • Open cathderal great baths, 1096 sq. ft., 3rd Mtn views cabin dbl-attached garage, • 3 bedroom suites room bdrm ha s o u tside• 5398 sq. ft., 6 BR, 4 2 0x24 s h o p wi t h • Insulated 3-bay shop door, 9148 sq. ft. Iot, BA • Granite counters, overhead door, hot • MLS 201306446 • 3200 sq. ft. shop 2013 property hardwood floors t ub r o om , la r g e Sherry Perrigan, Broker tax= $564.57.¹201400 w/large office • MLS 201310654 f enced area. M L S 541-410-4936 826. Call Everett, at • 24'x36' barn - 4 acres Megan Power, 201305717. $299,000 John L. Scott Real irrigation Broker, GRI, CDPE - Call Nancy Popp, Estate 541-548-1712 • Granite, travertine, 541-610-7316 Principal Broker marble finishes 541-815-8000 Shelley Arnold, Broker Crooked River Realty 6 Acres In Tumalo j 541-771-9329 $675,000 MORRIS Deschutes River View! • 2594 sq.ft. custom John L. Scott REAL ESTATE • 4 bedrooms, 2 baths Real Estate, Bend built MORRIS • 2392 sq. ft. on 1.5 AC, I&~ dy~ ~ Op d www.johnlscottbend.com • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath REAL ESTATE 3 tax lots • Barn, storage building, 137233 Mohawk Drive. hd~&ml y ~ ~ ~ d • Large kitchen 8 open yC' RV hook-up Call a Pro 3 bdrm, 1 bath 1600 beam vaults Broken Top j sq. ft., assumable 4% • MLS 201400839 www.Jackson-AnderWhether you need a $1,225,000 Sue Conrad, loan. Beautiful great son.com • 4652 sq.ft, 4 bedfence fixed, hedges Broker, CRS room, extended bar, Candice Anderson, room, 4 bath 541-480-6621 trimmed or a house French doors to out Broker 541-788-8878 • Theater, office, main side patio, attached John L. Scott built, you'll find level master g arage. Over 2 . 6 Real Estate, Bend • 0 • • • Built in 2011, on 3rd professional help in acres backs to BLM www.johnlscottbend.com Green The Bulletin's "Call a land. Master with bath • MLS 201400172 Duplex - $309,900 MORRIS and walk-in closet. Service Professional" David Gilmore, Broker • NE Bend single level Renai water heater, REAL ESTATE 541-312-7271 Directory • 3 bedroom, 2 bath plumbed for propane • 2 bedroom, 2 bath 541-385-5809 or elect. in k itchen • Fenced yards & 2-car 541-388-0404 and laundry room, Look at: tandem garages Windermere Central Beautiful & heat pump and fa fur Bendhomes.com www.johnlscott.com/44 Oregon Real Estate nace. Storage shed Spacious. 02 MORRIS and covered storage, for Complete Listings of Beautiful property with Pre-sold home on Kellie Cook, Broker REAL ESTATE concrete drive walk Area Real Estate for Sale comfortable spaces Aubrey Butte with 541-408-0463 for varied family interway and e ntrance. hd~&ml y ~ ~ ~ d HPMFS PR!CEP FRPM great views. John L. Scott New lawn in 2013. 70' RV parking! New 3 ests. Exquisite teakAd ¹1322 Real Estate, Bend Cabin on Deschutes! 2 i CROSSING > wood flooring in foyer, $431,000 - $739,000 $239,000. MLS bdrm, 2 bath 1590 sq. TEAM Birtola Garmyn cabin overlook- www.johnlscottbend.com 2 01401156 Ker r y ft. home coming soon! living area and gour- bed High Desert Realty ing Deschutes river 541-815-6363 Pick your colors! Gas met kitchen. Kitchen Delight! 1.44 541-312-9449 /separate gu e s tEquestrian 2679 NW ShieldS DI; Cascade Realty, fireplace, upgraded has granite counter- w a cres fenced a n d www.BendOregon quarters & dbl garage. appliances and cabi tops, large i s land, MLS cross-fenced, 2-stall RealEstate.com • Home w/600 sf ADU 201 3 08238. 17280 SE Renegade nets, t i l e flo o rs, p lanning desk a nd b arn, 1352 sq . f t . • Deck, privacy upgrades $239,900.Nancy Incredible setting, Loop, $230,000. numerous oak cabif enced a n d lan d with western Principal Bro- home • Hickory flooring immaculate home, 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1 acre, scaped, and more! n ets. Master b e d- Popp, accents. $ 1 8 4,900 ker 541-815-8000 1280 sq.ft. home w/2 • Master on main level $449,000 ¹ 201401334 Call $194,900. too new for room on main level Crooked River Realty • Gorgeous mountain stall barn. Minutes with luxurious bathMLS¹201400132 Nancy Popp, Princi • Priced at$579,000 views! from Prineville. p r ivate Classic Redmond Pam Lester, Principal room an d pal Broker, 541-815DIRECTIONS: West on Shevlin Park Rd., • 4.85 AC between MLS ¹201306623 deck. Large Broker, Century 21 8000. Crooked River Home - New Listing left on MW Mt. Washington Dr., left on Bend & Redmond Winderemere Swifterra Gold Country Realty, f amily/media r o o m• 4 bed, 2 bath on .46 Realty NW Shields Dr. • Open floor plan 8 150 NW 4th St., and game/rec room. acre nicely treed lot Inc. 541-504-1338 European Feel vaulted ceilings Prineville, OR. $542,500 MLS¹ • Park-like setting with • Seldom found acre• 2.6 AC irrigation, pond 541-447-7502 201303078. A LIFE IN PARADISE! RV space age with irrigation & fenced Bobbie Strome, 2 Bdrm, 1 bath, 800y • Updated windows are • Convenient to all of Rinehart, Dempsey & 2241 NW Awbrey Rd., Principal Broker Sq.ft., rustic cottage light & bright Bend A LL A R O U N D Bend. Hand crafted Phelps, Broker John L Scott Real on a 2.99y acre par• $189,000 won't last • Remodeled and added www.rinehartdeplsey.com home with attention to Estate 541-385-5500 cel. Come viewthis long! to detail on a l l f i nish Windermere Central amazing piece of BEND PARK Park-like Kathy Denning, Broker • Total privacy with Oregon Real Estate work. This is a must 541-480-4429 paradise on the outsetting. Main dwelling views of Cascades as preview pr o perty. skirts of Redmond. John L. Scott River's Edge Golf plus guest well Solid fir doors, cusBuilt on the curve of Real Estate, Bend Course backing 14th house/rental on a to• Unique to Bend with tom clear vertical fir the Deschutes River, www.johnlscottbend.com T-Box. Ad ¹9952 tal of 0 .55y acres. lots of possibilities cabinets & ceiling fans this perfect small TEAM Birtola Garmyn Main dwelling floors Copper Canyon - 3 bd, Sharon Abrams, CRS, 1899 NW Monterey Mews in all rooms. Great home has amazing High Desert Realty are engineered hard- 2.5 ba in 2350y sf. Principal Broker, • Charming cottages room floor plan with views of the moun541-312-9449 wood in living, dining, Nice, newer home in 541-280-9309 wood floors & a fire• 2 & 3 bedroomplans tains and the river. www.BendOregon 8 bedrooms. MitsubJohn L. Scott place surrounded by • Htgh end fm>shes garage has ishi electric heating 8 SW Bend. The Old RealEstate.com Real Estate, Bend cabinetry. 3 bedroom, Detached Mill, river, parks, rec- www.johnlscottbend.com a studio-type room • Central location c ooling syst e m . 2.5 bath, large masreation and shopping Call The Bulletin At with an extra bath and Kitchen has fantastic • Homes pricedfrom$$29,900 t er b e droom w i t h are a short distance 541-385-5809 shower attached. cabinets with Corian away. Great room liv- Former model home for walk-in closet, DIRECTIONS: West on NWNewport $425,000 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail countertops. Adjacent ing that i s l i ght 8 Crescent Creek built-ins & bath with all Ave./NW Shevlin Park Rd., right on NW 2300 sq ft, 3 MLS¹201309622 guest house and main bright. Gas log fire- Over At: www.bendbulletin.com the extras. M ature bedrooms, 2.5 baths, Pence Ln., left on NW Monterey Pines Bobbie Strome, h ome together f or landscaping with place with slate sur- o pen f l oo r pl a n , Dr. Property on right. All the room you need. Principal Broker $510,000 paver paths. Close to round. Kitchen has John L Scott Real vaulted ceilings, light $284,900 MLS¹201309647 Bend & has Estate slate floor, h ickory and bright window • 2598 Sq.ft., 3 bdrm 8 downtown 541-385-5500 Bobbie Strome, plenty of parking for cabinets, fully applip ackage, cus t om HIDDEN 2.5 bath Principal Broker uests & toys . 61089 Ruby Peak Ln. anced and a pantry. paint finishes through• Full of upgrades & Beautiful Custom Home John L Scott Real ) H!LLSf 459,000 • Vaulted great room Large open loft family out. Master bedroom amenities in Premiere Golf Estate 541-385-5500 room (currently used and den/offi • Attractive finishes ce on • Great room, family MLS¹201308330 Community Bobbie Strome, Bend's Premiere as a bedroom by ten- main level. Covered • Vaulted master 8R room & den • 4 bedrooms, 3 baths Principal Broker ants). Larger fenced back porch/ patio and Awbrey Glen • Hot tub & on a corner John L Scott Real • Gourmet kitchen • Island kitchen rear yard for enter- newly la n dscaped lot w/huge center island • 4 bedrooms + sepa• Priced at$$24,900 Estate 541-385-5500 taining, kids 8 pets. yard — too many uprate office • MLS¹201400897 • Granite 8 cabinets Chain link fence dog grades and features • Recently remodeled DIRECTIONS: South on Brosterhous Barbara Myers, Broker galore 22555 Mcardlee nclosure & s m a ll to list. New price of beautiful kitchen 541-923-4663 or Rd., left on Marble Mountain Ln., left on • 0.63 acre w/lush land$574,000 s torage shed t o o . • Corner location across 541-480-7183 only $239 , 000. Ruby PeakLn. acres of mountain scaping $249,000. from tennis courts MLS201209207 Windermere Central • 20 Danielle Snow, Broker Danielle views MLS¹201401159 Snow, Broker Clyde Browning, Oregon Real Estate • 3 bed, 2.5 bath + Bo541-306-1015 61662 Daly Estates Dr. 541-306-1015 Bobbie Strome, Principal Broker, CiANNDN John L. Scott 80' RV pa r king! nus room Principal Broker • Bright southern exposure John L. Scott 541-480-4520 PDINT Real Estate, Bend • 2560 sq. ft. $179,900. 1616 sq. ft. John L Scott Real Real Estate, Bend Eagle Commercial • Open floor plan 3 bdrm, 2 bath home • 15 acres irrigation + www.johnlscottbend.com www.johnlscottbend.com Estate 541-385-5500 Real Estate • Laminate wood floors with dbl. garage, gas Barn • Large kitchen fireplace, pantry, split www.johnlscott.com/76 • Priced at$239,900 bedroom f l o orplan 924 with great room con Kathy Caba, Principal DIIIECtlONS: From Hwy. 20 East, south Broker 541-771-1761 cept. ¹ 20 1 309527 on 27th St., right on Capella Pl., right on John L. Scott Pam Lester, Principal Daly Estates Dr. Real Estate, Bend Broker, Century 21 Gold Country Realty, www.johnlscottbend.com Inc. 541-504-1338 2305 NW Grimes Rd. OVAHTfr Y PART NO 2326 NN 6th St. Log accent home and $875,000. Great farm 7c horse property on 40 located in the agri• Spacious 5-BRhome acres. Ad ¹1252 cultural valley, north 7 • Office & bonusroom l~ TEAM Birtola Garmyn of Prineville. 5 Bdrm, • Two fireplaces High Desert Realty 3.5 baths, 438/4 sq.ft. • Large landscapedlot 541-312-9449 property includes 75 www.BendOregon • Priced at$689,900 acres. Must see! MLS RealEstate.com 201309754. DIRECTIONS: West on NWPortland Ave., Winderemere Swifterra Like New River Canyon right on MW5th St., right on NW6th St. 150 NW 4th St., Estate, $394,500 Prineville, OR. • Large open, sunny 541-447-7502 61117 Snowbrush Dr. great room • 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath & • Formal LR andDR 26695 Horsell Road laundry room • Granite tile counters Recently remodeled • Large patio with firepit 3bd, 2 bath, 2070ysf • Family room w/ fireplace • BBQ, water feature farm house on 67.9y • Large fencedbackyard • Amenities: pool, gym a cres w i t h 39 . 7 y • Priced at$$60,000 & tennis acres of i r r igation. PSbrokers@yahoo.com 1344ysf building for DIRECTIONS: South on Brookswood 541-410-8084 or Office/Recreation/StuBlvd., right on SW Hollygrape St., left on 541-848-7590 dio, 4502y sf building SW Snowbrush Dr. Windermere Central with 12' door & man Oregon Real Estate door for shop/RV/Toy / Boat storage 8 i n1612 NW 11tI1 St. New construction 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1705 door gardening. New • Central WestSide 750y deep well being sq. ft, 23 acre lot, tile • Outdoor living areas floors, tile backsplash, drilled to provide a • Hardwood floors landscaped, fenced. year-round source of domestic water. New • Upstairs bonusroom $179,900. MLS¹ 201209125 Pam gas log fireplace will • Priced at$$80,000 Lester, Principal Bro be installed. $625,000. DIRECTIONS: From downtown, west on MLS¹201401400 ker Century 21 Gold Newport Ave., right on NW 11th St. Bobbie Strome, Country Realty, Inc. Principal Broker 541-504-1338 John L Scott Real Home / Shop and guest Estate 541-385-5500 62938 Ft'esca St. studio on fenced .5 • Fenced entry courtyard acre. ¹1452 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath 3005 • Premium finishes TEAM Birtola Garmyn s q. ft. home t o b e • Open greatroom High Desert Realty built on 2~/~ acres. • Master on main level 541-312-9449 Daylight b a sement, www.BendOregon • Priced at$429,900 office, f a mily/bonus RealEstate.com rooms, upgraded DIRECTIONS:Morth on 0.8. Riley Rd., left abinets new n e w on BronzeSt., left on FrescaSt. Incredible NW style es- c H S. & more tate on almost 90 $349,000.Pam Lester, acres. AD¹1362 Princ. Broker, CenTEAM Birtola Garmyn 8 Tournament Ln. tury 21 Gold Country High Desert Realty • Golf course view Realty, Inc., 541-504541-312-9449 • Master on main level 1338 ¹201401392. www.BendOregon • High vaulted ceilings RealEstate.com 5 Acres With Viewsj • Wood-burning fireplace $439,900 • Priced at$4$$,000 Newer one level • 2261 sq.ft. Iog home Purchas eprice$350,000,20% down,Loanamount$280,000,30yearfixed. craftsman, $214,900 tt!!tECt!0aS:Cottonwood Rd. west from • 2 bedroom, loft, 2 bath • Vaulted great room Hwy. 97, right on E CascadeRd. At Circle • Unobstructed Casdesign 10, take E Cascadetoward Circle 9. Concade views • 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1450 tinueon E Cascadetoward Circle 7. Left • MLS 201400333 sq.ft. on Winners Cir., right on TournamentLn. Jumbo purchaseprice /value Ss00,000 — 20% down /equity,$640,000 loanamount. Becky Brunoe, Broker • Tiled floors throughOffer valid as of date of ad, restrictions may apply. Rates/fees subject to change. On Approved CredIt. 541-350-4772 out home 1122 NW Foxwood Pl. • Oversized garage (24X26) • Estate on 0.56 acre • Close to river & forest • I • • I• •I• • Gorgeousmountain view I• lands • Spacious rooms Dave Disney, Broker MORRIS • Two swimming pools 410-8557 REAL ESTATE f • Priced at$1,790,000 Windermere Central IA~ & m ly ~ & 0~ 4 Oregon Real Estate DIRECTIONS: North on O.B. Riley Rd., left on MWArchie Briggs Rd., right on NW 10 Acres, Gorgeous TURN THE PAGE 1 Foxwood Pl. Mtn Views ou re never alone avhen we re doiny your Poan ... For More Ads • 30x60 insulated shop The Bulletin w/4 bays, workshop & office • Single level home, 5 A cres w /Mountain = built in 2000, 1728 sq. Views - 3 b drm, 2 ft. bath, 1620 sq ft, irri• 10 acres, 6 irrigated, ated, 36x40 shop, fully fenced, pastures jenced, ex t ensive i i twattor af the y~z angiecox.johnlscott.co sprinkler sys t e m. Casey NM!5 189449 $ je nnifer NMLs 288550 m/37392 M LS¹ 2809 2 2 5 . Angie Cox, Broker $265,000. Pam «5»«~~»bt4» 541-213-9950 Lester, Principal BroJohn L. Scott ker, Century 21 Gold Real Estate, Bend Country Realty, Inc. www.johnlscottbend.com 541-504-1338

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~ Expansive northeasterly views of the Ochoco Mo untains and Pilot Butte

• .29 of acre lot in Rivers Edge ~ This homesite offers 120 feet in w i d t h

providing opportunity for many design options

• 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 Call Brian add, rinapal roker, irector o ot ales

Csll Biisn Lsdd, Piincipsl Brokerl 541-408-3912

541408-3912 l brian©bendpropertysource.com

brlanebendpropertysource.com

• 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, 1796 SF • New fiooring, central air • Family room with fireplace • 2 eating areas - living room too • Large deck, fenced yard • 2 sheds, one set up as a TV room MLS¹201402032 C ti Cd tg

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Lisa Larbeero, Broker 541-610-9697 www.CJLIsa.com

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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 countertops and energy efficient construction • Locationsupportsthe active Bend lifestyle with easy access to parks, trails, river and downtown www.8thStregktCottages.com

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• Beautifully maintained NW Craftsman designed home • Situated on a private .70 acre homesite offering desirable sun exposure • Recently updated kitchen with slab granite and stainless steel appliances • Traditional in style this home offers wonderful entertaining areas • Triple car garage is a bonus • Close proximity to downtown Bend

• Don't miss this stunning end unit townhome in NW Crossing - hasonly beenusedasasecond home •Lotsofupgradeshave beenadded to makethisawarm inviting home for the demanding buyer, 2220SF • Master on mainlevel, 2 nice sizedbdrms &full bath upstairs •Home hasamplestorage and anice oversized 2-cargarage •NW Cross ing hasnice parks,easyaccessto schools& downtown MLS¹201311030 2499 NW Crossing

11 Unit Apartment Complex Near St. Charles • Great rental history • Terrific investment

• 90% occupied MLS¹201310762

I Kel y Horton, Bro er 541-5 - 16

Call Mary tratton, Bro er, Rl 541-41 -6

Call Shelly Swanson, Brokerl 541-408-0086

maryselhmsegmail.com

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• Enloythis beautifulcustom

home w/ lovely finishes • Open floor plan w/ spacious kitchen & great rm, living, & main level master suite • Oversized 2-car garage w/shop & storage! • Views of Rivers Edge Fairway, the 13th tee & mtns • Enjoy the private decking & beautiful gardens • Directions: Mt. Washington to Fairway Heights Dr. MLS¹201308552

Carmen Ann ook, Licensed Oregon Broker l 5414806491 carmsell s¹¹stt.net

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home, log accents,windowwall w/spect acularmountainview, master suitew/his&hersbaths & closets •Detac hedguesthouse,hobbyshopw/bath,largeRV barn& shop • Horse shelter & corral • Low maintenancelandscaping, endof road privacy MLS¹201303251 Call Ron Davis, Principal Brokerl 541-480-3096 www.oregonRanchAndHorse.com

• Stunning Shevlin Ridge one level home, large 3-car garage • 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 3456 SF • Mountain inspired custom home • Upscale popular neighborhood • Gorgeous craftsmanship • Large kitchen, living space • Expanded deck & landscaping for rear privacy MLS¹201310941 Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker l 541-408-3912

• Impressive NW custom designed home tucked away on a quiet cul-de-sac offering beautiful views of the 13th green of GM Course! • 4 bed, 3 bath w/multiple private indoor & outdoor living spaces • 2 fireplaces w/stone surrounds, slate & wood floors • Well cared for and 1 year Home Owners Warranty included • By appointment only MLS¹201401950

www.bendpropertysource.com• brlan@bendproperiysource.com

Resort & Residential Specialist satkosellsoregonegmall.com

Call Jodi Satko, Brokerl 541-550-081

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•StunningCascadeMountainviews • 5 acres, 4acresirrigation • Custom home: 5987 SF,3bed,

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4bath • High quality finishes, 3 fireplaces, 2mastersuites,gourmetkitchen •Outdoorheated pool,landscaped,greenhouse • Shop/RV garage- 2880 SF,3doors, concrete floor • Barn, paddocks, fenced, gated MLS¹201309777

Call Pam Mayo-Phillips, or Brook Havens, Principal Brokers 541-923-1376 l www.desertvalleygroup.com

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• New construction on level 1t Acre lot • Stunning Northwest style w/high end finishes • Open great room floor plan, comfortable yet elegant • Master+ Deo on main level, 3 additional bedroomsup • Oversized 3-car garage & 3 outdoor living areas • Gated community w/tennis courts, clubhouse & trails MLS¹201303701

5bad,55bath,451355 • Old-world charm & extraordinary attention to detail • Cathedral ceiling living room w/grandiose fireplace; exceptional wine cellar • Separate guest quarters with bedroom, bath & living room • Extensive use of reclaimed wood & beamed ceilings; distinctive light fixtures MLS¹201401939

• 102 acres with 100 acres COI Irrigation • Custom home 3611 SF, 3 bed, 3.5 bath with quality finishes • Cascade Mountains, Smith Rock views • 3-csr garage with upstairs office & finished 4-car garage • Shop with RV storage • 4 stall barn with corrals and outdoor arena • 2nd home 1156 SF, 3 bed, 2 bath MLS¹201304005

Sandy Kohlmoos, Broker, GRI, CRSl 541-408-4309 www.bestbendhomes.com

Deb Tebbs, Broker/President l 541-4194553 debtebbsgroup@ bendluxuryhomes.coml www.debtebbsgroup.com

Call Pam Mayo Phillips & Brook Havens, Principal Brokers l 541-923-1376 www.desertvalleygroup.com

brlaniNbendpropertysource.com

Incredible River Views ( $699,000

1265 NW Remarkable Dr. ( $750,000

Close to Town Country Living ( $815,000

Located on Mirror Pond! ( $1,299,000

• Remarkab leAddress... Rem arkableView • 3524SF,4bed,3bathhomesitsontopof the world with0180degreeviewolthe CentralOregonHighDesert • Traveiine entryleadsupto expansiveviews

• 3791 SF, 3 bed, 3.5 bath • Upstairs area loft w/pool table • Great room open to gourmet kitchen

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diningarea • Outsidelswrap-aroundfront deck • Masteronmain level withsoakertub

• MaSter w/Slttlng area+ hiS & hers closets

• DOwnSt airsareawithbar area

Call Rhonda Garrison, Principal Broker l 541-279-1768 www.rhondagarrlson.cascadesothebysrealty.com

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MLS¹201308637

• 3-cargarage,fencedbackyardw/hottub

MLS¹201400355

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• KitChenW /Cherty Cabinetry &afOrmal

• 4 bed, 3 bath, 3381 SF • 10 irrigated acres w/wheel line • Cascade views • Shop1-2car garage+ office & den • Shop 2 - 5 cargarage

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www.crosswaterriverretreat.com Call Brlan Ladd, Prlncipal Brokerl 541-408-3912

10 NW Drake Rd.

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• Stones throw from downtown Bend • Elegant finishes,

3 bedrooms, 4 baths • Remodeled down to studs in 2006 MLS¹201306173 Call for a Personal Tour!

