Bulletin Daily Paper 11-23-13

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OSUCASCADES: STUDENTS

COVER OREGON

Cosmic death ray — The largest ever gammaray burst was detected this year. A3

Enrollment was LIp by

16 percent for the fall PluS: BOredOm — Sclen-

By Tyler Leeds

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For Erin MacMillan, good timing led her to finally take advantage of Bend's university. "I was at a point where I needed to

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leaving Bend " MacMillan said. "And then right at that time they decided to offer a program in computer science and I just jumped on board." Stories like MacMillan's are not uncommon at Oregon State University-Cascades Campus, which posted a 19 percent fall term enrollment growth in undergraduate programs and an 8 percent rise in gradu-

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All in all, 936 students are taking courses at OSU-Cascades, which represents a 16 percent growth in "full-time equivalency," a measure of the number of credits being taking. There are also 175 students enrolled in lower-level courses at Central Oregon Community College who intend to matriculate to OSU-Cascades, bringing the student count to 1,111. See Enroll /A4

.

Photos by Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Applicants go through the process of signing up for health care while attending the Cover Oregon application fair at the Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center on Friday. Cover Oregon is the state's health insurance exchange under the Affordable Care Act.

Plans extended Friday wasthe deadline for health insurers to decide whether to offer to extend policies that do not meet the standards set by the

Affordable CareAct. Ninecompanies notified the Oregon Insurance Division theywould beextending individual policies.

By Michael Doyle McClatchy Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — Two Californians proposed for the federal bench and two Texans offered as U.S. marshals are collateral damage, at least for now, in the suddenly escalated Senate confirmation wars. Expect more of the same. Senate rules provide other ways beyond the now-curtailed filibuster to obstruct nominees. Hearings can be boycotted. Routine procedural approvals can be withheld. New Capitol Hill ambushes can be plotted, perhaps with tactics not yet seen. For a truly motivated minority, losing one weapon means it's time to pick up another. "My sense is the Republicans are going to be putting up whatever roadblocks they can, though they don't have the main roadblock they used to have," Russell Wheeler, a judiciary expert at the Brookings Institution, said in an interview Friday. Republicans already flexed their muscles Thursday, the same day Senate Democrats weakened the filibuster by a 52-48 vote. Under the new rules, executive branch and most judicial nominations will require only 51 votes to proceed rather than the 60 required for legislation and Supreme Court nominations. Using the prior filibuster rules, Republican lawmakersthwarted nominees, including Goodwin Liu, a University of California, Berkeley, law professor nominated to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. See Filibuster /A6

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• Companies offering to renew policies through March 31, 2014: Moda Health Plan Inc. and PacificSource Health Plans. These plans cover a little less than 40 percent of people in the individual market,

according to thestate Department of ConsumerandBusiness Services. • Companies offering to renewpolicies through Dec.31, 2014: Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Oregon, Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of the Northwest, Providence Health Plan, LifeWise Health Plan

of Oregon, HealthNetHealth Plan ofOregon Inc., TimeInsurance Co.andJohnAldenLifeInsuranceCo.Theseplanscoverabout60 Kevin Sperl, 60, of Bend, looks over his options while attending the Cover Oregon application fair Friday in Bend.

By Tara Bannow The Bulletin

After going without health insurance for about five years, returning to the ranks of the insured was not an easy courtship for Kevin

Sperl. On Friday,the 60-year-old Bend resident showed up at Cover Oregon's application fair to submit his application forcoverage on the state-run health insurance exchange. Turns out, he'd printed out and completed the wrong form from the website, and had to fill out a different one. "It's a pretty chaotic process," he said. Once he'd finally sent out his application, Sperl sat at a nearby computer to learn which plans and benefits he qualifies for. The first premi-

um that popped up: "$0 per month with tax credit." He wasn't convinced. "The cynicism in me tends to not believe that," he said. "I

don't believe it. Zero's pretty free." Hundreds of locals turned out to The Riverhouse conference center in Bend on Friday to get help filling out and sending off their applications to buy plans through Cover Oregon. The exchange's embattled website has thus far prevented anyone from buying plans and prompted many to submit paper applications. More than 300 people had registered ahead of time to attend the event, which went on for eight hours. But the staff also was prepared to help those who just showed up, said Elizabeth Cronen, a Cover Oregon spokesperson who was overseeingthe operation. If too many people showed up, she said, staff would direct some to local community partners. "We will make sure that we provide services to anyone who arrives," she said. See Fair /A4

Sunny High 41, Low 22

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Nov. 29, according to theDCBS.Those who want to renewtheir current plans must opt-in to keep their plans. Renewals are not automatic. To be eligible for policy extensions, people must have been

covered bytheir plan asof Oct. 1and continue coveragethrough Dec. 31. Those who keep their existing plans will not qualify for tax

credits throughCoverOregon. — Tara Bannow,TheBulletin

Business Calendar Classified

By John Noble Wilford New York Times News Service

I(itzhaber: 'All handson deck' for CoverOregonfix By Mac McLean The Bulletin

Gov. JohnKitzhaber made an "all hands on deck" call to boost Cover Oregon's effectiveness and accountability when he announced two key changes to the struggling health care exchange's operations and leadership structure Friday morning. In a press release Kitzhaber said he asked Greg Van Pelt, a former Providence Health System Oregon CEO and the president of the Oregon Health Care Lead-

C7-8 Comics/Pu zzles F3-4 DearAbby D6 Obituaries B1, B3 Community Life 01-6 Horoscope D6 Sports F1-8 Crosswords F 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies

Digging this summer at the ruins of a 1700 B.C. Canaanite palace in northern Israel, archaeologists struck wine. Near the banquet hall where rulers of a Middle Bronze Age city-state and their guests feasted, a team of U.S. and Israeli researchers broke through to a storage room holding the remains of 40 large ceramic jars. The vessels were broken, their liquid contents long since vanishedbut not without a trace. See Wine/A6

ership Council, to study how Cover Oregon operates and how it could be improved. The governor also said he asked Bruce Goldberg, director of the Oregon Health Plan, to oversee the system's application, eligibility and enrollment process. He said Goldberg's addition should give Rocky King, the health care exchange's executive director, the ability to focus his efforts on making sure the program's website was ready to use as quickly as possible. See Kitzhaber /A4

The Bulletin

INDEX

TODAY'S WEATHER

Wine aged for millennia

percent of the individual market, according to the DCBS. Those companies must notify their customers of their options by

AnIndependent

B5 C1-6 D6

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Vol. 111, No. 327,

5 sections

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TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013

The Bulletin

NATION de%ORI.D

How to reach Us QueStiOning a drOne Strike —It is not every day that a victim of U.S. drone strikes travels to Washington looking for answers, but

STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?

there was Faisal bin Ali Jaber in the House chamber. "It really puts a human face on the term 'collateral damage,"' Rep. Adam Schiff, D-

541-385-5800

Calif., said after listening to Jaber's story of how hewatched last year

Phonehours:5:30 a.m.— 5 p.m. Mon.-Fr i.,6:30a.m .-noonSat.-Sun.

as drone-fired missiles incinerated his nephew and brother-in-law in a Yemeni village. Neither of the victims was a member of al-Qaida.

GENERAL INFORMATION

Jaber spent the past weekstruggling to pierce the veil of secrecy over the Obama administration's drone strike program.

541-382-1 811

Navy Yard Shaating —The companythat employed the Washington Navy Yard shooter pulled his access to classified material for two days in August when mental health problems became evident, but restored it quickly and never told Navy officials about the withdrawal. An initial Navy review revealed that the Fort Lauderdale, Fla.-

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based company,TheExperts, ordered computer contractor Aaron Alexis back to Washington, D.C.,after a police incident in Rhode

N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS

Island in August, according to senior U.S. officials. The company then withdrew his ability to access secret-level data for two days, said the

officials, who spoke oncondition of anonymity becausethey were not

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authorized to publicly discuss the investigation.

NEW S R O O M FA X

TSA OffiCer ShOOting —A Transportation Security Administra-

54i -385-5804 N EW S R O O M

tion officer killed by a gunman at Los Angeles International Airport was shot12 times, with bullets grazing his heart and piercing his

E M A IL

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Members of the Dallas Police Department Honorary Color Guard pause Friday after a ceremony to mark the 50th anniversary of the assassination of John F. Kennedy at Dealey Plaza in Dallas.

bladder and intestines, according to anautopsy report released Friday. Gerardo Hernandez had more than 40 bullet fragments in his body from the Nov. 1 shooting, the Los Angeles County coroner's

office said. Hewas declared dead 45 minutes after arriving at the

On a ayitcannever escape, Daasre ectsan triesto ea

dimpood Avo.

hospital and nearly two hours after the shooting.

DeSegregatian Settlement —After decades of court battles and $1 billion of government aid, one the nation's most historic school desegregation efforts might finally be nearing an end. A fed-

eral judge gavepreliminary approval Friday to a settlement in a Little Rock desegregation lawsuit that would phase out special court-ordered payments after the 2017-18 school year. The end would come

60 years after the eyes of thenation first were riveted on Little Rock, when President Dwight Eisenhower in1957 ordered federal troops to

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may beconverted toanelectronic fundstransfer.TheBulletin, USPS P552-520, is publisheddaily byWestern Communications Inc., 1777S.W.Chandler Ave., Bend,OR 97702.Periodicalspostage paid at Bend,OR.Postmaster: Send address changes to TheBulletin circulation depart ment,P.o.Box6020,Bend,OR 97706. TheBulletin retains ownershipand copyright protection ofall staff-prepared news copy,advertising copyandnews or ad illustrations.Theymaynot be reproducedwithout explicit prior approval.

Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawn Friday night are:

O >7023035036044OO The estimated jackpot is now $205 million.

By Manny Fernandez

site of one of the most horrific New York Times News Service events of the 20th century. In DALLAS — At the precise the past, the city has avoidminute when shots rang out in ed getting involved in events a downtown Dallas plaza 50 marking Kennedy's assassiyears ago Friday, more than nation, and there was a strong 5,000 people paused in silent push in the 1970s to demolish tribute at the place where the the red-brick depository buildcity and the nation were forever ing, which many considered an changed by the assassination ugly monument to the assassin, of President John F. Kennedy. Lee Harvey Oswald. Beneath the gaze of the But on Friday, amid heavy sixth-floor corner window of security and beneath a wet, the former Texas School Book gray sky, the city embraced D epository, dignitaries a n d its tragic place in U.S. history residents of all ages gathered as it never has before, holdat Dealey Plaza as church bells ing its largest, most elaborate tolled at 12:30 p.m., the mo- a nd costliest tribute to t h e ment when gunfire first echoed president who died there. The through the plaza on Nov. 22, event seemed as much about 1963; the president's motorcade the healing of Dallas as it was heading to a luncheon at the about the legacy of Kennedy. Dallas Trade Mart. Mayor M ichael Rawlings For 50 years, Dallas has defended the city's efforts to begrappled with its role as the come more tolerant and more

ran e nu r By Steven Erlanger

riched uranium. But the WestNew York Times News Service ern officials said that such a reWASHINGTON — U n der versal is difficult and that Iran the proposed six-month deal does not now seem to have the that six major powers are ne- ability. gotiating with Iran in Geneva, The concern around the 20 Iran would eliminate its curpercent purity level is that Iran rent stock of uranium enriched could, if it chose, quickly turn to 20 percent by diluting it or that into bomb-grade material, turning it into fuel rods or ox- which means that it could more ide powder, forms that are quickly "break out" to create unusable for weapons, senior a nuclear weapon before the Western officials said Friday. West could detect it or react to Iran would be allowed to stop it. continue to enrich uranium Iran denies any intention of at much lower levels, to 3.5 building a nuclear weapon. percent, the officials said, but Western officials said Iran would also agree to cap its was also being asked to halt current stockpile of such urani- construction, for six months, um, by eliminating, diluting or on the Arak heavy-water reactransforming into fuel as much tor. The reactor, when finished 3.5 percent uranium as it pro- and fueled, could produce pluduces overthe six months. tonium, another route to a nuThe officials spoke about the clear weapon. deal on the condition of anoIran would also agree not to nymity, because the negotia- install any more of its faster, tions had not been completed. second-generation centrifuges, The rationale for such a deal, the machines used to enrich the officials said, is to satisfy uranium, and would not operIran's refusal to suspend all en- ate the 1,000 or so of these cenrichment — a concession that trifuges already installed but its negotiators could not sell do- not yet in use. Iran would also mestically, even for six months. agree to additional inspections, But in exchange, Iran would to ensure that the deal is kept. agree to cap its stockpile, while If Iran agrees, the combinaeliminating its current supply tion of concessions would give of the more highly enriched breathing space for a longer uranium, which is much closer negotiation on a more permato bomb grade and has caused nent deal.The arrangement anxiety among Western naalso is designed to convince tions, Israel and the Arab gulf Iran that, if the West detects evnations — including Saudi idence of an effort at a nuclear Arabia. breakout, the Western nations Iran has refused toexport would have time to take deciany of its enriched uranium to sive preventive action — potenbe turned into fuel, as the West- tially military action. ern negotiators — the five perIn return, Iran would receive manent members of the U.S. what the Western officials said Security Council, plus Germa- was about $3.6 billion in oil inny — had first proposed over come, which has been frozen years of negotiations. abroad, released in portions Israel and Saudi Arabia have over six months. Iran would expressed concern that if Iran also get relief on sanctions on produced only oxide powder auto parts and kits for reasfrom the 20 percentenriched sembly, on gold and precious uranium, and not fuel rods or metals, on commercial airplates, the oxide could be re- craft parts and repairs and on convertedinto 20 percent en- petrochemicals.

diverse since 1963. "Today, because ofthe hard work of many people, Dallas is a different city," Rawlings said. "I believe the New Frontier did not end that day on our Texas frontier." The ceremony was one of many observances across the nation Friday, including a musical tribute at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston. In Dallas, the ceremony unfolded with bagpipes and the reading ofexcerpts from Kennedy's speeches in the center of Dealey Plaza. "It's like k ind o f r e living things all over again," said Robert Connor, 57, of nearby Plano, who stood with his wife near the stage. "It's similar to 9/II: Don't forget what took place here."

ensure safe passagefor nine black students walking through angry crowds into the doors of the predominantly white Little RockCentral High School.

Califarnia tleSei't graveS —Bones found at a Southern California desert gravesite are those of two boys whoseparents also were buried there, coroner's officials confirmed Friday. The remains are

those of 4-year-old Gianni McStay andhis 3-year-old brother, Joseph McStay, the coroner's division of the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department said in a statement. A state DNA lab confirmed their

identities, the department said. Dental records earlier confirmed that other remains belonged to the boys' parents, Joseph McStay, 40, and Summer McStay, 43.

RhinO pOaChing —After two decades of gains, the population of rhinoceroses is being killed off by poachers at such a high rate that

conservationists fear the deaths could soon surpass the numberof rhinos born each year. The International Rhino Foundation, a nonprofit group, said Friday that two rhinos a day are poached in South

Africa alone andthat 688 were believed to have beenkilled there in 2012 — a record surpassed this year by September. Susie Ellis, executive director of the foundation, warned that worse days might

lie ahead. "There arereasons to think that it might get worse before it gets better," she said. — From wirereports

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SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

TART • Discoveries,breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day

It's Saturday, Nov. 23, the 327th day of 2013. There are

SCIENCE

38 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS HealthCare.gov —The website will be down for

maintenance tonight through Sunday morning.A4

Iran nuclear talks —Secretary of State John Kerry will join negotiations in Geneva,

joining Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.A2

Meat rules —Newfederal

Wld

cienis s: ' onser cosmic as zi e arm ess as ar

winter

this year? Not likely

The massive gamma ray burst in a faraway galaxy was spotted last spring. Though it's unlikely to happen to Earth, if one hit a planet it would be toast.

labeling regulations take effect,

requiring country-of-origin labels to show where livestock was born, raised andslaughtered.

HISTORY Highlight:In1936, Life, the

photojournalism magazine created by Henry R. Luce,was first published. In1765, Frederick County, Md. became the first colonial entity to repudiate the British Stamp Act. In1804, the14th president of the United States, Franklin Pierce, was born in Hillsboro, N.H. In 1889, the first jukebox

made its debut in SanFrancisco, at the Palais Royale

Saloon. In1903, Enrico Caruso made his American debut at the Met-

ropolitan Opera House inNew York, appearing in "Rigoletto." In 1910, American-born phy-

sician Hawley Harvey Crippen was hanged at Pentonville Prison in London for murder-

ing his wife, Cora. (Crippen's mistress, Ethel LeNeve, was acquitted in a separate trial of

being an accessory.) In1943, during World War II, U.S. forces seized control of

Tarawa and Makini atolls from the Japanese. In1959, the musical "Fiorel-

lo!," starring TomBosley as legendary NewYork Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia, opened on Broadway. In1963, the classic British

science-fiction series "Doctor Who" premiered on BBC Television, starring William

Hartnell as the first incarnation of the time-traveling title

character. In1971, the People's Republic of China was seated in the U.N.

By Seth Borenstein The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Astronomers call it the monster. It was the biggest and brightest c osmic explosion ever w i tnessed. Had it been closer, Earth would have been toast. Orbiting telescopes got the fireworks show of a lifetime last spring when they spotted what is known as a gamma

ray burst in a far-off galaxy. The only bigger display astronomers know of was the

Big Bang — and no one, of course, was around to witness that. "This burst was a once-in-acentury cosmic event," NASA astrophysics chief Paul Hertz said at a n e w s c onference Thursday. But because this blast was 3.7 billion light-years away, mankind was spared. In fact, no one on Earth could even see it with the naked eye. A gamma ray burst happens when a m a ssive star dies, collapses into a brandnew black hole, explodes in what's called a supernova and ejects energetic radiation. The radiation is as bright as can be as it travels across the universe at the speed of light. A planet caught in one of these bursts would lose its atmosphere instantly and would be left a burnt cinder, astrono-

mers say. Scientists might be able to detect warning signs of an

impending gamma ray burst. But if a burst were headed for Earth — and the chances of that happening are close to zero, astronomers say — there wouldn't be a n ything anybody could do about it. N ASA t elescopes in o r bit have been seeing bursts for more than two decades,

happening and being danger-

By Seth Borenstein The Associated Press

ous is virtually nil," Dermer said. A lso, because a burst i s concentrated like a f ocused searchlight or a death beam, it has to be pointing at you to be seen and to be dangerous. "Either it's pointed at us or it's not," Preece said. "If it's not, yay! Civilization survives and we see maybe a supernova. If it were pointed at us, then it matters very much how NASA Goddard Space FlightCenter /The Associated Press far away it is in our galaxy. If it's in our local arm, well, we Thls artist's renderlng shows how a gamma ray burst occurs with a massive star collapsing, creating a black hole and beaming out had a good run." focused and deadly light and radiation bursts. Some theorize that a mass extinction on Earth 450 million years ago was caused by spotting one every couple of One of the main reasons a gamma ray burstin a neardays. But this one, witnessed this was so bright was that rel- by part of our galaxy, but Deron April 27, set records, ac- ative to the thousands of other mer said that's unlikely. cording to four studies pub- gamma ray bursts astronoWe don't see gamma ray lished Thursday in the journal mers have seen, the monster bursts from th e surface of Science. was pretty close by cosmic E arth b ecause th e a t m o It flooded NASA i n stru- standards. A light-year is alsphere obscures them and bements with five times the en- most 6 trillion miles. cause most of their light is the ergy of its nearest competitor, Most of the bursts NASA type we cannot see with our a 1999 blast, said University of telescopes have seen have eyes. That's why NASA has Alabama at Huntsville astro- been twice as distant as this satellites that look for them. physicistRob Preece, author one. Other explosions could This burst was so bright of one of the studies. be this big, but they are so t elescopes on Earth saw a It started with a star that much farther away, they don't brief flash in the constellation had 20 to 30 times the mass of seem so bright w hen t hey Leo. our sun but was only a couple reach Earth, the studies' auFor scientists, this was a of times wider, so it was in- thors say. wow moment. "These are really neat excredibly dense. It exploded in A stronomers say it i s i n a certain violent way. credibly unlikely that a gamplosions," said Peter MichelIn general, gamma ray ma ray burst — e specially son, a Stanford physicist who bursts are "the most titanic a big one like this — could is the chief scientist for one of explosions in the universe," go off in our galaxy, near us. the instruments on a NASA and this one was so big that H arvard's Av i L o eb , w h o gamma r a y b u r st-spotting some of the telescope instru- wasn't part of the studies, put telescope. "If you l ik e f i r ements hit their peak, Preece the chances at less than I in 10 works, you can't beat these. said. It was far stronger and million. Other than the Big Bang itself, lasted longer than previous Our galaxy doesn't have these are the biggest there are." ones. many of the type of star that "I cal l i t t h e m o n ster," l ends itself t o g a mma r a y The burst "is part of the cyPreece said. In fact, one of the bursts, said Charles Dermer, cle of birth and life and death a co-author of the studies and in the universe," Michelson other studies, not written by Preece, used the word "mon- an astrophysicist at the U.S. said. "You and I ar e m ade ster" in its title, unusual lan- Naval Research Laboratory. of the stuff that came from a "The chance of anything guage for a scientific report. supernova."

WASHINGTON — The weather forecast for this winter is mostly a shrug of the shoulders. For most of the nation, the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration predicts e qual c h a nces for unusual warmth, cold, snow, rain and even average weather. That's because of an absence of certain global weather factors, like El Nino — a warming of the central Pacific that affects temperatures and rainfall worldwide NOAA's Mike H a lpert s aid Thursday t hat t h e winter isn't likely to be too memorable o r un u sual, except in the South where drought should deepen in the southwest and develop in the southeast. Forecasters expect unusual warmth from Arizona to Alabama and also in New England. The extreme U.S. north, around the Dakotas, is likely to be colder than normal. Just because forecasters are predicting equal chances for nearly everything, that doesn't mean it h as to be a normal year, said Halpert, acting director of NOAA's Climate Prediction Center in College Park, Md. It just means the largescale climate factors that forecasters use, such as El Nino, aren't giving them strong signals or patterns, he said. B ut extremes tend t o h appen wit h E l Ni n o s, so Halpert added, "we're probably more likely to see something more benign" for the winter. And the winter weather is likely to change more from week to week, rather than persisting heavy cold and snowy or mild for weeks on end, Halpert said. NOAA's forecast doesn't look for i n d ividual blizzards or events, just averages. So a winter that doesn't look extreme doesn't mean it will b e f r ee of s nowstorms, Halpert said. He said residents i n s n owprone areas shouldn't put away their snow shovels.

Security Council. In1980, some 2,600 people were killed by aseries of earthquakes that devastated

southern Italy. In1996,a commandeered Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 767 crashed into the water off the Comoros Islands, killing 125

of the175 people on board, including all three hijackers.

Ten years ago:Five U.S. soldiers were killed in a helicopter

crash in Afghanistan. Eduard Shevardnadze resigned as president of Georgia in the face of protests. Five years ago:Thegovernment unveiled a bold plan to

rescue Citigroup, injecting a fresh $20 billion into the trou-

bled firm as well as guaranteeing hundreds of billions of

dollars in risky assets. A gunman shot and killed a woman

and a manwho came to her aid inside a church in Clifton,

N.J. (Suspect Joseph Pallipurath, the estranged husband

of the dead woman, Reshma James, is awaiting trial.) Spain clinched an improbable, comefrom-behind Davis Cup victory over Argentina.

One year ago:Actor Larry Hagman, best known for

playing the scheming oil baron J.R. Ewing on TV's "Dallas," died at the age of 81. Support-

ers and opponents of Egyptian President MohammedMorsi clashed in the streets of Cairo and other major cities, in the

worst violence since Morsi took office nearly five months earlier.

BIRTHDAYS Screenwriter Joe Eszterhas is 69. Actor-comedy writer

Bruce Vilanch is 66. Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., is 63. Singer Bruce Hornsby is 59.

TV personality Robin Roberts is 53. Actress-singer Miley Cyrus is 21. — From wire reports

Researchersdiscover newcategory of boredom By Karen Kaplan

PDAs beeped, subjects were asked to complete a questionBoredom is a lot more innaireabout what they were doteresting than scientists had ing and how they felt about it. thought. By g a t hering e m p i rical A new study of students in data about real-life situations, G ermany reveals that there are Goetz's team hoped to validate five distinct types of boredom. psychological models that diThat's one more than research- vided boredom into four disers had expected. tinct categories: What's more, the newly dis• In different boredom, a covered category — which they relaxing and slightly positive labeled "apathetic boredom"type of boredom that "reflected was quite common among high a general indifference to, and school students, according to withdrawal from, the external the study, published this week world" • Calibrating boredom, the in the journal Motivation and Emotion. slightly unpleasant state of Boredom isn't just boring. having wandering t houghts and "a general openness to beIt can be d angerous, either for the person who is bored haviors aimed at changing the or for the people around him. situation" • Searching boredom, the For instance, people who are bored aremore likely to smoke, kind that makes you feel restdrink or use drugs. Kids who less and leaves you "actively are bored are more likely to seeking out specific ways of drop outof school and become minimizing feelings of borejuvenile d e linquents. Stud- dom"; and • Reactant boredom, which is ies have also linked boredom with stress and other health so bad that it prompts sufferers "to leave the boredom-inducing problems. "Given the high frequency of situation and avoid those reboredom in various situations sponsible for this situation (e.g., encountered in daily life and teachers)." the variety of detrimental exThe short surveys adminperiences to which boredom is istered by the PDAs asked related, it is rather surprising student volunteers whether that to date there has been little they were in the middle of an research conducted on this spe- "achievement activity" (such as cific emotion," the researchers attending a lecture or studying wrote in their study. for a test) or doing something To rectify t ha t s i tuation, else, like eating, napping or doThomas Goetz, a professor of ing something fun. empirical educational research Students were also asked to at the University of Konstanz rate the intensity of their feelin Germany, and his colleagues ings of boredom, well-being, recruited two sets of test sub- satisfaction, enjoyment, anger jects — 63 college students and and anxiety. If they reported 80 high school students. feelings of boredom, they were The researchers gave the stu- asked to describe those feeldents personal digital assistant ings using a five-point scale devices that beeped six times that ranged from "calm" to throughout the day. When the "fidgety." Los Angeles Times

What they found is that the life of a German student can be very boring indeed. During the two-week period of the study, the college students were bored 28 percent of the time (that is, they registered feelings of boredom in 1,103 of the 3,945 PDA questionnaires). Life was even more dull for the high school students — they were bored 39 percent of the time (in 1,432 out of 3,645 cases.) Slightly more than half — 53 percent — of the boring experiences had by college students occurred during an achievement activity, compared with 66 percent for the high school students. T h e r e s earchers speculated that the difference was explained by the fact that college students had more free-

dom to walk away from a boring situation. The big surprise in the data was the emergence of the fifth type of b oredom. Apathetic boredom accounted for 10 percent of all boredom among the college students and 36 percent of all boredom among the high-schoolers. This was a troubling discovery. Students experienced apathetic boredom with even stronger feelings of aversion than they did with reactant boredom, but they were far less likely to do anything about it. In fact, after analyzing the numerical ratings from the students, the r e searchers c o ncluded that apathetic boredom shared some features with l earned helplessness and depression.

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013

IN FOCUS:HEALTHCARE.GOV

OSU-Cascadesenrollment

ension eore eat we sitecras: ontractor wante to Lis ea ine By Eric Lipton, lan Austen and Sharon LaFraniere rVew York Times News Service

W ASHINGTON — On a sultry day in late August, a dozen staff members of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Servicesgathered at the a gency's Baltimore headquarters with managers from the major contractors building Heal t h Care.gov to review numerous problems with President Barack O bama's online health i n surance initiative. The mood was grim. The prime contractor, CGI Federal, had long before concluded that the administration was blindly enamored of an unrealistic goal: creating a cutting-edge website that would use the latest technologies to dazzle consumers with its many features. Knowing how long it would take to complete and test the software, the company's officials and other vendors believed it was impossible to open a fully functioning exchange Oct. 1. Government officials, on the other hand, insisted that Oct. I w a s not negotiable. And they were fed up with what they saw as CGI's pattern of excuses for missed deadlines. Michelle Snyder,

The System is down at the moment

Mark Makela/ New York Times News Service

Tilda Elias hands a paper application to prospective Affordable Care Act marketplace enrollees after their online application stalled this week at a hospital in Doylestown, Pa.

website that could function on the opening day. V ital c o mponents w e r e never s e cured, i n c luding sufficient access to a d ata center to prevent the website from crashing, and a backup system that could go live if it did was not created, a weakness the administration has never disclosed. And the architecture of the system that interacts with the data center where information is stored is so poorly configured that it must be redesigned, a process that experts said typically takes months. An initial the agency's chief operating assessment identified more officer, was telling colleagues than 600 hardware and softoutright, " If we could f i r e ware defects, "the longest them, we would." list anybody had ever seen," one person involved with the A major humiliation project said. Interviews w it h c u r r ent When the realization of and former Obama adminis- impending disaster f i nally tration officials and special- hit government officials at ists involved in the project, the Aug. 27 meeting — just 34 as well as a review of hun- days before the site went live dreds of pages of government — they threw out nearly 30 and contractor documents, requirements, including the offer new details into how Spanish-language version of tensions between the gov- the website and a payment ernment and its contractors, system forinsurers to receive questionable decisions and government subsidiesfor the weak leadership within the policies they sold. Medicare agency turned the Even then, t h e s y stem rollout of the president's sig- failed a test of only 500 simunature program into a major lated users in late September. humiliation. Panicked, agency o f ficials The online exchange was sent out an urgent order just crippled, p eople i n v olved days before the startup of with building it said in recent the healthcare exchanges to interviews,because of a huge almost double the system's gap between the administra- data capacity, t echnicians tion's grand hopes and the involved in the project have practicalities of b uilding a now confirmed. But the site

was still down m ore than half the time in mid-October. The acrimony between the Medicare agency and CGI had built steadily over the preceding months, the new interviews show. By late summer, teams of agency officials had parked themselves in CGI Federal'sheadquarters in Herndon, Va., demanding on-the-spot reviews and demonstrations of new code that was never tested.

Fair

benefits I can tap into from this point out."

Continued from A1

Federal deadline extended The notification this week that all applications must be postmarked o r s u b m itted by Dec. 4 to ensure coverage by Jan. 1, 2014, has had some scrambling to get their information in on time. The Obama administration said Friday it would extend the deadline to enroll t hrough the federal health care ex-

change by one week, from Dec. 15 to Dec. 23. But Cover O regon spokesperson M i chael Cox said that policy does not change Oregon's deadlines. He said people should still enroll by Dec. 15. Cover Oregon Executive Director Rocky K in g s aid this week people will not be able to enroll using the online exchange until at least Dec. 16. The scene at the Riverhouse early F r iday a f ternoon was orderly and — for some applicants — efficient. Dozens of C o ver O r egon staff members in turquoise T-shirts darted around answering questions and helping people navigate the 20page document from across long rows of tables. Cardboard d i v iders s eparated applicants at the tables, each bearing a sign that said, "Pri-

ence left Jilton feeling optimistic about health care reform. "I'm confident that we can make this work," she said. "We all have to be patient and just do our part." T he a p plication f o r m s Friday called only for financial information, not health information. In addition to Social Security numbers or Alien Resident numbers, applicants were asked to provide employer and income information, se l f -employment d eductions, c u rrent health insurance information and things like alimony payments, student loan interest and educator expenses. They also had to provide information a b out h e a lth coverage currently offered through employers. T umalo r e sident M a r i anne Fellner decided to apply for i n surance through Cover Oregon after learning that, under her current plan through Regence BlueCross BlueShield, her premium will increase to nearly $600 a month after Jan. I to comply with the Affordable Care Act. After learning late Friday that R egence was among the companies extending their existing plans, Fellner said she would still opt to buy coverage on the exchange. The self-employed artist

vacy is our policy."

and designer is generally

The whole process took l ess than a h a l f-hour f o r Sandy Jilton. A f ter a r r ivi ng, she w aited about 10 minutes to get across from a representative. Jilton, 63, moved to Bend from Hawaii about three months ago to r etire. Sh e c o uldn't t a k e with her the insurance she had through her job there as a property manager, and said although she's pretty healthy, insurance provides peace of mind. The experi-

healthy, but said she likes to have insurance in case the worst happens. Fellner, 59, expects she'll qualify for ta x c r edits offered through Cover Oregon. She likened it to asking for her "senior discount" through the AARP. "At this point, I've earned it," she said. "I've paid into

the program long enough. Since I haven't taken any excessive benefits, I'm going to start seeing what kind of

Agency officials c omplained that C G I m i s sed crucial deadlines and that it could not control other contractors, although the company said it had no power to do so.

Contractor complaints CGI and o t her c ontractors complained of endlessly shifting requirements and a government d e c ision-making process so cumbersome that it took weeks to resolve elementary questions, such as determining whether users should be r equired to provide Social Security numbers. Some CGI s o ftware engineers ultimately walked out, saying it was impossible to produce good work under such conditions. "Cut corners, make date," said one specialist, who like most of t h e p e ople interviewed for this article would not allow his name to be used because the Obama administration has requested that all government officials and contractors i nvolved k e ep

Cultural gap Among those answering questions Friday was Miguel Angel H e r rada. T h r ough a grant f rom t h e O r egon Health Authority, the Latino Community Association brought Herrada on board to help Latinos apply for insurance through Cover Oregon,

a group he said experiences more barriersto the process than most. This community tends not to read newspapers or watch American television, Herrada said, so much of his work i s done d oor-to-door, i n one - o none meetings and in small

groups. And the barriers extend beyond language, he said. "The cultural gap is huge," Herrada said. "The social gap is also interesting because the Latinos here, they have fear from many sources, official and nonofficial. It's only to their own community they've found this confidence to ask and approach, otherwise they don't ask for help." Roughly 145,000 Oregonians will need to buy new insurance policies under the AffordableCare Act, according to the Oregon Insurance Division. Another 193,000 are coveredunder small employer plans that will end on their renewal dates. After submitting her application and heading out the door less than an hour after she a r r ived, Fellner said she expects to h e ar back "many, many weeks in the future." "So far, we're feeding the machine, but not much information is coming back," she said. "At least it's in the queue." —Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletirLcom

their work confidential. A nother sore point w a s the Medicare agency's decision to use database software, from acompany called MarkLogic, that m a naged the data differently from systems by companies like IBM, Microsoft and Oracle. CGI officials argued that it would slow work because it was too unfamiliar. Government officials disagreed, and its configuration remains a serious problem. Thanks to a huge effort to fix the most obvious weaknesses and the appointment at last of a single contractor, QSSI, to oversee the work, the website no w c r a shes much less frequently, officials said. That is a m ajor improvement from a month ago, when it was up only 42 percent of the time and 10hour failures were common. Yet an enormous amount of work remains to be done, all

sides agree. In a statement Friday, the Medicare agency said officials held hundreds of meetings in the month before the startup and tried their best to manage a highly complex project in a short time. "There wereissues in meeting deliverables in a timely fashion," the statement said. "We expectedthere would be issues. However, we did not anticipate the degree of the problems in the system." One computer expert who has tracked the project closely for months said, "Literally e veryone involved was a t fault." The Medicare agency was not everyone's first choice to run the $630 million project. White House officials at first debated whether to name an outsider, such as Jon Kingsdale, who set up the landmark Massachusetts health insurance program, or even to create a new agency. Both of t h ose ideas fell through, and over the past three years five lower-level managers held posts overseeing Healthcare.gov's development, none ofwhom had the kind of authority to reach across the administration to ensure theproject stayed on schedule.

Kitzhaber Continued from A1 "We made a c ommitment to Oregon and we're going to keep it," Kitzhaber said in his press release. "It's all hands on deck to

help Oregonians get signed up for the coverage they want and need." T he g o v ernor's an nouncement comes at the end of a long week for Cover Oregon. The exchange revealed that not a single person has been able to sign up for health insurance coverage because its website wasn't finished. During a tense Wednesday hearing, King said he hoped to have the Cover Oregon website open so certain insurance agents and community g r o ups could use it to enroll customers starting Dec. 6 and individuals could use it by Dec. 16, one day after the current application deadline for people who want to start receiving health insurance coverage on Jan. 1. This anno u ncement prompted two Oregon congressmen — Reps. Peter DeFazio, D- S p ringfield, and Kurt Schrader, D-Canby — to send Oregon Insurance Commissioner Laura Cali a letter asking she extend the enrollment deadline to Dec. 31. "Simply put, the state has not kept up its end of the bargain to provide a quick, accessibleway for Oregonians to sign up for health insurance," the congressmen said in a joint statement. "Therefore, it's only fair the state grant people a few extra weeks to get the plan they want." — Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmcleanCbendbulletin.com The Associated Press Contributed to this report

This chart shows the number of students enrolled in OSU-Cas-

cades programs, including students currently taking freshmanandsophomore-levelcoursesatCOCC. : :Fall 2013 OSU-Cas-

: cades including : 'COCC-ouly students

Program UNDERGRADUATE American Studies

18

Art

15

Biology

80

R

. . R .

Business Administration/Accountancy

138

Computer Science Energy Systems Engineer~ing Exercise & Sport Science

~

68 91

Exploratory Studies

~

sy

17

General Science Human Development 8 Family Science

14 154

Liberal Studies

59

Natural Resources Psychology Social Science

65

Tourism & Outdoor Leadership

53

Corvallis Majors

10

Nondegree Undergraduate GRADUATE Counseling

18 80

MAT — E~lm ~nt ry Edgati n

29

MAT — Secondary Education

14

0

MFA Creative Writing

Nondegree Graduate

22

Source: OSU-Cascades

Enroll Continued from A1 "The growth is a little more than we projected," said Jane Reynolds, director of enrollment services. "We're still looking for double-digit growth next year too, but I think we'll see a more immediate big jump when we get to the fall 2015." By fall 2015, OSU-Cascades plans to be a four-year university complete with a new "living and learning center" in southwest Bend. The university experienced enrollmentgrowth across de-

mographic subgroups, though there was an especially notable growth in minority students, including a 9 percent increase in Hispanic students and 75 percent in American Indians and Alaskan native. "There's been a lot of interest in our new programs, so exercise and sports science is growing rapidly, and while the there are only 17 students enrolled in it, the new computer science

program is also growing very fast for a brand new major," Reynolds said. With 154 students, human development and family sciences is the largest program at the university. "We've had that program essentially since the beginning of OSU-Cascades, and it's been growing steadily since," Reynolds said. "There's a lot of interest from students in the field, especially the human services option, where students learn how to work with people and go on to intern and eventually work in areas like counseling and social service." Emily Yozamp, a freshman at COCC in human development and family sciences, moved from Los Angeles to study at OSU-Cascades. "I came to OSU-Cascades because ofthe great offerings, and the COCC pricing under OSU's wing for the first years,"

Yozamp said. "I chose my majorbecause Isee children as our future leaders and I worry a lot of people don't seem to see the significance of working with them." Administrators continue to cite the benefits of living in Bend as another driver of growth. "Bend's always been one of my favorite places, so that was a big draw," said Tyson Oleman, an undergraduate in the energy engineering systems program. "I also want to work in manufacturing as an engineer, and they had the ESE program, so that really worked out." OSU-Cascades also continues to have a significantly older population than the traditional college, with the average age of undergraduates at 29 and graduate students at 35. "I have a family here in Bend and it just wasn't feasible for me to head over the mountains to Corvallis," said Elizabeth Allison, a mother with two middle schoolers. "I wanted to further my career and study accounting, and they just started offering the program, so the timing couldn't have been better." New students lead to new demands, and Reynolds said that the university is going to have to up its hiring to address the added demand. "We do feel very, very busy here at OSU-Cascades," Reynolds said. "We haven't hired a lot of extra staff yet but we will need to in response to the continued enrollment growth. The peoplewho advise students are most impacted due to the greater numbers they are having to serve, but it's something we can certainly address." — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulfetiri.com

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SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

AS

IN FOCUS:DEFENSE CUTS

o a r-era' ar o ' ar ee orreiremen By W.J. Hennlgan

There's even a F acebook group called Save the A-10 LOS ANGELES — The A-10 that was created in August and Thunderbolt II, a snub-nosed has garnered more than 4,000 g round-attack p l an e n i c k - supporters. named the "Warthog," is the The situation serves as a harlatest aircraft to find its way binger of the battles to come in onto the Pentagon's endan- an age of budget austerity. The gered weapons list. military says it must slash, or Outfitted with a seven-bar- "divest," its older arsenal to rel Gatling gun the size of a save money. But because these Volkswagen Beetle in its nose, entrenched programs support the Cold War-era plane has a troops and provide thousands reputation for tearing apart ar- of jobs across many states, mored tanks and clearing the Congress has continually come way for troops on the ground to their rescue. with its massive 30 mm rounds The Pentagon already faces of ammunition. budget cuts of $487 billion over But the unsightly plane has 10 years, and now it must cope been inthe cross hairs of Pen- with the threat of an additiontagon officials in recent years. al $500 billion in cuts because The Air Force — better known of sequestration. The military for aerial dogfights and drop- services are going through an ping GPS-guided bombsunprecedented process of dewould rather invest its dimin- veloping two budgets for 2015 ishing funds elsewhere. With — one with sequestration and billions of dollars in budget cuts one without. and a possible second round Sequestration cuts w o uld of sequestration looming, the reduce Pentagon s pending military faces tough decisions: $52 billion next year. When keep funding proven planes of itcomes to programs such as the past or invest in high-tech the A-10, some in Congress feel 21st-century weapons. there are better places to cut. "It would be unconscionable The Pentagon has yet to release its latest budget or offi- to further cut an asset like the cially signal that the Warthogs A-10 for budget reasons — inare on a kill list. But last month, creasingthe risks our service the Air Force disclosed that members confront in ground eliminating the fleet of 326 air- combat — w hen equivalent craft would save it about $3.5 savingscould be achieved elsebillion over five years. where inthe Air Force budget But taking no chances, A-10 without reducing operational supporters in Congress rushed capabilities," said the bipartito offer an amendment this san letter sent to Defense Secweek to the National Defense retary Chuck Hagel and Joint Authorization Act that would Chiefs Chairman Gen. Martin effectively prohibit any addi- Dempsey. tional A-10 retirements until The Air Force spends mil2021 or later. lionsofdollars on "conferences, Last week, 33 lawmakers air shows and bloated headwrote a letter to the U.S. secre- quarters staffs," the letter said. tary of Defense and chairman But major savings — meaof the Joint Chiefs of Staff to sured in billions rather than express "deep concern" about millions of dollars — can be retiring the A-10. made only by cutting an entire Last month, Sen. Kelly Ayo- fleet, the Air Force has said. tte, R-N.H., a member of the That way, the infrastructure Senate Armed Services Com- that supports the fleet can also mittee, blocked the confirma- be cut, which encompasses tion of the White House nomi- thousands of jobs. The A-10 program also supnee for Air Force secretary until she received answers about ports 6,000 jobs in the Air ¹ the plane's fate. tional Guard, which flies 90 Los Angeles Times

A-10s in five states. Guard officials have expressed dismay at the prospect of killing the plane. No one calls into question the A-10's success at close-air support. The plane is considered one of the best at directl y protecting troops on t h e ground. Pilots do that by laying down fire on enemy tanks, vehicles and strongholds with its

Endangered'Warthog' The A-10 Thunderbolt II may be retired because of sequestration budget cuts. Known mainly for effectively defeating ground targets near friendly troops, the 'Warthog' is able to survive heavy anti-aircraft fire. What makes it unique:

Pilot is protected by a

Large wings provide necessary maneuverability at low speedsandaltitude

1,200-lb. titanium

armor bathtub Bullet proof windshield and canopy glass protect pilot

high-powered Gatling gun.

The A-10 was designed by Fairchild-Republic in the 1970s around the gun — the heaviest rotary cannon ever mounted on an aircraft. Pilots can shoot short bursts that unleash 140 rounds of ammunition in two seconds. To do so, it must fly low and slow over the battlefield, making it susceptible to

C

Airframe is madeof multiple independent beams that run the length of the fuselage and wings

ground fire. But the plane is designed to keep flying even if parts of the wing or one of its engines has been blown to shreds. And the cockpit is surrounded by a bullet-resistant titanium tub. The aircraft has been routinely upgraded over the years. As good as the A-10 is in close-air support, the military classifies it a s a s i ngle-role aircraft. That's the problem. Going forward, the Air Force has said it wants to rid itself of one-mission planes in f avor of a fleet of multi-role aircraft. These jack-of-all-trades aircraft can blast apart enemies on the ground and in the sky. The A-10 replacement is the upcoming F-35 fighter jet. Known as th e Joint Strike Fighter, the nearly $400 billion program for morethan 2,400 jets is centered around a plan to develop a fighter plane that could — with a few tweaksbe used by the Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps. The idea is that it can take off and land on runways and aircraft carriers, as well as hover like a helicopter. No single fighter aircraft has had all those capabilities. And it is expensive. At $35,200, the F-35's cost per flying hour is twice as much as the A-10's, according to the Government Accountability Office.

FREE

Seven-barrel Gatling cannon shoots large armor- piercing shells at 4,200 rounds per minute

Fuel tanks located away High-mounted enginesavoid from engines reduce fire damage from loose debris on risk unpaved runways BIG GUN,BIG SHELLS Plane's cannon shoots 30-millimeter explosive andarmor-piercing projectiles four times the weight of standard 20-millimeter fighter projectiles; from above, the projectiles can penetrate any tank found on today's battlefield, including the M-1Abrams Standard fIghter round

Standard fighter projectile is only a quarter of the weight of the A-10projectile A-10 round

Projectile can bearmorpiercing or high-explosive

Cartridge case is made of lightweight aluminum instead of heavier brass found onstandard rounds

Source: LosAngeles Times reporting Graphic: Javier Zarracina, Raoul Ranoa, LosAngeles Times

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013

TODAY'S READ: MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION

it taxesset,a e eson oora oan as in ton By Jake Grovum Stateline.org

WASHINGTON — Colorado voters overwhelmingly approved a plan for taxing their state's legal marijuana market earlier this month. And Washington state will start issuing licenses to retailers next month to sell recreational marijuana. Washington and Colorado are setto provide a case study in the debate over legalization. That debate is expected to spread to other state legislatures next year — advocates have identified Rhode Island and Maine as potential targets — and also to foreign countries like Uruguay. It's unlikely the outcome in Colorado or Washington will settle the issue. But both sides agree the stakes are high. "Reformers look at t h ese two states as literally laboratories," said Allen St. Pierre, executive director of NORML, a group that backs marijuana legalization. And if things go well, he said, "This is largely the beginning of the end of cannabis prohibition."

continue to experiment: An annual survey shows 18.7 percent of young adults ages 18 to 25 used marijuana in 2012, compared with 16.1 percent in 2004. Both Colorado and Washington set 21 as the age for le-

gal marijuana use.

Revenue is on e m easure that both sides will be watching closely as a way to evaluate legalization. Estimated income in Washington and Colorado varies widely, from tens of millions of dollars in the first few years to as much as $2 billion in the first half-decade of legalization. The disparity comes, in part, over uncertainty about demand. State officials have been left guessing. Colorado has made Opponents still fighting no official estimate. A study Opponents aren't g i v i ng from the Colorado Center on up. They, too, see the start of Law and Policy projected the legal markets as a t u r ning tax could produce $60 million point, one that will confirm in new revenue and savings warnings about ill effects and annually in the first years of dash promises of new reve- legalization. nues. They plan to highlight W ashington p r edicted a missteps and problems that "fully f u n ctioning" m a r ket arise as legalization becomes could bring in $1.9 billion in a reality. five years, although the state "I don't accept that marijua- isn't counting on those dollars na legalization is inevitable," in future budgets. said David Evans of the Drug The revenue swing could Free A m erica F o undation, ultimately prove crucial to the which opposes legalization. future of legalization and it is "The states that have legalized one reason the stakes were so it are going to serve as an ex- high for the ballot question in ample of what not to do." Colorado on Nov. 5. Already, opponents have seized on anecdotalevidence Tax revenue o f i n creasing u s e a m o ng T he measure o ffered a young people — as chronicled two-tiered tax scheme, as apby The Denver Post, for exam- proved by the legislature. It ple — in the 20 states plus the passed the House 37-27 with District of Columbia that al- solely Democratic support, low medical marijuana. although a handful of RepubSupporters balk at the con- licans backed it in the Senate. nection, saying marijuana use The question fell under Coloamong teens is hardly a new rado's strict anti-tax policies, phenomenon. They also point which requirerevenue-raising to areas where medical mari- proposalsto go before voters, juana businesses exist that ha- who gave it 65 percent support ven't seen new crime waves or this month. other side effects. The approved tax includes Legal or not, young adults a 15 percent assessment on

Photos by Brennan unsley/The Associated Press file

Terry Nelson, a retired federal agent with the organization Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, who supports legalizing drugs, tours the River Rock marijuana dispensary, in Denver, last month. Out-ofstate activists and several foreign lawmakers pushing for drug law reforms at home took a close up look the evolving legal marijuana industry in Colorado last month. Below, a pot plant at River Rock. the wholesale price of retail marijuana, with the first $40 million set aside for education. Then there's a 10 percent sales tax, in addition to the state's 2.9 percent sales tax, with proceeds earmarked for regulation, public health and police activities related to the legal pot market. In Washington state, recreational marijuana was approved last year with 55 percent of the vote. It will be taxed 25 percent three separate times: producer to processor, processor toretailer, and retailer to consumer. The effective tax for consumers ends up being between 35 percent and 45 percent, depending on how many transfers are involved and other variables. Washington's tax was subjected to less public scrutiny than in Colorado since it didn't require a separate vote. The Colorado tax on marijuana passed by a nearly 2-to1 margin in the same election in which voters also easily defeated a $1 billion proposal to increase the state's flat income tax and earmark those dollars for education. The pot tax gained more support than legalization itself saw just a year earlier when it was approved by 55 percent of voters.

Wine Continued from A1 A chemical analysis of residues left in the 3-foot-tall jars detected organic traces of acids that are common components of all wine, as well as ingredients popular in ancient winemaking. These included honey, mint, cinnamon bark, juniper berries an d r e sins used as a preservative. The recipe was similar to medicinal wines used for 2,000 years in ancient Egypt and probably tasted something like retsina or otherresinous Greek wines today. So the archaeologists who have been exploring the Canaanite site, known a s T el Kabri, announced Friday that they had found one of civilization's oldest and largest wine cellars. The storage room held the equivalent of about 3,000 bottles of red and white wines, they said — and they suspected that this was not the palace's only wine cellar.

Eric H. Chne/George Washington Universitytna The New YorkTimes News Sertnce

Zach Dunseth removes debris from wine jars while excavating the ruins of an ancient Canaanite city. The oldest and largest ancient wine cellar, that archaeologists say is 3,600 years old, has been unearthed in northern Israel.

sureoutsidethe storage room. The archaeologists said that much of the palace, including the banquet hall and the wine storage room, had been destroyed 3,600 years ago in some violent event, perhaps "This is a hugely signifi- an earthquake. The wine celcant discovery," Eric Cline, a lar was covered with thick deco-director of the Tel Kabri brisofmud bricks and plaster. excavations, said in a state- That and the fact that no subment issued by George Wash- sequent buildings were erectington University, where he is ed on top of the site has made chairman of the department Tel Kabri an inviting place for of classical and Near Eastern archaeological studies. languages and civilizations. Team members said some "It's a wine cellar that, to our older discoveries had been knowledge, is largely un- made before in t ombs, but matched in its age and size." nothing on the scale of Tel Cline and the other co-di- Kabri. Patrick McGovern of rector, Assaf Yasur-Landau the Museum of Archaeology of the University of Haifa in and Anthropology at the UniIsrael, described their findings versity of Pennsylvania said Friday in Baltimore at the an- he had "reservations about a nual meeting of the American finding for which a detailed Schools ofOriental Research. scientific report has not been Another member of the team, p ublished." He s aid i n a n Andrew Koh of Brandeis Uni- email that "the oldest chemiversity, reported the results of cally confirmed 'wine cellars' the organic residue analysis, are those in the tomb Scorpion emphasizing the quantity of I of Egypt" about 3150 B.C. "If we are making the claim the samples and thoroughness of the testing. The researchers only for ancient Canaan, and had to work quickly to exam- put the emphasis on 'palaine the residues before they be- tial,'" McGovern suggested, came contaminated on expo- "the Kabri might well be the

earliest." M cGovern and o ther r e searchers have been able to re-create ancient wines and beers from the dregs from long-ago tastings. Koh said his group expected to produce a reasonable facsimile of the 1700 B.C. vintage favored by the palace elite in the land of Canaan. In the Middle Bronze Age, from 2000 to 1550 B.C., Canaan was a confederation of city-states, the most important of which seems to have been Hazor, in a region that included what today is Israel, Lebanon, n o rthwestern Jordan and parts of western Syria. At the time, Canaanites were farmers, merchants and early seafarers to Cyprus and the Aegean Islands. These were the centuriespreceding the appearance of the biblical Hebrews. In the biblical narrative, God promised Canaan as a gift to Abraham; some modern scholarshave stirred controversy suggesting that the early Israelites were in fact themselves Canaanites. As for the ancient beverage, thepresence of tartaric acid was "a surefire marker"

L

Had the tax f a iled, legal marijuana potentially would have been subject to only a 2.9 percent sales tax, short-circuiting one of the key arguments

sibly cause a "gray market," in which some drug sellers become tax evaders, depressing revenues from the legal market. "The fact that the governfor legalizing the drug in the first place: revenue. ment set the taxes so high, parThe C o l orado m e a sure adoxically, is going to reduce saw wide support from state the revenue because cheating lawmakers and D emocratic will be widespread," said RobGov. John Hickenlooper, de- ert Corry, Jr., an attorney who spite many of them publicly was involved in the campaign opposing legalization itself. against the m a r ijuana t ax They said the levy fulfilled measure. "The shops will lose the promise of the legalization a lot of the market to the gray campaign a year earlier. market." Colorado allows home-growGray market? ing of as many as six plants, Opponents, however, see while Washington does not, a downside in high tax levleading to more concern about ies that they say could pos- a"gray market" cutting into tax

of grape juice or wine," Koh said in a teleconference briefing with reporters Thursday. Other recognized ingredients were consistent with w i n emaking recipes i n a n cient texts from the ruins of Mari, an early city on the Euphrates River in what is now Syria. "They wrote about the recipes," Cline said, referring to the Mari texts. "Here, for the first time, we believed, we have these crafted wines that verified the recipes beyond shadow of doubt." Thirty-eight of the 40 vessels contained recognizable wine residues. "This wasn't moonshine that someone was brewing in t h eir b asement, eyeballing t he mea s urements," Koh said. "This wine's recipe was strictly followed in each and every jar." The c urrent e x cavations began in 2005. Four years later, archaeologists uncovered spectacularfrescoes from the Aegean islands, and last year they found the banquet halL In July, they started finding one after another of the ceramic jugs in the 15-by-25-foot storage room. Support for the project was provided by the National Geographic Society, the Israel Science Foundation, the Institute for Aegean Prehistory, the Bronfman Philanthropies, George Washington University, Haifa University and private donations. More discoveries may be in the offing. Just days before the archaeologists wrapped up this summer's work, they came upon two doors leading out of the wine cellar where

they had been digging, one to the south, and one to the west. They will have to wait until the next excavation season, in 2015, to find out whether the doors lead to additional storage rooms, possibly with more wine that the Canaanite connoisseurs of the grape never got to swoon over at their goatmeat banquets.

Filibuster

revenue. Other factors: Washington will not allow pot growers to sell directly to consumers, while Colorado will, and Washington is doing away with much of its medical marijuana system, while Colorado's medical market will continue alongside the recreational market. Corry and others said the dual tax system in Colorado could mean the medical marijuana market, which will be taxed much less than the recreational one, could flourish, with recreational marijuana mainly purchased by t o urists and o t her o u t-of-state consumers. Ultimately, it may be the federal government that weighs most heavily on the success or failure of marijuana legalization. It's still not clear, for instance, if the new retailers and customers will be able to use banking servicesrelated to their business. Observerson allsides have b een awaiting w or d f r o m the Justice Department on whether banks and credit card companies will be allowed to process transactions or even keep deposits f ro m t h e se businesses. For now, it's likely even an armored car service contracted to move cash could find itself violating federal law for working with a marijuana business. The broader treatment of marijuana, too, is a wild card. Federal law enforcement officials have said they don't plan to go out of their way to crack down on the new markets in the two states, but it's not clear how much leeway that would ensure,since federal raids on casual users and small-time sellers are already a rarity. Other cautions: It w o u ld only take one incident — not to mention a new administration in Washington — to change that understanding, potentially upsetting any marketplace that's been established. " Until the federal law i s completely clear, I think any prudent marijuana p roducer, even in a state where it's

legal, is going to have some concerns about how v i sible they make t h eir i n dustry," said Jeffrey Miron, a Harvard economist and analyst at the libertarian Cato Institute. "If it's illegal federally, it's really hard for a state to really, in a clean and unambiguous way, try to legalize it."

publicans. Members of both parties have practiced the no-show tactic, but its deployContinued from A1 After falling short on a 52- ment Thursday reminded all 43 Senate vote, Liu withdrew that even a weakened minorih is nomination an d n o w ty retains arrows in its quiver. "The Republicans have serves on the California Supreme Court. More recently, gotten a lot more aggressive Republicansused the 60-vote in f i g hting n o m inations," margin to block three nomi- Wheeler said. Data compiled by Wheeler nees to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Co- shows that judicial vacancies lumbia Circuit. are filled much more slowly Some believe the dimin- in states with one or two Reished filibuster will encour- publican senators; suggestage presidents to nominate ing, he said, that Republican more controversial candi- lawmakers may be "simply dates. For nominees, the rules slow-walking" the nominachange will certainly mean tion process. Richard Painter, a law proquicker approvaL Republicans didn't need the fessor at the University of filibuster, though, to impede Minnesota, cautioned that 10 nominees Thursday morn- Republicans should hesitate ing. The unhappy Republican before they make "too big senators simply ducked a of a stink" over nominees, committee meeting, thereby because of p ublic d isconfrustrating a planned Senate tent with a d y s functional Judiciary Committee vote. Congress. At the same time, No specific controversy Painter, a former chief ethics shadows Los Angeles-based lawyer in President George attorney John Owens or San W. Bush's White House, noted Francisco-based attorney Mi- that old-fashioned deal-makchelle Friedland. Friedland ing can work wonders. "What you can do is say, 'If even clerkedfor former Supreme Court Justice Sandra you want Republican votes on Day O'Connor, a Republican anything else, like a treaty, who showed up for Fried- then talk to us about judges,'" land's confirmation hearing. Painter said. Both were nominated Aug. I A nother p o tential t o o l to the 9th Circuit, which han- for Republicans is the Sendles appeals in nine Western ate Judiciary C ommittee's states. Both sailed through long-standing but still fluid their r e cent c o nfirmation "blue slip" tradition, by which hearings. the committee seeks a goM. Douglas Harpool, a ahead from a state's two senSpringfield, Mo., a t torney ators. Committee chairmen nominated to the bench in decide how much weight to Missouri, and Edward Smith, give the blue slips. an Easton, Pa.-based judge President Barack Obama, proposed fora federal court for instance, nominated atseat in eastern Pennsylvania, large Circuit Judge Alison likewise, appear noncontro- Renee Lee to a Columbia, versial. And Texans Robert S.C.-based federal judgeship Hobbs and Gary Blankinship, in June. South Carolina's two nominated to serve as U.S. Republican senators h ave marshals, have similarly ex- voiced some hesitation about cited no partisan rancor. Lee. No hearing has yet been Nonetheless, the nominees set, though no one is sayare now hostages of the Judi- ing the blue slips are being ciary Committee's eight Re- withheld.


SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

UPDATE: TYPHOON HAIYAN

Pneumonia is atest t reat tostorm- attere P ii ines

• frz ss

esc'

Jes Aznar/ New York Times News Service

A family takes shelter in an abandoned building in Tacloban, Philippines. Torrential rain and a rapid alternation of chilly breezes and sweltering heat have contributed to outbreaks of pneumonia in areas hit by Typhoon Haiyan. By Keith Bradsher New Yoriz Times News Service

TACLOBAN, PhilippinesTwo weeks after Typhoon Haiyan devastated the east-central Philippines, a new problem has emerged: pneumonia. Hundreds of thousands of people have lost their homes and are living under tarpaulins and i n m a keshift huts across Leyte Island and nearby islands. These simple structures are proving no match for torrential rain and a rapid alternation of chilly breezes and sweltering heat. Three Philippines Department of Health officials said in separate interviews Friday that acute respiratory infections, including pneumonia, were the biggest single public health problem to emerge since the typhoon. Concerns about pneumonia came as the National Disaster Risk Reduction Management Council, a Philippines government agency, said the death toll had reached 5,209

by Friday evening. The agen-

TyPhOOn death tOII —The official death toll for Typhoon Haiyan has exceeded5,200, confirming that the devastating storm was one of the Philippines' deadliest ever recorded. With the jump in the numbers of dead Friday, the storm for the

first time officially reachedthelevels of Tropical Storm Thelma, which killed at least 5,000 people in 1991, and the toll from Haiyan is likely to continue to grow. The counting method used is consid-

ered conservative, andgovernment figures also showthat1,611 people are still listed as missing. The death toll has been a contentious issue since the early days

of rescue efforts after the storm, when a high estimate of10,000 dead added to the notion that the government had been caught flat-footed by the typhoon that devastated the central Philippines.

President BenignoAquino III at the time played downreports of the higher possible death toll, suggesting that 2,000 or 2,500 might be more realistic.

Aquino attributed the larger figure to the "emotional trauma"experienced by those providing the estimates. The police official considered responsible for the number was "relieved from his post,"

the official Philippines NewsAgency reported. On Friday evening, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said Haiyan had killed 5,209 people. The

agencycountsonlythosecorpsesthathavebeenloggedbyauthorized officials. That number was up from the 4,011 dead reported by the gov-

ernment Wednesday.Thecouncil reported that 23,404 people were injured by the storm. Most of the deaths from Typhoon Haiyan were recorded on the island of Leyte, included1,725 in its badly dam-

3 British women incaptivi boundby'invi sible handcuffs' By Henry Chu Los Angeles Times

LONDON — It began with an out-of-the-blue phone call to a local charity. What ensued was a staggering tale of decades ofnear-enslavement and physical i n t imidation that Scotland Yard on Friday called unprecedented in its long experience. Three women had apparently been subjected to beatings and brainwashing for 30 years by a couple in their South London home, including one victim who spent her entire life under the couple's control, police said. The other two, a 57-year-old Irishwoman and a 6 9-year-old Malaysian, also were bound by what one officer called "invisible handcuffs" that prevented their escape from complete servitude until last month. The couple were arrested Thursday on suspicion of forced labor and i mmigration offenses,then released on bail. Both suspects are 67 and were arrested at some point in the 1970s, although police declined to disclose on what grounds. The suspects' names and nationalities have not been released. Their alleged victims are "highly traumatized," Scotland Yard said. "We are unpicking a story that spans at least 30 years of these women's lives," Cmdr. Steve Rodhouse said Friday. "The investigation into the arrests yesterday has uncovered something that is so far unique to us, and does not compare to any previous investigations we have carried out." Rodhouse added that the case did not appear to be one of sexual exploitation or human trafficking in the usual sense. "What we have uncovered so far is a complicated and disturbing picture of emotion-

"What we have uncovered so far is a complicated and disturbing picture of emotional control over many years. Brainwashing would be the simplest term, yet that belittles the years of emotional abuse these victims have had to endure." — Scotland Yard Cmdr. Steve Rodhouse al control over many years," h e s a i d . "Brainwashing would be the simplest term, yet that belittles the years of emotional abuse these victims have had to endure." All 37 officers from Scotland Yard's human-trafficking unit were trying to piece together how the three women came under such domination by their alleged captors and how th e situation escaped the notice of outsiders over such a long period. Detective Inspector Kevin Hyland said the women have told of physical abuse in the form of beatings but not sexual assault. A 12-hour search of the South London home where the women had been held has yielded 55 bags of evidence containing 2,500 individual items, Hyland said. Authorities said the break for freedom for th e t h r ee women began Oct. 18, when the Irishwoman contacted a charity after watching a television documentary and said that she and two others had been held against their will for 30 years. Charity w o r kers c a l led police and arranged to meet the women a few days later, officials said. The Briton and the Irishwoman showed up for the meeting and gave their address to the authorities, who then rescued the Malaysian. It was n o t i m m ediately clear why the suspects were not arrested until Thursday,

a month later, but the BBC reported that it was due to the complexity of the investigation and the need to establish the trust and cooperation of the three women. Police said the household may have appeared as a normal family. The women were a pparently a l l owed s o m e " controlled f r eedom," a n d no violence was directed at outsiders. "It is not as brutally obvious as women being physically restrained inside an address and not allowed to leave," Rodhouse said, adding that officers are trying to establish "what were the invisible handcuffs that were used to exert such a degree of control over these women." Hyland said the two suspects had been living in Britain for many years. "We also do not believe the victims were trafficked" into Britain, he said. "At this very early stage, we do not believe that this investigation is linked to any other groups, and ... we do not believe we are looking for other victims." He said that unraveling the full story could take weeks or months. "Specially trained officers are working with the women to try and understand their lives, and what has taken place over the course of the last 30 years," Hyland said. "The very process of explaining what has happened to them is in itself a very traumatizing experience."