Call Bobby Lockrem, Brokerl 541-480-2356

Call Jodl Kearney, Broker l 541-693-4019

chrissulak©bendbroadband.com

blockrem©gmail.com

jodlrebroker©hotmall.com

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7991 SF 2.8 acres with 400' of private river frontage 800 SF guest cabin 4 bedrooms, 5.5 baths, indoor lap pool River & golf front property Adjacent 3.49 acre lot available at $799,000

Call Chris Sulak, Broker l 541-350-6164

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THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY MARCH 22 2014 E5

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

Beautiful Neighborhood ~ $160,000

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Lot in Super Hot Tetherow ( $212,000

• ':-. • • •

• Complete remodelincludingkitchen, bathrooms, flooring, paint(interior), decks • A/C and wiredfor hottub • large greatroom,wood burningstove,

2 bed with den/office Newly remodeled kitchen Open floor plan Close to Juniper Swim &

high ceilings • Openkitchenareawith breakfastbar • Masterbedroomwith sitting area&deck • I/2 acrelandscapedlotwith sprinklers, 2-carattachedgarage • Commu nity clubhousew/riveraccess &park • Additionalinfo atwww.sunriverdream.com

Downtown • New Int. Bc ext. paint & roof

• 1312 SF + 600 SF garage

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Call Chris Sulak, Broker l 541-350-6164

Call Ken Renner, Principal Broker l 541-280-5352

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Location! Charming Midtown Home/ $221,900 Chalet Style Near Sunriver ( $249,000

Lot 33 on Cozy Dryer Couk • Flat, easy to build lot is tucked into the eastern edge of Tetherow, called The Glen, allowing for privacyand quiet but close enough to ell the amenities Tetherow hss 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

• TerriFiclot in AwbreyRoad Heights • Great proximity to downtown • Build yourdreamhome • .2acrelot • 619 NW Powel Butte Lp

s

Call Nicolette Jones, Broker, ABR, CSP

Call Kelly Winch, Brokerl 541-390-0398

ken.renner¹¹sothebysrealty.com

chrissulak¹¹bendbroadband.com

541-241-432 nicolette.jones¹¹cascadesothebysrealty.com

kwinch¹¹sunriverdream.com

Braeburn ( $265,000

63430 Ledgestone Ct, Bend ( $315,000

17940 Parkway Lane ( $350,000

61885 Walter Court ( $385,000

• Great location across from Tetherow • Walking trail in your

backyard • Single-level townhome • Vaulted ceilings and lots of windows Lt f t v • 2 bed, 2 bath, 1168 SF MLS¹201402119

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MLS¹201308286

The Norma DuBoisand Julie Moe Team, Brokers 541-312-4042l www.TeamNormaAndJulie.com

Call Chris Sperry, Principal Brokerl 541-749-8479

Northwest Crossing ) $400,000

Peaceful Sunriver Location ( $439,900

• Build your dream home while you live in loft area or your RV • MLS¹201105898

Call Joanne McKee, Broker l 541-480-5159 www.joanne@joannemckee.com

• New construction,luxurytownhome • 4bedroom,3.5bathroom • 2540 SF &2-car attachedgarage • Granite, hardwood &tile throughout

Call Greg Barnwell, Broker l 541-848-7222 www.gregsellscentraloregon.com

Stones Throw to River ) $525,000

2972 NW Wild Meadow ) $525,000

• Fantastic upgradedkitchen, customcabinetry,stainless appliances • Great room with beautiful builtins, hugebonusroom • Large masterbathroom • 4 bedrooms, 3baths • 3-car garagewith RVparking MLS¹201401087

• Dramatic foyer & living area • Exquisite master suite

., • 3346 SF • Beamed cathedral ceilings & loft • 4 bedrooms, 2 full, 2 half baths

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• Beautiful extensive decks • Top end hot tub • 26 Siskin Lane

MLS¹201304990

541-948-5196 www.PointsWestBend.com

Childcare with Real Property ) $625,000

On theRim Whychus Creek "Sisters"( $645,000

• 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

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61330 Tam McArthur Loop ( $735,000

Brand New Construction In Tetherow

3129 NW Colonial Drive ) $748,000

Call Rod Hatchell, Broker l 541-728-8812 rodhatchell@gmail.com

• Cascade Mountainviews! • ChristianGladuDesign homeand TimberlineConstruction collaborated to designthisspacious&efficient home inTetherowGolf Club • Homepositionedfor passivesolar ainsand2ndfloor viewsof Cascades • urrently under construction and slated tobecompletethissummer!

Call formoredetails! Call Shelly Swanson, Broker l 541M8-0086

Call Natalie Vandenborn, Brokerl 541-508-9581

•Customhom e,3bed,2.5bath • Single level 2773SF • Open floor plan w/upgrades • Stunning views, 2.5 acres • Large backdeck • Oversized 2-cargarage MLS¹201310275

design ed for children

Call Jane Flood, Brokerl 541-350-9993

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• Avg. Gross revenue $262,840 • Security video monitoring 24/7 MLS¹201207464

Carmen AnnCook, Licensed Oregon Broker l 541-480-6491 carmsells@att.net

• Beautiful single story • 3 car garage • On 4th fairway in Broken Top • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath plus den • Vaulted ceilings • 2 fireplaces

'

63176 Watercress Way Cobblestone Childcare • Living quarters upstairs/ office/FP/bed • 4102 SF facility: specifically

www.gregsellscentraloregon.com

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19664 Aspen Ridge Dr. ( $499,900 • Stunning RenaissanceHome • 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 3-car gal'age • 3354 SF on a .24 acre lot • Finest of finishes > • Gourmet kitchen • Open & bright floor plan • Large outdoor living • Community pool & park Call Melanie Maitre, Broker ABR, SRES, ePRO 541-480-4186 l melanie@melaniemaitre.com

river

541-312-4042 l www TeamNormaAndJulie.com

Call Chris Sperry, Principal Brokerl 541-749-8479 chris¹¹chrissperfy.com www.chrissperry.com

60405 Snap Shot Loop ~ $469,750

• 17613 (¹10)SparksLane,Sunriver • 4 bed/2.5 bath,2385SF •Decksonlevelsand lotsofpaved parking area • Charming greatroomdesign • Lava rockfireplace, vaulted wood ceiling • Close to SHARC aquatic & the

The Norma DuBoisand Julie Moe Team, Brokers

•Enjoythe Cascadeviewsfrom this wonderf ully updated ranch home • On over an acrewith irrigation •Kit chenhasbeen recently remodeled, bar area • New wood Ifooring, carpet and windows, home neatinside/out • Large flex room hasown entrance -coul d be used asgame,craftor home business

• Great location between Sisters & Bend

chris¹¹chrfssperry.com www.chrissperry.com

• Single level • Modern, minimalist design • Fenced backyard • Banquette in breakfast nook • Lightly lived in and beautifully maintained • 3 bed, 2 bath, 1412 SF

Call Greg Barnwell, Broker l 541-848-7222

• Permitted GP Building w/living quarter/loft • Bath, laundry area, septic, well & pumphouse • RV hookups inside & out, 100 emp breaker in shop

• Custom built w/2 master bedrooms • Third bedroom downstairs w/ accessto apatio Ikfullbath •A chef'sdream withan enormous island, pantry,gasrange/oven, plenty ofcounter& cabinetspace • Slate & wood flooring throughout • Backs up to 37 acrepark & next door is a community garden

• Beautiful 3107 SF custom Prairie Style home on a .64 acre lot • Mt Hood Jefferson Eastern mtns. & City views • Slab granite, hardwood floors¹L windows galore • Lovely wrap-around cedar deck • Don't miss this incredible home!

Call Natalie Vandenborn, Brokerl 541-508-9581

Nvandenborn¹¹gmail .com

Nvandenborn¹¹gmail .com

In Winston Ranch ( $869,000 • 3727 SF, 3 bedroom 2.5 bath, bonus • 5.25 acres w/1.25 irrigated • HUGE Cascade Mountain ,fur

views • Beautifully remodeled • Fully fenced with barn, pasture • RV garage with office MLS¹201310641

Call Stephanie Ruiz, Brokerl 541-948-5196 stephaniewilsonruiz¹¹yahoo.com

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single level ranch style Large sunny lot (.29 acre) 3 beds, 2 baths, 160B SF Overlooking Bend Golf Bt Country Club • Views of 3 ponds and several fairways • Convenient location MLS¹201401492

• • • • • • •

Hard to find 4 bdrm, 2.5 bath Open, spacious kitchen Granite counters Bt island New stainless appliances Living room w/gas fireplace Oversized 2-car garage Main level office/den

1349 NW 18th Street • 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1759 SF • Triple car garage • Newly remodeled kitchen • Open floor plan w/vaults • Fenced & fully landscaped

m oos, ro er, S l

Call Brian add, Prmcipal Brokerl 541-408-3912

www.bestbendhomes.com

www.bendpropertysource.com• brian¹¹bendpropeftysource.com

Deschutes River View Property ~ $875,000

18815 Peony Place( $980,000

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• River views fromnearly everyroom • Rich-toned oakhardwoodfloors • Custom distressedkitchencabinetry • Slab granitecounters • Pro-qualitySSappliances • Montanastonegreplace • Mainhouse-3hds,2.5ba,2450SF • Guestquarters- 2bds, I bath,788SF • MLS¹201301856

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19665 Harvard Place •3 bedroom, 2.5 bath,huge bonusroom 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

lc o e t t e o n e s, r o e r Nicollete.jones¹¹cascadesothebysrealty.com

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Call Myra Girod, roker l 54 - 15-2400 or Pam Bronson, Broker l 541-788-6767 myra. amteam¹¹cascadesir.com

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floor • Slab granite, hardwoods, stainless steel appliances • Overlooks the 6th green

and pond • Triple car garage

Call Ken Renner, Principal Broker l 541-280-5352

Call Natalie Vandenborn, Broker l 541-508-9581

ken.renner@sothebysrealty.com

Nvandenborn@gmail.com tl 4'

• 3bedroom, 3.5 bath, 3167 SF • Rooftop terrace Cascade View • Gourmet kitchen, built-ins • Walking access to town/trails • Upgrades throughout • 2-car garage, personal elevator MLS¹201311003 see video at http://www.36swwallstreet.com/

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Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker l 541-408-3912

The Winter Spring Edition of our Magazine available now on stands or online at KTVZ.com

www.bendpropertysource.comebrian@bendpropertysource.com

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E6 SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014 • THE BULLETIN Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

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

• H o mes for Sale •

745

745

745

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

750

• H o mes for Sale

Redmond Homes

Redm o nd Homes

Going Green at T he LAZY RIVER SOUTH Parks At Broken Top j Secluded Serenity T he W i ndsor, N W West Hills. 4 Bdrm, 3.5 Yellow Jacket $103,000 - 3.39 acres $199,900 - Enjoy this Greens! Be a u tifulR emodeled 353 5 y close to Bend Redmond - Main floor bath, in 4040y sq.ft., Reservoir j $295,000 r eady f o r you r beautiful view from $454,000 contemporary single S q.ft. home with 4 • 2245 sq.ft. craftsman • 35 acre and 14 acre den/4th bedroom, lots delightful w e s tside• 1344 sq.ft. cabin HOME! MLS¹ the Sisters to Smith level custom Red- bdrm + offi ec and 3 • 3 bedroom, 3 bath irrigation of natural light, eating home with panoramic • 2 bedroom+ loft, 1 201100749 Cal l Rock on the deck of • 2 arenas and a round bar in kitchen, land- C ascade an d c i t y bath mond home w/new baths. Master bath • Hardwood floors, Travis L. Hannan, this townhome. This solar power. Quiet with large jetted tub 8 crown molding scaping, 3 bdrm, 2r/~ views on a spacious • 1.51 acres, near PC, Principal Broh ome comes f u rpen cul-de-sac, easy ac- new tile shower. Me- • MLS 201401385 • 60x60 barn with stalls bath, 2235 s q ft. lot with high desert Burns, OR ker 541-788-3480 nished wit h a p p licess to Hwy 97. Light dia room, family room, Jim & Roxanne and hay storage natural landscaping. • MLS 201310611 Redmond RE/MAX ances, washer, dryer $309,900. Call Jim & Bright kitchen with h uge kitchen w i th Cheney, Brokers • House is close to 1700 Hinton, 541-420-6229 Two gas fireplaces, Rosemary Goodwin, Land & Homes and refr i gerator. granite countertops, handcrafted cabinets 541-390-4050 sq.ft. Central Oregon Re- one in living room and Broker, Certified Real Estate MLS¹201100663 541-771-7786 eating bar, stainless & granite counters, 541-390-4030 Jean Nelsen, Broker alty Group, LLC one in master bedNegotiator Eagle Crest appliances & til e walk-in pantry, sun541-420-3927 room. Master bed541-706-1897 Properties 866-722- 3370 flooring. Family room room with hot t ub. John L. Scott Hard to find single story room has c offered 1272 Trail Creek - Cas4r w/gas fireplace & Home has cedar eves Real Estate, Bend 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1491 ceiling and slider to cade Mountain views! 2 215 Condor D r www.johnlscottbend.com sq. ft. on almost 1/4 upper deck with hot built-ins PLUS a Liv- with copper accents. .41 acre lot backs to Northwest Craftsman ing Room. Spacious E xterior siding o n MORRIS acre in great location tub. Master bath has creek & walking path. home in private gated Single Level, Shop, master bed r o om home, garages & REAL ESTATE close to t rails and deep soak tub, large 2681 sq ft, 3 bdrm, MORRIS community at Eagle .97 Acre w/vaulted cei l ing, storage bldg have just parks. $199 , 999 t iled s hower a n d 2.5 bath, triple car REAL ESTATE Crest. Reverse-living • 3+ Bedroom, 2 bath, ¹ 201401175. large closet, walk in been painted. Watch Pam double sinks. Great garage. $458,868. floor plan thoughtfully shower & access to the wildlife from the Private & sec l uded guest cottage Lester, Princ. Broker, room is light and airy Lynn Johns, Principal to capture the rear deck. Extra wrap-around deck or home, yet close to • Paver tile sidewalk 8 C entury 2 1 Gol d with expansive city 747 Broker, 541-408-2944 designed gorgeous views of the deep 2 car garage. go to your private ac- town. All new kitchen patio Country Realty, Inc., and Cascade views. Southwest Bend Homes Central Oregon m ountains, lan d Screened RV parking. c ess to 300y f t o f a ppliances. Li n e d• Great for animals or 541-504-1338 Kitchen is efficiently Resort Realty scape & tree tops. ¹201400490. John L. Little Deschutes River pond for swimming & gardening laid out with granite 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 2110 Quality construction Scott Rea l E s tate frontage for fishing, water fun w/pool filter www.johnlscott.com/88 Tumalo Home/Views! j tile counters, newer sq. ft. home, 3-car gaThe Bulletin g racious rooms & 541-548-1712 swimming or floating. system & water fea- 139 appliances, p a ntry rage. $624,900 To Subscribe call $399 , 999. beautiful fin i shes Peggy Lee Combs, • 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath, $495,000 ture. Passive solar and hardwood floor- 60826 Scotts Bluff, 541-385-5800 or go to throughout. P r ivate Golfers Retreat! Hand- MLS¹¹201309267 h eat sink p ar t o f Broker 541-480-7653 2606 sq.ft. ing. Triple garage with High Lakes Realty 8 somelyupdated home John L. Scott www.bendbulletin.com guest rooms will ac• 6.4 acres Bobbie Strome, heating system. Great Ultimate floor. Wired M a n agec ommodate lar g e over looking the 5th Real Estate, Bend Principal Broker room affords easy • Huge Cascade for security system. Property family o r gu e sts. fairway i n Ri v er's John L Scott Real 1367 Highland View family living. Great www.johnlscottbend.com Mountain views Wired for stereo with ment 541-536-0117 Large lot with easy to Edge. Open f l oor Estate 541-385-5500 Loop - Furnished natural light from large Sisters Horse Property. • MLS 201307561 s peakers on m a i n 749 for landscape. plan, spacious maswindows & d o o rs. 10.8 acres w/8+ acres Odette Adair, floor i n 4 zo n e s. Southeast Bend Homes Creekside townhome care ter, large back deck, Location Location, Lo- Enjoy the treed surwith outstanding set- One-of-a-kind home! Broker, S.T.A.R. 5-zone heating syspas t ure, b e drooms, 2 . 5 convenient to shop- c ation! 5 B d rm, 2 r ounding, pond & irrigated ting! Patio backs to 3 541-815-4786 tem. Two levels of ceNottingham Square 1300 large common area b aths, 2204 s q f t . large home w/sepaping. $415,000. b ath, 1 6 0 0 sq. f t . water feature. Huge d ar d e cking p l u s sq ft nicely updated 3/2, MLS 2013 0 9730 manufactured home f amily r e c roo m rate guest quarters. Scott McLean, paver patio. Plumbed backs to canal, 2 car qar. with m ature l a nd- $359,900. Views, p rivate Principal Broker with add-on's nestled w/plenty of scape, providing a b u i lt-in Mt. in humidification sys20747 Canterbury, FSBO, setting and g a ted. 541-408-6908 on 6.5 acres. Living storage cabinets & lovely, private back- Robyn Fields, Principal t em. $610, 0 00$210,000. 541-390-1579 Realty Executives room, dining room, counters. 5 bedrooms $675,000. yard exp e rience. Broker, Eagle Crest MLS¹ 201301639 MORRIS Scott McLean, Properties kitchen and master (2 in main level & 3 on Great room floor plan 750 Bobbie Strome, Great Bend single level s uite h av e n e w er 2nd floor). Small barn REAL ESTATE 971-255-9866 Principal Broker with soaring ceilings, Principal Broker Redmond Homes home nestled on a 541-408-6908 IM p w ry~~ a~ r laminate flo o ring. floor to ceiling win- FIND ITr 2 s t alls, t ack Realty John L Scott Real quiet cul-de-sac close Ideal for starter home, with Executives built-ins & gas room, shop area & Estate 541-385-5500 SUT IT! 3 bdrm, 2-bath 1486 sq. dows, to the popular Lark- rental property, temVacation 24/7 New f urroom. Skyliner Summit j • Beautiful primary or ft. home on 1 acre fireplace. SELL IT! spur trail featuring 3 porary home, while storage Good classified ads tell nace and heat pump. MLS¹ with Cascade views, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, The Bulletin Classifieds bdrms, 2 bath, 1423 building a new home. $650,000 second home, 1 $393,000 the essential facts in an 201302745 • 2525 sq.ft. c overed porch, o r sq. with nice tile, new A great private county Bobbie owner 1 419 sq f t . ML S Strome, interesting Manner.Write paint in and out, great setting. Shared well, 2 • 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath • 3043 SF, many upganic garden, potting 201400649 $219,000 227 Highland Meadow from the readers view not Principal Broker Loop, beautifully situ• .11 acre lot shed, dbl. g arage, Robyn Fields, Principal office area, large in- storage buildings, 400 John L Scott Real grades the seller's. Convert the ated lot! 2681 sq ft, 3 arden shed, fenced. sulated garage and a AMP service to home • MLS 201309912 • Conveniently located, Broker, Eagle Crest bdrm, 2.5 bath, triple facts into benefits. Show Susan Agli, Broker, 184,500. MLS great large deck to and 100 AMP service Estate 541-385-5500 very quiet area Properties car garage. $433,388. 201307988. Call enjoy. Lot is .26 acre to pump house. This Recently r e modeled, ABR, ALHS & SRES • Lots of privacy, great the reader howthe item will 971-255-9866 Lynn Johns, Principal help them in someway. 541-408-3773 Nancy Popp, and is easy to main- is a m us t p review clean and well laid out for entertaining Broker, 541-408-2944 541-815-8000 tain with the sprinkler property, if you do, single level home on a www.sharona.johnlscot This - 3 b edCentral Oregon advertising tip Crooked River Realty $ 143,500 system. All this at the you will see its poten- very private 4.6 acre t.com room, 2 bath, 1234 Resort Realty " sell fast p rice" of Sharon Abrams, CRS, brought to you by tial. $212,000. MLS lot. New paint in and - Beautiful sq ft in great north $260,000 $ 235,000. 42 4 S E ¹201400038 Principal Broker, $244,000 - Recreate all out, newer laminate, u pgraded cha l e t Redmond location. The Bulletin Mustang Place, Bend. 541-280-9309 Bobbie Strome, Servlng Cee~al D~n since 19al year round when you carpet & flo o ring, MORRIS w/double garage lo- MLS¹201401199 Heather Hockett, BroJohn L. Scott own this lovely 3 bed, Principal Broker Stainless appliances, REAL ESTATE Call Travis L. Hancated on the 18th hole ker, 54 1 - 420-9151 John L Scott Real Real Estate, Bend Whispering Pines. 3 2.5 bath Forest Green centra heat, l a r ge of the R i dge G olf nan, PC, Principal d~ A C entury 2 1 Gol d Estate 541-385-5500 www.johnlscottbend.com bdrm, 2 bath property Course at Eagle Crest Broker townhome. Fully furconcrete patio. Fully Country Realty. has complete perim- in Central Oregon. 541-788-3480 n ished & r e ady t o landscaped yard, at- Spacious Home in The Lodge Like Feel, Vacation Condo eter fencing and is move-in! tached double garage Cliffs $279,900 - Light • 2 bedroom, 1 bath MLS ¹201301534. Redmond RE/MAX Great home & shop on John Day Area neat and well mainMLS¹201310566 and detached shop & bright interior, huge Land & Homes Eagle Crest a huge 0.41 acre lot in • 5 acres outside of • Large loft tained with trees and Eagle Crest with large attached walk-in pantry, three Properties Real Estate Redmond. Sgl story, 3 John Day, OWC shrubs. Home has Properties carport/RV area, stor- car tandem garage. • Pool, tennis 541-771-7786 866-7223370 bdrm, 2 bath, 1792 sq • Energy efficient pasbeen lightly lived in 866-722- 3370 MLS ¹ 20 1 3 08975. Candice Anderson, age shed on top of ft home on a v e ry sive solar Ridge g al . p o t able Call Vicci B o wen, Broker 541-788-8878 and has a wonderful 10264 Sundance - 1657 sq. $249,900 - 2236 roomy lot. Updated • Beautiful vaulted wood 5000 John L. Scott sunroom and appeal- Loop - Northwest $169,900 water concrete cis- 541-410-9730 Newer 3 beroom beautiful h a rdwood ceilings Sq.ft., 5 bdrm home Real Estate, Bend ing floor plan with c ontemporary w i t h ft. t ern. Al l o n fu l l y Central Oregon Realty + den, master suite w/master suite on flooring, kitchen cabi- • Large shop, RV www.johnlscottbend.com l arge d eck, s h o p stunning panoramic w/walk-in Group, LLC fenced lot with autoc l o set, netry with glass ac- hookup each level. Living building is a p prox. views. Walls of win- slider to back patio. matic gate. $215,000. room w/gas f i recents, granite coun- • Turkey, elk, deer & S unburst Park - I m - The Washington, NW 4000 sq.ft. w/ 4 12x12 dows & luxurious fin- Living room w/gas ¹ 201309890 tertops with tile back bald eagles out back place. RV parking 8 maculate single level Redmond. Main floor d oors and a m a n ishes throughout this L Scott Realty, fireplace unique gar d e n. splash and large is- Theresa Ramsay, Bro- John 3bd, 2ba, 1630 sq ft master suite w/sitting door. The is a com- gorgeous c u s tom MLS¹201309588 541-548-1712. land. Living room Plus MLS¹201306110 ker 541-815-4442 home on nearly 0.46 room, walk-in closets plete office w/bath, home. Park-like set- Call Kelly Starbuck, Call Kelly or Virginia, Family Room! Forced John L. Scott Ridge At Eagle Crest j acre featuring pan- in all rooms, 3 bed, r ec, k i tchen an d ting with waterfall and Broker air heat with central Principal Brokers Real Estate, Bend oramic Cas c a de 2.5 bath, 2147 sq ft. m eeting room i n - mature l a n dscape. Principal $189,000 541-771-7786 541-923-0855 786 A/C. Huge 1380 Sq Ft www.johnlscottbend.com • 1328 sq.ft. chalet cluded in th e 4 000 Expansive c overed views. Rear yard is MLS¹201310072. Redmond RE/MAX shop with 12' roll up Redmond RE/MAX • 3 bedroom, 2 bath fully fenced; includes $299,000 Jim Hinton, sq.ft. This property is deck overlooks priLand & Homes Lovely SW Bend Land & Homes door and storage loft • .05 acre on the pond a paved RV parking Central Oregon Re- a must preview, must vate backyard. 4 car Craftsman! Real Estate will work for your RV! Real Estate • MLS 201400300 site with (2)-30-amp a lty G r oup, LL C see facility. The shop garage with RV bay 541-771-7786 • 3 bed/2 bath, 2054 sq. Lester Friedman PC, 541-771-7786 Fenced b a c kyard, 54'I -420-6229 and dwelling have plug-ins & a sewage and workshop. Perstorage shed and lots ft., open living space Broker, ABR, CSP, separate electric fect for entertaining 8 dump. Great room is - A great 2 Highland Meadow $263,900 of paved parking area. • Fenced backyard, m eters. Shop a n d guests with 2 master 173 EPRO, S.T.A.R. vaulted and light 8 b edroom 2.5 b a t h Where can you find a landscaped w/sprinLoop Smith Rock ¹201401030 John L. 541-330-8491 bright with a woodd welling share t h e suites, 2 bonus rooms views! .30 acre lot, home to relax in while Scott Rea l E s tate klers helping hand? Avion water meter, 8 home offi stove (also plumbed ce.4 bed• Great location, close sq ft, 3 bdrm, staying at Eagle Crest 541-548-1712 for gas if a gaslog From contractors to 2nd gar a ge/shop rooms, 3. 5 b a t hs, 2321 Resort. Enjoy all the to Old Mill, schools, 2.5 bath, triple car 1025 sq.ft. $499,500. fireplace is desired). 4 702 s q f t . ML S amenities Eagle Crest Great location. Great river trail yard care, it's all here garage. $402,777. Kitchen & utility room MLS ¹201400070 201307976 $799,900. has to of fe r! bones in this 3 bdrm, • $269,000 www.angJohns, Principal in The Bulletin's Bobbie Strome, Robyn Fields, Principal Lynn are also plumbed for MLS¹201306058 2 b a t h Re d mond iecox.johnlscott.com MORRIS Broker, 541-408-2944 "Call A Service Principal Broker Broker, Eagle Crest gas, if that is your Eagle Crest h ome. 1920 sq. f t . Angie C ox , Br o ker Central Oregon REAL ESTATE John L Scott Real preference for cook- Professional" Directory Properties Properties w/large utility room 541-213-9950 Resort Realty ing or clothes drying. Estate 541-385-5500 971-255-9866 866-722- 3370 w hich could b e a John L. Scott Jenn-Air range, Maycomputer room, too. Real Estate, Bend River Rimj $319,900 tag r efrigerator 8 Step-down v a ulted www.johnlscottbend.com • 1799 sq.ft. Amana d i shwasher living room w/wood• 4 bedroom, 2 bath were installed in 2007. Madras Hwy, stove. Attached large • Great room plan Large walk-in pantry shop & 2-car garage. Reduced to $250,000. • MLS 201309843 too! MLS¹ 201401439 Oil monitor for heat- 22.3 acres within the Judv Mevers, Broker, $317,300. ing w/above ground city limits, 21.1 acres GRI, CRS, SRES Bobbie Strome, of irrigation rights. oil tank. $299,900 541-480-1922 Principal Broker Hwy frontage, ¹201306715. John L Scott Real dividable/backs to John L. Scott Real Estate 541-385-5500 Ochoco Creek. Estate 541-548-1712 •

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MLS ¹201307351

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Sundance j $419,000 Handsomely appointed Winderemere Swifterra MORRIS • 2344 sq.ft, energy effiin Vista Meadows. 3 150 NW 4th St., REAL ESTATE cient bdrms, 2 baths, 2013 Prineville, OR. • 3 bedroom, 2 bath s q. f t. , h i g h e n d 541-447-7502 • 4.1 acres stainless appliances and light fixtures. New New Construction! Sgl. Need help fixing stuff? • MLS 201401049 fencing. $2 7 9,900 story home, 1724 sq. Call A ServiceProfessional Matt Robinson, Broker 541-977-5811 ¹ 201300620. J im ft. 3/2 move-in ready! find the help you need. Landscaped wit h www.bendbulletin.com Hinton, 541-420-6229 Central Oregon Realty sprinklers 8 fenced. $189,900. ¹201304779. Rural But Close Group, LLC Pam Lester, Princ. • 35 acres, 14 acres irHome on 4.9 AcresBroker, Century 21 MORRIS rigation Extremely well main- Gold Country Realty, • 2 arenas and a round REAL ESTATE tained 3 bdrm 2 BA- Inc., 541-504-1338 pen bath s i ngle s t o ry • 60x60 barn w/stall & h ome on 4 . 9 f l a t Newer large home on hay storage Sunrise Village j acres. 2208 sq. ft., almost 1/4 acre, 3000 • House has many im$670,000 sq. ft. 3 b drm, 2~/~ rock fireplace, dbl ga• Remodeled 3705 sq.ft. provements rage, gas fireplace, bath, landscaped and www.johnlscott.com/26 • 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath central air 8 m ore. fenced with RV gates. 268 • Office MLS¹ 2013 1 0722 $299.900. Nelsen, Broker • MLS 201306633 Pam Jean $345,000. Pam ¹ 201304622 541-420-3927 Deborah Benson PC, Lester, Principal Bro- Lester, Principal Bro John L. Scott Broker, GRI, ker Century 21 Gold ker, Century 21 Gold Real Estate, Bend Preview Specialist Country Realty, Inc. Country Realty, Inc. www.johnlscottbend.com 541-480-6448 541-504-1338

REIMAX KEY PROPERTIES Is pleased to announce our 2013 Broker Achievements

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SE Bend j $319,900 New Listing! $199,900 • 2496 sq.ft. Need to get an • 3 bedroom, 2.5 baths- • 3 bedroom, 3 bath ad in ASAP? high ceilings • .19acre, fenced yard • Fenced, sprinklers, MORRIS You can place it • MLS 201309521 F/B yards REAL ESTATE Karin Johnson, Broker online at: • Large kitchen, break541-639-6140 www.bendbulletin.com fast bar, pantry www.johnlscott.com/12 Sunriver j $179,900 • 1597 sq.ft. 100 541-385-5809 Peggy Le e C o mbs, • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath • Convenient location Broker 541-480-7653 Horse Property 3 bdrm, John MORRIS • MLS 201309261 L. Scott 2 bath, 1823 sq. ft., Real Estate, REAL ESTATE Patti Geraghty, Broker Bend d bl garage on 2 . 3 www.johnlscottbend.com 541-948-5880 acres, pellet stove, l iving a n d bo n u s SE Bend j $750,000 NOTICE r oom, central a i r, All real estate adver- • 4072 sq.ft. 2-stall barn/tack room, tised here in is sub- • 5 bedroom, 3.5 bath hay storage, fenced acres with views to th e F ederal •• 20 MORRIS and cross fenced, RV ject MLS 201301102 Housing A c t, REAL ESTATE cover. $29 9 ,900. Fair Sue Conrad, makes it illegal dOp ~ ¹ 201401392. Pam which Broker, CRS advertise any prefLester, Princ. Broker, to 541%80-6621 erence, limitation or Tetherow Crossing C entury 2 1 Gol d Country horse propCountry Realty, Inc., discrimination based on race, color, relierty is fenced & cross 541-504-1338 ion, sex, handicap, fenced w/New Zealamilial status or naand electric fence 8 Just Listed!!! Updated MORRIS 1701 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, tional origin, or intenelectric gate. Views of Cascades, p r i vate 2.5 bath home, open tion to make any such REALESTATE living with pellet stove, preferences, l i mitasetting, 40x60 shelter for horses, 20x30 hay low maintenanceback tions or discrimination. storage, 40x60 chain yard, dog run, extra We will not knowingly SE Bend home features great room layaccept any advertislink dog pen. 2 proparking. $235,000. ing for real estate out w/ vaulted ceilScott McLean, pane gas free-standwhich is in violation of ings, hardwood floors, ing stoves, 1 in family Principal Broker this law. All persons a large kitchen w/ 541-408-6908 and 1 in living room. are hereby informed b reakfast ba r a n d Wood blinds throughRealty Executives that all dwellings ad- nook, formal dining out, hardwood floors, Keystone Ter r ace. vertised are available room, dow n stairs carpet 8 vinyl. Close Three fully occupied on an equal opportu- guest bedroom, main to Deschutes River. 3182ysf tri-plexes lo- nity basis. The Bulle- floor master suite w/ $368,000. c ated just a fe w tin Classified Travertine s h ower, ¹201400248. blocks from shopping jetted tub, 8 private John L. Scott Real & the facilities of Junideck, two large up- Estate 541-548-1712 Get your s tairs g u est b e d per Park. Exterior of buildings have vinyl business rooms, double vanity The Davis, NW Redsiding and are neat guest bath, a bonus mond 3 bdrm (den or and attractive. room, private land- 4th bdrm), 2~/~ bath, e ROW I N G scaped and fenced 1929 sq f t . h o me. $325,000 for each triplex. back yard w/ irriga- Open great room, MLS ¹201309427, tons of cabinet space tion, RV parking, & with an ad in 201309433, play structure along in kitchen, 2nd floor The Bulletin's 201309444 w/ a c overed Trex laundry rm, $291,000. "Call A Service Bobbie Strome, deck 8 paver patio. ¹ 201307047. Jim Principal Broker $565,000 ¹201400800 Hinton, 541-420-6229 Professional" John L Scott Real John L. Scott Real Central Oregon Realty Directory Estate 541-385-5500 Estate 541-548-1712 Group, LLC •

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Debi Corso

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Sunriver/La Pine Homes Sunriver/La Pine Homes Sunriver/La Pine Homes Sunriver/La Pine Homes Jeffer son County Homesj

295 Vista Rim Dr. En- $430,000 - Ultimate Charming home on a Large Bonus Room 123741 Mu t tonshop2 bdrm, 2 bath, 2-car Beautifully updated and New Construction in Want to move in and ergy Star home built family home, 4 bedvery large .51 acre lot $ 223,900. Lots o f Street, I m maculate garage, 2.3 acres, well-maintained home Sunriver - Rare op- enjoy life? This Maby Sage in Vista Rim! room, 3 bath, over 7 in. Close to schools & natural light. 4 Bdrm, chalet located on an 146504 Bills R oad. in q uiet n o rth-end p ortunity to ow n a dras home is loaded NW Craf t sman acres, 20x40 heated shopping centers in 2i/~ Bath, spacious acre. Gravel drive, $79,900. High Lakes Sunriver loc a tion. brand new home in with upgrades. Well w/great room plan, pool. MLS Redmond. 3 bdrms, 2 rooms, freshly covered porch, wood Realty & Pr o perty Fully furnished 3 bed- Sunriver in a superb maint. and boasts a contemporary luxury ¹ 201305932 C a l l baths, good condition. painted. Dual pan- stove, slate hearth, Management room, 2.5 bath, 2212 location which backs large tiled entry way, 541-536-0117 finishes & wood Travis L. Hannan, G arage ha s b e e n tries. Call Jim Hinton, s piral staircase t o sq ft with large mas- to a large common ceiling fans, recessed floors. Designed for PC, Principal Broconverted to l i ving 541-420-6229, Cen- sleeping loft. 2 bdrms 4 bdrm/2 bath, 1755 sq. ter suite o n m ain. area. 5 bedrooms, 4.5 l ighting, large l o f t an a c t iv e fa m ily ker 541-788-3480 space. $18 9 ,900. tral Oregon Realty on main floor and util. ft. o n 1 . 2 7 a c r e. Generous living area, baths, 2700+ sq ft. area, a master bdrm w/mud room, full size Redmond RE/MAX ¹201308901 John L. Group, LLC room. Hickory cabi $79,000 52360 Whis- kitchen, guest bath. O pen, roomy a n d with w alk-in closet, pantry 8 utility room Land 8 Homes Scott Rea l E s tate nets, garden window, Kitchen is light and bright Great R oom window co v e rings Roomy single l e vel plenty of storage. This pering Pines H i gh bright with updated floor plan with three throughout. Garage is w/extra built-ins. Den Real Estate 541-548-1712 Lakes Realty & Prophome on a large lot in 541-771-7786 & extra bonus room open floor plan with its erty & granite master suites and a finished with ceiling Ma n agement appliances Creekside TownhomeStonehedge in Red- recessed lighting is w/walk-in closet. Encountertops. G r eat bonus room/loft up- storage rack and you - Gated 541-536-0117 $478,000 1 871 sq ft, 3 b e d mond. Open floor plan joy tranquil setting on community! 4 bedthe i deal v a cation room has cozy gas stairs. Granite counter have great views from rooms, 2.5 bath, awe- with v a ulted l i ving home. Minutes from 5 1325 Evans W a y . fireplace Large deck tops the pond & peaceful thro u ghout, the back deck. VA asoom, 3. 5 ba t h , some location on the room Plus a family Willamette Ski Pass, 1836 sq.ft., 1.12 acre, is just off main living raised panel wood sumable if e l igible. sounds o f n e a rby r3208 Sq.ft.. Private creek, upgrades ga- room, kitchen fea- t rails a n d lak e s. city utilities. $235,000. area overlooking treed doors and plenty of $124,900 water feature from MLS¹ resort living, lore, main level mas- tures plenty of cabin- $169,000. your back patio. ExMLS High Lakes Realty & common area; front wood accents make 201304344 year-round or 2nd ter. $254,900. etry, eating counter, M a nage- d eck includes M t . 2 01302230. Ke r r y Property the home cozy and Heather Hockett, PC, pansive views east of home. Lynn Johns, Principal large pantry, dining 54'I -815-6363 ment 541-536-0117 Smith Rock, mtns & Bachelor views. well appointed. ExBroker, Century 21 MLS¹201305107 Broker, 541-408-2944 area with access to city lights from front. Cascade Realty, Downstairs has sauna cellent vacation rental Gold Country Realty, 51375 Evans Way Call Charlie or Central Oregon the huge back deck. 541-420-9151 Plumbed for central potential. $ 5 99,000 A- f r ame, off the bathroom 8 2 Resort Realty M aster bedr o om 1303 Elk Dr - $182,500. $65,000. v ac. H eat/cool i s Virginia, Principal outbldgs, RV hook-up. bedrooms. Ideal for a MLS¹201306692 Brokers separation from addi- Quality thru-out. 4 ductless system. 2 family r e treat or Clyde Browning, Lakes Realty & Culver! 10y Acres541-350-3418 tional two bedrooms. bdrm, 2224 SF. High High bedrooms, 2 baths, rental. $49 5 ,000. Principal Broker, Property M a nageSet-up for horses, Lakes Realty & PropRedmond RE/MAX Two offices or hobby 541-480-4520 1919 s q f t . ML S MLS201308795 Crook County Homesj 3-stall barn, numerLand & Homes Ma n agement ment 541-536-0117 rooms. Landscaped erty 201308726. $349,900 Clyde Browning, Eagle Commercial ous o u t buildings, 541-536-0117 Real Estate front and back with Robyn Fields, Principal Principal Broker, Real Estate Large Prineville Home. Find It in 541-771-7786 guest quarters & fenced back yard that 145055 Birchwood Broker, Eagle Crest 541-480-4520 2290 sq.ft. home with more. has lots of trees for The Bulletin Classlffeth! Two bdrm, 1 bath 720 Properties $49,950. Nice 840SF, Eagle Commercial $599,900 -Outstanding MLS¹201305577 privacy. Forced air sq.ft. frame home on kitchen island, wood 541-385-5809 971-255-9866 2 bdrm, new well. Real Estate detail in design and fir e place, Call Charlie or gas with central air 1 a c re . D e tached burning High Lakes Realty 8 construction of t h is soaking tub, and a 2 Virginia, Principal cond. $199 , 900 2-car garage, finished $320,000 4.77 52571 Doe Lane, La Property M a nagebeautiful Sage Buildgarage. $175,000. Brokers acres, 1 acre of irri¹201310177 John L. pump house for extra carScott Pine, 850 sq. ft. 1.13 ment 541-536-0117 ers home. Located on 541-350-3418Redm McLean, Take care of Scott Rea l E s tate storage. Not far off of gation. Pond, shop acre, RV pole barn. the 18th hole of the Principal Broker ond RE/MAX Land 146532 Old C abin 541-548-1712 and 1 60 0 s q . ft. Challenge Course at Hwy 31. $ 1 05,000. $94,500. High Lakes your investments 541-408-6908 & Homes Real Es$160,000. 3 bdrm, 2 MLS 201401070 house. MLS¹ Realty & Pr o perty Eagle Crest Resort, Realty Executives tate 541-771-7786 Spacious family home bath, heat pump, hot Management 201307143 Cal l Cascade Realty, Denwith the help from you will have access centrally located 8 tub. High Lakes Re- 541-536-0117 nis Haniford, Princ. Travis L. Hannan, to all of the amenities E agle C r ee k Gol f a cross f ro m V e r n alty & Property ManPC, Principal BroBroker 541-536-1731 The Bujjetjn'8 with ownership. MLS Course Chalet - 1447 Patrick Elem School. agement 61746 Rock View People Lookfor Information ker 541-788-3480 ¹2615599 sq ft, 3 bedrooms, 2 $99,700. Home, shop, Just bought a new boat? in Redmond. 2416 sq. 541-536-0117 About Products and "Call A Service Redmond RE/MAX Eagle Crest baths, new hardwood ft., 4 bdrm, 2.5 bath, super clean! H igh Sell your old one in the Services Every Daythrough Land & Homes 14746 C a mbium Properties floors & heat pump, classifieds! Ask about our Lakes Realty 8 Prop- Professional" Directory extra large B o nus Real Estate The ffvlletin Classiffeds 866-722- 3370 Super Seller rates! double car garage. Room! Large Master $110,000. 3 bdrm + erty Ma n agement 541-771-7786 den, m ultiple o u t541-385-5809 18th Fairway of the 541-536-0117 b edroom w/h u g e $754,900 - Knockout R idge Cour s e , closet 8 double sink buildings. High Lakes $344,500 - Small mountain vi e w s! $269,000. Pr o perty vanities in the master Realty & acreage with i r ri3863 sq.ft. custom Lynn Johns, Principal bath! Light & bright Management gated pasture overig = h l I I a home. Office,out541-536-0117 Broker, 541-408-2944 kitchen w/ eating bar looking pond buildings and shop. Central Oregon that opens to a family 151628 Hackamore fenced pas t ure MLS¹ 2 0 1 106428 Resort Realty room, formal dining & Custom 1325 sq. ft. ready for horses or Call Charlie or Virformal living room. h ome with other critters. Dewor k ginia, Principal Bro- Eagle Crest Resort Extra wide hallways, shops. tached garage shop $24 4 ,900. kers 541-350-3418 1792 sq ft Desert Sky large pantry, forced w/storage. Lakes Realty & Redmond RE/MAX Home - Cascade air heat & A/C, large High MLS¹201307823. M a n ageL and 8 Hom e s Mountain views, ga- patio & fenced back Property Call Don Chapin, ment 541-536-0117 Real Estate rage w it h s t o rage yard. $199 , 000. Principal Br o k er 541-771-7786 above, 2 b e droom, ¹201310177 John L. 15924 Jackpine Rd. 541-923-0855 2.5 bath, large bonus Scott Rea l E s tate $40,000 2 bedrooms, • WWW.aljSeaSOnSloanS.COm Redmond RE/MAX Just too many room, luxury upgrade 541-548-1712 near town on .94 acre. Land & Homes package inc l udes High Lakes Realty & • Get Pre-aPPIOVed collectibles? Real Estate h ardwood & sl a t eThe Jefferson in desir- Property M a nage541-771-7786 flooring, granite tile able N W R e dmond ment 541-536-0117 • Online aPPliCatiOnS On a SeCure Site Sell them in kitchen counters, Alneighborhood, single 15951 Tallwood Ct $349,900 - Energy Star The Bulletin Classifieds der cabinetry, ceiling level, 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, $214,900. 3 bdrm, 3 home built by Sage in fans & more. HOA 2020 sq. ft. $297,000. Vista R i m ! NW bath, bonus r oom, dues include most ¹201306374 Craftsman w / great 541-385-5809 shop. High Lakes Re- Purchase Refinance exterior maintenance Call Jim Hinton, room plan, contempoalty & Property Man8 all landscaping. All 541-420-6229 rary luxury finishes & $895,000 - Located in agement wood floors. Expan- Madras, this pristine, resort amenities are Central Oregon Realty Construction 541-536-0117 included w/ownership. Group, LLC sive views east of one-of-a-kind l o wer $259,500. 1 6045 Strawn R d Smith Rock. MLS Deschutes home is Lynn Johns, Principal Conventional Jumbo Reverse $73,000. 2 bdrm, 1 ¹201308726 known for its blue rib- Broker, 541-408-2944 Looking for your next bath, .84 acre, ready Eagle Crest bon rainbow trout 8 emp/oyee? Central Oregon Properties for TLC. High Lakes Place a Bulletin help steelhead fis h ing. Resort Realty Realty & Pr o perty Mortgage . 100% VA 866-722- 3370 Remodeled in 2005 wanted ad today and Management reach over 60,000 MLS ¹201301789 Advertise your car! $399,900 - Peaceful 541-536-0117 Eagle Crest Add APtcture! readers each week. FHA USDA Loans 5.08 acres - Single Reach thousands of readers! Your classified ad Properties 16565 Beesley Pl v nc level, vaulted ceilCall 541-385-5809 866-722- 3370 will also appear on $209,000. 3 bdrm, 2.5 ings, 4 large bedThe Bulletin Classifieds bendbulletin.com bath, 1800 sq.ft., 2 car r ooms, 2 bat h , Adorable Cottage in the which currently regarage. High Lakes master b e d room Heights. $ 1 2 4,900.Forest Greens Townceives over Realty & P r o perty separation, 2 , 157 Arched e n t ryways, home - 1484 sq ft, 3 1.5 million page Management John Andersch sq.ft. 3-car garage. oak hardwood floor- bedrooms, 2.5 bath, views every month 541-536-0117 MLS¹201308350 ing, large lot w/RV ac- great room floor plan, Quietly doing it right the first time. at no extra cost. Call Kelly Starbuck, cess, 3 bdrm, 1 bath, fully furnished w/hot Bulletin Classifieds 1715 Mare C ourt 54 j -4 j 9-7078 Principal Broker 1227 sq. ft., 500 sq. ft tub. Golf course set$145,000. 1809 sq. ft., Get Results! 541-771-7786 b asement. MLS ¹ ting. $227,900 3 large bdrms, 30x60 Call 385-5809 or jmandersch@gmail.com Redmond RE/MAX 201308245. Vicci Bo- Lynn Johns, Principal shop. High Lakes Replace your ad on-line Land & Homes Broker, 541-408-2944 549 SW MillViewWay, Ste IOI • Bend, OR wen 541-410-9730 alty & Property Manat Real Estate Central Oregon Central Oregon Realty agement bendbulletin.com NMLS¹302845 NMLS¹1031909 Q 541-771-7786 Resort Realty Group, LLC 541-536-0117