Where BuyersAnd Sellers Meet Cl™as's'ifieds .headsullssn.com

aged capital city of Tacloban. On Friday, Manuel Roxas II, the nation's interior secretary, likened the disaster-hit area to a badly injured patient that had stabilized

cy uses aconservative figure for deaths that relies on bod-

enough to bemovedout of the emergency room. "The worst is

ies being found and logged by

The major streets of Taclobanare nowalmost completely cleared of debris, although mayside roads remain snarled. Thegovernment

officials. At a meeting Friday, where representativesof severaldozen domestic and foreign medical groups described the latest health concerns, most were acute respiratory infections, said Dr. Jim Bernadas, the acting chief typhoon health incident officer for Leyte Island, the island in th e archipelago that suffered most of the casualties. He attributed the respiratory infections to the widespread lack of shelter, saying more tents were needed from international donors. The department plans to compile today detailed information on the number of acute r espiratory i n f ections t h a t have been diagnosed and officially reported to authorities, Health Department officials sard.

A7

over," he told a news conference in Manila. said that about half of the total amount of debris has been removed. — New YorkTimes NewsService

living under a tarpaulin," said Dr. Ian Norton, the team leader of the National Critical Care and Trauma Response Center, an A u stralian g o vernment group based in Darwin that

has deployed a full field hospital here complete with operating theaters.

Compounding the problem

is that residents from all walks of life, from doctors to municipal officials, fishermen and manual laborers, lost every garment they owned when their homes were ripped apart by wind, water or both. Donations of used clothing from abroad have barely started to arrive — red and white plastic bags of clothing were being handed out Friday afternoon U.S. aid along Tacloban's coastal road. Dr. Rajiv Shah, the adminMost peoplewear the same istrator of the U.S. Agency for T-shirt and shorts, often borInternational D e v elopment, rowed, for days on end. They said in a telephone interview cannot change when they get from Washington on Friday soaked in the rain, and the that the U.S. government was constant damp here makes it concerned about reports of hard to dry anything. pneumonia i n typ h o on-afShelter has not been a big fectedareas.The agency esti- priority for aid groups, which mates that 1.1 million homes have focused on bringing in were damaged or destroyed food, water and medical supby the typhoon, and Shah said plies first. The result is that better shelter, nutrition and almost all the tarpaulins here clean water were crucial to are scavenged from debris, preventinga further spread of sometimes with holes or rips. acute respiratory infections in Virtually no tents have been the coming months. put up. Shah, a specialist in internal medicine, said the United Worsening health States was donating plastic Pediatric respiratory cases sheeting t o p r o vide b etter that start as coughs and colds protection from the elements quickly worsen in this envifor vulnerable families and ronment and can easily turn had donated food rations for into pneumonia. "It's a sign of the conditions 2.7 million people, including h igh-energy bars that m ay of living — it's raining every help strengthen the immune day," said D ounia D ekhili, systems of children who have the Philippines emergency not been getting enough to eat program directorfor Doctors since the storm. Without Borders, as she stood Foreign medical teams are under an open-sided shelter seeing so many cases that at the group's clinic here and some ofthe smaller ones from watched a cold drizzle falL nongovernmental organizaDoctors Without Borders is tions are running out of antibi- bringing in tents, she said. otics and have to borrow more One ofthe many pneumonia from other c l inics, usually patientshere is Kesha Magasthose set up by governments. on, a 3-year-old who lay shyly "It's the constant rain while in her mother's arms on a bed

at Norton's hospital Friday after barely surviving the previous night. Her mother, Jocelyn Magason, said the storm surge had destroyed their home in Tolosa, a town 10 miles south of Tacloban. The family s urvived t he surging waters by climbing on the roof of their home, with Magason and her h usband passing up each of their four children, ages I to 11. They counted themselves lucky that the sea level rose less in Tolosa, becoming chest-deep in oceanfront low-income neighborhoods like theirs, than here in Tacloban, where it reached 13 to 20 feet. Kesha is asthmatic and be-

gan having trouble breathing four days ago, her mother said. Kesha's condition deteriorated over the next couple of days, and her mother took her to a foreign medical mission.

The g r oup

r e cognized

pneumonia and r ushed the girl Thursday to the Australian hospital, located next to Tacloban airport. "We thought she was going to die that night, and now she is sitting up, looking around with her mum," said Norton, adding that special antibiotics had been used because of the complication of Kesha's asthma. Dr. Frederic Ruckert, a surgeon for International Search and Rescue Germany, a nonprofit group, said in an interview at the group's clinic in Palo, 8 miles south of Tacloban, that w h ile r espiratory infections were a problem, diarrhea had proved less of one than expected. The heavy rain may have washed away contaminants that might otherwise cause diarrhea, he said. A mputations h a v e a l s o been less common here than after some natural disasters, although a few are still occurring. Norton said numerous cases had been referred to the Australian hospital for possible amputation, but only two amputationswere necessary.

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A8 T H E BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013

Ur anites leeChina'ssmog or lue skies Norwegian, 22, By Edward Wong

a home here five years ago.

New York Times News Service

"Some people imagine this place as Greece or Italy or Bali." "Dali is one of the few places in China that still has a close tie to the earth," he added, sitting in front of a table of squashes in his garden courtyard. "A lot of villages in China have become empty shells. Dali is a survivor of this phenomenon." Lin said she first fell in love with Dali when she came as a backpacker in 2006. She returned twice before moving here. In 2010, on the third visit, she and her husband, whom she had met trekking in Yunnan, looked for land to lease to build a hotel on Erhai Lake. It has not all been easy going, Lin said, citing negotiations and misunderstandings with local officials, villagers and

DALI, China — A t y pical morning for Lin Liya, a native of Shanghai transplanted to this ancient town in southwest China, goes like this: See her 3-year-old son off t o s chool near the mountains; go for a half-hour run on the shores of Erhai Lake; and browse the local market for fresh vegetables andmeat. She finished her run one morning b eneath c l oudless blue skies and sat down with a visitor from Beijing in the lakeside boutique hotel started by her and her husband. "I think luxury is sunshine, good air and good water," she said. "But in the big city, you can't get those things." More than two years ago, Lin, 34, and her husband gave up comfortable careers in the booming southern city of Guangzhou — she at a Norwegian r i s k man a gement company, he at an advertising firm that he had founded — to join the growing number of urbanites who have decamped to rural China. One resident here calls them "environmental refugees" or "environmental immigrants."

Gilles Sabrie/ New YorkTimes NewsService

Lin Liya, who with her husband gave up a career in the city to start a boutique hotel ln the country, stretches by Erhai Lake, near Dali, China. At a time when hundreds of millions of Chinese are leaving the land to find work in the cities, some urban dwellers are escaplng the pollution, crowds and stress for small town life.

employees.

with lung cancer, the youngest such victim in China. Her doctor blamed air pollution. The urban refugees come from all walks of life — businesspeople to artists, teachers to chefs — although there is no reliable estimate of their numbers. They have staked out greener lives in small enclaves, from central Anhui province to remote Tibet. Many are Chinese "bobos," or bourgeois boGoing the other way hemians, and they say besides At a time when hundreds of escaping pollution and filth, millions of Chinese, many of they want to be unshackled them poorfarmers, are leaving from the material drives of the their country homesteads to cities — what Lin derided as a find work and tap into the en- focus on "what you're wearing, ergy of China's dynamic cities, where you're eating, compara small number of urban dwell- ing yourself with others." ers have decided to make a reThe town of Dali in Yunnan verse migration. Their change province, nestled between a in lifestyle speaks volumes wall of 13,000-foot mountains about anxieties over pollution, and one of C h ina's largest traffic, living costs, property freshwaterlakes,is a popular values and thegeneral stress destination. Increasingly, the found in China's biggest coastal indigenous ethnic Bai people metropolises. of the area are leasing their Take air quality: Levels of village homes to ethnic Han, fine particulate matter in some the dominant group in China, Chinese cities reach 40 times who turn up with suitcases and the recommended exposure backpacks. They come with limit set by the World Health one-way tickets from places Organization. This month, an like Beijing, Shanghai, Guangofficial Chinese news report z hou and Shenzhen, all o f said an 8-year-old girl near which have roaring economies Shanghai wa s h o spitalized but also populations of 15 mil-

lion people or more. O n Internet f orums, t h e new arrivals to Dali discuss how to rent a house, where to shop, how to make a living and what schools are best for their children. Their presence is everywhere in the cobblestone streets of the old town. They run cafes, hotels and bookstores,and the younger ones sit on the streets selling trinkets from blankets. Some become farmers here, and some spend their days home schooling their children. Their p resence has t r ansformed Dali and surrounding villages into a cross between Provence and Haight-Ashbury.

"We just wanted to switch to a different life," said Lin, who had lived in Shanghai as well as Guangzhou. "My friends in

Lakeside villages

ing, a photographer, flies back

One magnet is the village of Shuanglang, which became a draw after the famous Yunnan natives Yang Liping, a dancer, and Zhao Qing, an artist, built homes there. As at other lakeside villages, the immigrants, some with i mmense wealth, live near fishermen and farmers. "All kinds of people come here with different dreams," said Ye Yongqing, 55, an ethnic Bai artist from the region who has lived mostly in cities, including London, but bought

Shanghai are struggling there — not only in their work but also just to live. The prices are too high, even higher than in Europe. They become crazy, go mad." Lin moved here less than two years after givingbirth to a son. "It's good for the baby because it's like m y m o ther's childhood," she s a id. "My mother's childhood in Shanghai — the air was still clean, you couldsee blue skies,there was clean water." From the nearby lakeside village of Caicun, Huang Xiaolto Beijing to shoot portraits and events for clients. She had once lived in a courtyard home in the Chinese capital but fled in September withher 3-year-old son and husband, an American who works remotely as a technology director for a New York

publishing company.

"I'm still p roductive even though I don't go into an office," she said. "I don't know if it's the weather and the environment, or just me feeling that, 'Oh, I got out of the cave that I wanted to

escape.™

crowned world chess champion For his v ictory, Carlsen will receive 60 percent of the M agnus C a r lsen, th e roughly $2.5 million prize 22-year-old Norwegian who fund, although the W orld has been the most dominant Chess Federation, which orchess player since 2010, final- ganizes the championship, ly broke through Friday to would not be more specific. win the game's most importIt was Carlsen's first time ant title, the world champion- to make the world champiship, for the first time. onship finals, and he said he He defeated Viswanathan was nervous going in because Anand, 43, of India, the ti- Anand had won the title four tleholder since 2007, and he times, back to back, in 2007, did not lose a game in the 2008, 2010 and 2012. best-of-12 series, which was Carlsen said he realized he held in Anand's hometown, had a chance to grab the title Chennai. Carlsen so domi- from Anand during Game 3 nated the match, which began on Nov. 12. Nov. 9, that it lasted only 10 Anand had built up a congames, with Carlsen winning s iderable a dvantage, b u t three and the others ending in Carlsen fought his way back, draws. and the game ended in a The championship has long draw. "What I r ealized during been dominated by players from Russia and, before that, the game was that he was the Soviet Union. Carlsen is also nervous and vulnerable," only the second player from Carlsen said after he won the the West to become champion title. "He was no Superman." since World War II, and the British GQ ra n a s t ory first since Bobby Fischer, the about the match in the same eccentric American who held issue containing a photo feathe title from 1972 to 1975. ture on the Victoria's Secret C arlsen ha s b e e n t h e lingerie show in New York. world's top-ranked p layer The surprised editors postalmost continually since Jan- ed on Twitter, "So this story uary 2010, and his current about ¹chess i s c u rrently rating, the system used to more popular on the site than compute the rankings, is the our 100 shots of Victoria's Sehighest in history. cret models." He has not achieved the There is hope in the chess level of celebrity that Fischer, world that with Carlsen as the who died in 2008, enjoyed. game's official standard-bearBut Carlsen has been some- er, it will regain the cachet it thing of a star since he was 13, briefly enjoyed after Fischwhen he became one of the er's victory. Carlsen seems youngest grandmasters ever, to be aware of that pressure. and he has won attention both In the news conference afinside and outside the chess ter the match, he was wary world because of his youth when asked if chess could and his looks. He is frequently have other than niche apfeatured in magazines that do peal, given the interest in the not caterto chessplayers and championship. is a favorite of television interHis answer was modest, viewers. He is also a model for "I know a lot of people who the clothing company G-Star don't play chess found it very Raw. interesting to follow."

By Dylan Loeb Mcclain

New York Times News Service

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© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2013

STATE NEWS

Salem

• Salem:The Oregon Department of Forestry had a busy year. So much so, it's seeking funding to cover costs.B3 • Salem:Members ofthe Legislature

contemplate the legalization of marijuana.B5

EVENT CALENDAR

TODAY BOOKSALE:Hosted by the United Senior Citizens of Bend;10a.m.-2 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E Fifth St.; 541-323-3344. SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!:Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11 a.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. LI.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. THANKSGIVINGFOOD FAIRE:A pop-up market for local food for Thanksgiving; order turkeys online; free admission; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; Central Oregon Locavore, 1216 N.E First St., Bend; 541633-7388 or www. centraloregonlocavore. Ol'g.

AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Boston novelists Lisa Borders, author of "The Fifty-First State," and Ron MacLean, author of "Headlong," read from their novels; free; 2 p.m.; Dudley's Bookshop Cafe, 135 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-749-2010 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. COLLEGECHOIR AND VOCALJAZZENSEMBLE CONCERTS:Featuring contemporary pieces, folk songs and vocal pop; $5 at the door; 2 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7512. JAZZ ATTHEOXFORD: Featuring King Louie's Portland Blues Review with LisaM annand Andy Stokes; SOLDOUT;5 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436 or www.jazzattheoxford. com. QUOTA INTERNATIONAL HOLIDAYDINNERII AUCTION:Featuring a reception, dinner and silent and live auctions; $45 per person, registration requested; 5:30 p.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-815-5664 or www. quotaofcentraloregon. ol'g. REMEMBRANCEOF CHRISTIAN FA'UHIVA BENEFIT:Featuring Hokulea Ohana Hula Dancers, Amphibeus Tungs and Kingz Ambassadors; $5; 5:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. BENEFIT CONCERT: Featuring Rand Berke, Noelle Bangert, Solomon and Seth and Loose Gravel; proceeds benefitthe "Feed the Hungry" program; $5 suggested donation; 7-10 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, I036 N.E Fifth St.; 541-390-0921 or www. bendscommunitycenter. OI g.

HOUSECONCERT: Featuring Montana

REDMOND

ro ram ein cance e is ear By Leslie Pugmire Hole The Bulletin

Redmond's eight-year experience with the International Baccalaureate Program ends this year, Superintendent Mike McIntosh announced this week. Declining enrollment and consistently high expenses led to the decision, which some viewed with relief. "I've been criticized for taking so long to make this decision, but there is also a heaviness in my heart that we can't continue to offer this incredible program," he said. Five seniors are in line to graduate with an IB diploma from Redmond High School this spring, while only one current junior has been working toward that goal, according to McIntosh. Under the IB system, which was developed in the 1970s as a college preparatory program forthe children of U.S. diplomats, students can take either individual IB courses or a full menu that leads to a hard-won diploma. Redmond High has been offering both choices. When the decision was made to keep the IB program at Redmond High when Ridgeview High School opened two years ago, IB came

under fire for providing very much to very few. Nonetheless, the district opted to keep IB at Redmond

High. Regarding what has changed, McIntosh says

"No one wanted to throw anyone under the bus, but there was a lot of emotion around the fact that some teachers felt frustration that they were facing the challenge of teaching these large classes, while IB teachers had only a few." — Mike Mclntosh, Redmond School District superintendent

simply, "I'm superintendent now." In his second year as leader of the district, McIntosh said as difficult as the decision to discontinue the program was, he felt it was the only one. "Since its inception, IB has always had more expenditures than the budget planned for and we deliberately allowed time for that to rectify itself," he said. But the challenging

high-profile program never

drew the numbers hoped for when it began in 2006. In the years since, Bend — originally a partner in the plan to open a regional IB schoolstarted its own program, and Redmond Proficiency Academy opened; students looking for a new academic environment had more choices. Today, many of the IB classes at Redmond High have as few as six to eight students, while classes across the hall in a math or English class could have as many as 30 to 40 children. "No one wanted to throw anyone under the bus, but

there was a lot of emotion around the fact that some teachers felt frustration that they were facing the challenge of teaching these large classes, while IB teachers had only a few," said Mclntosh. Redmond High has nine IB-certified teachers, a distinction that is expensive to maintain, with regular costly trainings required to remain a certified IB program. Program dues alone cost the district $10,400 annually, in addition to the equivalent of a full-time coordinator, an expense that costs the district about $90,000 a year. Three IB-certified teachers share that role, including Chad Lowe, who has been with the program since its inception. "When MYP (an IB feeder

program for grades 6 to 8 that the district discontinued a few years ago) ended, it made it difficult to get word out to younger students, and help them decide if they thought they could be successful," said Lowe. SeeRedmond/B5

ae rouse Ie OIt OLIt Or I'eVIeW By Rachael Rees The Bulletin

In an effort to conserve the greater sage grouse, the Bureau of Land Management issued a draft environmental report Friday on land use in Oregon. The draft, open now for a 90-day comment period, contains six alternatives for maintaining and increasing habitat for sage grouse on BLM-administered lands. These options range from no action, to analyzing different management plans proposed by conservation

groups, to modifying recommendations from the National Technical Team report. That 2011 study was conducted to ensure BLM actions were effectively conserving and restoring the greater sage grouse and its habitat. The greater sage grouse population has declined over the years because of the loss of their sagebrush habitat, according to the BLM website. Because of a court order, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has until 2015 todecide ifsage grouse should be listed under the Endangered Species Act. SeeGrouse /B5

PUBLIC OFFICIALS U.S. SENATE • SEN. JEFF MERKLEY, D-ORE. 107 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICEBUILDING WASHINGTON, D.C. 20510 PHONE: 202-224-3753 WEB:http://rnrkkly. senate.gov BENDOFFICE: 131 N.W. HAWTHORNE AVE., SUITE208 BEND, OR97701 PHONE: 541-318-1298 • SEN. RON WYDEN, D-ORE. 223 DIRKSENSENATE OFFICEBUILDING WASHINGTON, D.C. 20510 PHONE: 202-224-5244 WEB:http://wyden. senate.gov BENDOFFICE: 131 N.W. HAWTHORNE AVE., SUITE107 BEND, OR 97701 PHONE: 541-330-9142 U.S. HOUSEOF REPRESENTATIVES • REP.GREGWALDEN, R-HOODRIVER 2182 RAYBURN HOUSE OFFICEBUILDING WASHINGTON, D.C. 20515 PHONE: 202-225-6730 WEB:http://walden. house.gov BENDOFFICE: 1051 N.W. BOND ST., SUITE400 BEND, OR 97701 PHONE: 541-389-4408 FAX:541-389-4452 STATE •GOV.JOHN KITZHABER, D 180 STATE CAPITOL, 900 COURT ST. SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE: 503-378-4582 FAX:503-378-6872 WEB:http://governor. oregon.gov • SECRETARY OFSTATE KATEBROWN, D 136 STATE CAPITOL SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE: 503-986-1616 FAX:503-986-1616 EMAIL:oregon.sos© state.or.us •TREASURERTED WHEELER,D 159 OREGON STATE CAPITOL 900 COURT ST. N.E. SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE: 503-378-4329 EMAIL:oregon. treasurer©state.or.us WEB:www.ost.state. QI'.Us

en artistwor sto ee iscra t inetic — an evovin Meet John Hughes, a retired cabinet maker and artist who has lived in Bend for 30 years. Over the last decade, he has turned his home and yard into a work of art. Hughes' folk-art installation is ever-changing, ever-moving — a kinetic work in progress. See more photos on B2.

1:. F

Dean Guernsey/ The Bulletin

mandolin player Tom Murphy, with Mai and Dave; $10, reservations requested; 7 p.m.; Runway Ranch, 22655 Peacock Lane, Bend; dehle@bendcable. com or www.hadbf.com. IMPROV COMEDY NIGHT:Audienceengaging entertainment with local theatrical group Triage; $8 in advance,$12 atthe door, dinner available for separate purchase; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E Reed Market Road; 541-388-1133 or www.bendimprov.com. "THE GAME'SAFOOT; OR HOLMES FORTHE HOLIDAYS":A1936 whodunit about a Broadway star noted for playing Sherlock Holmes

solving one of his guests' death; $19, $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. JAZZ ATTHEOXFORD: Featuring King Louie's Portland Blues Review with Lisa Mann and Andy Stokes; SOLDOUT;8:15 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436 or www.jazzattheoxford. com. PHUTUREPRIMITIVE: The rave-pop band performs, with Pumpkin, Medium Troy and DJ Lyfe; $15; 9 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329 or www.facebook.com/

slipmatscience.

SUNDAY SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!:Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. "ANGELSSING": A screening of the Christmas movie, with an ugly Christmas sweater contest, photos with Santa and a movie memorabilia raffle; proceeds benefit the Ronald McDonald House Charities of Central Oregon; $10; 2 p.m., 3 p.m. movie;

McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-318-4950 or www. rmhcofcentraloregon. Ol'g.

"THE GAME'SAFOOT; OR HOLMES FORTHE HOLIDAYS":A 1936 whodunit about a Broadway star noted for playing Sherlock Holmes solving one of his guests' death; $19, $15 seniors, $12 students; 2 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org.

MONDAY SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!:Learn entertaining information

about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11 a.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. "HENDRIX70: LIVE AT WOODSTOCK": A screening of Jimi Hendrix's performance at Woodstock; $12 general admission, $48 club pass, plus fees; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. "REACHINGFORTHE MOON":A screening of the award-winning film presented by LGBT Stars and Rainbows; $5, reservations requested; 7 p.m.; Volcanic

•ATTORNEYGENERAL ELLEN ROSENBLUM, D 1162 COURT ST. N.E. SALEM, OR97301 PHONE: 503-378-4400 FAX:503-378-40 I7 WEB:www.doj.state. OI'.us

•LABOR COMMISSIONER BRADAVAKIAN 800 N.E. OREGON ST., SUITE 1045 PORTLAND, OR 97232 PHONE: 97 I-673-0761 FAX:971-673-0762 EMAIL:boli.mail@state. or:us WEB:www.oregon. gov/boii

SENATE • SEN. TED FERRIOLI, R-DISTRICT30 (JEFFERSON,PORTION OFDESCHUTES) 900 COURT ST. N.E., S-323 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE: 503-986-1950 EMAIL:sen.tedierrioli@ state.or.us • SEN. TIMKNOPP, R-DISTRICT27 (PORTIONOF DESCHUTES) 900 COURT ST. N.E., S-423 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE: 503-986-1727 EMAIL:sen.timknopp© state.or.us

Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. highdesertmuseum.org. Century Drive, Bend; SCIENCEPARTY: 541-323-1881 or www. ELECTRICITY!:Learn volcanictheatrepub.com. entertaining information "DOCTOR WHO:THE about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for DAY OFTHEDOCTOR IN 3-D":A screening of nonmembers; 1:30 the sci-fi series'50th p.m.; High Desert anniversary special; $15; Museum, 59800 S. 7:30 p.m. and 10 p.m.; U.S. Highway 97, Bend; Regal Old Mill Stadium 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, "VALHALLA":A Bend; 541-312-2901. screening of the adventure ski film drama for LGBT Movie TUESDAY Night; tickets available at The Plankery; $12 SCIENCEPARTY: in advance, $14 at the ELECTRICITY!:Learn entertaining information door; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Volcanic about electricity; $3 Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. for members, $5 for Century Drive, Bend; nonmembers; 11 541-323-1881 or www. a.m.; High Desert volcanictheatrepub. Museum, 59800 S. com. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. SeeCalendar /B3


B2 T H E BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013

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John Hughes, a Bend artist, incorporates everyday objects into the folk art display outside his home. Many of the pieces feature bicycle parts, which twirl in the breeze. But other materials are repurposed, too.Futon frames become fences; sprockets, chains and spokes come together in his sculpture garden. It's a style he calls Re:Cycleart. Photos by DeanGuernsey • The Bulletin C--

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SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

After bee O FBS S88 S deaths, OCOVer ire i pesticides restricted The Associated Press SALEM — T h e Or e g on Department o f A g r i culture is restricting two pesticides implicated in bee die-offs this summer in W i lsonville and Hillsboro. Products that contain the t wo ingredients will b e r e quired to carry Oregon-specific labels, and the department is asking the Environmental P r otection A g ency if national r estrictions are needed. In June, about 50,000 bumblebees were found dead and

dying in a Target parking lot in Wilsonville under linden trees that had been sprayed. Hundreds of bees were found dead days later in downtown Hillsboro. Because of t h at, d epartment Director Katy Coba told state legislators Thursday, the pesticides will not be allowed to be applied to linden and basswood trees or other members of their genus, Tilia.

AROUND THE STATE Air adviSOry —Much ofnortheast and north central Oregon is under an air pollution stagnation advisory from the Oregon Department

of Environmental Quality. Theagency issuedthe advisory becauseof stagnant air conditions and increasingly high levels of air pollution. It's in effect through Monday afternoon for the Lower Columbia Basin,

including Pendleton, Hermiston, the foothills of the BlueMountains and the Columbia River Gorge east of The Dalles. The agency asked people in the areas to halt open burning and limit use of uncertified wood

stoves, aswell asdriving and idling of vehicles.

By Jeff Barnard

policy, the department was The Associated Press 'You can still have still $40 million short, accordGRANTS PASS — After ing to documents submitted to some slower years, going through a record $122 the Legislature. million fighting big wildfires but over the long The stateemergency fund this year, the Oregon Depart- term you see a trend only has $30 million, so the ment of Forestry is asking the ... which makes Natural Resources SubcomLegislature for an extra $40 mittee of the Joint Ways and million to cover its 2013 costs it very difficult to Means Committee recomas well as greater spending budget for these mended deferring the allocaauthority next year. tion decision to the full Legthings." The issue was taken up islature, which convenes in — Dan Postrel, February. The subcommittee Friday by th e L egislature's Emergency Board in Salem, forestry department alsorecommended increasing which handles spending when spokesman the department's spending authe full Legislature is not in thority for next year by $124 session. million, $12 million less than The department expects the department sought. wildfire spending to continue average. Postrel said the department increasing as climate change The total was 162 square ran through its normal spendpresses a trend of more and miles on state, private and ing authority for two years in bigger wildfires nationwide, U.S. Bureau of Land Manage- just one, and needed the insaid department spokesman ment lands protected by the crease to be able to pay for opDan Postrel. Oregon department. erations next year. "It is not a predictable proOregon spent $122 million A r eport f r o m C l i mate gression," said PostreL "You on large fires this year, far Central Research in Princcan still have some slow- more than recentyears. Ris- eton, N.J., submitted to the er years, but over the long ing costsare driven by greater subcommittee, noted that $1.5 term you see a trend ... which reliance on expensive technol- billion has been spent fightmakes it very difficult to bud- ogy, such as air tankers and ing wildfires in Oregon since get for these things." helicopters, as well as more 2000. The figure includes state Lightning a n d dr o u ght and bigger fires, Postrel said. and federal spending. Oregon s pread w i ldfire t o mo r e After federal r eimburse- is second only to California state-protected land this year ments, $10 million from priin average annual wildfire than any year since 1951vate landowners, and $25 mil- spending a m ong w e stern and eight times the 10-year lion from a special insurance states.

Warm Springs murder plea — Oneof two womenaccused of beating another womanto death onthe Warm Springs Indian Reservation pleaded guilty Thursday to first-degree murder. Twenty-one-yearold Tana Lawrence faces up to life in prison when she is sentenced in

March in federal court in Portland. Theother womanaccused in the killing, 26-year-old Angeledith Smith, is scheduled for trial Feb. f 8. Prosecutors claim the pair beat Faron Kalama to death in September

2012 on thereservation in north-central Oregon, becausethey believed she had been sleeping with Smith's husband and Lawrence's boyfriend.

Squad dlasts suspicious driefcase —Astate police bomb squad with a robot-mounted shotgun has destroyed a suspicious briefcase at a North Bend boat ramp. Investigators later said they found it

contained apropanecamp stove that didn't work. They're speculating a transient may have intended to dispose of it by putting it atop a trash bin. Detective Jon Bohanan says authorities are on heightened alert in

the wake oftwo incidents in Coos Baythis year. In one, abombwent off at a veterans memorial. In the other, a bomb was found at a fire in a

public chapel. Jail-herain SCheme —A Medford womanwho admitted paying a nurse $500 to get heroin to her jailed boyfriend has been sentenced to

20 days behind bars. JadePowell, 26, hastwo young children. Court documents allege her boyfriend, 25-year-old Andrew Caucutt, arranged for Powell to pass a"gumball-sized" piece of heroin and $500 to the

nurse, who workedfor a jail contractor. The documents state Caucutt got the heroin in October. Powell pleaded guilty Thursday. Caucutt has been released on $50,000 bail and faces trial on heroin and contraband

charges. Thenurse, 45-year-old Camilla Pierce, of EaglePoint, has pleaded not guilty to heroin and contraband charges.

Salem seagull —A pesky seagull that became anuisance ata Salem office building picked a good time to move on. The bird disappeared on its own this week before wildlife officials could carry out a

plan to euthanize it. Thegull had repeatedly pecked atthe front door of a real estate business. The bird also tore at the welcome mat and land-

ed on nearbycars.

Calendar Continued from Bl OREGON ENCYCLOPEDIA HISTORY NIGHT:Featuring "The Great Depression in Bend: Lumber, Public Work Relief, and a Hooverville Jungle"; free; 7 p.m., doorsopen at6 p.m .;McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com.

WEDNESDAY SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 1 f a.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org.

THURSDAY CENTRAL OREGON THANKSGIVINGCLASSIC: Featuring a 5K and 10K run; race starts and finishes behind the amphitheater stage; proceeds

benefit Girls on the Run, an affiliate program of Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Oregon; $25 for the f OK, $20 for the 5K, $1 0for the Gobbler's Walk; 9 a.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www. deschutescountygotr.org. I LIKE PIE THANKSGIVINGDAY FUN WALK/RUN:Run or walk 2K, 5K, 10K or10 miles and eat pie; with a baking contest; online registration closes Nov. 25; $5 donation and five cans of food for Neighborlmpact, registration requested; 9 a.m., shirt pickup and registration at 8 a.m.; Riverfront Plaza, 875 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-749-0540 or www. footzonebend.com. THANKSGIVINGDINNER: A traditional Thanksgiving dinner will be served; $10 per person, $5 for children ages 10 and younger, reservations requested; 3 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1836 S.W. Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-548-4108.

FRIDAY RAKU POTTERYSHOWANDSALE: Featuring works by local potters of

the Raku artists of Central Oregon; free admission; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-610-5684. SANTA LAND ATTHE OLDMILL DISTRICT:Take a photo with Santa; free, additional cost for take home photos; f 1 a.m.-5 p.m.; Santa Land, 330 S.W. Powerhouse Drive in the Old Mill District, Bend; 54 I-312-013 I. SCIENCEPARTY, ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11 a.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. LI.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. WONDERLANDEXPRESS AUCTION:A silent auction of unique creations; proceeds benefit Wonderland Express'annual event; free admission; f1:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.; Sunriver Resort Great Hall, 17600 Center Drive; 541-593-4405 or www.wonderlandexpress.com. SCIENCE PARTY:ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.

highdesertmuseum.org. CARRIAGE RIDESINTHE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben & Jerry's and Francesca's; tips and donations benefit the Kids Center; weather dependent; donations accepted;2-5 p.m.;Ben 8 Jerry's, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CIVIL INARFOOTBALL FUNDRAISER:Watch the University of Oregon and Oregon State play on three big-screen tvs, with a silent auction; proceeds benefit Chimps Inc; $55, $650 for corporate table, reservations requested; 4 p.m., gates open at 3 p.m.; Hooker Creek Ranch, Chimps Inc. Sanctuary, 5525 GerkinMarke g tRoad,Bend; 541-410-4f22 or www.chimps-inc. org. CIVIL WARFUNDRAISER:Watch Oregon State University and the University of Oregon football teams play; playroom for youngsters; proceeds benefit New Generations Early Childhood Development Center; $f0, $7 children ages 7-17, free children ages 6 and younger; 4 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-685-3147.

Tax fraud —The U.S.attorney's office says a Clackamas man who filed false claims seeking $1.9 million in fraudulent federal income tax

refunds hasbeensentenced to four years in federal prison. A Portland jury convicted Miles Julison in August on two counts of filing false claims. He was sentenced Wednesday. Evidence at trial showed the

man sought the dramatic refunds in tax returns for 2007 and2008. Prosecutors said he actually paid no federal income taxes in those years. On his 2007 return, he claimed a refund of nearly $412,000 and

got a refund check.Thegovernment said he spent it to buy a Mercedes-Benz sedan,payoffhismortgageandmakepaymentsonaski boat, an SUV and snowmobiles. By the time he sought a $1.5 million

refund for 2008, hewas already under investigation.

Culumdia RiVer bridge reOpenS — Thesouthbound lanesof Interstate 5 across theColumbia River bridge havereopened. TheOregon Department of Transportation said crews worked through Thursday night to remove a span roller that failed. The southbound lanes

reopened to traffic at 4:20 a.m. Friday.Thebridgewas undergoing routine maintenance late Thursday when it failed to completely close. The northbound span of the bridge remained open to normal traffic.

Southbound traffic from Washington state wasrouted into Oregon on Interstate 205. — From wire reports

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POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 54 I-383-0358.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT DUu —Keith Brian Martin, 36, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:53 p.m. Nov. 18, in the area of Southwest Hill Street and Southwest Wilson Avenue. DUII —Jacob Henry Berado, 29, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:29 p.m. Nov. 20, in the area of Northwest Columbia Street and Northwest Nashville Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at12:02 p.m. Nov. 20, in the1800 block of Northeast Yellowstone Lane. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at12:16 p.m. Nov. 20, in the 2600 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at12:59 p.m. Nov. 20, in the 2600 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at1 p.m. Nov. 20, in the 2600 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. DUII —Jon Josef Lassan, 49, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:26 p.m. Nov. 20, in the area of Northeast Second Street and Northeast Franklin Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 9:24 a.m. Nov. 21, in the 21200 block of Keyte Road. Unauthorized ttse —A vehicle was reported stolen at11:46 a.m. Nov. 20, inthe20200 blockofReed Lane.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Crlmlnal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at1:28 p.m. Nov. 21, in the area of Northeast Third Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:04 p.m. Nov. 21, in the Northeast Third Street.

OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —Nicholas Chance Thompson, 21, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:26 a.m. Nov. 22, in the area of Third Street andNortheast Underwood Avenue inBend.

BEND FIRE RUNS Tuesday 4 p.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 60375 Corral Road. 25 —Medical aid calls. Wednesday 16 —Medical aid calls.

CIVIL SUITS Filed on Aug. 22 13CV1285 — Tisha Woodard v.Jana M. VanAmburg, M.D., (fka Jaderborg), Lauren O'Sullivan,D.O.and St. Charles Health SystemInc., dbaSt. Charles Medical Center, complaint, $203,329.45 Filed Aug. 23 13CV1286 —MichaelandNatalee Turner v.BearMountain FireLLC, complaint, at least316,000 Filed Aug. 26 13CV1291 — TheSunriver Owners Association v.Sunriver Vacation RecreationAssociation LLC,complaint, $13,834.38 13CV1292 —RBSCitizen N.A.v. Franklin D. Callfas, complaint, $81,599.96

Filed Aug. 27 13CV1293 — Association of Unit Owners of The Inn ofthe SeventhMountain v. Pamela G.Starr andRobert A. Fravel, complaint, $34,019.71pluscontinuing assessments ,costsandfees 13CV1295 — RandyAlbright v. Daniel N. Zook, complaint, 8100,000 Filed Aug. 28 13CV1297 —Sherry Thrasher v. Ambrose K.Su,DPM,PatrickJ.Evoy, DPM, CascadeFoot Clinic LLC,Jeffrey A. HolmboeM.D.,Jon N. Swift Jr., D.O. and the Neuromusculoskeletal Center of the CascadesP.C.,dbaThe CenterOrthopedics andNeurosurgical Careand Research, complaint, $1,365,000 Filed Aug. 29 13CV1298 —Capital OneBankv. Richard Waible, ImberCreekRET., complaint, $15,562.89 13CV1300 —Sobeeth Inc.v. Pure Bliss LLC, TobyBunce, AmyBunce, Kristie Wilson andKadeWilson, complaint, 382,777.66 13CV1301 —MindyWilson v. Marcus Muffley, complaint, $42,571.76 13CV1302 — Austin S. Morris v. Linghong Zeng,complaint,$675,972.02 Filed Sept. 3 13CV1305 —Gary D.Scoles v.Mike's Mobile Mix Concrete, dbaMike's Mobile Mix, and ChadGroves, complaint, $250,000 13CV1306 —JanaeL. McMaster v. Barbara L.Jaques,complaint, at least $100,000 13CV1307 —Jason MacNeil v. Don P. Davis, RobertW. Decker,Sundance Water Sports Club and Russell J. Brewer, complaint, $801,675.92 13CV1308 —PaulSpradlin v. Northwest PremierFoodsLLCdba Di Lusso BakeryCafe,complaint, $ I52,987.29 13CV1309 —MercedesMezav. Robert W. Berger,complaint, $85,000 Filed Sept. 4 13CV1311 —BryanFarrar, guardian ad litem for JaydenFarrar, aminor child, v. Derek LeeLuther, complaint, $120,000

w8679 lim i ted quanfities

HNsoN TV.APPLIANCE

Filed Sept. 6 13CV1313 — Sheila Hitev.Hailey O'Neil, complaint, $32,170 Filed Sept. 9 13CV1314 — David R.Bementand Lynne Bement v. St. Charles Health System Inc.,complaint, atleast $1,000,000 Filed Sept. 10 13CV1315 — CaseyN.Gardner v. Christine Jones,Jared Glassburnand State FarmMutual Automobile Insurance Company, complaint,$105,524.45 13CV1316 — Tiffany B. Fraser v. Joseph A. Taormina,complaint, $133,300.65 13CV1317 —Wiliam Hunt v. David Hunt, individually andassuccessor trustee of the AudreyNorvell HuntRevocable Living Trust, complaint, $50,000 Filed Sept. 11

13CV1319 — Discover Bankv. Jeffrey H. Wilmot, complaint, $13,22548 13CV1320 — Grant Mcluskie v. Bend Cable CommunicationsLLCandHerb Oakes,complaint, $816,000 Filed Sept. 12

13CV1322 —RhondaNicoll v. Cathleen Rose, complaint, $677018.36 13CV1323 —Ltt WSupply Corporation v. Michael P. Vineyard, asan individual and dbaMichael Vineyard Drywall, complaint, $16,449.20 13CV1326 —Portfolio Recovery Associ atesLLCv.BrentNewman, complaint, $15,528n2 13CV1327— DickinsonFinancialLLCv. Krista E Cooper,complaint, $7,593.71 13CV1328 —KelleeN.Antalek v.Harry Pollard, akaRainforest StudiosakaRue Morgue, complaint, $1,500,000 Filed Sept. 13 13CV1329 —StaceyLopezv. Randall

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Mahaney, complaint,$25,000 Filed Sept. 18 13CV1331 —RayKlein Inc., dba ProfessionalCredit Service, v.Michelle L. Savage,complaint, $10,324.79

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43,000-acre Gilchrist State Forest.

The Oregon Department of Forestry has $10.2 million in funding lined up — $1.98 million in Oregon Lottery-backed bonds, $3 million from the federal Forest Legacy grant and

the trees on the Gilchrist State Forest are mature enough for any kind of sustainable logging effort. And once they are, will the state be able to cut any down? $5.2 million in bonds approved by It's very difficult to log for profit or the Legislature in 2013. thin for public safety. It's likely, though, to be a poor It's the rare exception that a timber investment. sale goes through without lawsuits The Oregon Department of For- or other challenges that reshape the estry ticks off a regiment of reasons sale or stop it. It's hard to argue that why the state forest should grow. logging or thinning is getting easier. Central Oregon forests are at risk A state forest i s n o t l ess i m of being fragmented into smaller mune. Arguably, it could face more parcels. That hurts wildlife. It could difficulty. c omplicate fire protection. And i t There are indeed other advantages means the land could be lost as a to consolidating the land. But the Deworking forest. Buying the land would preserve partment of Forestry's polite market"public access to recreation opportu- ing arm-twist for the purchase needs nities. And, in time, a working state- a disclaimer. There is no easy path owned forest will provide a steady through this wood. Without changes stream of revenue to local counties," at the federal and state level in forest the department says. policy, nobody should get the impression that it's going to be much of a Oh, really? It's going to be many years before working forest.

Digital travel agencies take hotel tax to court nline travel agencies, among them Hotels.com and Orbitz, are suing the state of Oregon. Their beef? Lawmakers earlier this year adopted legislation that applies local and state transient room taxes to the full price of a room purchased by a consumer. That can be money out of the travel sites' pockets, and they're not happy about it. Online travel sites generally purchase rooms at wholesale prices from hotels, motels and the like, then turn around and sell them at close to full price, taxes included, to consumers. They pay room taxes on the wholesale price, meanwhile, denying the state and local governments what they would collect on the difference between the two. They pocket that difference. The state wasn't happy with the old system — no surprise there. It figures the loss of revenue from taxes collected by online agencies amounts to more than $3 million annually. T hat meant less money to spend attracting tourists at both the state and local level. Too, cit-

O

ies and counties keep a portion of transient room taxes for their own use and they got less than they otherwise would have. Those who run online travel sites are — again, no surpriseunhappy with the change, and eight of them are suing the state in the Oregon Tax Court. They make two arguments against the change. On one hand, they say, they're not subject to the tax because they're not hoteliers. At the same time they argue that taxing them violates U.S. constitutional limits on the regulation of interstate commerce. The battle between the websites and the states is not limited to Oregon. It's being fought across the country, and in several court cases — one federal case in Texas and two state cases in South Carolina and Georgia, according to The Washington Post — the states have won. Meanwhile, a state appeals court in Florida earlier this month sided with the websites on the matter. We hope online travel agencies have to pay up. Ultimately, we suspect, it will be up to the Supreme Court to decide the issue.

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M IVickel's Worth Chickens to China?

of the Deschutes to its natural state without applying the same rationale to the Colorado Street dam. Remove the hydro dam, then remove the Colorado Streetdam and have a natural flowing river throughout Bend. Don't apply one criterion to downtown and one to the Mill District. Mirror Pond is surely as important as the Mill District even though it might not be as financially advantageous to investors. Spend a few million dollars to preserve Mirror Pond

Did I read correctly in The Bulletin on Oct. 27 that chicken is to be sent to China for processing and then returned to U.S.A.? The Federal Department of Agricultural has approved this — without labeling, — in the interest of trade with China. How can this possibly make economic sense? How many American workers will lose their jobs? Our dogs have already been poisoned by melamine fillers and taint- just as we are spending over $7 miled jerky from China. Are we next? lion dollars to create a water park or Generic chicken is off m y m enu remove both dams. along with tilapia. Charles Porter Ann Bond Bend Bend

and the City Council slow down on their Bridge Creek plan? Perhaps look around at changes in studies regarding the water plan and listen to new thought. I now pay $100 a month for the water bill. My usage remains well below 400 cubic feet. What is your water bill like? Tom Fllclch Bend

Support Alzheimer's Disease funding

Advocates for Alzheimer's Disease research and familysupport serviceshave two reasons to take immediate action. First, the Senate has earmarkedthe recently released City needs to consider National Alzheimer's Plan for an adPond argument ditional $100 million for research, edwater bills ucation and local program support. lacks logic I pay a water bill that continues Second, Oregon Sens. Ron Wyden Several articles and opinion piec- to increase and increase. Appar- and Jeff Merkley have both been es have supported removal of the ently City Council, in voting 4-3 re- appointed to the Budget Conference hydro dam on Mirror Pond, with cently for the more expensive water Committee, which is charged with reasoning generally paraphrased as treatment facility, didn't take the developing abudget agreement bethe following: Return the river to its residents and their water bills into fore the end of this year. natural beauty or return the original consideration. Both senators are known to be channel as it is beautiful or recreate Central Oregon LandWatch, in strong supporters of increased the wild and scenic river or it should presenting a lawsuit this month, funding for Alzheimer's research, run natural again. takes residents like myself into con- and participation on th e B udget The hydrodam blocked a portion sideration. It's reassuring to pay at- Conference Committee will ensure of the Deschutes in 1910, and five tention to LandWatch and its goals their voices will be heard on this imyears later, the Colorado Street dam regarding the surface water important issue. Knowing the feelings blocked another portion. M i rror provement project. of their constituents will most cerPond provides for a quiet, peaceful The council must know, somehow, tainly strengthen their conviction area with beautiful parks, huge trees that studies on the Bridge Creek to preserve this funding as a budget and wildlife for those seeking such SWIP have changed in the last 5 to 8 priority. things. The Old Mill District pond years. Yet the council voted recently If Alzheimer's Disease has improvides for more active recreation in favor of a more expensive plan. pacted your family or friends, I enand a venue for restaurants, water As a r esident in B end, I f e el courage you to call or write their recreation rentals, hotels and other snubbed over and over while watch- offices to voice support for keeping businesses that border it or view it. ing my water bill increase. this additional funding in the final It's discouraging for me, as a res- budget agreement. We can't let this Any decision to remove the hydro dam, thus removing Mirror Pond, ident, to watch consistent increases great opportunity slip away. cannot logically be based in any way in my bill. Joe Coss on a desire to return that portion Could the city staff, city officials Bend

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Obama's health insurance lie undercuts his credibility By Gladys Biglor illions of Americans woke up t o P r e sident B a r ack Obama's big lie when they received medicalinsurance cancellation notices. In a speech given on June 15, 2009, atthe annual conference of the American Medical Association, the president told Americans, "We will keep this promise to the American people. If you like your doctor, you will be able to keep your doctor. Period. If you like your health care plan, you will be able to keep your health care plan. Period.... No one is talking about taking that away from you.n Many Americans believed him then re-elected him. N ow th e p r e sident i s t e l l i n g A mericans he'll a l lo w t h e m t o keep their plans through 2014 even though they're considered "substandard" under the law. The next day, we're told by Laura Cali, Oregon insurance commissioner, the same, even though several states have rejected the proposal, including several politically

M

"blue" states. Washington state's commissioner d e cided a l l owing extensions would not be good for Washingtonians. Other state commissioners fear a l l owing e x tensions would destabilize the industry, raise premiums even higher and layer on additional complexity on the already complex web of Obamacare regulations. Even Oregon's insurance comm issioner c a r efully c h o s e h e r words. "If an insurer chooses to offer extensions, it will need to notify the Oregon Insurance Division and contact customers directly about their options," she said. And then she told them what additional regulations they would have to adhere to. So let me get this straight. The la w m a n dates i n surance companies provide o nl y h e a lth care policies meeting A f fordable Care Act standards. Obama now tells those same companies to continue selling legally questionable policies to Americans. So here are two questions: First, who's at risk or legally li-

IN MY VIEW

Republicans appear to have been right all along. able if a medicalprocedure goes Conservatives warned us of the wrong or a n e x p ensive medical catastrophic effects this 2,700-page procedure is necessary when the unfair, unaffordable, unworkable old extended plan does not meet act would have on you, me, our ACA? Will it b e the patient who families and our nation. agreed to renew their ( asubstanT hey first t r ie d t o m a k e t h e dard") policy, the doctor who per- bill better for Americans, but the formed theprocedure and accepted Democrat-led House and Senate the substandard insurance or the would have nothing to do with that. insurance company who "chose n to Next, they fought hard against it, offer the substandard policy at the knowing the bill would harm more president's directive'? A mericans than i t w o u l d h e l p , Second, doesthe president real- damage our economy and diminish ly think Americans are so docile middle class jobs. and stupid we can't see that this A mericans are left w it h a l a w is a purely political ploy that does that appears to be whatever Presinothing to fix the disaster that is dent Obama deems it to be, which Obamacare? changes on nearly a d aily basis, Wait — it gets worse. More pain and a "fix" t hat doesn't fix a nything — just kicks the can down the lies ahead. Remember th e a d m i nistration road. purposefully delayed the employer Now Sen. Jeff Merkley tells us he mandate (which will affect an even didn't understand that grandfather greater number of Americans) until provisions were weak (resulting in after the 2014 mid-term elections. millions of Americans losing their Don't forget polls c onsistently coverage). showed a majority of A m ericans Is that so? rejectedObamacare from day one. If anyone should know the truth,

Does the president really think Americans are so docile and stupid we can't see that this is a purely political ploy that does nothing to fix the disaster that iS Obamacare?

I would think it would be Merkley, since he sat on the Subcommittee on Labor Health and Human Services and had direct input into the law, having drafted several sections giving his political supporters special exemptions. So Obama's big lie begs the question: What other lies has he told Americans? Will we ever be able to believe him? Can we ever believe Merkley, for that matter? Supporters of the president and Merkley should consider the adage: Fool me once,shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. — Gladys Biglor lives in Bend.


SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

BITUARIES

rM~ ' p g

OREGON r

Legislature broaches marijuana quandary

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a

DEATH NOTICES Keith Neville Gerber Jr., of Poweii Butte Oct. 1, 1957 - Nov. 16, 2013 Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, Prineville, OR 541-447-6459 Services: Saturday, November 23, at 1:00 p.m., at the Redmond Community Presbyterian Church, 529 NW 19th St., Redmond, OR Contributionsmay be made to:

A fund in honor of Keith for his children's college education, has been set up at Wells Fargo.

DEATHS ELSEWHERE

By Jonathan J. Cooper Deaths of note from around theworld: The Rev. T.J. Jemison, 95: A civil rights pioneer who organized a 1953 bus boycott in Baton Rouge, La., that foreshadowed the one set off by Rosa Parks in M o ntgomery, Ala. Died Nov. 15 in Baton Rouge, La. Louis D. Rubin Jr., 89: Had wide-ranging career as a teacher, novelist, essayist, editor and publisher. Was devoted to the practice and promotion of American Southern writing. Died Nov. 16 in Pittsboro, N.C. — From wire reports

FEATURED OBITUARY

S C ICQ eI'e

er servicesto aw en orcement By John Rogers

her psychic ability as a preschoolerin her native Kansas The Associated Press City, Mo., SAN FRANCISCO — SylF or many y ears, i t w a s via Browne once said she was something she shared only only 3 years old when she dis- with friends and family. covered she could look into She eventually began givthe future and know what was ing readings to others and, 10 coming. years after moving to CaliforFor th e n ex t 7 4 y e a r s, nia in 1964, she formed the Browne claimed to d o j u st Nirvana Foundation for Psythat, predicting who w ould chic Research. win elections, which celebriAmong the predictions she ties would be getting married, cited overthe years as comsplitting up or having babies ing true w ere t hat A r n old and whether people who had S chwarzenegger would g o d isappeared were a l ive o r into politics (made 11 years dead. before the "Terminator" actor Sometimes she got it right was elected California's goverand sometimes not. Among nor) and that Madonna would the predictions that misfired have a second child but not was one she made to talk- by the father of her first one. show host Larry King in 2003 A year before Barack Obama that she would live to be 88. was elected president in 2008 Browne was 77 when she she predicted the United States died Wednesday atGood Sa- would have its first black presmaritan Hospital in San Jose. ident within eight years. The cause of death was not A v i sion m i sfired b adly disclosed. when she told the parents of One of the most well-known Shawn Hornbeck in 2002 that psychics of he r g eneration, the 11-year-old Missouri boy Browne often appeared on was dead after he disappeared "The Montel Williams Show" while riding his bike. Police and in interviews with King. found him four years later livShe wrote dozens of books, ing with his abductor. including several best-sellers, She also told the mother and shesometimes offered her of Ohio k i dnapping victim services to the FBI and police Amanda Berry in 2004 that agencies. her daughter was dead. Berry Over the years she said and two other women were she mingled w i t h a n g els later found alive. They had and ghosts, twice t r aveled been held captive for years. through the tunnel of l i ght Such wrong i n f ormation during near-death experienc- given to grief-stricken people es and came face-to-face with brought Browne her share of extraterrestrials. critics, including those who " They look l i k e us but maintained that her psychic their eyes are really strange powers were no more than edbecause they're r e flective," ucated guesses. Browne, speaking in her disShe responded that even the tinctive, raspy voice, once told best psychics don't get it right Williams' audience. every time. She also mainShe also believed in rein- tained that even a p sychic can't predict exactly what's carnation, telling King t h at and Channing Joseph

peoplekeep coming back to going to happen to them. Earth in new lives until they get it right. In a statement posted on her website, Williams i ndicated his belief that she made the cut this time. "A beacon that shined for so many was extinguished today, but its brightness was relit and will now shine forever for many of us from above," he sard. Browne said she discovered

Indeed, if they could she presumably would not have booked a Caribbean cruise for herselfand her fans scheduled for next March. Browne is survived by her husband, Michael Ulery; her son and fellow psychic, Christopher D u f r esne; a n other son, PaulDufresne; her sister, Sharon Bortolussi; and three grandchildren. Services will be private.

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The Associated Press

SALEM — Oregon lawmakers are beginning to debate whether they should ask voters to weigh in next year

on legalizing marijuana for

Jerret Raffety / Rawlihs (Wyo.) Daily Times file photo

With BLM issuing several takes on how to address the sage grouse and its habitat, a variety of interests are preparing to comment on the proposals — everyone from cattlemen to environmentalists.

recreational use. State Sen. Floyd Prozanski, a Eugene Democrat who leads the Senate Judiciary Committee, unveiled a draft of a bill on Friday that would ask voters in the 2014 election ing regulations in Washingwhether marijuana should ton and Colorado told Oregon be legal. If it passes, the 2015 lawmakers that state officials Legislature would be charged are facing serious challenges, with writing laws to regulate many of them unexpected, as the manufacture, sale and use they try to set up marijuana of the drug. regulations. Sen. F l oy d P r o zanksi, "It has not been an easy D-Eugene, says a legaliza- road. And since the passage tion vote is inevitable, and the of 502, I'm not as optimistic Legislature would write more as I once was that Washingwell-rounded rules than activ- ton did get it right," said Hilists drafting their own initia- ary Bricken, a Seattle lawyer tives. Legalization advocates who advises companies in the in Oregon have proposed marijuanabusiness.I-502 was several competing ballot mea- the Washington initiative that sures of their own. legalized marijuana in 2012. "It is here, we need deal Washington has struggled, with it," Prozanski said. "Be- for example, to balance the 25 cause if we don't deal with it, percent excise tax required in it's going to be given to us, and the law with a need for legal I think we'll have a lot of unin- marijuana to compete with tended consequences." b lack-market sales of t h e Prozanski convened a Ju- drug, she said. Oregon has diciary Committee hearing the benefit of seeing guidance Friday to consider the issue issued earlier this year by the before lawmakers begin a six- U.S. Department of Justice week special session in Feb- about legalized marijuana. ruary. Because time is short Even in Washington and during the legislative session, Colorado, marijuana remains Prozanski proposed delaying illegal under federal law. The a complicated conversation federal government said it about how to regulate and won't interfere with m a ritax the drug until lawmak- juana operations that meet ers have more time to work eight standards, including through it in 2015. strict prohibitions on sales to Anthony Johnson of New minors andeff ective enforceApproach Oregon, which is ment of state laws.

Grouse

Natural Desert Association in Bend, said ONDA favors Continued from B1 Alternatives C and F, which The goal, t h e w e bsite include provisions that set states, is for state wildlife aside large areas where acmanagement agencies, the tivities like mining, energy BLM and the Fish and Wild- development and grazing life Service to address threats are prohibited. posed to the bird, so the need John O'Keefe,treasurer of to put sage grouse on the list the Oregon Cattleman's Asis eliminated. sociation, said he hasn't had According to the Friday a chance to look at the draft release, the BLM prefers Al- in detail and couldn't comternative D in the proposed ment on which alternative draft, w hich i n corporates the association prefers. l ocal adjustments t o t h e But, he said the associtechnical team report. That ation intends to "comment alternative emphasizes bal- vigorously" on the draft to a ncing resource use a n d support association memsage grouse habitat pres- bers that graze livestock on ervation, according to t h e the public lands. "As expected, it's a real draft. T he Bulletin could n ot wide range of alternatives," reach the BLM for comment O'Keefe said. "It's real critiFriday. cal that we get this right." But Dan Morse, conserva— Reporter: 541-617-7818, tion director for the Oregon rrees@bendbulletin.com

WASHINGTON

Lobbyist wants to limit study of coal terminal The Associated Press SEATTLE — A f o r m er W ashington s t at e a t t o r n ey general wh o i s n o w lobbying for Montana and North Dakota has said an environmental review of a proposed coal terminal in Longview, Wash., should not include possible climate change considerations. C ongress "has not a u thorized states to regulate interstate commerce in relation t o c l i m ate change and has not enacted national legislation to control greenhouse gas emissions i ndirectly by l i m i ting t h e sale or export of coal," Rob McKenna wrote earlier this week in a letter to the Corps of Engineers, Washington Department of Ecology and Cowlitz County, Wash. M cKenna was t h e R e publican nominee who lost the race fo r W a shington governor in 2012. The t h ree g o vernment entities are now determining the scope of the upcoming environmental review f or the $650 million M i l lennium B u l k T e r m i nals projectplanned by Ambre Energy Ltd. and Arch Coal Inc. Trains wo u l d car r y Rocky Mountain coal to the Longview terminal for export to Asia. A s i m ilar t e r m inal i s planned at Cherry P oint, near B ellingham, W a sh. A nother p r oposal w o u l d

study. E nvironmental gr o u p s w ant a f ul l r a nge of i m p acts studied, similar t o the review for the Gateway Pacific terminal at C h err y Point. L ast J u ly , t h e Ecology Department said it would take a sweeping look at t h e p r oposal, inc luding tr ain t r a f fi c a n d the global-warming effects of burning exported coal in Asia. McKenna wrote that such scope for the Longview p r oject r e view would b e unr e a l istically broad and speculative while requiring impossible assessments. It also would interfere with international trade and infringe on state rights, he said. Montana and North Dakota "do not believe that the tremendous breadth of the Cherry Point scoping decision was legally justified," McKenna wrote. "We therefore encourage Ecology to limit the scoping decision to matters within the jurisdiction of the state of Washington." McKenna's r o l e w as reported i n T h e S e a ttle Times and The Bellingham Herald. The National Park Service, the governors of Oregon and Washington and others have asked regulators to look at the cumulative effects of proposed projects i n Was h i n gton ship coal by barge down and Oregon and to considthe Columbia River f r om er the impacts beyond the Boardman to a terminal at two states. Clatskanie. T he U.S. C h amber o f Five p u b li c me e t i ngs C ommerce, National A s held around W a shington sociationof Manufacturers state on the Longview proj- and others have asked for ect drew thousands of peo- a narrower focus, saying ple, and 163,000 comments there's no precedent for a w ere s ubmitted o n th e far-reaching analysis of scope of the environmental coal exports.

• we are aHigh-Save animalshelter

considering collecting signatures for a legalization initiative, said it was too soon to say whether Prozanski's proposal would satisfy his organization. The group is backed by some of the deep-pocketed interests that funded legalization efforts last year in Washington and Colorado, the only two states that have created legal markets for the drug. People involved with creat-

Redmond

ing an increased number of AP courses and potentially more Continued from B1 college-level classes. "But when we had that C urrent juniors taking a continuum going, we saw two-year IB class will be most growth." Lowe said he un- impacted, said Lowe. While derstands the economic there's a possibility those stupressuresthat prompted the dents can take an AP test at the district to cancel the IB pro- end of one year in the subject, gram but he's disappointed that will not work for all subnonetheless. jects, because sometimes IB "It was my understand- curriculum topics vary greatly ing that we (IB coordina- from AP. "There was a f ear f actor tors) had this year to try and bring up the numbers, but I involved with IB," said McIndidn't think that would only tosh. "It was given a label as be a few months." extremely difficult and a repuWith the demise of IB, tation for taking over your life. those coordinators can re- But it's good business to offer turn to the classroom, and choice, and the pressure's on the rest of the IB teachers me to replace it with something can resume teaching more that's equal to or better, and typically s i ze d c l a sses,now I have to deliver." Mclntosh said, r e ducing — Reporter:541-548-2186; class sizes throughout the lpugmire@bendbulletin.com building. The leadership team at Redmond High and interested staff will be working See us for toward additions to next $100 mail-in rebates on year's course offerings to select Hunter Douglas fulfill the wishes of students wanting more rigor, includproducts.

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BRIGHTSIDE A N I M

A L

C E N T E R

BrightSideAllimalS.org

Kenneth Bentz, Broker • 541.647.0657 . ".:-..;;:,; ,:" www.BentzRealty.com • KentNBentzrealty.com


B6 T H E BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013

W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central, LP ©2013.

'

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Today:t~ Sunny.

Tonight:

22 WEST

56/34

Hood

Seasidev 57I34 • Cannon Beach

Hi s oro POrtland P. 50' 3 • Sa n dy

49/22

Lincoln City 58/34

49/23•

39I25

• Madras

Camp Sherman

43/21

EAST

Coos Bay

m v 39 n1

L Crescent»

60/35 •

Il Ontario

e'e

'""

330 9

• Burns

42/tsg •

40/21

• Bandon

Roseburg

58/36

4 1/1 0

45/29

Port Orford • Beacii

Yesterday's state extremes

Frenchglen 44n 3

Rome

• 70'

41/1 3

Brookings

Chiloquin 43n9

shl a nd

I

58/39

ll

3806

Paisley

IVledford

• Bl'OOkalgS I A

Silv e r 40/1 3

• 48/25

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330 9

Jordan Valley

Chn s tmas Valley

Lake

rr

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CIiemult

• Lakeview

FaIIS 45n 4

50/23

• -1 0

Fields•

McDermitt

4604 ~

440 3

La Pine

~

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

I glo~goI $105( /20Sf (30S/ (405/ Vancouve

4 9/32

• 2.99

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Cheyenne

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67/53 4 4 4 4 8 4 "

Honolulu ~ 83/68

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43/25

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Halifax

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30/1

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Brownsville, Texas • -17 0 Big Piney, Wyo. w

Quebec Thunder Bay

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• 88'

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(in the 48 contiguous states):

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Miami 84/71

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Juneau 40/28

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• Louisville

Little Rock

a»aet „

Colu m bus ~ I •

)4 4 4

27/20

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW

49 27

47 24

47 27

47 27

CONDITIONS • ++

FRONTS Cold

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunnsetoday...... 7:11 a.m Moon phases Sunset today...... 4:32 p.m Sunrise tomorrow .. 7:12 a.m Sunsettomorrow... 4:31 p.m

Last Ne w

F i r st Full

• rl •

Moonset today...11:26 a.m Nov.25 Dec.2 Dec.9 Dec.17

PLANET WATCH

TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....5.35 a.m......3.47 p.m. Venus.....10;53 a.m...... 7:19 p.m. Mars.......1:07 a.m...... 1:47 p.m. Jupiter......7:39 pm.....1052 a.m. Satum......5:44 a.m...... 3:52 p.m. Uranus.....2:08 p.m...... 2:39 a.m.