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Manufactured/ Mobile Homes Overlooking C rooked 1296 sq. ft. home and Lake Front P roperty $25,000 - $65,000. Hager Mountain Estates 13601 SW Canyon Dr. 16685 SW Chinook Dr. Klamath Fall Acreage j River Gorge, Im 28x48 shop with two with Bre a thtaking S pectacular lots i n 4 lots, $25,000 each lo- 1.13 acres in CRR, 6.9 ac r e s with $286,000 1980 sq.ft. home, newly maculate home on the 12' overhead doors on Views! $89 5 ,000. Yarrow s u bdivision, cated in Silver Lake. Mt. Jefferson views, Crooked River and • 14.56 acres updated kitc h en, r im features a s pa 4.28 acres adjoining 7 Remodeled in 2006. the newer developUnderground power owner w il l c a r ry. Smith Rock v iews, • Mt Shasta & golf fenced/gated, h u ge cious & open great miles of public land. Loft area, spacious ment in the east hills and conduit for phone $58,500 ¹201106385 owner w il l ca r ry. course views bonus room, w/separoom design, a large $144,900. 201301345 master suite, 3 fire- of Madras. Very near and internet. Views of Juniper Realty $189,000 MLS • Cul-de-sac, backs rate entrance, natural 541-504-5393 bonus room with a full Call Nancy P o pp, places, 4 bedrooms, 2 the new aquatic Cen- Hager Mountain. Sep201008671. Juniper BLM kght. 1-acre. $154,900 bath, a spacious mas Principal Bro k e r, bathrooms, 4500 sq ft ter, middle school and tic feasibility for stanRealty 541-504-5393 • MLS 201400802 - MLS 201308329 Call Check out the t er, l a r g e gu e s t 541-8'I 5-8000. on 6.8 acres. MLS¹ COCC campus. Home dard system. The Dana Miller, Principal Nancy Popp, Princiclassifieds online $300,000 - This 64-acre bdrms, newer paint, Crooked River Realty 2 01400129. Da v i d ID YARROW Eagle area is a sportsman's Broker, ABR, AHWD pal Broker, 541-815carpet and flooring in Franke, 541-420-5986 Crest Prop e rties paradise. www.bendbullebn.com irrigated Culver prop541-408-1468 8000. Crooked River erty has e xpansive side and new exterior 5780 NW 66th Lane Central Oregon Realty 866-722-3370 Bobbie Strome, Updated daily Realty Cascade M o untain paint, a circular drive, Redmond. 4 bdrm on 5 Group, LLC Principal Broker acres, 40x50 shop, $129,000 - Beautiful views. This is a rare 4r 864 sq.ft. shop w/heat, immac. landscaping John L Scott Real 20+ ACRES in West RV pad w/dump, 3 Powell Butte Estates, find with both building with irrigation system, fenced, borders BLM. Large home with guest golf course lot behind Estate 541-385-5500 the gates and Eagle bdrm, 2 bath beautia fenced and irrigated $289,000. 541-815-1216 quarters. 4bdrms, 3 gated com m unity, qualifications and a MORRIS baths, on 5.27 acre Crest. Half an acre on Half acre commercial lot mtn. views, private renewable lease with fully appointed home. garden area, chicken REAL ESTATE Enclosed garden, with coop, attached ga 5.82 acres 3 bdrm, 2 horse property fenced the fairway of the Re near Sunriver near well, paved roads with the current farm tenIM~ dy ~ ~ Op t 1 b ath, 1560 s q . f t . store, restaurant and and x-fenced, shop sort Course. Owner raised beds. "Dynaa ccess t o BLM . ant. MLS¹201307637 rage with shop space, Large 28x32 sq. ft. other bu s i nesses. mite" Cascade views. area with s t orage. ship benefits for this Eagle Crest central heat, pellet $169,000 MLS Lot 16 SW Shad Rd. Now only $45,000. Properties One acre. $139,900 gated community in 201305077. stove and exc. p ri shop, dble car garage. $369,900. Call Gail 2.7 acres located on a Scott McLean, clude access to an 866-722- 3370 MLS 201309296 vacy. $260 , 000 Fenced for h orses. Day 541-306-1 01 8 Pam Lester, Principal paved street. Mt. Jef Nancy Near the entrance of Central Oregon Realty additional private pool Principal Broker Popp, Principal Broker Century 21 ¹201308441 ferson & Smith Rock 541-408-6908 the ranch. $279,000 Group, LLC 8 te n ni s cou r t. Broker 541-815-8000 John L. Scott Real Gold Country Realty, 3.18 acres g randfa- views. $58, 5 00. MLS 20130955 Realty Executives thered in. Septic and MLS¹ 201208266 ¹201401229 MLS¹201400733 Crooked River Realty Inc. 541-504-1338 Estate 541-548-1712 Call Linda Lou w ater o n t h e l o t , Eagle Crest Juniper Realty NE Bend Lot j $53,000 FACTORY SPECIAL Day-Wright, Broker, Near Smith Rocks, gorP rime p r operty a t power at the road. 16751 SW Dove Rd. in Properties 541-504-5393 • .12 acre cul-de-sac lot New Home, 3 bdrm, 541-771-2585 geous 3 bdrm, 3 bath, Crooked River Ranch MLS 2012 0 8989 866-722-3370 CRR, One level 2500 • Alley access $46,500 finished 3880 sq.ft. $694,000 with Cascade views! $79,900. Call Linda Lot 1, Mustang Road in sq. ft. c ustom l og Crooked River Realty on your site. • Utilities at street ¹ 201300784. Call $149,900 - Build your Property i s cor n Lou home on 4.9 acres. DayW right Crooked River Ranch, J andM Homes 201401111 pletely fenced. Cor 541-771-285 Crooked 5.11 acre corner lot Floor to ceiling win 8479 SW High Cone Linda Lou Day-Wright. dream home on this • MLS 541-548-5511 Lisa McCarthy, ner lot, near firehall. River Realty dows with views of the Drive. Large 4 bdrm, 2 541- 771-2585 Crooked large gently sloping lot on paved street with Broker, ABR River Realty with views of Mt. Jef$79,900. MLS¹ Mtns. Hickory hard bath located in t he mtn views $95 000 Need to get an 541-419-8639 Cro o ked ferson 8 Mt . Hood; 20140064. Call Linda wood & t ile f loors, heart o f Have an item to MLS 201310051 New carpet 8 p a int ad in ASAP? River Ranch on 1.20 also adjacent to the Lou Day-Wright. 541gourmet kitchen incl. Juniper Realty, sell quick? 771-2585 C r o oked cherry cabinets, gran acre. Wonderful out- r eady to m ove i n . walking trail and pond. You can place it 541-504-5393 River Realty ite counters, farmers door area for enter- Quiet location 3 bdrm, Easily accessible on If it's under online at: sink and stainless ap taining or r e laxing. 2 bath on 5.16 fenced the corner of High- Private acres. Private well, $155,000 '500 you can place it in Call The Bulletin At www.bendbulletin.com land View Loop & MORRIS pliances. The stacked Oversized 2-bay shop 541-385-5809 gated community! rock w o o d-burning w ith s t orage a n d close to golf course. T rail C r eek. M L S REAL ESTATE The Bulletin 20 Acres! Powell Place Your Ad Or E-Mail ¹201400392 541 -385-5809 fireplace is perfect for plenty of room to keep $185,000. 6760 SW dy ~ ~ ~ d Butte w/easy acClassifieds for: B uckskin, in C R R . Eagle Crest Properties At: www.bendbulletin.com the toys out of t he these chilly days. cess t o a i r ports, MLS 201310512. 866-722-3370 Residential Landscaped with lots of weather. $ 1 43,000. $499,999 ¹20'I 208751 shopping, r e cre- '10 - 3 lines, 7 days Lot 21 SW Chipmunk trees is where you will Juniper Realty, Building Lots mls 201300653 Juniper Realty, ation. Al l C e ntral 541-504-5393 1.71 acres, septic ap- • Marsh Hawk Rd .48 Rd, in CRR. 5.16 level find this 4 bdrm mfd Juniper Realty, 541-504-5393 '16 -3 lines, 14 days acres, with 2 storage h ome. Has a l a k e proved power and acres OWWII, paved Oregon has to offer. 541-504-5393 New listing! Country sgl (Private Party ads only) water at the street. Well, septic feasibils heds. Partial m t n Motivated Seller! Nice s treet, $49,5 0 0 view where you can ity done. Ready for view. community wa- j ust si t b a c k a n d 3 bdrm ranch- style Bend Country Home on level 3 bdrm, 2 bath $39,900 ¹201307972 MLS¹201103380 house with a nice floor 2+ a c r es . New home on 5 acres and Linda Lou Day-Wright. • Lost Ponderosa Rd., your dream home. 32.42 Acres in Urban ter installed. $60,000 watch th e w i l dlife. 541- 771-2585 La Pine 1 . 0 a cres MLS¹201303502 plan, country kitchen, Hardi-plank s i d ing, is newly painted inGrowth B o u ndary, ¹201300800 Home has newer viCall Charlie or Juniper Realty nice brick fireplace, interior d o or s 8 side 8 out. New floor Crooked River Realty Wickiup Jct. paved n yl w i ndows, i n Adjacent t o The va u lted 541-504-5393 street, $50, 0 0 0. Virginia, Principal nestled on 4+ acres knobs, garage doors coverings, Greens, kitty corner to ground watering sysBrokers Powell Butte q u iet & more! BLM access living room ceiling and Fenced acre with water MLS¹201310270 new Ridgeview High NE Bend Acreage j tem, 10x12 storage 541-350-3418 even wire shelving in and sewer. $28,500. • Marsh Hawk Rd .51 country lane. Fenced, close to property for School. $7 5 0 ,000. b uilding & 8 x 4 0 f t the closets and pan54700 Wolf St. High Redmond RE/MAX $239,900 corral, shed, s h op trail riding. 4 bedroom, acres OWWII, paved cargo container. MLS ¹ 201 2 03193• 19.68 acres try. Db. attached gaLakes Realty & PropLand 8 Homes area, along with stor- 3 bath has plenty of St, $59,900 Pam Lester, Principal • Mt Jefferson views $79,500. MLS Man agement MLS¹201301116 Real Estate age rooms. 2 acres ir- new updates. All new- rage with opener ha erty 201305511 Cascade Broker, Century 21 541-771-7786 • Auklet Dr .49 acres, rig., mtn and Smith kitchen with custom lots of s pace a nd 541-536-0117 Gold Country Realty, • 15 minutes to medical Realty, Dennis Hani& shopping Rock views. L ocal cabinets, tile coun- shelves. Fairly secul- 5 Acre lots SE Prinev- c leared & rea d y , 10 Acres. 15805 Sixth Inc. 541-504-1338 ford, Princ. Broker • MLS 201400819 541-536-1731 small Powell Butte t ertops, bam b o o ded but close to town, ille. $64,500 St., La Pine, Owner $75 , 000 Steve Payer, raised garden beds, Charter School. Cen- floors, new f ixtures MLS¹201307999 $50,000 2.16 AcresFinancing available. $ 82,500. Ready t o Broker, GRI large corral, pig pen Clyde Browning, P ossible Ow n e r tral location commut- and more. Bathrooms Say "goodbuy" $99,900. High Lakes Carry! 541-480-2966 ing distance to Bend, have new tile. Recent and chicken coop, build with wells and Principal Broker, Short walk to Realty & Pr o perty paved roads. too! $259,900, 4055 to that unused 541-480-4520 Deschutes R i v er. Prineville & Redmond. carpet, windows & Management Scott McLean, Not a bad package at paint. Covered porch, NE Walnut, Redmond. Eagle Commercial Very private setting. item by placing it in 541-536-0117 Principal Broker 4r Real Estate Enjoy c o mmunity $ 279,900! 105 2 5 triple car attached ga- Heather Hockett, Bro541-408-6908 54 1 - 420-9151 The Bulletin Classifieds F leming Rd. Cal l rage, and pull-through ker, amenities of g olf, Realty Executives Shevlin Ridge( Gol d fishing, swimming 8 Heather Hockett, PC, s hop. Property i s C entury 2 1 MORRIS Tick, Tock $225,000 Broker, Century 21 agent owned. Country Realty. more. MLS REAL ESTATE 5 41-385-580 9 $97,000 2.59 acres. • .39 acre lot 201303502Gold Country Realty, $289,900 but will en- Sgl. story 3 b drm, 3 R eady t o Tick, Tock... IM~ dy ~ ~ Op t 1 bu i l d. • End of cul-de-sac 541-420-9151 tertain offers. 22837 Call Charlie or MLS¹201100751 1680 sq. ft. home location ...don't let time get Virginia, Principal Views! Views! Views! Abilene Ct. in Bend. bath Travis L. Han- • City water & sewer Call Heather Hockett, on 4 acres with 3 acre Call Brokers $149,900. Flat, open, Mfd JMobile Homes away. Hire a Want to impress the nan, PC, Principal • MLS 201400429 w ater r i g hts 541-350-3418 buildable 9.7 acres in PC, Broker, Century state with Land Broker relatives? Remodel Updated home w/vi Scott Huggin, professional out 21 Gold Country ReRedmond RE/MAX Powell Butte. 541-788-3480 nyl windows, carpet Broker, GRI your home with the of The Bulletin's Land & Homes ¹201310923. D a v id alty, 541-420-9151 3 bdrm, 2 bath mobile and laminate floors, Redmond RE/MAX 541-322-1500 help of a professional Real Estate Franke, 541-420-5986 "Call A Service home for sale or rent. Land & Homes F/A furnace, A/C heat 541-771-7786 Central Oregon Realty from The Bulletin's Private, along COI caReal Estate pump and wood stove Professional" Garage Sales Group, LLC "Call A Service nal. 541-389-2636 541-771-7786 heat. Trex deck, com 5.5 acres, septic, power Directory today! Professional" Directory Garage Sales piete u n d erground and water installed. Cute as can be 2 bdrm, 775 sprinkler system, pri What are you Located near the en2 bath, extra building MORRIS 16160 SW Dove Rd. Illlanufactured/ vate well and 1600 sq. out back. Landscap12250 NW Dove Rd. in Garage Sales REAL ESTATE 6.1 acre corner lot, trance of the Ranch. looking for? Mobile Homes ft. shop plus 1080 sq. ing and much more! MLS CRR. Custom l~ y~ ~ Op d Mtn. views, near Des- $119,900 Find them ft. barn. Fenced and You'll find it in 20' I 303383. c edar-sided h o m e chutes River. $79,900 201104846 Call Linda 20784 Valentine, 1998 MLS x-fenced. $379,000. Vacant Lot in Crooked Lou DayWright. 541in $120,000. MLS with floor to ceiling MLS 201205646 ¹201400236 The Bulletin Classifieds 2 bdrm + office (Den), River Ranch $34,500. 771-2585 C r o oked 201303383. Linda Lou windows. Immaculate Juniper Realty The Bulletin John L. Scott Real Level 8 treed buildvery open floor plan, River Realty Day-Wright Broker 1841 sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 541-504-5393 Estate 541-548-1712 attached double ga able lot, 1.44 acres. Classifieds 541-771-2585 b ath h o m e wit h 541-385-5809 Enjoy all the ameni- 16535 SW Chinook Dr. 7965 SW R iver R d. rage, turn key and Crooked River Realty tongue 8 groove caVery nice home, great move-in c o n dition. ties or ranch living. 5.68 a cres, R i ver 2.79 acres, near the 541-385-5809 thedral ceilings, gas o pen feeling a n d Broken Topj $269,000 ¹ 201309880. Gai l v iews, o w ner w i l l D eschutes Riv e r . $56,550. free-standing stove, TURN THE PAGE bdrms on both ends • .45 acre lot Cascade Village Day, 5 4 1-306-1018 carry. $225,000 MLS $49,000 ¹201009429 wood floors. Spa- Great horse property, 4 for privacy, Irg master, • Backs non-developFor More Ads Central Oregon ReJuniper Realty Homes N.W. LLC 201106408. Juniper c ious k i tchen i n - stall loafing shed with w/ Irg walk in closet, ment zone 541-388-0000 The Bulletin alty Group, LLC 541-504-5393 Realty 541-504-5393 cludes Corian auto watering, opens has c orner• Flat terrain counters, b r eakfast to fenced area, ap- kitchen pantry, counter space, Wooded acre, w e ll, bar and separate prep prox. 40x80 shed for laminated f l o oring,• MLS 201400288 septic. $22, 9 00. Debbie Hershey, island. Large decks to hay or what have you. and extends into din 53215 Day Road, La Broker, CRS, GRI enjoy the views. All of Fenced and c ross ing area. 36x36 ga Pine. High Lakes Re541-420-5170 this on 4.81 acres. f enced wit h m a n y rage, shop wired and alty & Property Man$385,000 MLS s eparate areas. 2 partially agement fin i shed. 201101447. J uniper bdrm, 2 bath with sky- metal siding and 541-536-0117 Realty, 541-504-5393 lights, walk-in closets, Fenced a re a roof, for dining area with built w ith a 14198 SW Nine Peaks in hutch. Large living horses, Garage Sales MORRIS Pl., CRR Mtn. views room and wood stove. cover-all, 2/~ acres REAL ESTATE fenced an d c r o ss from this 1960 sq. ft., $179,900 Garage Sales MLS fenced. $164,900. 3 bdrm., 2 bath home 201108032. Cascade MLS 201302690 Cas Garage Sales on 1.16 acre. 936 sq. Broken Top Lot j Dennis Hani- cade Realty, Dennis ft. garage has a shop Realty, ford, Princ. Broker $320,000 Haniford, Princ. Bro • .65 acre cul-de-sac lot Find them area plus 2 bays. RV 541-536-1731 ker 541-536-1731 covered storage 8 • Cascade Mountain in carport. $12 9 ,500Great location w/unob- Views Galore! Smith views The Bulletin MLS 201208272 • 13th Hole & Lake structed view of 8 mtn Rock views on a quiet Juniper Realty, Classifieds peaks. Nestled be- dead-end co u ntry views 541-504-5393 tween Bend 8 Red- road. Spacious 2700 • MLS 201310090 541-385-5809 and only mo- sq. ft. home boasts 3 David Gilmore, Broker 14482 SW Pony Trail in mond 541-312-7271 CRR. Like new home m ents away f r o m bdrms, 2 baths, huge You won't find another 97 for an easy country kitchen, dinbuilt in 2001 that has Hwy. acres lot like this one. always been a vaca- c ommute. Built i n ing area, large util. '0 This lot ha s b e en on 2.5 a cres room and a b a setion h ome. U n ob- 1994 completely groomed structed mtn views, 2 w/2494 sq.ft. of living m ent which i s i n with a fence, gravel Oversized liv- cluded in the sq. ft. MORRIS FOr 27 yearS, EVergreen haSfOCuSed On PurChaSe buSineSS, SD We bdrm, 2 bath on 2.58 space. driveway, fire pit, and REAL ESTATE acres. Master bath ing room & d i ning Also has extra area knOW a thing Or tWO abOut the unique needS Of real eState benches to enjoy the room make comforthas garden tub and able environment for upstairs and all bdrms evening fire, log cabin are on the main level. separate wal k - in professionals and homebuyers. living & enter- The dbl. garage is Central Oregon, Prinev- look alike s t orage shower, New Pergo family shed has also been taining. New 5-panel large. This property is ille. Grandfathered-in flooring and windows. That'S Why We'Ve deVelOPed an infraStruCture With SyStemS and Great lot for RV Large composite fir doors 8 glass panel 1.5 acres with 1 acre one acre building sites built.Just offofpaved PrOCedureS that allOW US tO quiCkly PrOCeSS lOanS SO that We CIOSe decking, Hardi-plank front door. Oak lami- irrigation, fenced and on paved dead end use. nate flooring in living ready fo r h o r ses. road. Ideal summer road. $47,500. MLS siding. $110,000. On Time and as Promised'. In fact, our entire platform is 201309821 r oom, hallways 8 $5000 allowance to retreats for snowbirds Juniper Realty, baths. 4 bdrms, 3 are buyers at closing with or year round living. Cascade Realty, Den541-504-5393 engineered to close purchase transactions in 14 days". master suites. New a ccepted of fer . Power & water, wild- nis Haniford, Broker Hardi-plank s i d ing, $289,900. 12333 NW life. Near to mtns, riv- 1-541-536-1731 1 45241 Corral Ct. La Pine, 3/2, 1620 sq.ft., r oof, t r im , wa t e r 10th St., Terrebonne. ers 8 lakes. 6 miles to Teamwork, strength and focus: that's what la w n . Call Heather Hockett, new hospital & shopmfd home on 1 .65 h eater a n d Find exactly what you get when you work with Evergreen. acre, shop. $139,900. ¹201400552. John L. PC, Broker, Century ping. $34,500. Terms. you are looking for in the High Lakes Realty & Scott Rea l E s tate 21 Gold Country Re- For sale by owner. CLASSIFIEDS 541-548-1712 alty, 541-420-9151 541-350-4077 Property M a nagement 541-536-0117 •

-

RRI

RR

IRR

It's amazing wbat you can do when you really focuson it.

152671 Long Prairie$ 249,000. 4 b d r m, 3.55 acres, h orse b arn, arena. H i g h Lakes Realty & Property Man a gement 541-536-0117

Kevin Pangle

1.56 acres, 1620 sq.ft.

NMIS 89521

LindaFisher-Berlanga NMLS210118

MarkLong

WendyPangle

Sheryl Rhoden

NMLS208965

NMLS208295

NMLS 221299

Brad Haun

Lisa Hawes

NMLS221546

NMLS404405

Tastefully done spacious home sitting on the CR rim, dble garage with a t tached tack room and horse stall. Located off a paved road. $229,000 MLS 201309151

Linda Lou Day-Wright. 541- 771-2585

Crooked River Realty 1643 Yoke Rd. 2188 sq. ft. home on 10 acres, with 4 0 x60 s h o p. $369,500. High Lakes Realty & Property Ma n agement 541-536-0117

TWO lOCatiOnS SerVing all of Central OregOn

Bend ~ 541-318-5500 685 SE 3rd Street, Bend, OR 97702 ML-3Z3-Ig

The Earned Income Tax Credit. You may have earned it. Why not claim it? 360' View/Top of Butte in Terrebonne. Home, shop, mansion building site. 2% to broker. See: bend.craigslist.org/reo/ 4382262025.html

3 bdrm, on 6.48 acres. with multiple garages, 1183 Crescent CutOff Rd., C r escent. $174,900. High Lakes Realty 8 Pr o perty Management 541-536-0117

Prineville ( 541-416-7480 220 NW Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville, OR 97754 ML-3Z3-5

If yOu're WOrking hard juSt to make endS meet and haVe One or mOre Children living with you, you may qualify for the EITC. Think of it as 8 reward for doing one of life's most beautiful, most important and most loving jobs. Visit our

Web site or ask your tax preparer if you qualify.

NMLS 3182

Because when it comes to getting more for your family,consider it done. A message from the Internal Revenue Service.

www.irs.gov/eitc

EVERGREEN

gq@ The Internal

Revenue Service

"The If-dayclosedoesnot imply aguarantee ofanykind andonly referencesthe historical servicelevel pnvidedbyE verqreenon standard FHA,VA,andconforming conventional loans.Assumesexpeditious andcompletecooperation byall partiestothetransactnn. Notallapplications are eligible fora14-dayclose,including but not lim<taItojumbo loans,renovatnn loans,loansbrokendto other lenders,or properties requiringrepairs.Notall applicantswil qualily; certainrestrictionsapply. ©2014EvergreenHomeLoansisaregisteredtrade nameof EvergreenMoneysourceMortgageCompany' NMLS ID3182.Trade/service marks arethepropertyof EvergreenHomeLoans.All rightsreserved.Licensedunder. Oregon Mortgage LendingLicenseML-3213.3/14.


THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY MARCH 22 2014 E9

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

'

$659,000 39 ACREGEM INPOWELL BUTTE

$139,900 BEND'S WESTSIDE

$289,900 I 3016 CLUBHOUSE, BEND • 5th fairway in Rivers Edge Village • Near river trails & shopping

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• Master on main with walk-in closets & large master bath • Open great room, loft/ office, 1 bed & bath upstairs

541-977-1852 TONY LEVISON BROKER

-=

• Tuscany style luxury in Bend • 2910 SF • Single level living • Stunning kitchen • Two master suites • 0.46 AC fenced lot • Gorgeous openfloor plan

-

,

541-390-6123 DAVE LEWIS BROKER

• Beautiful River Canyon Estate

• Large, open & sunny great room • 3bed,2.5 bath & 3-car garage • Large patio, gas firepit

EI

• 1 renovated 2 bed condos • High end finishes • Near COCC & Newport Market • Professionally managed & Well maintained

• R.D. building & design • New construction • 3553 SF & 42X16RVgarage • 3 bed (2 full) & 2.5 bath, bonus room plus office

$689,900 I 18380 PINEHURSTROAD, BEND • Tumalo home & land

package • 9.64 fenced acres • 2750 SF home • 4 AC irrigation • Mountain & water views • Superior location

u

'EI

$224,900 I CENTRALLY LOCATED ru

IIH I

' 541-280-1543 LORISCHNERINGER BROKER

541-390-0098 MIKE EVERIDGE BROKER

$199,000 I 20017 SEQUEBECCOURT

$234,500ISINGLE LEVEL 8EGREAT NEIGHBORHOOD

• One of the last available properties in Sundance • Great price • Flat 3.65 AC • Build your dream home • On a cul-de-sac

Tsr r '

'

• RV parking • Open floor plan • Master bedroom separation • Fenced garden & storage shed • MLS¹ 201 401930

541-390-0934 DEBBIETALLMAN BROKER

541-410-8084 SUSAN PITARRO BROKER

$299,900ICUSTOM HOME WITH MTN VIEWS

I-.J

I IM 8

541-891-9441 DON ROMANO BROKER

$169,900 I 623 SE6THSTREET, BEND • Great price & great location • Cute, cozy, updated & move-in ready • 3 bed, 1 bath, great room floor plan • 0.16 AC lot, fenced • Laundry rm, deck, fire pit, garage/shop

I

541-213-0451 HILARY RICH BROKER

$619,900I1639 NW FAREWELL DRIVE,BEND

• Beautiful 2590 SF log home with private setting • Huge great room & flex

• Near SageElementary • Free standing gas stoves • Updated roof • RV parking • Corner lot • 2452 & 2466 SW Wickiup Ave, Redmond

$679,000ICUSTOM HOME, SHOP 6 BARN

space • Mountain views & 1.67 AC of outdoor living • CRR golf, tennis, pool & more

541-633-0255 GRANT LUOWICK BROKER

• Large upstairs bonus room • Tranquil wrap arounddeck This home offers the best of NW Bendliving

~

qroup

I C a m m l t m e at Y eu V a l u e

Patty Dempsey 541-480 m5432 Andrea Phelps . 541-408-4770 Cleme Rinehart 541 m480 m2100 WWW. RINEHARTDEMPSEY. COM

$214,900INEWER ONE LEVEL CRAFTSMAN

• Beautiful 2697 SF home • 4bed &2bath • 2 master suites Hardwood & slab granite • 26.72 AC irrigated '. ' • Great mountain views • 6393 SW Quarry Ave, Redmond

• Vaulted great room design • 3bed,2bath&1450SF • Tiled floors throughout home • Oversized garage (24X26) • Close to river & forest lands

541-410-8557 DAVE DISNEY BROKER

$249,000IGREAT LOCATION G OPEN LIVINGI

$272,000ISPACIOUS HOME G CORNERLOT '/~' !

EII

541-420-3891 BOB AHERN BROKER

• RV parking, dump & lawn • Large living & dining rooms • Open kitchen with storage • Large bright, utility room & office • 3 car garage with big shop area

$145,000IUNBEATABLE DESCHUTES RIVER VIEW

• Vaulted ceilings & great

• 6.4AC & in CRR

room • Double car garage • Forest Grove nearBlakely Park • Deck & fencing

• Bring your builder • Mature trees with interesting topography • Must see to be appreciated

• 3 bed & 2 bath

541-977-5345 MIKE WILSON BROKER

541-480-9883 AUDREY COOK, BROKER $699,900ISUPREME LOG HOME G GUEST CASITA

'". 4

• 2900 SF log home • 750 SF log guestcasita • 2.2 AC of privacy • 36X40 RV garage • Access to river & BLM lands • 2510 Rohlfing Circle, La Pine

'

$449,000IRIVERFRONT CONDO, DOWNTOWN BEND

• 3bed,2bath &2963SF • A wonderful Awbrey Butte home on flat a lot • Well defined rooms • Concrete & butcher block countertops in kitchen .

-~NIIlgil:

• Gorgeous mountain viewsl • 4.65AC between Bend& Redmond • Open floor plan & vaulted ceilings • 2.6 AC irrigation, pond &fenced

$329,900IMOTIVATED SELLER!

$289,900 I 3016 CLUBHOUSE, BEND

541-419-8758 CAROL ARMSTRONG • Townhome BROKER

$449,000IINCREOIBLE SETTING, IM MACULATE HOME

Rinehart, Dempseg EtPhelps

• 2 bed & 1 bath units

• Tuscany style luxury in Bend • 2910 SF Single levelliving • Stunning kitchen • Two master suites • 0.46 AC fenced lot • Gorgeous openfloor plan

• 5th fairway in Rivers Edgelrlllsus • Near river trails & shopping • Master on main with walk-in closets & large master bath • Open great room, loft/ office,1 bed & bath

• Well appointed & immaculate • Master on main • Tons of storage • Move-in ready

• Well maintained manufactured home • 3 bed & 2 bath • Living room & family room • Well designed kitchen

, 541-604-1649 GAILROGERS BROKER

541-410-8084 SUSAN PITARRO BROKER

$375,000IDESIRABLE NORTHWEST CROSSING

Experttsa Ya u T r ust

$189,900 I SOUTHWEST AREA

541-480-0448 JOHNTAYLOR BROKER

$155,000 I HOME ON '/s ACRE

• Custom built home • 2165 SF • 3bed &2bath • Close to lake • 1.17 AC • Mountain views • 6134 SW Sundance Lane, Culver • MLS¹ 201401270

541-771-1383 JEANETTEBRUNOT BROKER

$589,000 I21426 BELKNAP DRIVE, BEND

541-480-6790 JAKEMOORHEAD ' BROKER

• Open floor plan with gas fireplace • Sunny kitchen & breakfast room • Formal dining room or office • Master suite with sitting room • Backs to Fairhaven Park

• Fenced & landscaped • Gated community pool, court & spa

$344,900I2160 OSPREY DRIVE, REDMOND

I

$189,000 I PARKSIDELIVING IN NW REDMOND

• 1796 SF, 3 bed & 2 bath, forced air, AC, Built1999, updated mfg. . Attached double garage

541-576-4742 KENDALLCOMEY BROKER '.„' • Move-in ready Eagle Crest home! • 4 bed & 3 bath • 2217 SF • Brazilian Cherry wood floors • 0.49 AC lot • Located on 11th green

541-480-6790 5 4 1-480-2245 JAKE MOORHEAD LORETTAMOORHEAD BROKER BROKER

541-306-0479 CHRISTIN HUNTER BROKER

& BBQ • Clubhouse & walking trails

541-848-7590 PAM BELL BROKER

I

• Spectacular mountain & Smith Rock views • 39 fenced & cross fenced acres & 36 AC of irrigation • 3 bed, 2 bath home & 1530 SF • 36X46' six stall barn with wood floors, hay loft & tack room •Two ponds,greenhouse,outbuildings& chickencoop • Hay/livestock pasture

E

$394,500 I 19777 BANEBERRYAVENUE, BEND

I

EIE

• Townhome

$589,000 I 21426 BELKNAP DRIVE, BEND . ' i~= L

$859,000 SHEVLIN RIDGESTUNNER

,

E

$278,000IA REALGEM ON THE DRY CANYON RIM

:

.

$249,000ILARGE LOT G GATED RV PARKING

• Open floor plan • Fresh paint • Granite counters • Two balconies • Detached garage

— 541-610-5672 541- 639-6307 I VERONICATHERIOT SECILY LUSE BROKER BROKER

$285,000I DUPLEX

• Immaculate home on the Dry Canyon • 1911 SF,3 bed & 2 bath • Open floor plan & hardwood floors • Fabulous kitchen & large master • A real show stopper • 1714 NW Rimrock Court

-''. F

• Corner lot duplex • 2 bed, 2.5 bath units • 100% occupied & professionally managed • Great NE location in pocket neighborhood off Butler Market road

$285,000 I MULTI-LEVELDUPLEX

• Well maintained 2016 SF home • All main level living with ,

E

541-771-1168 ERIC ANDREWS BROKER

-

541-480-7183 BARBARAMYERS BROKER

a bonus roomupstairs • Open floor plan & gas fireplace • Sale includes hot tub, gazebo, refrigerator & garden shed • 2121 NW Poplar Place

• 2 bed, 2.5 bath units • 100% occupied & ia a a

mm m m u

541-306-0479 CHRISTIN HUNTER BROKER

professionally managed uulqs& spsslu sfloor plans • Large yard • Multi-level living • Bedrooms on separate floors


E10 SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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

MORRIS ee

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REAL ESTATE

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DARRINKELLEHER, • 2 homes, multiple outbuildings BROKER • 33.12 Acres, fenced,crossfenced 2 d g I I VI

541-788-0029 • MLS 201400239

j

BROKEN TOPf $1,100,000

TUMALO RANCHf $549,000

7.SSACRESWITHYIEWSf $99gOO

DAWNUIRICKSON, ' 4460 sq.ft. BROKER C,RS, • 3 bedroom,4.5 bath • 17th fairway & pond views GRI, CHMS 541-610-9427 • MLS 201400886

• 5628 sq.ft. custom home • 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath 541-548-3598, • View & River Frontage

DIANELOZITO BROKER

541-306-9646 • MLS 201308728

DES CHUTESevuvisw f $6so,ooo

80 ACRES f $875,000 CHeR'HART MAN, • 1939 sq.ft, 2 bedroom, 2 bath PRINCIPAlBR OKER ' 4 stall barn, loafing sheds 541-312-7263 • Borders federal land to south 503-866-8255 • MLS 201401359

JJ JONE S

• 2776 sq,h,

DpH KEL LEHER

EEHO GOLFRCOUNTRYCLUBl$47S//P//I • 3048 sq.ft., remodeled

a 3 bedroom 3 bath • Slab grantte, wood floors 541-788-3678 • MLS 201401269 BRQKER

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PANO RAMICCASCADEVIN Sf SBII+N • 5004 sq.ft, 4 bedroom

JIMMORAN, BROKER

• Gourmet kitchen, theater room • 2.18 acres, extensive decking

541-948-0997 • MLS 201400616

SUNRIVER f $549,000 2264 sq.h.

HWBE NO/SHEYLINRIDGEl $579,000 , sq.ftg openplan DIANE ROBINSON, • Single level2221 • 3 bedroom, 2 bath pluden s BROKER , ABR

JACKJOHHS BROKER GRI

541-419-8165 • MLS 201310335

541-480-9300 • MLS 201400042

• May 2014 completion

4 bedroom 3 5 bath • .30acre

NW BENDf $524,500 ueE JOHHSOH • 2168 sq.ft. Pahlischbuilt • 3 be droom, 3 bath BROKER • Hardwood floors, granite kitchen 541-480-1293 • MLS 201401052

a 3 bedroom 3 bath '.32 ,3 It 541-480-1911 • MLS 201401501 BRQKER

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I 1

5 ACRES f $430,000 • 2625 sq.ft.

JACKIE FRENCH,

• 4 bedroom, 2 bath • Beautiful landscape,pond 541-480-2269 • MLS 201309091 BROKER

BRASADA RANCH f $429,000 cabtn KIRKSAHDBURG, • 17» sq.h, fumtshed • 3 bedroom smtes BRpKER

GREG MILLERPC, BROKER , CRS, GRI 541-408-1511

• Granite counters,hardwoodfloors

541-556-1804 • MLS 201310654

RIVER RIM f $424,900 • 1800 sq.ft, single level • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • Fenced, mature landscaping

• MLS 201401042

OUGMR BENMNPC

19ACRESVIEWSf $415AIO • 1500 sq.ft. updated home • 3 bedroom, 2 bath

BROKER,GRI, PREV IEWSPECIALIST • Shop, fenced,Swalley Irrigation

541-480-6448 • MLS 201400856

TANGLEWOOD f $398,500 JERRY STOHE • ' 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath BRpKER ' • g Hardwood floors, cherry cabinets • .21acre lot, 3<ar garage

541-390-9598 • MLS 201400230

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=- CJJ~

lAVA RIDGES f $329A+0 • 2456 sq.ft.

SKYUNER SUMMIT I $393AIOO CRAIGSMITH,

• 4 bedroom,3.5 bath • .11acre lot 541-322-2417 gMLS20l 309912 BRQKER

JAHE STuiL

RIVER RIM f $319,900 DARRYL DOSER, BROKER C,RS

BROKER,ABR,GRI ' 4 bedroom,2.5 bath • Hardwood floors stone &tile

541.948 7998 • MLS 201 310214

' 4 bedroom 2 bat" • Great roomplan

541-383-4334 • MLS 201309843

BRAN O ONFAIRBANKS, BROK ER,SRES,GRI, DPE 541-383-4344

NW BENDf $319,500 • 2080 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom,2.5 bath • Covered front porch

' MLS 201401314

SE BEND f $319,900

CRAIGLO NG, I ' BRQKER

• '

4

3 bedroorn, 3 bath • .19acre, fencedyard

541-480-7647 • MLS 201309521

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a'

I, NW BEND f $318,000 MARK YAICESCHIHIpc, BRQKER CRS GRI 541-383-4364 '

' » 0o sq h

' 3 bedroom, 2 bath • .15acre, fenced

• MLS 201401445

GREG FLOYDK, BROKER '

GARYROSE, BROKER , MBA

• 3 bedroom, 2 bath • .5 acre, shared dock

541-390-5349 • MLS 201401375

1" '

~ /S '

NE BEND f $265,000

541-350-6049 • MLS 20140» 61

• 1389 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom, 2 bath

• .22acre on culcle-sac

541-588-0687 • MLS 201401798

</4q":.

• 1710 sq.ft. craftsman JAN IAUG HUH, BROKER , ABR,CRS, • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath • Hardwood floors GRI,CSP

SUNRIVER f $288,900

BIGDESCHUTESRIVERf $298,000

• NE BENDf $275,000 ICHAEL JHPPP

BROKE R

I

• 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath • .26acre on culgfe.sac

541-390-0504 • MLS 201401513

• BROKENTOPf $269,000

CATHYDELNERO ' 45 ac« lot non-developmentzone BROKER , CSp I • Backs • Flatterrain

41-410-5280 • MLS 201400288

"

" '

NE BEND f $249,500

GREAT INVESTMENTf $249,900 BpNHIE SAYICKAS • DeschuteRi sver &Pilot Butteviews • Build in Bend's best kept secret BROKER EpRp ' • .37acre lot SRES

541-408-7537 • MLS 201307954

AMY HAIUGAN, • 1728 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath BROKER • .16acre cornerlot

541-410-9045 • MLS 201309188

NW REDMOND f $175,000

RIDGEATEAGLECRESTf$179,900 • 1255 sq.ft. townhome • 2 bedroom, 2.5 bath • Cascade Mountain views 541-480-8796 • MLS 201401764

CLIFF FEINGOID BROKER

MINDAMCKITRICK, • 1725 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom, 2 bath BROKER , GRI • Close to DryCanyon &schools 41-280-6148 • MLS 201400737

„5'.'I:A', NW BENDLOTf $149,000 CMO LTRPEBORsKTpC BRQKER ABRCRS GREEN 541-383-4350

' . 37 acre lot ' I'ossible SmithRock&Mtn vie„s • Near community college

• MLS 201401078

LA PINE f $112,000

RIDGE ATEAGLECRESTl $119,900

Gup FLOYD K BROKER

• .38acre lot • Views to north and east • Close to upperathletic facility

541-390-5349 • MLS 201307552

RACHE LIEMAS, BROKER 541-383-4359 541-896-1263

• 1404 sq.ft. manufactured • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • 1.02 acre, fenced

• MLS 201401452

SE BEND LOTf $109,000

BREHT IAHDELS • Flat .16 acre • ' RV parking allowed BROKER

• $4500 Credtt for water SDC

41-550-0976 • MLS 201401390

LA PINE$85,000 f KELLY NEUMAH pRINppAL BROKE '

• 2 bedroom, I bath cabin • VVell & ~~pti~on slte • 10 flat, treed acres

541-480-2102 • MLS 201310161


ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014 • •

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Pets & Supplies

Pets 8 Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

Adult barn/ shop/working cats, fixed, shots. No fee, free delivery. 541-306-4519

210

Furniture 8 Appliances

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246

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Golf Equipment

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Chest freezer, Kenmore 10-12 c.f. 4 trays, $100 The Bulletin p/up 5 4 1-548-6642. recommends extra '

CHECKYOUR AD

a

i caution when pur-i

products or • Garage Sales I chasing services from out of I area. Sending 8 Garage Sales 8• the cash, checks, or • i n f ormation Garage Sales i credit may be subjected to i

on the first day it runs to make sure it is core rect. Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541 -385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

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1' MOVING SALE 63351 Brightwater Drive off NEq18th Street Fri. March 21 • Sat., March 22 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Crowd control admittance numbers issued @8:00 am Friday. (Take Empire Avenue to 18th Street, turn north at the 18th street round-a-bout and follow to Brightwater Drive the north one go to sale site) A very nice moving sale!!! Nissan 2000 Pickup 4WD with shell and only 28,700 miles - not turned over - Lady is 81; Queen size Sealy Posturpedic bed; Oak China cabinet; Sofa; Entry table; Coffee table; Antique paperweights; Antique German doll; Other dolls; Noritake Dish set eDaryle pattern; Dinette set, Oak t riple dresser; Gazelle exerciser; Drafting table; Wall clock; rug; Linens; Books; Oak desk with slide-in credenza; Pots and Pans; Electrical appliances' dishes; Bakeware; Casseroles; Bath supplies; Printer; Small TV; Three vacuums; Other electronic items; Tools added to sale include; Router; Belt sander; Industrial motor; Shaper; Circular saw; eDremel e like tool; Grinding wheel; Transit; Chain hoist; Planer; Card Stock cutter; Shop vac; Like new portable folding 10 inch table saw; Six shelf units-heavy duty steel and board; Old red wagon; Three older trunks; Garden cart on bicycle wheels; Fishing Reels; Lots of garden decor and wind chimes; Pots and lawn and garden tools; Lawnmower; Car cover; Two large planters; Bird houses; impact wrench set; Lots of other items!! Handled by ....

oeedy'8 Estatesales co. LLC 541-419-4742 days • 541-382-5950 eves

www.deeedysestatesaies.com

eg $0

Coins & Stamps

Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the HAVANESE PUPPIES HELP YOUR AD classifieds! Ask about our AKC, Dewclaws, UTD 202 stand out from the Super Seller rates! shots/wormer, non-shed, rest! Have the top line 541-385-5809 Want to Buy or Rent hypoallerqenic, $850 in bold print for only 541-480-1277. i FRAUD. For more Find them Aussie Mini AKC par$2.00 extra. CASH for dressers, information about an 8 Labrador Puppies, $300 ents on site. Shots/ in dead washers/dryers wormed. advertiser, you mayi The Bulletin 8 $350. 1st shots. vet Sta r ting 541-420-5640 The Bulletin $ call th e Or e gon $ Servingrentrel Crregonsincelggg $350. m/f blue merle checked. 541-416-1175 ' State Atto r ney ' 541-385-5809 541-598-5314 Classifieds Looking to buy 4 or 5 Wanted: $Cash paid for i General's O f f i ce Just bought a new boat? vintage costume jew- Bow front fish tank, 42" white doves for outConsumer Protec- • Sell your old one in the elry. Top dollar paid for w/ stand, fish, pump & d oor a v iary. C a l l 541 e385-5809 tion h o t line a t i classifieds! Ask about our Gold/Silver.l buy by the h eater, $325 o b o . 541-382-2194 i 1-877-877-9392. Super Seller rates! Estate, Honest Artist 541-408-0846 541-385-5809 Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Dining table > TheBullctin > Serving Centref Oregonsince lggs Beautiful round 240 Chihuahua 8-wk-old Mini Aussie Toy pups, oak pedestal table male parti-mix. color. toy size, assorted colCrafts & Hobbies Will pay cash for with 4 matching $300 541-410-5349 211 women's clothing & o rs, $ 36 0 ca s h. chairs, table is 42" accessories dating 541-678-7599 Children's Items in diameter and in from 1900s-1970s. brand new condiNeeded: good home for Respectful reseller/ Redmon Weigh to Grow, tion, as are the g reat G olden R e collector. Bend lodig. baby scale, up to chairs. Priced at triever; female, great c al. Contact S u 44¹, $20. 541-388-3879 $400. 541-447-3342 disposition, 8 yrs old. zanne at (559) Steve 541-408-2265 Alderwood 381-5085. 212 Chihuahua puppies, tiny, Quiltworks Quilting Norwich rare AKC male Freezers 2 Kenmore up1st shots/dewormed, Antiques & Frame,locally made pup, 9 wks, h ouse right, less than 1 vr $275 $250. 541-420-1068 in Prineville, easy to Collectibles raised; 3 s/~-year-old & $325. 830-822-3945 208 use makes quilting a Norwich male, house Cockatiel young, yellow, Pets & Supplies G ENERATE SOM E 2 - d rawer dream! Just add your not trained. Brand new r aised & g ood o n EXCITEMENT in your Dark oa k machine to use with $1 800 each. dresser, curved front, cage, toys, supplies. leash. included Handi 541-487-4511, or neighborhood! Plan a $250. White wicker The Bulletin recom- $40 (541) 633-0164 garage sale and don't baby c nb , u n i que handles. Manual incl. sharonm©peak.org mends extra caution forget to advertise in Exlnt shape, only $250. Large dark oak when purc hasPayback Chick Starter classified! used to quilt 4 tops, roll top desk, $800. ing products or serSale - $1.00 off 541-385-5809. Surveryor's tr a nsit $600. 541-549-1273 vices from out of the 25 and 50 lb. bags. or 541-419-2160 area. Sending cash, Loveseat like new, light 1930-1940, orig. box Quarry Ave. C ASH checks, or credit intan, $250. $350. Hay & Feed. 242 541-923-5960 f ormation may b e 541-389-4030. 541-923-2400 Exercise Equipment DACHSHUND PUPS subjected to fraud. www.quarryfeed.com NEED TO CANCEL Paying cash for old gas AKC Mini longhaired For more informaYOUR AD? M$500/ F$600 POODLE pups, toy. pumps/glass-top tion about an adver• Chandelier, 541-598-7417 12-20 wks. $175-$250 The Bulletin visibles, etc, old soda tiser, you may call 22" diameter x 17n Classifieds has an & up. 541-475-3889 pop machines/advertisthe O r egon State high, 12 lights, "After Hours"Line ing. 541-504-1050, Kyle Attorney General's Donate deposit bottles/ QueenslandHeelers bronze 8 crystal, to local all vol., Call 541-383-2371 Office C o nsumer cans Standard & Mini, $150 has 6 arms (2 lights non-profit rescue, for 24 hrs. to cancel The Bulletin reserves Protection hotline at & up. 541-260-1537 on each arm), feral cat spay/neuter. the right to publish all your ad! 1-877-877-9392. $300 obo. Cans for Cats trailer www.rightwayranch.wor ads from The Bulletin dpress.com R ecliner, XL fau x newspaper onto The at Jake's Diner; or The Bulletin leather, exc. c ond. Bulletin Internet web• Weslo Cadence rervtng Central Oregon sincefgtB donate M-F at Smith 210 $150. 253-820-3926 Treadmill,folds up Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or site. Furniture & Appliances for easy storage, at CRAFT, Tumalo. Refrigerator S/S w/iceAdopt a rescued cat or Call for Irg. quantity light use, works The Bulletin maker; washer/dryer; older kitten! F ixed, pickup, 541-389-8420. Serving Central Crregon sincetggs great. $150. A1 Washers&Dryers couch & loveseat; all shots, ID chip, tested, www.craftcats.org 541-923-7491 $150 ea. Full war$600. 541-639-1825 Wanted: Old Oriental more! 65480 7 8th, ranty. Free Del. Also Scandinavian Stokke- rugs, any size or conTumalo, T h urs/Sat/ German Shepherds Pilates XP297; Pilates wanted, used W/D's Sun 1-5, 3 8 9-8420 www.sherman-ranch.us Balans kneeling chair, dition, call toll free, chair, fluidity bar, call 541-280-7355 www.craftcats.org 541-281-6829 1-800-660-8938 $125. 541-508-1749 for info. 541-408-0846

Diana Pace

'Int, v

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280

Es t ate Sales

Boynton Estate Sale 1045 SE Blackridge Place, Bend Fri-Sat, 9-4 Very nice contents of home and garage, Laz- Boy furniture, bedroom set, jewelry, 50" Samsung TV, diningset,sewingmachineand supplies,office furniture and supplies, musical instruments, dressers, nice womens clothing, hand and garden tools, kitchen items, Plus much more. See Pictures at www.farmhouseestatesales.com

advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 12 oi'

~ee eke ee! Ad must include price of

246

n ~l e t e oi Seoo

Guns, Hunting & Fishing .44 Remington Magnum ammo, 5 boxes O $30 ea. 830-822-3945 (Bend)

I

DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial

CASHII For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies.

or less, or multiple items whosetotal does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809

www.bendbulletin.com

541-408-6900.

Guns for sale by a collector. Call for Need to get an details: 541-504-1619 ad in ASAP? You can place it Garage Sales online at: www.bendbulletin.com Garage Sales

Garage Sales

541-385-5809 Desert Baby Eagle .40 caliber handgun, 2 holsters, Rail Flashlight, 50 rounds ammo, $650 obo. 916-952-4109

Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809

Left Handed Stag Arms AR15, Model Stag 15, L-3 EOTech ESPS2 red dot scope w/quick detach mount, o ver 2000 rounds of high quality Federal 62 g rain g r een t i p 5 .56/223 am m o . $2500. 541-350-7017

RUGER SR22 pistol, with holster, $ 295. 541-316-1931

Stag Arms AR-15: Model Stag15, 5.56/223, Stainless steel barrel. Leupold Firedot G 3-9X40 Scope, MagPul PRS buttstock, Hogue grip, Bipod.$1875 Call 541-410-3568

People Lookfor Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The Sulletin Clalriffeds Taurus PT 140, 40 cal, 4 mags, holster, 2 mag belt clip, box of shells, $375. 541-383-7659

Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items & upscale bamboo flv rods. Call 541-678-5753, or 503-351-2746

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Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Redmond Area

Garage/Moving Sale MOVING SALE Fri. 1-5 Nort h west C r ossing, ** FREE ** Sat. 9-2 Dishes, furn. 232 7 N W Frazer Ln. Garage Sale Kit lots more. 2817 SW M a r . 22-23, 10-2 p.m. Place an ad in The Indian Place. Bulletin for your ga- Seasonal Garage Sale! rage sale and reMarch 20-21-22, 8 to 4 Sa l es Northeast Bend ceive a Garage Sale Silver, handmade crafts, antiques & col120 1 N E 9th, Sat. 8 Kit FREE! lectibles, lots of linens, Sun. 8am-5pm. Misc KIT INCLUDES: old and new furniture, hous e hold, s p orting • 4 Garage Sale Signs outdoor garden. go o ds , t o ys , v i n yl • $2.00 Off Coupon To No clothes, no junk! plo t ter, alto sax, more. Use Toward Your 4504 SW Minson Rd., Ad Powell Butte. Beach house annual •Next 10 Tips For "Garage Sue, 541-416-8222. spring cleaning yard Sale Success!" sale. Lots of great fur292 n iture, decor a n d Sales Other Areas clothing items. Sat. PICK UP YOUR only 9-1. 653 NE 12th GARAGE SALE K!T at M OVING S ALE S a t 1777 SW Chandler o nly 9-3. 3 5 5 W . ESTATE SALE Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Washington, Sisters. Sofa, recliners, dressers, complete office, Singer Quality furn., beautisewing machine, Schwinn BioDyne exercise The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 f ul, a r twork, c o l bike, bookcases, books, lots of kitchenware, lectibles, antiques and American Fostoria glassware, collectibles, cast much more. iron cookware, key start mower, riding mower, Craftsman bandsaw/ radial arm saw/ table saw/ PRE-ESTATE SALE NOTICE belt-disk sander, woodworking hand & power Furniture, electronics, Remember remove tools, fishing gear & fly tying supplies, camping household, no junk, your Garageto Sale signs & outdoor gear, yard & garden & outdoor items, only. Fri. & Sat. (nails, staples, etc.) holiday items, freezer, Johnson SeaHorse 5s/g cash 3/21-22, 9-4. 2200 NE after your Sale event hp motor, firewood, lots tools & garage stuff! Hwy20, Space17 is over! THANKS! Fri.-Sat., 9-4, numbers Fri. 8 a.m. Powell Butte behind Jake's Diner. From The Bulletin Hwy just past airport, right on McGrath Rd., left and your local utility on Cimmaron Dr. to 22820 Buckskin Ct. companies. Attic Estates & Appraisals Providence subdivision, 541-350-6822 Decatur Ct., sporting The Bulletin gervtngCentral Ckegonstnce Iggg For pics and more info go to oods & much more. www.atticestatesandappraisals.com www.bendbulletin.com at., 8-12only.

s ell y o u r s tu ff . Add a photo to your Bulletin classified ad for just $15 per week.

Visit www.bendbulletin.com, click on "PLACE AN AD" and follow the easy steps. All ads appear ir! both print and online. Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your ad appears in print and online.

assi ie s

www.hendbulletin.com

To PlaCeyOur PhatOad, ViSit uSOnline at

i anvw.bend b u l l e t i n . c o m or Call with queStiOnS,

5 41 -385 - 5 8 0 9


F2 SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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

541-385-5809 Dr go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.

260

261

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Misc. Items

Medical Equipment

Fuel & Wood

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

Guaranteed Income For Your Ret i rement. Avoid market risk & get guaranteed income in retirement! CALL for FREE copy of our SAFE MONEY GUIDE Plus Annuity Quotes from A-Rated Companies! 800-908-7035. (PNDC)

How to avoidscam and fraud attempts

Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. VBe aware of international fraud. Deal lowhenever posSaturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. cally sible.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place a photo inyourprivate party ad foronly $15.00 parweek.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500 in total merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

Icall for commercial line ad rates)

*illiust state prices in ad

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

MX

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 246

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Bend Senior High Class of 1974 40th Reunion to be held August 8-19, 2014 in Bend. More information on Facebook Reunionmanager.net Alumniclass.com Classmates. com OR contact Mark Harpole at har olemchotmail.com Pll: 770-663-0254 •

Meet singles right nowl No paid o perators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 877-955-5505. (PNDC) Would "Steve & Donna" who launched helium balloons from Sunriver Resort about 28 years ago, call this number to find out where your balloons landed. 541-898-2650

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Computers

• TV, Stereo & Video

Oarage Sales Garage Sales

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin delivery, call the help wanted ad Circulation Dept. at 54'I -385-5800 today and To place an ad, call reach over 541-385-5809 60,000 readers or email each week. classified@bendbulletin.com Your classified ad will also The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since1983 appear on bendbulletin.com 270 which currently receives over Lost & Found 1.5 million page Found bucket of tools views every scattered on B utler month at no Mkt Rd. on Monday extra cost. afternoon. Cal l to Bulletin identify, 541-408-4818 Classifieds Get Results! Check out the For newspaper

Call 541-385-5809 classifieds online or place your ad www.bendbulletin.com on-line at Updated daily bendbulletin.com Found children's leather mitten at Mt Bachelor What are you parking lot on 3/15. Call to identify after looking for? April 2nd, 406-570-5051. You'll find it in LOST Cat 3/12, white & The Bulletin Classifieds ray/tan male, OB Riley/ len Vis t a-Cooley? Bingo is missed! Call 541-385-5809 541-531-3699 341 Lost Jack Russell Terrier, fem, black, white, gray Horses & Equipment face, blue collar, last seen 3/7, 23rd/Hemlock AUSTRALIAN SADDLE Redmond. 541-420-5557 m isc. t a ck , $ 2 4 5; 541-548-0875 345

REIIIIEIIIIBER:If you

have lost an animal, Livestock & Equipment don't forget to check w/3 pt. The Humane Society 8' springtooth hitch or direct pull Bend 541-382-3537

Redmond 541-923-0882 8 1 e llle

541-447-7178;

or Craft Cats 541-389-8420.

$185. 541-410-3425

Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbullstin.com 358

Farmers Column

10X20 Storage Buildings for protecting hay, firewood, livestock stc. $1496 Installed. iothsr sizes available) 541-617-1133.

CCB ¹173684 kfjbuildsrs@ykwc.net 306

Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 (4) 5'x12' horse panels, $75/ea. Assorted wa375 ter and feed tubs, call for prices. Meat & Animal Processing 541-923-9758 Little Bit of Texas SauN ew H o lland 2 5 5 0 sage, 8 links to 1 3/g-lb. swather, 14' header pkg, $10; 3 or more pkgs, with conditioner, cab © $8 ea. 830-822-3945 heat/A/C, 1300 orig. Ws deliver in Bend! hrs. $29,000 obo. 1488 International, cab TURN THE PAGE heat/A/C, 5 4 0/1000 For More Ads Pto, 3 sets remotes, nice tractor. $18,000. The Bulletin Farm Equipment & Machinery

541-419-3253

7 tr .

«tg

The Bulletin Offers Free Private Party Ads • 3 lines - 3 days • Private Party Only • Total of items advertised must equal $200 or Less FOR DETAILS or to

Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care

Flatscreen Magnifier Optlec Clearview+ viewer, magnifier for reading, writing and viewing for those who have vision loss $900 obo. (other items listed previously havebeen sold) In Bend, call 541-480-6162

To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.

Y Watch for buyers Need to get an who offer more than your asking price and ad in ASAP? who ask to have You can place it The Bulletin money wired or online at: handed back to them. Fake cashier checks www.bendbulletin.com and money orders Find exactly what are common. 541-385-5809 you are looking for in the PNever give out perCLASSIFIEDS sonal financial information. Full size power sg'Trustyour instincts Aff year Dependable adjustable bed Firewood: Seasoned; and be wary of w/memory foam someone using an Lodgepole 1 for $195 mattress, $800. Porescrow service or or 2 for $385. Cedar, table wheelchair, agent to pick up your split, del. Bend: 1 for 4 leg walker, merchandise. $175 or 2 for $325. Quadri-Poise cane, 541-420-3484. bathroom assist The Bulletin serving central oregon since 1903 chair, all for $200. Log truck loads of Call 541-526-5737 Lodgepole Firewood, Inverter Duracell 1000 delivered. watt $30. Call 541-815-4177 541-388-3879 265 Building Materials Just bought a new boat? Pine 63 Juniper Split Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Bend Habitat Super Seller rates! RESTORE PROMPT D ELIVERY 541-385-5809 Building Supply Resale 542-389-9663 Quahty at LOW L adies p e tite si z e PRICES clothes, name brands. Seasoned Juniper 740 NE 1st at 2330 SW Indian $150/ cord rounds; 541-312-6709 Ave., Redmond. $170/ cord split. Open to the public. Delivered in Central OR, since 1970! Call Natural gas Ruud 266 eves, 541-420<379 tankless water Heating & Stoves heater, brand new! 269 199 Btu, $1800. NOTICE TO ardening Supplies Also brand new 80 ADVERTISER gal. electric water & Equipment Since September 29, heater, $500. 1991, advertising for In Sunriver area. used woodstoves has BarkTurfSoil.com 530-938-3003 been limited to models which have been PROMPT D ELIVERY *REDUCE YOUR certified by the O r542-389-9663 CABLE BILL! Get an egon Department of All-Digital Sa t e llite Environmental Qualsystem installed for ity (DEQ) and the fedE n v ironmental FREE and program- eral m ing s t arting a t Protection A g e ncy $ 24.99/mo. FRE E (EPAl as having met Everything tokeep up your yard! HD/DVR upgrade for smoke emission stancer t ified Honda lawnmower, new callers, SO CALL dards. A self-propelled, elecNOW (877)368-4508. w oodstove may b e identified by its certifi- tric l e a f bl o wer; (PNDC) cation label, which is electric elect. hedge Reduce Your Past Tax permanently attached trimmer, a 6' ladder, Bill by as much as 75 to the stove. The Bul- pruners, s h ovels, Percent. Stop Levies, letin will not knowrakes, brooms, and Liens and Wage Gar- ingly accept advertis- other garden tools. nishments. Call The ing for the sale of Selling as a Tax DR Now to see if uncertified packageonly you Qualify woodstoves. $400 cash! 1-800-791-2099. 541-548-5515 (PNDC) People Lookfor Information AboutProductsand Free Manure will load ServicesEveryDaythrough Deschutes Mkt The Bulletin Classineda Bend. 541-318-8707

DirectTV 2 Year Sav- T HE B U LLETIN r e ings Event! Over 140 quires computer adWinchester Model channels only $29.99 vertisers with multiple a month. O nly Diad schedules or those 70 - SA.308 Win. recTV gives you 2 selling multiple sysClassic FeatherYEARS of s a vings tems/ software, to disweight, Monte Carlo and a FREE Genie close the name of the Stock, Burris 3x9 upgrade! Call business or the term scope and case. 1-800-259-5140. "dealer" in their ads. Very clean and well Private party advertiscared for. $750. (PNDC) ers are defined as 541-420-4183 DISH T V Ret a iler. those who sell one Starting at computer. 247 $19.99/month ifor 12 Sporting Goods mos.) & High Speed TURN THE PAGE - Ilflisc. Internet starting at For More Ads $14.95/month (where The Bulletin Catalytic heater Sears available.) SAVE! Ask propane f l ameless, About SAME DAY In257 $10. 541-388-3879 stallation! CALL Now! 1-800-308-1563 Musical Instruments (PNDC) Find exactly what you are looking for in the REDUCE YOUR CLASSIFIEDS CABLE BILL! * Get a Satellite Coleman 3-b u rner whole-home installed at c amp s t ov e $1 0 system NO COST and prosuavlsloN 541-388-3879 ramming starting at Beautiful Lowrey Sunvision Pro 1 9.99/mo. FRE E Kneeboard, O'Brien Adventurer II Organ 28LX Tanning Bed HD/DVR Upgrade to Tournament Plus, Absolutely perfect new callers, SO CALL Has only 300 hours, $15. 541-388-3879 condition, not a Ilamps have average NOW scratch on it, about Water Skis (pair) O'Brien 1-866-984-8515. life of 800-1000 hours 4-feet wide, does Celebrity, very good, of effective tanning (PNDC) everything! Includes $30. 541-388-30879 usage). 1 owner, a nice bench, too. great condition, $1600 obo. includes manual, 541-385-5685 goggles & head pillow. $900. Call toseei Garage Sales 541-385-9318 in Bend

Call 54! 385 5809 fgPromote your service• Advertise for 28daystianing df9l40frtis StdetpackageisnO i eseiiibleoneernttsire!

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD...

325

Ha y , Grain & Feed

NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landlaw requires anyone scape Contractors Law who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all PLACE AN AD, ZuOdtd QurzdrfI. construction work to businesses that adCall 541-385-5809 541-385-5809 be licensed with the vertise t o p e r form Zarug gme r<g. Fax 541-385-5802 Construction ContracLandscape ConstrucThanService tors Board (CCB). An More tion which includes: Wanted: crew mem258 Peace Of Mind active license l anting, deck s , bers to sail Winchester Travel/Tickets means the contractor ences, arbors, Bay, OR to San Franis bonded & insured. Spring Clean Up water-features, and incisco and return, ap•Leaves Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of ir- Advertise VACATION prox. 3 wks this sum•Cones CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be SPECIALS to 3 milmer. Call Mark, •Needles www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e lion P acific N o rth541-233-8944 •Debris Hauling contractor.com Landscape Contrac- westerners! 29 daily newspapers, six or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit Wanted- paying cash WeedFree Bark states. 25-word clas- for Hi-fi audio & stuThe Bulletin recomnumber is to be in& Flower Beds mends checking with cluded in all adver- sified $540 for a 3-day dio equip. Mclntosh, the CCB prior to contisements which indi- a d. Ca l l (916) JBL, Marantz, D yvis i t naco, Heathkit, Santracting with anyone. Lawn Renovation cate the business has 2 88-6019 o r Some other t rades Aeration - Dethatching a bond, insurance and www.pnna.com for the sui, Carver, NAD, etc. also req u ire addiworkers c ompensa- Pacific Nor t hwest Call 541-281-1808 Overseed tional licenses and Compost tion for their employ- Daily Co n nection. Wedding dress silk/lace certifications. ees. For your protecTop Dressing (PNDC) long train, sze 4-8. tion call 503-378-5909 Just bought a new boat? $150. 541-389-9377 or use our website: Call The Bulletin At Landscape Sell your old one in the www.lcbtstate.or.us to 541-385-5809 classifieds! Ask about our Maintenance WHEN YOU SEE THIS check license status Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Super Seller rates! Full or Partial Service before contracting with At: www.bendbulletin.com 541-385-5809 •Mowing .Edging the business. Persons •Pruning oWeeding doing lan d scape Custom Remodel & Tile Sprinkler MarePiXatBejdbijletin,CO m 260 Adjustments maintenance do not T. Schellworth, Gen. On a classified ad Misc. Items Contractor/Builder r equire an LCB l i go to Fertilizer included CCB ¹188631 cense. www.bendbulletin.com with monthly program Bend Indoor Swap 541-588-0958 to view additional Aeration/Dethatching Meet - A Mini-Mall full photos of the item. 1-time or Weekly Services of Unique Treasures! Weekly,monthly Debris Removal Ask about FREEadded 3rd St. 8 Wilson Ave. or one time service. 261 svcs w/seasonal contract! 10-5 Thurs-Fri-Sat. JUNK BE GONE Bonded & Insured. Medical Equipment EXPERIENCED I Haul Away FREE COLLINS Lawn Maint. Buying Diamonds Commercial For Salvage. Also Ca/I 541-460-9714 /Gofd for Cash 8 Residential Falcon 4-w h eel Cleanups & Cleanouts Saxon's Fine Jewelers power scooter with Mel, 541-389-8107 541-389-8655 Garage Sales accessories, gently Senior Discounts used, in mint condiDomestic Services Need to get an Garage Sales t ion. $ 4 00 . C a l l 541-390-1466 ad in ASAP? 5 41-389-1821 f o r A ssisting Seniors a t Same Day Response Garage Sales details. You can place it Home. Light houseFind them keeping & other seronline at: vices. Licensed & in www.bendbulletin.com FIND YOUR FUTURE Bonded. BBB CertiThe Bulletin HOME INTHE BULLETIN fied. 503-756-3544 Serving Central 541-385-5809 Oregon Since 2003 Classifieds Home is Where the Dirt Is Your future is just apage 9 yrs exp. in housekeep- Residental/Commercial away. Whetheryou're looking BUYING 541-385-5809 ing. Refs & rates to fit Lionel/American Flyer for a hat or aplace to hangit, Sprinkler your needs. Julie & The Bulletin Classified is trains, accessories. Activation/Repair Hovana, 541-410-0648 Allen Reinsch Yard your best source. 541-408-2191. BackFlow Testing Illlaintenance & Illlowing or 541-728-1800 Every daythousandsof (& many other things!) BUYING & S E LLING Maintenance Call 541-536-1294 or All gold jewelry, silver buyers andsellers ofgoods Handyman «Thatch & Aerate 541-815-5313 and gold coins, bars, and services dobusinessin • Spring Clean up rounds, wedding sets, these pages.Theyknow I DO THAT! .Weekly Mowing Villanueva Lawn Care. Home/Rental repairs class rings, sterling sil- you can't beatTheBulletin & Edging Maintenance,clean-up, ver, coin collect, vinClassified Section for Small jobs to remodels •Bi-Monthly & Monthly thatching + more! tage watches, dental selection andconvenience Honest, guaranteed Maintenance Free estimates. gold. Bill Fl e ming, - every item isjust a phone work. CCB¹151573 541-981-8386 call away. 541-382-9419. Dennis 541-317-9768 •Bark, Rock, Etc. Lendeoe in The Classified Section is People Look for Information ~ ERIC REEVE HANDY •Landscape Cemetery space: al easy to use.Everyitem About Products and SERVICES. Home & Construction double depth interis categorizedandevery Services Every Day through Commercial Repairs, oWater Feature I ment grave space I cartegoiy is indexed onthe Carpentry-Painting, The Bulletin Classifieds ( with outer burial Installation/Maint. section's front page. Pressure-washing, •Pavers container built in, Whether youarelooking for Honey Do's. On-time •Renovations Tree Services J located in Meadowa home orneeda service, promise. Senior park area of Des•Irrigations Installation Discount. Work guaryour future is inthepagesof MR. STUMP BUSTER ( chutes M emorial The Bulletin Classified. anteed. 541-389-3361 Senior Discounts Professional Stump & Tree ~ Gardens, $900. Call or 541-771-4463 Bonded & Insured Removal• 24 yrs exp. 5 41-389-1821 f o r Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 Insured - Free estimates! The Bulletin Senang CentralOregon sinceM3 CCB¹181595 LCB¹8759 Call 541-213-9103

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DAILY B R I D G E

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

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will SIIprtz

C L U B s aturday,March22,2014

Test your percentages By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency This week's deals have treated percentageplay.When declarerhas a choice ofplays, a knowledge of how s uits tend t o b r eak can l e t h i m calculate the best play. Cover the East-West cards. Against your four hearts, West leads the jack of diamonds and continues with the ten and a third diamond (not best). East plays the ace and you ruff. You have nine tricks. The 10th could come from a w i n ning club finesse. An option is to try to score dummy's fifthspade. How do you proceed?

rebid two hearts and he tries 2NT. What do you say? ANSWER: Today's South bid four hearts, reasonably enough. I would consider a raise to 3NT. The pattern is a lmost balanced, the hearts w i l l produce six tricks and partner's hand will be protected from the opening lead. Note that 3NT by North would have been unbeatable in today's deal. West dealer Both sides vulnerable 4 5A76 5 2 Q 102

OK53 4A73

The percentage play is to go for the long spade. Play a low spade from both hands at Trick Four, preserving an entry to dummy. If West wins and leads a trump, you win in your hand, take the ace of spades and ruff a spade high. Go to dummy with the ten of trumps and ruff a spade. Draw trumps, lead a club to the ace and discard your jack of c l ubs on the good spade. You will almost always succeed when spades break 3-3 or 4-2: an 84 percent chance. The club f i nesse would offera 50 percent chance.

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Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

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By Ed S6588

(c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

03/22/14


THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY MARCH 22 2014 F5

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

L AST W E E K 'S SO L U T IO N

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The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregonsince f903

476

476

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

General

CROOK COUNTY EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

Crook County Sheriff's Office BOR DEPUTY (Shore Patrol on Bureau of Reclamation lands around the Prineville Reservoir) $18.00 per hour Seasonal/full time (No benefits) (May 23, 2014- September 12, 2014) Closes: March 31, 2014 at 5:00 p.m.