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. in Bend High/Low............... 32/5 24 hours ending 4p.m.*. . 0.00" Record high ...... 69 in1954 Month to date . . 0.2 8 " Record low.......... 5 in1929 Average month todate... 091" Average high.............. 44 Year to date............ 4.58" Average low............... 27 Average yearto date..... 8.68" Barometric pressureat 4 p.m.30.53 Record 24 hours ...0.97 in 1998 *Melted liquid equivalent

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX

OREGON CITIES

S K IREPORT

Yesterday Saturday S unday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing City Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W Hi / Lo/W the need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at S p.m. yesterday: Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m. for solar at noon. Snow accumulation in inches Astoria ....... 52/33/000 ....56/34/s..... 54/40/s Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Baker City.......38/5/0.00.....34/11/s......42/16/s Anthony Lakes ....... . . . . . . . 0.0. . .no report LDW MEDIUM HIGH Brookings......70/43/0.00.....58/39/s......51/41/s Hoodoo....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Burns........ . ..46/9/0.00......41/8/s......42/16/s 0 2 4 6 8 10 Mt. Ashland....... . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Eugene........46/19/0.00.....46/26/s.....40/31/pc Mt. Bachelor...... . . . . . . . . . . 0.0. . .no report Klamath Falls ...52/42/0.00.....45/1 4/s......47/1 6/s Mt. Hood Meadows...... . . . . 0.0. . . . . . . . 19 Lakeview.......39/21/0.00.....44/13/s......48/19/s Mt. Hood Ski Bowl..... . . . . . . 0.0. ..no report La Pine ........ 40/-1/0.00.....41/13/s......47/20/s Snow levelandroadconditions representing condiTimberbne...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . . . . 22 atSp.m.yesterday.Key:TT.= Traction Tires. Warner Canyon...... . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Medford.......51/19/0.00.....48/25/s......49/28/s tions Newport....... 54/37/0.00..... 58/34/s...... 56/43/s Pass Conditions Willamette Pass ...... . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . .no report North Bend.....61/32/0.00.....58/35/s.....56/38/pc 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit....... . Carry chains or T.Tires Ontario . . . . 40/1 8/0 00 ....33/1 9/s ... 38/24/s 1-84 at Cabbage Hill...... . . . . . . . . . . No restnctions Aspen, Colorado....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .15 25 Pendleton......35/11/0.00.....38/22/s......38/26/s Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass...... Carry chains or T.Tires Mammoth Mtn., California.....3-5... . . .16-20 Portland .......50/24/0.00.....49/32/s......48/33/s Hwy. 26 at Government Camp........ No restnctions Park City, Utah ..... . . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . .no report Prineville........34/5/0.00.....40/1 4/s......46/23/s Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... . . . . . . No restrictions Squaw Valley, California...... .0-0...no report Sun Valley, Idaho...... . . . . . . . 0-0...no report Redmond........33/0/0.00.....41/14/s......48/21/s Hwy. 58 at Willamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Roseburg.......35/28/0.00....45/29/pc......45/35/s Hwy.138 at Diamond Lake.... Carrychains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0-0 . . .no report Salem.........50/24/0.00.....49/23/s.....44/31/pc Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . . 4 . . . . . . . . 22 Sisters........ ..34/5/0.00.....39/18/s......46/24/s For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: The Dalles......40/17/0 00.....41/25/s.....43/30/pc www.tnpcheck.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:W-weather,Pcp-precipitation, s-sun,pc-partial clouds,c-clouds, h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurnes, sn snow, i-ice, rs-ram-snowmix,w-wind, f-fog, dr-dnzzle,tr-trace

JRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

-40S (-30S -20 Yesterday's extremes

Partly cloudy.

WOAD CONDITIONS

Nyssa Juntura 37n4

Partly cloudy.

2

Valev

• Brothers 4004 'Ham ton

La Pinexins

340 i

32/20

4U22

Sunny and cool.

Baker City

• pa ulina 41 IB

4U1 4

Sunriver Bend •

56/39

RedmOnd

39n 8

Eugerle•

Florence•

Sunny and a little cool.

40/22

3704

.prieeeiiie „

Sisters'

55/34

Jose osep

BA

HIGH LOW

Moonrisetoday...10:11 p.m

CENTRAL

4U20 Umon

• Mitchell mos

37/iz

Ente rpns

4U20

La Grande•

33/27

~

400 4

• 36/23 ondon

• Meacham

Warm Spnngs•

47/24

58/34

38/22

38/22

Ruggs

38/22

Albany

NeWnOrt •

+

. PendletOn 3309

39/26

Maupin

Camp 4U28g

5aem 1

~ 3508

Government -

37/24

Biggs

• i 4U25

51/32

Sunny skies and pleasant conditions.

Umatilla

R iver t h e

57/34

McMinnville

Mostly sunny.

BEND ALMANAC

IFORECAST: STATE I ,Astoria

57/3i

Sunny.

Clear.

41

Tillamook•

B

BA

eq+++

++++ 9+e

W a r m Stationary Showers T-storms

e 4 •

*

*

* * *

' ** * * *

eesm

+ev+Ye+ Rain F l urries Snow 84 4 4

* e'

Ice

Yesterday Saturday Sunday Yesterday Saturday Sunday Yesterday Saturday Sunday Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,TX ......35/22/0.61 ... 34/26/1...32/27/i GrandRapids....46/31/0.01.. 27/16/pc. 27/24/sn RapidCity.......40/-1/0.00..34/24/pc.. 47/29/s Savannah.......79/61/0.01..73745/sh.. 55/33/s Akron ..........50/39/007..33/17/sn. 26/18/sn GreenBay.......35/28/0.01..23/10/pc.23/22/pc Reno.......... A4/23/0.00...46/23/s.. 48/25/s Seattle..........49/32/0.00...49/34/s.. 49/34/s Albany..........45/37/0.06..41/18/pc.27/15/pc Greensboro......65/46/0.00...54/26/c.. 36/19/s Richmond.......73/47/0 00..56/27/pc. 38/21/pc Sioux Falls........30/0/0 00....18/7/s.. 31/23/s NY....48/39/025..37/19/sn. 25/19/sn Spokane........34/15/0 00...36/17/s. 36/22/pc Albuquerque.....43/29/0.01.. 37/26/rs..36/26/rs Harrisburg.......50/42/0.01..45/24/pc. 32/20/pc Rochester Anchorage ... 30/19/0 17 27/20/sn. 27/15/sn Hartford,CT.... 53/42/0 15 43/24/pc 31/16/pc Sacramento......72/47/0.00...66/39/s .. 66/39/s Springfield,MO..36/30/0.00...38/16/s. 35/27/sn Atlanta .........64/51/000..62/31/sh.. 47/27/s Helena...........29/I/0.00 ...36/20/s .. 42/26/s St Louis.........50/37/000...36/15/s .. 31/26/s Tampa..........83/70/000 ..83/64/pc. 74/55/pc Atlantic City .....59/44/0 00..51/28/pc. 39/24/pc Honolulu........84/67/0.00... 83/68/s .. 82/6ms SaltLakeCity....42/31/0.00..49/34/pc. 47/33/pc Tucson..........64/51/0.69... 57/47/r. 57/42/pc Austin..........73/37/024..42/40/sh. 41/36/sh Houston........73/46/1.4051/41 .. Ish . 50/38/sh SsnAntonio.....75/39/017..41/41/sh.41/3Ish Tulsa...........35/30/007..42/23/pc.. 33/30/c Baltimore .......60/46/0.01 ..50/26/pc. 35/22/pc Huntsville.......64/55/0.05..48/22/sh.. 40/23/s Ssn Diego.......65/5il 37...65/53/c. 67/56/pc Washington,DC..61/46/000 ..51/28/pc. 36/25/pc Billings .........31/15/0.00... 39/25/5 .. 49/27/s Indianapolis.....49/36/0.08...32/16/s. 28/23/pc SanFranosco....68/57/000... 63/47/s .. 63/48/s Wichita.........29/24/000 ..38/18/pc.. 35/27/c Birmingham.....65/57/0.00 ..54/29/sh.. 47/29/s Jackson,MS.....67/61/0 82.. 55/30/sh. 47/35/pc SanJose........69/47/000...64/43/s .. 65/44/s Yakima..........41/9/000...39/21/s. 42/26/pc Bismarck.........21/0/0 00...13/8/pc.36/21/pc Jacksonvile......78/64/007..79/53/sh. 59/39/pc SantaFe........35/24/0.11..34/20/sn. 30/20/sn Yuma...........61/55/OA4... 65/50/r. 68/51/pc Boise...........39/22/0.00... 37/23/s .. 39/28/s Juneau..........42/24/0.48... 40/28/r. 34/24/sn INTERNATIONAL Boston..........47/42/0.25 ..45/26/pc. 32/20/pc Kansas City......29/24/0 00... 29/13/s. 34/26/pc Bridgeport,CT....53/46/0.15..47/26/pc. 34/22/pc Lansing.........45/29/0.01.. 26/13/pc. 25/21/pc Amsterdam......41/41/000 ..43/36/pc. 46/42/pc Mecca..........81/77/000 ..90/71/pc .. 90/71/s Buffalo.........48/37/0.31 ..37/19/sn. 25/21/sn LasYegas.......49/45/0.74...51/43/r. 57/44/pc Athens..........68/50/002 ..65/58/sh.62/53/sh Mexico City......72/46/045 ..70/48/sh. 67/45/pc Burlington, VT....43/34/0 07.. 33/14/sn . 24/12/pc Lexington.......58/46/045..39/20/pc.. 30/1Is Auckland........75/57/000 ..70/62/pc.65/60/sh Montreal........39/34/006 .. 30/19/sf.. 25/10/s Caribou, ME.....38/27/000..31/15/pc. 22/14/pc Lincoln..........32/14/0.00....25/9/s.34/24/pc Baghdad........69/53/000 ..75/60/pc. 75/59/pc Moscow........37/37/003 ..36/34/sn. 36/32/sh Charleston,SC...76/59/000..71/41/sh 52/32/s Little Rock...... 61/44/0.71. 48/26/pc 38/33/pc Bangkok........82/81/000 ..91/72/sh.91/77/sh Nairobi.........63/63/000 ..73/55/sh. 74/55/sh Charlotte........65/51/0 00 .. 61/31/sh.. 42/23/s LosAngeles.....66/56/trace...67/53/c. 67/54/pc Beijing..........39/28/000 .. 52/20/pc. 48/26/pc Nassau.........81/75/007... 79/71/t. 78/71/pc Chattanooga.....62/53/0.01 ..56/26/sh.. 40/25/s Louisville........58/46/0.01..42/20/pc.. 32/21/s Beirut..........68/66/0.00 .. 75/64/pc.. 76/63/c NewDelhi.......55/54/0.00.. 82/60/pc.. 83/60/s Cheyenne........33/6/0 00 .. 30/15/pc. 44/2B/pc Madison,Wl.....38/29/0.06....22/8/s.24/22/pc Berlin...........41/41/000..41/33/sh.39/30/pc Osaka..........54/41/000..56/50/pc. 60/48/sh Chicago.........43/31/0 03 .. 28/15/pc. 27/23/pc Memphis........61/46/0.58..49/25/pc .. 40/31/s Bogota .......68/50/000 ..56/50lt...75/48/t Oslo............18/18/000 ..26/20/pc .. 25/21/c Cinonnati.......55/43/0.12 ..38/20/pc. 29/19/pc Miami..........82/73/0.81..84/71/pc. 81/70/sh Budapest .......50/48/000.. 46/43/c 44/31/sh Ottawa.........41/32/007.. 27/10/sf.. 21/9/pc Cleveland.......50/38/012 ..34/21/sn. 27/22/pc Milwaukee......41/31/0.03..25/14/pc. 26/25/pc BuenosAires.....84/57/000 ..84/62/pc.. 87/66/c Pans............41/41/000..41/36/sh. 38/34/pc ColoradoSpnngs.27/18/0 04.. 30/18/pc.. 44/28/c Miuneapolis.....33/15/0.00....17/4/s.27/24/pc CaboSanLucas ..81/66/000 ..82/66/pc. 82/64/pc Rio deJaneiro....81/73/000 ..73/69/sh. 75/68/sh ColumbiaMO...42/31/000...34/14/s.. , 33/27/s Nashville........61/48/0.28..48/23/pc .. 36/26/s Cairo...........73/72/0.00... 83/64/c .. 82/65/c Rome...........48/46/0.00... 52/48/r. 57/45/sh Columbia, SC....74/55/0.00..69/38/sh .. 48/24/s NewOrleans.....79/64/000..67/43/sh. 55/43/pc Calgary..........16/1/0.00... 41/27/s .. 41/30/s Santiago........88/59/0.00... 72/55/c.74/54/pc Columbus, GA....72/55/0.00.. 70/37/sh .. 53/31/s NewYork.......57/51/0.07..46/28/pc. 35/23/pc Cancun.........84/75/015... 80/74/t...80/74/t Sao Paulo.......70/64/000 ..63/61/sh. 68/63/sh Columbus, OH....54/41/0 26..36/19/pc. 27/19/pc Newark,NJ......57/48/0.03..49/26/pc. 34/23/pc Dubiin..........28/28/0.00..42/36/pc. 46/35/pc Sapporo ........45/43/0.00..46/36/pc.. 47/40/c Concord,NR.....37/29/014..40/19/pc. 27/11/pc Norfolk,VA......74/46/0 00...57/29/c. 37/25/pc Edinburgh.......34/34/000 .. 37/34/sf .. 37/34/c Seoul...........45/27/000 ..47/32/pc...51/27/r City .. 32/28/0 01 .39/28/pc 31/29/sn Geneva.........37/37/009 .. 36/32/sf .. 34/24/6 Shanghai........63/55/000..67/45/sh. 63/39/sh Corpus Christi 77/45/1 81 50/48/sh 51/46/sh Oklahoma Dallas FtWorth...42/35/018 .. 41/30/sh.. 36/33/rs Omaha.........29/14/000.... 23/9/s. 32/24/pc Harare..........61/61/212 ..78/58/sh. 76/58/sh Singapore.......81/73/000..BI78/sh. 87/78/sh Dayton .........52/39/0.15..34/18/pc.27/19/pc Orlando.........80/71/0.00..83/62/pc. 70/53/pc HongKong......73/70/002..74/55/sh. 75/61/sh Stockholm.......27/27/000..31/25/pc.27/25/pc Denver......... 40/1 5/0.00 .. 38/22/pc.. 48/32/c PalmSpnngs.....62/54/0.06... 61/49/r. 65/49/pc lstanbul.........59/57/000 ..58/52/sh .. 64/57/c Sydney..........73/64/000...87/56/s .. 80/59/s DesMoines......27/19/0.01.... 22/9/s .. 28/25/s Peoria..........43/33/0.03.... 28/9/s .. 28/23/s Jerusalem .......72/53/0 00..72/59/pc.. 72/62/c Taipei...........77/68/0.00...77/63/s. 76/58/sh Detroit..........46/34/0.1 0.. 32/20/pc. 27/23/pc Philadelphia.....56/49/0.01..48/29/pc. 34/22/pc Johannesburg ...71/61/1.95..79/58/pc 78/54/sh TelAviv.........70/63/000..81/63/pc.. 81/67/c Duluth..........28/1 0/0.00.... 16/2/s .. 26/21/c Phoesix.........59/55/1.02... 63/52/r. 64/50/sh Uma ...........70/64/0.00..75/61/pc. 73/60/pc Tokyo...........57/52/0.00..57/49/pc.. 58/51/c ElPaso..........60/36/0.00..44/31/sh.46/32/sh Pittsburgh.......54/45/012 ..37/18/pc. 25/15/sn Lisbon..........50/50/0 00...52/41/c.. 5I41/s Toronto.........48/34/0 25.. 34/18/sf..25/21/sf Fairbanks.........17/4/0.00.. 4/-13/sn...8/-5/pc Portland,ME.....40/32/0.03..42/20/pc. 30/14/pc London.........41/41/0 00..38/35/sh.. 38/36/c Vancouver.......43/27/0 00...45/36/s.. 45/34/s Fargo............22/5/0.04.....9/5/s. 29/23/pc Providence......52/41/0.18..46/23/pc. 32/18/pc Madnd .........39/37/0.00...48/31/s.. 50/30/s Vienna..........45/45/0.00..46/40/sh.. 43/28/c Flagstaff ........36/32/0.97.. 36/27/rs. 37/22/sn Raleigh.........70/46/0.00... 56/27/c .. 37/20/5 Mauila..........82/77/000 ..88/75/pc.88/74/pc Warsaw.........46/46/000 ..43/40/sh.. 44/28/c

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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S W Scoreboard, C2 Sports in brief, C3

NHL, C4

NBA, C3

NFL, C6

Gol f, C4

College basketball, C4 College football, C6 O< www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2013

PREP FOOTBALL

Cougars lead

Ri eview aimin or tit e ame

After leading Mountain View to an 8-3 record and its seventh

By Grant Lucas

all-IMC teams

Intermountain Confer-

ence football championship in eightyears, the Cougars'Austin Phillips

was named theClass

5A IMC defensive player of the year. Mountain View's Brian Crum

was voted the league's coach of the year. Phillips, a senior

defensive linemanwho finished with 54 tackles and three sacks, led a

Cougars' defense that ranked in the top 10 of 5A with less than 18 points allowed per

PREP FOOTBALL

The Bulletin

REDMOND — Standing on the football field at Ridgeview High on Wednesday afternoon, in frigid temperatures that had coaches buried beneathlayers as ifprepared for a trip to the mountain, Boomer Fleming recalled the days of late summer. The senior running back remembered vividly that during those practices, well before the regular season started, he and the Ravens knew exactly where they wanted to be at this point in

the season. They expected to be here. And here they are. A28-21 home victory over Henley last week has Ridgeview (11-1) riding a 10game winning streak. The Ravens have racked up just shy of 425 yards of total offense per game,and their defense has limited opponents to fewer than D points per contest. And here they are, where they expected to be — in the semifinals of the Class 4A state playoffs.

"We just had a huge buy-in from the whole program," Fleming said. "All of us bought into this idea that we could be the state champs, and that is what we're striving for now." Ridgeview, in just its second year, is one win away from a shot at the state title. To get there, the Ravens, seeded No. 4 in the 16-team bracket, will have to go through top-seeded Philomath — at 11-0, the last remaining undefeated team in 4A. SeeRidgeview/C5

OSAA

FootdallState Championships Today's game: Class 4A state semifinals • At Cottage Grove High School

• No. 4 Ridgeview (11-1) vs. No. 1 Philomath (11-0),

3 p.m. • Admission to all semifinal

games is $8 for adults, $5 for students (age 5and older through high school).

ooking to avoid sip-up at Arizona The Associated Press

Summit senior wideout Tyler Mullen and Mountain View senior

TUCSON, Ariz. — Oregon found itself trailing in the Pac12 North race after losing to Stanford two weeks ago, but

WINTER SPORTS

running back Keenan Springer shared the

kept playing hard, hoping for

offensive player of the

another opportunity to earn a spot in the conference cham-

year honors. Mullen racked up more than

pionship game.

1,400 yards of total offense and a total of18

That chance came last weekend. Shortly after the fifthranked Ducks rolled over Utah, Southern California knocked off Stanford. Just like that, Oregon was back on top of the division, controlling its fate in a bid for a second trip to the Pac-12 title game in three years. "It's one of those deals where you just have to control what you can control," Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota said. "It just happened that Stanford lost and now we control our own destiny. But really it's just one game at a time like we always take it." The next one is against Arizona. See Ducks/C5

touchdowns to guide the Storm to their first

state playoff appearance in school history. Springer rushed for 933 yards and15 touch-

downs this season and posted five 100-yard games, including a 162-

yard and three-touchdown performance against Wilsonville in

September. Joining Mullen and Springer on the IMC all-

league first team were Mountain View's Austin

Phillips (C), Nick Hjelm (WR), and Conor Nehl (QB); Bend's Stephan Kearsley (OT), Alex Henry (TE), and Hunter McDonald (RB); Redmond's Jordan Adams (OG), Dustin Gunnels (OT), and Derek Brown (RB); and Summit's Orlando Garcia (OG). Phillips, were Mountain

Ducks

By John Marshall

game.

On the first-team allIMC defense, along with

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

5

Nextup Oregon at Arizona

When:Today, 12:30 p.m. TV:ABC Radio:KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM

Roger Witney i Atprne Canada

Laurenne Ross races down the super-G course in a World Cup event at Lake Louise, Alberta, last season.

View's Grant Lannin

(DL), Jace Johns (DL), Zach Ferguson (ILB), and Derek Ostrom (DB); Summit's Tyler Mullen

(DB), Marc Hasenoehrl (ILB), and Patrick Leiphart (DB); Bend's Hunter McDonald (ILB) and Chris Wallace (DE/ OLB); and Redmond's Sam Dennis (DE/OLB) and Ethan Moser (DB). Mountain View's Zach

Editor's Note:This is the second of a two-part series featuring 2014Winter Olympic hopefuls from Central Oregon.

Emerson was named the league's first-team

By Mark Morical

McDonald was

IMC's top punter, and

kicker. For a complete list of the IMC all-league

selections, seeC2. — Bulletin staff report

GOLF

Bend's Vijarro out at Q-School

Sumping Beavers hoping for ate reviva

• Bend alpine skieLaurenne r Rosshopes to qualify in three eventsfor the upcomingSochiWinter Olympics

The Bulletin

When it comes to alpine skiing and the Winter Olympics, nothing is a sure thing. S o Bend's Laurenne Ross is a pproaching this season like any other — but she knows that every World Cup event will help determine whether she qualifies for her first Olympic Games. The criteria for m aking the U .S. Olympic team for Sochi, Russia, is based

on results from all of the World Cup races prior to the Olympics this season. "Not a single athlete has their spot locked in yet," Ross said via email last week from Copper Mountain, Colo., where she was training with the U.S. Ski Team. "Thereare a few chances to get the results I need to make it to Sochi in February.... It's not a given for anyone, so we're all going to have to race fast in the upcoming World Cups. I have no doubt that the team in Sochi is going to be outstanding. I really hope to be a part of that team and I think my chances are quite good." See Ross/C5

r

Ã/SA,

By Anne M. Peterson fittttiRE

~ ~ ~

e p ttt

Sarah BrunsoniU.S. Ski Team

Alpine skier Laurenne Ross, of Bend, is hoping to qualify for her first Winter Olympics.

MURRIETA, Calif.

-

Andrew Vijarro's plans to play on the Web.com Tour will have to wait after the Bend pro fell short Friday of advancing from the second

GOLF: LPGA TOUR

stage of the Web.com

Turning pro at16 and finding work isn't sobad

Tour's National Qualify-

ing School. The 24-year-old professional shot a final-round 77 at Bear Creek Golf Club to finish at 8 over for the 72-hole

second stage and in a tie for 50th place. Twen-

By Karen Crouse New Yorh Times News Service

ty golfers shot even par or better to advance to

December's final stage. Among those who

advanced wereEugene Wong, Vijarro's former teammate at the Uni-

versity of Oregon, and Zac Blair, a Utah golfer who won the 2011 Pacific Northwest Amateur

Championshi pplayed at Tetherow Golf Club in Bend and the nephew of

Tetherow Academy pro Mike Lewis. — Bulletin staff report

David Atbere/ Naples Daily News via The Associated Prese

Sixteen-year-old Lydia Ko watches her ball from the first tee in the first round of the LPGA Tour's Titleholders event at the Tiburon Golf Club in Naples,Fla.,on Thursday. The event is Ko's debut as a professional golfer.

NAPLES, Fla. — In anticipation of her professional debut, Lydia Ko met with Phil Mickelson last week during a visit to the Callaway headquarters in California. Ko, a South Korean-born New Z e alander, is ranked fifth in the world and would have made nearly $1 million in prize money had she turned pro atthe start of the year. During their conversation, Ko mentioned that she and her mother, Tina, were looking for a home in the United States to cut down on travel. She said Mickelson, a five-time major champion who lives in California, gave her a valuable piece of

advice. "Phil mentioned that one of his biggest mistakes was staying after college where the taxes are quite high," she said. So the 16-year-old Ko will narrow her search, she said, to places where there is no state income tax, although she was quick to add, "I don't have any money yet." Ko's first paycheck is a m ere formality. There is no cut in this week's T i tleholders event, the LPGA Tour's season finale, and Ko got off to a solid start at Tiburon Golf Club with a pair of I-under-par 71s, nine strokes behind the leader, Sandra Gal. SeeGolf /C5

The Associated Press

CORVALLIS — Oregon State and Washington are a lot alike: Both hit a stride earlier this season but then ran into misfortune. The two 6-4 teams meet tonight, both jockeying for position behind Oregon and Stanford in the tough Pac-12 North. "I made that comparison to our team. I said, 'This is a good football team that's been kind of like us,'" Oregon State coach Mike Riley said. "They were doing great and then they hit a lot of

tough games with Oregon, Stanford and UCLA. They had kind of a murderer's row in there. And they played well. They had a chance to beat Stanford just like we dld.

The Beavers (6-4, 4-3) got off to a disastrous start, losing at home to Eastern Washington in the season opener. See Beavers/C5

Nextup t

Washington at

Oregon State When:Today, 7:30 p.m. TV:ESPN2

Radio: KICE-AM 940


C2

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOV 23, 20'I3

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY GOLF

Time

European Tour, South Africa Open

2:30 a.m.

TV/R a dio

LPGA Tour, CME Group Titleholders

10:30 a.m.

Golf

World Cup of Golf

6 p.m.

Golf

SOCCER English Premier League, Arsenal FC vs. Southampton FC

Today Football: 4A statesemifinal, Ridgeviewvs. Philomath,CottageGroveHigh, 3 p.m.

7 a.m. 9:30 a.m.

NBC

MLS, Houston at Sporting KC

4 :30 p.m.

NBC S N

College, Michigan State at Northwestern

9 a.m.

College, Duke atWakeForest

9 a.m.

ESPN ESPN2

College, Virginia at Miami

9 a.m.

ESPNU

College, Oklahoma atKansas State

9 a.m. Fox Sports 1

College, Harvard at Yale

9 a.m.

College, Montana atMontanaState College, Oregon atArizona

11 a.m.

FOOTBALL

NBCSN

1 2:30 p.m.

Root ABC , 1110-AM, 100.1-FM

College, TexasA8M atLSU

12:30 p.m.

CBS

College, BYU at Notre Dame

12:30 p.m.

NBC

College, Wisconsin at Minnesota

1 2:30 p.m.

ESP N

College, Indiana at Ohio State College, Idaho at Florida State

12:30 p.m. 12:30 p.m.

E S P N2 E S P NU

College, JamesMadison at Towson

12:30 p.m.

N B CSN

College, Utah at Washington State

12:30 p.m.

Pa c -12

College, Colorado State at Utah State

12:30 p.m. C B S SN 1 p.m. Fox Sports1, 940-AM

College, Portland St. at Eastern Washington 2:30 p.m.

Root

High school, Ridgeview vs. Philomath (after Oregongame)3:30 p.m.

1110-AM, 100.1-FM

AH-IntermountainConference

College, Arizona State at UCLA College, Savannah State at Utah

4 p.m. 4 p.m.

Fox Pac-12

College, Tulsa at Louisiana Tech

4 p.m.

CBSSN

College, Missouri at Mississippi

4:45 p.m.

College, Baylor at OklahomaState

5 p.m.

ABC

College, Kansas at lowa State College, USC at Colorado

5 p.m.

Fox Sports 1 Pac-12

College, Washington at Oregon State

7:30 p.m.

ESPN2, 940-AM

College, Boise State atSanDiego State

7:30 p.m.

CBSSN

10 a.m.

Pac-12

Co-offensive players ofthe year—TylerMullen, sr.,Summit; KeenanSpringer, sr., Mountain View Defensive player of the year —AustinPhillips, sr.,MountainView Coach of the year — BrianCrum,Mountain View First-team offense — Austin Phillips, sr., C, Mountain View;OrlandoGarcia, sr., OG, Summit, JordanAdams,ir., OG,Redmond; StephanKearsley, sr., OT,Bend; Dustin Gunnels, sr., OT,Redmond; Alex Henry, sr.,TE,Bend;Nick Hielm,sr., WR,Mountain View;Tyler Mullen,sr., WR,Summit; KeenanSpringer, sr.,RB,Mountain View;Hunter McDonald, ir., RB, Bend;DerekBrown,so., RB,Redmond; Conor Nehl, sr., QB,MountainView. First-team defense — Austin Phillips, sr., DL, MountainView;Grant Lannin, sr., DL,Mountain View; JaceJohns,sr.,DL,MountainView;ZachFerguson,ir., ILB,Mountain View;MarcHasenoehr, sr., ILB, SummitHunter ; McDonald, Ir., ILB, Bend;Chris Wallace,ir., DE/OLB,Bend; SamDennis, ir., DE /OLB, Redmond;DerekOstrom, ir., DB,MountainView;Tyler Mullen,sr.,DB,Summit; Patrick Leiphart, Ir., DB, Summit. First-team special teams —HunterMcDonald, Ir., PBend;ZachEmerson, so., K,Mountain View. Second-team offense — BlakeGarrison, sr., C, SummiCade t; Foisset, ir., OG,Bend; BenKlein, ir., OT,MountainView;Tayor Paulson, ir., OT,Redmond; Cody Winters, ir., TE,Redmond; Dantly Wilcox, ir., WR, MountainView;JoshCherry, sr., WR,Summit; ZachFerguson,ir., RB,Mountain View;MarcHasenoehrl, sr., RB,Summit; DarrenRoss, so., RB,Redmond;CreightonSimmonds ir., QB,Bend. Secondteam defense — JoeHagenbach,ir, DL, MountainView; Cameron Mccormick, so., DL, Summit; Blake Garrison, sr., DL,Summit; BenKlein, ir., ILB,MountainView;OrlandoGarcia,sr., ILB,Summit; EvanChapman, Ir., ILB, Bend;Tyler Lammers, so., DE/OLB,Bend; Michael Suttertield, ir., DE/OLB, MountainView;ChrisAdamo,ir., DB,Mountain View; JordanNeelon,ir., DB, Bend;Christian Johnson,ir., DB,Bend. Second-teamspecial teams —Tyler Mullen, sr., P,Summit; TonyWatters, sr., K Bend. Honorable mention offense —JakeBrauchler, so., C,Redmond;Colin Leautschalt,so.,OG Redmond;KyleHeimuller, ir., OT,Summit; BradDeswert, sr., OT,Bend;JaceJohns, sr., TE,MountainView; CameronMccormick, so., TE,Summit; BrodyBlok, sr., WR,MountainView;QuinnFetig, ir., WR,Bend; GabeBrauchler,so.,RB,Redmond;BransenReynolds, so., QB,Summit; BlakeKnirk, sr., QB,Mountain View. Honorable mention defense — Nick Rasmussen,so., DE/OLB,Summit; BenPeters, sr., DB, MountainView. Honorable mention special teams — Ben Burroughs,ir., P, Redmond; Devon Curtright, sr., K, Summit.

HOCKEY

College, Air Force atDenver

6 p.m.

Root

MOTOR SPORTS

Formula One, Brazilian Grand Prix, qualifying (taped)

1 0 p.m.

NBCS N

BASKETBALL NBA, Portland at Golden State

7:30 p.m.

C S N NW

SUNDAY GOLF

Time

Euorpean Tour,South Africa Open

2:30 a.m. 10:30 a.m.

LPGA Tour, CME Group Titleholders

TV/Radio Golf Golf

SOCCER

English Premier League, Manchester City FC vs. Tottenham Hotspur FC5:30 a.m.

NBCSN

English Premier League, Cardiff City FC vs. Manchester United FC 8

a .m.

NBCSN

MLS, playoffs, Real Salt Lake at Portland 6 MOTOR SPORTS

p . m.

ESPN

Formula One, Brazilian Grand Prix

8 a.m.

NBC

BASKETBALL

Men's college, Charleston Classic, third-place game, teams TBD

9 a.m.

ESPNU

Men's college, Hall of Fame Tip-off, teams TBD

10 a.m.

W omen's college, Duke at Marquette

1 p. m . Fox Sports1

W omen's college, Oklahoma at UCLA

1 p.m .

Pac-12

1:30 p.m.

ESPN2

1:30 p.m.

ESPNU

Men's college, Pureto Rico Tip-off, third-place game,teams TBD Men's college, Harvard at Colorado Men's college, Puerto Rico Tip-off, final, teams TBD

ESPN

ESPN2 ESPNU

Men's college, Vermont at Duke

Men's college,ParadiseJam,teamsTBD Men's college, SanFrancisco at Oregon

CBSSN Pac-12, 1110-AM, 100.1-FM

Men's college, Carleston Classic, final, teamsTBD

6 p.m.

ESPN2

Men'scollege,Paradise Jam, teams TBD

6:30 p.m.

CBSSN

Men's college, Chatanooga atUCLA

7 p.m.

Pac-12

FOOTBALL

NFL, SanDiego at Kansas City

10 a.m.

CBS

NFL, Carolina at Miami

10 a.m.

Fox, 940-AM

1:25 p.m. CFL, Grey Cup, Hamilton at Saskatchewan 3 p.m. NFL, Dallas at New York Giants NFL, Denver at New England

Fox NBCSN

5:20 p.m.

NBC

11 a.m.

NBC

11 a.m.

Pac-12

FIGURESKATING

ISU Grand Prix (taped) WRESTLING College, Boise State at Oregon State

Listingsare the mostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible

forlatechanges madeby TI7or radio stations.

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FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE AH TimesPST AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA NewEngland 7 3 0 .700254 199 N.Y.Jets 5 5 0 5 00183 268 Miami 5 5 0 .500213 225 Buffalo 4 7 0 .364236 273

South

Indianapolis Tennessee Houston Jacksonville Cincinnati Pittsburgh Batimore Cleveland

W L T Pct PF PA 7 3 0 .700252 220 4 6 0 4 00227 226 2 8 0 .200193 276 I 9 0 . 100129 318 North W L T Pct PF PA 7 4 0 .636275 206 4 6 0 4 0 0216 245 4 6 0 .400208 212 4 6 0 .400192 238

West

W L T Pct PF PA Denver 9 I 0 . 900398 255 Kansas City 9 I 0 .900232 138 Oakland 4 6 0 4 00194 246 San Diego 4 6 0 4 0 0228 222 NATIONALCONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 6 5 0 .545276 260 Dallas 5 5 0 .500274 258 NY Giants 4 6 0 4 00192 256 Washington 3 7 0 .300246 311 South W L T Pct PF PA NewOrleans 9 2 0 .818305 196 Carolina 7 3 0 .700238 135 TampaBay 2 8 0 2 00187 237 Atlanta 2 9 0 .182227 309 North W L T Pct PF PA Detroit 6 4 0 6 00265 253 Chicago 6 4 0 .600282 267 GreenBay 5 5 0 .500258 239 Minnesota 2 8 0 .200240 320 West W L T Pct PF PA 10 I 0 9 09306 179 Seattle 6 4 0 .600247 178 SanFrancisco Arizona 6 4 0 .600214 212 St. Louis 4 6 0 .400224 234

Thursday's Game NewOrleans17,Atlanta13 Sunday's Games MinnesotaatGreenBay, 10a.m. JacksonvileatHouston,10a.m. San Diego atKansasCity,10 a.m. ChicagoatSt.Louis,10a.m. PittsburghatCleveland,10a.m. Tampa BayatDetroit,10a.m. N.Y.JetsatBaltimore, 10a.m. CarolinaatMiami,10 a.m.

Carolinaat Boston,10a.m. MinnesotaatWinnipeg, noon WashingtonatToronto, 4 p.m. Pittsburghat Montreal, 4p.m. Ottawa at Detroit, 4 p.m. NY IslandersatPhiladelphia, 4pm. N.Y.RangersatNashvile, 5 p.m. AnaheimatPhoenix, 5p.m. Dallas atSt.Louis, 5p.m.

ChicagoatVancouver, 7p.m. Color adoatLosAngeles,7:30p.m. NewJerseyat SanJose, 7:30p.m.

GOLF

Class 3A Semifinals Today's Games Summit High School Nyssavs Dayton,3 p.m. Vale vs.CascadeChristian, 7 p.m.

ESPN2

Men's college, California at Stanford

Today'sGames

Today's Games

ESPNU

34 85 69 3 3 73 49 3 2 68 45 3 2 61 53 2 4 60 59 24 52 65 2 3 64 72

Friday's Games

Cottage GroveHighSchool Ridgeview vs. Philomath, 3p.m. Autzen Stadium, Eugene North Bend vs. CottageGrove, 6p.m.

4 p.m.

4 3 0 4 2 2 3

Calgary4, Florida3,SO Pittsburgh4, N.Y.Islanders3 Montreal 3,Washington 2 Vancouver6,Columbus2 AnaheimI, TampaBay0, OT

Class 4A Semifinals

Class1A Semifinals Today's Games Cottage GroveHighSchool Camas Valley vs Lowell 11a m. Hiusboro Stadium TriangleLakevs. Imbler,2:15 p.m.

23 15 4 2 1 15 3 2 1 16 5 2 3 14 5 2 1 11 8 22 11 9 2 4 10 11

Anaheim 2 5

Class 5A Semifinals Today's Games Autzen Stadium, Eugene Ashland vs Sherwood I p m Hiusboro Stadium Silvertonvs.WestAlbany, 5:30 p.m.

Class 2A Semifinals Today's Games Summit HighSchool GrantUnionvs. Portland Christian,11 a.m. Hiusboro Stadium Heppnervs.Regis,11 a.m.

Central Division GP W L DT Pts GF GA

Chicago St. Louis Colorado Minnesota Dallas Nashville Winnipeg

Pacific Division GP W L DT Pts GF GA 1 6 6 3 35 76 63 SanJose 2 2 1 4 3 5 33 77 51 Phoenix 22 1 4 4 4 32 76 70 Los Angeles 23 15 6 2 3 2 64 50 Vancouver 24 1 2 8 4 28 64 63 Calgary 23 8 11 4 20 64 84 Edmonton 2 4 7 1 5 2 16 64 84 NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime loss.

7' (

At Jeld-Wen Field Sheldonvs Jesuit CentralCatholicvs.Tigard

4 p.m.

WATER POLO

,V

I 173 3

SecondRound Quarterfinals Friday's Results Jesuit 62,Lakeridge33 Canby24, Sheldon17 CentralCatholic42,Clackamas7 Tigard42,NorthMedford0 Semifinals Saturday's Games

College, Kentucky at Georgia

6:30 p.m.

i

/

/

Class 6A

College, Vanderbilt at Tennessee

ESPN

www.gocomrcs.comyrnthebteachers

Football

NBCSN

West Ham United FC vs. Chelsea FC

IN THE BLEACHERS In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick

PREP SPORTS

English Premier League,

College, California at Stanford

ON DECK

Golf

"... Now just pull the pin thingy, then wind up and chuck the sucker."

Tennes seeatOakland,I:05p.m. IndianapolisatArizona,I:05 p.m. Dallas atN.Y.Giants,1:25 p.m. DenveratNewEngland,5:30p.m. Open Buffalo,Cincinnati, Philadelphia,Seattle Monday's Game SanFranciscoatWashington, 5.40p.m.

College Schedule AH TimesPST

(Sublect to change) Friday's Game FAR WEST

Navy58,SanJoseSt. 52 (3 OT) Saturday'sGames Top 25 No.1 Alabama vs. Chatanooga, 11am. No. 2FloridaStatevs. Idaho, 12:30p.m. No. 3BayloratNo.11OklahomaState,5 p.m. No. 4OhioStatevs. Indiana, 12:30p.m. No. 5OregonatArizona,12:30 p.m. No.7clemsonvs.TheCitadel,9a.m No. 8Missouriat No.24Mississippi, 4:45p.m. No. 9Texas ABMat No.18LSU,12:30p.m. No. 10Stanfordvs. California, I p.m. No. 12SouthCarolinavs. Coasta Carolina,10a.m. No.13 MichiganStateat Northwestern, 9am. No.14UCLAvs.No.19ArizonaState,4p.m. No. 15FresnoState vs. NewMexico, I p.m. No.16 WisconsinatMinnesota,12:30 p.m. No. 21Louisville vs.Memphis, 9a.m. No 220klahomaatKansasState,9a.m. No. 23SouthernCalat Colorado,6:30p.m. No. 25DukeatWake Forest, 9a.m. Pac-12 Standings North Conf. 6-1 6-2

Oregon Stanford OregonState Washington WashingtonState California

4-3 3-4 3-4

South

ArizonaState UCLA USC Arizona Co orado

0-8 Conf. 6-1 5-2 5-2 3-4 1-6 1-6

Utah

Today's Games OregonatArizona, 1230p.m. Utah atWashington State, 12:30p.m. California atStanford,1 p.m. ArizonaStateatUCLA,4 p.m. USC atColorado,6:30p.m. Washingtonat OregonState, 7:30 p.m.

Overall 9-1 8-2 64 6-4 5-5

1-10

Overall 8-2 8-2 8-3 6-4 4-6 4-6

Betting line NFL

(Home teams in CAPS) Favorite Opening Current Underdog Sunday LIONS 95 85 Buccaneers TEXANS 1 0 . 5 10 Jaguars PACKERS 5 4 Vikings CHIEFS 5 45 Chargers Panthers 4 4.5 DOLPHINS BROWNS 2 2 Steelers RAMS PK I Bears RAVENS 3 . 5 3.5 Jets Titans PK I RAIDERS CARDINALS 2 2.5 Colts GIANTS 25. 25 Cowboys Broncos 25. 2.5 PATRIOTS Monday 49ers 4.5 55 REDSKINS College Today

P ENN ST 1 . 5 lllinois 7 Pittsburgh I TEMPLE 9 O HIO ST 32 Michigan St 7.5 E. Carolina 7 FLORIDA ST 56 M arshall 32 . 5 GEORGIA 23.5 IOWA ST 6 Duke 5

BostonCollege PK Wisconsin 14.5

MIAMI-FLA 19.5 HOUSTON 3 5 LOUISVILLE 24.5 TENNES SEE 3 C. MICHIGAN 9

BowlingGreen 24.5

WYOMING 7 W. Kentucky 4 IOWA 6 A rizona St 2 . 5 U TAH ST 6 . 5 Usc 21.5 LSU 3.5 I-Mississippi St 2 O regon 18 . 5 T ULANE 17 STANFORD 31.5 N .TEXAS 8 . 5 NOTRE DAME PK Baylor 9 Mid Tenn St 22.5 ARKANSAS ST 24 OREGON ST NL S.ALABAMA 3.5 Smu 4.5 FRESNO ST 31 FLAATLANTIC 20 Tulsa 3.5 KANSAS ST 3 M issouri 3 WASHINGTON ST I B oise St 7 I-Little Rock,Ark.

Nebraska PURDUE I SYRACUS E 7 Connecticut 34.5 Indiana 7 NORTHW ESTERN 6.5 NC STA TE 57 Idaho 33 FLORIDA INT'L 245 Kentucky 4.5 Kansas 6 WAKEFOREST I MARYLAND 16.5 MINNESO TA 20 Virginia 3 Cincinnati 23 Memphis 2.5 Vanderbilt 13 UMass 24.5 E. MICHIGA N 6 Hawaii TEXAS ST 5 6 Michigan 2 UCLA 11 ColoradoSt 22 COLORA DO 4.5 TexasA8M 2 ARKANSA S 195 ARIZONA 17 Utep 32.5 California 8 TX-S.Antonio PK Byu 9.5 OKLAHOMA ST 23 S. MISS 24 GeorgiaSt NL Washington 3.5 UL-Monroe 45 S. FLORIDA 32 NewMexico 22 NewMexicoSt 35 LATECH 4.5 Oklahoma 2.5 MISSISSIPPI I Utah 6 SANDIEG OST 2 6.5

BASKETBALL Men's college Friday's Games

EAST Siena71,Cornell 70 St. John's64,Monmouth (NJ) 54 Villanova84,Delaware 80 SOUTH

Brown81, Longwood69 E. Kentucky95,Brescia 56 Jackson St.68, UT-Martin 64 LSU89,SELouisiana66 Mississippi111,MVSU82 NC Centra76, AppalachianSt.70, OT SouthFlorida72,Stetson63 SouthemMiss. 66,SouthAlabama59 Tennessee 88,TennesseeSt.67 UALR 85,Southern U.82,DT MIDWEST CS Northridge80, Austin Peay77, OT Detroit 77,FAU44 I linois 77,ChicagoSt.53 IndianaSt 80,TrumanSt. 69 lowa86, Penn55 Kansas88 Towson58 KentSt. 79,SC-Upstate 78 Montana St. 59,Cent. Michigan54 Northwestern 63, IUPUI61 NotreDam e84, SantaClara69 SE Missouri109,MidContinent 64 Toledo103,StonyBrook99 W. Carolina 98, Niagara90 SOUTHWES T AbileneChristian62,W.NewMexico44 IncarnateWord 80, Southwestern (Texas)61 WrightSt.75, HoustonBaptist 59 FAR WEST ArizonaSt.70,Bradley58 Colorado St. 72,N.Colorado65 E. Washington 80,BostonU.68 Grand Canyon72,SavannahSt.71 Idaho87, NorthTexas76 Nevada83, Chattanooga81 Portand69,Columbia52 PortlandSt.67,LoyolaofChicago63 San Francisco 75, Montana74 IJC Davis80,SIU-Edwardsville 75 UC Irvine84, LIUBrooklyn 64 Utah84, Lamar57 IJCLA81, MoreheadState 70 Wyoming 70 SouthDakota53 TOURNAMENT 2K Sports Classic Championship l)conn 59,Indiana58 Third Place BostonCollege89,Washington 78 Charleston Classic Semifinals Clemson85,Davidson 54 IJMass81, NewMexico 65 Consolation Bracket Temple83,Georgia 81 UAB87,Nebraska74

Coachesvs. Cancer Classic First Round MichiganSt.96,Virginia Tech77 Oklahoma 86,Seton Hall 85 Puerto RicoTipoff Semifinals Charlotte86, Northeastern77 Michigan82,Florida St.80, OT Consolation Bracket Georgetown 90, KansasSt. 63 VCU73, LongBeachSt. 67 USVI ParadiseJam First Round La Sage 78,MorganSt.59 Maryland68, Marist 43 N. Iowa90,LoyolaMarymount81 Providence 67, Vanderbilt 60

Women's College Friday's Games EAST

Akron72, Canisius56 Cal St-Fullerton80, Columbia54 Fordham 80,Yale 52 Maine66,LIUBrooklyn50 Rutgers69 Howard38 St. Bonaventure 61,Monmouth (NJ)55 Uconn96,Boston U.38 SOUTH FloridaASM65 Webber57 Jackson St.74, Houston Baptist 50 Mississippi96,SELouisiana69 Tulane 55, UNCWilmington 50 WakeForest92, Radford 65 MIDWEST Marist 74,BowlingGreen60 Ohio St.75,Old Dominion 60 Purdue76,Belmont46 SOUTHWES T Arkansas 78, MissouriSt. 44 Arkansas St.92, KentSt.61 Baylor88,NorthwestemSt. 54 Navy89,Oral Roberts 64 Oklahoma St. 82,SouthernCal51 SavannahSt.51,UTSA50 Tulsa 60 W.Michigan59 UALR68,Memphis63,OT IJTEP 92, N.Arizona43 FAR WEST UtahSt. 78,IdahoSt.66 Washington St. 92,FresnoSt.79 TOURNAMENT TD BankClassic First Round GreenBay63,Siena52 Vermont 68, North Florida44

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH TimesPST

Eastern Conference Atlantic Division

GP W L DT Pts GF GA 2 2 14 6 2 30 61 41 2 3 14 8 I 29 67 61 2 2 13 8 1 27 64 53 2 3 10 6 7 27 58 65 2 3 12 9 2 26 61 49 2 2 8 1 0 4 20 63 71 Florida 2 4 6 1 3 5 17 53 80 Buffalo 2 4 5 1 8 I 11 43 76 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 2 3 15 8 0 30 67 51 Washington 23 12 10 I 25 71 66 NewJersey 22 9 8 5 23 48 53 N.Y.Rangers 22 11 11 0 22 46 54 Philadelphia 2 1 9 1 0 2 20 44 51 Carolina 2 2 8 1 0 4 20 43 63 Columbus 2 3 8 1 2 3 19 56 71 N.Y.Islanders 2 3 8 1 2 3 19 66 77

Boston TampaBay Toronto Detroit Montreal Ottawa

Western Conference

LPGA Tour CMEGroupTitleholder Friday At Ritz Carlton Golf Resort(Tiburon Golf Club) Naples, Fla. Purse: $2 million Yardage:6,540; Par:72 SecondRound(Leading Scores) SandraGal 64-69 — I33 SunYoungYoo 68-68 — I36 GerinaPiler 71-67—138 Pornanong Phatlum 70-68 — I38 Cristie Kerr 69-69 138 MorganPressel 71-68 139 HeeYoungPark 69-70—139 AnnaNordqvist 66-73—139 AzaharaMunoz 72-68—140 JenniferJohnson 71-69 — 140 NatalieGulbis 70-70 — I40 InbeePark 68-72 140 ShanshanFeng 66-74—140 Lexi Thompson 66-74—140 AmyYang 73-68—141 ChellaChoi 71-70 — 141 So YeonRyu 70-71 141 MeenaLee 69-72 141 Mo Martin 69-72—141 AyakoUehara 69-72—141 SandraChangkiia 67-74 — 141 Rebecca Lee-Bentham 65-76 — 141 MichelleWie 72-70 — 142 Lydia Ko

MoriyaJutanugarn AngelaStantord LizetteSalas CatrionaMatthew Mika Miyazato KarrieWeb b KarineIcher Juli Inkster SuzannPetersen StacyLewis BrittanyLang JennyShin Jodi EwartShadof Na YeonChoi CandieKung StacyPrammanasudh CindyLaCrosse JanePark JessicaKorda I.K. Kim lhee Lee

HeeKyungSeo AlisonWalshe IreneCho MiJungHur CarlotaCiganda Pernilla Lindberg

Ai Miyazato BrittanyLincicome

71-71 142

70-72 — 142 74-69 — 143 71-72—143 70-73 — 143 70-73 143 70-73 143 69-74—143 69-74—143 72-72—144 71-73 — 144 68-76 — 144 73-72 145 72-73—145 71-74—145 71-74—145 71-74 — 145 69-76 — 145 68-77 145 74-72—146 72-74—146 69-77 — I46 74-73 — 147 74-73 147 73-74—147 73-74 — 147 72-75—147 72-75 — 147 69-78 — I47 68-79 147

SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUESOCCER AH TimesPST CONFERENCECHAMPIONSHIP Eastern Conference Leg I — Saturday,Nov9: Sporting KC0, Houston 0 Leg 2 —Today,Nov.23: Houstonat Sporting Kc, 4:30 p.m.

Western Conference

Leg I — Sunday,Nov. 10: RealSalt Lake4, Portland 2 Leg 2 —Sunday, Nov. 24. Real Salt Lakeat Portland,

6 p.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

American League

CLEVELAND INDIANS— Agreedto terms with LHP Mike Zagurski onaminor leaguecontract. OAKLANDATHLETICS — AnnouncedINF Scott

Sizemoreelectedfreeagency. National League CHICAGOCUBS — Named Brandon Hydebench coach,GaryJonesthird base/infield coach,Bil Mueller hittingcoach,Mike Brumleyassistant hitting coach and JoseCsatro quality assurancecoach. Promoted director ofamateurscoutingJaron Madisonto director of playerdevelopment andnational andregional crosscheckerMattDoreyto director of amateur scouting. COLOR ADO ROCKIES — Agreedto terms with RHPLaTroyHawkins onaone-yearcontract. MILWAUKEEBREWERS Traded RHP Burke

BadenhoptoBostonfor LHPl.uis Ortega. NEW YORKMETS — Sent RHP HanselRobles outright toLasVegas(PCL). ST.LOUISCARDINALS— Traded38 David Freese and RHP FernandoSalas to theL.A. Angelsfor OFs PeterBouriosandRandal Grichuk.

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA — FinedNewYork coachMike Woodson $25,000forpublic criticism ofofficiating FOOTBALL National Football League NFL — Fined Washington CB EJ. Biggers $21,000,ChicagoCBZackBowmanandNewEngland OT MarcusCannon$15,750andTennesseeLBAkeem Ayers $7,875 for their actions during last week's

games. Suspended umpire Roy Ellison one game for wordsdirectedat Washington OTTrentWiliams duringSunday'sgame. CHICAGOBEARS — Signed DT TracyRobertson from thepracticesquad. INDIANAP OLISCOLTS—SignedWRGrift Whalen to thepracticesquad. KANSASCITYCHIEFS Placed WR KyleWil-

liams on injured reserveSignedWRChadHall OAKLANDRAIDERS— SignedDT Ricky Lumpkin to thepracticesquad. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS — ReleasedDEBrandon Moorefromthepractice squad.SignedDEDamikScafe to thepractice squad SAN FRANCI SCO 49ERS — Signed CB Tramaine Brock toafour-year contract extensionthrough2017. TENNES SEETITANS—ReleasedS Corey Lynch. ClaimedDBMicahPellerin ofl waiversfromDallas. HOCKEY

National HockeyLeague

CAROLINAHURRICANES — Recalled F Elias Lindholmfrom Charlotte (AHL). Rea ssigned F Chris Terry toCharlotte. DALLASSTARS—Traded F Lane MacDermidto Calgaryfor a2014sixth-round draft pick. TAMPABAYLIGHTNING Reassigned F Brett

Connolly toSyracuse(AHL). TORONTOMAPLELEAFS — Signed W Connor Brownto athree-year, entry-level contract. WASHING TONCAPITALS—ReassignedDDmitry Orlov toHershey(AHL). WINNIPEG JETS Reassigned DZach Redmond to St.John's(AHL). PlacedDZachBogosianoninjured reserve,retroactiveto Nov.15. ActivatedDMarkStuart.



C4

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013

MEN'5 COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

GOLF ROUNDUP

Gal holds steady in

Top-ranked Michigan State rolls past Virginia Tech, 96-77

wind at Titleholders •

The Associated Press NAPLES, Fl a. — A windy a f t ernoon a l o ng the Gulf Coast of Florida played right into the hands of Sandra Gal on Friday in the LPGA Titleholders. Gal controlled the flight

The Associated Press NEW YORK — A d r eian Payne had a career-high 29 points and 10 rebounds, Keith Appling had 13 points and seven assists, and top-ranked Michigan State beat Virginia Tech 96-77 on Friday night in the semifinals of the Coaches vs. Cancer Classic. Gary Harris scored 19 despite shooting just 2 for 12 on 3-pointers and Branden Dawson had 12 points and 10 rebounds for the Spartans.

Michigan State (5-0) will play Oklahoma in the f inal tonight. The Sooners rallied to beat Seton Hall 86-85 in the first semifinal. Hokies senior Jarrell Eddie had 23 points — 17 in the first half. Adam Smith scored 27 as Virginia Tech (3-2) fell to 4-8 all-time against teams ranked No. 1 in The Associated Press college basketball poll. After s t ruggling a g ainst Columbia and Portland State in their two games since beating then-No. I Kentucky, the Spartans appeared as if they put their early troubles behind them in jumping out to a quick five-point lead. But Eddie and the Hokies

came back, even going up 28-27 with 7:09 left in the half on Adam Smith's 3-pointerVirginia Tech was 6 for9 on 3s for the half. That was it, though. Dunks. Long 3s. Inside and out, Michigan State dominated. Payne hit a 3 with 2 seconds left in the half to make it 46-33, his 20th point of the

half. Also on Friday: No. 2 Kansas 88, Towson 58: LA WRENCE, K a n. Andrew Wiggins scored 16 points, Andrew White III added 13 and Kansas (4-0) opened the Battle 4 Atlantis tournament with a victory. No. 10 VCU 73, Long Beach State 67: SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Rob Brandenberg scored 19 points to help Virginia C ommonwealth b e at Long Beach State in the Puerto Rico Tip-Off. The Rams (41) trailed by eight early in the second half before reeling off a 13-0 run. No. 14 Michigan 82, Florida State 80: SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Nik Stauskas scored 26 points, including seven in overtime, as Michigan (4-1) erased a 16-point second-half deficit to beat Florida State in the Puerto Rico Tip-off. No. 18 Connecticut 59, lndiana 58: NEW Y O R K Shabazz Napier scored 27 points, including 11 over the final 7 minutes, to lead Connecticut (6-0) over Indiana in the championship game of the 2K Sports Classic Benefiting Wounded Warrior Project. Massachusetts 81, No. 19 New Mexico 65: CHARLESTON, S.C. — Chaz Williams scored 19 points as Massachusetts ran past New Mexico (3-1) to reach the Charleston Classic championship. No. 22 UCLA 81, Morehead State 70: LOS ANGELESJordan Adams scored a career-high 30 points, Kyle Anderson had a triple-double and UCLA (4-0) pulled away in the second half. Arizona State 70, Bradley 58: TEMPE, Ariz. — Jordan Bachynski had 15 points and 10 rebounds to lead Arizona State. Jahii Carson, coming off a 40-point night in a win against UNLV o n T uesday, had 19 points, seven rebounds and five assists, for the Sun Devils,who are 5-0 for the first time since 1985. Boston College 89, Washington 78: NEW YORK — Joe Rahon scored 22 points, including four 3-pointers in Boston College's first-half barrage from beyond the arc, and the

Eagles beat Washington (2-3) in the third-place game of the 2K Sports Classic. Utah 84, Lamar 57: SALT LAKE CITY — Jordan Loveridge scored 14 points and collected seven rebounds and Princeton Onwas chipped in 12 points and nine boards off the bench to lead Utah (4-0).

of her ball and picked up three birdies on the back nine at Tiburon Golf Club,

giving her a 3-under 69

Chang W Lee/The New YorkTimes

Jean Marcellus, center, plays basketball with others during tryouts for the Mixed Gender Basketball Association at West Orange High School in West Orange, N.J., on Nov. 16. A former Harlem Globetrotter and retired educator's vision for a Mixed Gender Basketball Association includes changing the teams' gender makeup from quarter to quarter and a 4-point shot for women.

nove new ea uewou inse e n erino e a By Harvey Araton

BASKETBALL

New York Times News Service

WEST ORANGE, N .J. — W hen Heather LaCasse heard of a proposed coed professional basketball league, she passed on the information to her boyfriend,Jean Marcellus,and suggested he try out. As an inducement, she promised to keep him company on the drive from New Yorkto New Jersey. But on the morning of the tryout, Marcellus, who is 6-foot-6 and played some college and overseas pro ball, talked LaCasse, who is about a foot smaller and

played in high school, into packing gym gear, too. "When we got here,he gave me the pen and I said, 'I don't think I'm goingto do it because I haven't done organized ball in a long time,'" said LaCasse, 30. "And then he and everybody at the signup table said, 'Just do it.'" Making a snap decision at the sound of a well-known slogan, she did. Mshangwe Crawford, wh o p l ayed football in college, hit the court mainly to provide support for his girlfriend, Amanda Hill, a former high school standout who was intrigued by the concept of men paired with women, for pay. "I play with her four nights a week and Idon'tknow anyone who loves the game more than Amanda," Crawford said. Women assisting men. Men helping women. Before a ball was dribbled Saturday in the West Orange High School gymnasium, John Howard's belief in the societal benefits — and potential commercial appeal — for what he is calling the Mixed Gender Basketball Association was heightened. A few women, most notably Ann Meyers and Nancy Lieberman, have played with men in a professional setting. Many top women's college teams routinely use male practice players. Earlier this year, the Dallas Mavericks' owner, Mark Cuban, suggested that Brittney Griner, the No. 1 pick in the 2013 WNBA draft, audition for his team. The offer was panned by critics who frowned on imposing male standards on women with leagues and challenges of their own. "Whether he was serious about it, I don't know, but Griner's going into the NBA and playing in an otherwise gender segregated model is not what I'm talking about," Howard said. "My model is not antagonistic or j u s t c ompetitive. It's collaborative." After playing basketball for the University of Cincinnati and the Harlem Globetrotters in the 1960s, Howard had a long career in education as a district superintendent, high school principal and college professor. While working for the Michigan Department of Education in

the late 1970s, he helped launch a gender equity project and became fascinated with the subject and unconvinced that segregated paths in the realm of sports worked bestforthe greater good. Retired last year, Howard has since January been crafting game and business plans for a league he hopes can begin play in 2014 or 2015, with exhibition games at select sites commencing late next month. He has created a red-and-blue logo (of a ponytailed woman outleaping a man for the ball), a website and a company based in Florida — MGBA Inc. — that has on staff national directors of operations, affairs and communications. He said he is building a network in several areas around the country with the intention of selecting teams to play a series of exhibitions to roll out the concept

regionally. "When I show people the plan or the website, the first thing that comes out of their mouth is, 'Are you serious?'" Howard said. "I tell them, 'Yeah, I'm serious.' And they say, 'Well, tell me more about it.' They want to see how it works." In his blueprint, the composition of the teams would change from quarter to quarter: three men and two women, and vice versa. There would be a 4-point shot line for women, allowing Howard to implement what he called scramble timegiving a team that is trailing at the end of a game or possibly each quarter the right to play up to five women to increase the chance for a 4-point play. Coaches, he said, would have to process many more game situations than in men's or women's basketball, even on basic screen-and-rolls, given the possible consequences of an unfavorable manon-woman matchup. Women, conversely, would bring more discipline and a greater commitment to fundamentals, Howard said. Saturday's tryout attracted about 40 players, two-thirds men, m i m icking an earlier effort i n A t l anta. Howard said he needed to infiltrate the women's networks better, although the New Jersey tryout conflicted with one for an all-women's league, and several candidates either could not make it or arrived late. Almost all of the players were from the area, but Jacqui Burrows was an exception. After hearing of the opportunity from a friend, who saw an ad placed on Craigslist, she drove almost five hours from Nashua, N.H., with her 20-year-old daughter, Krista, who came to support her mother.

Like LaCasse, it had been awhile since Burrows played organized ball, only longer. After a productive high school career inMassachusetts ended in 1987, she passed on what she described as "a lot of offers" to play college ball, noting the women's game was nowhere as developed as it is now. She has continued to play in recreational leagues with men, including her husband, who encouraged her to try something "out of the box." Unaware that the tryout would stretch into the evening, Burrows had to leave in the late afternoon, but she impressed the evaluators enough to be offered a spot on one of the teams that will play the exhibitions next month. As one of the few men with height, Marcellus was selected for a team spot. LaCasse received an invitation to attend a second tryout. Hill was offered a spot; her boyfriend, Crawford, was offered a second look. Hill was ecstatic, echoing several of the women who said they preferred to play with men. "It helps you keep your game at a certain level, or helps you get better," she said. "I feel women play harder when they are on the court with men — it's like we have to prove we can play with them." Added Shay Gomez, a 6-3 forward who played at Monmouth University and who said she is a third cousin of the NBA players Derrick Rose and Ryan Gomes,

"Most of us grew up going against guys and we don't back down, and when we get hit, we don't break." Ability and productivity aside, Howard said all players would be paid the same on 12-member teams, which he hopes to sell individually for $25,000. "Our motto is, 'Equal pay for equal play,'" he said. With some exceptions, minor league basketball has been a tough sell, if only because college basketball is so wide-

spread and popular as a less flamboyant alternative to the NBA. Many of those trying out for the MGBA do not have the credentials of what one would consider to be an aspiring professional player. "Yes, I'd like to get elite players now, but we've got to start somewhere," Howard said. He hopes the coed concept, which has been popular in college intramurals, will be the immediate attraction: the possibility ofseeing the unexpected — or even the image he created in the league logo — come to life. One television network, Howard said, has told him to send the first highlight of a woman dunking on a man, pronto. "I'll be waiting for that," he said, at the same time understanding, or sympathizing, that "nobody wants to be that guy."

and a three-shot lead going into the weekend of an LPGA Tour finale that pays $700,000 to the winner. The 28-year-old German has spent much of the year working on a shorter swing and hitting a v a riety of shapesand trajectories,and that was put to good use in the blustery conditions. And the fact she opened with a 64 didn't hurt. "My advantage was yesterday," Gal said. "Shooting 8-under was big. Today it was hard for everybody to catch up. That's what gave me that three-shot lead." Gal was at 11-under 133. Sun Young Yoo, the former Kraft Nabisco champion, had a 68 and was alone in second. The degree of difficulty was best measured by what Yoo considered her best shot of the round — a 6-iron on the 18th hole that didn't even hit the green. "I'm very pleased with how I played," Yoo said. "I recovered very well." Lydia Ko, the 16-year-old from New Zealand making her pro debut, played her final 10 holes without a birdie and finished at 71, leaving her nine shots behind. "I thought I played much better today than yesterday, but the score was the same," Ko said. "I left a couple of my putts short just in front of the hole. Then when I got my speed right, the d i rection w as wrong, so that was kind of frustrating." Gal hasn't won since her inaugural title at the Kia Classic two years ago, and her biggest disappointment this year was not getting picked for the Solheim Cup team. She felt her game was turning around, but not in time to warrant a captain's pick. Instead, she might have to settle for the biggest payoff in women's golf. To win this week would amount to one-third of her career earnings. "It's easier for people to say, 'I don't care about the money, I only want to play well.' But they don't mean it, right?" she said w i th a smile. "But I'm not out here to play for money. I'm out here to play with heart and to inspire others. It's a huge purse. But at the end of the day, when you win a tournament, you're happy about fighting and overcoming fear." Cristie Kerr shot another 69 to lead the group at 6-under 138, five shots behind. Also on Friday:

Schwartzel, Crespi share lead: JO H ANNESBURG — Charl Schwartzel shot a 7-under 65 to earn a share of the lead at the European Tour's season-opening South African Open. The 2011 Masters c hampion had five birdies and an

eagle in his opening nine

NHL ROUNDUP

en route to a 12-under 132.

Marco Crespi (67) joined

Crosby's late goal lifts Penguinspast Islanders

him in the lead after two rounds at Glendower Golf Club. Morten Orum Mad-

The Associated Press PITTSBURGH — S i d ney C r osby scored with 1:16 remaining to give the Pittsburgh Penguins a 4-3 victory over the New York Islanders on Friday night. Crosby's 12th goal of the season was also the 250th of his career, and the Penguins' captain also had an assist. Chris Kunitz had two goals and an assist, Evgeni Malkin had a goal and two assists, and James Neal added two assists. Jeff Zatkoff, playing for the first time since Nov. 2, stopped 32 shots in his fourth NHL start. Thomas Vanek scored twice for the Islanders in his first game after missing five with an upper-body injury. Vanek has three goals and two assists with New

the leaders. Bjorn in f ront: M E L BOURNE, A u stralia T homas Bjorn o f D e n mark shot a 3 -under 68 for aone-stroke lead after two rounds of the World Cup at Royal Melbourne. Bjorn was at 8-under 134. American K evin S t r eelman was in second place after shooting a 69. He and Matt Kuchar led the overall team standings for the U.S. after 36 holes, with a threestroke margin over Denmark and seven over Japan and Australia.

York since being acquired from Buffalo in October. Colin McDonald also got his second of the season for the Islanders. Kevin Poulin made 30 saves for the Islanders. Also on Friday: Ducks1, Lightning 0:ANAHEIM, Calif. — Ryan Getzlaf scored with 5.2 seconds left in overtime, Jonas Hiller made 31 saves in an emergency start to get his 19th career shutout, and Anaheim beat Tampa Bay. Viktor Fasth was scheduled to start in goal for the Ducks, but sustained a lower body injury during the warm-ups. So Hiller got the call and finished with his second shutout of the season. Canucks 6, Blue Jackets 2: VANCOU-

VER, British Columbia — Henrik Sedin scored twice and twin brother Daniel Sedin had a goal and two assists as Vancouver beat Columbus. Canadiens 3, Capitals 2: WASHINGTON — David Desharnais scored his long-awaited first goal of the season, and Montreal took an early three-goal lead and survived two goals from Washington's Alex Ovechkin. Flames 4, Panthers 3: CALGARY, Alberta — Sean Monahan scored in the sixth round of the shootout to lift Calgary past Florida. Joe Colborne had a goal and an assist in regulation for his first multiple-point game with the Flames since being acquired from Toronto in the offseason.

sen (66) was a shot behind


SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Ross

mer at home in Bend, and also a few weeks in Chile to train on snow with Continued from C1 her U.S. teammates. Lindsey Vonn onFriday officially withdrew from next week's World Cupski races Ross, who was raised in Klamath She said Olympic gold medalists in Beaver Creek, Colo., but in a surprise, she left open the possibility that she would Falls and grew up skiing with the Lindsey Vonn — who reinjured her race the next week when the women's World Cup moves to the Lake Louise resort Bend-based Mt. Bachelor Sports Edright knee on Tuesday to put her in Canada. ucation Foundation, moved to Bend fourth Olympics in doubt — and Julia Vonn partly tore the anterior cruciate ligament in her right knee in a crash during about three years ago. Mancuso havebeen "awesome teamtraining Tuesday, nine months after having the same ligament surgically rebuilt The 25-year-old is part of an exmates" during her progression on the after a violent fall in the world championships. Howmuchdamagethe most recent tremely deep and talented U.S. womWorld Cup circuit. accident did to her knee has not been clear. en's speed team. She says she hopes "They are incredibly helpful and "Lindsey is recovering very quickly from abrasions to her faceand contusions to compete in the 2014 Winter Olymkind, and being able to train with to her shoulder blade," Dr. William Sterett, head teamphysician for the U.S. wompics — set for Feb. 7-23 — in three them year-round has definitely conen's Alpine ski team, said in a statement released Wednesday by Vonn's publicist. events: downhill, super G and super tributed to my (and my other team"Beyond that, she has a stable knee with an MRI finding of a partial tear of her ACL combined. mates') success," Ross said. graft. With therapy, she is progressing well while not losing any of the strength she "It's going to be hard to make it in Ross, Vonn, M a ncuso, L eanne worked so hard to achieve." all three of these events, but it would S mith, Stacey C oo k a n d A l i c e — New York TimesNewsService be wonderful to have three chances M cKennis ar e a l l c o m peting f o r to medal in the games," Ross said. the four Olympic spots in the speed She posted the first World Cup events. p odium finish o f h e r c a reer t h i s the World Cup circuit," Ross said. World Cup event in the United States. While the next two months will past March with a surprising sec- "Any other year, I would have proved She said she is hoping to have family be pressure-packed, Ross said she ond-place performance in a downhill that I should be on the Olympic team and friends at the finish and others will try not to become distracted by race in Germany. ... but because last year all six of the watching at home on television. results and comparisons with her That made her the sixth U.S. Ski ladies onthe U.S. Speed Team capShe said she is trying not to put too teammates. "Maintaining my focus and perTeam women's speed athlete last tured podiums, we all showed that much pressureon herselfby thinking season to finish in the top three of we are medal contenders. It's going to ahead to Olympic selection. spective are some big t h ings I 'm " It sounds r i d iculous, bu t t h e working on in my mental game," she an FIS Alpine World Cup race. With be tough to choose four athletes from that many skiers having that much a group of six that all have a huge Olympics is just another race," Ross noted. "Getting caught up also really success last season, this season will amount of potential." claimed. "Just to get there I need to hinders my ability to perform. This is be even more crucial for Olympic Ross also claimed a U.S. national ski my best, and to ski my best I need what my life is about right now, but selection. championship in super G last season. to stay in the moment. That's one like everything else, it's fleeting. So "My performances last season Her first World Cup races this sea- of my big goals for this upcoming I'm just really trying to enjoy the ride." definitely proved that I am capable son are set for Nov. 29-Dec. 1 in Bea- season." — Reporter: 541-383-0318, of competing on the highest level of ver Creek, Colo. It will be her first Ross spent some of this past summmorical@bendbulletin.com.

Vonndoesnotrule outareturn intwoweeks

Ducks Continued from C1 The Ducks (9-1, 6-1 Pac-12) are heavy favorites, but it's a dangerous

game. The Wildcats (6-4, 3-4) have one of the fastest-snapping offenses in the country — just a notch behind Oregon — and one of the nation's top running backs in K a'Deem Carey, an All-American last season who is second nationally with 150 yards per

game. A rizona will b e p l aying with a sense of urgency, too. While the Wildcats are bowl eligible, they have lost their past two games, both at home and both games they could have won. The first, against UCLA, A r izona had trouble getting out of its own way and couldn't stop Myles Jack, a freshman linebacker taking his first turn at running back for the Bruins. The Wildcats followed that up with an even more disappointing loss, 24-17 to a Washington State team that had lost its previous three games by a com-

bined score of 162-83. Arizona also has the added incentive of playing its final home game against one of the nation's elite programs, so the Wildcats should be up for this one. "It's a huge game, just to try to get some national respect and it being our seniors' last home game," Arizona coach Rich Rodriguez said. "I'm probably over the top on that. I want them to really enjoy their last home

game."

Here's five things to look for when the Ducks meet the Wildcats in the desert: Tempo up: Oregon has been the standardbearerforfast-paced offense the past few years and has again been close to unstoppable this season. The Ducks are second nationally in total

offense (580 yards per game), third in scoring (nearly 51 points) and have been the quick-strike kings, scoring in two minutes or less in 47 of their 66 scoring drivesthis season. Arizona has taken the speed approach since Rodriguezbecame the coach lastseason, playing at a pace few teams can

match — exceptmaybe Oregon. Thomas r e turns: De' A n thony Thomas had plenty of expectations for his junior season after a superb sophomore year. It didn't work out quite the way the Oregon running back had hoped, thanks to an ankle injury that kept him out of nearly four full games. Thomas returned with a flourish last week, returning a kickoff 86 yards for a touchdown and catching a touchdown pass in Oregon's 44-21 victory over Utah last Saturday. Thomas says he's healthy now and should give the Ducks a huge boost for the stretch run. Catching Carey: Oregon is the last team in the past two seasons to hold Arizona under 100 yards rushing. The Ducks will have their hands full this time trying to stop Carey. An All-American last season, he's been just as good this year, ranking seventh nationally with 1,353 yards despite playing one less game than most of the leaders. With 117 yards, Carey willbecome Arizona's career rushing leader — as a junior. Magical Mariota:Mariota has been

arguably the most efficient offensive player in college football this season, which is why he is one of the front-runners for the Heisman Trophy. The sophomore has thrown for 2,819 yards and 25 touchdowns, and hasn't thrown an i nterception since Nov. 17, 2012, against Stanford. He has thrown 343 passes without a pick, a Pac-12 record, and is the NCAA's career leader in interception

percentage (0.97) among quarterbacks with at least 600 pass attempts. Red-zone woes:Arizona was solid in the red zone early in the season, scoring on 25 of their first 28 chances inside the opponent's 20-yard line. The Wildcats haven't been nearly as good over the past two games, scoring six o f 1 0 t i mes with j u st two touchdowns. Arizona failed on a fourth-and-I and lost a goal-line fumble against UCLA and last week failed on a last-chance play inside Washington State's 20 when Samajie Grant caught B.J. Denker's pass out of bounds. The Wildcats can't afford to lose points like that against Oregon.

CS

Ridgeview Continued from C1 A t C ottage Grove H i g h School this afternoon, one of the highest-scoring offenses in 4A will square off against one of the stingiest defenses. The wing-T offense of Philomath's Warriors, who defeated Gladstone 35-17 at home last week to advance to the semifinals for the first time since winning the then-Class AA state title in 1988, has posted nearly 41 points per game — third-most in 4A. So far this season, Philomath has outscored opponents 450-171. Stopping that o f fense, a run-based system predicated on misdirection, is where the focus will be, Ridgeview coach Andy Codding said. "It's not about playing Philomath. It's about playing the wing-T," said Codding, whose defense has 23 sacks and 15 interceptions this season while allowing th e s econd-fewest points in 4A. "We need to get ready to play a wing-T team. Philomath's pretty good, but I think if w e can make adjustments to play against that offense, we'll be in position to play against them." On paper, the similarities between the Ravens and the Warriors are evident. Philomath and Ridgeview rank 1-2 in 4A with 11- and 10-game winning streaks, respectively. Both have the ability to score at will: both rank in the top 10 in the classification in points scored. Each program boasts a defense that sits in the top four of 4A in fewest points allowed. And each runs an offensive formation — the wing-T of Philomath, the fly sweep of Ridgeview — that emphasizes the run. But al l t h e r e semblance aside, all the production and e fficiency P h i l omath ha s shown through 11 games, that goes out the window when Ridgeview takes on the Warriors this afternoon. "We're just going into this t hinking it's going to b e a

yard-for-yard game," Fleming said. "It's going to be (about) every inch of what we can get on each other. Going into each

game, we just look at it (as) four quarters. They might run

faster (40-yard dashes), they

Beavers Continued from C1 Then they reeled off six straight wins, before falling back with losses to Stanford, USC and Arizona State. After the Huskies it only gets harder, with the Beavers facing No. 5 Oregon at Autzen Stadium in the annual Civil War. Washington (6-4, 3-4) won its first

four games and popped up to No. 15 in the AP Top 25, but the Huskies slumped with consecutive losses to Stanford, Oregon and Arizona State. They're coming off a fourth conference loss to UCLA last weekend. Against the Beavers, Washington may be without quarterback Keith Price, who injured his right (throwing) shoulderin the second quarter of the Huskies' 41-31 loss to the Bruins. Coach Steve Sarkisian told reporters after practice Thursday that Price's condition had "vastly improved," but the Huskiescontinued to prepare redshirt freshman Cyler Miles for his first

Golf

college start. Riley said he expects both teams to challenge the adversity they've faced. "You can lose it and not play well and get worse or you can continue to try to grow and correct those things that caused those losses and play better," Riley said. "Play your best game. That's what it will take." Five things to look for when Oregon State hosts Washington: The other QB: While Washington's quarterbackisuncertain, the Beavers are hopingstarterSean Mannion can shake off the four interceptions he threw in a 30-17 loss to Arizona State last weekend. Mannion also threw for 320 yards and two touchdowns, and he still leads the nation with an average of 386 yards passing a game and 33 total touchdowns. A look at Cyler:After Miles replaced Price against UCLA, he responded by connecting on 15 of 22 attempts for 149 yards and a pair of TDs. Miles has appeared in six games for the Huskies this season, throwing for 250 yards

"Those Friday movie nights or normal teenager things, I kind of missed that many

and three touchdowns. But Sarkisian says he'd like to see Miles show his versatility. "He'll run the football more. I think he's trying to find his way some of when is the right time to run it, when is it not," the coach said. "We need him to run it. That's one of the assets he possesses when he's on the field." Don't speak: The P ac-12 reprimanded Sarkisian for public comments he made about officiating and for revealing private communications he had with conference officials this week. Sarkisian complained about the officiating in the game against UCLA and said that the conference apologized for a blown call that wiped out a Huskies touchdown in their 4131 loss last week. Commissioner Larry Scott said the Pac-12 has rules that prohibit coaches from making public comments about officiating or private communications with the league. "We have an obligation to our membership to enforce the conference rules which they have approved," Scott said in a

pop star Lorde, and two spots ahead of the U.S. swimmer Continued from C1 Missy Franklin. "I don't even know why I'm Ko, the winner of this year's Canadian Open, turned pro there, to be honest," Ko said. "I don't know what I've really in October and s uccessful- years ago. But when l y petitioned the L PGA t o I'm on tour, actually I done. I've just done the things waive its 18-years-old miniI love to do." mum age requirement for tour get more time to go to If anybody could relate to membership. the movies and watch what Ko was going through, W henever teenagers a r e it was her first-round playing thrust into the grown-up world the movies I wanted to partner, Michelle Wie, who of commerce,there are fears watch back at home." turned proin2005, shortly bethat their adolescences will fore her 16th birthday. — Lydia Ko " I think s h e h a ndled i t be trampled by the adults in their midst. But in Ko's case, great," Wie said. by turning professional she is As they made their w ay gettingboth a paycheck and a her in the top 10 in the wom- around the course, Wie shared piece of her childhood back. In en's world rankings is Lexi with Ko details of her pro deher last two years as an ama- Thompson, 18, from Florida, but at th e Samsung World teur, she spent so much time who has won twice this year. Championship, in p articular traveling for tournaments that There are also Thailand's Ari- the terror she felt as she stood she never had the chance to so- ya Jutanugarn, who turns 18 over her first drive. cialize with her peers at home. today, and Charley Hull, 17, of K o recalled hearing t h e On the LPGA Tour, Ko has Britain, who figure to compete story from Wie but couldn't friends she can hang out with in several LPGA tour events remember when during the at the mall on off days or go to next year as nonmembers. round the conversation took the movies with at night, givIn five starts this year, Juta- place. "It was pretty hectic," she ing her a built-in social scene nugarn collected a second and she did not have. two thirds and did not finish said, apologetically. "Those Friday movie nights lower than fourth. Hull, who Karen Stupples, a one-time or normal teenager things, starredforthe European team major winner who is reportI kind of missed that many at the Solheim Cup, is sixth on ing on the tournament for Golf years ago," Ko said. "But when the Ladies European Tour's Channel, interviewed Ko afI'm on tour, actually I get more Order of Merit. ter she signed her scorecard. Ko's stature t r a nscends While waiting to go on air, time to go to the movies and watch the movies I wanted to golf. She was recently includ- Stupples praised Ko for keepwatch back at home." ed in Time magazine's list of ing her composure after her And if she is hungry for the world's 16 most influential wobble on the third hole. "After that, you could have peer companionship, Ko will teenagers, appearing at No. 2, not have to search far. Joining behind a countrywoman, the gotten a little shaky," Stup-

statement. Approaching records:Mannion has thrown for 3,860 yards this season and needs just 199 yards to pass Derek Anderson, who threw for 4,058 in 2003 forthe school's single-season record. Mannion's favorite target, Brandin Cooks, has 1,443 yards receiving and needs 90 yards to break the record of 1,532 set by Mike Hass in 2005. Cooks already has a school-record 100 receptions. On the line: Should the Beavers come out on top, they will secure a winning record for the seasonand should Washington State lose at home to Utah, they will also clinch third place in the Pac-12 North. With the Cougars a win away from getting to six w i ns, the Pac-12 could have nine teams reach eligibility with seven bowl agreements: the Rose Bowl, Alamo, Holiday, Sun, Las Vegas, Fight Hunger and New Mexico. Teams that don't get into one of those bowls would be eligible for an at-large invitation.

might bench-press more, but you've got to play the game for four quarters. And that's really what we pride ourselves on being able to do." It will most definitely be a battle, one that Ridgeview senior fly back Cody Simpson looks forward to. It will most definitely be about momentum, something Ravens junior running back Tanner Stevens said his team will look to seize early on. "We're confident going into

this game," Codding said. "We've got some work to do. They're a t ough team, but we're not running scared from them."

— Reporter: 541-383-0307; glucas~bendbulletin.com.

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TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOV 23, 20'l3

NFL: WEEK 12 PREVIEW

an elsmus ecareu no o e coc By Barry Wilner The Associated Press

Carolina made a big statement with it s v i ctory over New England before a national television audience. Should the Panthers stumble Sunday at Miami, so much of the legitimacy they gained from that win could disappear. The Dolphins come off a win over San Diego despite all the inner turmoil over the Richie In c o gnito- Jonathan Martin a f f air, an d r e m ain firmly in the AFC wild-card r ace. So i f a n y one i n t h e Carolinas sees this game as a slam dunk, they'd better re-evaluate. "They are 5- 5 an d t h ey are going to bring out their best football," Panthers cornerback Captain Munnerlyn said. "But I don't see us letting Steven Senne/The Assoc>ated Pressf>le down. We are going to go out Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning, left, and New EnglandPatriots quarterback Tom Brady and play our best football. will meet on Sunday in a key AFC matchup. We're trying to go up, we're not trying to go down." Carolina owns the top wildChargers. San Diego has won card berth in the NFC with four of the past five against six weeks to go. It was won Chiefs and has been playing From the on-screen score box to high-definition telecasts to the six straight w it h a n o v e ropponents close, losing three yellow first-down line, innovation has become a huge part of NFL powering defense and timely straight by a c o mbined 18 viewing. It's about to take the next step. o ffense. Quarterback C a m points. Microsoft, which entered a five-year, $400 million deal with the Newton is playing as well as Kansas City's opportunisNFL in May, on Friday launched Xbox One, which will provide fans he did in taking top offensive tic defense (NFL best with with pretty much everything but snacks asthey watch theaction. rookie honors in 2011. Everyfive defensive TDs and a plusThe idea for the device is to take the information viewers conthing is coming together for 15 turnover differential) has sume on secondand third screens, from checking on their fantasy the Panthers. 36 sacks, but will find it difteams to devouring stats and chatting with friends, and put it all Which always can breed ficult to get to Philip Rivers, on the main screen in their home. cockiness. who has been trapped only 19 "Our vision for Xbox One is to enable a new level of interactive "That is one of things I've times. entertainment that makesyour games, TV, movies, and sports talked to the players aboutIndianapolis (7-3) at Arizona come alive," says Yusuf Mehdi, Xbox chief marketing and strategy everything we've done, hey, (6-4): Bruce Arians stepped in officer. "Our partnership with the NFL is in support of creating the we can take a step back (with for an ill Chuck Pagano last mostcompelling NFLexperienceinyourhomeonXboxOneand a loss)," coach Ron Rivera season and won Coach of the on the sideline with Microsoft Surface." said. "And we don't want to. Year in Indianapolis as an inSoon, NFL coaching staffs will be able to use the Surface tablet So we have to stay focused terim coach. He has the Carfor game-planning. and focus in on who we're dinals job full time now, and "For consumers, you can now snap the NFL experience on your playing. faces the AFC South-leading TV screen next to live games soyoucan track your fantasy play"We want to be relevant. Colts with an Arizona team ers stats while you watch the game," Mehdi says. "Onthe sideline, We want t o r e m ai n r e l ethat has won three in a row. we aim to bring the power of Microsoft technology to coaches and "It's a fairy tale, it really is," vant. We want to stay in the players to help themview plays and improve the game." conversation." Arians said. "I hate that to get Available along with live gametelecasts will be NFL RedZone So does Miami, of course, an opportunity to be a head and NFL Network; Snap, through which fantasy teams can be and a victory Sunday would coach we had to go through tracked while still watching the game on the screen; and Skype position it for a stretch run what we had to go through for, well, trash-talking with folks at the other end. Roughly 20 milwith nothing but conference last year, but it was the only lion Americans play fantasy football. games remaining. way.... This would have never — The Associated Press "Obviously they've been on happened without last year." a roll as far as football is conArizona is showing some cerned, playing pretty well, o ffense lately, scoring 2 7 and we'recoming off a game Drew Brees threw a pair on a near-record pace. points in each of those three " It's incredible t o score victories. A n d li n e backer where we feel like we c an of touchdown p asses and take the momentum and kind the Saints (9-2) overcame a points like that," Brady said John Abraham h a s s even of build with it," Dolphins de- lackluster offensive showing. of Denver, which has 398, 92 sacks in the past four games; fensive end Cameron Wake Brees hooked up with Jimmy more than Seattle, the next his 129 career sacks are the said. "Try and make sure we Graham on a 44-yard touch- most prolific t eam. "They most among active players. have our season go in a posi- down and Benjamin Watson have a lot of guys that can I ndianapolis has won i t s on a I-yard scoring play in the make plays with the ball. Ev- past five games against Artive direction." Also Sunday, it's Denver at first half, good enough to give erybody contributes, that's izona dating to 1992, when New England, San Diego at the first-place Saints a sweep what good offenses do. The Colts QB Andrew Luck was 3. Kansas City, Indianapolis at of disappointing Atlanta (2-9). backs contribute, the t i ght San Francisco (6-4) at Arizona, Dallas at the New The Falcons will have their end contributes, the receivers Washington (3-7), Monday York Giants, Chicago at St. first losing season since 2008. contribute. They're all scor- night: The d efending NF C Louis, Tampa Bay at Detroit, Denver (9-1) at New En- ing touchdowns. champion Niners suddenly "It's not like you can just go are in a dogfight to get a wildMinnesota at Green Bay, the gland (7-3): Ah, Tom Brady New York Jets at Baltimore, vs. Peyton Manning. Always in and stop one guy. Our de- card playoff berth. They trail Pittsburgh at Cleveland, Ten- a high-profile matchup befense has its work cut out for idle Seattle by 3'/~ games and aren't likely to make up that nessee at Oakland, and Jack- tween two all-time greats. us. sonville at Houston. Brady owns a 9-4 record WR Wes Welker, who be- deficit in the NFC West. On Monday night, it's San against his rival, and Patriots came a star in New England, After two straight defeats Francisco at Washington. coach Bill Belichick usually returns to Foxborough after in which the offense has sputOff this week are Seattle comes up with a d efensive joining the Broncos this year. tered, San Francisco faces a (10-1), Cincinnati (7-4) Phil- scheme that slows or even San Diego (4-6) at Kansas weak defensethat ranks 28th adelphia (6-5) and Buffalo confounds Manning. But New City (9-1):Now that the Chiefs overall, 26th against the pass. (4-7). England, plagued by inju- have a loss and they can forMuch of the attention in On Thursday night, New ries throughout the defense, get about that perfection dis- W ashington ha s b e e n o n Orleans handed host Atlanta might not have the talent to traction, they need to find a whether QB Robert Griffin its fifth straight loss, 17-13. slow Denver's attack that is way to handle the enigmatic III was criticizing the coach-

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Xbox launches innovative deviceforfans

es and his teammates after last Sunday's loss to Philadelphia. In the midst of a flop of a season after winning the NFC East, the last thing the Redskins need i s a n o ther distraction.

the ground in the f irst 100 games of a career, and he is 300 yards from 10,000. The Packers have dropped three straight and won't have Aaron Rodgers back at quarterback this week. In f a ct, Dallas (5-5) at New York when Scott Tolzien starts for Giants (4-6): N ow t h at t h e a second straight week, he Giants have r e -established will be only the third Packers themselves as a pretty solid QB to do so in 22 years. Brett team with four straight vic- Favre or Rodgers has been betories,they can become a hind center during that span. challenger in the NFC East by Green Bay hopes to get Rodghandling up-and-down Dal- ers back for the Thanksgiving las. Eli Manning has stopped Day game in Detroit. t hrowing p i ck s a n d N e w New York Jets (5-5) at BalYork's defense has a w ak- timore (4-6):Ed Reed already ened afterthat early-season has made one return v i sit slumber. to his old stomping grounds The Cowboys come off a near the Inner Harbor, with bye but remain undermanned H ouston. Th e T e xans c u t because of injuries. Their de- him, he landed with the Jets, fense is especially vulnerable and now is back in Baltimore. through the air — the Cow- He'd better hope the rest of his boys basically can't coverdefensive mates come along and might need a ton of points — they barely showed up in in this one. Jason Witten has last week's loss at Buffalo. been almost unstoppable by And he should hope the RaGiants with 26 receptions for vens' defense he left behind 237 yards and two TDs in the doesn't toy with r ookie QB past two meetings. Geno Smith the way the Bills Chicago (6-4) at St. Louis did. Baltimore has sacks in 21 (4-6): The Bears aren't losing straight games. any sleep about Jay Cutler beRavens RB Ray Rice finally ing sidelined with a high left had a breakout last week, but ankle sprain because backup New York generally is tough quarterback Josh M cCown to run on. has passed for five touchPittsburgh (4-6) at Clevedowns with no interceptions land (4-6): Sunday's winner in four games overall. The in- in this bitter rivalry can keep jury-plagued defense got two alive playoff hopes, although sacks last week from Julius c atching Cincinnati i n t h e Peppers, doubling hi s s ea- AFC North is a long shot. son total, and he had a seaAn Ohio native, Ben Roethson-best 11 tackles. An active lisberger is 15-1 against the Peppers is critical if Chicago Browns and won his past five is to stay in playoff conten- starts against Cleveland. He tion; it is tied with the Lions comes off a strong outing in a atop the NFC North. win over the Lions: 367 yards Rams rookie Tavon Aus- passing and four TDs. tin became the first player Cleveland has lost 10 of in NFL history with a punt the past 12 meetings at home return of 95-plus yards and with Pittsburgh. two touchdown receptions of Tennessee (4-6) at Oakland 55 yards or longer in his last (4-6): The Titans are playing game. the first of three straight road Bears rookie guard Kyle games. They are 2-2 away Long faceshis older brother, from Nashville and desperRams DE Chris Long, for the ately need this one because first time. the next two trips are to Indy Tampa Bay (2-8) at Detroit and Denver. (6-4): Don't look now, but the Running back Chris JohnBuccaneers are a hot team. son has four TDs rushing in T hey've won two in a r o w , the past two weeks, but Oakand received an o f f ensive land ranks sixth against the spark from undrafted rook- run. ie RB Bobby Rainey, who Raiders QB Matt McGloin rushed for 163 yards and two became the first u ndrafted TDs and caught a pass for a rookie since the start of the score last week against At- common draft in 1967 to have lanta. Veteran WR V i ncent three TD passes and no interJackson had 10 r eceptions ceptions in a game filling in against the Falcons with a for injured Terrelle Pryor. season-high 165 yards. Jacksonville (1-9) at HousTampa will n eed similar ton (2-8): For those who think production against D e troit Houston's season can't get because the Matthew Staf- any worse after eight straight ford-Calvin Johnson combo defeats — yes, the Texans is among the league's best. were th e d i v ision f avorite Megatron has seven of his 11 heading into 2013 — a loss to TDs in the past four games the lowly Jaguars would be while making 35 receptions rock bottom. for 746 yards. Houston's Andre Johnson Minnesota (2-8) at Green needs 10 catches to become Bay (5-5): Adrian P eterson the 15th player to reach 900. heads into his 100th career He had career highs in recep-

game approaching another

tions (14) and yards (273) in

milestone.He needs 67 yards rushing to pass Barry Sanders for third-most yards on

his last game against Jacksonville, so it's quite possible he gets there Sunday.

Ducks' Robinsontwins are threats on gridiron, hardwood By Ryan Thorburn The (Eugene) Register-Guard

Tyrell Robinson appears to be on the fast track to stardom in the Oregon football program. The truefreshman received some high praise from longtime defensive coordinator Nick Aliotti, who said Robinson can be a "great inside linebacker" after he helped fill in when leading t ackler D e r rick M a l o ne left the Utah game with a shoulder

injury.

"He's so sudden, he's so athletic," Aliotti said. "If he knew what we were doing right now, he could probably start.... I can't teach a guy to be cat-like from sideline to sideline. You can work on it, but I can't teach that. I can't teach a guy to be 6-4 and run like a deer. "We've got to teach him the X's and 0's, but that man has the athleticism that one of these days he's going to be really special." Even more exciting for the future of the Ducks' defense: Tyree Robinson, from the very beginning, has been a little faster than Tyrell. Tyree beat his fraternal twin into the world by a minute or two. And the brothers have been highly competitive since day one. "The one-on-one basketball games were crazy. Some of them turned into fights," Tyrell said of the childhood battles with Tyree in the driveway.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL "Just very competitive. Sometimes we'd go out there in the morning and we wouldn't leave until nighttime." In the seventh grade, Tyrell moved from the boys' childhood home in San Diego to live with their father in Sacramento. The year spent apart made them evencloser. "It was an experience for me to be away from my brother," Tyrell said. "When we were young we kind of lived in each other's shadows. When I went to go live with my dad it kind of made me and my brother independent people. But it was better for us because I came back focused, he was focused also and we just took that and ran with it." The Robinsons were two-sport stars at San Diego's Lincoln High, a school that has produced Marcus Allen, Terrell Davis and former Oregon quarterback Akili Smith. Tyree and Tyrell would also like to play in the NFL, but they haven't given up on their hoop dreams. When Oregon's football season ends, the Robinsons said Mark Helfrich and Dana Altman have given them their blessing to join the basketball team. Defensive end Arik Armstead also will be spending the winter with the Ducks in Matthew Knight Arena.

"I think we'll bring a lot of intensity, a lot of defense to the team," Tyrell said. "Full-court defense is me and my brother's main thing. We can lock it up and guard the other team's best

the field with an important November game still in doubt as the Ducks pulled away from the Utes during the second half for a 44-21 victory at Autzen Stadium. "I think he's blessed with an explayer." Tyree projects as a 6-foot-4, cellent skill set," Pellum said. "He's 200-pound combo guard. Tyrell as extremely explosive, he's extremely a 6-4, 217-pound big guard/small athletic. He's got good size and he hasn't even been through winter conforward. The chance to play together, on ditioning with us yet. All freshmen the gridiron and the hardwood, was are trying to learn what they're doimportant to the twins during the ing on the run. He's not shying away recruiting process. After Chip Kel- from any physical contact. He's putly left for the Philadelphia Eagles, ting his face in things and doing evthe Ducks had to hold off USC and erything he's supposed to do. It's just Washington for the dynamic Robin- a steep learning curve." son duo. Tyree isredshirting and serving as When Helfrich retained Oregon's a defensive back on the scout team. veteran staff, including linebackers Aliotti said it was a difficult decision coach Don Pellum and secondary because having both Robinsons gain coach John Neal,the brothers decid- some game experience would have ed to stay on their Oregon trail. benefited the 2014 Ducks when the "I couldn't split with my b r othdefense losessenior safeties Brian er," Tyree said. "Just growing up, we Jackson and Avery Patterson. "I think I've responded real well always competed to make sure we were better in everything. Even to just knowing what I have to do with this day we compete in everything my assignments," Tyree said. "I think we do, whether it's in the classroom that's what they like about me; I'm a or on the football field and hopeful- hard worker and I'm just trying to get ly this year on the basketball court, betterevery single day. Every freshtoo." man's dream is to come in and play Tyrell saw his first action on the right away. I had no problem about kickoff team in the opener against (redshirting). It's not because I don't Nicholls and played his first snaps know how to play football or anyon defenseduring the fourth quarter thing. It was just a better situation for at Virginia. Last Saturday he was on me."

Tyree and Tyrell were both outs tanding wide r eceivers i n h i g h school. They're content l earning the nuances of Aliotti's defense, but should offensive coordinator Scott Frost orreceivers coach Matt Lubick ever need an extra pair of hands, the Robinsons will be the first to volunteer. "If the offense needs me, I can come in and make a play," Tyrell said. "I think our main focus right now is defense." Torrodney Prevot, another true freshman linebacker with a role on the defense this season, believes that his classmates will have memorable careers at Oregon. "Me and Tyrell, we've been going through this whole thing together, we're learning the defense together. I see greatness in Tyrell," Prevot said. "Tyree is very agile. I think he might be able to go both ways next year." It could be awhile before the Robinsons are available for Altman. The Ducks can still win the Pac-12 and play in the Rose Bowl. And if the twins do get to enjoy some March madness, it will be followed in short order by some important spring football practices. "In the long run, they are both really talented kids," Aliotti said. "They're going to have great careers here. Next spring is going to be huge for those two guys."


C7 © To look upindividual stocks, go tobendbulletin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2013

S&P500

N ASDAQ ~ 2 2 4 9

DOW 16,064.77I

+

3,991.65

Toda+

1,840

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Eye on HP

1,800 "

Hewlett-Packard reports its latest quarterly financial results on Tuesday. Wall Street is expecting the technology bellwether to post lower earnings and revenue for its fiscal fourth quarter. The company has been trying to ease the pain of the declining PC market by cutting costs and focusing on more profitable areas.But the PC slump has been weighing on its results this year.

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Dow jones industrials

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Close: 16,064.77

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Vol. (In mil.) 2,985 1,672 Pvs. Volume 3,189 1,647 Advanced 1879 1579 Declined 1 179 9 6 9 New Highs 2 24 2 3 9 New Lows 57 23

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HIGH LOW C LOSE C H G. DOW 16068.78 15976.27 16064.77 +54.78 DOW Trans. 7199.78 7159.04 7199.37 $-26.01 DOW Util. 496.81 493.19 495.31 -0.56 NYSE Comp. 10207.82 10155.96 10205.71 +43.31 NASDAQ 3991.66 3973.00 3991.65 +22.49 S&P 500 1804.84 1794.70 1 804.76 + 8 . 91 S&P 400 1309.27 1303.38 1 308.81 + 2 . 66 Wilshire 5000 19152.55 19051.01 19151.32 +92.16 Russell 2000 1125.64 1117.56 1 124.92 + 5 . 30

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Less confident consumers? The partial government shutdown last month left many consumers feeling less confident about the economy. The University of Michigan's index of consumer sentiment fell to 73.2 in October from 77.5 the previousmonth.The index has fallen for three straight months after reaching a six-year high of 85.1 in July. Economists anticipate that the index for November, due out Wednesday, will show little change from October's reading.

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ALK 40 ,89 — AVA 23.00 ~ BAC 9, 3 2 — B BSI 29.15 ~ BA 7 1 .08 ~ CACB 4.69 COLB 16.56 COLM 47.72 COST 95.37 — BREW 5.87 FLIR 19.06 HPQ 11.35 HOME 10.50 INTC 19.23 KEY 7 . 81 — KR 2 4 .41 — LSCC 3.71 LPX 14 .51 MDU 19.80 MENT 13.21 MSFT 26.26 — NKE 46.73 — JWN 50.94 NWN 39.96 PCAR 41.96 PLNR 1.14 PCL 41.28 PCP 174.20 SWY 16.07 — SCHN 23.07 SHW 146.49 — SFG 32.35 — SBUX 48.95 — TQNT 4.31 UMPQ 11.39 — USB 31.28 WAFD 15.64 — WFC 32.12 — WY 2 5 .61

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Ready, set, shop! The retail industry's most lucrative season officially kicks off the day after Thanksgiving. And Black Friday is usually one

of the biggest shopping days of the year, setting the tone for the rest of the holiday shopping season. This year, consumers have a shorter shoppingwindow, with 25 days between Black Friday and Christmas. Last year, there were 32 days. A weak back-to-school shopping season this year has many experts projecting sluggish holiday sales growth this season. 0

Oividend Footnotes:a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included rr - Annual rate plus stock c - uqurdatmg dividend. e - Amount declared or paid m last12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was mcreased bymost recent dividend announcement r - Sum of dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate ] - Sum of dividends paid this year Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends marrears m - Current annual rate, which was decreased bymost recent dividend announcement. p - Imtral drvruend, annual rate not known, yield not shown r - Declared or paid m precedmg 12months plus stock dividend t - Paid m stock, approximate cash value on ex-drstabutron datePEFootnotes: q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds99. drr - Loss in last12 months

::.";;."Nike increases dividend Nike announced Thursday that it will increase its quarterly dividend by 14 percent. The athletic shoe maker's new dividend of 24 cents per share will be paid on Jan. 6 to shareholders of record as of Dec. 16. That's up from its most recent ~J dividend of 21 cents per share. Nike was added to the Dow Jones industrial average on Sept. 23, and immediately ranked near the

NIKE (NKE)

top of the 30 stocks that make up the average. Its rise of more than 50 percent this year ranks second only to Boeing's nearly 80 percent climb. All of the Dow stocks pay a dividend. Even with the new dividend payment, Nike's yield will be one of the lowest in the Dow at 1.2 percent. That's a full percentage point below the average yield of the Dow 30.

3-YR *: 24%

Total return 1-YR: 67%

$47

FundFocus Morningstar notes that although this fund is trailing its peers this Marketsummary year, it's still up more than 30 Most Active percent and has consistently NAME VOL (Dgs) LAST CHG been competitive over the years.

Facebook NokiaCp MicronT Zynga

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Foreign Markets LAST CHG %CHG 4,278.53 + 24.63 + . 5 8 London 6,674.30 -7.03 -.11 $ -22.96 $ . 2 5 Frankfurt 9,219.04 Hong Kong 23,696.28 $ 115.99 $ . 4 9 Mexico 41,199.02 + 200.65 + . 49 Milan 18,822.31 -19.54 -.10 Tokyo 15,381.72 + 16.12 + . 1 0 Stockholm 1,297.87 $ 7.37 $.5 7 Sydney 5,335.90 + 47.60 + . 9 0 Zurich 8,250.43 -18.26 -.22 NAME Paris

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GR OWTH

CH G %CHG +3 . 1 8 +105.6 +2 . 3 9 +81.6 «2 $-. 7 5 +39.5 29 +.99 +35.5 42 +.69 +23.5 + 1 3.66 +22.8 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ +.89 +18.9 +.44 +17.6 Q o Fund target represents weighted +.48 +17.1 average of stock holdings +.47 +16.6 • Represents 75% offund'sstock holdings

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10-YR *: 19%

Total returns through Nov. 22

Dodge 8 Cox Fidelity

$94.84

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StoryStocks The Standard & Poor's 500 index closed above 1,800 for the first time Friday, while the Dow Jones industrial average maintained an upward march after finishing above 1 6,000 for the first time a day earlier. Health care stocks helped lift the broader market; biotechnology company Biogen Idec, led the market's gains. Biogen surged on reports that it won market exclusivity for its top-selling multiple sclerosis drug in Europe. Major indexes have surged this year as solid corporate earnings, a strengthening economy and easy-money policies from the Federal Reserve have drawn investors to stocks. TWC

Close:$132.92 %1 2.06 or 10.0% The stock jumped on reports that two cable television operators are weighing whether to make bids for the cable service provider. $140 120

The Gap

GPS Close:$41.31 V-0.55 or -1.3% The retailer posted a spike in quarterly profit, but its conservative annual outlook implied a tough holiday season ahead.

$45 40

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N $46.66

Volx12.6m (6.3x avg.) PE: 20.5 Vol2 7.5m (1.6x avg.) P E: 15 . 3 Mkt. Cap:$37.47 b Yiel d : 2. 0% Mkt. Cap:$19.31 b Yiel d : 1. 9% LDK US Steel X Close:$1.60 unchanged or 0% Close:$26.36 V-0.79 or -2.9% China's second-largest solar compa- Wells Fargo sees prices falling durny signed a deal with 11 banks for a ing the first half of 2014 after an ex$256 million credit facility to boost tended run, issuing downgrades to production. two steelmakers. $2.5 $30 2.0

25

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$6.88~ Volx3.0m (1.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$254.12 m

N $2.32 P E: .. . Yield :...

Abercrombie & Fitch

ANF

Close:$34.15 V-0.82 or -2.3% The retailer lost money during the third quarter as it closed Gilly Hicks stores and this quarter is starting slow, too.

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PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 BalA m 24.08 +.13 +19.6 +22.5 +13.6+16.4 A A A CaplrrcBuA m 58.23 +.16 +13.3 +16.1 +9.7+13.7 C A C CpWldGrlA m 44.45 +.25 $-21.7 +27.3 $.11.0 $-17.1 C C D EurPacGrA m 47.88 +.15 +16.2 +23.0 +6.8+16.3 D C 8 FrrlnvA m 51.47 +.33 $-27.2 +31.8 $-15.4 $-20.5 C C 8 GrthAmA m 44.42 +.34 +29.3 +33.8 +15.7+20.4 8 8 C IncAmerA m 20.50 +.08 +16.5 +19.2 +12.1+16.5 C A A InvCoAmA m 38.27 +.24 +28.4 +32.1 $-15.1 $-18.1 C D D NewPerspA m38.48 +.19 $-23.1 +29.1 $-12.4 $-19.8 C 8 8 WAMutlnvA m39.66 +.24 +29.0 +32.3 +17.6+18.9 C A C Income 1 3.63 +.03 +0.5 + 0.9 +4.3 +8.6 A A 8 IrrtlStk 42.72 +.31 +23.3 +33.5 +8.8 +20.0 A A A Stock 164.31 +1.33 $-36.4 +43.7 $-19.0$-22.7 A A A Contra 99.94 +.71 +30.0 +33.0 +15.7+20.5 C 8 C GrowCo 123. 9 3+1.09+32.9 +35.8 +18.1+25.7 A A A LowPriStk d 49 .34 +.17+ 31.1 +37.8 +17.7+26.0 8 A 8 500 l dxAdvtg64.15 +.32+28.9 +32.5 +17.1+20.3 C 8 B

FUND

Fidelity Spartan FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 43 +.01 +12.6 +16.8 +10.2+17.5 A A A IncomeA m 2.4 0 ... + 12.8 +17.0 +10.7+18.0 A A A FrankTemp-Templeton GIBondAdv 13.05 +.03+1.4 +3.3 +5.2+11.0 A A A Irrtl I 26 . 74 +. 1 9 +27.8 +40.3 +1 3.4 +24 .3 A A A Oakmark Oppeubeimer RisDivA m 21. 29 +.10+23.3 +26.8 +14.1+16.3 E D E RisDivB m 19. 25 +.09+ 22.3 +25.7 +13.0+15.2 E E E RisDivC m 19 . 16 +.09 + 22.5 +25.9 +13.2+15.4 E E E SmMidValA m43.40 +.17 +33.9 +39.5 +13.0+24.2 8 E C SmMidValBm 36.37 +.14 +32.9 +38.2 +12.1+23.2 C E D CATEGORY Small Growth PIMCO TotRetA m 1 0 . 89 .. . -1.3 - 0.6 +3.6 +7.7 B 8 C MORNINGSTAR T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.30 +.17 +27.6 +32.0 +16.7 +20.1 D 8 8 RATING™ * * * * N GrowStk 5 0.27 +.33 $-33.1 +36.7 $-17.4$-24.5 A A A ASSETS $3,745 million HealthSci 6 0.93 +.85 +47.8 +51.4 +31.8 +32.0 8 A A EXP RATIO 1.31% Vanguard 500Adml 166.91 +.85 +28.9 +32.6 + 17.1+20.3 C 8 8 500lrrv 166.88 +.84 +28.8 +32.4 + 17.0+20.2 C 8 8 MANAGER Clifford Greenberg CapOp 46.92 +.60 +39.6 +46.1 $ -17.6+24.5 A A A SINCE 1997-09-30 Eqlnc 30.25 +.12 +27.8 +30.7 +19.0+19.5 D A 8 RETURNS3-MO +9.6 StratgcEq 29.35 +.14 +36.8 +43.3 + 20.2+26.6 A A 8 YTD +32.1 TgtRe2020 27.25 +.10 $-14.4 +17.5 + 10.0+15.1 8 A 8 1-YR +38.6 Tgtet2025 15.81 +.05 +16.3 +20.0 + 10.8+16.2 8 8 C 3-YR ANNL +17.7 TotBdAdml 10.66 +.02 -1.6 -1.5 + 2.9 +5.5 D D E 5-YR-ANNL +25.5 Totlntl 16.65 +.07 $-13.4 +21.3 + 56+155 D D 8 TotStlAdm 45.62 +.22 +29.8 +34.0 $ .17.2$.21.5 8 A A TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 45.60 +.22 +29.6 +33.9 + 17.1+21.4 8 8 A SBA Communications Corp 3.73 USGro 27.72 +.17 +30.4 +34.3 + 16.9+20.5 8 A C Penn National Gaming 3.08 Welltrr 39.23 +.15 +18.1 +20.6 + 12.5+16.0 8 A 8 Liberty Media Corporation Class A 2.73 Fund Footnotes b - ree coveong market costs 1$paid rrom rund assets d - Deterred sales charge, or redemption TrarrsDigm Group Iuc 2.57 fee f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple fees are charged, usually a marketmg fee acd either a sales or Gartner, Irrc. Class A 2.5 redemptron iee Source: Momrngstar

N $28.4 1

Vol2 9.6m (1.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$3.81 b

P E: .. . Yiel d : 0. 8 %

Ariad Pharma.

ARIA Close:$3.78%0.99 or 35.5% European regulators will allow the company to market its leukemia drug despite a suspension in the U.S. due to its risks.

$30 20

35

10

A

S 0 52-week range

$32.41 ~

N $55.23

A

S 0 52-week range

$2.16~

Intel

INTC

Close:$23.87 V-1.36 or -5.4% Shareholders left the chip giant's investor day unimpressed, with some pointing to its outlook on potential revenue in 2014. $26 24

N $24.59

Vol25.1m (1.5x avg.) P E: 12 . 7 Volx71.3m(5.4xavg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.61 b Yiel d : 2 .3% Mkt. Cap:$701.78 m Y

PE: .. ield :..

Biogen BII B Close:$285.62 L33.1 9 or 13.1% Shares hit an all-time high after European regulators provided its new multiple sclerosis drug with 10 years of exclusivity. $300 250

22

A

S 0 52-week range

N

OQA

8 0 52-week range

$19.42~ $26.98 $139.72 ~ Vol377.4m (2.4x avg.) PE: 1 2 . 9 Vol3 4.7m (3.9x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$118.66 b Yi e l d: 3.8% Mkt. Cap:$67.47 b

N $289 .97 P E: 40 . 1 Yield: ...

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

[]

mi 8

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.75 percent Friday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

AP NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3 -month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill

. 07 . 09 .12

.07 .09 .11

2-year T-note . 28 .27 5-year T-note 1 .35 1 .36 10-year T-note 2.75 2.79 30-year T-borrd 3.83 3.89

BONDS

...

L

+0 . 01

L

.09 .14 .17

+0 . 0 1 Y -0.01 L -0.04 L -0.06 L

V L L L

Y .27 W .68 T 1.68 L 2.82

Commodities Oil fell Friday, but still closed out the week with a gain of $1 a barrel versus a week earlier as the U.S. jobs outlook improved. Platinum, gold and silver declined. Crops were mixed.

Foreign Exchange The dollar advanced against the Australian dollar and the

Japanese yen amid concerns about the future of the Fed's monetary stimulus. It fell versus several other major currencies.

h5I4 QG

L

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.62 3.66 -0.04 L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 5.09 5.10 -0.01 79 B arclays USAggregate 2.34 2.34 . . . L PRIME FED Barcl ays US High Yield 5.73 5.70 +0.03 v L Div . yield: 1.1% RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 4.70 4.72 -0.02 L Source: FactSet YEST 3.25 .13 B arclays CompT-Bdldx 1.63 1.63 . . . L 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 3 .21 3.22 -0.01 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

52-WEEK RANGE

Friday's close: $78.87

Price-earnings ratio (Based on trailing 12 month results):29 AP

CRUDEOIL

07

LDK Solar

52-WK RANGE oCLOSE YTD 1 YR V OL TICKER LO Hl CLOSE C HG %CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank ofAmerica Barrett Business Boeing Co Cascade Bancorp ColumbiaBnkg Columbia Sportswear Costco Wbolesale Craft Brew Alliance FLIR Systems Hewlett Packard Home FederalBncpID Intel Corp Keycorp Kroger Co Lattice Semi LA Pacific MDU Resources Mentor Graphics Microsofl Corp Nike Inc B NordstromInc Nwst Nat Gas PaccarInc Planar Systms Plum Creek Prec Castparts Safeway Inc Scbnitzer Steel Sherwin Wms Stancorp Fncl StarbucksCp Triquint Semi UmpquaHoldings US Bancorp WashingtonFedl Wells Fargo & Co Weyerhaeuser

+

$1 9.86

Time Warner Cable

"

14400 M'

N

SILVER

L L T T L T v L L L T L T

2.52 4.00 1.73 6.72 3.57 .97 2.72

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Oil (bbl) 94.84 95.44 - 0.63 + 3 . 3 -7.7 Ethanol (gal) 2.02 2.08 -0.67 Heating Oil (gal) 3.04 3.01 +1.15 -0.1 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.77 3.70 +1.78 +12.4 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.73 2.74 -0.65 -3.1 FUELS

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. 1244.00 1243.50 19.86 19.93 1382.70 1391.70 3.23 3.20 713.95 713.10

%CH. %YTD +0.04 -25.7 -0.36 -34.2 -0.65 -10.1 +0.91 -11.4 + 0.12 + 1 . 6

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.31 1.31 + 0.02 + 1 . 2 1.07 1.07 -0.23 -25.5 Corn (bu) 4.22 4.23 -0.18 -39.5 Cotton (Ib) 0.75 0.75 + 0.56 + 0 . 1 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 359.60 361.80 -0.61 -3.8 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.39 1.39 +0.22 +19.7 Soybeans (bu) 13.20 12.92 +2.17 -7.0 Wheat(bu) 6.50 6.49 +0.12 -16.5 AGRICULTURE

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6208 +.0044 +.27% 1 .5937 Canadian Dollar 1.0532 +.0007 +.07% .9975 USD per Euro 1.3551 +.0090 +.66% 1 .2883 Japanese Yen 101.34 + . 2 4 + . 24% 82 . 43 Mexican Peso 12. 9 736 —.0829 —.64% 13.0232 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5613 +.0017 +.05% 3.8762 Norwegian Krone 6 . 0 695 —.0390 —.64% 5.6821 South African Rand 10.0667 —.0623 —.62% 8.9432 S wedish Krona 6.5 8 3 4 —.0649 —.99% 6.6815 Swiss Franc . 9072 —.0079 —. 87% .9351 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0910 + .0063 +.58% .9 6 28 Chinese Yuan 6.0940 +.0010 +.02% 6 .2367 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7527 +.0001 +.00% 7 .7508 Indian Rupee 62.855 -.185 -.29% 55.225 Singapore Dollar 1.2496 -.0012 -.10% 1.2251 South Korean Won 1061.81 -.98 -.09% 1085.75 Taiwan Dollar 29.64 + .07 +.24% 29 . 15


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2013

BRIEFING

FCC chairmannot for in-flight calls A day aftersetting off an uproaramongtravelers opposedto in-flight phone calls, thechairmanofthe Federal Communications

Commissionbacktracked, saying hepersonally isn't in favor ofcalls onplanes. "We understand that

many passengerswould prefer that voice calls not

be madeonairplanes. I feel thatwaymyself," chairman TomWheeler said Friday. The role of the FCC,he added, is to advise if there is asafety issue withusing

phones onplanes. Hesaid there is "no technical reason to prohibit" the use of

mobile devices onplanes. The decisiontoallow calls will ultimately rest with the airlines, he said. — Fromwirereports

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR MONDAY • Oregon Alcohol Server Permit Training: Meets Oregon Liquor Control Commission minimum requirements to obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541447-6384 or www. happyhourtraining.com. TUESDAY • Lead-based paint certification training: Certification to work on pre-1978 housing and child-occupied facilities; EPA, CCB and OHAapproved; registration required; $229 includes EPA/ CCB certified renovator certificate; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; COBA, 1051 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541389-1058, gretchenp@ coba.org or www.coba. Ol'g.

DEC. 2 • Affordable Housing Information Session: Applyforthe Bend Area Habitatfor Humanity homeownership program; registration suggested; 5:30 p.m.; Crook County Library, 175 N.W. Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville; 541-385-5387 ext. 103, djohnsonO bendhabitat.org or www.bendhabitat.org. DEC. 6 • Business Hop: Networking event hosted by the Redmond Chamber of Commerce and CVB; free admission; 8-10 a.m.; Juniper Golf Course, l938 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541923-5191 or www. visitredmondoregon. com/ DEC. 9 • Introduction to Finding Funding: Learn about funding for nonprofits using "Foundation Directory Online;" led by community librarian Nate Pedersen; free; registration required; 9-11 a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St 4 541-617-7050 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/ nonprofits. DEC. 10 • Oregon Alcohol Server Permit Training: Meets Oregon Liquor Control Commission minimum requirements to obtain an alcoholserver permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541447-6384 or www. happyhourtraining. com. • What Should Be In Your New Home Warranty? Home warranty issues for contractors, subcontractors and homeowners; registration required; $20 for nonmembers, free for Central Oregon Builders Association members; 10 a.m.noon; COBA, 1051 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541389-1058, gretchenp© coba.org or www.coba. Ol'g.

CENTRAL OREGON

ersona incomes rose as ear By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

Personal income rose in Deschutes, Jefferson and Crook counties last year, new data from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis shows. But for Deschutes and Jeffersoncounties,the pace of growth actually slowed in 2012 compared with 2011. Personal income equals the

income received by all people in a county from all sources, including earnings and property income. Per-capita personal income is total personal income divided by the population. The data, released this week, highlighted income changes in counties across the country between 2010 and 2012. Deschutes County's per-capita personal income came in at $38,448, the data show, up 3.2

percentfrom 2011.Jefferson County recorded $30,126 in 2012, up 4.9 percent from 2011. Crook County's per-capita personal income reached $32,164 last year, a 6.5-percent increase. The information sector, which includes data centers,accounted formuch of the increase. It's typical for personal income to rise slightly on an annual basis. Just five of the country's 381 metropolitan statistical areas saw per-capita personal income drop overall between 2011 and 2012. Yet the statistics indicate growth slowed a bit in Deschutes and Jefferson counties. Personal income in Deschutes County increased 3.2 percent from 2011 to 2012, while Jefferson County recorded a 4.9-percent increase. Their growth rates increased 4.8 percent and 6.1 percent, respectively, from

Per-capita personal income2010-12 Per-capita personal income is slowly rising across Central Oregon, new data from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis show.

CROOK O ESCHUTES JEFFERSON O R EGON COUNTY CO U NTY COUNTY O V ERALL $32,164

$38,448 $35,547

$30,126

$28,544

$39,166 $35 ,869

$27,086

'10 '11 '12

'10 '11 '12

'10 '11 '12

'10 '11 '12

Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis Andy Zeigert i The Bulletin

2010 to 2011. Some economists say a number of factors, including population growth outpacing job creation, could be driving

the slowdown in per-capita personal income. Another factor could simply be that 2010 was a bad year for job growth, making modest gains in 2011

ou're rent's too ex oret e OSS1 11 o an By Andrew Tangel Los Angeles Times

NEW YORK — Steven Cintron kicks back on a small sofaa mere couple offeetfrom his kitchen table. The breather from his construction job is w elcome, even ifcramped like everything else in New York City. The couch doubles as a bed for his pit bull, Bruno. Cintron's own queen-sizemattress is shoved in the back with the TV, a hunched walk past the mini-fridge, three-burner stove and closet-size bathroom. Cintron's roughly 200-square-foot pad isn't just any tiny apartment in the Big Apple. It's an RV. As the most expensive city in the country gets even pricier, Cintron and other New Yorkers are taking drastic steps to survive the most brutal real estate market in the United States. They are ditching skyhigh rents and buying secondhand recreational vehicles. "I've got everything," said Cintron, a husky 34-year-old with a close-cropped beard

and gold chain, as his fan and

AT ENtlDN

Carolyn Cole i Los Angeles Times

With rents continuing to increase, some folks in New York have moved into RVs, parking them in their ideal neighborhood. portable air conditioner whir. "I'm comfortable here." Cintron was looking for a new place to live last spring after splitting up with his girlfriend. Unable to find an affordable apartment that would

also allow his dog, he found inspiration in a friend who owns an RV. So he bought a 1996 Gulf Stream Ultra posted on Craigslist for $5,000.

He wound up parking near

Brooklyn's Park Slope neighborhood, where he grew up but now can't afford to rent. By turning to mobile apartments, RV dwellers are something of real estate pioneers in New York. RVs give New Yorkers a way into hip or exclusive neighborhoods they otherwise might not be able to afford. They don't

look like significant growth. "When you get that first bounce off the bottom, any growth tends to look stronger," said Josh Lehner, a senior economist with the Oregon Office of Economic Analysis. Deschutes County has also seen solid population growth over the last three years. The city of Bend added nearly 2,500 residents between 2010 and 2012, according to U.S. Census Bureau figures released earlier this year. Retirees and people moving to the area without jobs could also lower per-capita incomes, since population growth is exceeding workforce growth, Lehner said. Oregon's per-capita personal incomeincreased 4.5 percent in 2012. Nationwide, the growth rate was 3.4 percent. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, eglucklich@bendbulletin.com

In Cyprus, pay tuition

have to worry about nagging landlords, rent increases or upstairs neighbors tap-dancing at midnight. But there are obvious tradeoffs. Getting electricity takes some effort. Heating during the winter can get costly. Mail may need to be delivered to post office boxes. There's also the issue of how to hook up sewage lines. And RVs may not offer much social cachet. "The ladies aren't really kicking down the door," said Rick Hall, who gave up on trying to find an apartment before hemovedtoNew Yorktostudy at St. John's University. Hall bought the RV from a friend when he was still in Ohio and parked his home near the school's campus in Queens. New Yorkers have long struggled to find affordable shelter in a city bursting at the seams with more than 8 million people. They have crammed extra roommates into bifurcated living rooms, converted closets into bedrooms and moved into house boats.

in BitCOins The Associated Press NICOSIA, Cyprus — Cyprus' biggest private university said Thursday it will start accepting the digital currency Bitcoin as an alternative way to pay tuition fees. The country had been a hub for international banking before suffering a collapse in its financial system this year, leading the government to impose controls on the flow of capital as it accepted an international bailout. But the University of Nicosia said the move to accept Bitcoins was unrelated to the controls. Rather, it was meant to help foreign students in countries where traditional banking transactions are either difficult or costly to pay for programs, such as online degrees. The university's chief financial officer, Christos Vlachos, said the institution, which has about 8,500 students enrolled, is the first in the world to take Bitcoin

payments.

Wind farmculpable in eagledeaths By Dina Cappiello The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The government for the first time has enforced environmental laws protecting birds against wind

energy facilities, winning a $1 million settlement Friday from a power company that pleaded

guilty to killing 14 eagles and 149 other birds at two Wyoming wind farms. The Obama administration

• Deschutes County ePermitting System Training: Learn to create an account, submit plans for electronic review, track permits and other information; satisfies continuing education requirements; $20 for nonmembers, free for COBA members; 1-3 p.m.; COBA, 1051 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-1058, gretchenp@coba.org or www.coba.org.

• Obamacare:

Its Impact on Individuals and Business Owners: Learn to remain in complianceand avoid penalties; registration

has championed pollution-free wind power and used the same law against oil companies and power companies for drowning and electrocuting birds. The case against Duke Energy Corp. and its renewable energy arm was the first prosecutedunder the Migratory Bird Treaty Act against a wind energy company. "In this plea agreement, Duke Energy Renewables ac-

requested; free; 3-4 p.m.; COBA, 1051 N.E. Fourth St. Bend; 541-389-1058, gretchenp@coba.org or www.coba.org. • Information session: general certificate in brewing; Learn about the new exampreparation course to earn the lnstitute of Brewing and Distilling General Certificate in Brewing; registration required; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 54 I -383-7270.

knowledges that it constructed these wind projects in a manner it knew beforehand would likely result in avian deaths," Robert Dreher, acting assistant attorney general for the Justice Department's Environment and Natural Resources Division, said in a statement

Friday. An investigation in May revealeddozens ofeagle deaths from wind energy facilities.

Dina Cappieflo iThe Associated Press file photo

Duke Energy will pay $1 million for killing 14 golden eagles over the past three years at two Wyoming wind farms.

PEOPLE ON THE MOVE

,

• Forthe complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/bizcal

• Leslie Mllam has joined Pinnacle Architecture lnc. as a receptionist. Milam has a bachelor's degree in tourism and outdoor leadership from OregonState University-CascadesCampusand several years experience in customer service. • Juliane Reed has joined Every Idea Marketing as anaccount executive. Reed previously worked atZolo Media for11 years, working with national, regional and local advertising agencies. Reed will focus on client management, media buying, event promotion and development. • Marnl Tucker has joined Fratzke Property Managementas a property manager. Tucker previously worked at Hollywood Video in the corporate offices where shefocused onleaseaccounting, lease complianceandreal estate.

Milam

Reed

Visnack

• Greg McCauley has joined CASAof Central Oregon as an assistant associate director of its executive staff. McCauley is a long time businessmanandbusiness owner. • David Visnack has joined Hydro Flask as the vice president of marketing and product. Visnack brings15years of experience in theoutdoor sports and recreation industry. Visnack will specialize in brand leadership, marketing, product developmentande-commerce programs.

• Tom Trissel has joined Hydro Flask as a customer service manager.Trissel previously worked atAltrec.com as customer service manager andassistant store manager. • John Ogle has joined Hydro Flask as an IT manager.Oglewaspreviously a consultantfor NetSuite Development and Optimization Solutions, where he managed and implementedsystem development projects. • Jlm Blrtola and Ruben Garmln have been selected for membership in The Fellowship of Realty Professionals, an organization of residential real estate sales professionals. Birtola and Garmin are the principal brokers andowners of Birtola Garmin High Desert Realty.


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT W Religious services, D2-3 Volunteer search, D4 Support groups, D4 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2013

O www.bendbulletin.com/community

Advent calendars offer a daily dose of cheer

SPOTLIGHT nas

Novel Idea choice to be unveiled

;:tti/ r ua4

The Deschutes Public

Library Foundation will host "A Novel Idea" Unveiled from 7-9 p.m. Dec. 6 at the Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St., Bend.

The free event is open to all agesand

I

/

provides the public the

first opportunity to learn the 2014 Novel Idea

By Courtney Ortega

PLACF:

community read selection. Guests canexpect

Fort Worth Star-Telegram

ja A

a trivia quiz, appetizers

and cash beerand wine bar. The bookwill also be available for purchase or checkout at the

library that evening. More Novel Idea events will be held in the

spring.

*

"More than 20 cultur-

al programs are planned

to build and expand the themes of the book rp

for deeper discussion and understanding," said Chantal Strobel,

community relations manager. "Wealso

$(Q Photos by Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

With help from Girl Scouts Jayde Clark, left, and Samantha Fischer, center, Clara Pratt makes a pizza casserole in her kitchen to serve at the Bethlehem Inn. She will spend this week making all of the sides for the inn's Thanksgiving dinner.

make available book club kits to local book

With origins tracing back to the 19th century, advent calendars have, over the years, become a favorite holiday tradition of families around the world as a way to count the days until Christmas. Today's advent calendars, most of which start with Dec. I, range in style from versions filled with chocolates and other treats, to more elaborate creations that play Christmas tunes. They're carried at

big-box,

ooin u

groups throughout Deschutes County — free of charge." Contact: lizg© deschuteslibrary.org or

home

goods,

541-312-1 032.

Locavore expands delivery to Sisters

~

Central Oregon Locavore is expanding its

star-Telegram

The organization's

ort oseinnee

online market allows

customers to order grass-fed meats, sustainably harvested sea-

The website features more than 500 products in total.

Clients can payusing a secure, online credit card system. Delivery is free and will take place between 5:30 and 8

p.m. on Thursdays at Melvin's, 160 Fir St., Sisters.

Customers also can pick up their orders between 4 and 6 p.m.

Thursdays at Locavore's headquarters, 1216 N.E. First St. in Bend, or, on Fridays, at the Waldorf School of Bend, 2150 N.E. Studio Road.

Locavore plans to expand the numberof delivery sites in Central

Oregon. For more information, visit central oregonlocavore.org.

Coat/blanket drlve oll Ilow Community members are invited to donate coats and blankets to

those in needduring the Share the Warmth drive. The drive, which is taking place through Dec. 20, takes place at Windermere offices in Bend, Redmond and Prineville.