VERTISING! 29 Daily HDFatBo 1996 newspapers $540/25-word classified 3-days. Reach 3 million Pacific Northwesterners. For more information call (916) 288-6019 or e m ail: Completely elizabeth ©cnpa.com Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award for the Pacific Northwest Daily ConnecWinner Showroom Condition tion. (PNDC) Many Extras For Sale Current LLC Low Miles. O 20132013 UFS Dist. b Univ. Uciickfor UFS with USFS R-6 Water $77,000 T ender contract i n 476 541-548-4807 Oregon/Washington. Employment Rm(DBI 541-521-8206 Opportunities ® Rl@ilQN HONDA XR650L USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 2002 The Bulletin Nice bike, Door-to-door selling with $2900. I Recommends extra fast results! It's the easiest 541-480-4744. caution when purway in the world to sell. chasing products or I

Livestock Truck Driver Must have CDL, 2yes

exp., progressive co.,

401k, $50,000/yr, insurance 541-475-6681

' g SM A R T W IR E L E S S

Sales 2014 is our 5th year as Oregon's 100 B e s t Companies To Work For! W e h i r e the " Smartest an d th e Brightest" salespeople that are capable of delivering an exceptional customer experience. S mart W i reless i s seeking full time Retail Sales associates to be part of our high performance sales team f or our AT&T R e d mond location. Hourly base + commission, work 20 hours and above and get exc. benefits including medical, dental, vision, tuition reimbursement and employee dealer phone program. Apply at: www.smartwireless.comffobs

SOCIAL SERVICES

CRISIS RESPONSE TEAM MEMBER OPENING DATE: March 11, 2014 CLOSING DATE: March 21, 2014 11:59 PM

r

I I services from out of I I the area. SendingI c ash, checks, o r I credit i n f ormationI • may be subjected to I FRAUD. I more informaI For tion about an adver- I I tiser, you may callI the Oregon State I Attorney General'sI C o n sumer g I Office Protection hotline at I I 1-877-877-9392. I

Position will provide community based assessment and crisis intervention on the phone and face to face, in a variety of settings, and provide hospital liaison/ c oordination a n d pre-commitment inv estigations. Response area for this BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS position is C r ook Search the area's most County and D es- comprehensive listing of chutes County. classified advertising... For more informareal estate to automotive, tion, go to merchandise to sporting losn .or ~ goods. Bulletin Classifieds click "About Us", appear every day in the Employment. print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 Send resume to: www.bendbulletin.com Resume - LCSNW, 365 NE Court St., The Bulletin Serving Central Oregonsince IFIS Prineville, OR 97756 8t&t Fax: 541-447-6694 FrcntsesFnatter Email: crookTRUCK DRIVER count ©Icsnw.or WANTED SALES - Make your Must have doubles own schedule. Comendorsement. mission Based Sales Local run. Program. Self-Starter, TELEFUNDRAISING Truck is parked in Motivated, E x p eriMadras. 541-475-4221 Tele-funding for ence in A dvertising Sales a plus. Send • Meals On Wheels, Resume to Looking for your next cecelia@cnpa.com or • Defeat Diabetes employee? fax 916-288-6003. No FFoundation, Place a Bulletin help Veterans (OPVA). phone calls please! wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 Seniors and a/l Sales readers each week. We are looking for others we/come. Your classified ad experienced Sales will also appear on Mon-Thur. professional to Join bendbulletin.com 4:30- 8:30 p.m. Central O r egon's which currently $9.10/hour. l argest ne w c a r receives over 1.5 dealer Subaru of million page views Bend. O ffering Call 541-382-8672 every month at 401k, profit sharing, no extra cost. medical plan, split Bulletin Classifieds s hifts, an d p a i d People Lookfor Information Get Results! About Products and training. Please apCall 385-5809 ply at 2060 NE Hwy Services EveryDaythrough or place 20, Bend. The Bulletin Clsssinsfts your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com E

HUMAN RESOURCES GENERALIST Jefferson County School District 5094 Posted: March 14, 2014 A licationDeadline: March31 2014

Salary and Benefits: • $50,000 - $60,000 • 260 Day Contract-Exempt Position • Full Family Medical/Vision/Dental • PER's Pickup by District Start Date: May 1, 2014 or sooner if possible

LTheB~g

528

Loans & Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have

concerns or questions, we suggest you consultyour attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392.

541-447-6554

EOE

MidOregon Credit Union Controller Mid Oregon Credit Union is looking for a Controller to supervise all credit union accounting functions. The successful candidate will analyze statistics, prepare financial reports, ensure accuracyand compliance, conduct and document complex financial analysis projects and supervise staff. Position requires thorough knowledge of accounting principles and the general ledger system. Accounting degree preferred. Must be PC-proficient in a Windows environment. Excellent benefits package and competitive salary. V i s i t our web site at www.midoregon.com for more details and application.

Please send your salary requirements, resume, cover letter and completed application to: Mid OregonFCU Attn: HumanResources P.O. Box6749, Bend, OR 97708

The Bulletin Serw'ng Central Oregon since 1903

Home Delivery Advisor The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time position and consists of managing an adult carrier force to ensure our customers receive superior service. Must be able to create and perform strategic plans to meet department objectives such as increasing market share and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a self-starter who can work both in the office and in their assigned territory with minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary with company vehicle provided. S t rong customer service skills and management skills are necessary. C o mputer experience is required. You must pass a drug screening and be able to be insured by company to drive vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we believe in promoting from within, so advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to:

The Bulletin

c/o Kurt Muller PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020 or e-mail resume to: kmuller@bendbulletin.com No phone calls, please. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace. EOE

The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809

MidOregon Credit Union Loan Officer — Contact Center (Financial SerViCe

Representative)

Full-time lending position in Bend includes processing loans requested by phone; processing of dealer fax and online applications; monitoring of Contact Center loan queue to insure turnaround time meets service standards and making follow up calls to the member as necessary; outbound calling; loan maintenance requests; new membermember/loan retention closure requests, request for payoff; and other duties as assigned.

Position requires excellent sales and customer service skills, sound decision-making, and the ability to understand and retain a variety of complex product and services information. Successful candidate must be PC-proficient in a Windows environment. 1-2 years lending experience required. Go to www.midoregon.com for more information including job application. Please send resume, application, and cover letter to: Mid Oregon FCU Attn: HumanResources P.O. Box6749, Bend, OR97708 Mid Oregon Credit Vnion is a drug-free workplace

2007 Winnebago

Outlook Class "CR

31', solar panel, Cat. heater, excellent condition, more extras.Asking $58K. Ph. 541-447-9268 Can be viewed at Western Recreation

(top of hill)

in Prineville.

Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809

The Bulletin

Serern Central Ore on since /903

:3.

®

O'Brien towable 2 person tube, HD, exc. Triumph Daytona $40. 541-388-3879 2004, 15K m i l e s, Wanted: crew memperfect bike, needs bers to sail Winchester nothing. Vin Bay, OR to San Fran¹201536. cisco and return, ap$4995 prox. 3 wks this sumDream Car mer. Call Mark, Auto Sales 541-233-8944 1801Division, Bend 875 DreamcarsBend.com 541-678-0240 Watercraft Dlr 3665

: 0 0 850 Snowmobiles

Arctic Cat 580 1994, EXT, in good condition, $1000. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.

ds published in nWa

BANK TURNED YOU 860 DOWN? Private party will loan on real es- Motorcycles & Accessories tate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200. LOCALMONEyrWe buy secured trust deeds & FXSTD Harley note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev Davidson 2001,twin 541-382-3099 ext.13. cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short S TRUGGLING W I TH shot exhaust, Stage I YOUR M O R TGAGE with Vance & Hines and worried about fuel management foreclosure? Reduce system, custom parts, your mortgage 8 save extra seat. $10,500 money. Legal loan OBO. Call modification services. Today Free co n sultation. 541-516-8684 Call Preferred Law 1-800-335-6592. (PNDC) Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming Business Opportunities Eagle performance, too many options to CLASSIFIED ADVERlist, $8900. 541-388-8939 TISING! Reach Over 3 M i l lion Pa c ific Northwesterners. $540/25-word classified ad in 2 9 d aily newspapers for 3-days. Call the Pacific Northwest Daily Connection (916) 288-6019 or e m a il Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limelizabeth Ocnpa.com for more info. (PNDC) ited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Instructors - Part-time Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, OSU-cascades, in Bend, is recruiting part-time heated handgrips, instructors in the disciplines of Sociology, auto cruise control. Psychology,Biology, and Spanish to teach on $32k in bike, a term by term basis in the 2014/2015 academic year. T h ese a r e fi x ed-term only $20,000or best offer. 541-318-6049 appointments w/renewal at the discretion of the Dean. Salary is commensurate with education and experience.

Requirement: Bachelor's degree required or Required qualifications: MS, MA, Ph.D. or equivalent experience in Human Resources may be Terminal degree in discipline or closely considered related field and evident commitment to cultural diversity & ed u cational equity. Must be at least 21 years of age and a U.S. Preferences: 3-5 years of Human Resources Preferred qualifications include teaching Citizen; Must have a valid Oregon Driver's LiGeneralist experience experience at the college or university level. cense with a satisfactory driving record; No criminal record; Pass a detailed background See complete job description on the Jefferson Applications should be received by 04/30/14. investigation. Must have prior Law EnforceCounty School District Website: To review posting and apply, go to website: ment experience. MUST USE SHERIFF'S htt://'csd.k12.or.us/de artments/hr/ h ttp://oregonstate.edu/jobs a n d rev i e w human-resources- eneralist OFFICE APPLICATION. posting number 0010921. Jefferson County School District is an Applications and full job description can be OSU is anAA/EOE. Equal Opportunity Employer. found at www.co.crook.or.us. Please apply at the Crook CountyTreasurer's/Tax Office 200 NE 2 St. Prineville, OR 97754

870

Business Opportunities Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

3

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Customer Service We are seeking a career-minded individual for an office/ sales position. Must have good phone 476 skills and ability to Employment work with customOpportunities ers both in person and on phone with good computer skills CAUTION: as well. 40 hours wk Ads published in Mon. thru Sat. with "Employment Opbenefits. portunities" include Send resume to PO employee and indeBox 640, Redmond, pendent positions. Ads for p o sitions OR 97756 that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With EMPLOYMENT any independentjob Now taking applications! A new Behavioral opportunity, please Health Centeris i nvestigate tho r opening in the Bend/ oughly. Use extra La Pine area. All posicaution when applying for jobs on- tions available, including: • Counseling Staff line and never proDietary vide personal infor- •• Housekeeping mation to any source you may not have •• Maintenance Support staff researched and Clencal deemed to be repu- •Competitive benefits and table. Use extreme wages. Please email c aution when r e - your letter of interest and s ponding to A N Y resume to online employment Emil Okleancenter.com ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Event Coordinator / Consumer H otline Sales &Marketing at 1-503-378-4320 Juniper Golf Course, For Equal Opportui n R edmond, i s nity Laws contact s eeking a E v e nt Oregon Bureau of Labor & I n dustry, Coordinator/ Sales 8 Marketing person. Civil Rights Division, Please E-mail 971-673- 0764. resume to The Bulletin sbratcher© Ollao I a. c o 541-385-5809 or mail to Juni per Golf Course - Event Add your web address Coordinator/Sales to your ad and read1938 SW Elkhorn ers on The Bulletin's Ave.,Redmond, OR web site, www.bend97756 bulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your H ELP W A NTED i n website. western North Dakota. Great Northern Ag is a pulse processing / Broken Top Club seed facility in need of Seasonal Positions staff. Full details at Golf Maintenance www.greatnorthernag. Landscaping com or call Apply At Clubhouse 701-497-3082. (PNDC)

6 9 13 5 4 3 7 2 1 8 6 9 5 3 4 8 7 2

EXTREME VALUE AD-

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IS JFS/KF

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9 4 7 6 2 8 8 5 6 3 1 9 5 2 3 7 4 1

tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 870. 541-385-5809

V ictory TC 9 2 c i 2002, runs great, 40K mi., Stage 1 Performance Kit, n ew tires, r e a r brakes. $ 5 0 0 0. 541-771-0665 870

Boats & Accessories 12'1969 Sears sluminum fishingboat, low hours on new 8 hp engine, with trailer and extras. Good shape! $1600. 541-382-2599

Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809

181 Maxum ski boat, 2000, inboard motor, great cond, well maintained, $8995obo. 541-350-7755

The Bulletin

Servmg Central Oregon since /903

880

Motorhomes

Best Motor Home Selection In C.O.! Over 40 New &

Pre-Owned To Choose From! On the spot financing, low monthly payments. Over 350 RVs in Inventory! Best Selectionl Best Value! Visit us online at www.bigcrv.com Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

c riIL I

Dodge Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, 69,000 miles. $4500. In La Pine, call 541-602-8652

irin

I ut u s t o w o r k fgI

F y+Q f i l ' S t

The Bulletin deliverS yOur "HELP WANTED" ad to

70,000 print readers and20,000 online visitors a day. The Bulletin, local, hassle-free, worry-free advertising.

Get 7 consecutive days F OR O N L Y @2 1 .4 3 A D A Y ! ~ And get $33 in ad upgrades for FREE! BASED ONA 2" A0 SPACE

Classifieds 5 41 -38 5 - 5 8 0 9 "It's simple. The Bulletin is easy to work with, always make good suggestions and the price for the ads are deCent. CirCulatiOn Of yaur neWSPaPerCOVerSOIIr area Of intereStiiI draWing gOOdCandidateS fOr the

positions we have open at the time." Mike ThrooP, JefferSOnCOunty Human ReSOurCeS


F6 SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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

880

880

881

882

908

933

933

935

940

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Pickups

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Vans

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 Fleehvood Discovery Winnebago Adven- readers each week. Your classified ad 40' 2003, diesel, w/all turer 2005 35~/~', gas, will also appear on options - 3 slide outs, less than 20,000 miles, bendbulletin.com satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, excellent condition, 2 which currently reetc., 32,000 miles. slide-outs, work horse ceives over 1.5 milWintered in h eated chassis, Banks power lion page views evshop. $84,900 O.B.O. brake system, sleeps ery month at no 541-447-8664 5, with a l l o p tions, extra cost. Bulletin $69,000 / negotiable. Classifieds Get ReCall 5 4 1-306-8711or sults! Call 385-5809 email a i kistu@bendor place your ad cable.com on-line at bendbulletin.com Forest River Sunseeker Class C, 24-ft -Double 882 bed, roomy bath/shower, lots storage, oak wood, Fifth Wheels dining area slide-out w/ new awning. Micro, air, Aspect new flat screen TV & RV Winnebago 2009- 32', 3 slidebatt. On-board gen/low hrs, arctic pkq, full cover. outs, Leather inteFord 450 V10, 36,300 mi, rior, Power s eat, windows, tow pkg, leather seats, no locks, wheels. smoking/pets, sleeps 5-6 Aluminum Alpenlite 29' 1993, 17" Flat Screen, $31,500. goo s eneck. Surround s o u nd, with 541-419-6176 $4500 obo. Needs camera, Queen bed, new ref r igerator Foam mattress, AwNeed to get an 541-306-1961. ning, Generator, Inad in ASAP? Leave message. verter, Auto Jacks, You can place it Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or online at: Best 5th Wheel ne w , www.bendbulletin.com p ets. L i k e Selection in C.O.! $74,9OO Over 45 541-460-6900 541-385-5809 New 8 Preowned To Choose From! Generator Kubota 3500 On the spot financqas, 60 h rs, $1000 ing, low monthly CASH. 541-923-5960 payments. Over 350 RVs In Inventory! WINNEBAGO Best Selection! BRAVE 2003 Best Value • 34D, 2 slides • Tires 80% Visit us online at • Just completely www.bigcrv.com Bend: 541-330-2495 serviced Gulfstream S u nRedmond: sport 30' Class A • 39,000 miles 541-546-5254 1988 new f r idge, • No trades TV, solar panel, new • $48,000 firm refrigerator, 4000W 541-815-3150 generator, w h eelchair lift avail. Good cond. $11,500 obo „

aa a

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500

King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s cissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566

g• 1

Recreation by Design 2013 Monte 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.$36,000 obo. Call Peter, 307-221-2422,

( in La Pine ) WILL 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:

541-546-5254

o 0 0

00

541-447-5504

CHECKYOUR AD

KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.

$25,000.

541-548-0318

(photo above is of a similar model & nor the actual vehicle)

Winnebago Suncruiser34' 2004, 35K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $49,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243 881

Travel Trailers 30'

NOMAD, needs work, good interior, could be right trailer to right person. $1400 OBO. 541-633-5159

908

Aircraft, Parts & Service

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad.

1/3interestin

Columbia400,

541-385-5809

Financing available.

The Bulletin Classified

$150,000

541-288-3333

2002, 34'10' - Workhorse 8.1, Less than 18,000 mi, 5.5 Onan gen., 2 slides, 4 dr. refrig w/icemaker, micro/convection oven, water purifier,

hydraulic jacks, power pilot seat+ more options. Exceptionally clean. $59,900/make offer.541-504-1008

KeystoneLaredo 31' RI/ 20 06 w ith 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove 8 refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,600

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat 8 air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.

1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www. N4972M.com

Call Dick, 541-480-1687.

I RX.JK E National RV

Tropical, 1997,

35-ft, Chevy Vortec engine, new tires, new awnings, 12-ft slide-out, queen bed, Italian leather couch and recliner, excellent condition. Ready to travel„ towing hitch included. $19,900. 541-815-4811

Navion RV 2008, Sprinter chassis 25'. Mercedes Benz diesel, 24,000 miles, pristine cond., quality throughout, rear slide-out w/ queen bed, deluxe captain swivel front seats, diesel generator, awning, no pets/ no smoking. $75,500. 541-382-2430

Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441 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

Providence 2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-480-2019 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED

We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

Salem Cruise Lite 18', 2014 Only $10,999! Zero Down! $112 Per Month!

$10,999, 0 Down, $112 per month, 132 months, 5.75% apr, Tier One credit score,

on approved credit.

Over 350 RVs in Inventory! Best Selection! Best Value! Visit us online at www.bigcrv.com Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

541-548-5254

Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174

Fleetwood Wilderness2000 model, 28', 1 slide, good condition, with awning and A/C, $7500.

1/5th interest in 1973 Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent periormance & affordable flying! $6,000.

541-383-6270

Orbit 21' 2007, used

Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $12,000. 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121

Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

541-410-6007

172 Cessna Share IFR equipped, new avionics, Garmin 750 touchscreen, center stack, 180hp. Exceptionally clean & economical! $13,500. Keystone Challenger 2004 CH34TLB04 34' Hangared in KBDN fully S/C, w/d hookups, Call 541-728-0773 new 16' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. ins ide 8 o ut. 27" TV dvd/cd/am/fm e n tertain center. Call for more details. O nly used 4 times total in last 5y~ years.. No pets, no smoking. High retail $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including sliding hitch that fits in your truck. Call 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to see. 541-330-5527.

®

®

®"

1974 Bellanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent

condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K. In Madras, call 541-475-6302

Laredo 30'2009

j !Mt N l

LINCOLII ~

Cadillac Eldorado, 1978

New brakes, tires, axles, needs paint & vinyl top. Very good condition. $2200 obo, cash. Call for

$28,000

541-419-3301

Monaco Lakota 32' 2002, 2 slides, AC, recliners, walk-around queen bed, sliding glass door closet, new tub & 10-gal water heater, good tires. Brand new 20' screen room available. Super clean, 1 owner, n o n-smokers. $11,999. 541-447-7968

i IW —.I-

.

MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides,

king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250

QB~.

d

full details!

p •

541-678-5575 Ford F150 1963, Nice,

original Thunderbird canopy. needs motor $450. 541-410-3425

Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390

Cessna 182Q, 1977, mid-time engine/ prop, custom panel, S-Tec 30+ altitude hold, Garmin 430, GPSS, oversized tires, digital fuel flow, excellent paint & interior. Must see to appreciate. Asking $68,000.

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• CCC) 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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541-447-4605

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Monaco Lapalma,

, pt Sunriver Hangar - Hard to find T-Hangar located at Sunriver Airport will accommodate most s i n gleChevy Silverado 1500 Ford F-350 2006, bed BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K Chrysler Town & engine and small twin 2001, bed liner, tow liner, tow pkg, pre- miles, premium packLXI 1997, aircraft. A u tomated pkg, Alloy wheels. Vin m ium wheels. V i n age, heated lumbar Country beautiful inside & b i fold door i s a p ¹185489. supported seats, pan- out, one owner, non¹B94205. proximately 40'x11'. oramic moo n roof, $8,888 $17,999 loaded with Equipped with elecBluetooth, ski bag, Xe- smoker,. 197,892 mi. t ric w i nch & n e w non headlights, tan & options! S US A R U . SUBA R IJ. Service rec o rds fluorescent lighting in black leather interior, available. $4 , 950. 2013. H o meowner2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend n ew front & re a r Call Mike, (541) 815677-266-3821 877-266-3621 dues are assessed brakes O 76K miles, 8176 after 3:30 p.m. Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 each January. HOA one owner, all records, dues cover hazard invery clean, $16,900. 541-388-4360 s urance, gro u nd Ford F-350 4x4, Honda Odyssey lease, snow removal 1999.Very good and acco u nting. cond. Runs well, Self-serve f ue l is Two sets of tires on available at airport ofrims - summer and f ice. $65,0 0 0 . winter $2500 MLS201108365 2005 Diesel 4x4 541-593-2312 2006 XLT 4-door Clyde Browning, Chev Crewcab duor 541-977-7568 Crew Cab Principal Broker, BMW X3 2011 black ally, Allison tranny, 541-480-4520 on black, sport/prem tow pkg., brake con6.0L Turbo diesel, full VW Eurovan 2000, no Eagle Commercial packs, leather, 3.5i troller, cloth split pop top, V6, only 62K power, a u t omatic, Real Estate turbo, nav., 20k front bench seat, 6-disc CD, cruise, fog miles. Good condition, miles, 19" wheels, only 66k miles. T-Hangar for rent lights, running boards, $9500. 907-321-1013 cold weather pkg, Very good condition, at Bend airport. tow pkg, bedliner, grill Xenons, warranteed Call The Bulletin At Call 541-382-8998. Original owner, guard, folding rear to 9/2015. $38,000 541 -385-5809 $34,000 seat. Tan cloth inte916 One owner, or best offer. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail rior, metallic tan exte503-789-9401 Trucks & 541-408-7826 rior. 91,400 miles. At: www.bendbulletin.com (Portland) Heavy Equipment to sell $21,500 975 Chevy Ext. Cab 1991 Priced 541-350-6925 Automobiles Just too many with camper shell, ood cond., $1500 collectibles? BO. 541-447-5504. Ford Ranger 1990 K ing Cab , g o o d Sell them in cond, new motor, The Bulletin Classifieds Peterbilt 359 p otable tinted windows, bed water truck, 1 990, liner, 2 sets tires, 3200 gal. tank, Shp dual pipe. Must see 541-385-5809 pump, 4-3" hoses, Corvette Coupe to appreciate. $4000 camlocks, $25,000. 1996, 350 auto, obo. 541-948-9061 (P/roto forillustration only) 541-820-3724 Dodge Durango 2013 135k, non-ethanol Dodge R a m 150 0 AWD, 3rd row, 22k fuel/synthetic oil, 929 2006, Bed liner, tow mi. ¹664830 $30,795 garaged/covered. Automotive Wanted premium pkg, Bose Premium Gold wheels. Vin ¹146717. system. Orig. owner DONATE YOUR CAR$23,999 manual. Stock! FAST FREE TOW$10,500 OBO. 541-598-3750 ING. 24 hr. Response S US A R U . Retired. Must sell! Tax D eduction. 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend Ford Supercab 1992, www.aaaoregonauto541-923-1781 source.com brown/tan color with UNITED BR E A ST 677-266-382'I m atching ful l s i z e CANCER FOUNDADlr ¹0354 TION. Providing Free canopy, 2WD, 4 60 Buick Lacrosse CX over drive, 135K mi., M ammograms 8 2008 full bench rear seat, Breast Cancer Info. Dodge Ram 1500 slide rear w i ndow, 888-592-7581. SLT uad cab 1999 bucket seats, power (PNDC) seats w/lumbar, pw, Ford Bronco 1990, HD receiver & trailer 5.9 351, 134k miles, Get your brakes, good t ires. exc. cond. inside and business Good cond i tion. out. $3,295 or make FWD automatic, $4900. 541-389-5341 offer. 541-550-6328 4-Spd, 75,999 mi. 5 .2L V8 aut o . , Vin¹343933 a ROW I N G 1 43,659 mi. R W D $9,977 Vin ¹628726 with an ad in Bargain Corral. ROBBERSON y $5,977 The Bulletin's "Call A Service %l ROBBERSON 541.31 2.3986 FORD XLT 1992 L INcoLN~ I M Z OR Professional" DLR ¹0205 Ford Bronco II 3/4 ton 4x4 Directory 4x4, 1989541.312.3986 matching canopy, d' E legance Automatic, power Cadillac DLR¹0205 30k original miles, 931 1998, low miles 66k, possible trade for steering, stereo non-smokers, $3200 Automotive Parts, classic car, pickup, upgrade, set-up to obo. 541-389-5486 motorcycle, RV Service & Accessories tow, runs good. $13,500. $1700. Cadillac Deville In La Pine, call 4 Michelin P225/45R-18 541-633-6662 928-581-9190 DHS 2000. Most low profile radials options, exc. cond. mounted on 5 spoke, 5 93 000 mi New lug Chevy rims, $600 Dodge Ram 2500 obo. 541-647-2640 tires. $4,800. 2008 Diesel, 541-233-8944. 932 exc. towing vehicle, Antique & 2WD, 55,000 miles. New batterClassic Autos Jeep Wrangler Unlim- CHECKYOUR AD GMC 2500 2003 ies, rear air bags, ited Sa hara 2 0 07, Please check your ad HD SLE Crew Cab Roll-n-lock bed running boards, alloy on the first day it runs 4-wheel drive, 6.6 cover, spray-in wheels, tow pkg. Vin to make sure it is corliter V6 Turbo Dieliner. 5th wheel rect. Sometimes in¹120477. sel Duramax engine, 1921 Model T hitch available, too. s tructions over t h e $26,999 Allison transmission, Delivery Truck $19,000. phone are misundermany options, S US A R U . 541-604-1285 stood and an error Restored 8 Runs 107,000 miles. occur in your ad. $9000. Very good condition, 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend can If this happens to your 877-266-3821 541-389-8963 $21,500. ad, please contact us Dlr ¹0354 707-484-3518 the first day your ad (located in Bend) N issan Rogue SV -2013 appears and we will be happy to fix it as AWD, 16,500 miles, s oon as w e c a n . 1921 Model T Ford F250 Camper SpeDeadlines are: Weekcial 1966, AT w/limited Delivery Truck days 12:00 noon for slip rear end. A few isRestored & Runs sues but runs good. Full next day, Sat. 11:00 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. $9000. steel rack w/drs. $1950 541-598-3750 12:00 for Monday. If 541-389-8963 firm, cash. 541-420-01 56 GMC Sonoma 2001 4x4 aaaoregonautosource.com we can assist you, Ext Cab, 4.3L V6, 87,650 please call us: miles, very good cond. 541-385-5809 Ford F-250 XLT Toyota Landcroiser $5500. 541-388-1714 2006 SuperCab The Bulletin Classified VX 1999 Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulfetin.com Buick Skylark 1972 Updated daily 17K original miles. Please see Bend 4.7L V8, 4WD, auto., Craigslist for details and 6.0L V8, auto.,diesel, Corvette 1979 more photos. 4WD Vin¹D74407 16 mpg Hwy, Vin¹ L82- 4 speed. 66902 Bargain Cor$18,900. Bargain Corral I nternational Fla t 85,000 miles 541-323-1898 Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ral $11,977 $18,977 Garaged since new. ton dually, 4 spd. ROBBERSON I've owned it 25 trans., great MPG, ROBBERSON L INcoLN ~ I M ROR years. Never damcould be exc. wood aged or abused. hauler, runs great, 541.312.3986 541.312.3986 new brakes, $1950. $12,900. DLR¹0205 DLR¹0205 541-419-5480. Dave, 541-350-4077