People can donate new or gently used and clean coats for kids and adults, as well as blankets. The offices in Redmond and Bend are

also collecting sleeping bags, gloves, scarves, hats and socks. All of the items will be distributed through the Family Access Network, The Shepherd's House

and Crook County Children and Senior

Services. In addition to the local Windermere offices,

• Volunteers work to ensure that everyonecan havea seat at the table on Thanksgiving By Mac McLean

Free Thanksgiving meals

The Bulletin

ike many home cooks at this time of year, Clara Pratt is experiencing a bit of stress when it comes to the side dishes that she'll serve her Thanksgiving guests when they sit down for dinner Thursday afternoon. "The only thing I haven't figured out is what I'm going to do with the sweet potatoes," said Pratt, who can't seem to get her head around the idea of serving her guests canned sweet potatoes, but also dreads the idea of peeling the orange and yellow tubers by hand. Pratt is in this conundrum because rather than making sweet potatoes,dressing, gravy, green beans, cranberries, and dessert for a handful of family and friends, she's making them for 75 to 80

L

Because of space limitations, the Bethlehem Inn's

Thanksgiving meal is open only to its residents and their families. But here's a list of community organizations that are offering

their holiday at the Bethlehem Inn emergency homeless shelter and could really use a good, hot meal right about now. "People need a break sometimes," said Pratt, who cooks meals for the Bethlehem Inn's guests in the kitchen of her southeast Bend home aboutonce a month and has enlisted a few of her family members to help out with the Thanksgiving feast. But while her undertaking may seem monumental, Pratt is just one of many Central Oregon residents who delay their personal Thanksgiving plans to make sure that everybody can enjoy a traditional holiday feast.

The meal Chris Clouart, the Bethlehem Inn's managing director, said everybody remembers at least one time when they had a Thanksgiving meal done right. They remember what the

Noon Wednesday; 1854 N.E. Division Street; 541388-2096

(doors open at11 a.m.); 1036 N.E. Fifth Street; 541312-2069

LA PINE • La Pine Community Kitchen — Noon Wednesday; 16480 Finley Butte Road; 541-536-1 312 • American Legion Post 45 — Noon Thursday; 52532 Drafter Road; 541536-1402

REDMOND • Redmond Senior Center — Noon Thursday; 325

N.W. DogwoodAve.; 541-

food smelled like when it was being prepared in the kitchen, how they had fun catching up with their family and friends, and most of all the sense of comfort they feel after stuffing themselves to oblivion on turkey, stuffing

and gravy. But these memories can be painful for people who have found themselves in a difficult situation where they're just one step away from being out on the streets for Thanksgiving or at the very least can't afford the turkey

and fixings that make the meal what it is. "It's important to allow people as normal a life as possible," said Clouart, who explained that missing out on Thanksgiving or another seminal celebration, such as Christmas, only increases the amount of stress that people in an already stressful situation must deal with. He said this is why groups like the Bethlehem Inn, Bend's Community Center, Family Kitchen soup kitchen, and Shepherd's House rescue

and Deschutes County Title. — From staff reports

Santa's little helper The famous Elf On the Shelf is known for his mischievous ways

and for popping up

Center — Noon Thursday

Clara Pratt watches as Girl Scouts Samantha Fischer, left, and Kristen Rives put pepperoni on a dish to serve at the Bethlehem Inn.

The holiday wreath that keeps on giving, Threshold's Advent Wreath features circular compartments perfect for concealing a variety of Christmas trinkets and treats. Threshold Advent Wreath, $24.99, Target. www.target.com

when you least expect it. He lends a helping hand to families' Christmas countdowns with his own advent calendar. Elf On The Shelf Advent Calendar, $69, Pottery Barn Kids. www. potterybarnkids.com

• Bend's Community

people who will be spending

Filled with fun

this week:

BEND • Shepherd's House-

~<i t-)S~C:

already begun, here's a look at festive options to help us remember that the Big Day is on its way.

a free Thanksgiving meal

548-6325 mission host Thanksgiving feasts for people who are in need or, as Pratt puts it, could simply use a break (See "Free

Thanksgiving meals"). Clouart said these meals also take a lot of work, especially for groups like his that do not have access to a commercial kitchen facility capable of handling the hours of work needed to put together a feast for dozens. That's why he's thankful volunteers like Pratt and Brian Dioguardi, the owner of Baldy's BBQ, are willing to chip in. See Meals/D5

individuals can also drop off items at Chico's in the Old Mill District

~

port Worth that'S

weekly delivery of fresh, local foods to Sisters.

food, eggs, handmade cheeses, vegetables, greens, dry goods, coffee, beer, medicinal herbs and more, all produced regionally.

Is

specialty and online retailers. Amid the holiday whi r l w i nd

"We are fortunate to live in Central Oregon. There are so many kind and generous

people here who make these celebrations work for needy people." — Chris Clouart, Bethlehem Inn's managing director

Decadent delight Forget the wimpy calendars filled with chocolate that tastes like plastic. This edible advent calendar by the famous Dylan's Candy Bar in New York City makes counting down the days until Christmas a very indulgent pastime. Dylan's Candy Bar Advent Tree Calendar, $30, Neiman Marcus. www.neiman marcus.com

Here comes Santa Claus Santa Claus is coming to town, so what better way to count down the days to his arrival than with an advent calendar that looks just like the big man himself? Pier 1 Imports Santa Advent Calendar, $19.95, Pier 1 Imports. www.pierl.com

Built-in surprise A fun twist on the traditional advent calendar, L.L. Bean's three-dimensional Lighthouse Advent Calendar features windows and doors that open each day to reveal a special holiday surprise. Lighthouse Advent Calendar, $119, L.L. Bean. www.llbean. com


D2

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOV 23, 20'I3

Off court, a documenta s lens on Asian-AmericanChristianity By Samuel G. Freedman New Yorlz Times News Service

During his y ears getting started as a f i l m p r oducer, Christopher Chen took a great many meetings. He had his favorite places, like the Griddle Cafe in Hollywood, Calif., and Nate 'n Al in Beverly Hills, Calif. Even if the movie he was pitching never came together, the deliserved great corned beef hash. Then, in late 2009, Chen received arequest unlike any other in his career. The prospective subjects of a documentary wanted him to meet at their church. And they had a question for Chen in a dvance of the meeting: Are you a Christian? Which, conveniently, he was. So on a Sunday morning, Chen found himself worshiping at the Chinese Church in Christ, an evangelical congregation in Mountain View, Calif., part of Silicon Valley. After the service, he sat down with two members named Shirley and Gie-Ming Linu Their Son, Jeremy, was in his senior year at Harvard as a star guard on the basketball team. Chen wanted to capture him on film. Four years later, of course, Jeremy Lin isa brand name and a phenomenon, having burst into fame with the New York Knicks last year and gone on to a lucrative freeagent contract with the Houston Rockets. Just the other night, he put up 21 points at Madison Square Garden in a victory over his former team. As for t h e d o cumentary, "Linsanity" has been shown on the festival circuit and in art houses, and is now moving into the download and DVD part of its cinematic life. At one level, the film is a quintessential saga of sporting triumph, with Lin as the perpetual underdog who defies every doubter and conquers every challenge to achieve his dream.

Deeper meaning In a deeper way, though, "Linsanity" b r i n g s to a m ass audience not just a n Asian-American sports star, but an Asian-American Christian. The film shows Lin not only tossing in 3-pointers and piercing down the lane, but also repeatedly speaking of divine direction, divine intercession, divine will. "I think God did something supernatural to me," he says near the film's end, "something that I couldn't do on my own. Something that I m ay never be able to recreate." Earlier in the documentary, when Lin is on the verge of being cut by the Knicks, his mother offers a prayer: "God, if this is your will for him to play in the NBA, you need to show us." Lin proceedsto score 25 points and rescue his career.

/

Tony Chan / Ketchup Entertainment via The New York Times

Houston Rockets point guard Jeremy Lin In a scene from "Linsanity," a documentary directed by Evan Jackson Leong. The film highlights Lin not only as an Asian-American sports star who tosses in 3-pointers and pierces down the lane, but also as a Christian who repeatedly speaks of divine direction, intercession and will. In the contemporary sports scene, such testimonials are common enough, but they u sually c om e f r o m w h i t e or black athletes. When the website Beliefnet ranked the 12 most famous evangelical Christians in sports several years ago, eight were white, three were black and one was Hispanic.

services in both Chinese and English. All along, as a basketball fan, Chen had followed Lin's career, from high school in Palo Alto to Harvard. Once Lin made it to the NBA and consented to be the subject of a documentary, Chen and the film's director, Evan Jackson Leong, faced a decision about how to treat the issue of faith. Asian-American Christianity "We talked about that from So "Linsanity" offers a rare Day One," said Chen, 37. "Even window into another part of during our initial lunch meetthe American religious land- ing, Jeremy's parents asked, scape: Asian-American Chris- 'How do you want to handle tianity. In addition to its star, the religion part?' I said then several of the film's creators what I say now, which is that are active Christians. Their you can't tell Jeremy's story fervent faith typifies a trend without addressing his faith. for A sian i m m igrants and It's really cornerstone. You can't ignore it or just brush it their families. Although Christians form a aside." minority of the population in places like South Korea and Balancing hoops, religion Taiwan, they constitute a disLeong, 34, approached "Linproportionate share of the im- sanity" from two directions. migrants to the United States He was a lifelong basketball from those places, said Dr. Pe- player himself, and he h ad ter Cha, an ordained minister plunged deeply into the subwho is a professor at Trinity j ect of Christianity in A s i a Evangelical Divinity School in as the director of a 2010 film Deerfield, Ill. Once in the Unit- about it, "1040." "If Jeremy Lin was a devout ed States, Asian immigrants and their American-born chilBuddhist, we'd have to put that dren use churches as a kind of in the documentary," Leong bridge between old world and said in a recent interview after new. a pickup game in New York. "It's a very p a r adoxical "But because he's Christian, combination," Cha said in a p eople think t hey k now i t phone interview. "How does already. They've got this atone institution facilitate both titude of 'don't preach to me.' maintenance of the ethnicity But if it's good material, it's from the homeland and also good material." the process of adaptation and While he did not grow up in acculturation into American a religious home, Leong has society? The effectiveness of increasingly explored Christiimmigrant congregations is anity in his personal as well as precisely because the same in- his professional life. So Lin's stitution provides both roles." unlikely ascent to stardomChen, one of the producers not recruited to a major colof "Linsanity," lived out just lege, not drafted by an NBA such a situation. The grand- team, cut twice in the same son of a famous Chinese evan- season — spoke to him. "You can do everything you gelist, Moses Chow, Chen was born to parents who had possibly can to perfect your i mmigrated from C h ina t o game, and train all you can, Taiwan to the East Bay area but there's still an X f a ctor of Northern California. He about who makes it," he said. grew up attending an evan- "I got to see this miracle. And gelical church that conducted it is a miracle."

RELIGIOUS SERVICES To submit service information or announcementsfor religious organizations, email bulletin@bendbulletin.com or call 541-383-0358. ANTIOCH CHURCH:Or. Gerry Breshears, professor of systematic theologyat Western Seminary; continue the series onPhillippians; Sundayat 9:30a.m. ReduxQ-and-A after; BendHighSchool, 230 N.E.Sixth St., Bend. BENDCHRISTIANFELLOWSHIP:Pastor Dave Miler; "Thankfulness"; Sundayat10 a.m.; 4twelve youth group; Wednesdays at7p.m.;19831 RockingHorseRoad,Bend. BEND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE: PastorMatt Bissonnette; "Attitude ofGratitude"; Sundayat10:15 a.m., 1270 N.E.27th St., Bend. COMMUNITY OF CHRIST: Evangelist Susan Gregory; "God's ChosenOne,"basedonLuke 23:33-43; Sunday at 'l1 a.m., following 10:45a.m. praise singing; 20380 Cooley Road, Bend. CROSS CHURCH:Pastor EdByrnes; "Philippians- Finding Joy and Contentment in theGospel: Psst, I HaveASecret," based onPhilippians 4:10-23; today at6:30 p.m.; 64N.W. Franklin Ave.,Bend. DISCOVERY CHRISTIAN CHURCH:Pastor DaveOrullinger; "A Vision for OurThanks," based on Colossians 3:12-17; Sunday at10 a.m.;Adult Bible study at 9a.m.; 334 N.W. Newport Ave.,Bend. EASTMONT CHURCH: PastorJohnLodwick;"W henA Fence MakesAGood Neighbor," based onLuke10:30-37 and part of theseries, "Neighboring Like Jesus"; Sundayat 9 and10:45 a.m.;62425Eagle Road,Bend. FATHER'SHOUSE CHURCH OF GOD:PastorRandyW ills; "Waiting onGod"as part of the series, "An Uncertain Journey toaPromisedLand";Sundayat9and10:45a.m.;Youth Group; Wednesdaysat7 p.m.;61690Pettigrew Road,Bend. THE FELLOWSHIP ATBEND:Pastor Loren Anderson; "The Stewardand hisTreasure," based on1 Corinthians 16:1-4; Sundayat10 a.m.; Summit HighSchool, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive,Bend. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH:Pastor StevenKoski; "ThePresentofPresenceand ConfessingMyPopeCrush"; Sunday at9and1045 a.m.;Jason Medina,5:01p.m.service; 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend. FIRST UNITEDMETHODISTCHURCH:The Rev. Thom Larson; "A FullOay"basedonJohn6:25-35;Sundayat9and 11 a.m.; 680N.W.Bond St., Bend. FOUNDRY CHURCH:The church will share communion as part of their worship experience;Sundayat10:15 a.m.; 60 N.W. OregonAve., Bend. GRACEFIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH: PastorJoel LiaBraaten; "AnyRegrets?" and"What's a King Look Like?"; Sundayat9:30a.m.;2265 N.W .ShevlinParkRoad,Bend. JOURNEYCHURCH:Pastor Keith Kirkpatrick; "Give Thanks andForgive";Sundayat10a.m.and6:30 p.m.;70N.W. Newport Ave.(Inthe former Liquid Loungespace), Bend. NATIVITY LUTHERAN CHURCH: Intern Pastor Ron Werner Jr.; Sundayat 9and11 am.; Bible study; Wednesdaysat10 a.m.; "Compline" for Adventseason, 6:30p.m. Oec.4, 11and 18; 60850 BrosterhousRoad,Bend. NEWPORTAVENUE CHURCHOFCHRIST:Minister Dean Catlett; "Gratitude Is AsGratitude Does," based onLuke 17:11-19;Sundayat10:45 a.m.; 554N.W.Newport Ave., Bend REAL LIFE CHRISTIAN CHURCH:Pastor Mike Yunker; "CaesarTribute," basedonMatthew17:24-27; Sundayat 8 a.m.,10a.m. and6:30 p.m.;2880 N.E 27thSt.,Bend. SPIRITUALAWARENESSCOMMUNITYOF THE CASCADES: JonathanGoldman,speaker, author andfounder of Essential Light Institute; "Pride,ShameandGuilt — Healingthe Unholy Trinity"; Sundayat515 p m.;heldatThe OldStone Church,157 N.W. FranklinAve.,Bend. SPRINGSOFLIFE MINISTRIES: Evangelistand Bible teacher

Eddie Cienda;W ednesdaysat7p.m.;ongoing;TheSound Garden Studio,1279N.E.SecondSt.,Bend. TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH: Sunday at9a.m.; St. Francis Church, 2450N.E.27th St., Bend. UNITARIANUNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP OF CENTRAL OREGON: UUFCOmembers JoanneWilson, Charles Scamahornand SueClarke; "The Gifts of Thanksgiving"; Sunday at11 a.m.; attheOld StoneChurch, 157 N.W.Franklin Ave., Bend. WESTSIDE CHURCH:Pastor SteveMickel; "Shadow Sightings"; todayat 6:30p.m.andSunday at8, 9and10:45 a.m.; 2051N.W.ShevlinParkRoad,Bend. WESTSIDESOUTH CAMPUS: PastorEvanEarwicker; "Shadow Sightings"; Sundayat10:30 a.m.; 1245S.E.Third St., Bend. WESTSIDE SISTERSCAMPUS:Pastor Steve Mickel; "Shadow Sightings"; Sundayat10:30a.m.; 442Trinity Way, Sisters. WESTSIDE ONLINECAMPUS:Pastor SteveMickel; "Shadow Sighti ngs";todayat6:30p.m.andSundayat9and10:45a.m.; www.westsidelive.org. WESTSIDE RADIOCAMPUS:Pastor Corey Parnell; "Shadow Sightings"; today at8:30a.m.; Heirborneradio showon KBNO,AM1110. COMMUNITYPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: PastorRob Anderson; "Who'sYour King?" basedonLuke23:33-43; Sunday at 9and11a.m.; 529N.W.19th St., Redmond. EMMAUS LUTHERANCHURCH:The Rev. David Poovey; "Aren't YoutheChrist" based on Luke23:39; Sundayat10:30 a.m.; 2175S.W.SalmonAve., Redmond. GRACELUTHERANCHURCHATEAGLECREST:Pastor Randy VanMehren; "TheJoy andConfidence of the Christian: God KnowsUsandWeKnow Him; inChrist Jesus"; Sundayat 10:30 a.m.;7525FalconCrest Drive, Redmond. ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH: Pastor Eric Burtness; "The Bible in Fifty Words!"; Sunday at 8:30 and11 a.m.; Community Thanksgiving Eve service, 7 p.m. Nov.27;1113Black Butte Blvd., Redmond. SHILOHRANCH COWBOY CHURCH:PastorJordanWeaver; Sunday at9and10:30a.m.and Mondayat7p.m.;Men's Bible study; Thursdaysat 7a.m.; in thecafe ofTheRim RockRiders Equestrian Facility, BrasadaRanch, 17037S.W.Alfalfa Road, Powell Butte; LadiesBible101, Thursday at 7p.m. at Brewers; 541-241-4220 for directions. VERTICAL CHURCHOFGOD: Pastor Jeremy Seibert; Sunday at10:30a. m.;youthnight;Wednesdayat6p.m.;52460 Skidgel Road, LaPine. COMMUNITYBIBLE CHURCH AT SUNRIVER:40th anniversary celebration; "He'sAlwaysBeenFaithful," based on Psalm92:1-5; lunch tofollow; Sundayat10 a.m.; Sunriver Resort GreatHall,17600 Center Drive,Sunriver. CONCORDIA LUTHERANMISSION: The Rev.Wilis Jenson; "The GospelDeliversMenfrom theEndof Life andtheWorld because itGivesLifeEternal Now,"basedonLuke23:43; Sunday at11a.m.; heldatTerrebonne GrangeHall, 828611th St., Terrebonne. "THE ABRAHAM INSPIRATION GROUP":Seminar video with AbrahamandJerry andEsther Hicks; donations accepted;5-8 p.m.Oec.14;RosieBareisCampus,1010 NW. 14th St., Bend;541-389-4523. JOURNEYTO BETHLEHEM:Travel backto experiencethe first Christmaswith free, guidedtours; non-perishablefood, clothing andblankets acceptedfor BethlehemInnShelter; 6-9 p.m.Oec.5-6and5-9p.m.Oec.7;BendAdventistChurch, 21610 N.E.Butler Market Road;541-382-5991 or www. bendadventist.org. LIVING NATIVITYPRESENTATION:Witness several scenes from the Biblical Christmasstory; 7-8:30 p.m. Oec.21 and 22.; Powell ButteChristian Church,13720 S.W.Highway126, Powell Butte.

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What are we to makeof Isaiah's mythical cockatrice andthe flying fiery serpent'? Blame the translator

and that they weren't even part The Rev. Eugene Curry, se- of the Israelites' mythology, so nior pastor, Park Hill Baptist modern translatorsrecognize Church, Kansas City, Mo.: that that's not what tsepha Translating animal names means. As such, today's Enin ancient documents is noto- glish translations of the Bible riously tricky because the spe- (the New International Version cific identity of the things men- and the English Standard Vertioned can't always be deduced sion) translate tsepha as "vifrom context alone. The "cock- per" or "adder." The "flying fiery serpents" of atrice" of the Old Testament is a great example of this. Isaiah are a different story. The The original Hebrew refers Old Testament routinely refers to tsepha, which, based on the to venomous snakes as "fiery context, is clearly some sort serpents" — their bites feel like of nasty, poisonous animaL fire in the veins. As for flying, Several English translations one possible explanation is that of the Bible (Wycliffe, 1382; a coiled snake that lashes out Coverdale, 1 535; G e n eva, certainly seems to fly from the 1560; and King James, 1611) perspective of the victim. chose to translate this word as Snakes represent foes "cockatrice." This was the nastiest and The Rev. Justin Hoye, St. most poisonous animal the Patrick's C atholic C h urch, translators could think of, and Kansas City, North: one that loomed large in the There are multiple interpreEnglish psyche during that tations of this passage from historical period (as can be Isaiah 14. A common emphasis, seen by their appearances in though, is that the strength of Chaucer and S hakespeare's God's people lies in their depenwritings). dency and trust in him, even as But as our k nowledge of the ferociousnessof one's adancient Israel has improved versary is acknowledged. over time, so has our ability to This oracle occurs during translate ancient Hebrew. We a transition in Judah and the now know t hat c ockatrices s urrounding region. A k i n g didn't exist in ancient Israel (or has died,either an Assyrian or anywhere else for that matter) King Ahaz of Judah. Philistia

IEK.K.+ TBII'-LIDIE

P~'IUI t

sees a time-sensitive weakness to exploit and contemplates a revolt against the forces that threaten them. The prophet Isaiah, however, chastises them for rejoicing. Their upcoming adversarial king(s) will be worse than the last, enabling a n A s syrian northern aggression to devastate the PhiLstines. According to John Sawyer's commentary, "Isaiah: The Daily Study Bible Series: Vol. 1," the snakes described are assembled in order of lethality. The first is the most generic, encompassing all cunning figures. The cockatrice, or adder, with its venomous bite, follows. The final figure is a compilation of the first two. It exhibits the cunning of the first snake, the venom of the second, and is

fiery and winged. The Assyrians used winged serpents in their iconography and would already have been familiar w it h t h i s i m agery. Even though the A ssyrians remained a g r owing t hreat to Philistia and Judah, Isaiah urges people to depend all the more on God alone who will handle destructive forces and bring about true peace. — Distributed by MCT fnformation Services

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SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D 3 "The Wheel of Dharma

Celtic Cross Christianity

Buddhism

Star of David"

Judaism

CHRISTIAN CHURCH OF REDMOND 0

0

p

536 SW 10th, Redmond

THE SALVATION ARMY

THE RIVER MENNONITE CHURCH

541 NE DeKalb Ave., Bend 541-389-8888

Sunday, 3 pm at the Old Stone Church, 157 NW Franklin Ave., Bend

SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP

Sunday School 2 years - 5th grade Nursery 0-2 years Visitors welcome

541-548-2974 0

0

www.redmondchristian.org

0

Sunday Worship 9:00 am F 10:45 am

You AreTheMost Important Part of aur Services

Sunday School for all ages Kidmo • Junior Church

"Yin/Yang" Taoist/ Confumanism

Lead Pastor

Send to: PO Box 808, Bend OR 97709

The Present Of Presence 8 Confessing

www thenvermennomte.org

Major's Robert S Miriam Keene

My Pope Crush 9:00 am contemporary

NEW HOPE EVANGELICAL 20080 Pinebrook Blvd.• 541-389-3436

10:45 am traditional HOUSE OF COVENANT

5:01 pm worship S dinner Sunday School: 3 yrs to 6th grade

Est. 1994

at New Hope Church!

We provide a congregational setting for Jews and Christians alike. If you're interested in learning the Bible from a Hebrew

Cowboy Fellowship Saturdays Saturday 6:00 pm Sunday 9:00, 10:45 am,

Potluck 6 pm

Sunday Worship Services FAITH CHRISTIAN CENTER

CALVARY CHAPEl BEND

1049 NE 11th St. • 541-382-8274

20225 Cooley Rd. Bend

SUNDAYS:

Phone: (541) 383-5097

9:30am Sunday EducationalClasses

Web site: ccbend.org

10:30 am Morning Worship

Sundays. 8:30 F 10:30 am This Sunday at Faith Christian

W ednesdayNight Study:7 pm

Pastor Mike Johnson will share his message

YouthGroup: Wednesday 7 pm

in the Sunday service titled

Child Care provided

"Things to Come"

8:30 am - 10:15 am - 11 am

Women's Ministry, Youth Ministry are

"The Presence Filled Life"

available, call for days and times.

beginning at 10:30 AM. Childcare is provided in our Sunday morning service.

"Teaching the Word of God,

Bear Creek Center 21300 Bear Creek Rd. Bend, OR. 97701 Our Shabbat Services are on Saturday mornings at 10 00 a.m. Our ministries include:

• 4 •

.TEMPLE BETH TIKVAH

is a member of the Union for Reform Judaism. Our members represent a wide range of

Jewish backgrounds. 541-548-3066

We welcome interfaith families

www.powellbuttechurch.com

and Jews by choice. Our monthly activities include Services, religious education for children 8

REAL LIFE CHRISTIAN CHURCH

Like Hymns? We've Got 'em!

from our series,

Pastor Randy Myers

Nursery & Children's Church

13720 SW Hwy 126, Powell Butte

10.00 am Contemporary Worship Service

Aspen Hall

at 7:00 PM

HOLY REDEEMER CATHOlIC PARISH

For information, please call ...

A number of Faith Journey Groups meet

Fr Theodore Nnabugo, Pastor

Senior Pastor - Mike Yunker - 541-312-8844

Wed, November 27, 5:00 pmCommunity Candle Lighting-

www holyredeemerparish.net

Associate Pastors

Old Mill District,

and times.

230 NE Ninth Street, Bend

www.bendfp.org

LIVING TORAH FELLOWSHIP

www.facebook com/bendfp

Ca La Roca Church

541 382 4401

Saturday 10;30 am - 2 pm Worship/Dance - StudyFood/Fellowship Hebrew Roots Fellowship worshipping in Spirit and Truth

Sponsored by Chabad of Bend "Loving people one at a time."

For the complete schedule of

541-410-5337

Greenwood Avenue and NE 11th Street.

16137 Burgess Rd

www.real-lifecc.org

Services 8 Events

www.bendfaith.com

Tuesday, Wednesday 8 Friday Mass

Children Welcome www.livingtorahfellowship.com

go to: www.bethtikvahbend.org

9:00 am

Confessions: Saturdays — 3:00—4:00 pm 541-548-4555 SUNDAYS

HOLY TRINITY, SUNRIVER

Morning Worship 8:30 am 8 10:30 am

18143 Cottonwood Rd.

For information about our Religious EASTMONT COMM U N ITY SCHOOL

"Educating and Developing the Whole Child for the Glory of God" Pre K - 5th Grade 62425 Eagle Road, Bend • 541-382-2049

Life groups 9 am

Thurs. Mass 9:30 am;

Kidz LIVE ages 3-11 10:30 am

Sat. Vigil Mass 5:30 pm

Principal Lonna Carnahan

Evening Worship 6 pm

Sunday mass 8:00 am

www.eastmontcommunityschool.com

Adult Classes

OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS, Gilchrist

120 Mississippi Dr

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST

Sunday Mass — 12:30 pm

1551 NW First St. • 541-382-6100

Confessions: Sundays 12:00 — 12:15 pm

(South of Portland Ave.)

HOLY FAMILY,

near Christmas Valley Pastor Duane Pippitt

57255 Fort Rock Rd

www.redmondag.com

Sunday Mass — 3:30 pm Confessions. Sundays 3:00 — 3:15 pm

Church Service 8 Sunday School: 10 am

Rev. Julian Cassar

UndeniableWays"

IfreGospeland Ihereb¹ ¹ran( eternaJ life. (St. John 20:22-23, Augsburg Confession XXVI)1.8, 10

Nursery Care F Children's Church ages 4 yrs-4th grade during all Worship Services "Courageous Living" on KNLR 97.5 FM 8:30 am Sunday

11 am Divine Service

Reading Room:

15 Dec., I pm: AdventVespersService 24 Dec., 7 pm: Christmas Eve DivineService 25 Dec, 11 am Christmas DivineService

541-382-3631

541-382-5822

www.eastmontchurch.com

NEW CHURCH 2450 NE 27th Street

Sunday Services

Masses

Classic (Blended) Service 9:00 am

Saturday - Vigil 5:00 PM

Contemporary Service 10:45 am

Sunday 7:30 AM, 10:00 AM

Hispanic Service

6:00 pm

Domingo 12:30 PM -Misa en Espanol

For more information about weekly

Reconciliation

ministries for the whole family,

Saturday 3:00 PM - 4:45 PM

Religion of the

Light andSound of God

info@eastmontchurch.com

HISTORIC DOWNTOWN CHURCH

FOUNDRY CHURCH

(Child Care Availablej Sunday School 10:20 a.m.

Experiences/Beyond Meditation. Both

Education Hour 10:45 a.m.

"A I-Ieart for Bend in the Heart of Bend"

Masses Saturday 8:00 AM

Sunday 4:30 PM M onday Fr - iday 700 AM F 12:15 PM

Women's Bible Study, Tuesday 9:15 a.m. Men'a Bible Study, Wednesday 7:30 a.m.

This Sunday, Foundry Church will share

Sunday Worship Services at 8:30 am 8 11:00 am

after 7:00 AM Mass to 6:00 PM

www.eckankar.org

Sunday School for all ages 10:00 am

Tuesday (Family Holy Hour)

www.eckankar-oregon.org

5:00 PM - 6:00 PM

541-728-6476

Reconciliation Tuesday 7:30 AM - 8:00 AM

For Kidztown, Middle School and High School activities Call 541-382-3862

www bendchurch.org HIGHLAND BAPTIST CHURCH, SBC

3100 SW Highland Ave., Redmond • 541-548-4161

ST. THOMAS CATHOLIC CHURCH

1720 NW 19th Street

TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH

469 NW Wall St. • 541-382-5542 www.trinitybend.org

Redmond, Oregon 97756 541-923-3390

Father Todd Unger, Pastor

Sch dul M(rss~ Weekdays 8:00 am

Sunrfa¹ Schedule

Wednesday 6:00 pm

8:00 am, 9:30 am, 11:00 am

Saturday Vigil 5:30 pm

Sunday Bible Fellowship Groups

First Saturday 8:00 am (English)

9:30am E II:00 am

Sunday 8:00 am, 10:00 am (English)

Dr. Barry Campbell, lead pastor

12:00 noon (Spanish)

Historic St. Francis Church,

Ever¹oneis Welcome!

9:00 am - Contemporary Service Sunday School during the 9:00 am Service

11:00 am -Traditional Service

Groups, Youth Groups, Quilting, Crafting,

Music F Fellowship Open Hearts. Open Minds Open Doors. Rev. Thom Larson

firstchurchCbendumc.org

CHURCH 6 SYNAGOGUE DIRECTORY LISTING Effective May I, 2013

Rev. Rob Anderson, Pastor

Come Experience a warm, friendly family of worshipers.

"A Full Day" Scripture: fohn 6:25-35

*During the Week: Women's Groups, Men's

(541) 548-3367

Children's Room available during services

Sermon Title:

CHRISTIAN LIFE CENTER

529 NW 19th Street

"Thanksgiving Eve Service,

Rev. Thom Larson

21720 E. Hwy. 20• 541.389.8241

(3/4 mile north of High School) Redmond, OR 97756

W ednesday, November 27 at7:00 pm

4 SaturdayS and TMC: $115 5 Saturdays and TMC: $l38

Everyone Welcome - Always. A vibrant, inclusive community. A rich and

9:00 am Contemporary Worship 9:00 am Nursery Care 9:15 am Children 8 Youth Sunday School

Every Saturday on the church

diverse music program for all ages

9:30 am Adult Education

page. $23

Coffee, snacksandfellowship aftereachservice

11:00 am Traditional Worship

Copy Changes:

Youth Groups High School - Sunday 11:00am — 12:30pm M iddleSchool— Wednesday 6:00—7:30pm

by 5 PM Tuesday

M-W-F Women's Exercise 9:30 am 494 NW Lava St. at Franklin, Bend, OR

680 NW Bond St. /541.382.1672

COMM U NITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

8:00 am and 10:15am

lexcept Wednesday) Sunday Worship Services:

Pastor Daniel N. LeLaCheur 21720 E. Hwy. 20 541.389.8241 www.clcbend com

communion as part of our worship experience..

Wednesday Mid-WeekService Children 8 Youth Programs 7:00 pm Nursery Care Provided for All Services

IION LUTHERAN CHURCH

For More information

SundaySchoolclasses are at9:00 am and our Worship Service at 10:15 am

Pastor Joel LiaBraaten Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

ELCA Worship in the Heart of Redmond

Monday-Friday

I •

www.gracefirstlutheran.org

Exposition 8 Benediction

Childcare provided on Sunday

8:45 am 8 10:45 am

"Travel the Road to Spiritual Freedom" Mar. 7-9 at the Unity Center of Portland and

(In the Heart of Downtown Bendl

Sunday Morning Worship

the Portland Eckankar Center.

60 NW Oregon, 541-382-3862 Pastor Syd Brestel

Coming in 2014: Oregon Regional Seminar,

.

541-420-1667 www.sovereigngracebend.com

Corner of NW Franklin 8 Lava (FORMERLY FIRST BAPTIST)

worshipping God and teaching the Bible truths recovered through the Reformation. Call for information about other meetings

• •

62080 Dean Swift Rd.

S-

Just 2 blocks SW of Bend High School Sunday Worship 10:00 am Sovereign Grace Church is dedicated to

2265 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend 382-6862

Dreams. Sat. Dec 28 at 3pm Spiritual

40 SE 5th St., Bend

Phone. 541-325-6773

Sunday Worship 9:30 a.m.

contact 541-382-5822 or email

1541) 385-3908

Meeting at the Golden Age Club

condordialutheranmission Facebook: Concordia Lutheran Mission

Sat. Nov. 30 at 3pm Spiritual Wisdom on

events are at the E. Bend I ibrary,

www.uufco.org

SOVEREIGN GRACE CHURCH

8286 11th St. (Grange Hall) Terrebonne, OR

GRACE FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH

Other Introductory Events

157 NW FRANKLIN AVE., BEND

The Rev. Willis C. Jenson, I'astor

www.lutheransonline.com/ ECKANHAR

Nursery Care are available.

FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH

Rev. Joseph K. Thalisery 62425 Eagle Road, Bend

(Pre-K through Grade 51 and

Mail:PO Box428,Bend OR 97709

Please visit our website for a complete listing of activities for all ages. www.bendnaz.org

• Sat. 12 noon - 2 pm

Children's Religious Education

THE OLD STONE CHURCH

6:30 pm Ladies Bible Study THURSDAY 10:00 am 50+ Bible Study WEEKLY I.ife Groups

10 am Sunday School

I Dec., I pm: Advent VespersService 8 Dec., I pm: Advent Vespers Service

Mon. through Fric 1( am - 4 pm

fulfillment. Thanks to Joanne Willson, Charles Scamahorn, and Sue Clarke for

Meeting place:

WEDNESDAY

ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI CATHOLIC CHURCH

presentations about the gifts of Thanksgiving — generosity, gratitude, and

their words to share.

Childcare provided.

115 NW Minnesota Ave. "DisplayingIhe Reafi(¹ oj C/irisl in

Lay-Led Service

Three members of UUFCO will give

Wed. Testimony Meeting: 7:30 pm

EASTMONT CHURCH

November 24, 2013 at 11:00 am:

1270 NE 27 St.• 541-382-5496

First United Methodist Church 680 NW Bond Street

The eissionof Ifie Church is io forgive sins Ifirou¹h

Wednesday NITELive Kids Youth Group

We are a Welcoming Congregation

"The Gifts of Thanksgiving"-

Senior Pastor Virgil Askren SUNDAY 9:00 am Sunday School for all ages 9:00 am Hispanic Worship Service 10:15 am Worship Service

MISSION (LCMS)

Celebrate Recovery

OF CENTRAL OREGON

"Diverse Beliefs, One Fellowship"

BEND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE

All services are held at the

CONCORDIA LUTHERAN

Confessions: Thurs. 9:00 - 9.15 am

Education programs, call Kathy Schindel at 541-388-8826

541-388-8826

WEDNESDAYS

FAMILY NIGHT 7 PM

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISTS

REDMOND ASSEMBLY OF GOD

1865 W Antler • Redmond

Youth Events

or contact us at 541-385-5439

HOLY REDEEMER, LA PINE

Sunday Mass — 10:00 am

12:30 pm Contemplative Prayer

1155 SW Division, ¹D8, Bend

Mike Sweeney 8 Jeff Olson

Wednesday Noon Worship followed by

Choirs, music groups, Bible study,

www.houseofcovenant.org

Sunday Night Church 6:30 pm

The church is located on the corner of

December I, 8, 15, 22

Visit us on the web at

(No child care)

"Restored Youth" service begins

Parish Office: 541-536-3571

Waiting, Accepting, fourneying, Birthing

fellowship and ministries every week

(Full children's ministry)

please contact the church for details

Advent Sermon Series What ToExpect When You're Expecting

www.facebook.com/bendyouthcollective

Rabbi fohanna Hershenson

On Wednesdays

throughout the week in small groups,

Hadashah (New Testament) • Biblical Feasts • Lifecycle Events • End-times prophecy

adults, Hebrew school, Torah study, social action projects and social activities

Saturday, November 23, 10:00 am — Bat Mitzvah of Rachel Uri at

Book by Book"

• Davidic dance and worship • Children's ministry and nursery • Hebrew classes • Home groups • Teaching from the Torah and the Brit

at the RLCC Church, 2880 NE 27th

Sunday Services 8 am

Check out the new First Presbyterian Find what you need 8 bookmark us

Pastors: Chris Blair, Trey Hinkle, Ozzy Osborne and Glenn Bartnik

Nursery-care provided

Website at www.bendfp.org

perspective, come join us at:

M usic and the Word 7 pm •

230 NE Ninth, Bend

All Are Welcome, Always!

Church Office: 541-389-8787 E-mail:theriver@mailshack.com

Celebrate New Life

CHRISTIAN CHURCH

"Omkar" IAum) Hinduism

Children 8 Adult Classes Worship Service — 11:00 am

Messianic Synagogue

POWELL BUTTE

(Across Nmth St. from Bend High)

Rev. Dr. Steven H. Koski

Greg Strubhar, Pastor Darin Hollingsworth, Youth Pastor

"Star 8 Crescent" Islam

541 NE Dekalb Sunday School 9:45 am

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

Wed. Bible Study at noon

3rd Tues.Men's Club 6:00 pm, dinner Youth and Family Programs

for the outpouring of help

Active Social Outreach

COMarketplace: The First Tuesday of each

3rd Th. Women's Circle/Bible Study I:00 pm

We are grateful to the community

The Bulletin:

Mondays 6:30 pm Centering Prayer

month. $23 Copy Changes: by Monday

Wednesdays

I week Prior to Publication

5.30 pm Prayer Service The Rev. Roy D. Green, Interim Rector

Confessionson Wednesdays from

For complete calender:

5:00 to 5:45 pm

All are welcome

www.hbcredmond.org

and on Saturdays from 4:30 to 5:15 pm

through our red doors

1113 SW Black Butte Blvd. Redmond, OR 97756 - 541-923-7466 Pastor Eric Burtness www.zionrdm.com

Small Groups Meet Regularly (Handicapped Accessible) Please visit our website for a complete listing of activities for all ages. www.redmondcpc.org

I

I

Call Pat Lynch

>4i-383-0396 plynCh@bendbulletln.COm


D4

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013

Strangenew social-media trend arises: being nice Will Oremus Slate

First it was Jimmy Kimmel declaring his love for Jimmy Fallon. Then it was the Yankees being nice to the Red Sox, which was almost unfathomable, yet also understandable and gracious in the wake of the Boston b ombings. But now it's getting out of hand: Archrival c orporate brands are being nice to each other with no discernible provocation whatsoever. Earlier this week, a bunch of British snack brands, from Cadbury to Walker's Crisps to JaffaCakes and Phileas Fogg, threw each other a veritable Twitter tea party — and indeed, Yorkshire Tea joined in the lovefest. And last week, Microsoft's Xbox One team engaged ina random tweet of kindness toward the Sony Playstation 4, even though the two products are about to go head-to-head in a high-stakes holiday-shopping-season showdown that will help shape the fates of both companies for years to come. What's next? A Ford F-150 ad congratulating Chevy on the 2014 Silverado? McDonald's congratulating Burger King on putting its Big King back on the menu? Hertz admitting that Avis really does try harder? The surprising thing is that, whether genuine or cynical, Microsoft's gesture seemed to work: It's been retweeted some 15,000 times, ensuring that the PS4's launch doesn't entirely overshadow the upcoming launch of the Xbox One in terms of social-media buzz this week. I predict that, as with Oreo's timely Super Bowl tweet, Microsoft's olive-branch p loy wil l b e come a t r e n d among the savvier brands on social media, which will compete to garner goodwill by saying nice things about their arch-rivals. That doesn't sound like a bad thing, on its face, although I could see it turning from sweet to saccharine rather quickly. — Oremusis the lead blogger for Slate's Future Tense,reportingon

emerging technologies, techpolicy and digital culture.

VOLUNTEER SEARCH Volunteer Search iscompiled by the Department ofHumanServices Volunteer Services.Theorganizations listed areseeking volunteers for a variety of tasks. Toseeafull list, and for additional information onthetypes of help needed, goonline to www. bendbulletin.com/volunteer. Changes, additions or deletions should besent to1300 N.W.Wall St., Suite103, Bend 97701, emaiTherese.M.Hel l ton©state. or.us or call 541-693-8988.

SENIORS AARP:www.aarp.org/money/taxaide or888-687-2277. ASPEN RIDGEALZHEIMER'S ASSISTEDLIVING AND RETIREMENT COMMUNITY:541-385-8500. BEND SENIOR CENTER: Kim, 541-706-6127. CASCADEVIEW NURSING AND ALZHEIMER'SCARECENTER: 541-382-7161. CENTRALOREGON COUNCILON AGING(COCOA)AND MEALS ON WHEELS:www.councilonaging.org or 541-678-5483. LA PINESENIOR ACTIVITY CENTER: Karen Ward,541-536-6237. LONG-TERMCARE OMBUDSMAN PROGRAM:NancyAllen, 541-3 I2-2488. PILOTBUTTE REHABILITATION CENTER:541-382-5531. PRINEVILLESOROPTIMIST SENIOR CENTER:Melody, 541-447-6844. TOUCHMARK ATMT. BACHELOR VILLAGE: 541-383-1414. UNITEDSENIORCITIZENS OF BEND(USCB):uscb©bendtel.net or 541-323-3344. VOLUNTEERSINACTION: 541-548-7018.

CHILDREN, YOUTH AND EDUCATION SERVICES ADULTBASICSKILLS DEPARTMENT (COCC):Margie Gregory, mgregory@ cocc.edu or 541-318-3788. AFS-USA:www.afsusa.org or Caitlin Krutsinger, 503-419-9514. ALYCE HATCHCENTER:Andy Kizans, 541-383-1980. BENDPARK&RECREATION DISTRICT:Kim, 541-706-6127. BIGBROTHERS BIG SISTERS OF CENTRALOREGON:541-312-6047 (Bend), 541-447-3851,ext. 333 (Prineville) or 541-325-5603 (Madras). BOY SCOUTSOF AMERICA: Paul Abbott, paulabbott©scouting.org or 541-382-4647. BOYS &GIRLS CLUBS OF CENTRAL OREGON: www.bgcco.org, info© bgcco.org or 541-617-2877. CAMP FIREUSA CENTRAL OREGON: campfire@bendcable.comor 541-382-4682. CASA(COURTAPPOINTED SPECIALADVOCATES): www. casaofcentraloregon.org or 541-389-1618. CHILDREN'SVISION FOUNDATION: Julie Bibler, 541-330-3907. CIRCLEOFFRIENDS: Beth, beth© acircleoffriendsoregon.comor 541-588-6445. DESCHUTES COUNTYSHERIFF'S OFFICE— CENTRAL OREGON PARTNERSHIPSFORYOUTH: www.deschutes.org/copy,COPY© deschutes.org or 541-388-6651.

FOSTERGRANDPARENTS PROGRAM: Steve Guzanskis, 541-678-5483. GIRL SCOUTS: 541-389-8146. GIRLSON THE RUN OFDESCHUTES COUNTY: www.deschutescountygotr. org or info@deschutescountygotr.org. GRANDMA'SHOUSE:541-383-3515. HEALTHYBEGINNINGS:ww w.myhb. org or 541-383-6357. HIGH DESERTTEENS VOLUNTEER PROGRAM: www.highdesertmuseum. org or 541-382-4757. IEP PARTNERS: Carmelle Campbell at the OregonParentTraining and Information Center,888-505-2673. J BAR JLEARNINGCENTER: Rick Buening, rbuening@jbarj.org or 541-389-1409. JUNIPERSWIM & FITNESS CENTER: Kim, 541-706-6127. KIDS CENTER: Lisa Weare, Iweare@ kidscenter.org, 541-383-5958. LAPINE HIGH SCHOOL:Jeff Bockert, jeff.bockert©bend.k12.or.us or 541-355-8501. MEADOWLARK INDEPENDENT LIVING PROGRAM: Teal Buehler, 541-617-9576. MOUNTAINSTARFAMILY RELIEF NURSERY: 541-322-6820. NEIGHBORIMPACT: 541-548-2380, ext.115. OREGON STATEUNIVERSITY EXTENSION SERVICE: 541-548-6088, 541-447-6228 or541-475-3808. OREGON STATEUNIVERSITY MASTERGARDENERVOLUNTEER PROGRAM: http://extension. oregonstate.edu/deschutes or 541-548-6088. READ TOGETHER: 541-388-7746. REDMOND HIGHSCHOOL: 541-923-4807. REDMOND LEARNINGCENTER:Zach Sartin, 541-923-4854. REDMOND YOUNGLIFE: 541-923-8530. SCHOOL-TO-CAREERPARTNERSHIP: Kent Child, 541-355-4158. SMART (STARTMAKING A READER TODAY):www.getsmartoregon.org or 541-355-5600. TRILLIUM FAMILYSERVICES: 503-205-0194. VIMA LUPWA HOMES:www. lupwahomes.org or541-420-9634. YOUTH CHOIROFCENTRAL OREGON: 541-385-0470.

ANIMALS AND ENVIRONMENT BENDSPAY& NEUTERPROJECT: 541-617-1 010. BRIGHTSIDE ANIMAL CENTER: volunteer©brightsideanimals.org or 541-923-0882. CAT RESCUE, ADOPTION & FOSTER TEAM (CRAFT):www.craftcats.org, 541-389-8420 or541-598-5488. CHIMPS, INC.:www.chimps-inc.org or541-410-4122. DESCHUTESLANDTRUST: www.deschuteslandtrust.org or 541-330-0017. DESCHUTESNATIONAL FOREST: Jean Nelson-Dean,541-383-5576. EAST CASCADES AUDUBON SOCIETY: www.ecaudubon.org or 541-241-2 I90. THE ENVIRONMENTALCENTER: www.envirocenter.org or 541-385-6908. EQUINEOUTREACHHORSE RESCUE

OF BEND: www.equineoutreach. SYSTEM:541-312-1032. com or joan@equineoutreach.comor FRIENDSOFTHE BEND LIBRARIES: 541-419-3717. www.fobl.org or Meredith Shadrachat 541-617-7047. HEALINGREINS THERAPEUTIC RIDINGCENTER:Oarcy Justice, HIGHDESERT CHAMBER MUSIC: 541-382-9410. www.highdesertchambermusic. HUMANE SOCIETYOF CENTRAL com or Isabelle Senger atinfo@ OREGON: Jen, jennifer@hsco.org or highdesertchambermusic.com or 541-382-3537. 54 I-306-3988. HUMANE SOCIETYOF THE HIGHDESERT MUSEUM: OCHOCOS:54I-447-7178. 541-382-4754. JUNIPERGROUP SIERRA CLUB: LA PINEPUBLICLIBRARY: Cindylu, 541-389-91 I5. 54 I-317-1097. PRINEVILLE BLM:www.blm.gov/or/ LATINOCOMMUNITY ASSOCIATION: districts/prineville/recreation/host.php Brad, volunteer©latca.org or or541-416-6700. 541-382-4366. STEWARDSHIPFOR SUSTAINABLE THE NATUREOFWORDS: BAGGING: LexaMcAllister, www.thenatureofwords.org or Imcallister@cocc.eduor 54 I-647-2233. 541-914-6676. REDMOND FRIENDSOFTHE SUNRIVERNATURECENTER & LIBRARY:541-312-1060. OBSERVATORY: 541-593-4442. REDMONDINTERCULTURAL VOLUNTEERCAMPGROUND EXCHANGE(R.I.C.E.):Barb, bonitodiaO HOST POSITIONS: TomMottl, msn.com or541-447-0732. 541-416-6859. TOWER THEATREFOUNDATION: 541-317-0700.

HEALTH

AMERICAN CANCERSOCIETY: Charlie Johnson,541-434-3114. AMERICANREDCROSS: 541-749-4111. THE BLOOMPROJECT:www. thebloomproject.org or Heidi Berkman at h.berkman@thebloomproject.org or 541-241-8845. DESCHUTES COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT: Tuesday Johnson, Tuesday Johnson@co.deschutes. or.us or 541-322-7425. HOSPICEOF REDMONDSISTERS: www.redmondhospice. org or Volunteer Coordinator at 541-548-7483. MOUNTAINVIEW HOSPITAL:JoOee Tittle, 541-475-3882, ext. 5097. MOUNTAINVIEW HOSPITAL HOSPICE: 541-460-4030 or Tori Schultz, tschultz@mvhd.org or 541475-3882, ext. 5327. NATIONALALLIANCE ON MENTAL ILLNESS— CENTRAL OREGON: Eileen White, namicentraloregon@ gmail.com. NEWBERRY HOSPICE: 54 I-536-7399. PARTNERS IN CARE:www. partnersbend.org orSarahPeterson at 541-382-5882. RELAY FORLIFE: Stefan Myers, 541-504-4920. ST. CHARLESIN BENDAND ST. CHARLES IN REDMOND: 541-706-6354. VOLUNTEERSIN MEDICINE: Kristi, 541-585-9008.

ARTS, MUSIC, CULTURE AND HERITAGE 88.9KPOV, BEND'S COMMUNITY RADIOSTATION:info©kpov.org or 541-322-0863. ART COMMITTEEOFTHE REDMOND FRIENDSOF THE LIBRARY: Linda Barker, 541-312-1064. ARTS CENTRAL STATION: 541-617-1317. CASCADES THEATRICAL COMPANY: 541-389-0803. CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY ASSOCIATION:Julie, 541-383-7779. DES CHUTESHISTORICAL MUSEUM: 541-389-1813,10 a.m. to 4 30p.m. Tuesday throughSaturday. DESCHUTES PUBLICLIBRARY

HUMAN SERVICES ABILITREE: volunteer©abilitree.org or 541-388-8103, ext. 217. AMNESTYINTERNATIONAL: Philip Randall, 541-388-1793. ASSISTANCE LEAGUEOF BEND: 541-389-2075. BEND COMMUNITYCENTER: volunteer©bendscommunitycenter. org or 541-312-2069. BETHLEHEM INN: www.bethleheminn. org or 541-322-8768. BRIDGING GAPS:bendbridginggaps@ gmail.com or 541-314-4277. CENTERFOR COMPASSIONATE LIVING (PREVIOUSLY PEACE CENTER OFCENTRAL OREGON): www.compassionatecenter.org orBeth Hansen,541-923-6677. CENTRALOREGONVETERANS OUTREACH: covo.org©gmail.com or 54 I-383-2793. DEPARTMENTOFHUMAN SERVICES/VOLUNTEERSERVICES: Therese Helton, Therese.M.HeltonO state,or.us or541-693-8988. DEPARTMENTOFHUMAN SERVICES/VOLUNTEERSERVICES CROOK COUNTY: ValerieDean,541447-3851, ext. 427. DISABLED AMERICAN VETERANS (DAV):OonLang, 541-647-1002. FAMILY KITCHEN: Cindy Tidball, cindyt@bendcable.com or 54I-6I0-651I. FAMILY RESOURCE CENTER: 541-389-5468. HUMAN DIGNITYCOALITION: 54 I-385-3320. HUNGERPREVENTION COALITION: Marie, info© hungerpreventioncoalition.org or 54I-385-9227. LA PINECOMMUNITY KITCHEN: 54I-536-l3l2. NEIGHBORIMPACT: chrisqO neighborimpact.org or 541-548-2380, ext. 106. PEACEBRIDGES, INC., BEND: www.abridgetopeace.org orJohnC. Schwechten at541-383-2646. PFLAG CENTRALOREGON: www.pflagcentraloregon.org or 541-317-2334. RONALD MCDONALDHOUSE:Teresa, 54 I-318-4950. SAVINGGRACE:541-382-9227 or 54 I-504-2550.

SOROPTIMISTINTERNATIONAL OF BEND:www.sibend.org, president@ sibend.org or 541-728-0820. ST. VINCENTDEPAULSOCIAL SERVICES: 541-389-6643. VOLUNTEER CONNECT:www. volunteerconnectnow.org or 541-385-8977. WINNINGOVER ANGER & VIOLENCE: www.winningover.org or 541-382- I943. WOMEN'S RESOURCECENTER OF CENTRALOREGON:541-385-0750.

HABITAT FOR HUMANITY AND THRIFT STORES BENDAREAHABITATFOR HUMANITY:www.bendhabitat. org, jbarry©bendhabitat.org or 541-385-5387. HABITATRESTORE:OiCrocker, 541-3 I2-6709. HUMANE SOCIETYOFCENTRAL OREGON THRIFT STORE:Jen, jennifer©hsco.org or 541-382-3537. NEAT REPEAT THRIFT SHOP:Peg, 541-447-6429. NEWBERRYHABITATFOR HUMANITY:541-593-5005. OPPORTUNITYFOUNDATION THRIFT STORE OF BEND:54'I-389-0129. OPPORTUNITYFOUNDATION THRIFT STORE OF REDMOND: 541-548-5288. REDMOND HABITATFOR HUMANITY: Scott or Warren, 541-548-1406. REDMOND HABITATRESTORE: Roy, 541-548- I406. SISTERSHABITAT FOR HUMANITY: 541-549-1193. ST. VINCENTDEPAUL— LAPINE: 541-536-1956. ST. VINCENTDEPAUL— REDMOND: 541-923-5264.

GOVERNMENT, CITY AND COMMUNITY THE CITIZENREVIEWBOARD(CRB): crb.volunteer.resources@ojd.state. or.us or 888-530-8999. CITY OF BEND:Cheryl Howard, choward©ci.bend.or.us or 541-388-5505. DESCHUTESCOUNTY VICTIMS' ASSISTANCEPROGRAM: Diane Stecher, 541-317-3186or 541-388-6525. DESCHUTESRIVERWOODS NEIGHBORHOODASSOCIATION: www.drwna.org or Barbara atinfoO drwna.org or 541-382-0561. JEFFERSONCOUNTY CRIME VICTIMS' ASSISTANCE PROGRAM: Tina Farrester, 541-475-4452, ext. 4108. JEFFERSON COUNTYVOLUNTEER SERVICES: Therese Helton,541-4756131, ext. 208. LA PINERURAL FIREPROTECTION DISTRICT: Volunteer Coordinator, 541-536-2935. ORCHARDDISTRICT NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION: www.orcharddistrictneighborhood. com. SUNRIVERAREACHAMBEROF COMMERCE: 541-593-8149. VISIT BEND: www.visitbend.com or 541-382-8048.

SUPPORT GROUPS The following list contains support group information submittedto The Bulletin. Submissions must beupdated monthly for inclusion. Tosubmit, email relevant details to communitylife© bendbulletin.com. ABILITREEPEER GROUP FOR PERSONSAFFECTEDBYA DISABILITY:541-388-8103. ABILITREE YOUNG PEER GROUP: 541388-8103 ext. 219. ABILITREE BRAIN INJURY SUPPORT GROUP: 541-388-8103. ADHDADULTSUPPORTGROUP: 541-420-3023. ADOPTIVEPARENT SUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-389-5446. ADULT CHILDRENOF ALCOHOLICS: 54I-633-8I89. AGE WIDEOPEN (ADULT CHILDREN SUPPORT GROUP): 541-410-4162 or www.agewideopen.com. AIDSEDUCATION FOR PREVENTION, TREATMENT,COMMUNITY RESOURCES ANDSUPPORT (DESCHUTESCOUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT):541-322-7402. AIDSHOT LINE:800-342-AIOS. AL-ANON: 541-728-3707 or www.centraloregonal-anon.org. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS (AA):541548-0440 or www.coigaa.org. ALS SUPPORT GROUP:541-977-7502. ALZHEIMER'SASSOCIATION: 54 I-548-7074. ALZHEIMER'SASSOCIATION CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-330-6400. ALZHEIMER'S/DEMENTIACAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP:541-948-7214. AUTISMRESOURCE GROUP OF CENTRAL OREGON:541-788-0339. BENDATTACHMENTPARENTING: 541-385-1787. BEND S-ANONFAMILY GROUP: 888-285-3742. BEREAVEMENTSUPPORT GROUPS: 541-382-5882. BEREAVEMENT SUPPORT GROUP/ADULTSAND CHILDREN: 541-383-3910. BEYOND AFFAIRSNETWORK: A peer group for victims of infidelity, baninbend@yahoo.com. BRAININJURY SUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-382-945 I. BRAINTUMOR SUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-350-7243 BREAKUPSANDDIVORCE SUPPORT GROUP:541-610-3060 or

phoenixcounse lingbend@gmail.com. CANCER FAMILYSUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-5864. CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 541-536-7399. CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 541610-3060orphoenixcounselingbendO gmail.com CELEBRATE RECOVERY BEND: Faith Christian Center, 541-383-5801; Westside Church,541-382-7504; centraloregoncr.org CELEBRATERECOVERY LAPINE: Grace Fellowship, 541-536-2878; High Lakes Christian Church,541-536-3333; Living Waters Church,541-536-1215; centraloregoncr.org CELEBRATERECOVERY MADRAS: Living HopeChristian Center, 541-4752405 or centraloregoncr.org. CELEBRATERECOVERY REDMOND: Redmond Assembly ofGodChurch, 541-548-4555 or centraloregoncr.org. CENTRALOREGON ALZHEIMER'S/ DEMENTIACAREGIVERS SUPPORT GROUP:541-504-0571. CENTRALOREGON AUTISM ASPERGER'SSUPPORTTEAM: 54I-633-8293. CENTRALOREGON AUTISM SPECTRUM RESOURCEAND FAMILY SUPPORTGROUP:541-279-9040. CENTRALOREGON COALITION FOR ACCESS(WORKING TO CREATE ACCESSIBLE COMMUNITIES): 541-385-3320. CENTRALOREGON DEPRESSION AND ANXIETYGROUP:54I-420-2759 CENTRALOREGON DISABILITY SUPPORTNETWORK:541-548-8559 or www.codsn.org. CENTRALOREGON FAMILIESWITH MULTIPLES: 541-330-5832 or 54 I-388-2220. CENTRALOREGONLEAGUEOF AMPUTEESSUPPORT GROUP (COLA): 541-480-7420 or www.ourcola.org. CENTRALOREGON RIGHT TO LIFE: 54 I-383-1593. CHILDREN'SVISION FOUNDATION: 54 I-330-3907. CHRISTIANWOMEN OF HOPE (WOMEN'SCANCER SUPPORT GROUP): 541-382-1832. CLAREBRIDGEOFBEND (ALZHEIMER'S SUPPORT GROUP): 541-385-4717 or rnorton10 brookdaleliving.com. CO-DEPENDENTSANONYMOUS BEND: 54 I-6 I0-7445. CO-DEPENDENTSANONYMOUS REDMOND: 541-610-8175.

COFFEEAND CONNECTIONCANCER SUPPORT GROUP:541-706-3754. COMPASSIONATEFRIENDS (FOR THOSE GRIEVING THE LOSS OF ACHILD):541-480-0667 or 54 I -536- 709. I CREATIVITY &WELLNESSMOOD GROUP:541-647-0865. CROOKEDRIVERRANCHADULT GRIEF SUPPORT: 541-548-7483. DEFEATCANCER: 541-706-7743. DESCHUTESCOUNTY MENTAL HEALTH24-HOUR CRISIS LINE: 541-322-7500. DEPRESSIONAND BIPOLAR SUPPORT ALLIANCE:541-549-9622 or 541-771-1620. DEPRESSIONAND BIPOLAR SUPPORT: 541-480-8269 or suemiller92©gmail.com. DEPRESSIONSUPPORT GROUP: 541-617-0543. DIABETICSUPPORT GROUP: 541-598-4483. DISABILITYSUPPORT GROUP: 54I-388-8I03. DIVORCE CARE:541-410-4201. DOUBLETROUBLERECOVERY: Addiction andmental illness group; 541-317-0050. DYSTONIASUPPORT GROUP: 541-388-2577. ENCOPRESIS (SOILING): 541-5482814 or encopresis@gmail.com. EVENINGBEREAVEMENT SUPPORT GROUP: 54I-460-4030 FAITHBASED RECOVERY GROUP: Drug andalcohol addictions; pastordavid@thedoor3r.org. FAMILYRESOURCECENTER: 54 I-389-5468. GAMBLERS ANONYMOUS:Redmond 541-280-7249,Bend 541-390-4365. GAMBLINGHOT LINE:800-233-8479. GERIATRICCARE MANAGEMENT: info@paulbattle.com or 1-877-867-1437. GLUCOSECONTROL LOW CARB DIET SUPPORT GROUP: kjdnrcd@yahoo. com or 541-504-0726. GLUTENINTOLERANCEGROUP (CELIAC):541-389-1731. GRANDMA'S HOUSE:Supportfor pregnant teensandteenmoms; 541-383-3515. GRANDPARENTSRAISING OUR CHILDREN'S KIDS:541-306-4939. GRANDPARENTSSUPPORTGROUP: 54I-385-4741. GRIEFSHAREGRIEFRECOVERY SUPPORT GROUP: 54I-382-1832.

GRIEFSUPPORT GROUP: 541-3066633, 541-318-0384 ormullinski© bendbroadband.com. GRIEFSUPPORT GROUP: 541-548-7483. GRIEFSUPPORTGROUPS: For the bereaved; 541-771-3247. GRIEFSHARE (FAITH-BASED) RECOVERY CLASS: 541-389-8780. HEALINGENCOURAGEMENT FOR ABORTION-RELATEDTRAUMA (H.E.A.R.T.):541-318-1949. HEALTHYFAMILIESOF THEHIGH DESERT: Homevisits for families with newborns; 541-749-2133 HEARINGLOSS ASSOCIATION: 541-390-2174 orctepper©bendcable. com. HEARTS OFHOPE:Abortion healing; 541-728-4673. IMPROVE YOUR STRESS LIFE: 541-706-2904. LA LECHELEAGUEOFBEND: 541-317-5912. LIVINGWELL(CHRONIC CONDITIONS):541-322-7430. LIVING WITHCHRONICILLNESSES SUPPORTGROUP:541-536-7399. LUPUS &FIBROMYALGIA SUPPORT GROUP:541-526-1375. MADRAS NICOTINE ANONYMOUS GROUP:541-993-0609. MATERNAL/CHILDHEALTH PROGRAM(DESCHUTES COUNTYHEALTHDEPARTMENT): 541-322-7400. MEN'SCANCER SUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-5864. MENDED HEARTSSUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-4789. MISCARRIAGESUPPORT GROUP: 541-514-9907. MOMMYAND MEBREASTFEEDINGSUPPORT GROUP: Laura, 541-322-7450. MULTIPLESCLEROSIS SUPPORT GROUP:541-706-6802. NARCONON: 800-468-6933. NARCOTICSANONYMOUS (NA): 541-416-2146. NATIONALALLIANCE ON MENTAL ILLNESSOF CENTRAL OREGON (NAMI):541-408-7779, 541-504-1431 or email: vonriedlpn©yahoo.com. NAMI BEND-EXTREME STATES:54I647-2343 or www.namicentraloregon. OIg

NAMI BENDCONNECTIONS: 541-4808269 or www.namicentraloregon.org NAMI BENDFAMILY SUPPORT GROUP:whitefam©bendcable.com or

www.namicentraloregon.org. NAMI MADRASCONNECTIONS:For peers, 541-475-1873 orNAMlmadras© gmail.com. NAMI MADRASFAMILYSUPPORT GROUP: 541-475-1873 or NAMlmadras@gmail.com. NAMI MADRASFAMILY-FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP:541-475-3299 or www.namicentraloregon.org NAMI REDMOND FAMILYSUPPORT GROUP: namicentraloregon©gmail. com. NAMI REDMOND CONNECTIONS: 541382-3218 or 541-693-4613. NEWBERRY HOSPICE OF LA PINE: 54 I-536-7399. OREGON COMMISSIONFOR THE BLIND:541-447-4915. OREGON CURE: 54 I-475-2I64. OREGON LYMEDISEASE NETWORK: 541-312-3081 orwww.oregonlyme.org. OVEREATERSANONYMOUS: 541-3066844 or www.oa.org. PARENTS/CAREGIVERSOF CHILDREN AFFECTED BYAUTISM SUPPORT GROUP: 541-771-1075 or http:// coregondevdisgroupaso.ning.com. PARENTSOFMURDEREDCHILDREN (POMC)SUPPORT GROUP: 54 I-410-7395. PARISH NURSES ANDHEALTH MINISTRIES:541-383-6861. PARKINSON'SCAREGIVERS SUPPORT GROUP:541-317-1188. PARKINSON'SDISEASE SUPPORT GROUP: 541-280-5818. PARTNERSIN CARE:Homehealth and hospice services; 541-382-5882. PAUL'SCLUB:Oadsand male caregiver supportgroup;541-548-8559. PFLAG CENTRALOREGON: For parents, families andfriends of lesbians and gays; 541-317-2334 orwww. pflagcentraloregon.org. PLAN LOVINGADOPTIONS NOW (PLAN):541-389-9239. PLANNEDPARENTHOOD: 888-875-7820. PMS ACCESS LINE: 800-222-4767. PREGNANCYRESOURCECENTERS: Bend,541-385-5334; Madras,541475-5338; Prineville, 541-447-2420;

Redmond, 541-504-8919. PULMONARY HYPERTENSION SUPPORT GROUP:54 I-548-7489. RECOVERINGADDICTS IN THE ADDICTIONFIELD:541-610-3060 or phoenix counselingbend©gmail.com. SAVINGGRACE SUPPORT GROUPS: Bend, 541-382-4420; Redmond,541504-2550, ext.1; Madras,541-475-1880. SCLERODERMA SUPPORTGROUP: 54 I-480-1958. SEXAHOLICSANONYMOUS: 541-595-8780. SOUPANDSUPPORT:For mourners; 541-548-7483. STEPMOM SUPPORTGROUP: 541-325-3339 or www. insightcounselingbend.com. SUPPORTGROUP FOR FAMILIESWITH DIABETIC CHILDREN:541-526-6690. SURVIVORSOF SUICIDELOSS SUPPORTGROUP:541-610-3060 or phoenix counselingbend©gmail.com. TOBACCOFREEALLIANCE: 541-322-7481. TOPS OR: Bend, 541-388-5634; Culver, 541-546-4012; Redmond, 541-923-0878. TYPE 2DIABETES SUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-4986. VETERANSHOTLINE: 541-408-5594 or 818-634-0735. VISIONNW:Peersupportgroup; 541-330-0715. VOLUNTEERSINMEDICINE: 541-330-9001. WOMEN'S RESOURCECENTER OF CENTRAL OREGON: 54I-385-0747 WOMEN SURVIVINGWITH CANCER SUPPORTGROUP:541-706-5864. YOUNGPEOPLEWITH DISABILITIES PEERGROUP:831-402-5024. ZEN MEDITATIONGROUP: 54 I-388-3179.

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SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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'Hun er ames'on 4 M ace ing Fire" a boost. "Likes" at Facebook amounted to 11.6 million earlier this week, Contrino said, compared with around 2.9 million for the first film. On Twitter, tweets were running 12 to 1 positive over negative, he said.

By Rob Golum Bloombeig News

"The LOS ANGELES Hunger G a mes: C a tching Fire," the film sequel about teens fighting to the death in a totalitarian world, is set to dominate cinemas for three weeks and earn $400 million or more for Lions Gate Entertainment Corp. The movie, w it h J e nnifer Lawrence returning as heroine K atniss E v erdeen and Josh Hutcherson as her co-combatant Peeta Mellark, opened in theaters worldwide Friday and is forecast to take in $166 million domestically this weekend, according to BoxOffice.com. That would give Lions Gate one of the top five debuts ever, based on rankings from Box Office

Mojo. L ions Gate c ould e a r n more than $400 million from "Catching Fire" over several yearsthrough itsshare of ticket sales, DVDs, pay television and free TV, according to Benjamin Mogil, an analyst at Stifel Nicolaus 8 Co. The film's futuristic setting, the appeal of the young characters and a story about rebellion against an oppressive government should attract a wide swath of movie fans. " When you l ook a t t h e tracking, it's for everyone," said GregFoster,senior executive vice president of Imax Corp., which will show the film on al l o f i t s 6 50-plus screens for three weeks, inc luding almost 350 i n t h e United States and Canada. The film is opening in a total of 4,163 North American locations, according to Rentrak Corp.

Blockbuster franchises "Catching F i re " un d e rscores Lions Gate's dependence on blockbuster movie franchises, particularly since t he last o f f i v e "Twilight" teen-vampire films concluded its cinema run. The shares have more than doubled this year, after gaining 97 percent in2012. The movie grossed $25.3 million in e arly screenings last night, the company said. An opening of $166 million would put " C atching Fire" fourth on the weekend alltime list behind "Marvel's The Avengers," "Iron Man 3" and

Sun Sentinel (Fla.)

Black Friday is all about being smart with your mon-

ey and scoring great deals, b ut there's one t h in g y o u shouldn't check off your list: safety. As you head out to stores hunting f o r b a r g a ins whether at 6 p.m. on Thanksgiving or 11 a.m. on Black F riday — m a k e s ur e y o u don't fall victim to criminal activity. "This is a criminal opportunity," said Keyla Concepc ion, spokeswoman for t h e Broward County Sheriff's Office. "If criminals see someone who's distracted, not paying attention, too concerned with bargains or deals and not paying attention to their belongings or surroundings, that may make them an easy target." To preventbecoming a victim, here are some Black Fri-

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Successoutside the U.S. The movie'sbest prospect for growth is outside the U.S., where sequels tend to do better, according to Mogil. Foreign sales may be as much as $450 million, he said. The first Murray Close/ Lionsgate via The Associated Press film generated $283.2 million "The Hunger Games: Catching Fire" is expected to dominate at internationally, or 41 percent the box office in the coming weeks. of the total, according to Box Office Mojo. "This has a chance of get"Harry Potter and the DeathMore revenue from Imax ting to 50-50, foreign box ofly Hallows Part 2," the current theaters will c o ntribute to fice equal to U.S. box office," No. 3 at $169.2 million, accord- sales of the 146-minute pic- said Matt Harrigan, an anaing to Box Office Mojo. ture assome fans choose the lyst at Wunderlich Securities "Catching Fire," based on exhibitor's higher-priced, big- Inc. in Denver who also recthe Suzanne Collins n ovscreen format over conven- ommends buying Lions Gate. el, garnered an 89 percent tional cinemas, Mogil said. "It will do as least as well as favorable rating on R otten At Fandango.com, the online the first one in the U.S. and Tomatoes.com, which aggre- sales service, tickets for Imax materially better overseas." gates critics' reviews. The film shows at the AMC Century The studio is spending genpicks up where "The Hunger City 15 in Los Angeles are $19, erously to promote "Catching Games" left off, with Evercompared with $14 for a typi- Fire," according to Harrigan, deen and Mellark touring the cal screen. The service said who estimated the marketing fictional nation of Panem af- advance salesare the highest budget at close to the film's ter winning the 74th Hunger for any picture this year. production cost. "The attendance hasn't reGames. Lions Gate is known for They inadvertently become ally changed, the average tick- hedging its risks on high-cost symbols of rebellion and are et price hasn't changed, but pictures by selling foreign forced to compete again, this you'll move some people from rights in advance, as it did with "The Hunger Games" time against more d eadly 2-D to 2- D Imax," Mogil said. foes — former winners like Director Francis Lawrence and more recently "Ender's themselves. Donald Suther- used Imax cameras for a num- Game." With "Catching Fire," land again stars as President ber of shots, including arena the studio has terms that Snow, and Woody Harrelson sequences, and the scenes provide for m ore generous and Stanley Tucci return in will expand vertically in the returns. "The international deals are supporting roles. Lawrence, specially equipped theaters in 23, wonthe best-actress Oscar what Foster called "an amped better," Mogil said. this year for "Silver Linings up version you can't get anyLions Gaterose 3.7 percent Playbook." where else." to $33.76 at the close in New Lions Gate declined to comYork. The company's TV diviment, according to Peter Wil- Competition awaits sion produces "Mad Men" and "Catching Fire" may lead "Orange Is the New Black," kes, a spokesman. the box office for three weeks, the women's prison series on Salesto catch fire including Tha n ksgiving Netflix Inc. Tickets sales for "Catching weekend, until "The Hobbit" A third movie from "The Fire" in the U.S. and Canada sequel opens on Dec. 13, ac- Hunger Games" will be in thecould amount to $425 million cording to Phil Contrino, chief aters next November and the over the full theatrical run, analyst for r esearcher Box fourth ayear later,according said Mogil. He estimated the Office.com. to Box Office Mojo. production cost at about $90 Walt Disney Co. is releasNext year, Lions Gate remillion, including any tax sub- ing two films: "Delivery Man" leases "Divergent," mining sidies, and said his multiyear this weekend, a Vince Vaughn a similar vein with a young profit estimate for the picture comedy from D reamWorks female character challenging excludesprovisions for corpo- Studios, and "Frozen," an ani- an authoritarian leader. The rate expenses or taxes along mated feature going into wide picture, scheduled to open in the way. release on Wednesday. Strong March, is based on the novel The first film, released in word of mouth for "Frozen" by Veronica Roth. It features March 2012, generated $408 could lead to an upset, Contri- Shailene Woodley, who garmillion i n d o m estic t icket no said. nered favorable notices in sales, according to Box Office Social media and Internet "The Descendants," and Kate Mojo, anindustry researcher. buzz are also giving "Catch- Winslet.

Some safety tips tohelpsurvive BlackFriday By Miriam Valverde

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strooms. Have a designated "meet area"in case you get separated. • Show children who may be a source of help within the store or mall, such as a law enforcement officer or mall security, in case they get lost. • Have children memo-

Out of store

rize or keep handy your cell

ables visible while hopping

phone number, home phone number and address.

from store to store. • Take them home after

• Park as close to the store as possible, and in well-lit areas. • Have your keys in hand as you near your v ehicle. Check the back seats and surrounding a r eas b efore getting inside the car. • Do not leave any valu-

buying them or lock them in the trunk. • Don't be afraid to ask for

help. • If you feel unsafe, ask mall security/store staff to walk you over to your car. Sources:Broward County

Sheriff's Office,National Crime Prevention Council, TrustedChoice.com, National Center for Missing k Exploited Children

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Clara Pratt makes pudding cups in her kitchen that will be served for dinner at the Bethlehem Inn. She will spend the next few days making the side dishes for the inn's Thanksgiving dinner.

Meals Continued from D1 "We are fortunate to live in Central Oregon," said Clouart. "There are so many kind and generous people here wh o make these celebrations work for needy people."

my kitchen'?" Luckily, the cooks at Di o guardi's r e staurant h a v e P r a t t's back and will spend t w o or three days next week t h a w i ng, brining and smoki n g t h e t urkeys that will be s e r ved at the Bethlehem Inn's

Thanksgiving meal. They'll be doing the same for t he pr e- T h anksgivi ng d i n n er t hat Shepherd's H o u se is holding Wednesday a f t e rnoon. "We've always t ried to h elp o u t

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TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013

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TV SPOTLIGHT

loving, and afterwards, we got to betogether and have a nice "chin wag." A bunch of us went back to the hotel and had a nightcap. I didn't get a lot of time to spend with anybody, because people were coming and going and rehearsing and this and that, but it was nice.

By Jay Bobbin © Zap2it

One of comedy's top honors is now among Carol Burnett's rewards formaking countless fans glad they've had such time together with her. The iconic TV variety veteran became the 16th talent to receive the Kennedy Center's Mark Twain Prize for American Humor last month, joining

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Were you pleased with Q ..the "Carol Burnett Show"

a list of honorees ranging from Steve Martin, Bill Cosby and Bob Newhart to Ellen DeGeneres, Whoopi Goldberg and Lily Tomlin. PBS televises the event Sunday (check local listings), soon after Burnett's guest appearance as McGarrett's aunt on CBS' "Hawaii Five-0" and the home video release of a "Christmas With Carol" compilation from her classic "Carol Burnett Show." T he six-time Emmy w i n ner clearly is still going strong, and among those saluting her at the Twain Prize ceremony were 2010 recipient Tina Fey, Burnett's former weekly TV cohorts Tim Conway and Vicki Lawrence, longtime friend Julie Andrews, music legend Tony Bennett, Amy Poehler, Martin Short and Lucie Arnaz ... the daughter of Lucille Ball, whom Burnett credits with having been one of her main supporters early on. In an interview shortly after that celebra-

the event? • I was just thrilled. Lucy • was a mentor, and she was such a good friend and so encouraging. She wanted to sign me up to do a sitcom, but I refused, because I didn't want to do one character every week. She understood, and when I got the chance to do my show, I talked to CBS about doing a variety show. They said, "That's a man's game," but I had a clause in my contract that if I wanted to do a one-hour variety show, they had to put it on. I think that's what Tina and Amy and a lot of the others do. They are sketch comedians, as opposed to doing just one thing. And I think that maybe because I was able to do a variety show, that put the idea in a lot of young comedians.

Randee St. Nicholas via Newscom

"Carol Burnett: The Mark Twain Prize" airs Sunday on PBS (check local listings). tory night in Washington, D.C., the glow — and the glee — obviously lingered for Burnett. How did you find that • evening to be'? . I knew who was going to . be on the show because I read the playbill, but still, I didn't know what they were going to do or say. And I had no idea which clips they were going to show, so all of that was somewhat a surprise. I can't single out one person; they were all just wonderfuL

Q•

• What were some of the • standout moments for

you?

opened the show, A •• Tina and she's just brilliant. Her line was funny; she said, "I love you ... and it's just shy of being creepy." And Amy had a whole shtick where she was pretending to be my "abused" assistant. I didn't even recognize her at first. Supposedly, I was a very mean boss. I was on the verge of tears a few times, but the time they really flowed was when Tony Bennett sang "Just the Way You Look Tonight," with just a piano accompaniment. It was so touching. And my chum Julie! We've known each other 51 years. She was funny and very

highlights that were presented'? . I go out on the road a lot, . and I have a whole bunch of clips that I show the audience, so I was happy to see other clips that haven't been done to death. Of course, they used the Scarlett O'Hara with the curtainrod ...theyhadto.Asfaras I'm concerned, that's an homage to Bob Mackie, who creat-

ed that (costume). They picked

requested that an Q •• You aspiring comic named

some strange ones, but funny ones that I liked. And that I'd forgotten.

Rosemary Watson perform at the ceremony. What was behind that? • She wrote me a fan letter • a few months ago, and it was lovely, and I was impressed by it. She just wanted some advice, because what she would really love to have is a career doing a variety show, because she can do all these different characters. She makes a living doing a lot of voice-overs, so I Googled or YouTubed her, and I thought she was terrific.

A

was the moment Q •• How when you had to g ive your acceptance speech? • Well, I'm not a standup, • but I told a couple of stories. I figured that was the best way. It wasn't laughs all the way through, but the punch lines were good.

A

was your feeling Q •• What as other female TV comedy stars paid tribute to you at

Cutting asign o serious epression

MQVIE TIMESTQQAY

Dear Abby: I am a 15-year-old A counselor at school might be girl. Recently I made a new friend, able to help if Mandy is willing to "Mandy," and confided to her talk to one. But if she isn't, then about my dark past of depression. tell your mother about this so she When I explained how I used to can let M andy's mother k now what's g o ing cut myself, she burst into tears and told on. me she had cut herC utting c a n self the day before. b e a sign of I didn't expect that serious deDEAR response. p ression, a n d ABBY know from ex secrets of perience that what t his k in d a r e Mandy is doing is destructive. not a good way to handle things. Dear Abby:I'm 19 and in college What stopped me from cutting on a scholarship. I have decided to was getting a p e r manent scar declare an art major. I have found from it. a part-time job that will give me a Although plenty of people told little extra income — figure modme that cutting was no way to eling for some of the art classes. deal with my pain, the only one I This would include both clothed listened to in the end was myself. and nude modeling. I really want Mandy to stop. I It isn't the only job I plan on told her not to do it, but I'm afraid taking, but it will help me out for she will anyway. the time being. Studying the huShe's an amazing person, and man figure is essential for any she doesn't deserve the pain she art student, and it is something is causing herself. How can I help that hasbeen done for centuries. her'? When I told my parents, it was not — Been There in San Francisco well-received. Dear Been There: Co ntinue My mother strongly disagreed encouraging your friend to stop with my choice and handed the cutting, but if she's not able to, phone to my sister, who told me she may need professional help to if I want to take my clothes off I quit. It is nothing to be ashamed should be a stripper. Abby, this of. hurt me deeply. My dad is worried

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 12 YEARS A SLAVE(R) 12:I5, 3:20, 6:25, 9:25 • ABOUT TIME(R) 12:20, 3:15, 6:20, 9:15 • ALL IS LOST (PG-13) 10:05 a.m. • THE BESTMANHOLIDAY (R) 12:30, 3:40, 6:35, 9:35 • CAPTAIN PHILLIPS(PG-I3) 1:25, 4:35, 7:55 • CLOUDY WITHA CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2 (PG)11:05 a.m. • DELIVERYMAN(PG-13) 10:20 a.m., 12:55, 4:50, 7:25, 10:05 • ENDER'8GAME (PG-13)10:25 a.m.,1: 05,3:50,6:50, 9:40 • FREE BIRDS (PG) 10:15 a.m., 12:35, 4:10, 6:40 • GRAVITY(PG-13) 11:10a.m. • GRAVITY3-D(PG-13) 2:10, 5: l5, 7:40, 10 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)10a.m., 10:30 a.m., 11 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 12:45, 1:15, 1:50, 2:45, 4, 4:30, 5:30, 6:15, 7:15, 8, 9, 9:30, 10:30 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE IMAX (PG-13) Noon, 3:30, 7, 10:15 • JACKASSPRESENTS:BADGRANDPA(R) 2:15, 4:40, 7:30, 9:55 • LAST VEGAS (PG-13) 10:40 a.m., 2, 5:05, 7:45, 10:20 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)10:50 a.m .,1:35, 4:20, 7:05, 9:50 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD 3-D (PG-13)9:05 • Accessibilitydevices are avai/ableforsome movies.

• There may be an additional fee for 3-Oand INIAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSATURDAY, NQV. 23, 2013:This yearyou appear more willing to take risks and step into new territory. You will choose experiences that broaden your mind. You also will let go of a rigid mindset. If you are single, you could meet someone from a different culture. By interacting with this person, you will see a newstyle of living. If you are attached, Starsshowthekind thetwoofyou of dayyou'Ilhave might opt for a ** * * * D ynamic sp eciaI vacat ion p l t l ve together. You will want more oneon-one time as a * Difficult couple away from your obligations. The two of you also might consider taking a class or learning a new hobby together. Count on LEO as a friend.

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

will relax and speak more freely. Stop by and catch up on a friend's news. You could be overwhelmed by everything you hear. Tonight: Hang out.

CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * You might want to have a discussion that is way overdue, but the other partycould shy away.Handlea money matter directly. A parent or older friend coulddothe unexpected.Check in on this person. Tonight: Having fun does not mean breaking the bank.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

** * * Your spontaneity attracts many people. Make plans to get away from the immediate issues in your life. Go to a ARIES (March21-April19) ** * * * Y our presence at a party allows movie or a museum, or meet an out-oftown friend halfway. Confusion could surothers to relax, because they know it will round meeting places and times. Tonight: be a success. Your attendance affects Whatever you want. many situations. You are the factor that makes everything flow today! Others feel VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) the difference you make. Tonight: Time to ** * Sometimes taking a day off feels let your hair down. right. You have handled a lot of responsibilities in the past few weeks, and you TAURUS (April 20-IVlay20) deserve a break. Kick back and hold off ** * * L isten to news within your on taking any action for now. You might immediate circle and decide just how far be overserious and need to lighten up. Toyou want to go with a personal matter. night: Work on being a couch potato. You might decide that you'd be happiest letting sleeping dogs lie for now. Your LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22j time will come. Confusion surrounds ** * * You could see a personal matter your finances. Tonight: Invite friends differently after a surprising conversation. over. An interaction about money could be very GEMINI (May 21-June20) intense and might end up in confusion ** * * You might not realize how inquis- over some minor detail. Postpone this itive you are. Sometimes observing and conversation if possible. Tonight: Find listening might be more effective. People your friends.

that it will ruin my reputation. I find it hypocritical because my mom was an art major and her portfolio contains nude figures she drew. My school is diligent about the safety and respect of its models, and I trust them. I'd like to take this job for the experience, and it will allow me to make more connections within the department I'll be studying in for the next two

years. I'm not looking for my parents' approval, but I wish they would a ttempt t o u n d erstand. W h a t

would you suggest? — Serious Student in Virginia Dear Serious Student: Having studied figure d r awing m y self years ago, I can attest to the fact that models of all ages were used — both nude and clothed. There was nothing lurid or sexual about it, and the models were not posed

in a suggestive manner or being ogled. If you wish to display your body in the context of an art class, you shouldn't have to justify it to your parents or your sister. Your mother appears to have a short memory, and your sister's comment was out of line. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or PO. Box 69440, Los Angeles,CA 90069

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

** * * You have surpnslng energy. A conversation could clear the air, or it couldcauseaproblem. Confusion seems to filter through the air right now. Unless you are sure you can establish a strong, clear connection, postpone this talk. Tonight: The spotlight is on you.

I

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t

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 54 I-330-8562 • DESPICABLE ME2(PG) 11:30 a.m. • DON JON (R) 9 • THE LONE RANGER(PG-13) 5:30 • THE SMURFS2 (PG)2:30 • After 7 p.m., shows are 21 and older only. Younger than 21mayattendscreenings before 7 p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guardian. s

• t

I

Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • MUSCLESHOALS (PGj6 • SHORT TERM 12 (R) 1:30, 8:30 • WADJDA (PG)3:30 I

I

I

Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • DELIVERYMAN(PG-13) l1:45, 2, 4: l5, 6:30, 8:45 • FREE BIRDS (PGi11 a.m.,1, 3, 5 • THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 6:15, 8:15, 9:30 • THOR: THE DARKWORLD(PG-13) 11a.m., 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * * You will remain even-tempered, even with a loved one acting erratically. You might wonder what to do in face of this person's behavior. Make an important call to someone at a distance. Tonight: Be as clear as possible in order to avoid a misunderstanding. Listen well, too.

Sisters Movie House, 720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • 12 YEARS A SLAVE(Rj 4:15, 7 • DELIVERYMAN(PG-13) 2:45, 5:15, 7:45 • THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHINGFIRE (PG-13) 1:30, 4:30, 7:30 • LAST VEGAS iPG-13j 2 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)2:30,5,7:45

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * You might want to examine what is happening with a loved oneandhis or her finances. Youalso might be looking at your own spending habits. A surprise could cost you. Make sure to double-check all expenses and countyour change. Tonight: Let someone else pick up the tab.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * You could be full of energy especially after you touch base with a favorite person. Listento someone's concerns with extra care. You might want to echo whatyou have heard,as m isunderstandings could emerge today. Tonight: Sort through invitations, then decide.

MadrasCinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway97, 54 I -475-3505 • DELIVERYMAN(PG-13) 12:10, 2:25, 4:45, 7:10, 9:35 • FREE BIRDS (PG) 1:20, 3:20, 5:20 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)12:30, 2:15, 3:30, 5:I5, 6:30, 8:15, 9:30 • JACKASSPRESENTS:BADGRANDPA(R) 7:20, 9:25 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)Noon,2:20,4:40,7, 9:20 Pine Theater, 214 N. Main St., 541-416-1014 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)12:50, 3:40, 7, 10 • THOR: THE DARKWORLD(Upstairs — PG-13) 1, 4, 9:50 • Theupstairs screening roomhas limited accessibi/ity.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * Get into the holiday spirit, whether it be decorating, raking or sharing with a story about Thanksgiving. Others will respond to your enthusiasm. You inadvertently could help someone past some sad feelings with your spirit. Tonight: Take a brisk walk with the dog after dinner. © King Features Syndicate

TV TQQAY 12 p.m. on FOOD,"Thanksgiving Live" —Needhelp making that perfect stuffing or lump-free gravy? Maybe you've never cooked a turkey before and don't know where to start. In this annual special, viewers can call in for tips on Thanksgiving cooking from Food Network personalities including Ina Garten, Alton Brown, Bobby Flay and Giada De Laurentiis. 8 p.m. on COM,"Bill Cosby: Far From Finished" —Theveteran actor, comedian, activist and educator returns to his standup roots for his first televised comedy special in 30 years. Hemines subjects he knowswell, including parenthood, marriage, and the diff erence between spousesand friends. 8 p.m. on HBO, Movie: "Identity Thief" —Their styles differ, but JasonBateman and Melissa McCarthy makefor a reasonably amusing pairing in this 2013 comedy, containing a sufficient amount of the raunchy humor bothhave become associated with. McCarthy plays the title thief, whose lifting of a Denver businessman's (Bateman) identity prompts him to travel to Florida to find her, bring her backandget his situation corrected. Others are on their trail, though. AmandaPeet and Robert Patrick are among co-stars. 8:30 p.m. on E3, "MikeIll Molly" —Mike (Billy Gardell) goes to work renovating the basement as a living space for himself and Molly (Melissa McCarthy), but the project soon proves hazardous to his sanity — and his eyebrows. Carl (Reno Wilson) invites Samuel (Nyambi Nyambil to share his place in "Carl Gets aRoommate." Reginald VelJohnson returns as preacher Brother Heywood. 9 p.m. on E3, "Criminal Minds" — When two murder victims are found within hours of each other, one in Los Angelesand one inSan Diego, Rossi (Joe Mantegna) and the team suspect a pair of killers working together. KimWayans ("In Living Color") and Mackenzie Phillips ("One Dayat aTime") guest star as relatives of other victims in "The Pact." 10 p.m. on HBO,"Sarah Silverman: WeAreMiracles" — And the crowd goes wild! All right, maybe "crowd" is a bit of an exaggeration. Silverman goes intimate for her first HBOstandup special, taped at a LosAngeles nightclub for an audience of 39. If you know Silverman, you knowthat nothing is off limits in her act, so consider yourself warned. Dc Zap2tt

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Understanding anci taking steps to improve credit scores and making strides toward paying off debt and saving for a down payment can simplify the mortgage qualification process for borrowers. by CMS, for The Bulletin Advertising Department Homeownership remains a dream for many people, but on the heels of the recession that began in late 2008, prospective home buyers may fear that securing a mortgage will be more difficult than it was in the years beforethe economy took a turn for the worse.Understanding how one qualifies for a mortgage and how financial situations can affect his or interest rate can dispel fears. Guidelines that now govern borrowers and lenders alike have been developed to help prevent homeowners from gettingin over their heads with their mort-

tate agent and getting the right trusted [lenderj is step No. I," said Larry Wallace, loan officer with MortgageExpress in Bend. Accordingto Wallace, buyers need to be able to put everything in front of a trusted professional to get a good idea of what to expect from the home buying process. This can be done simplyby having a phone conversation at the beginning of theprocess.A mortgage professional will be able to asses income, and pull up credit reports to garner basic qualifications. Some individals may find that they don't qualify at this time, but they can find out what they can do to repair their situation.

buyers need to be able to put everything in front of a trusted professional to get a good idea of what to expect from the home buying process. gages. Home buyers can prepare themselvesin advance of home shoppingto increase the likelihood of securing a loan to financetheir future home purchases and assuring these purchases are affordable. According to Julie Nash, AVP, seniorloan officer and affordable housing specialist at The Bank of the Cascades, buyers' credit, income and equity are the primary components that lenders examine when qualifying borrowers.These elements ultimately affect the borrower's interest rate as well. Here are tips buyers should considerto secure a mortgage: Find a trusted real estate agent and lender with whom to work. "Working with a good real es-

Address credit concerns before beginning the process. "When we meet with potential borrowers for a refinance or purchase, we're going to have a conversation about credit," said Nash. "Credit is key." Poor credit is a prospective borrower's worst enemy, and it's an instant and glaring red flag to l e nders. Consumers should consult a financial professional before attempting to repair their credit on their own, according to Wallace.Before they evenbegin the process of applying for a home loan, individuals should go over their credit reports carefully, ensuring there are no potentially harmful inaccuracies that may affect their ability to secure an affordable mortgage, Wallace

said closingaccounts or paying off collections accounts are some of the biggest mistakes he sees people make. By working with aprofessional,borrowers can find out the best steps they can take to improve their credit scores.

cluding bonuses, but applicants should avoid including additional income on their applications unless they can prove it. Income may come from other sourcessuch as retirement, and social security should also be documented.

Pay down debt. Even if an applicant's credit score is solid, lenders may disqualify applicants with substantial amounts of debt. Consumer debt is calculated against income toestablish a borrower's d ebt-to-income ratio. A h i gh debt ratio may disqualify the borrower from a mortgage or increase the interest rate he or she payson theirmortgage. Credit card debt should be paid down before beginning the process. It may benefit applicants to pay off additional loans, such as car notes or student loans, before applying for a home loan. The less debt an applicant has, the more qualified the applicant becomes. Also, avoid overusing credit cards. Using credit too f r equently can make it more difficult fo r p r ospective home buyers to secure a home loan. Financialexperts recommend using nomore than 20 percent of available credit to maintain a strong credit rating.

Make a substantial down payment for increased equity. According to N a sh, d own payments impact th e t y p es of loan programs for which borrowers qualify.Some programs requireonly 3 to 5 percent downpayment; however, in those cases, additional costs including mortgage insurance will be applied. Buyers who are prepared to make a down payment of20 percent or more on the cost of the home will avoid paying mortgageinsurance and will likely qualify for a lower rate. Lenders view borrowers who can afford hefty down payments as low-risk borrowers who are less likely to default on their loans. In addition, the larger the down payment, the less the monthly mortgage payment will be, saving borrowers a significant amount of interest over the life of the loan.

Disclose your income accurately. I ncome verification i s r e quired bylenders, according to Nash. Some borrowers might be tempted to inflate their earnings on home loan applications by including overtime or bonuses they haven't yet earned when listing their annual income. Borrowers can expect lendersto request documentation of any extra income, in-

With c a reful p r eparation, home buyers can increase their chances of qualifying for mortgages by considering their credit, income and savings for down payments. By taking time to reduce debt and grow savings, qualifying for a mortgage when the time is right will be a simpler process and may be more affordable than imagined. By talking with real estate agents, lenders and fianancial advisors, home buyers can position themselves to buy an affordable home.

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Scott 627- VacationRentals & Exchanges able at $35,000 each 541-312-9449 $314,900 - Picturesque O utback. 163 A c re bench and cabinets in Real Estate, Bend 630 - Rooms for Rent or purchase both for www. BendOregon Single Level Home. 3 property with custom garage. Extraordinary www.johnlscott.com $60,000 RealEstate.com 631 - Condominiums 8 Townhomes for Rent Car garage, Mani- home, Glorious Steen l andscape 8 w a t e r $181,900 - Chalet Juniper Realty cured yards, Open M t. v i e ws , Hu g e 632 - Apt./Multiplex General feature in vinyl fenced 541-504-5393 Home, La Pine. 3 floor p l an , M a ster Heated Shop, L.O.P. 634- Apt./Multiplex NE Bend Get your back y ard. U n d er Bdrm, 2 bath, loft with separation, Close to T ags, Gour m e t 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend business ground sprinklers front Downtown Investment balcony, 1845 sq.ft., old mill 8 downtown. Kitchen, 4 Bedroom, 4 a nd back. Move in 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend Property - 5 u nits decks, 30X40 Debbie Tallman, Bath. 726 r eady! N o dis a p covered across from the river 640 - Apt./Multiplex SW Bend with RV car-port, Broker 541-388-0404 Kathy Neal, Broker p ointments here ! shop on 1st St. & 1509 NW G ROW I N G 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond Timeshares for Sale 18X24 garage - shop Windermere 541-420-4978 ¹201308584 2nd St. Original vinbuilding, Fenced. 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished Central Oregon Real Windermere John L. Scott Real tage 1917 home re$7,900-$40,000 Enjoy with an ad in MLS¹201306509 Estate Central Oregon Real 648 - Houses for Rent General Estate 541-548-1712 modeled in 2007. 3 Eagle Crest all year Dave Disney, Broker Estate The Bulletin's 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend BR, 3 bath, gourmet $339,000 Alfalfa as a fractional owner. 541-388-0404 Spacious 1810 Sq.ft., 3 652 - Houses for Rent NW Bend Ranch On 9 AC, h a r dwood, "Call A Service Benefits of being an kitchen, A LIFE IN PARADISE! Windermere bdrm, 2 bath, Corner B end. 34 B d rm, 2 2 Bdrm, 1 bath, 800y 654- Houses for Rent SE Bend Eagle Crest Owner at granite & 4-level elProfessional" Unit Condo. $139,400 Central Oregon Real bath, 1 9 5 9 Sq . f t., Sq.ft., rustic cottage 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend a "fraction" of the cost. evator. Main l i ving TEAM Birtola Garmyn Estate Directory with vacation rentals 36X28 3 ba y s h op on a 2.99y acre parHome-ID FRAC 658- Houses for Rent Redmond High Desert Realty $195,000 - 6.5 Acres which will p r oduce building, 24X25 cel. Come view this Eagle Crest Properties 541-312-9449 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver $279,000 5.82 acres 3 C ontract Term s , m ost i n come. A t equipment c a r port, a mazing p iece o f 866-722-3370 www. BendOregon bdrm, 2 b ath 1 560 660- Houses for Rent La Pine Bend. Level acreage Completely f e n c ed paradise on the outtached vacation rental sq.ft. Large 2 8 x32 RealEstate.com with old growth juni661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 730 is 1 BR, 1 bath, great sq.ft. shop, double car with corals, Borders skirts of R e dmond. 662- Houses for Rent Sisters room & huge deck, garage. Fenced for Remarkable Deschutes pers & M tn. v iews, BLM,MLS Built on the curve of New Listings Scattered historic rock River & River Canyon separate e n t rance, horses. Near the en ¹201306096 663- Houses for Rent Madras the Deschutes River, croppings, 20% down, Views! $1,200,000 Dave Disney, Broker heating, etc. MLS ¹ 664- Houses for Rent Furnished this p e rfect s m a ll Deschutes River trance of the ranch. TEAM other terms n e goBirtola Garmyn 201309397. 541-388-0404 home has amazing Canyon j $625,000 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent MLS 20130955 tiable, 440X648' lot. High Desert Realty Windermere $1,500,000. • 3329 sq.ft. custom views of the mounCall Linda Lou 675 - RV Parking MLS¹201304442 541-312-9449 Call Ainslie Reynolds, Central Oregon Real tains and the r iver. home Day-Wright, Broker 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space Dave Disney, Broker www. BendOregon Estate Principal Broker • 4 bedroom, 3 bath Detached garage has 541-771-2585 541-388-0404 682 - Farms, Ranches and Acreage RealEstate.com ReMax Key Properties. • 2.44 acres Nancy Popp, Broker, $400,000 - 18 Modoc, a studio-type room Windermere 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 541-410-1054 Cell • MLS 201309953 with an extra bath and 541-815-8000 G reat Full T i m e o r Central Oregon Real Sunriver Newly Re541-728-0033 Offi ce 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent att a c hed. Diane Lozito, Broker Crooked River I nvestment Cra f t s modeled 8 Close To shower Estate 541-548-3598, Realty man Home! $139,900 Sunriver. 3 M a s ter $425,000 REAL ESTATE Will do 1031 exchange 541-306-9646 Bdrm + s t u dio, 2 suites, extensive MLS¹201309622 705 - Real Estate Services or carry to qualified MUST SEE! Very well TEAM Birtola Garmyn 1 baths, balcony with Bobbie Strome, Desert Realty r emodel i n 201 1 , 713- Real Estate Wanted buyer. C o ul d be m aintained sin g l e High Principal Broker river views, in gated 1902 sq.ft., owner oc541-312-9449 m edical offices o r level home in Culver 719 - Real Estate Trades c ommunity w it h i n - cupied or v a cation John L Scott Real www. BendOregon restaurant building. Is Heights. 3 bedrooms, 726 - Timeshares for Sale door pool, steps to RealEstate.com r ental. Close to a l l Estate 541-385-5500 in great shape and 2 baths w/additional river trail, minutes to 730 - New Listings MORRIS Sunriver has to offer. has new heating and d en/office. B uilt i n 360' v i e ws d owntown, ca n b e Susan Pitarro, Broker Amazing Need to get an REAL ESTATE 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale cooling sys t e ms. c abinets in t h e f i n from this 2 0 a c res getaway, investment 541-388-0404 ad in ASAP? I d p d lyO H d Op «d Owner is licensed real ished double car ga w/irrigation, 2560 738 - Multiplexes for Sale or full t i m e l i ving. Windermere e state agent in O rSq.ft., home! Barn, rage, huge .21 acre You can place it 740 - Condominiums & Townhomes for Sale Madras j $305,000 $95,000 Central Oregon Real egon State. lot. Must See! MLS beautiful ponds, plus • 1.4 acre lot Teresa Brown, Broker 744 - Open Houses online at: Estate Tom Roth, broker 2 pastures & f a r m 201309876 $117,500 541-788-8661 • Commercial zoning 745 - Homes for Sale www.bendbulletin.com BPOR 541-771-6549 John L. Scott Real deferral t a x rate 4.83 Acres j $370,000 • City water & sewer John L. Scott 746 - Northwest Bend Homes John L. Scott makes this home Estate 541-548-1712 • 2455 sq.ft. ranch style Real Estate, Bend • MLS 201309814 Real Estate, Bend perfect! $57 4 ,000. 747 - Southwest Bend Homes 541-385-5809 home www.johnlscott.com Corey Charon PE, Hwy 20, 4 Bdrm, www.johnlscott.com 64120 22555 MC Ardle - 10 • 3 bedroom, 3 bath 748 - Northeast Bend Homes Broker 2.5 bath, on almost 7 2241 NW Awbrey Rd • Fenced, outdoor Wonderful 2002 B uilt min. f ro m C o stco. 541-280-5512 749 - Southeast Bend Homes acres, close to town. Home On d/2 + Acre. Bend. Hand crafted 738 www.johnlscott.com arena, barn $450,000. 750 - Redmond Homes home with attention to • MLS 201307799 /76924 $199,000 Multiplexes for Sale TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM detail on a l l f i n ishDawn Ulrickson, Broker, Kathy Caba, Principal 753 - Sisters Homes Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty work. This is a must High Desert Realty Broker, ABR 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes Three fully o ccupied 541-312-9449 541-312-9449 preview pro p erty. 541-771-1761 3182ysq.ft. t r iplexes 756 - Jefferson County Homes www. BendOregon MORRIS Solid fir doors, cuswww. BendOregon John L. Scott l ocated just a f e w RealEstate.com 757- Crook County Homes REAL ESTATE tom clear vertical fir Real Estate, Bend RealEstate.com blocks from shopping 762 - Homes with Acreage I d p d lyO H d d p« d cabinets & ceiling fans C ustom Home on A l www.johnlscott.com & the facilities of Junimost 10 Acres. Mtn 7150 SW S WALLOW in all rooms. Great 763- Recreational Homes and Property per Park. Exterior of RD. Spacious 1804 room floor plan with USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 764 - Farms and Ranches buildings have vinyl Views! $425,000 MORRIS AUCTION sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 bath wood floors 8 a fireTEAM Birtola Garmyn siding and are neat BANK OWNED 771 - Lots REAL ESTATE w ith S m i t h Roc k Door-to-door selling with High Desert Realty place surrounded by and attractive. Six contiguous v iews. B r ight a n d cabinetry. 3 bedroom, 773 - Acreages t dp & d y d d d Op « d 541-312-9449 fast results! It's the easiest $ 325,000 for e a c h vacant parcels o pen k itchen a n d www. BendOregon 2.5 bath, large mas775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes acres, RV parking, 2 way in the world to sell. triplex +/- 60.94 AC great room. Private t er b e droom w i t h 4.8 RealEstate.com stall barn, tack room, 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land MLS ¹201309427, STARTING BID location o n 5.62 walk-in closet, The Bulletin Classified 201309433, River View Condo, Mt. acres. $199,000. MLS built-ins 8 bath with all office, & hay storage. $550,000 648 past u r e, December 201309444 Bachelor Village, 20% 201304491 J u niper the e xtras. M a ture Fenced 541-385-5809 17, 2013 Houses for pond, 3 acres irrigaBobbie Strome, Equity Share. $49,900 Realty, 541-504-5393 landscaping 1675 SW Veterans with E(xitRnlh Principal Broker tion, 8 a chi c k en TEAM Birtola Garmyn Rent General SE Bend j $134,900 Way/Reindeer Ave, 2100 S q.ft., C l assic paver paths. Close to coop. John L Scott Real High Desert Realty • 1464 sq.ft. manufacRedmond OR downtown Bend & has H ome on E dge o f www.edgreen.johnlsc Estate 541-385-5500 541-312-9449 PUBLISHER'S tured BROKER'S plenty of parking for ott.com E d G r e en, Canyon. $179,900 • 3 bedroom, 2 bath www. BendOregon NOTICE WELCOME uests & toys . Broker 541-598-5666 TEAM Birtola Garmyn 740 RealEstate.com All real estate adver- • .52 acre lot Call 310.887.6225 485,000 High Desert Realty John L. Scott tising in this newspa- • MLS 201309914 Condo/Townhomes 3200 Sq.ft., w/unique KENNEDY WILSON MLS¹201308330 541-312-9449 Real Estate, Bend Pat Palazzi, Broker www kwreoauction.com per is subject to the for Sale setting against lava Bobbie Strome, www. BendOregon www.johnlscott.com 541-771-6996 F air H o using A c t flows of Bend! Principal Broker 627 RealEstate.com which makes it illegal Attn. Outdoor Enthusi- $349,900 5 Acres j $489,000 Awbrey Butte j John L Scott Real Vacation Rentals to a d v ertise "any 16751 SW DOVE RD. Estate 541-385-5500 • 2625 sq.ft. $998,700 asts. Fully furnished 1 TEAM Birtola Garmyn dId preference, limitation • Expansive Cascade & Exchanges One level 2500 sq. ft. • 4 bedroom, 2 bath bdrm, 2 bath condo. High Desert Realty $229,000 1.56 acres or disc r imination custom log home on • Beautiful landscape, mountain views Easy resort living with 541-312-9449 based on race, color, • 3856 sq.ft. everything you need. 4.9 acres.Floor to ceil 1620 sq.ft. Tastefully pond MORRIS www. BendOregon done spacious home. religion, sex, handiing windows w/views • MLS 201309091 • 3 bedroom, 3 bath $69,000. MLS¹ RealEstate.com REAL ESTATE Home sitting on the Jackie French, Broker • MLS 201306785 cap, familial status, 201300532. Call of the Mtns. Hickory I d p d d y O R d Op t T umalo Home o n 5 rim, double car gamarital status or nahardwood & tile floors. 541-480-2269 Jerry Stone, Broker Paula Mellon, Broker. Acres. Incredible Mtn tional origin, or an inSkyliner Summit j 541-390-9598 541-977-4009 $499,999 MLS rage with a t tached Views! $499,000 tack room and horse tention to make any $529,600 201208751 Central Oregon Realty TEAM Christmas at Birtola Garmyn stall. Located off a such pre f erence,• 2525 sq.ft. Juniper Realty, Group, LLC the Coast High Desert Realty p aved r oad. M L S limitation or discrimi- • 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath 541-504-5393 WorldMark 541-312-9449 201309151 nation." Familial sta- • .11 acre lot Golf C o urse T o w nMORRIS www. BendOregon 2732 Sq.ft., 5 bdrm, 3 Linda Lou Day-Wright. Depoe Bay, OR tus includes children • MLS 201309912 home - 3 bedroom, MORRIS b ath Craftsman I n REAL ESTATE 2 bedroom condo, RealEstate.com 541- 771-2585 under the age of 18 Darryl Doser, 2.5 bath, 1533 sq ft, REAL ESTATE River Canyon Estates. Crooked River Realty I&p & ly O d d Op d sleeps 6 living with parents or Broker, CRS master on main, 1st NW Bend, Cedar Cha I d p d l y O M d Op « d 12/22 - 12/29 or $424,900 legal cust o dians, 541-383-4334 green - Challenge l et, Views t o T a k e TEAM $239,900 - Cabin on Birtola Garmyn Just too many 12/23 -12/30. pregnant women, and course, large back Your Breath Away! Awbrey Glen j Deschutes! 2 bed High Desert Realty $1399 people securing cusdeck w/ h o t tub. collectibles? $399,000 cabin overlooking De$620,000 541-325-6566 541-312-9449 tody of children under $227,900. M L S ¹ TEAM Birtola Garmyn • 2573 sq.ft. schutes river w/sepawww. BendOregon 18. This newspaper 201308524 • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath High Desert Realty rate guest qtrs. & dbl Sell them in RealEstate.com will not knowingly ac630 Lynn Johns, Principal acre on 17th 541-312-9449 MORRIS garage. MLS The Bulletin Classifieds • .40 cept any advertising Broker, 541-408-2944 Green www. BendOregon 6653 SW Daly Lane, 201308238 Rooms for Rent REAL ESTATE for real estate which is Central Oregon • MLS 201309276 RealEstate.com Culver. Mtn. v i ews Nancy Popp, I d p d lyO H d d p« d violation of the law. Resort Realty 541-385-5809 Minda McKitrick, from this 4 bdrm, 2 Principal Broker Room for rent in Red- in Big River Meadows Re ur r e aders a r e SW Bend j $224,900 bath, 1992 sq.ft. home 541-815-8000 Broker, GRI mond, $350+ utilities. No O hereby informed that • 1702 sq.ft. $224,500 A Must See! sort Home Backs Big built in 2008 on 4.77 541-280-6148 smoking. Mature, r eCrooked River 5 Acre View Lots - SE Commons! $349,000 This imma c ulate sponsible, & stable. Call all dwellings adver- • 3 bedroom, 2 bath acres. Borders farm Realty Riverdance Rd., tised in this newspa- • .84 acre lot townhome f e a tures TEAM Birtola Garmyn Jim, 541-419-4513 land. $195,000 Prineville. Ready to High Desert Realty Cj per are available on • MLS 201309806 vaulted ceilings, granWhere can you find a Juniper Realty build lots with wells, 541-312-9449 an equal opportunity ite counters, wall to Kelly Neuman, 541-504-5393 helping hand? paved access, power Call a Pro www. BendOregon basis. To complain of wall windows. TastePrincipal Broker at street, septic feasiMORRIS From contractors to RealEstate.com Best Priced Home in Whether you need a discrimination cal l fully furnished and in 541-480-2102 b ility in place . REAL ESTATE HUD t o l l-free at quiet location. MLS Gorgeous Custom Built DRW! Light & Bright yard care, it's all here fence fixed, hedges $75,000-$82,500. 1-800-877-0246. The ¹201308943 b d rm , 2 bat h . H ome On 3 3 A c r e 3 in The Bulletin's Scott McLean, trimmed or a house $189,999 toll f re e t e l ephone Eagle Crest Properties W/Views! $1,990,000 TEAM Principal Broker Call The Bulletin At "Call A Service Birtola Garmyn built, you'll find number for the hear866-722- 3370 541-408-6908 TEAM Birtola Garmyn 541-385-5809 High Desert Realty ing im p aired is Professional" Directory professional help in Desert Realty Realty Executives MORRIS Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Eagle C rest, F o rest High 541-312-9449 1-800-927-9275. 541-312-9449 The Bulletin's "Call a REAL ESTATE Greens Golf course www. BendOregon $249,000 - Starwood on $615,000 - Tuscany At: www.bendbulletin.com www. BendOregon I dp d lyO d d O p d Rented your Townhome. 3 Bdrm, RealEstate.com large private lot. Move Style i n Service Professional" Br a detich RealEstate.com Property? 2.5 bath, 1536 sq.ft., i n ready with n e w Park. 2 91 0 S q . ft.,Beautiful single s tory Directory Southj 3 Bdrm, 2 bath Almost home in Awbrey Glen. The Bulletin Classifieds Three Rivers Main level m a ster,S E Bend 2 + Ac r e , paint, multiple level Single level living, 2 $375,000 541-385-5809 1600 Sq.ft., Nestled in party decks, h u ge master suites, .46 1789 Sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 has an east facing back deck, Spectacular V i e ws! The • 2136 sq.ft., 2.77 Acres Pines. $169,900 "After Hours"Line. w/hot tub. $225,000. $674,900 g arage/shop & R V Acre lot, g orgeous b ath on 0 .3 3 a c re • 3 bedroom, 2 bath 632 corner lot. Gourmet TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn Call 541-383-2371 MLS ¹201303093 storage, 3 Bdrm, 2.5 Kitchen. • Big Deschutes River High Desert Realty kitchen w/granite 24 Hours to Lynn Johns, Principal High Desert Realty b ath, A / C , pel l et Eric Andrews, Broker Apt./Multiplex General frontage 541-312-9449 counters, open to the 541-312-9449 d. Broker, 541-408-2944 stove, laminates. 541-388-0404 • MLS 201309896 www. BendOregon family room. Paved Central Oregon www. BendOregon Mike Wilson, Broker Windermere CHECK YOUR AD Gary Rose, RealEstate.com patio overlooking lush 541-388-0404 658 Resort Realty RealEstate.com Central Oregon Real Broker, MBA l andscape, lots o f Windermere Estate Pristine Large Family Houses for Rent 541-588-0687 Golf Course 2 B drm, 3 bdrm, 2 b at h + 2 Home or V a cation Central Oregon Real $619,000 - The Perfect storage w/4-car Redmond bdrm, 1 bath Apart 2d/2 bath, 1277 sq.ft., garage. Estate Getaway. $399,900 Home in Awbrey Park. Colleen Dillingham, Great room floor plan, ment Above Shop! TEAM Birtola Garmyn Newly renovated SW $539,900 $260,000 Che s t nut 3618 sq.ft., Main level Broker 541-788-9991 fully furnished. Hot High Desert Realty TEAM Birtola Garmyn Park Beauty! Come on the first day it runs Redmond home, 1008 sq master, Massive boJohn L. Scott tub. $180,000. MLS 541-312-9449 High Desert Realty to make sure it is cor- ft 3 bed/2 bath. 2-car gar, See T h e Pe r f ect nus room, Giant triple MORRIS 2013030749 Call Real Estate, Bend www. BendOregon 541-312-9449 Home! Move-in garage, City l i ghts www.johnlscott.com rect. "Spellcheck" and fenced backyard w/extra REAL ESTATE Lynn Johns, Principal RealEstate.com human errors do oc- parking. No s moking. www. BendOregon Ready, Fan t a stic view. Broker, 541-408-2944 I d p d 1 1 0 H d Op I d $750/mo + security dep. RealEstate.com Neighborhood, RV Eric Andrews, Broker Beautiful 8 Spacious cur. If this happens to R emodeled Home , Central Oregon app l ications. 732 Beautiful property with your ad, please con- Taking 541-388-0404 Resort Realty +400 Sq.ft. Off i c e/ Area & Storage Shed, Immaculate R e model Close to parks, trails, comfortable s paces tact us ASAP so that 541-419-1917 Windermere Commercial/Investment Spacious Single Level Shop On 1.4 Acre. corrections and any restaurants and shop- Central Oregon Real for varied family interE agle C r e st , Gol f on ' /2 A c r e Lo t ! $169,900 Properties for Sale 659 ests. Exquisite teakadjustments can be ping. Course T o wnhome $229,900 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Estate made to your ad. Aaron Ballweber, wood flooring in foyer, Houses for Rent with 2 car garage. 3 TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty Excellent Retail Prop 6 2738 M o ntara D r , Broker living area and gour541 -385-5809 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1447 541-312-9449 Sunriver High Desert Realty erty & Perfect Loca Bend. 2.5 acres, 2682 541-388-0404 met kitchen. Kitchen The Bulletin Classified s q.ft., 10th tee b o x www. BendOregon 541-312-9449 t ion O n H w y 97. sq ft, 3 bedroom, 2.5 Windermere has granite counterResort Course. CasRealEstate.com PROPERTIES $155,900 www. BendOregon baths, guest house, BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS VILLAGE Central Oregon Real tops, l arge i s land, cade mtn and g olf Sunriver, Three Rivers, TEAM Birtola Garmyn RealEstate.com 1200 NE Steins Pillar R V ga r & sho p . p lanning desk a n d Estate Search the area's most views. $280,000. MLS La Pine. Great High Desert Realty Dr., Prineville. 2169 $550,000. comprehensive listing of Selection. Prices range Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 numerous oak cabi¹201307174 $279,000 - E x traordi 541-312-9449 Scott McLean, n ets. M aster b e d classified advertising... Lynn Johns, Principal b ath, Ranch o n A l sq ft, 3 b e d rooms nary Cascade views. $425 - $2000/mo. www. BendOregon Principal Broker most 1 Acre. w/bonus, 2.5 baths, & 1-acre, custom home, room on main level real estate to automotive, Broker, 541-408-2944 View our full RealEstate.com 541-408-6908 3 car tandem garage. with luxurious bathmerchandise to sporting $350,000 Central Oregon inventory online at knotty hickory, knotty Realty Executives Scott McLean, TEAM Birtola Garmyn room a n d pr i v ate goods. Bulletin Classifieds I/i/Iage-Properties.com MLS¹201305319 Resort Realty alder, Corian, Principal Broker High Desert Realty Large appear every day in the 1 -866-931 -1061 $ 119,900. PRI M E wrap-composite deck, $694,000 - Near Smith deck. 541-408-6908 f amily/media room Wonderful 3 bdrm (2 541-312-9449 print or on line. COMMERCIAL Rocks, gorgeous 3 dbl attached gar. MLS Realty Executives www. BendOregon and game/rec room. mstr suites), 3 d/2 bath Call 541-385-5809 PROPERTY, this 201302855 b edroom, 3 bat h , Find exactly what RealEstate.com MLS¹ www.bendbulletin.com c harming Mad r as Forest Ridge town12250 NW Dove Rd. 3880 s q . ft . MLS $542,500 Nancy Popp, 201303078 you are looking for in the building is u pdated, home. with east fac- Affordable Starter, In One level 2500 sq. ft Principal Broker 201300784 ing back deck a nd Bobbie Strome, CLASSIFIEDS located on Hwy. 97, 541-815-8000 Linda Lou Day-Wright. V a c ation custom log home on Sdrv>ngCddtrdi Oregan dmdd P903 3-car garage. main vestment, Principal Broker Cat 5 w ire system, 541- 771-2585 Home i n Sis t ers. 4.9 acres. Floor to Crooked River John L Scott Real hardwood floors & off level mstr, great room, $207,500 ceiling windows with Crooked River 634 Realty 676 Estate 541-385-5500 granite til e k i tchen TEAM Birtola Garmyn st. parking. views of t h e m t ns. 2885 Sq.ft. home in SE Realty Apt./Multiplex NE Bend counters, pantry, loft Mobile/Mfd. Space Pam Lester, Principal Hickory hardwood and High Desert Realty area and situated on on 4.81 acres. 70+ acres of seclusion Big Deschutes River j B roker Century 2 1 541-312-9449 tile floors $385,000 Bend $298,000 Call for Specials! the 12th hole of the Home has 4 bedroom on Bi g D e schutes 2 bedroom 2 bath, $675 Gold Country Realty, MLS 201101447 www. BendOregon sq.ft. Limited numbers avail. month. 541-213-0488 or R idge C o urse a t + den 8 3 ba t h s , River with private har- •• 1700 Inc. 541-504-1338 RealEstate.com Juniper Realty, 3 bedroom, 2 bath 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. Eagle Crest Resort. m aster o n mai n , bor. Lodge style home 541-504-5393 W/D hookups, patios 541-480-5133 13735 SW Commercial Would make an exc. 8498 SW Crater Loop. vaulted great room, with expansive 40x40 • .50 acre lot, shared or decks. Loop. C o m mercial full time home or 2nd Unobstructed mtn 1272 Trail Creek Dr. rock fireplace 8 triple great room overlook- dock 693 MLS 201306059 MOUNTAIN GLEN, building with 900 sq. home. All landscap- views from this well Eagle Crest. Lot only garage! Barn, corrals, ing river, harbor, pvt 3 • Greg Floyd PC, Broker Office/Retail Space 541 -383-9313 ft. of office space & R V area & mo r e . acre lake 8 gorgeous ing, most ext. maint. k ept 2 bed, 2 b a t h $155,000. 2321 sq.ft. 541-390-5349 Professionally for Rent 2,400 sq. ft. of wareand all resort ameni- home on 1 acre that 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, + $529,900 Cascade Mtn. views. managed by Norris & house/manufacturing ties a r e in c luded. backs to community o ffice, great r o o m www.johnlscott.com/4 MLS¹ 201 3 05184. Stevens, Inc. 500 sq. ft. upstairs area. Owner terms or $339,500. MLS property. Quiet loca plan, all premium fin- 5436 $1,395,000. lease option is avail- ¹ 201304729. L y n n tion, sits away from ishes. $458,868 Kellie Cook, Broker Call Ainslie Reynolds, Just bought a new boat? office on NE side of 541-408-0463 town, private bath, all able. $165,000 Johns, Principal Bro- street. $89,900/ MLS Lynn Johns, Principal Principal Broker Sell your old one in the MLS 201304157 ¹201309635 Broker, 541-408-2944 John L. Scott ReMax Key Properties. MORRIS classifieds! Ask about our util. paid. $500 month ker, 541-408-2944 541-410-1054 Cell Super Seller rates! plus $500 d eposit. Juniper Realty, Central Oregon Juniper Realty Central Oregon Real Estate, Bend REAL ESTATE 541-480-4744 541-504-5393 Resort Realty 541-504-5393 Resort Realty www.johnlscott.com 541-728-0033 Office 541-385-5809 I d p d d y O R d pp p d •

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The Bulletin


THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY NOVEMBER 23 2013 E3

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

745

745

745

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Boonesborough I Great l o c ation in NE Bend l $649,000 Private 8 sec l uded Ridge at Eagle Crest Sunrise Village l Tanglewood. This well • Custom 2152 sq.ft. h ome, yet close to Level, nearly 0.6 acre $524,000 $670,000 • 2874 sq.ft. single level kept home has gran- • 3 bedroom, 2 bath town. All new kitchen parcel with utilities at • Remodeled 3705 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom, 3 bath ite counters, new roof, • 3.59 acres, 3600 sq.ft. a ppliances. Lin e d the street. HOA fee • 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath • 2.63 acres new hot water heater, shop pond for swimming & i ncludes al l E a g l e• Office • MLS 201304612 large deck & a fenced • MLS 201306453 water fun w/pool filter C rest a menities: 3 • MLS 201306633 Jane Strell, y ard. $262, 9 0 0 Greg Miller PC, system & water fea- sports centers, pools, Deborah Benson PC, Broker, ABR, GRI MLS¹201306286 Broker, CRS, GRI ture. Passive solar t ennis c o urts, r e Broker, GRI, 541-408-1511 541-948-7998 Jim King, Broker h eat sink p a r t o f duced golf fees, use Preview Specialist 541-693-8761 heating system. Great of restaurant, road 541-480-6448 John L. Scott room affords e asy and common ground dg Real Estate, Bend family living. G reat maintenance. Large Cj www.johnlscott.com natural light from large lot with golf course w indows 8 doo r s . view. You must preMORRIS MORRIS Hillside Chateau - CopEnjoy the treed surview thi s p r operty. MORRIS REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE per Cupolas, Slate r ounding, pond & Eagle Crest o f fers REAL ESTATE I& y d ly O d dOy d y dy d l yO d d Op d Roof, Stone Exterior. water feature. Huge easy access to Bend, 4 Bedrooms, 4 Baths, family r e c room Redmond & Sisters. Cascade Mountain Say "goodbuy" 4152 sq. ft., Offered at w/plenty o f b u i lt-in The lot sits on the tee Views l $595,000 Want to impress the $2,395,000. storage cabinets & box of the 4th hole of • 2960 sq.ft. remodeled to that unused Cate Cushman, relatives? Remodel home counters. 5 bedrooms the Ri d g e Golf item by placing it in Principal Broker (2 in main level & 3 on Course! $14 9 ,900 your home with the • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 541-480-1884 shop The Bulletin Classifieds 2nd floor). Small barn MLS¹ 201308967 help of a professional w ith 2 s t a lls, t a c k Bobbie Strome, • 4.96 acres, 3 acres ir- www.catecushman.com from The Bulletin's rigation room, shop area & Principal Broker "Call A Service Horse Property. 5 41 -385-580 9 storage room. John L Scott Real • MLS 201308316 $675,000. 17235 EmProfessional" Directory Diane Lozito, Broker $615,000 MLS¹ Estate 541-385-5500 erald Valley Rd., Sis- NE Bend Horse Prop- 201302745 541-548-3598 Single-level home in SE Super Adorable Hometers. 10.8 Acres w/8+ erty - 1620 sq ft, 3 541-306-9646 Bobbie Strome, Bend on 0.54 of an acres irrigated pas- bedrooms, 2 b aths, Principal Broker bedrooms, 2 baths, acre. Brand-new car- 31251 t ure, l a rg e ho m e 5.2 acres, 3 ac irriJohn L Scott Real sq ft, 0.16 acre w /separate gues t gated. Solid set 5-stall Estate 541-385-5500 pet, 1312 Sq.ft., 3 lot, newer paint, carbdrm, 2 bath, backs to quarters. Mt. Views, barn, very private. s easonal canal , pets, laminate woods private setting. Gated. Scott McLean, Ranchette, $ 6 50,000. double-gate access and so much more. MORRIS Scott McLean, Principal Broker Great backyard with 63140 Don Jr. Lane, for RV p arking. InREAL ESTATE Principal Broker 541-408-6908 RV parking. $155,000. Bend, OR. 5.75 acres, cludes 541-408-6908 hot tub, yM*p d t y O d dOy d Realty Executives 3318 sq ft 4 bdrm 3.5 washer, dryer, refrig- Call Candy W oodRealty Executives Detroit Lake - Stunning N ice 200 0 y r . bu i l t baths, 5.16 acres irr, erator, A/C 8 p atio bridge, Broker, 541-610-5876 custom-built 2010 H unting, F i shing i n home with 30X30 inR V Gar/Shop + i n furniture. D etroit Lake h o m e Beautiful C h ristmas sulated shop on 4.5 come. Total Property Shelley Arnold, Broker, that's perfect for large Valley - 3 bedroom, 2 acres i n Resources Scott McLean, P r i neville. 541-771-9329 Principal Broker gatherings, quiet es- bath, 1800 sq ft, 2.44 King of the mountain John L. Scott SW Bend I $279,000 541-408-6908 capes or year-round acres. Enjoy the big on this nice hillside Real Estate, Bend • Deschutes River & living. A s hort walk Realty Executives All for outdoors on this spa- setting. www.johnlscott.com Pilot Butte views from the marina, town cious 2+ acre parcel. $161,000. • 3 bedroom, 2 bath Sisters I $204,900 or lake. This home Manufactured home, MLS¹201309423 TURN THE PAGE manufactured • 1920 sq.ft. boasts s o many built in 2003 with de- Teresa Ramsay, Bro• .37 acre lot • 4 bedroom, 2 bath amenities that photos tached double garage. For More Ads ker, 541-815-4442 • .17 acre, fenced back- • MLS 201307954 won't do i t j u stice! $67,000 Call Debbie John L. Scott The Bulletin Bonnie Savickas, yard MLS¹201308216 Real Estate, Bend Brown, Broker, Broker, EPRO, SRES • MLS 201309690 $549,000. Call Deb- 541-419-8156 www.johnlscott.com Debbie Hershey, bie McCune, PrinciRare 5 acre parcel outTotal Property Broker, CRS, GRI NOTICE: pal Broker side Sunriver, 4 bdrm, Resources ReMax Key Properties. All real estate adver- 2 bath chalet. Over541-647-0052 Cell Ideal building location, tised here in is subsized 2-car garage 541-728-0033 Office B roken To p ni n t h ject to t h e F e deral with attached shop, F air H o using A c t , near the Deschutes MORRIS natural terDon't begin to describe fairway, which makes it illegal River & Cas c ade .34 acres. OfREAL ESTATE this 38 a c r e f a rm, rain. to advertise any prefLakes. $199 , 0 00 MORRIS at $239,000. y dy d l yO d d Op « d ranch, horse property. fered erence, limitation or MLS¹201308026 Cate Cushman, REAL ESTATE Barn with stalls, irriThe Highlands - Gated, discrimination based www.johnlscott.com/2 Principal Broker gation, 2600 S q .ft. m ountain views. 2 on race, color, reli541-480-1884 8599 home, shop, & near www.catecushman.com 10-acre parcels. Ofgion, sex, handicap, Ellen Clough, Broker, South Deerfield Park l BLM land. All this & $259,900 fered at $550,000. familial status or naABR, CRS just 20 min to Bend. Immaculate Home on • New 1801 sq.ft. Cate Cushman, tional origin, or inten541-480-7180 www.johnlscott.com/7 • 3 bedroom, 2 bath Principal Broker Spacious .26 acre lot- tion to make any such John L. Scott 4510 • Covered front & back 541-480-1884 3 b e d rooms, 2 . 5 preferences, l i m ita- Real Estate, Bend Jean Nelsen, Broker porches www.catecushman.com baths, 1592 sq ft, 0.26 tions or discrimination. www.johnlscott.com 541-420-3927 • MLS 201305442 R M zoned lot, R V We will not knowingly John L. Scott The p erfect s e tting; Ray Bachman, parking. T r a ditional accept any advertisGood classified ads tell Broken Top first fairReal Estate, Bend Broker, GRI floorplan, vaulted ing for r ea l e s tate the essential facts in an www.johnlscott.com way, mature pondero541-408-0696 ceilings, family room which is in violation of interesting Manner. Write acr e s . sas, . 35 adjoins kitchen, won- this law. All persons Downtown Bend I offered at $275,000. derful park-line set- are hereby informed from the readers view - not $699,000 Cate Cushman, the seller's. Convert the ting yard. Cul-de-sac that all dwellings ad• 2593 sq.ft. Principal Broker location. $ 2 8 9,000. vertised are available facts into benefits. Show • 2 master suites 541-480-1884 MORRIS Call T in a R o berts, on an equal opportu- the reader how the item will • Historic characterwww.catecushman.com help them in someway. Broker, 541-419-9022 nity basis. The BulleREAL ESTATE renovated Total Property tin Classified This • MLS 201301793 This beautiful, l oved Resources advertising tip Diane Robinson, 1814 Sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 Price re d uce d to Spacious, open f loor brought to you by $549,900. 4 Bdrm, 2.5 plan, large k itchen bath home was built in La Pine I $110,900 bath, 3 00 9 S q . ft., The Bulletin w ith eating ba r 8 2 005. G r eat r o o m • 1404 sq.ft. manufacddy mg dddy yl yyydgd y dcd yddd ba m b oo triple garage, great pantry. Huge master fireplace, tured room 8 family room. suite, 3 add i tional floors, volume ceil• 3 bedroom, 2 bath U pscale kitc h e n R esidential Lot - N E large bedrooms. Nice ings w/windows, open • 1.02 acres w/granite & breakfast Bend - 63586 NE sized backyard. Great floor plan to kitchen • MLS 201304556 MORRIS bar. Large windows. Stacy Lane, 13582 sq neighborhood, close w/granite counters & Rachel Lemas, Broker breakfast bar, 2 car REAL ESTATE www.johnlscott.com 541-383-4359 ft RS zoned interior lot to schools, shopping /92357 8 m o re ! B a r bara garage w/workshop. y&y& l yO d da p d available for $55,000. 541-896-1263 Peggy Le e C o mbs, J ackson, Brok e r Angie Cox, Broker, Scott McLean, Dream Acreage I 541-213-9950 Broker 541-480-7653 541-306-8186 Principal Broker $299,000 John L. Scott John L. Scott John L. Scott 541-408-6908 • Smith Rock & CasReal Estate, Bend Real Es t a te, B e nd Real Estate, Bend Realty Executives cade Mtn. Views www.johnlscott.com www.johnlscott.com www.johnlscott.com • 2.97 acres MORRIS • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath REAL ESTATE •

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2123 NW Lemhi Pass Dr.