engine, power everything, new paint, 54K orig. miles, runs great, exc. cond.in/out. $7500 obo. 541-480-3179

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Plymouth B a r racuda Bill, 541-480-7930 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 V8, centerHangarfor sale at Redmond Airport - not lines, 541-593-2597 a T Hangar -$39,000.

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Your auto, RV, motorcycle, boat, or airplane ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months(whichever comes first!).

541-420-0626

Rolls Royce 1992 Silver Spur II,excellent! Midnight Blue exterior, Save money. Learn Parchment leather inteto fly or build hours rior, 15-inch chrome RR with your own airwheels, Alpine Sirius c raft. 1966 A e r o DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS navigation system, Commander, 4 seat, 77,200 miles, dealer150 HP, low time, ship maintained, alfull panel. $23,000 ways garaged. New, obo. Contact Paul at about $250,000; sell 541-447-5184. $ I9,500. 541-480-3348

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14' 5" Stegot

• EX Loaa Oaiiet ttltil ! grg trol!15hp o' '

h remote t 0! r!@gnrigg<r foot con o fish!4epth ttumrr(inBir finder, IUII canvas , Exceitent rnuch cogd $3250. 541.000-000

The Bulletin serving central oregon since 19IB

541-385-5809

Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. Somerestrictions app/y

your od will also appear in: • The Bulletin • The CentralOregonNickel Ads • (enfral Oregon Marketplace • bendbullefin.com *Privateparty merchandiseonly

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Automobiles

Oarage SaleS

MercedesBenz

Pontiac Grand AM SE12003

wHEN YQUsEE THls

Oarage SaleS

C220 1996

CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010

Grand Sport - 4 LT loaded, clear bra hood & fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000.

2.2L 4 cyl. auto, 104k miles, 29 MPG

LNICOL N ~

Take care of your investments with the help from I The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

I

Vin¹572987

Bar ain Corral 6,977

ROBBERSON i LINCOL N ~

~

Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e

Ne e d to sell a

Vehicle? Call The Bulletin and place an ad today! "Wheel Deal"! for private party I advertisers

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Subaru Impreza 2.5i 201 1, 4 c y l , a u to, AWD, keyless entry. Vin ¹507659 $16,999

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Nissan Altime2010

S UBA R U . SOBBBOOSSBNO.OOII

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2.5S 4cyl., FWD, CVT, 76k mi., 32 mpg„Tuscan Sun Metallic, vin¹443778 $11,997 ROBBERSON i "«o. ®

Ford Thunderbird 2002 c o nvertible 541-312-3986 with brand new tonDLR ¹0205 neau cover, white with grey i nterior, loaded, 88,600 low miles, choice condition, everything works. Great fun car to d r ive. I l l ness forces sale $13,950 cash. C all Bi l l 541-604-9307 Olds 98 Regency 1990 exc. shape, runs as new, one owner, 20 mpg in town. New battery, stud snow tires. $2000.

On a classified ad V olvo S40 T 5 2 0 0 5 go to AWD sunroof lux/winter www bendbulletin com Pkgs, new tires, more! toviewadditional $6775 obo.541-330-5818 ph o tos of the item

ToyotaCelica Convertible 1993

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s u a A Ru

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.

ALL,NEW STATEOF —THE ART DEALERSHIP!

I

Garage Sales Garage Sales

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YOLVO SEOIINSANOSUIf'S

Dlr ¹0354

GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o nvertible around in this price range, new t ires, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc. 111K mi., remarkable cond. inside and out. Fun car to drive, Must S E E! $5995. R e dmond. 541-504-1993

S

SIIPERIIIRKELECTIIIII IIFNEWII IKEO

877-266-3821

SOBOIOOBBNNO COB

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

The Bulletin Classifieds

Check out the

T URN THE P A G E

Volkswagen Jetta 2.0L 2013, 4 Cyl., Turbo diesel, 6 speed w/tiptronic, FWD, moon roof, alloy wheels. Vin ¹356856 $22,988

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

S UBA R U .

1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647

877-266-3821

Dlr ¹0354

541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonautosource.com

ER Oarag e Sales MOreP iXatBendblletin.CO m Find them

fphoto forillustration only)

541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205

541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205

I A s k about our

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mi., 29 mpg Hwy,

Hwy, Gray, Vin¹391666 $5,998 ROBBERSON y

503-358-'I 164.

Dodge Avenger SE Sedan 2012, 4 c y l, auto, FWD, MP3. Vin ¹293948 $12,988

FWD, V6 auto., 90k

Toyota Prius IV 2010 char. gray, 51k mi., ¹014996. $16,988.

Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warSubaru Outback 2.5i ranty remaininq. 2005, auto, 4 cylinder, $37,50f. 541-322-6928 AWD, alloy wheels, Vin ¹340402 $9 999 Check out the classifieds online ® s u s A Ru www.bendbulletin.com 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Updated daily 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

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Garage Sales

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Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds 541 N385-5809

SOBS g CCOOBt 0 CSON NINC LBts

SMOLICHVOLVO.coI!I

Porsche 911 Turbo

msma

541-389-9377

2003 6 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, $59,700. 541-322-9647

Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible

with hard & soft top, silver with black interior, all original, very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. 702-249-2567 (car is in Bend)

KENDALL AUTO GROUP IS THRILLED TO JOIN THE COMMUNITY OF BEND Ai Carrera Bend, we've been fulfilling dreams for over 32 years. As the newest 1000

Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE C IRCUIT COU R T , STATE OF OREGON, COUNTY OF DESCHUTES. In the

Legal Notices

respected automotive names in the Northwest. A company that is equally

RESENTATIVE:

Michael Ray Hartman, 568 Widgeon Rd., Redmond, OR 97756, (541) 7 28-4103. LA W Hyundai Sonata 2009, Matter of the Estate of Y ER FO R P E Rauto, 4 cylinder, FWD, EDNA JO MATHERS, SONAL RE P R EDeceased. No. alloy wheels, SENTATIVE: 14PB0015. NOTICE Vin ¹486022 TO INT E RESTED Andrew C. Balyeat, $11,999 PERSONS. NOTICE OSB ¹951927, BaIS HEREBY GIVEN lyeat & Eager, LLP, S USA R U . that the undersigned 920 NW Bond St., 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. has been appointed Suite 209, B end, 877-266-3821 personal representa- OR 97701, (541) Dlr ¹0354 tive. All persons hav- 322-0404 or (541) FAX, ing claims against the 322-0505 aw.com estate are required to andy©balyeatl present them, w ith vouchers attached, to 1000 the undersigned perLegal Notices sonal representative c/o the Law Office of (photo for illustration only) LEGAL NOTICE Kia Forte SX Hatch- Carl W. Hopp, Jr., 168 Notice of Application back 2013, 4 Cy l , NW Greenwood Avfor Allocation of m oon r o of , re a r e nue, B end, O R Conserved Water 9 7701, w ithin f o u r spoiler, alloy wheels. CW-83 months after the date Vin¹684485 of first publication of $17,988 t his notice, or t h e On December 18, 22 Landowners ® s u s A Ru claims may be barred. 2013, All persons whose on the Hurtley Lateral 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. r ights may b e a f - ( Deschutes Riv e r 877-266-3821 (DRC), fected by the p ro- Conservancy 700 NW Hill St, Bend, Dlr ¹0354 ceedings may obtain OR 97701, Repreadditional information sentative) filed an Apfrom the records of plication for AllocaKia Soul+ 2012 the court, the per- tion o f Co n served Q .'I sonal representative, W ater under O RS or the lawyers for the 537.470. personal representative, Carl W. Hopp, Jr. The Department desDated and first pub- ignated the applicalished on March 15, tion as CW-83. The 2.0L 4 cyls, FWD, 2014. CARL W. automatic, 43k propose to HOPP, JR., Applicants miles, 28 MPG Hwy, conserve water by reOSB¹751760, A ttorvin¹438072 ney fo r Pe r sonal placing approximately $12,977 6,450 feet of the TSID Representative. Hurtley Lateral water ROBBERSON'L LEGAL NOTICE conveyance system SBBBB BBa ~ ~ IN THE COURT OF with, hig h d e nsity T HE STATE O F polyethelyne (HPDE) 541.312.3986 OREGON FOR THE pipe. Replacement of DLR ¹0205 COUNTY OF DESthe e xisting, d amCHUTES PRO aged and leaky porBATE DE P A RTtions of the delivery Want to impress the MENT. In the Matter system will eliminate relatives? Remodel o f the E state o f water losses through your home with the J ANNICE H A R T - the irrigation delivery help of a professional system. MAN, D e ceased. Case No. from The Bulletin's 13PB0141. NOThe Hurtley Lateral "Call A Service IS H EREBY serves approximately Professional" Directory TICE GIVEN that the un102 acres, of which, dersigned has been 85.6 acres will be inappointed personal volved in this project. Mazda3 2012 r epresentative. A l l T he project is e x persons ha v i ng pected to yield apclaims against the proximately 0.434 cfs estate are required of conserved water to present t hem, from Whychus Creek with vouchers atunder Water R ight tached, to the unCertificate 74135 with Sport, 5 spd, leather dersigned personal a priority date of 1895. seats, hatchback, representative at the It is p roposed that FWD. 68,398 mi. law offices of BA1 00% of t h e c o nvin¹532282 LYEAT & EAGER, served water will be $17,977 LLP, 920 NW Bond protected i n s tream Street, Suite 209, from the point of diROBBERSON W version (at approxiBend, OR 97701, within four months m ately River M i l e after the date of first 23.5) to the conflu541.312.3986 publication of t h is ence with the DesDLR ¹0205 notice, or the claims chutes River and then may be barred. All to River Mile 120 on the Deschutes River p ersons who s e rights may be af(near Lake Billy Chifected by the pronook). ceedings may obtain additional Any interested perinformation from the son may comment in Mazda Miata 1997 writing, on C W -83. records of the Court, M-edition the personal repreComments must be Mica Green, S-spd, s entative, o r th e received by within 20 original interior 8 lawyer for the perdays of the last date exterior. All power of publication in the sonal r epresentaoptions, leather, tive, Andrew C. Banewspaper 03/29/14. convertible boot, l yeat. Dated a nd Comments should be Tonneau Cover first published on sent to AC W P r o114K miles, synMarch 15, 2 0 14. g ram, Water R e thetic oils, new timMichael Ray Hartsources Department, ing belt I 81K, man, Per s onal 725 Summer Street & more! $5995. Representative. NE, Suite A, Salem, 541-548-5648 PERSONAL REPOR 97301-1266.

®

member of the Kendall Auto Group family, we are proud io join one of the most

1000

passionate about cars as if is about doing the right thing in the showroom or around town, Kendall cares. Ii is with a great deal of excitement that Kendall Auto Group begins ifs next journey in Bend. Thank you for making us a part of your community.

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*Coverage iseffective for12monthsfromvehicle purchasedate, or12,000miles fromtheodometer at sale. Forcompleteisforrmtioli regardingspecific details, limitationsandresponsibilities, refer to theLimitedPower Troin Vehicle Service Contract. Coverageiseffective for 12months fromvehicle purthosedate, or 12,000miles fromtheodometer attimeof sale. For completeinformation regordingspecific details, limitotionsandresponsibilities, refer to the Limited PowerTrain Vehicle ServiceContract. Pricesdonot includetitle, registration, Iox, licenseor575admiti fee.Subject toprior sale.Seedealer for details. Offerexpires03/24/14.


FS SATURDAY MARCH 22 2014 • THE BULLETIN / o

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

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VE SPRING EVENT

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DON'T MISS OUT! TEST DRIVE TODAY AND

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MSRP .............................. $26,045 TSS Discount ......................-$1,555 $24,490 Ford Retail Cash................... $1,500 * ..................-$500 Ford Credit Bonus Ford Retail Bonus Cash.............-$500

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Must finance throughFMCC. OnApprovedCredit, VIN:13OOO6

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NEW 2014 Ford Focus S 4-Door SedanAutomatic MSRP .............. $10,495

Ford Retail CustomerCash..... -$1000 TS&S Price........ $16,599

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$2,495Cashor Trade 36 Month Lease 10K MilesPerYear.Residual $9,802.35. OnApprovedCredit. VIN:219670 Due atSigning NEW 2013Ford Edge SELAWD NEW2014FordExpedition KingRanch

2014 S u b a r u Im p r e z a 2 .0 i CVT

Leather,HeatedSeats, PanoramicVista Roof, PowerLift Gate Nav., Self-LevelingSuspension, PowerRunning Boards ii

Option Pkg01.Standardmodel. PopularPkg.¹2.Auto-Dim Mirror/Comp/Homelink,BumperApplique Sedan,CargoTray 4D, All Weather FloorMats

4

nel MSRP .............. $30,125 0/0 APRforupto TSS Discount ......-$3,209 00 60 Months Ford Retail Customer InLieuof$1500 Cash.................-$1,500

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Saie Price 1 8>995 VIN: 270612

NEW 2013 Ford Taurus SEL Leather, HeatedSeats, Rear Spoiler,19" Wheels, Rear ViewCamera

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Lease

MSRP $20,782.VIN: E8257069. EEB-01 SalePrlce:$19,699

Cap reduction $2,042.68. Acquisition fee $595. Doc. fee $75.

Cap reduction $2,038.13. Acquisition fee $595. Doc. fee $75. 42 months, 10,000 miles/year. Residual 59% $12,261.38. No Security Deposit. *Tier I financing, 720 Beacon or higher. Title, lic. 8. doc. and dealer installed options not included. Down payment is cash or trade equity. On Approved Credit.

42 months, 10,000 miles/year. Residual 57% $11,603.49. No

2,500:;":.;.

2014 S u b a r u Leg a c y 2 .5 i CVT

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Sale Price ..$39,720

NEW 2014Ford EscapeAWD

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MSRP $20,357. VIN: EH015780.EIB-01 Sale Prlce: $18,999

2,500:-":.-. .

Option Pkg01.Popular Pkg.¹1. Auto-Dim Mirror/Comp/Homelink BumperApplique, CargoTray, AuWeather Floor Mats, Seat BackProtector

a

Security Deposit. *Tier I linancing, 720 Beacon or higher. Title, lic. 8. doc. and dealer installed options not included. Down payment is cash or trade equity. On Approved Credit.

MSRP ........ ...................... $22,995 TSS Discount -$1,000 $21,995 Ford CustomerCash.............. -$2,000 Ford Retail Bonus Cash.......... -$1,000

201 4 S ub a r u Im p r e z a 2 .0 i CVT

410,000=

NEW 2014 Ford Mustang NEW 2013 Ford Explorer Limited V6

S UBAR U

C onfiden c e i n M o t i o n

201 4 S ub a r u BRZ L i m i t e d 6MT

Option Pkg.21. Alloy Wheel Pkg.17oAlloy Wheels, 225/60 R17 Option Package01.Standard Model, Auto-DimMirror/Comp,Cargo 98TAu SeasonTires, FogLights, RearBumperCover, Tray Black,RearBumperApplique 4AII-SeasonFloor Mats,

48$

Eir

TSS Discount ......................-$3,500 Off MSRP 030 Ford Retail Cash................... $3,250 VIN. 216849 * ..... . . . . . . . . . . -$1,250 Ford Credit Bonus *Must Finance Ford Retall Bonus Cash----- -$1,'000 throughFMC C

2$,430 Sale Price NEW 2014Ford F150XL4x4

MSRP .............. $35,610

0

36 Month Lease

10KMiles PerYear. $2,495CaShOr• Trade Residual $21,088.00 Due atSigning OnApprovedCreditVIN:A84901 . •

... $39,615 -$2,500 $37,115 ..... $1,750 .......-$750 " ""-$500 ** Must trade in 8 " ""-$750 '95ornewer.*Must .

Ford Retail Cash....... Ford Credit Bonus * .... STX BonusCash........ ** Trade-In Assistance

.

.

.

Lease

MSRP $26,084.VIN:C6E249553. EDB-021 SalePrlce $24,149 Cap reduction $2,578.67. Acquisition fee $595. Doc. fee $75. 42 months, 10,000 miles/year. Residual 55% $14,346.20. No Secudity Deposit. *Tier I financing, 720 Beacon or higher. Title,

lic. 8. doc. and dealer installed options not included. Down payment is cash or trade equity. On Approved Credit.

2014 S ub a r u F o r e s t e r 2.5i Premium 6MT

201 4 S ub a r u I mprez a W R X P remium 5 M T

Option Package01.Standard Model. DimMirror/Comp w/ Homelink, AuWeather Floor Mats, CargoTray, SPT BoostGauge.

S33 365 SalepriceIoddIIIN:ooIIor King Ranch,Navigation, Moonroof,5th WheeTPrep

SYNC

All WeatherPkg:HeatedFront Seats, WindshieldWiper De-lcer, HeatedSide Mirrors,All Weather FloorMats, Auto-DimMirror Compass,CargoTray, CompSeparator - Moonroof, Rear Bumper Cover, Splash Guard Kit,Fog LamPKit, The Subaru popeafer.' Cross BarSet -Aero Motor Trend's 2014 Sport/Utility of the Year.'

MSRP............ TSS Discount ...

$49,960 -$3,714 $46,246 . $2,500 VIN: A73457. -$1,000 *Must Finance -$1,000 throughFMCC. ...-$500 On Approved Credit.** Must trade in a'95 ornewer.

Ford Retail Cash...* Ford Credit Bonus Special Package... Trade-In Assistance

$41,24$ sale price

MSRP ........ TSS Discount

... $65,050

Manual

$59 850 = Off MSRPl $$2 '500 ** Must trade in a '95 or newer.*Must Finance through ojta FMCCVIN:A92073

Ford Retail Cash...... * ... Ford Credit Bonus Trade-In Assistance**

S55,850 SalePg

e

Manual

MSRP $30,105. SulMru of Bend Discount $206 VIN:EG269781.EXO-01 Title, lic. 8. doc. and dealer installed options not included.

P'„".. $29

899

NEW 2014Ford F150Extended Cab4x4V-6 MSRP ..................... TSS Discount ............ Ford Retail Cash........ * ..... Ford Credit Bonus Trade-In Assistance ....

MSRP $28,761.VIN: 5E9601079.EZE-01 Sale Prfce $26,999 Cap reduction $3,227.45. Acquisition fee $595. Doc. fee $75. 42 months, 10,000 miles/year. Residual 53% $15,243.33. No Secudity Deposit. 'Tier I financing, 720 Beacon or higher. litle, lic. 8. doc. and dealer installed options not included. Down payment is cash or trade equity. On Approved Credit.

3,600:;":.;.

3,1 00:-":.-.

NEW201 4Ford F350CrewCabLongBed NEW20 14FordF350CrewCabLongBox XL, Value Pkg,5thWheel Hitch, GooseNeck1itch,

0

Lease

26,999 Sale Price

MSRP............ TSS Discount ...

Automatic

r

5.0 VB,Communication Pkg,SYNC,Satellite Radio

02 9 9

Cash.................-$2,000 TS&S Price.........$31,550

Automatic

NEW201 4FordF150STXSuper Crew

Power Epuip. Group, integrated Brake Controller, Communication Pkg.

rord Riiiiiii diioiiiinor '

MSRP .................... $30,730 TS&S Discount ........... $1,771 Ford Retail Customer Cash........................ $2,000 2.99% APR - 04 months - OAC OnApprovedCredit.VIN:865059,832717,848274

.

.

.

828,499 SalePrice

"" e23 999 2 0144cubadeda XV Craa a t r e k Hybrid C V T

... $32,900 -$1,731 ..... $1,250 ....... -$750 ....... -$750 .

MSRP $25,86S. Subaru of Bend Discount $1,868 VIN: ¹EG527401. EEE-02 Title, lic. 8. doc. and dealer installed options not included

Auto-DimMirror/Comp/Homelink, RearBumperCover, SplashGuards, All WeatherFloorMats, RearSpoiler VIN: 2EH229477.Enn-01

**

Must tradein 8'95 or newer. *MustFinancethroughFMCCVIN:A45809

Test Drive It Today!

Automatic

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OXXQ,P3W OF BEN D

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Sale endsMarch 24, 2014

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