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• Exceptional finishes • Front paver patio • Open great room • Bright island kitchen • Priced at$449,000

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DIRECTIONS: West on Skyliners Rd., right on NW Lemhi Pass Dr.

2203 NW Lemhi Pass Dr. • Central courtyard • Large great room • Master on main level • Bright interior • Priced at$649,900 DIRECTIONS: West on Shevlin Park Rd., left on NW Crossing Dr., left on NW Lemhi Pass Dr.

2175 NW Lolo Dr. • Elegant & spacious • Main floor above street • Master on main level • Central courtyard • Priced at$739,900 DIRECTIONS: West on Skyliners Rd., right on Mt. Washington Dr., right on

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• 1922 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom, 2 bath

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E agle C r e st , Gol f c ourse C h alet. 2 Bdrm, 2 bath, + loft, 1361 sq.ft., includes MORRIS hot t ub . $ 1 9 9,000, REAL ESTATE MLS $201302424 Lynn Johns, Principal Broker, 541-408-2944 La Pine I $395,000 Central Oregon • 2784 sq.ft. Resort Realty • 3 bedroom, 2 bath acres Eagle Crest, Tour of •• 5.09 Homes Award Win- MLS 201305321 ner! 5 Bdrm, 4.5 bath, Michael J Hopp, Broker 541-390-0504 + bonus room with office, 5495 sq.ft., tons of extras. $949,000. dg MLS ¹201203650 Lynn Johns, Principal MORRIS Broker, 541-408-2944 Central Oregon REAL ESTATE Resort Realty •

Elkhorn Ridge I $385,000 • 2245 sq.ft. home • 4 bedroom, 3 bath • Landscaped,fenced yarCI • MLS 201308088 Brandon Fairbanks, Broker, SRES, GRI, CDPE 541-383-4344

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La Pine.82 Acre I $169,900 • Overlooks Little Deschutes River • 1352 sq.ft. A-frame • 2 bedroom, 1 bath • MLS 201309302 Gary Rose, Broker, MBA 541-588-0687 •

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LAZY RIVER SOUTH Enjoy your privacy in R emodeled 3535 y this cozy single level Sq.ft. home with 4 home on almost a y/2 bdrm + office and 3 acre. 1420 Sq.ft., with b aths. Master b a t h 3 bdrm 8 2 ba t h . with large jetted tub 8 Landscaped w / gar- new tile shower. Meden area, ready to dia room, family room, move in ! $ 2 49,900 h uge k i tchen w i t h www.johnlscott.com/c handcrafted cabinets yndirobertson 8 g ranite counters, Cyndi Robertson, walk-in pantry, sunBroker 541-390-5345 r oom with ho t t u b . John L. Scott Home has cedar eves Real Estate, Bend with copper accents. www.johnlscott.com E xterior s i ding o n h ome, garages 8 Gated Estate I storage bldg have just $1,360,000 been painted. Watch • 9490 sq.ft. main home the wildlife from the • 4 bedroom, 5 bath wrap-around deck or • 25.72 acres go to your private ac• MLS 201302824 c ess to 300y f t o f Darrin Kelleher, Broker Little Deschutes River The Kelleher Group frontage for f ishing, 541-788-0029 swimming or floating. $495,000 •

1900 NW Monterey Pines Dr. • Charming cottages • 2 & 3 bedroom plans • High end finishes • Central location • Homes pricedfrom $329,900 DIBECTIONS: West ort NW Newport Ave./NWShevlin Park Rd., right on NW

There's nothing quite like a home when it comes to inspiration.

Pence Ln., left on NWMonterey Pines Dr. Property ort right.

1455 NE Hudspeth Rd. • Earth Advantage Gold • IronHorse neighborhood • Hand-crafted cabinetry • Tile kitchen & bath • Priced at$234,900 DIRECTIONS:East through city on Hwy. 26 (NE 3rd St.), left on NE Juniper St., right on NE Laughlin Rd, left on NE Hudspeth Rd.

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thegarnergrouP. COm NorthWest Crossing LOT S

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Bend 5 4 1-318-5500 685 SE 3rd Street, Bend, OR 97702 ML-32'l3-10

Prineville 541-416-7480 220 NW Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville, OR 97754 ML-3213-5

MLS¹¹201309267

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Luxurious Ge t away; Residence Club Villa Take care of at Pronghorn; 3 bdrm, your investments 3 bath, 2,227 sq.ft., with the help from one t welfth s h are. $35,000. The Bulletin's Cate Cushman, "Call A Service Principal Broker 541-480-1884 Professional" Directory www.catecushman.com

NMLS 3182

© 2013Everqreett HomeLoansisaregistered tradenameof Everrlreen MoneysourceMortqage Company'NMLS ID3182.Trade/service marksarethe property of Evergreen HomeLoans.All rights reserved.Licensedunder:OregonMortgageLending LicenseML-3213.11/13.

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E4 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

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Homes forSale N orthwest Bend Homes R e d m ond Homes

Redmond Homes

Redmond Homes

Redmond Homes

Redmond Homes

Redm o n d Homes

Sun river/La Pine Homes

This home has it all! 3051 NW Melville Drive MLS¹ 2 0130 7 4 86 SW REDMOND $177,999 I Well Main- $325,000- Set-up for $599,500 - Multigen- You Must See This! 3 If you are looking for a Newly rem o deled Single-level home on $279,900. 4 bdrm, 2 NEIGHBORHOOD. tained Home. 3 Bedhorses, 3-stall barn, e rational h o me, 6 bdrm, 2 bath, fully up- very unique h o me custom kitchen cabi- over 1/4 acre in Aw- b ath, 1920 s q . f t . Lovely 3 b drm, 2.5 rooms/2 B aths/1418 numerous outbuildBdrms, 5 bath, 4730 dated w/d e s igner with awesome views, nets, stainless appli- brey Glen! Backing up home built in 2 006, bath, 1484 Sq.ft., well Sq.ft., New Carpet & ings, guest quarters sq.ft., 4.32 i rrigated touches. Natural light you must check this ances, vaulted ceil- to open space, this double car g a rage maintained home lo Gas Fireplace, Large & more. acres, huge f a mily w/views of the Cas- one out. Beautiful 3 ings & tons of home boasts privacy and shop. Located on c ated i n n i c e S W Kitchen Island, Sepa- MLS¹201305577 room with fireplace, 2 cades. $144 , 5 00 bdrm, 3.5 bath, 3528 w indows. Cus t o m 8 serenity. In addition 2 .73 a c r es . Pa m Redmond n e i ghbor rated Master Suite, 36 Call Charlie or Virm aster s uites a n d MLS¹201303912 sq.ft., 1 .8 6 a c r es, paint colors, ceiling to 3 bedrooms, this Lester, Principal Bro hood. C l o s e to x 14 Gated RV Park- ginia, Principal Brocovered portch, fabu- Gail Day 541-306-1018 vaulted ceilings, living fans 8 m uch more home has a den/of- ker Century 21 Gold schools & shopping. ing. kers l ous Cascade M t . Central Oregon Realty family, dining, game make this a l o vely fice wi t h bui l t -in Country Realty, Inc. Lovely hardwood floor Cheryl Tanler, Broker 541-350-3418Redm Views. Group, LLC r oom & laun d r y 541-504-1338 541-923-4663 place to call home. shelving. Perfect for in great room. Full ond RE/MAX Land Barbara Myers, Broker rooms. Great decks in All o n 2. 4 3 a c r es! e ntertaining with a appliance package in Windermere Central & Homes Real Es541-923-4663 the front and back. Looking for your next www.jackson-andergreat room d esign $ 189,900 NEW C O N c luding washer & Oregon Real Estate tate 541-771-7786 Windermere Pond with a waterfall. employee? S TRUCTION! 1 6 1 6 son.com a nd l a r ge , op e n dryer. Perfect starter Central Oregon Real Landscaped 8 sprinPlace a Bulletin help $339,900 The Ridge sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 bath, $179,900 1657 sq. Candice Anderson, kitchen. Garage has home or investment. Estate kler system. Attached wanted ad today and a t Eagle Crest. 3 Broker 541-788-8878 extra storage and/or home with dbl car ga MLS 2013 0 9859 ft. Newer 3 beroom 2-car garage, 40'x52' reach over 60,000 Bedroom, 2 bath, Slab $679,000 - Custom + den, master suite John L. Scott shop space. Large rage, gas f ireplace, $139,900 detached shop and readers each week. Home, Shop, Barn. w/walk-in clo s et, quartz c o untertops, pantry, split bedroom Real Estate, Bend deck & patio off the John L. Scott Real storage bui l dings. Your classified ad Beautiful 2897 sq.ft., slider to back patio. 2097 sq.ft., home, 1/2 www.johnlscott.com rear of home so you plan with great room Estate 541-548-1712 MLS ¹ 20 1 3 06582. will also appear on acre lot. Old growth home, 4 Bedroom, 3 Living room w/gas can enjoy the sunlight concept. $525,000 bendbulletin.com - Wonderful fireplace b ath, 2 Mast e r s junipers. Three Pines Contem& open space. Live in Pam Lester, Principal $189,500 Cascade Realty, which currently regolf & mountain view. Audrey Cook, Broker suites, Har d wood, MLS¹201309588 porary j $599,000 B roker Century 2 1 a nd enjoy a l l t h e 541-536-1731 ceives over Many new features G ranite, 28.72 • New construction Call Kelly Starbuck, 541-923-4663 Gold Country Realty, amenities of B end's 1.5 million page including new carpet, P rincipal Acres/irrigated. The Bulletin 2825 sq.ft. Bro k e r Windermere C e ntral premier golf commu- Inc. 541-504-1338 views every month stove, bathroom floor 541-771-7786 Oregon Real Estate Cheryl Tranler, Broker • 4 bedroom, 3 bath To Subscribe call nity! $565,000. at no extra cost. 541-923-4663 MLS¹ 2 0130 9 0 19 ing, roof an d T r ex • .23 acre treed lot Redmond RE/MAX 541-385-5800 or go to The Delay Team, - Small Bulletin Classifieds Windermere • MLS 201306372 $159,900. Patio home decking. Cheerful de L and & Hom e s $349,500 Edie and Sam Delay, www.bendbulletin.com acreage with i r r iGet Results! in the greens 1151 sq. cor, r ental h i story Central Oregon Real Cathy Del Nero, Real Estate 541-420-2950 gated pasture overCall 385-5809 or available, rare oppor Estate ft., 2 bdrm, 2 b ath, 541-771-7786 Move in ready! Very Broker, CSP Hasson Company looking p on d 8 place your ad on-line h ome on l a rge l o t tunity. well cared for with a 541-410-5280 Realtors $739,000 I Ve r s atile f enced past u r e $199,000 Turn-Key at nicely l a n dscaped. MLS¹201308367 lot of extra improveHome + Ac r eage. bendbulletin.com Home. 4 B edrooms ready for horses or Stunning Ranch on Aw- Double car garage lo Eagle Crest ments. Living Room 3690 Sq.ft., 4 bdrm, other critters. De/2.5 Baths/1829 sq.ft., brey Butte - 4 BR, 3 Properties cated in a cul-de-sac. plus a large Bonus 2.5 bath, 15.5 Acres 866-722- 3370 Tile Floors & Counter tached garage shop bath home w / open Pam Lester, Principal 755 R oom, 2 Mast e r of irrigation, 30X40 w/storage. Tops, SS Appliances Broker Century 21 great room design. 1 on each MORRIS $214,500 O N THE & barn & 3 car garage, Sunriver/La Pine Homes Bedrooms, BB Q, Offi c e MLS¹201307823. Close to river, trails, Gold Country Realty, level. Elect. F/A and Master on main floor, REAL ESTATE CREEK! Serene in the w/French Doors, Ex- Call Don C hapin, downtown, NW Inc. 541-504-1338 woodstove. Com summer & cuddle-up Cascade Mtn, Smith 146532 Old Cabin Rd t&p d l y O d da p« d P rincipal Bro k e r tra Deep Garage Bay, C rossing & mor e ! pletely l a n dscaped Rock views. $160,000. 3 bdrm, 2 541-923-0855 2 0130 8 2 25 cozy in t h e w i nter! Gated & Paved RV Formal dining area, MLS¹ with deck, c overed Tillicum Village j This furnished, singleBarbara Myers, Broker bath, heat pump and Redmond RE/MAX $169,900 Single story Parking. beautiful stone firep atio and f i r e p i t . $275,000 541-923-4663 2 bd/2ba Creek Cheryl Tanler, Broker hot tub! High Lakes $295,0 L and & Hom e s place o p en s to h ome l oaded w i t h level • 1682 sq.ft. side Townhome of Windermere Realty 8 Pr o perty 541-923-4663 Real Estate upgrades. 1550 sq.ft., breakfast a r e a & • 3 bedroom, 2 bath fers gleaming cherry Windermere Central Central Oregon Real Management, 541-771-7786 gourmet kitc h e n, 3 bdrm, 2 bath, plus • .36 acre lot wood floors, surround Estate 541-536-0117 an office/den. Land Oregon Real Estate cherry cabinets, gran• MLS 201306049 People Look for Information s ound & s l ate f i re scaped with garden ite, h a r dwood & $754,900 Knockout 2 bdrm, Ready for TLC, Amy Halligan, Broker place! 204 Highland Meadow About Products and 6-burner gas area. m ountain v ie w s ! .84 ac r e. $ 7 3 , 000. 541-410-9045 MLS ¹201301795 Loop, Eagle Crest, . Services Every Day through Pam Lester, Principal stovetop. Very private 3863 sq.ft. custom 16045 Strawn Road. Eagle Crest 2020 sq.ft. 3 bdrm, 2 The Bulletin f'.fassifieds with mountain views. B roker Century 2 1 home. Office, outHigh Lakes Realty 8 Properties bath, great room plan, MLS ¹ 201 3 09435 Gold Country Realty, buildings and shop. Property Ma n age866-722- 3370 all premium finishes. $389,900 Ranch MLS¹ Inc. 541-504-1338 $750,000. Call Deb20 1 1 06428 ment 541-536-0117 $357,566 house - Barn - Shop Call Charlie or Vir- Beautiful bie McCune, Princi$338,500 Johns, Principal MORRIS MLS¹ 2 0120 9 1 54 s ingle-level 6.39 Acres zoned for ginia, Principal Bro- 145055 Birc h wood pal Broker res o rt Lynn Broker, 541-408-2944 2 acre lots, 3 Acres Ir- kers 541-350-3418 REAL ESTATE HUGE home in great loca $49,950. Nice 2 bdrm, ReMax Key Properties. $215,000. Central Oregon HOME in desired SW rigation 8 Mt. Views, 5 541-647-0052 Cell 1 bath, 840 sq. ft., tion w i t h ea s t erly Redmond RE/MAX Resort Realty location. 3 bdrm, 2.5 S tall Barn & 6 0 F t . L and 8 new well. High Lakes 541-728-0033 Office Hom e s Open f l o or Tremendous value in bath, 2880 sq.ft. Huge views. round pen, 210x105 Realty & Pr o perty plan, very well main $219,000 - 3 b e d Real Estate Snowberry V i l lage. 750 deck, fenced, sprin Arenas, Oversize ga- 541-771-7786 Management tained 8 low mainte r oom, 2 b a t h , 5 Bring your decorating klers & yard, move-in nance. A must see! rage an d wt l arge 541-536-0117 Redmond Homes acres, 1200 sq.ft. ideas for this 3 bdrm, 942 Trail C reek D r .. ready. shop. MLS¹201303636 barn MLS¹ 2 bath home w/1404 MLS¹ E agle C rest, 2 3 2 1 3 bedroom, 2y2 bath Pam Lester, Principal Audrey Cook, Broker 4 96 Eagle Crest 201306951 Sq.ft. Sunny windows, $249,900 20 120 51.76 s q.ft. 3 bdrm, 2. 5 1157 sq. ft. home in B roker Century 2 1 541-923-4663 Properties Call Travis L. Hannan, vaults 8 skylight await ACRES ZONED R4 Gold Country Realty, Windermere bath, + office, great Gilchrist. $ 1 09,999. 866-722- 3370 PC, Principal Bro$62,500 you! room plan, all pre- 138118 Hillcrest St. Inc. 541-504-1338 Central Oregon Real with a 2122 sq.ft., 3 ker 541-788-3480 MLS¹201309810 mium finishes. High Lakes Realty & - Prime lot, Estate 2 bath, country The Greens at Red- $399,000 Redmond RE/MAX Marilyn Rohaly, Broker, bdrm, $ 413,277 l o t onl y Property M a n ageh ome, l ovely l a n d mond. Large bonus easy to build. Smith Land & Homes 541-322-9954 $ 399,000 House, 4 0 ment 541-536-0117 views and Mt. $120,000) scaping an d l a r ge room, canal v iews. Rock Real Estate A cres, B a rn. 2 0 5 2 Lynn Johns, Principal John L. Scott Hood on a clear day. pond. 541-771-7786 sq.ft. Ranch house, Broker, 541-408-2944 1 715 Mare Ct . 1 8 0 9 Real Estate, Bend Golf comm u n ity Custom home to be Pam Lester, Principal sq.ft., 3 large bdrms, www.johnlscott.com $279,000. MLS¹ b uilt by Denn i s 2 246 Nez P e rce C t . Great room floor plan, Central Oregon Broker Century 21 30x60 shop, 2 M a s te r su i t es, 201308079 Resort Realty Staines Construction Gold Country Realty, R edmond. Lots o f 150x285 a r en a Well maintained home & $145,000. High Lakes Vicci Bowen Several p l an s to Inc. 541-504-1338 house for your money cottage with Realty and potential income & Pr o perty 541-410-9730 choose from. Choose here. Large home with 40x52 Barn, 3 9 . 10 Charming horse training prop- The Washington, NW Central Oregon Realty acres with Mtn. Views. hardwood floors, cozy Management your own finishes. upgrades galore. The fireplace, RV parking, 541-536-0117 e rty & ha y . 3. 7 5 Redmond. Main floor Cheryl Tanler, Borker Group, LLC MLS¹201304296 kitchen has stainless mature landscaping. Acres, 17 Acres irri- master suite w/sitting 541-923-4663 Eagle Crest Properties steel high quality ap$124,900. MLS¹ Make this ol d h o me gated, asphalt to site, room, walk-in closets MLS¹ 2 0130 9 3 00 Windermere 866-722- 3370 stead, located right p liances, gran i te 201308245. Call BLM on 2 sides,mtn in all rooms, 3 bed, $229,900. NEW Central Oregon Real o ff Hw y 9 7 , y o u r c ountertops an d a Vicci Bowen views, great location, 2.5 bath, 2147 sq ft. HOME, 3 bdrm, 2.5 $399,000 - This lot is Estate get-away retr e at. 541-410-9730 560K, MLS MLS¹201310072. bath+ office, 1936 sq. one of the few lots left kitchen island. You Orig. home, garage the Resort side of get wood flooring and $399,900 Single Central Oregon Realty ¹201308186 $ 286,900. Call J i m f t., ga s h e at , g a s on and storage shed built upgraded c a r pets, level, vaulted ceilGroup, LLC www.johnlscott.com/5 range, gas fireplace, Eagle Crest. Q uiet Hinton, 541-420-6229 cul-de-sac with com high ceilings, gas fire- ings, 4 large bed- Custom Home on 5.91 in 1940. Very clean, 9819 fenced, insulated ga Central Oregon Realty possible horse prop r ooms, 2 bath , Sarah Eraker, Broker, rage door w/opener. mon area behind and place surrounded by Group, LLC be d room Ac, P o w ell B u t t e. erty on 1 .63 a cres 503-680-6432 Pam Lester, Principal a filtered views of the stone, mountain view, master 36x4 0 $75,000. MLS master bedroom with s eparation, 2 , 1 57 $ 339,900. 8 53 H i ghland V i e w B roker Century 2 1 Cascades. Home to John L. Scott shop, woodstove & ¹201300544 Loop - 2321 sq ft, 3 sq.ft. 3-car garage. Real Estate, Bend b e built b y S a g e walk-in shower and Gold Country Realty, Jacuzzi tub, main floor Cascade Realty, tile galore. HOA Fees MLS¹201308350 bedroom, 2.5 b a th, Inc. 541-504-1338 Construction. www.johnlscott.com master suite. 541-536-1731 i nclude water a n d Call Kelly Starbuck, great room plan + ofMLS¹201304621 MLS¹201307493 Call West Hills. 4 bdrm, 3.5 fice, all premium fin- Gorgeous sewer so no big wa- P rincipal Bro k e r Tur n -key Eagle Crest Properties Vicci Bowen, ter bills! Many more 541-771-7786 bath in 4040y sq.ft. ishes. $448,868 (Lot home. Pan o ramic 866-722- 3370 Garage Sales 541-410-9730 Delightful W e stside only, $125,000) upgrades hard to reRedmond RE/MAX Cascade M o u ntain Oregon Realty Garage Sales home with Panoramic Lynn Johns, Principal Views. This home fea $79,000 Don't miss this place at $235,000. L and & Hom e s Central Group, LLC Cascade 8 City views Broker, 541-408-2944 tures new paint inside fabulous lot which is Heather Hockett, PC Real Estate ust over 1/3 of a n B roker Century 2 1 541-771-7786 on a spacious lot with Central Oregon & out, a newly remod jacre, G olf Course & Mt n Garage Sales backing up to High Desert Natural Gold Country Resort Realty eled kitchen w/ gran V iews. 3 Bdrm, 2 y 2 c ommon area a n d $430,000 U ltimate 541-420-9151 Find them Landscaping. 2 gas ite counters & SS ap bath, 1 4 1 7 sq . f t ., 20 130 1 8 80 pliances, to sell! Bring family home, 4 bedfireplaces, 1 in living MLS¹ bam b oo priced Eagle Crest. G reat in $184,900. NEW your builder and cre 227 Highland Meadow room, 3 bath, over 7 room 8 1 i n master hardwoods, slate, 8 room floor plan, main ate your dream home! Lp., E a gl e C r e st, acres, 20x40 heated The Bulletin bedroom. Master bed- CONSTRUCTION! high end carpet floor level master & hot tub. 2681 sq.ft. 3 b drm, pool. MLS room has c o ffered Split master floor plan, ing, a great room lay MLS ¹201309605 $220,000. MLS Classifieds Eagle Crest 2.5 bath, + office & ¹ 201305932 Cal l ceiling & slider to up- 3 bedroom, 2 b ath, out, a n en o rmous ¹201209360 sq . f t. , tile Properties formal dining room, Travis L. H annan, Lynn Johns, Principal per deck with hot tub. 1640 m aster suite w/ p r i 541-385-5809 866-722- 3370 great room plan, all PC, Principal BroMaster bath has deep floors/backsplash. RV vate balcony, large Broker, 541-408-2944 premium fin i shes. ker 541-788-3480 soak tub, large tiled parking. guest bedrooms w/ Central Oregon $103,000 3.39 acres 56811 Besson. 3 rental $ 433,388 (lot o n l y Redmond R E / MAX s hower 8 dou b l e Pam Lester, Principal Jack & Jill bathroom, r eady f o r you r Resort Realty units, great h istory. B roker Century 2 1 Hom e s $100,000) Lynn L and & sinks. Great room is utility room, spacious HOME! MLS¹ Gold Country Realty, bonus room w/ f i re Johns, Principal Bro- Real Estate New construction in NW $222,500. High Lakes light & airy with ex201100749 Call Pr o perty 541-771-7786 ker, 541-408-2944 Redmond. $182,900. Realty 8 pansive City & Cas- Inc. 541-504-1338 surround Travis L. H annan, place, Central Oregon 3 /2, 1 55 6 s q . ft . , Management cade views. Kitchen is CANYON R I M V IL sound, & built in TV & PC, Principal Bro4 56 N utcracker D r ., Resort Realty Stainless appliances, 541-536-0117 efficiently laid out with LAGE. This open floor the home is wired for ker 541-788-3480 E agle Crest, 2 0 2 0 pantry, plumbed for granite tile counters, plan features gas ap a backup generator. Redmond RE/MAX $229,000 - Gorge View sq.ft. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, AC, fully landscaped, 16160 Amber Lane 3 newer a p p liances, pliances, h a rdwood The deck has great Land 8 Homes Home Site. Rare rim great room plan, all sprinkler system, bdrm beauty inside. pantry 8 h a r dwood f loors, c e ntral a i r views & covers a dbl shop. Real Estate premium fin i shes. oversized garage door 23x25 lot with river view, Alf looring. Triple g a 541-771-7786 $139,900. High Lakes w /heat p um p a n d arage 2 0 1309010, most 6 acres, Private $355,566 w/opener. MLS¹ rage wit h U l timate good separation be 240,000 Realty & Pr o p erty well drilled, Cap and Lynn Johns, Principal 201305675. J e anne 1082 Trail Creek Dr., floor. Wired for secu- t ween master a n d John L. Scott Real Broker, 541-408-2944 Scharlund, B r o ker, Management fill septic approved, Eagle Crest, (Lot only rity system. Wired for other Estate 541-548-1712 541-536-011 7 bedr o oms. Central Oregon of nice homes 541-420-7978 $159,900) 2681 sq.ft. Area stereo with speakers Built-in desk, upstairs Resort Realty and CRR golf & rec. Central Oregon Realty 1303 Elk Drive o n main floor in 4 bonus room, vaulted S ingle Level 3 b d r m 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, + Diana Barker, Broker & formal dining $182,500. Qua l ity zones. 5-zone heat- ceilings, $459,000 - Between Group, LLC covered H ome in S W R e d office 541-923-4633 r oom, great r o o m throughout! 4 b d rm, ing system. 2 levels of porch, u nderground mond! $129,900 & R e d mond.P rivacy w i t h v i e w s. C e ntral Bend plan, all premium fin- Windermere Hig h cedar decking plus sprinklers, raised gar TEAM Birtola Garmyn D elightful 4 .8 5 A C Eagle Crest. 3 Bdrm, 2 224 sq. ft . Oregon Real Estate ishes. $479,288 Lakes Realty & Proppaver patio. Plumbed d en b e ds , ex c e p High Desert Realty property, Single level bath, 3245 sq.ft., 541-312-9449 Lynn Johns, Principal $229,000 I Large Yard open concept home, 3.5 erty Man a gement in humidification sys- tional l a n dscaping. dual master suites, Broker, 541-408-2944 in NW Redmond. 3 tem. $610,000 MLS¹ Fenced for animals, amazing Smith Rock 541-536-0117 MLS 20 13 0 4 759 www. BendOregon RealEstate.com Central Oregon 201301639 3.6 AC of COI, with $300,000 Bdrm, 2 b ath, New views. $478,500. MLS 1 4746 Cambi u m . Resort Realty Bobbie Strome, John L. Scott Real cedar privacy fencing, pond. 541-923-3371 ¹201207678 $ 110,000. 3 b d rm, MLS¹ 2 0120 9 1 25 Principal Broker Windermere C e ntral Cozy updated insulaEstate 541-548-1712 SpaLynn Johns, Principal plus den , m u ltiple $179,900. NEW $1,190,000 John L Scott Real Oregon Real Estate tion, Family room and Broker, 541-408-2944 cious custom home, o utbuildings. Hig h MLS¹ 20130 8 373 CONSTRUCTION 3 Estate 541-385-5500 large garage, EstabCentral Oregon 4652 sq.ft. Check Lakes Realty 8 Prop$119,900. U p dated! bdrm, 2 b ath, 1705 $499,900 - New Home lished Landscaping. Resort Realty out our Virtual Tour erty Man a gement at The Ridge at Eagle West Hills Beauty j Owner will carry ... 3 sq. ft, 23 acre lot, tile at h ttp://www.circlDiana Barker, bdrm, 2 b ath, 1440 floors, tile backsplash, Crest. 2274 Sq.ft., on $265,000 On the pond, 541-536-01 1 7 $499,000 Broker 541-923-4633 epix.com/home/FVV • 3109 sq.ft. sq.ft., on .3 4 a cre. landscaped, fenced. 1/2 acre l ot, G reat this is a r a r e f i nd! Windermere Jackpine R d . • 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath Large deck and over Pam Lester, Principal 7WQ room, Hickory floors, Luxury townhome that 1 5924 Central Oregon Real MLS¹201303060 $45,000 2 bedrooms, • Cascade Mountain B roker Century 2 1 Slab Granite & slab sized garage/shop. is f u ll y fu r nished. Estate near town on .94 acre. Call Charlie or Virviews Pam Lester, Principal Gold Country Realty, quarts c o u ntertops, Slate entry, granite tile High Lakes Realty & ginia, Principal Bro- $249,900 • MLS 201305542 B roker Century 2 1 Inc. 541-504-1338 1294 sq.ft. g a rage counter tops; g reat 2236 Property M a n agekers 541-350-3418 Craig Smith, Broker Gold Country Realty, with RV bay. Sq.ft., 5 bdrm home room and master bedment 541-536-0117 $359,000 - N orthwest Redmond RE/MAX Audrey Cook, 541-322-2417 Inc. 541-504-1338 r oom overlook t he w/master suite on L and & Hom e s C raftsman home i n Broker 541-923-4663 each level. Living deck and the pond 4 Bdrm, 2 bath, frame N ice and q u iet N W private gated commu Real Estate Windermere beyond. MLS house on a p a v ed room w/gas f i reRedmond property. 3 541-771-7786 nity at Eagle Crest. Central Oregon Real place. RV parking & ¹201305300 road, has all new carbdrm, 2 b ath, 1576 R everse-living f l o o r $127,500 - Great Estate Eagle Crest Properties unique gar d e n. pet, freshly painted sq. ft. on 2.8 acres. plan thought- fully de 866-7223370 MLS¹201306110 inside, new cabintry in place to have your MORRIS Beautiful mature land signed to capture gor family, $500,000 The Ridge 3 bedroom, 2 C all Kelly o r V i r bathroom, kitchen and REAL ESTATE scaping and yard. 48' geous views of t he at Eagle Crest. CasSpacious Home in The laundry room. Lamibath, 1008 sq.ft. ginia, Principal Brox 24' two bay insu lyO d d ap d cade & Smith Rock Cliffs I $ 2 8 9,000 mountains, land MLS¹201308704 kers 541-923-0855 nate flooring in family lated and heated shop scape & t ree t ops. views, Exceptional Light & bright interior, 7 86 Redm o n d r oom a n d din i n g Call Travis L. w/220V. Recent paint MLS¹ 201309730 second home, 2 huge walk-in pantry, Hannan, R E/MAX Land & room. Nice alcove upNeed to get an ad too! Plenty of room for master suites, 2 bedthree car tandem gaEagle Crest Homes R eal Esstairs between 2 bedPC, Principal Broker h orses, RV' s a n d room w/ bonus room, rage. MLS Properties in ASAP? 541-788-3480 tate 541-771-7786 rooms, Huge shop toys! ¹201308783 Very private. ¹ 201308975. Call and a great patio with 866-722- 3370 Redmond RE/MAX John L. Scott Real 541-923-3371 Vicci Bowen, 257 Highland Meadow Land 8 Homes p ergola Iust off t he Estate 541-548-1712 MLS¹ 541-410-9730 Fax It to 541-322-7253 2 0130 4 6 22 Lp., E a gl e C r e st. Windermere Central $184,900 Real Estate Oregon Real Estate Central Oregon Realty kitchen. Newe r 2321 sq.ft. 3 b d rm, MLS¹ 20130 9 238 $ 279,000. 541-771-7786 MLS ¹201306080 The Bulletin Classifieds $149,999. Extremely large home on almost Group, LLC 2.5 bath, + office, - Gated Cascade Realty, 1/4 acre. 3000 sq.ft., 3 $136,900 - Move I n great room plan, all $539,000 w ell m a intained 3 541-536-1731 The Davis, NW R edcommunity! 4 bedbdrm, 2.5 bath, land Ready. 3 Bedrooms/2 premium fin i shes. r oom, 3 . 5 bdrm, 2 b ath, 1190 mond - Open great ba t h , WINDANCE scaped 8 fenced with Baths/1094 sq.ft., ex$ 433,388 (Lot o n ly room, tons of cabinet Need help fixing stuff? 3 Bedroom, 2.5 bath, sq.ft., s i ngle l e v el RV gates. terior Paint in 2012, $99,500). Lynn Johns, 3208 Sq.ft.. Private home built 2005. Dbl. space in kitchen 2nd Call A Service Professional resort living, 1673 sq.ft., 19 acre Pam Lester, Principal Interior Paint in 2013, P rincipal Brok e r , large patio, B roker Century 2 1 floor laundry room, 3 find the help you need. y ear-round or 2 nd parcel an a p r ivate garage, New Vinyl Kitchen & 541-408-2944, C e npark setting Gold home. bed (den or 4th bed- www.bendbulletin.com setting with a view of fenced, Country Realty, Dining, New Carpet tral Oregon R esort w/picket fence, roses, MLS¹201305107 room), 2.5 bath, 1929 Pilot Butte, close to Inc. 541-504-1338 Throughout, Room for Realty lilacs 8 more! sq ft. $282,900. 52571 Doe Lane, La Call Charlie or Virschools, p a rk s & Pam Lester, Principal RV Parking. Call Jim Hinton, Pine, $94,500. 850 ginia, Principal Bros hopping. Light & MLS¹ 2 0130 4 9 82 Cheryl Tanler, Broker $ 279,900 - Home - 3 Broker Century 21 541-420-6229 sq. ft. 1.13 acre, RV kers 541-350-3418 - RV bright with many win$440,000. 4 Bdrm, 5 541-923-4663 Car Garage Gold Country Realty, Central Oregon Realty pole barn . High Redmond RE/MAX bath, 3500 sq.ft., 2 dows & custom lights, Parking, 3 b drm, 2 Windermere Central Inc. 541-504-1338 Group, LLC Lakes Realty & PropHom e s fenced back yard with shops, barn, 3-car ga Oregon Real Estate b ath, Great R o o m L and & Man a gement Estate The Jefferson - NW erty pavered patio & large CORNER LOT 1380 sq. rage w/guest quarters, Vaulted, Ga s F i r e- Real 541-536-0117 double garage. Built in ft., 3 bdrm, 2 b a th, located on 5 Acres in The Bulletin's place, 12x20 Bonus/ 541-771-7786 Redmond - $289,900. speaker system, vaulted ceilings, gas middle of Smith Rock. Media Room, 22x48 $565,000 - Spec"Call A Service Desirable NW neigh- 52817 Br i dg e Dr. vaulted ceilings with heat, and double car Pam Lester, Principal Professional" Directory Concrete RV Area. tacular Ca s cade borhood, single level, $ 174,500. 3 b d r m , recessed lighting & Broker Century 21 Audrey Cook, Broker garage. 3 b drm, 2 . 5 b a t h, 1809 Sq.ft. Private 1.2 view. 5 s tall barn is all about meeting RV parking. $264,000 Pam Lester, Principal Gold Country Realty, 541-923-4663 2020 sq ft. w/heated tack. acres. H i g h L akes • MLS¹201308272 Inc. 541-504-1338 your needs. Windermere B roker Century 2 1 MLS¹201306374 Realty & Pr o p erty Custom home, very Bobbie Strome, Central Oregon Real Gold Country Realty, MLS¹ Call J i m Hi n ton, Management p rivate, close t o Call on one of the 20130 5 391 Principal Broker Estate Inc. 541-504-1338 541-420-6229 541-536-0117 town. $449,999. I M MACU professionals today! John L Scott Real Central Oregon Realty MLS¹201304467 MOT I VATED LATE HONE OPEN 4.77 $320,000 Estate 541-385-5500 VERY 6 1746 R o c k V ie w . Group, LLC Call Charlie or VirSELLER. Be a u tiful 2 31 AC R E S in 173 Highland Meadow acres, 1 acre of irri$99,700. Home, shop, ginia, Principal BroWoodlands Golf h ome in S W R e d Boones Bor o ugh. Lp., Eagle Crest, 2321 gation. Pond, shop The W i n dsor, NW s uper clean! H i g h kers 541-350-3418 Course; open great mond with very moti 2153 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 s q.ft. 3 b drm, 2. 5 a nd 1 6 0 0 sq . f t. Redmond - Main floor Lakes Realty 8 PropRedmond RE/MAX room with mountain vated seller. This 4 house. MLS¹ den/4th bedroom, lots erty bath, sunroom, gran bath, + office, great Man a gement L and & Hom e s and lake v iews, 4 bedroom, 2 bat h ite counter, water fea room plan, all pre201307143 Call of natural light, eating 541-536-0117 Real Estate mium finishes. Travis L. Hannan, bar in kitchen, landbdrm, 6 bath, 5,096 home is ready for its ture and large 1344 541-771-7786 sq.ft., o f f ered at new owners. Small sq.ft. shop fit for a $402,777 (Lot o n ly PC, Principal Broscaping, 3 bedroom, 86890 Golden L ane. shop with hot tub and king! 2.5 baths, 2235 sq ft. $1,195,000. $99,500). Lynn Johns, ker 541-788-3480 $95,000, g o r geous Look at: Cate Cushman, gazebo in backyard. Pam Lester, Principal P rincipal Brok e r , Redmond RE/MAX Call Jim Hinton, views, 40 acres. High Bendhomes.com Principal Broker MLS 201308103 Broker Century 21 541-408-2944 Land & Homes 541-420-6229 Lakes Realty & Propfor Complete Listings of 541-480-1884 John L. Scott Real Gold Country Realty, Central Oregon Real Estate Central Oregon Realty erty Man a gement www.catecushman.com Estate 541-548-1712 Inc. 541-504-1338 Resort Realty 541-771-7786 Area Real Estate for Sale 541-536-0117 Group, LLC •


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Homes with Acreage

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152671 Long P r airie, Motivated Seller! Pow- Build your dream home 1 0037 Juniper G l en Ridge At Eagle Crest j $ 249,000. 4 bd r m , ell Butte Quiet Coun- On this 5.3 acre par Circle, Eagle Crest, $99,900 Snowberry Village ¹69 $139,900 Nearly LOT MODEL $199,900 - Home with 3.55 a c res, h o r se try Lane. Nice 3 bed- cel just a few minutes Lot o n l y $7 5 ,000!• Cascade Mountain $62,500. Tr e men- 2-acres, 3 b drm, 2 4300 sq.ft. shop on LIQUIDATION b arn, a rena. H i g h room ranch-style south o f P r i neville. Proposed new const. views dous value for Snow- bath, 864 sq.ft. shop Prices Slashed Huge 5 .95 a c r es . ML S Lakes Realty & Prop- house with a nice floor V iews of t h e C a s o n 2020 s q .ft., 3 • .32 to .36 acre lots berry Village. 3 Bed- w/power, co n c rete Savings! 10 Year 201209007 erty Man a gement plan, country kitchen, cades and easy ac bdrm, 2 bath, great • Golf, pool, tennis & room, 2 bath, 1404 floor & 14' overhead conditional warranty. Linda Lou Day-Wright. 541-536-0117 nice brick f i replace cess off Davis Loop. room, al l p r e mium trails sq. ft. Valued ceilings d oor, concrete R V Finished on your site. 541- 771-2585 nestled on 4+ acres. Septic approved and finishes. $345,566 • MLS 201301147 & s u nny w i ndows. pad w/water, power, Crooked River Realty ONLY 2 LEFT! E xceptional Cu s t om The property is fenced power available. Lynn Johns, Principal Christy HartmanTwo car garage and sewer. MLS Redmond, Oregon w/ corral, shed, shop 201302249 $35,750 Broker, 541-408-2944 DeCourcey, Broker Built Home on 7 .69 separate entry. Great 201309627 541-548-5511 2 Mfd. homes currently John L. Scott Real Central Oregon 541-312-7263 acres with Cascade area, along with storlocation in 55+ park Nancy Popp, Principal used a s ren t a ls. JandMHomes.com Resort Realty Mountain Views! This age rooms. Two acres Estate 541-548-1712 MLS¹201309810 Broker 541-815-8000 Property has a ton of s ingle l e ve l 21 4 6 of irrigation, mountain Call Marilyn Rohaly, Crooked River Realty 1 0127 Juniper G l en potential. First home Need to get an Sq.ft. home features a nd S m it h Roc k MLS¹ 2 0120 0 9 37 Broker, 541-322-9954 i s built i n 1 9 73, 2 Circle. Eagle Crest, an open floor plan, views. Local s m all $535,000. Estate liv ad in ASAP? John L. Scott Real only $80,000! probdrm, 1 bath, and the $159,900 - 1980 sq.ft. Powell Butte Charter vaulted ceilings, tile ing in The highlands Lot MORRIS Estate, Bend You can place it second home is built new const. on home, newly updated flooring, gas fireplace, School. Central loca- a t broken t o p 1 0 posed REAL ESTATE www.JohnLScott.com kitchen, fenced/gated, in 1998, 2 b drm, 2 2321 sq.ft. 3 b d rm, online at: Living Room PLUS a tion commuting dis- acres, gated, private I dp & l yO d d Op d huge bonus r oom, www.bendbulletin.com bath. The homes are Family Room, chef's tance to Bend, w ell, utilities at l o t , 2.5 bath, + o f f ice, ¹ 1 65 o n a t o tal o f 4 . 1 5 great room, all prem. Shevlin Commons Lot Suntree Village w/separate entrance, kitchen with large eat Prineville and R e d- app for cap-fill septic. 2 b e d$35,800 acres. Storage buildfinishes. $388,868 natural light. 1-acre. ing bar, granite coun mond. Not a bad Pam Lester, Principal Lynn j $239,000 rooms, 2 baths, 1188 541-385-5809 Johns, Principal • .25 acre lot ings, carports. Nice MLS 201308329 package at $279,000! B roker Century 2 1 tertops, stainless ap sq ft. Beautifully upclean property. MLS 541-408-2944 • Cascade Mountain Nancy Popp, p liances, doub l e Call Heather Hockett, Gold Country Realty, Broker, dated: windows, roof, ¹201306120. Central Oregon Principal Broker Rent /Own ovens & Hickory cabi PC, Broker, Century Inc. 541-504-1338 view p aint inside 7 o u t , 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes $139,900 Resort Realty 541-815-8000 netry. Master suite in 21 Gold Country Re• Close to Shevlin Park laminate floors, car$2500 down, $750 mo. Cascade Realty, Crooked River cludes gas fireplace, alty, 541-420-9151 • MLS 201301093 903 Highland View Lp- 10235 Sundance Ridge pet, water heater and OAC. J and M Homes Dennis Haniford, Realty tiled double sink van Q UALITY HOME O N Don Kelleher, Broker, Cascade Mtn views Lp., Eagle Crest lot more! Beautiful yard. 541-548-5511 Principal Broker ity, jetted soaking tub ACREAGE. 2 master galore! .45 acre lot, 541-480-1911 only $155,000. ProA must see! 541-536-1731 8 separate shower. bdrm suites, gourmet gently sloped, close to posed new const. on Call Marilyn Rohaly, 2 0748 V a lentine S t . 780 Central A/C, landscap kitchen with granite, Broker, 541-322-9954 $56,950 Cute 3 bdrm, Mfd./Mobile Homes L akeside Spor t s 2681 sq.ft. 3 b d rm, 2 ba t h , upd a t ed ing, sprinkler system, n ewer sho p c o m - Center. $12 5 ,000. 2.5 bath, + off ice & John L. Scott Real Find exactly what kitchen & bath, new with Land double garage & 2013 pletely finished with 4 MLS ¹201305350 formal dining room, Estate, Bend you are looking for in the Sq.ft. Shop. A Must carpet & t i le , n i ce great room plan, all www.JohnLScott.com MORRIS rooms. Artificial and Lynn Johns, Principal CLASSIFIEDS covered front deck & 83924 Christmas ValSee! MLS 201304744 fin i shes. Broker, 541-408-2944 premium REAL ESTATE natural grass, many large back yard with ley 19.55 acres with 2 $365,500 Central Oregon $484,388 Snowberry Village ¹71 flower beds. I&p & l yO d d Op d bedroom MH. John L. Scott Real Lynn Johns, Principal $149,800. The jewel deck. Spotless and Resort Realty $475,000 MLS¹ T h i s p ropEstate 541-548-1712 $50,000. Ad j acent$315,000 Broker, 541-408-2944 of Snowberry Village. like new. 201304368 e rty is l o aded! 1 0 Have an item to Cascade Village parcel available. High Central Oregon Spotless triple wideLANDcascade views, Vicci Bowen Homes N.W. LLC Lakes Realty & Prop- acres Resort Realty sell quick? 2363 sq. ft. Separate 541-41 0-9730 Lot 16 SW Shad Road 541-388-0000 erty Man a gement 3 bdrm, 2 bath, with Overlooking the Central Oregon Realty dining room, family 2.7 acres, Mt. Jeffer 1525 Murrelet Dr. Eagle covered por c hes If it's under 541-536-0117 Crooked River Gorge. room. Huge master son & S m ith R ock Crest, Ochoco Mtn 36x36 2 s t all b arn. Group, LLC Immaculate home on '500 you can place it in suite - jetted tub. Ap- 3 Bedroom, 2 bath views. $78,500 2304 sq.ft g a rage/ 4-bdrm v iews, 1 7 t h hol e $159,900 the Rim overlooking 763 pliances inc l uded. Lot 39 Big Sky Place Challenge Course, .49 mobile home for The Bulletin beautifully appointed shop with four overthe C rooked R iver Recreational Homes Separate lau n d ry 4.12 acres, Mtn views, acre lot, bring your sale or rent. home, nearly 1900 sq. head doors / i n suGorge. This home fea Classifieds for: room & 2-car garage. border public land, builder. $15 0 ,000. 541-389-2636 ft., dbl garage+ shop, lated hobby shop, and & Property tures a spacious and MLS¹201308578 near Deschutes can fenced-in garden, new much much m o re. MLS ¹201305175 open great room de '10 3 lines, 7 days Call Marilyn Rohaly, yon $89,000 flooring t h roughout. MLS 201304364 sign, a large bonus Fantastic cozy, move in 7965 SW River Road Lynn Johns, Principal Broker, 541-322-9954 $ 75,900 3 bdrm / 2 '16 - 3 lines, 14 days 1.23-acres. MLS Linda Lou Day-Wright. Broker, 541-408-2944 room with a full bath, ready home. On over 2.79 acres, near the John L. Scott Real baths owner will carry 541- 771-2585 Central Oregon 201308379 an acre w/Cascade (Private Party ads only) a spacious master, Estate, Bend with a g ood d own. Nancy Popp, Principal Crooked River Realty Deschutes river. Resort Realty large guest bedrooms, Mtn Views located be $49,000 www.JohnLScott.com New paint, newer car- Broker 541-815-8000 newer paint, carpet tween Tumalo & Sis 1 3601 S W p et. Located off a Crooked River Realty Must see to appreciate Can y o n 1850 Murrelet Dr. Eagle SHEVLIN RIDGE and flooring inside ters. Home is in great Drive. 1.13 acres, Mt Crest $139,900 - 864 sq.ft. paved road. Near the lot only 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, apvery clean move-in w/h u g e Jefferson and n e w ex t e rior c ondition f inished shop w i t h community park. MLS $189,900 views, proved plans. More $82,500! p r o posed Nearly ready 3/2, 1512 sq. ft. paint, a circular drive, great, solarium entry, o wner w i l l car r y . new const. 3 bdrm, 2 details and photos on heat, RV pad w/dump, 201303870 71/2-acres with Casmfd home. New int. immaculate landscap hand made ash cabi $58,500 b ath, 2020 s q . f t . craigslist. $ 159,900. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, beau- Linda Lou Day-Wright. cade & D e s chutes paint, laminate flooring with irrigation sys nets, tile countertops, Lot 21 SW C hipmunk Eagle Crest h o me 541-389-8614 tifully appo i nted 541- 771-2585 River canyon views. ing, slate entry, tiled lam i nate R oad. 5 .1 6 a c r e , with great floor plan. tem, a fenced and irri beautiful home. Enclosed, gar- Crooked River Realty 3 bdrm, 2 bath, w/ex- floors. Mstr b e d rm flooring community water in gated garden area, wood den w/raised beds, All premium finishes. People Look for Information tensive decks. Double separation. Front and chicken c o op , at throughout & 2 car at stalled. $60,000 dynamite C a s cade FACTORYSPECIAL $368,066. Lynn About Products and garage and workshop. back decks, garage. tached garage. Re 16535 S W tached garage with views. 1-acre M LS Ch i n ook Johns, Principal BroServices Every Day through New Home, 3 bdrm, MLS 201307097 $124,999. MLS shop space, central cent upgrades inc in 201309296 Drive. 5 .6 8 a c r es, ker, 541-408-2944 $46,500 finished Nancy Popp, 201300412. Cascade The Bulletin f:/assiffeds Nancy Popp, Principal heat, pellet stove and terior & exterior paint, River views, owner Central Oregon on your site. Principal Broker Realty, Dennis Haniexcellent privacy. This new roof, appliances, will carry. $225,000 Broker 541-815-8000 Resort Realty J and M Homes 541-815-8000 ford, Princ. Broker Tetherow Lot j home is 100% turn bathroom vanities & 16685 S W Crooked River 541-548-5511 Ch i n ook Crooked River 1-541-536-1731 $299,000 key ready t o go ! fixtures, sprinkler sys Drive. 6.9 acres, River Just bought a new boat? Realty Realty tem & fenced court views, all utilities in Sell your old one in the • .43 of an acre ¹201308441 yard. RV pkg & plenty stalled, owner carry. classifieds! Ask about our • Overlooking the 13th John L. Scott Real Super Seller rates! hole of room for a shop or $189,000 Estate 541-548-1712 541-385-5809 home addition if de 16160 SW Dove Road • Cascade views • MLS 2809519 sired. 20 13 0 8952 Just F inished! B e nd 6.1 acre corner lot, $39,900 - 1.71 acres, Debbie Johnson, Broker country h om e on $269,900 Mtn views, near Des septic approved 541-480-1293 2+acres. BLM access John L. Scott Real chutes river. $89,900 power and water at close to property for Estate 541-548-1712 Canyon City, Oregon 14 the st r e et . MLS trail riding. You get a acres zoned Residen 201307972 dg 4 bedroom, 3 b a th Advertise your car! tial, divided into 4 tax Linda Lou Day-Wright. home that has had 541- 771-2585 Add A Picture! lots. $99,900 MORRIS p lenty of n e w u p - Reach thousands of readers! Juniper Realty Crooked River Realty dates. The kitchen is Call 541-385-5809 REAL ESTATE 541-504-5393 4.92 acres, backs up to all new with custom The Bulletin Ciassifieds y&p & ly O d d Op d BLM and then just a cabinets, tile c ounMLS¹201305077 20942Lake Hwy, Cresshort walk to the river. You won't find another t ertops, bamb o o 20+ $74,900. MLS¹ floors, new light fix- cent Lake. Creek-front $169,000. acres lot like this one. A CRES I N WE S T property with Cres201102328. Call T his lot h a s b e e n t ures a n d mor e . POWELL BUTTE ES Linda L o u DayBathrooms have new cent Creek on one completely groomed TATES, gated c om Wright. 541- 771-2585 with a fence, gravel tile, r e cent c a r pet side and Cold Creek munity, mtn. v iews, on the other! A rare Crooked River Realty throughout and windriveway, fire pit, and find w/covered Trex private well, paved benches to enjoy the dows are recent as r oads w/access t o 5 3215 D a y Road , deck, game r oom, well as interior paint. evening fire, log cabin BLM. wooded acre, well, craft r o om , f a m ily look alike s t orage y You get a c o vered Pam Lester, Principal s eptic. $22, 9 0 0. r oom, master w i t h porch to enjoy in the shed has also been B roker Century 2 1 11849 Lar c hwood slider to deck, garage, built. Great lot for RV summer a n d the Country Realty, Drive. Cleared, ready use. Just off of paved home has a triple car generator with auto Gold Inc. 541-504-1338 to b u i ld , u t i l . in road. $47,000. MLS attached garage and switch, storage shed, $25,000. 51881 201309821 a pull through shop. plus easy access in - $65,000. Fordham Dr., Ready Cascade Realty, DenExterior of home is to summer and winter. $25,000 b u ild, C r e scent nis Haniford, Broker be painted. Property west side w i ndows S pectacular lots i n to Creek. $25,000 High overlook creek. Less Yarrow s u bdivision, 1-541-536-1731 is agent owned. Only than 2 miles to Cres- the newer develop- Lakes Realty & Prop$298,000 but will enerty Man a gement cent Lake, minutes ment in the east hills 773 tertain offers. $22837 of Madras. Very near 541-536-0117 A bilene C t. , B e n d from Willamette ski Acreages Sn o w mobile the new aquatic CenHeather Hockett, PC, pass. Highland View LP. from your back door. ter, middle school and 914 B roker, Century 2 1 Crest, Unob- Two beautiful adjoining MLS COCC campus. Home Eagle Gold Country Realty, $349,000. 2 01305685 Kerr y ID YARROW E agle structed Mtn v iews. 40 a c r e pa r cels. 541-420-9151 .44 Acre lot, back to Nestled in quiet pic 5 41-815-6363 C a s - Crest Prop e rties BLM, privacy galore turesque C h ristmas 866-722-3370 cade Realty $137,500 CRR St i ck with views. $134,900. Valley approx. 1300 built 3 bdrm, 2 bath on 123741 MLS ¹201307060 Mu t t onchop, feet to pavement and 1 a cr e c o m pletely Crescent Lake. I m- USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Lynn Johns, Principal power is closer great fenced, quiet location. m aculate chalet l o Broker, 541-408-2944 place to b uild your Clean an d s w e et, cated on a n a c r e. Door-to-door selling with Central Oregon retreat. private ready to move into. Gravel drive, covered fast results! It's the easiest Resort Realty 201308163 & Detached 24x24 i n201308167 $ 2 4,900 porch, wood s tove, sulated garage/ shop. slate hearth, s piral way in the world to sell. $97,000 - 2.59 acres. each R eady t o bui l d . Covered back porch, staircase to sleeping John L. Scott Real The Bulletin Classified MLS¹201100751 hot tub, garden shed. loft. 2 bdrms on main Estate 541-548-1712 541-385-5809 Call Travis L. HanMLS¹ 201309983. floor and util. room. nan, PC, Principal Land, Land, Land. Buy Debbie Walsh, Broker Hickory cabinets, garBroker 5 41-419-4576 B e n d den window, plenty of it now while you still LOTS FOR SALE Premier Real Estate storage. Open floor A D ¹ 1 0 1 - 8 8 9 A C 541-788-3480 c an. R a nc h wi t h Redmond RE/MAX breath taking views. plan an d r e cessed W /Potential Vi e w s Land & Homes 320 acres fenced, Ex lighting. minutes form Check out the $199,900 Real Estate tra large hay barn, Willamette Ski pass, AD ¹70070 - 1.68 AC classifieds online 541-771-7786 shop & home. Views www.bendbulletin.com Crescent and Odell Stunning $290,000 lakes, sn o w mobile $395,000 Best Priced Pronghorn 201307278 Updated daily from your yard. Steps A D ¹3081 - 0 .5 5 A C L ot. N i c klaus 4 t h John L. Scott Real from the Little DesAwbrey Butte Fairway. Seller will fi- Estate 541-548-1712 151628 Ha c kamore. chutes River. Perfect $154,900 nance club member- Prtnewlle j $99,000 Custom 1325 sq. ft. vacatio h a s sle-freeAD ¹ 1 7 165 - '/2 AC ship. Call Cate for home, with s h ops. home $169,000. MLS acres Near Big Deschutes d etails. Offered a t : •• 2.04 Purchas eprice$350,000,20% down,Loanamount$280,000,30yearfixed. Cascade Mountain $244,900. High Lakes 201302230. Call River $30,000 $8,000 Realty & Pr o pertyKerry 541-815-6363 views AD ¹4 - T R S '/2 AC Cate Cushman, 0/ 0/ • Crooked River views Management Cascade Realty, Home Site $18,000 Principal Broker 541-536-0117 • MLS 2704850 A D ¹ 7 1 8 4 5 A C 541-480-1884 5 1375 E v an s W a y . JJ Jones, Broker B acks B L M La n d www.catecushman.com Jumbo purchaseprice/value $800,000 — 20% down /equity,$640,000 loan amount. C abin, $69,5 0 0 . 541-610-7318 Offer valid as of date of ad, restrictions may apply Rates/fees subject to change. On Approved Credit $119,000 A-frame, outbuildings, AD 541-788-3678 ¹ 12228 - 19.57 AC Eagle C rest, 1 0 1 51 RV hookups. H i gh Views Sundance Ridge Lp. Lakes Realty & Prop- 360' Big Smith Rock views, $299,900 dh erty Man a gementAD ¹ 22355 - 8.34 AC .44 acre lot, backs to I I dI ' 541-536-0117 C lose in N E B e n d C line Butte & B L M. 360' View / Top of Butte $159,900. MLS MORRIS $209,900 in Terrebonne. Home, Find It in ¹201304889 AD ¹ 57818 - 0.19 AC REAL ESTATE shop, mansion building The Bulletin Classifiedsf Treed & Quiet Lynn Johns, Principal y&p d l yO d d Op d site. 2% to broker. See: Broker, 541-408-2944 $189,900 541-385-5809 http://bend.craigslist.org/ Central Oregon AD ¹TL 5000 1.9 AC Tumalo j $309,000 y n reo/4175046612.html Resort Realty I ncredible Vie w s ! • Deschutes Riverfront ou re never atone when were doind/ your (oan ... Brand Ne w C u s tom $10,000 • 1.47 acre 1 032 T r ai l Cr e e k AD ¹25775 - 39 AC Ex Hager Mountain Estates • Build your dream Drive. Frank L l oyd quisite lots, $30,000 each loTick, Tock Views! 4 cated home Wright inspired home $199,487 in Silver Lake. • MLS 201303902 backing to creek w/ Underground power Tick, Tock... A D ¹ 1 6 154 - 1 0 A C Carolyn Priborsky PC mtn views. 2681 sq.f t. and conduitfor phone Paulina Views! Broker, ABR, CRS, MORTGAG E CORPORATION ...don't let time get 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath + of- $99,900 and internet. Views of GREEN fice. Formal d i ning A D ¹ 7 0 4 - 3 9 5 A C Hager Mountain. Sepaway. Hire a 541-383-4350 and 3-car g a rage, W/Fabulous V i ews! tic feasibility for stanprofessional out Casey NMLs189449 Jennifer NMLS 288550 luxury finishes $379,000 d ard s y stem. T h e throughout. $469,900. TEAM Birtola Garmyn area is a sportsman's of The Bulletin's I:0!IP0!I!.!I «!II!.~421 I:IIIIP!I!II!.S¹att~ MLS 201308237 paradise. "Call A Service High Desert Realty Lynn Johns, Principal Bobbie Strome, 541-312-9449 MORRIS Professional" Broker, 541-408-2944 Principal Broker www. BendOregon REAL ESTATE Central Oregon John L Scott Real Directory today! RealEstate.com I&p & d y O d d Op I d Resort Realty Estate 541-385-5500

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SAT 1 - BPM Exquisitely Remodeled Estate just minutesfromBendon2f acress/

Great hobby farm setup. Well maintained home & property with upgrades.

Beautiful Pahlisch Homes

long mean dering privatedriveway. This home ir 680f sq. ft. all on

community f eaturing

one level with soaring windows It breathtakingviews of rheCascades.Formal living room/dining 20600 Bemis Place room.customSonomaCactus ceilDirections: H~ 20 towark' Sisters ing, slabgranite, heatedfloors!I exir righr on 0!d Bend Redmond triple car garage.Outsideenjoy Huyy.Gopasr Turrralo Jct, 4 rrrife rhe PebbleT!y.ck pool, 7 sarer down on left, right before Jou ¹et falls, hot rubandoutdoor fire pit Io Mt Vierry 5rabfes, 3 miler after you fnr hoursofentertaining. turn onto Old BendRedrrrorrd Hrry!y. Hosred/ byy

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$1,650,000

amazing neighborhood amenities; pool, hot tub, clubhouse, sports center,

20862Golden GatePlace,Bend

gym, game room and more! Come tour s variety Directions:from the Parku'ay, easr of single level and 2-story osReed Marker, south on 15th, then follow signs. floor plans.

Hosted 6 Listed byr E DIE DEI A Y

Homes Starting Mid-$300s

N ewer s e p ti c s y s t e m , community water, 3 heds, 2 haths on L37 acres. 3 1110 Newell Ave pastures, small barn w/ tack room. Chycken coop, Directions:North of Redmond on

g arden s h ed , n i c e l y H~~97, left on DavidsonWay,rf¹hr landscaped m/fruit trees on /frh 5t. House oncorner of 1/rh R garden area. Plenty of 6 Neus/I, room for toys.

Lrsred anrf //o¹ed by: MELODY LUELLING

NANCY HOOVER

Principal Broker

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541-420-2950

541-948-3107

541-815-2425

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• Expansive nor t h e a sterly vie w s of the O c h o c o M ountains and Pilot B u t t e

7 .29 of acre lot in Rivers Edge • T his home s ite offe rs 1 20 feet in w i d t h p roviding o p p o r t u n it y fo r m a n y d e s i g n options 7

Near river trail, golf, shopping and schools

Call Shelly Swanson, Broker ( 541-408-0086

• Only 7 minutes from downtown

1305 NE Watson Drive

• Tetherow is a planned 700 acre community backing to national 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

• 4 bedroom, 2 bath

• Midtown location — Hollingshead • Nicely updated 8 immaculate MLS¹ 201310309

R R . . R Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker, Director of Lot Sales ~a l l Stephanie Ruiz, Broker ( 541-948-5196 R 541-408-3912 ( brian©bendpropertysource.com

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stephaniewilsonruiz©yahoo.com

views • The living room features large view windows and cozy gas fireplace. • The kitchen is light and bright with a wonderful breakfast nook/sitting area • Expansive outdoor living space is perfect for entertaining MLS¹20131118

• Large lot with RV parking

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• This desirable single level home is located in Mountain High • Spacious open floor plan with wonderful golf course

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Western lifestyle theme, city services and irrigation Walking paths, landscaped. 1.8 miles north on MainStreet • 211 NW Saddle Ridge Loop - 2137 SF, 3 bed, 2 bath, den, large kitchen, oversized garage,.21 acre $348,170 •227 NW SaddleRidge Loop -2292 SF,3 bed,2 bath, den 8l finished bonus room, garage with shop.23 acre $379,160

Nestled in tall Ponderosa Pines within an hour of Bend & Mt. Bachelor & only 20 min. from Championship j Golf & Sunriver. • 53557 Kokanee Way,$490,000: Thisbright& open custom-built 1998 home directly overlooks the river • 53610 Brookie Way, $420,000: Beautiful Scandinavian inspired design w/hand blown glass, ironwork & sauna

• 53510 Brookie Way, $425,000: Hand-scribed CanadianSpruce log home w/covered porches,backs to N. Forest

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• Minutes to downtown Bend, Galvestonshopping

• $100,000 price reduction • 135 acres in popular hunting/recreation area

and dining district, parks, trails and the Deschutes River!

• Borders US Forest

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• 2 or 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, updated kitchen • 2-car garage • Cozy living room with gas fireplace! • Fenced, la ndscaped yard with raised beds and two decks

• 1954 SF 3 bedroom home w/floor to ceiling windows and spectacular lake and mountain views • Guest house, large shop, grass runway

for entertaining!

MLS¹201204205

MLS¹201309003

.R R R Call Lai n~ayanandKerri.Jo Talburt Team f541419-7540,541-980-7911

Call BriaKnadd, Principal Broecer ) 541-408-3912

.R. R Call Ron Davis, Principal Broker [ 541-480-3096R

Carmen Ann Cook, Broker ( 541-480-6491

laina@landranchhom escom l kerri.talburt@ca scadesothebysrealty,com

brian©bendpropertysource.com

www.OregonRanchAndHorse.com

carmsells@att.net

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Brazilian hardwoods, alder cabinetry • Gourmet kitchen, great room offers rockfireplace • Master suite overlooks pond, water feature. • Large bonus/media room • Lovely perennial gardens and landscaping • 3 beds, 2.5 baths, 3008 SF MLS¹201309160

• 4 bedrooms 2.5 baths, 2822 SF • Gourmet kitchen and formal dining room • Master on the main • Wood/slate floors with granite counter tops • Two living areas plus huge bonus room • Lovely front porch and private fenced backyard 1857 NW Remarkable MLS¹201308437

Call Myra Girod, Broker( 541-815-2400 or Pam Bronson, Broker ( 541-788-6767

Call Robin Yeakel, Broker, CRS( 541-408-0406 Resort Properties Specialist

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• Stunning NW architecture • 4 bedrooms, 4 baths • Five acre home site with sweeping Cascade Mountain views • Oversized 3-car garage, room on the property for shop, RV storage • Immaculate mature landscaping, grounds MLS¹201308171

7,ee cul-de-sac • Dream kitchen with large island & eating bar • Luxurious master suite • Separate in-law quarters on the main level • 5 bed, 5.5 bath, 5010 SF MLS¹201306569

Call Robin Yeakel, Broker, CRS ( 541-408-0406 Resort Properties Specialist

The Norma DuBois and Julie Moe Team, Brokers 541-312-5151 ( www. TeamNormaAndJulie.com

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• Master on main looks out to Mt. Jefferson; large office also on main •Recroom addition/guestquartersbySunForestConstruction • 4894 SF, 4 true bedroomsplusmulti-use room, 3-car garage • Expansive deck with hot tub • Gorgeous curb appeal MLS¹201307593

Deb Tebbs, Broker/President( 541-419-455P debtebbsgroup@ bendluxuryhomes.comf www.debtebbsgroup.com I

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1625 NW Overlook Drive

• New construction on level

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1+ acre lot

• Stunning Northwest Style

• Private riverfront setting - 10 acres • 5544 SF custom home 4 bed,

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• 3-car garage and detached 2220 SF shop/garage • Patios, decks, landscaped to enjoy the outdoor living • Fly fish or float from your front yard! MLS¹201302701

Sandy Kohlmoos, Broker, CRS, GRI] 541-408-4309

laura.blossey@sothebysrealty.com

www.bestbendhomes.com

Call Pam Mayo-Phillips, Principal Broker 541-480-1513 ( www.desertvalleygroup.com

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3 bath • Quality finishes - hardwood floors, granite countertops,

w/high end finishes • Open great room floor plan, comfortable yet elegant • Master 8i den on main level, 3 additional bedrooms up • Oversized 3-car garage & 3 outdoor living areas • Gated community w/tennis courts, clubhouse & trails MLS¹ 201303701

Laura Blossey, Broker [ 949-887-4377

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• 5712 SF, 0.82 acreswith full Cascade Mtn views • 5 en suite bedrooms+ 2 addl. half baths (2beds upstairs, 3 down) • 5-car garage, gear room w/lockers, vault, dog bath, deluxe mudroom • Sunny artist studio with Frenchdoorsto the terrace • A/V -game room, inspiring views from the office • 2 story library in turret, open floor plan, gourmetkitchen

Call Laura Blossey, Broker( 949-887-4377 laura.blossey©sothebysrealty.com

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20240 RockCanyon Road • 4 beds,4.5 baths,4891 SF •Located in DeschutesRiver Ranchwith 390 acresof protected open space • Private river access •M ainhouseboastsNW Rancharchitecture& OldW orldwarmth • Features barn,guest quarters, corral, outdoor arena, shop, RV area andadditional garage • Fully fenced &cross-fenced; water feature, hot tub MLS¹201310511

PRONGHORN IS BOOMING • Don't let this opportunity pass you by to becomea part of the most

Deb Tebbs, Broker/President (541-419-4553 debtebbsgroup@bendluxuryhomes.com(www.debtebbsgroup.com

Call Kelly Horton, Broker/Owner( 541-508-9163

Call Brian Ladd, Principal Broker, Director of Lot Sales

kelly©bendluxuryhomes.com

541-408-3912 ( brian©bendpropertysource.com

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luxurious resort in Central Oregon • This home inc udesretractab e windowsin the kitchenandfamily room whichincorporates the outdoor living space •Ithasanelevatortotakeyouto thetwo exquisitemasterbedrooms on the secondlevel • Casita for your guestsandall the amenities. • Price includesPronghom'sPremier Membershipdeposit of $115,000

vvvvvv.crossvvaterriverretreat.com

MLS¹201303439.

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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

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THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY NOVEMBER 23 2013 E7

To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809

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Gem in the Rough) Three Rivers South( $149,900

Sunstone Solar Townhomes ~ $165,000

• 55149 Forest Lane • 3 bed, 2 bath, 1224 SF • Very comfortable home for weekend getaways or full time living in the woods • Desirable development • Close to the Big Deschutes MLS¹201206233

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Call Greg Barnwell, Broker l 541-848-7222 l

• ALL NEW interior flooring • Fresh new interior paint • Shows AWESOME! • Central air for those HOTdays • Gas fireplace for cold days • 3 bdrms, 2.5 baths, 1461 SF • Great location! WON'T LAST! MLS¹201307187

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Call Melanie Maitre, Broker ABR, SRES, ePRO

www.gregsellscentraloregon.corn

541-480-4186 l melanie©melaniemaitre.com

Development Property ~ $242,500 r'

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• Great home in Tollgate in Sisters, OR • 3 bedroom, 1466SFsingle level home • New roof, newI!oonng, new windows, large great room, new septic on wonderful lot that backs to National Forest • Community offers clubhouse,pool, basketball courts &endlesstrails MLS¹201304627

II II

Call Mary Stratton, Broker l 541-419-6340

Call Shelly Swanaon, Brokerl 541-408-0086

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69322 Hackamore ( $236,500

Sparkling Clean!!! SE side of Bend( $194,500

• Uniquetownhomeoffering passive solar design • Contemporary style with private sun deckandfencedbackyard • Openkitchenandiving areawith south facing orientation • Hardwood ffoorsandvaulted ceilings • 3bd, 3 ba,doubecar atached garagewithspaciousdriveway • Near Costco,Medicaandschools

IF

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Whispering Pines! ~ $299,000

• Attention investors!

•4 bed/3bath2394SF

• Single level home in the Old Mill District • RV garage • .58 acre. Great opportunity to divide into multiple lots! 61404 Duncan Lane MLS¹ 201308731

• Large entertainmentareadownstairs

• 2.5 acres fenced &crossfenced • 10x20storageshed& loafing shed • ConcreteRVpad&alargedriveway • Bring thehorsesor4-Hprojects MLS¹201309381

Call Rod Hatchell, Broker l 541-728-8812

Carmen Ann Cook, Licensed Oregon Brokerl 541-480-6491 carmsellsOatt.net

17940 Parkway Lane ( $350,000

Redmond ~ $312,500

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19836 Copernicus Ave, Bend ( $345,000 •3bed,2.5 bath,fabulousmove-in ready home with office on main • Open kitchen,dining & living room looking out to thenicey landscaped backyard • Upstairs is mastersuite w/vaulted ceiling & largebathroomw/double sinks, soakingtub, shower &dream closet. • 2 additional bedrooms upconnecting to a full bath MLS¹201308648

• Majestic Ridge home w/4 bed, 2 ba & 3-car garage • Mostly main level living • 4th bed & bonus on 2nd floor I• I • Move-in ready! • Amenities include A/C, granite

~

counters, mountain views

MLS¹201306568

rodhatchell@gmail.com

Call CJ Neumannl 541-410-3710 or Lisa Lamberto l 541-610-9697 www.CJLisa.com

Call Chris Sperry, Principal Broker l 541-749-8479

20957 Marsh Orchard Ct. ( $369,900

Extraordinary & Private in NW Bend( $385,000

972 SE Briarwood Ctf $407,000

• Permitted GP Building w/llvlng

• Better than new ... updated throughout • Great room floor plan, light &

20957 MarshOrchid Ct. • Tango in Termngo! • Bright, 2276 SF, 3 Ldrm, 2.5 bath contemporary home • Backing to the canal is move-in ready • Master on the main, soaring ceilings throughout, dedicated huge home office, open kitchen with eat-ln area • Upstairs bonus area, large second 8r 3rd bdrms ¹i 3-car garage ' All combine to make this home simply irresistible

quarter/loft • Bath, laundry area, septic, well & pumphouse • RV hookups inside 8i out, 100 amp g~ »~7/Tis breaker in shop ":-; Pi'," ;:.'"', i Great location between Sisters & Bend ~ Build your dream home while you ~ ',a'~ live in loft area or your RV ' MLS¹201105898

christgichrissperry.com www.chrissperry.com

• Beautiful cul-de-sac homein desirable, establishedTangewood • Large mastew/gas r Iireplace Bispa-like ensuite w/soakingtub, doublevanities &shower • Gourmetkitchenw/granite countertops, argeeatingbarand open

bright • Large family room, 2 gas fireplaces • Easymaintenance landscaping • 5.12 beautifully treed acres

IR

to great roomwith fireplace 8ibuilt-ins

• Main floor den w/french doors • Triple tandem garage RVparking • Private backyard w/large paverpatio

• 3b edrooms 2 5 baths 2168SF MLS¹201304361

Call Joanne McKee, Broker l 541-480-5159

Call Chris Sulak, Broker l 541-350-6164

The Norma DuBois and Julie Moe Team, Brokers

chrissulak©bendbroadband.com

Call Natalie Vandenborn, Broker l 541-508-9581

www.joanne@joannemckee.com

541-312-5151 l www TeamNormaAndJulie.com

Nvandenborn©gmail.com

Peaceful Sunriver Location ~ $439,900

2 Levels, 2 living Quarters

River Rim ) $469,900

SW Chinook Drive, Terrebonne ~ $474,500

• 17613 (¹1 0) Sparks Lane,Sunriver • 4 bed/2.5 bath, 2385SF • Deckson levelsand lotsofpaved parking area • Charming great room design • Lava rock fireplace, vaulted wood

• Great NE neighborhood • 4 bedrooms, 2baths& 2 half-baths • 4223 SF, 2-car garage& shop area • .25acre lot • Private setting This is amustsee!

ceiling •ClosetoSHARC aquatic Bithe river

Call Greg Barnwell, Broker l 541-848-7222

Call Jordan Haase-Grandlund, Principal Broker

www.gregsellscentraloregon.com

541-420-1559 l www.JordanHaase.com

3134 NW Fairway Heights

Westside Charmer ( $529,900

• Custom home w/ lovely finishes

• Open floor plan w/spaciouskitchen & great rm, living, & main level master suite

• 3 car garage w/shop &storage!

II .

• Views of RiversEdgeFairway & mtns • Private decking & manufactured gardens

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: *

MLS¹201308552 $524,900

• Ideal home for entertaining

• 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath • 3-car garage, large lot • Beautifully appointed • Hot tub, shed, water

withcaptivating viewsofthe canyon & river below — • Large picture windows take advantage of magnificent landscape from every room • 6.32 acres

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feature

• CentraI Vacuum, A/C

• 2640 SF, 4 bed, 3 bath • Triple car garage & RV parking MLS¹201306622

60981 Creekstone Loop MLS¹201308339

Call Stephanie Ruiz, Broker l 541-948-5196

Call Chris Sperry, Principal Broker l 541-749-8479

stephaniewilsonruiz©yahoo.com

chris@chrissperry.com www.chrissperry.com

Fantastic Setting in Widgi Creek( $799,000

60754 Golf Village Loop, Bend

• Beautiful 3/4 acre pine treed lot • 3400 SF, 3-car garage • Hugebonus/famil y room • Formal living lk dining, 3 fireplaces • One owner home w/lots of extras • Wonderful decking, private backyard w/water feature • Very popular location! • 1684 NW City View

Close to Town Country Living ) $815,000 • 4 bed, 3 bath, 3381 SF • 10 irrigated acres w/wheel line • Cascade views • Shop1-2 car garage+ office

". ' • Lovely setting with mature

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trees

• Split-level floor plan captures the sunlight • Redwood ceiling accents • Incredible 8th fairway view • 3 bedroom, 3.5 baths, 3203 SF MLS¹201308715

4

• Shop 2 - 5 car garage • 2 porlcls MLS¹201308637

Carmen Ann Cook, Licensed Oregon Brokerl 541-480-6491 carmsells@att.net

Call Mary Stratton, Broker l 541-419-6340

The Norma DuBois and Julie Moe Team, Brokers 541-312-5151l www TeamNormaAndJulie.com

Call Bobby Lockrem, Broker l 541-480-2356

maryselhms©gmail.com

1265 NW Remarkable Dr. ( $829,900

New Home in Tetherow! ~ $869,000

Deschutes River View Property ~ $897,000

19 Acre Ranchw/Full & Peak Mtn. Views / $1,195,000

• RemarkablAddres e s... RemarkableView • 3524SF ,4bed, 3bathhomesits ontop of the worldwitha180degreeviewoi the CentralOregonHighDesert • Travertineentry leadsupto expansiveviews • Kitchenw/cherrycabinetry &aformal diningarea • Outsideiswrap-aroundfront deck • Master onmainlevel with soakertub • Downstairsareawith bararea • 3-cargarage,fencedbackyardw/hottub

River views fromnearly every room Rich-tonedoakhardwoodfoors Customdistressedkitchencabinetry Slab granitecounters Pro-quality SS appliances Montana stonefireplace Main house- 3bds, 2.5ba, 2450SF Guestquarters- 2bds, I bath, 788SF MLS¹201301856

• 3,078 SF., 3-car garage I

blockrem©gmail.com

• Backs to 12th fairw ay wl private and treed yard

• Includes full membership to Tetherow

• December completion

• Single leve iving, 3 bed,3full bath • Carriagehouse,1bed,1bath, great room

• 1000 SF heatedshopw/room for RV • 4-stall barn w/heated tack8i wash

bay • 200 x 200 outdoorarena • 6.5 acreswater rights w/automated irrigation, MLS¹201309281

Call Chris Sulak, Broker l 541-350-6164

Call Brian Ladd, Brokerl 541-408-3912

Call Ken Renner, Principal Broker l 541-280-5352

Call Carol Osgood,Broker l 541-419-0843 or

chrissulak@bendbroadband.com

www.bendpropertysource.com• briantgbendpropertysource.com

ken.renner©sothebysrealty.com

Korren Bower, Broker www.carolosgood.com

L ocated on M i r r o r Pond! ( $1,299,000 • 4 bedr oo m, 2 b a t h

• Stone's throw from downtown Bend • Elegant finishes, 5 bedrooms, 4 baths • Remodeled down to studs in 2006

IIII

• 2186 SF on 2+ acres • Immaculate and close-in

• 10 NW Drake Rd. • MLS¹201306173 Call for a Personal Tour!

• C all Kelly to see this great hom e ! MLS¹201 30681 5 Call Kelly Horton, Broker l 541-508-9163

Call Jodi Kearney, Broker l 541-693-4019

kelly©bendluxuryhomes.com

jodirebroker©hotmail.com

• •

Extraordinary Living Magazine Winter Edition Now Available on Stands or online at KTVZ.com

• Soon to be completed at the Ridge at Eagle Crest • 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath with 2 living areas, 2475 SF • Views of fairway from great room, deck and master

• Huge garage - room for all the toys, bikes, etc. • Close to pool, sports center and golf MLS¹201303546

Call Myra Girod, Broker l 541-815-2400 or Pam Bronson, Broker l 541-788-6767 myra.pamteam@cascadesir.com

'

• 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 3800 SF • Formal living 8t family room • Large office with French doors • Formal dining, awesome kitchen • 3-car garage • .64 acre lot MLS¹201307742 Call Natalka Palmer, Principal Broker natalkapalmer@gmail.com

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8 Quail - Sunriver ~ $524,000

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• Master on Main Level • Hardwood • SS Appliances • 2 decks, patio, hot tub ftc rental htstory • MLS¹201303390

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Call Greg Barnwell, Broker l 541-848-7222

ken.renner@sothebysrealty.com

www.gregsellscentraloregon.com

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• Dramatic foyer & living area • Exquisite master suite • 3346 SF • Beamed cathedral ceilings & loft • 4 bedrooms,2full,2 halfbaths • Beautiful extensive decks • Top end hot tub • 26 Siskin Lane MLS¹201304990

Call Ken Renner, Principal Broker l 541-280-5352

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Stone s Throw to Rlver ( $539,900

• Complete Remodel

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E8 SATURDAY NOVEMBER 23 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

"Lit " i tle Red Corvette"

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lUlonaco Dynasty 2004 - LOADED.i solid Features includse4-dr surface counter, d e convection micro, ld ry, built-in washer ramic tile floor, TU,OUD, liite dish, air leveling, pass-through tray, and a king size be - All for only $149,000 541-000-000

Corvett Convertible

Coupe, 350, auto with 732 miles, gets 26-24 mpg. Add lots more description andinteresting facts for $99! Lookhow muchfun a girl could have n a sweetcarlike this! $12,500 54T -000-000

R~, motorc~c boat, or airplane

up to g 2 mo to 40 words of t

length with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace — DELIVERED to over 30,000 households. • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.


THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY NOVEMBER 23 2013 E9

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

'

$136,900 I Move In Ready

$619,000 I The Perfect Awbrey Park Home

• 3 bed, 2 bath, 1094SF • New carpetthroughout • New vinyl kitchen & dining • Exterior paint 201 2 • Interior paint 201 3 • Room ri -I for RV

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54 1 - 4 1 0 - 7 4 3 4

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541 -3 9 0 - 5 2 8 6

$739,000 I Versatile Home On Acreage

MI CHELLE WHITE, BROKER

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,

2 8 0 . 1 5 4 3 LO RI SCHNERINGER, BROKER

$500,000 1RidgeAt Eagle Crest

• 3 bed, 2 bath, 1418SF • New carpet • Large kitchen island • Separated mastersuite • 36X14 Gated RV

• MLS¹ 201305597

Smith Rock views

54 1

$1 77,999 I Northwest Redmond

• g/g AC lot

'

• Canyon RimVilage • 3 bed, 2.5 bath homeplus apartment • 1 bed, 1 bathapt. rents for $550/mo • Corner lot, 0.22 AC, alley • Near park

!

• 3 bed, 2 bath • Slab quartz counter tops • 2097 SF • Old growth iun!pers

• Family room &bonus room • 3 car garage &a barn • Cascade mtn &

BA RBARA MYERS, BROKER

Ivy Avenue, Redmond $299,000 I 1535 NW

54 1 - 7 7 1 -1 1 68 ERIC ANDREWS, BROKER

$339,900 I The Ridge At Eagle Crest

• 3690SF,4 bed & 2.5 bath • 15.5 AC with irrigation

54 1 - 4 8 0 - 7 1 8 3

• Open floor plan • Fully fencedacre • Circular driveway • Large garage • Park like setting • MLS¹ 201306933

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easy access to Bend

$185,000 I A Great Home In Lapine!

:

• 4730 SF of4.32 AC • 6 bed, 5 bath • Fantastic cascademtn views • 2 master suites

Redmond,

ER ICANDREWS, BROKER

brand new !

Earv

54 1 - 7 7 1 - 1 16 8

• Open floor plan • All appliancesincluded • Community pool & park " ' I Jw ai [ w • Master opensto covered x:mnu ana evtr ~ pa tio

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54 1 - 7 7 1 -1 1 68 ERIC ANDREWS, BROKER

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fenced lot • Gorgeous openfloor plan

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$232,500 I Great Neighborhood

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„I, ~jh", 0.46 AC '.-'~Ajy4't

54 1 - 7 7 1 - 1 1 68 ERIC ANDREWS, BROKER

• Open floor plan • Fresh paint • Granite counters • Two balconies • Detached garage

$564,000 I Huge Price Reduction

• 2910 SF • Single level living • Stunning kitchen • Two mastersuites

!

$475,000 I River Front Condo, Downtown Bend

!

$615,000 I 21420 Belknap Drive

• 3618 SF • Main level master • Giant triple car garage • Huge bonusroom+ loft • Brazilian tea k decks • City lights views

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• Cascade 8 Smith Rock views •Exceptionalsecondhome • 2 master suites • 2 bed with a bonus room • Very private

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parking • MLS¹ 201308363

541 - 4 8 0 - 9 8 8 3

541 -48 0 - 7 1 83 BARBARA MYERS, BROKER

AUDREY COOK, BROKER

54 1 -4 1 0 - 7 4 3 4

541-946-3371

CH ERYL TANLER, BROKER

$400,000 118 Modoc, Sunriver

$459,900 1 Between Bend 8 Redmond

• 3 master suites • Extensive remodelin 2011 • 1902 SF owneroccupied or vacation rental • Close to all Sunriver

hasto

• Delightful 4.85 AC property • Single level open concept home —u • Fenced for animals • 3.6 AC of COI, with pond

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offer

541 -41 0- 8 0 8 4

SU SAN PITARRO, BROKER

541-946-3371 $469,000 I Tumalo

$268,000 I 55932 Black Duck Road

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54 1 - 4 1 0 - 1 2 0 0

• Small acreage in Tumalo with mountain views • Horse property, ride to

• Single level1736SFhome on 5 ACbackingVandervert • Open floor plan,vaulted ceilings, quality finishes • Comm boat ramp • Closeto Sunriver Resort

wl » »

BI LL KAMMERER, BROKER

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541-946-3371

$149,900 I 655 SW 23rd Street, Redmond

$150r000 I Possible Owner Carry Contract

• 3 bed, 2 bath • Attached finisheddouble

garage

541 -48 0 . 9 8 8 3 • 7 AC with Cascade mountain views • Borders BLM on 2 sides • 1974 SF manufactured home with 2 bed & 2 bath • Barn, well, chicken coop 8 more • Gated property & private

$449,500 I SingleLevel, Huge Shop

I,/:

AU DREY COOK, BROKER

54 1 - 3 9 0

$175,000 I Ideal Professional Office

GAIL ROGERS, BROKER

971 - 2 2 1 - 8 8 6 1

LA URA GIBONS, BROKER

PE TE RENCHER, BROKER

• Golfing community • Single levelwith bonus room • 1850SF,3 bed,2 bath i,!»!»!„r.,......„„

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• RVspace • Backs to

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SE CILY LUSE, BROKER

$180,000 I Best Buy In Woodriver Village • RV & boatparking • Close to DeschutesRiver, Farewell BendPark&Old Mil • 2 storagesheds, garage/shop Good

roping arena

sense home

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• 40X52 4 stall barn

DEE BAKER, BROKER

541- 7 2 8 . 4 4 9 9

AARON BALLWEBER, BROKER

541 -48 0 . 9 8 8 3

$159,000 I Clean As A Whistle

• Professionally managed • I 00% tenant occupied

Ita 541 -48 0 - 7 7 7 7

AU DREY COOK, BROKER

I

541 -4 8 0 . 7 7 7 7

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DI ANA BARKER, BROKER

541 - 4 1 0 - 1 20 0

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BILL KAMMERER, BROKER

$30,000 I Lots Available In Madras

• 3 bed, 2 bath • New cedarprivacyfencing • Cozy updatedinsulation • Family room &large garage • Established landscaping IjEzNVfa, • All met>culously maintained

large shop

541 -4 8 0 . 9 8 8 3

• 4.65 AC parcelin NEBend with 1836 SFmanufactured home • Several outbuildings & mtn views • 1.5 AC of COI irrig. 8 sprinklers

• CRR golf &

recreation

BOB AHERN, BROKER

$225,000 I 64004 Deschutes Market Road

$229,000 I Large yard In NW Redmond

• 6.39 AC, 3ACirrigated • Zoned for 2 AC lots • 5 stall barn, 60 FTround pen • Great mountain views •210X105 arena

541 - 9 7 7 - 1 8 5 2 CH RISTIN HUNTER, BROKER & TONY LEVISON, BROKER5 41-306 - 0 4 7 9

541 -42 0 . 3 8 9 1

• Rare rim lot with river view • Almost 6 AC • Private well drilled • Cap 8 full septic approved • Area

$389,900 I Ranch Home, Barn, Shop

4-

AU DREY COOK, BROKER

$229,000 I Gorge View Homesite

• New on themarket in SW Redmond Completely refurbished • 1279 SF,3 bed, 2 bath • Newsinks, counters, lights flooring, sprinklers

541-815-9 446 JANELLE CHRISTENSEN, BROKER

HUNTER L EVISON GROUP

541 -6 3 9 - 6 3 0 7

• 15 0X285

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$310,000 I Great Investment Opportunity

• Midtown location • Two houses on one tax lot

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HE ATHER CHESBRO, BROKER

box

541 -97 7 - 7 7 5 6

• River CanyonEstates • Mountain views • Large fencedbackyard • Great neighborhood amenities

• One level2052 SF,ranch house on39.10 AC • Great room floor plan • 2 master suites

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$259,000 I 61168 Foxglove loop

$399,000 I Ranch House, Barn, Arena

• Move in ready • Fantastic neighborhood • RV area 8storageshed • Close to parks, trails, restaurants,

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• 4 bedroom &office • Close distanceto Old Mill & river trails • Large, private backyard against canal

&

5th tee

Andrea Phelps 541-408-4770

0 0 9 8 MI KE EVERIDGE, BROKER

I

s260,000 I Come See The Perfect Home!

$265,000 I Greens At Redmond

Patty Dempsey 541-480-5432

$425,000 I Perfect Location!

• Commercial useapproved • 5 car parking • Updated interior • Low downpayment & financing available • Vacant & I readyto move in

54 1 - 4 2 0 - 3 4 2 3

Cleme Rinehart 541-480-2100

• 1920SF homeon.72AC lot •2500SFshop/garage/studio • High endfinishes • Paver entrance &patios • In town, minutes from t4' shopping & medical

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• Well maintained • Corner lot • 2 RVareas • MLS¹ 201310217

541 -6 0 4 - 1 64 9

g» » g » » g»»»»g • 11.80 AC with 5 AC of irrigation

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DI ANA BARKER, BROKER

541 -2 3 3 . 8 9 9 3

• Close to downtown • Approvedfor SFR,duplex or manufacturedhome • Take one orfour

NE SSA SEGOVIANO, BROKER

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E10 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

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MORRIS REAL ESTATE

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Independently Owned and Operated

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' 10,776 sq.ft. • 7 bedroom,7.5 bath • Bachelor to Jeffersonviews

• MLS 201106412

STEVEPAYER, BROKER, GRI

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20.13 ACRES I $995,000

CASAMARIPOSAI $3,990,000 MEGANPOWER BROKER,GRI, CDPE 541.610.7318

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• New construction 1743 sq.ft • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath • Pental Quartz island,hardwoodfloors • 2466 NW Crossing Drive

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VIRGINIAROSS, BRO KER,ABRCRS,Gll, ECOBROKER,P RE VIEWS 541.480.7501

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SEBENDI $825,000

• 4055 sq.ft. home • 5 bedroom, 3 bath • 2 ponds, barn, corrals

SUECONRAD BROKER, CRS

541-480-2966 • MLS 201305200

541-480-6621

SUNRISE VILULGE I $670,000 3705 sq.ft. KARINJOHNSON, • Redmodeled • 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath BROKER • Office 541-639-6140 • MLS 201306633

SUSAN AGLI, BROKER , ABR, ALHS 8SRES 541-408.3773

• 4072 sq.ft. • 5 bedroom, 3.5 bath • 20 acres with views • MLS 201301102

LISACAMPBELL BRpKER '

17.78 ACRE ESTATEI $798,500 ' 3688 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom,3.5 bath • Cascade Mountain views

541 41g.hgpp • MLS 201310073

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A4~ 20 ACRES IN SISTERS I 5749,500 • 2272 sq.h. farmhouse • 3 bedroom, 2 bath

BECKYBRUNOC BRpKER '

AWBREYBUTTEI $74g Mp SHELLY HUMMEII

• Breathtakinq Cascade views

541.35 p.4772 • MLS 201307141

BRO KER,CR S,GR I, CHM E 541.383.4361

• 3102 sq.ft. craftsman home • 3 bedroom, 3 bath • .72acre level woodedlot

• MLS 201310355

SISTERS I $625,000

TUMALO HOME/VIEWS! I 5624,900

• 3000 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom, 4 bath • I.03 acres, auesthouse,greenhouse

• MLS 201309672

DANAMILLER, PRINCIPAL BROKER ABR,AHWD 541-408.1468

• 4 bedroom,3.5 bath, 2606 sq.ft. • 6.4 acres • HuaeCascade M ount ainviews

• MlS 201307561

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SHEVLINRIDGE I $477,000 ' 3353 sq.ft. • 4 bedroom, 3 bath

SCOlTHUGGIN, BROKER, GRI

• Oversized 3car tandem garage

541-322-1500 • MLS 201303727

WESTHILLSI $475,000 JOHN SNIPPEN,BROKER, MBA,ABR , CRS,GRI 541.312.7273 541-948-9090

' 3535 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom, 3bath • .44acre landscapedlot • MLS 201306398

MADRAS I $415,QOQ

ELKHORNRIDGEI $385,QQP

COREY CHARON PE • Commercial zoning BROKER • Development potential 541-280-5512 ' MLS 201309823

MICHELL ETISDEl PC, BROKER, ABR, E-PRO 541-390-3490

' 2245 sq.ft, home • 4 bedroom, 3 bath • Landscaped,fencedyard

• MLS 201308088

8

lESTE RFRIEDMANPC, BROKER,ABR, CSP,EPRO, STAR. 541-330-8491

VALLEYVIEW I $374,900 ' 3540 sq 8 • 4 bedroom, 3 bath

• Ochace,Pawe Butte8SmithRockviews

' MlS 201308306

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NW BEND I $359,000 MARK YALCESCHINI P C, BROKER , CRS, GRI 541-383-4364

• 2150 sq.ft. new construction

• 4 bedroom,2.5 bath • Granite, tile, hardwood • MLS 201308189

ODElTE ADAIR BROKER 5TA R

541.815.4786

QUAIL CROSING S I $354,900 • 2103 sq.ff. • 4 bedroorn, 3 bath • .21acre lot • MLS 201308461

ASPENRIM I $344,900

LAVA RIDGES I $329,QQQ

' 2323 sq.ft, homebuilt in 2011 • 4 bedroom,2.5 bath • Fenced 8 landscaped yard 541-977-5811 • MLS 201310373

• 2456 sq.ft, JANESTRELL BROKER, ABR,GRI '4 bedroom,2.5 bath • Hardwood floors stone8,tlle 541-948.7998 • MLS 201310214

MAlT ROBINO SN BROKER

BROKEN TOPLOT I $320,000 DAVIDGRMORE, BROKER

• .65 acre culcie-saclot • Cascade Mountain views • 13th Hole 8 Lakeviews

541-312.7271 • MlS 201310090

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• 1846 sq.ft., 4.79 acres • 3 bedroom 2 bath • Barn, 2 stafs, next to BLM land

541-588-0687 • MLS 201309898

SUNRIVER I $279 900 ROSEMARYGOPDWIN, BROKER , CERTIFIED • EGOTITAOR 541.706.1897

' 1366 sq.ft., furnishedhome • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • .26acre lot

' MLS 201305726

BEND DUPLEX I $27g QQQ JUDYMEYERS, BROKER, GRI,CRS SRES 541-480-'I 922 '

' 1000 sq.h. units ' 2 bedroom,2 batheach

1,36 ACRE SIN LAPINEI 5274,500 SHERR YPERRIGAN, ' 1731 sq.ft. 3 bedroom • Open cathtIeral qreat room BROKER

' MLS 201309572

541-410.4938

• Convenlent mld town locabon

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• Insulated 3-bay shop

• MLS 201306446

CHEMULT I $239,500 ROOKIEDICKENS, BROKER,GRI, CRS,ABR 541 815.0436

• Turn-key business opportunity • 2 bedroom, 2 bath living quarters a HWY 97 frontaqe

• MLS 201203037

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NE BEND I $220,000 JIM 8,ROXANNE • 1488 sq.ft. single leve CHENEY, BR OKERS ' 3 bedroom, 2 bath

541.3gp.4p5p • Convenient location 541.3gp.4p3p • MLS 201309095

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NE BEND I $209,000 BRpKER

• 3 bedroom, bd 2 2bbath h

541-948-5880

• MLS 201309992

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• .24acre cul-de-saclot

JENBOWEN, BRpKERGRI'

SEBEND I $209,000 ' 1044 sq ft

• 3 bedroom, I both Mature landscapinon g .5acre lot gmI IIK• IIQ •' MLS 201310194 541.28p.2147

NE BEND ACREAGE I $195,000 LYNNE CONNELLEY ' 11.8 acres • Powell Butte mountain views BROKER , CRS • CUP in place 541-408-6720 • MLS 201305446

NE BEND I $179,000 MARGODE GRAY, BROKER,ABR, CRS 541-480.7355

• 1108 sq.ft. • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • 15 acrecu desac lot

• MLS 201310233

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LA PINE I $175,00Q DEBBIE HERSHEY, • 1620 sq.ft. manufactured BROKER, CRS,GRI ' 3 bedroom,2 bath • 3,99 acres 541.420.5170 • MLS 201307424

SEBEND I $134,900 PATPALAZZI, BROKER

• 1464 sq.ft. manufactured • 3 bedroom, 2 bath • .52acre lot

541-771.6996 • MLS 201309914

POWELL BUTTEI $130,000 JULIABUCKIAHD, BROKER , ABR, ALHS, CRS, GRI 541.719-8444

• II acres

• CascadeILOchoco views • Easy ownerfinancing

• MLS 201309738

FOR LEASE I $25/sq.F8. PAULAVANVLECK ' Retail pad site • Excellent access &visibility BROKER

COMM ERCIALRUILBINGI 51,80/sf/menth PAULAVANVLECK, • Excel ent visibility • 2700 sq.ft. BROKER

541-280-7774 • MLS 201307555

541-280.7774 • MLS 201310084

• Build to suit

• Bank, credit union or fast food


ON PAGES 3&4. COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2013 •

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::hours:

contact us:

Place an ad: 541-385-5809

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Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

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Subscribe or manage your subscription

24-hour message line: 541-383-2371

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I I e t f n: Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows

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CASH for dressers, dead washers/dryers 541-420-5640

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208

210

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241

246

Pets & Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

Coins & Stamps

Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all volunteer, non-profit rescue, for feral cat spay/ neuter. Cans for Cats t railer at B end P et Express East, across from Costco; or donate Mon-Fri at Smith Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or at CRAFT in Tumalo. Call for Ig. quantity pickup, 541-389-8420. www.craftcats.org

Labrador Pups, AKC Chocolate & Yellow. Hips OFA guaranteed. $300-$400.

Bicycles & Accessories

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

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800 rds 7.62x39+ ammo box. $250; 6 AK mags, $15 ea. Must sell, surgery. 541-306-0166

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1 -541 -954-1 727 Visit our HUGE home decor Labradors AKC Chococonsignment store. late males, shots, New items wormed, health guaranarrive daily! tee, $500. 541-536-5385 930 SE Textron, www.welcomelabs.com Bend 541-318-1501 Maine Coon 8 wk, kit- www.redeuxbend.com tens, unique pets, no papers, 1 p olydactyl SOM E female, 1 male, $100 G ENERATE EXCITEMENT in your ea. obo. 541-389-0322 neighborhood! Plan a PUPPY SALE! Poodle / garage sale and don't Maltese females, forget to advertise in $200, males, $150. classified! Cash 541-546-7909. 541-385-5809. puppy 9 English Labrador, AKC Pomeranian NEED TO CANCEL r egistered, 6 wks , wks old, male, black YOUR AD? fur ball cute face. beautiful white, cham- little The Bulletin pion bloodlines, par- $350.541-480-3160 Classifieds has an ents hip 8 eye certified, Poodle pups, AKC.Toy "After Hours" Line $800. 503-551-3715 Also-7mo. M,$200; F, Call 541-383-2371 $250. 541-475-3889 24 hrs. to cancel Kittens! Fixed, shots, ID your ad! QueenslandHeelers chip, tested, m ore! Standard 8 Mini, $150 Sectional w/ottoman, by Many @ PetSmart on & up. 541-280-1537 Crandall, 1 year old, 11/23, also at rescue, www.rightwayranch.wor brown, excellent cond. 6 5480 7 8 th , B e n d , dpress.com Paid $1596; asking $500. Thurs/Sat/ Sun 1 - 5, 541-388-7382 541-389-8430; kitten Rodent issues? Free foster 5 4 1-815-7278 adult barn/ shop cats, fixed, shots, s o me www.craftcats.org. f riendly, some n o t . deliver. Lab Pups AKC,black & Will yellow, Master Hunter 541-389-8420 sired, performance pedi- FREE Russian B l ue gree, OFA cert hips 8 el- male cat, 3 yrs, micrGREAT SOFA bows, 541-771-2330 chipped and neutered, 9'x28 eh x 37 ed. www.kinnamanretnevers.com needs loving home, Tan, down feather prefers outside warm with foam for LABRADOR AKC black place. Iikes other anisupport. 3 Back pups born 8 - 18-13, mals. 541-330-8712. 8 3 seat loose $250. 541.508.0429 cushions. Very Siberian-Husky pups, comfy! $400 OBO AND Wolf-Husky pups,

541-504-5224

People Look for Information About Products and M ountain Bike, 1 5 Services Every Daythrough frame (small). Full The Bulletin Claeeiffeds suspension, Maverick $2.00 extra. s hock, S RA M X O Bend local pays CASH!! The Bulletin drivetrain 8 shifters, 9 for all firearms 8 SererngCentral Oregon srnte 1903 speed rear cassette, ammo. 541-526-0617 541-385-5809 34-11, Avid Juicy disc CASH!! Just bought a new boat? brakes. Well t a ken For Guns, Ammo & care of. $950. Sell your old one in the Reloading Supplies classifieds! Ask about our 541-788-6227. 541-408-6900. Super Seller rates! NOVARA hooded cylcling 541-385-5809 jacket, women's Ig, pink 8, Hungarian PA-63 9mm gray. Retail $99; sell $69, Mak with 59 rounds & worn 1 x. 541-815-2737 mil i t ary issue holster, • Crafts & Hobbies HELP YOUR AD stand out from the rest! Have the top line in bold print for only

3rd Holiday Faircoming to Sisters, at OutlawStationEShopping Center close to Ray's Food Place, Hwy 20. Open 11/29 -12/22 Mon.-Thur. 10-4, Fri. Sat. Sun. 10-6. Vendors wanted! 541-595-6967

AGATE HUNTERS Pollshers • Saws

282

Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend

541-385-5809

S at. 9-3 , 2 0 5 1 N W Moving Sale! Sat., 9-4 Cabot L a k e Ct., Too much to move! Mis-

h ousewares, kid s cellaneous items. Cooley clothes, toys, bikes, Rd. to High Standard to 20657 Beaumont Dr. Christmas decor.

** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your ga-

rage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES:

1055 SE BAYWOOD CT.

• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your

Friday, Nov. 22 • Saturday, Nov. 23 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

• 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"

MOVING SALE

$500. 541-388-3322

286

Sales Northeast Bend

Next Ad

Sales Other Areas5

Yorkie mix males, (2), $150 each. 541-771-2606

NOTICE

HANCOCK & MOORE SOFA Salmon/Coral c h enille fabric with diamond pattern. Traditional styling w ith loose pillow back, down-wrapped seat

Asn.

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

I

Twin size bed, fully adjustable, great shape used less than 6 mo. with spread and sham.$500.

541-526-0687 Yorkie puppy, adorable male, 3 months, AKC, Washer/Dryer set, Fisher brown/blk, initial shots, 8 Paykel, large top-load, $550. Sisters, $150. 541-647-2685

541-549-6703 210

212

Furniture & Appliances

Antiques & Collectibles

A1 Washers&Dryers

Antiques wanted: tools, furniture, marbles, beer cans, early B/W photography, Western items. 541-389-1578

$150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355

Ruger MKIII 22/45 Gold Lite; Ruger MKII 22, 6" SS. 541-390-8000.

Cash and carry.

Art, Jewelry & Furs

Proform Elliptical machine, good condition, $150. 541-388-0853

Ski Equipment • "Cold Killer" winter training pants, T i tl e 9 , women's med. tall. Retail

$99; selling for $69. Worn 1x, 541-815-2737

Ski racks 8 brackets by Subaru, new in box, $80. 541-678-5125

14 carrot white gold ladies wedding band with a bright polish finish, 1.66 c a rrot diamond Hearts and arrows round c ut, Sl -1 Clarity, F color. Appraised at $15,000. Very unique piece. Asking $9500. 541-281-7815

++

DE A DLIK~ES~

541-526-1332

Sererng Central Oregon srnte 1903

www.bendbulletin.com

541-480-1373.

Nordic Trac A2350. Presents beautifully. Hardly used. A perfect holiday gift. $350.00

541-408-0846

BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com

I

R uger G P 10 0 35 7 mag., SS, NIB, $500.

cushions, roll arms, skirt, two matching pillows a n d arm c overs. L i k e n ew condition. $1 500.

Remember to remove your Garage Sale signs USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! (nails, staples, etc.) Door-to-door selling with after your Sale event is over! THANKS! fast results! It's the easiest From The Bulletin YorkiePom & Pom-a-poo way in the world to sell. and your local utility puppies, 9 weeks 8 companies. The Bulletin Classified HEALTHY! $350 call/text 541-385-5809 The Bulletin 541-977-7773 (LOCAL)

Crowd control admittance numbers issued at 8:00 a.m. Friday PICK UP YOUR (Take 27th OR 15th Streets south to Reed GARAGE SALE KIT at Market Rd. go to Shadowwood entrance fo 1777 SW Chandler Tangiewood-furn north and follow fo Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Aufumnwood to Baywood Cf.) Glass-top dining room table with six chairs; ComSen ng Central 0 egon snre 1903 puter armoire'; Computer system complete; Walnut flat top buffet; Nice watercolor; Three large mirrors; Two large occasional chairs; FloMINI FARM ESTATE SALE ral small recliner; Silverplate set by Community HOUSE, BARN, 2 OUTBUILDINGS FULL! "Bird of Paradise" pattern; Unique TV cabinet; Leather 8 other recliners, trundle bed, oak rolltop Antique wood folding box; hunting knives; Wood & two other desks, rolling kitchen center, carving tools; Glass-top coffee table; Artist paint mid-century china cabinet & dining table, small brushes and more art supplies; Sextant; Pan furniture pieces, KitchenAid & lots nice kitchenFlute;Pots and Pans and more Pots and Pans; ware, Franciscan Apple dishes, Hummels, KitchenAid mixer (red); lots of electrical kitchen glassware & collectibles, electronics, vintage appliances cleaning supplies; Food items; Pet cameras & electronics, 2 freezers, radial arm Taxi-small dog; Electrical tools, hand tools and saw, Delta table sander 8 scroll saw, 3 chain nuts and bolts; Christmas tree and smaller saws, 7 ladders, 3 lawn mowers, 3 wheel barChristmas tree; Christmas decor; Rug sham- rows, John Deere Sabre riding mower, 2 yard pooer; 10 cu. ft. freezer; Trash compactor; set of carts, Sabon 3 HP compressor, power & hand four studded tires;225/60/R16; Modern folding tools of all kinds, cowboy boots, western clothladder; Step ladder; Down comforters; Electric ing & belts, loads of household, antique wagon queen blanket; Suitcases;AND OVER 300 wheels, horse collars, store clock, antique COOKBOOKS AND OTHER BOOKS!!! Sewing Schwinn bike, cast iron, pulleys, machinist cabitable; Nlce large bound rug. and, as always, net; outdoor & more, stained glass supplies. more and more! Handled by .... Fri;Sat., 9-4 ... numbersFri. 8 a.m. Deedy's Estate Sales Co. LLC 62950 Eagle Rd off Butler Market 541-419-4742 days • 54 f -382-5950 eves Attic Estates 8 Appraisals • 541-350-6822 M/M/Mr.deeedysestatesa/es.com www.atticestatesandappraisals.com

The Bulletin

Whoodle puppy, 16 wks, 3rd shot, wormed, just 1 male left! Reduced to $700. 541-410-1581 Yorkie 9-wk male, tail docked, dewclaws, $600. Can deliv. 541-792-0375 Yorkie female, perfect size (7 I bs ) for breeding. 4 years old.

242

Exercise Equipment

Proform Crosswalk 380 treadmill, like new, only 1 hour of usage! $275 obo.

Repair & Supplies

Sersng Centrai Oregon srnte f903

2005 Maverick ML7n

541-390-1713.

The Bulletin

Bob 8 Ginni(Virginia) Huesby

9+$ 0 2

208

$400 ea. 541-977-7019

Estate Sales

: Monday- Friday 7:30a.m. -5p.m.

Pets & Supplies

Country Christmas & COWGIRL CASH More. Fri. Nov. 22, 9-7 We buy Jewelry, Boots, 8 Sat., Nov. 23, 9-4. at Vintage Dresses & Smith Rock Community More. 924 Brooks St. Church, 8344 11th St., 541-678-5162 Terrebonne. Non perwww.getcowgirlcash.com ishable foods appreci- Blue Tick/Walker Cross ated for church food Good Hunting ParWanted: canopy that fits bank. 541-419-8637 ents. Ready to start 1980 Toyota long bed. 541-480-8469. training today, $250 Call 5 4 1 - 306-0412, each. Been wormed ask for Joel. 208 healthy, & eating solid food 541-815-6705 Pets 8 Supplies 203 Chihuahua male pups, Holiday Bazaar one short hair, 100; The Bulletin recom& Craft Shows one long hair $250. mends extra caution when purc h as- 541-213-9731 ... A B/G Deal ... ing products or ser- Chihuahua puppies, (2) VENDORS WANTED vices from out of the adorable male 8 female, for Craft Fair & Bazaar area. Sending cash, born 8/23, weaned 8 Dec. 7; 9-5 8 Dec. 8; checks, or credit in- ready! $250 ea or best 10-3. Booths: $30 ormation may b e offer. 541-410-8888 crafts / $50 commercial fsubjected to fraud. Accepting donations For more i nformaf or Rummage S a l e. tion about an adverDonate items through you may call Dec. 6. Receipts avail- tiser, the O r egon State able for donations. General's hif///////i rx TACK & EQUIPMENT, Attorney Office C o n sumer Chihuahua puppies, tea15% Consignment Protection hotline at cup, shots 8 dewormed, Let us sell your tack & 1-877-877-9392. $250. 541-420-4403 equip. For info call 541.548.6088 or kimChihuahua/Yorkie mix, The Bulletin berly.griffiths@orSen ng CentralOregon smre tggs 2 males, $150. egonstate.edu 541-771-2606

14698 SW P eninsula Dr. CRR, follow signs. GRIZWOLD Quilting table, materiChristmas Lights & als, supplies, houseOutdoor decorahold, misc. Fri./Sat. tions SALE! Some 1 1/228 23, 9-4 : 3 0 , NEW-still in boxes. Sun. 11/24 9-noon. Many strands of lights! Santa, reindeer, snowmen. What are you .Enchanting/light-up looking for? Christmas figures. SAT. Nov. 23 ONLY You'll find it in 9 a.m.-2 p.m. 1154 NW Redfield The Bulletin Classifieds

208

3rd Holiday Fair Coming to Sisters at Outlaw Station Shopping Center close to Ray's Food Place, BLUE NOSE PITBULL Hwy 20. Open11/29 PUPS, 4 F EMALES. thru 12/22, Mon. Shots, Vet Check-up, Thur., 10-4, Fri. Sat. call for deta i l s. Sun., 10-6. 541-876-5155 or Vendors wanted! 541-977-1705. Ask 541-595-6967 for Brad or Suzanne

280

Pets & Supplies

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Bed, queen, four post Reber's Farm Toy Sale! frame, Simmons firm, Each Sat. & Sun., 10-5 until Christmas, 4500 SE $175. 541-382-3479 Tillamook Lp., Prineville. FREEZERS: GE upright 541-447-7585 22 cu.ft., $450; 19 cu.ft. upright $325. The Bulletin reserves 541-948-9191 the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin Full couch and newspaper onto The loveseat, coffee table Bulletin Internet webwith glass inserts, 2 end tables and 2 table site. lamps. Asking $200. The Bulletin 541-526-0687 Serring Central Oregon srnee1903

We will be closed ThurSday, November 28'h RETAIL,CLASSIFIED 8 LEGAL NOTICE ADVERTISING

DEADLINES DAY Thursday 11-28 ........... Go! Magazine 11-29 ... Friday 11-29 ................ Saturday 11-30 ............ Sunday 12-1 ............... Monday 12-2 ..............

DEADLINE .......... Monday 11-25 Noon ..........Monday 11-25 5 pm ......... Tuesday 11-26 Noon ......... Tuesday 11-26 Noon .......... Tuesday 11-26 4 pm .. Wednesday 11-27 Noon

CLASSIFIED PRIVATE P ARTY DEAD L I N E S Thursday, Nov. 28th and Friday, Nov. 29th DeadlineisNoon Wednesday, Nov. 27th Classifieds • 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Circulation Telephone Service at 541-385-5800willbe open Thanksgiving Day from 6:30 am to10:30 am to helP With yaur haliday mOrning deliVery.

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F2 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

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AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

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476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Automotive Driveability Tech needed. We are an extremely busy automotiveshop in n e e d of a

Employment Opportunities

SGL

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AUTOMOTIVECARBONFIBERS

Monday • • . • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . Noon Mon. TOP-NOTCH EXPE- SGL-ACF in M o ses RIENCED Driveability Lake, WA is currently S tarting looking for motivated, Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Technician. wage is $30 per flat innovative, quality and hour plus ben- cost oriented, indeThursday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. rate efits. If you have the pendent team memproven skills and abil- bers who have integwe have a posi- rity and a p r ofound Friday. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. ity, tion available for you. interest in being an end replies to PO i ntegral part o f o u r Saturday RealEstate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. SBox 6676, Bend, OR team as we bring this world-changing prod97708 uct to fruition. Saturday • . • .. 3:00 pm Fri. Choir Director ELECTRICIAN / N ativity Luthe r a n INSTRUMENTATION Sunday.. • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Church seeks a part TECHNICIAN time choir d i rector, Place a photoin your private party ad foronly $15.00 perweek.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500 in total merchandise

OVER '500in total merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days.................................................$33.50 28 days.................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days .................................

(call for commercial line ad rates)

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PLEASENOTE:Checkyour ad for accuracythe first day it appears. Please call Us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday. 260

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O v e r 1 4 0 Columbia shirts, mens channels only $29.99 3X, three for$50 a month. Call Now! 541-279-9995. Triple savings! Need to get an $636.00 in Savings, Free upgrade to Gead in ASAP? nie & 2013 NFL SunYou can place it day ticket free!! Start online at: saving today! 1-800-259-5140 www.bendbulletin.com (PNDC) DISH T V Reta i ler. 541-385-5809 Starting at GRATE $19.99/month (for 12 FIREPLACE 30 ux16", $5.00 mos.) 6 High Speed 541-383-4231 I nternet starting a t $14.95/month (where GENERATE SOME available.) SAVE! Ask EXCITEMENT About SAME DAY InIN YOUR stallation! CALL Now! NEIGBORHOOD. 1-800-308-1 563 Plan a garage sale and (PNDC) don't forget to advertise in classified! 541-385-5809. Computers D irecTV -

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NOTICE TO ADVERTISER

Since September 29, 1991, advertising for used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been c ertified by th e O r egon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental Protection Ag e n cy (EPA) as having met smoke emission standards. A cer t i fied w oodstove may b e identified by its certification label, which is permanently attached to the stove. The Bulletin will no t k n owingly accept advertisi ng for the s ale o f uncertified woodstoves.

REMEMBER: If you have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend 541-382-3537

Redmond 541-923-0882 Pi 541-44T-TITE; or Craft Cats 541-389-8420.

Home Securi ty T HE B U LLETIN r e Hay, Grain & FeedJ System 2GIG quires computer adBrand new installed vertisers with multiple ALFALFA, 4th cutting, by AbbaJay inad schedules or those nice 8 clean; not too cludes 2 hour in1 cord dry, split Juniper, fine-stemmed. selling multiple sysMid-size stallation and one $200/cord. Multi-cord bales (800 Ib avg) tems/ software, to dis$200 / year basic security discounts, & ya cords close the name of the available. Immediate ton. 541-480-8264 Culver service. $325. business or the term (Valued at $850) delivery! 541-408-6193 First quality Orchard/Tim"dealer" in their ads. 541-382-3479 othy/Blue Grass mixed Private party advertisA-1 dry Juniper 8 hay, no rain, barn stored, ers are defined as Tamarack $185 split, or Patterson Ranch those who sell one iPhone cover, new in $165 rnds multi-cord $250/ton. Sisters, 541-549-3831 box. pd $25, sell $15. computer. discount, deliv. 541-279-9995. 541-977-4500 Looking for your Menspantsftsize46x32, Travel/Tickets All year Dependable three of them for $50 next employee? 541-279-9995. Firewood: Seasoned Place a Bulletin Advertise V A CATION Lodgepole, Split, Del. help wanted ad SPECIALS to 3 mil- Nespresso LeCube cof- Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 today and lion P acific N o rth- fee machine, exc. $195 for $365. Cash, Check reach over westerners! 29 daily obo. 541-598-6147 or Credit Card OK. 60,000 readers six Older Necchi Super Nova 541-420-3484. newspapers, each week. states. 25-word clas- automatic sewing masified $540 for a 3-day c hine i n c a binet w / C .O. m i xe d wo o d , Your classified ad split, Del. in will also a d. Ca l l (916) E clipse Model B L E 1semi-dry, 2 88-6019 o r vis i t serger, all attachments 5 Bend. 2 cords $250; 1 appear on cord for $135, Cash or www.pnna.com for the many extras. $300 obo. bendbulletin.com check. 541-312-4355. Pacific Nort h west 541-548-0913 which currently Daily Con n ection.*REDUCE YOUR receives over (PNDC) Pine & Juniper Split 1.5 million page CABLE BILL! Get an Sat e llite views every SIX DAY VACATION in All-Digital PROMPT D E LIVERY month at no Orlando, Flor i da! system installed for 54Z-389-9663 Regularly $1,175.00. FREE and programextra cost. s t a rting at Yours today for only ming Bulletin $24.99/mo. FREE $389.00! You SAVE Classifieds HD/DVR upgrade for 67 percent. P L US Get Results! One-week car rental new callers, SO CALL Gardening Supplieag Call 541-385-5809 included. Call for de- NOW (877)366-4508. • & E quipment or place your ad •

tails. 1-800-712-4838.

I

(PNDC)

on-line at bendbulletin.com BarkTurtsoil.com Call a Pro Whether you need a 341 Misc. Items PROMPT D E LIVERY fencefixed,hedges 541-389-9663 Horses & Equipment Bike trailer, new $130. trimmed or a house Foot & b ac k m asbuilt, you'll find Have Gravel, sager, $200. InverWill Travel! professional help in sion table, $60. Or Cinders, topsoil, fill Best Offer, top quality The Bulletin's "Call a material, etc. Driveway 5 2008 Thuro-Bilt 3H items! 541-385-5685 Service Professional" road work, excavation 5 slant Shilo, g reat septic systems. c ondition. $5 9 0 0 Brand new RV cover, Directory Abbas Construction obo. 541-317-0988. class C, box unopened. 541-385-5809 CCB¹78840 Tyvek 3 layer all cliCall 541-548-6812 mate. 23' to 26' $250 345 The Bulletin Offers OBO. (541) 410-2944 Livestock & Equipment Free Private Party Ads For newspaper Buying Diamonds • 3 lines - 3 days delivery, call the /Go/d for Cash • Private Party Only Pygmy femalenanny Circulation Dept. at Saxon's Fine Jewelers • Total of items advergoat, $30. 541-385-5800 541-389-6655 541-388-3535. tised must equal $200 To place an ad, call or Less BUYING 541-385-5809 FOR DETAILS or to Lionel/American Flyer or email PLACE AN AD, classifisdEtbsndbullstin.com trains, accessories. o (PNDC)

541-408-2191.

BUYING &

S E LLING

Call 541-385-5809 Fax 541-385-5802

The Bulletin

10 u Crtaftsman radial arm

265

Building Materials

Classic Stallion Boots Ladies size 7t/a,

seldom worn, Paid $1100; selling for $290.

541-480-1199

REDMOND Habitat RESTORE

Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW PRICES 1242 S. Hwy 97 541-548-1406

Open to the public.

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Missing: Chihuahua since 8/2 in Crooked River Ranch. Male, 8 yrs old, about 6 lbs. There has been a sighting of him with a man in his late 50's with black hair, mustache 8 glasses in CRR. $5000 c ash reward, no questions asked. 541-325-6629 or 503-805-3833

Mortgage Bankers Responsible for: consulting with clients about their curr ent a n d fut u r e needs to help them achieve their financial goals. A dvise and educate clients on the home buying process. Assist clie nts t hrough t h e

A SMW Group and SGL Group Joint Venture

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Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bulietin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website. Apartment Manager(s) wanted for small complex in Bend. Please fax resume to 541-388-6973

Loans 8 Mortgages WARNING

855-747-7784

(PNDC) LOCAL MONEYTWe buy

The Bulletin recom-

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to Promote your service

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Building/Contracting

Handyman

Truck driver: Home NOTICE: Oregon state Chester Elliot Constr. weekends and most law r equires anyone Home remodel/renovate Advertising Account Executive weekdays, flatbed, who con t racts for Creative designs Rewardingnew business development doubles, tar p ing. construction work to 541-420-2980 COT experience will be licensed with the CCB¹ 148659 The Bulletin is looking for a professional and get you in, but not a Construction Contracdriven Sales and Marketing person to help our Home Repairs, Remod must. Based out of tors Board (CCB). An customers grow their businesses with an Prineville. Make no active license els, Tile, Carpentry expanding list of broad-reach and targeted mistake this is hard means the contractor Finish work, M ainte products. This full-time position requires a is bonded & insured. nance. CCB¹168910 work, 8-14 hrs day. background in consultative sales, territory Verify the contractor's Phil, 541-279-0846. Only serious should management and aggressive prospecting skills. CCB li c ense at apply. Full time 8 Two years of m edia sales experience is LandscapingNard Care( www.hirealicensedpossible p a rt-time. preferable, but we will train the right candidate. contractor.com Medical card, DMV or call 503-378-4621. NOTICE: Oregon Landprintout. I'll pay for The p o s ition i n c ludes a comp etitive drug The Bulletin recom- scape Contractors Law screen. Concompensation package including benefits, and mends checking with (ORS 671) requires all tact Earl P eterson rewards an aggressive, customer focused the CCB prior to con- businesses that ad541-410-7811. salesperson with unlimited earning potential. pe r f orm tracting with anyone. vertise t o Some other t r ades Landscape ConstrucEmail your resume, cover letter also req u ire addi- tion which includes: • • I and salary history to: decks , tional licenses and p lanting, fences, arbors, Jay Brandt, Advertising Director certifications. water-features, and inbrandt O bendbulletin.com Meet singles right now! stallation, repair of irOI' No paid o perators, Debris Removal rigation systems to be drop off your resume in person at just real people like licensed w i t h the 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; JUNK BE GONE you. Browse greetLandscape ContracOr mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. ings, exchange mes- I Haul Away FREE tors Board. This 4-digit No phone inquiries please. sages and connect For Salvage. Also number is to be inlive. Try it free. Call Cleanups & Cleanouts cluded in all adverEOE / Drug Free Workplace now: 8 7 7-955-5505. Mel, 541-389-8107 tisements which indi(PNDC) cate the business has Domestic Services a bond,insurance and workers c ompensaA ssisting Seniors a t tion for their employHome. Light house ees. For your proteckeeping 6 other ser tion call 503-378-5909 v ices. L icensed & or use our website: *AD RUNS UNTIL SOLD! Bonded. BBB C e rti www.lcb.state.or.us to fied. 503-756-3544 check license status before contracting with Drywall the business. Persons doing land s cape JL'S DRYWALL maintenance do not Over 30 years of fast, r equire an L C B reliable service. cense. Commercial & ResidenCheck out the tial. 541-815-4928 classifieds online CCB¹161513 www.bendbulletin.com Electrical Servicesg Updated daily

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Mike Dillon Electric Electrical troubleshooting, new panel installations. 24 yrs exp. Lic./ Bonded ¹192171 Holiday Special $50/hr 503-949-2336

Oregon Medical Training PCS. Phlebotomy classesbegin Jan. 6, 2014. Registration now open: www.oregonmedicaltraining.com 541-343-3100 476

528

Loans & Mortgages Cut you r S T UDENT LOAN payments in HALF or more Even if Late or in Default. Get Relief FAST. M uch LOWER p a yments. Call Student Hotline

secured trustdeeds & note,some hard money mends you use cauloans. Call Pat Kelley tion when you pro541-382-3099 ext.13. vide personal information to compaFind exactly what nies offering loans or loan process from you are looking for in the credit, especially application to closthose asking for adCLASSIFIEDS ing. No Cold Callvance loan fees or ing. Desire to work companies from out of hard. Strong com573 state. If you have munication sk i l ls, concerns or quesand a positive attiBusiness Opportunities $28/ hr tude. C o m petitive tions, we suggest you this position requires PROJECT ENGINEER consult your attorney A Classified ad is an compensation packskill in selecting apor call CONSUMER EASY W AY TO CONSTRUCTION age includes health, propriate music, HOTLINE, DOE dental, an d 4 0 1 k. REACH over 3 million training and directing 1-877-877-9392. Pacific NorthwesternTo apply email your our Chancel C h oir To review the full job resume, to: ers. $5 4 0 /25-word and leading congre- description and apply careers@hIppofinancial.com BANK TURNED YOU c lassified ad i n 2 9 gational song and re- please visit our webDOWN? Private party daily newspapers for sponse for 11 a.m. site: www.sglacf.com NURSE will loan on real es- 3-days. Call the Paformal service during employment@sglacf.c tate equity. Credit, no cific Northwest Daily Sept. thru May. Fa- om problem, good equity Connection (916) miliarity with Lutheran is all you need. Call 2 88-6019 o r e m a il liturgy and worship is Where can you find a Saint Alphonsus Oregon Land Mort- elizabethOcnpa.com d esirable. Ple a s e SOIEE NANPA ONTARIO SAKERCITY gage 541-388-4200. for more info (PNDC) helping hand? submit resumes by From mountain hiking, Nov. 27, either elecFrom contractors to thrill-seeking white watronically or on paper Press Operator t er rafting, skiing a t to: Choir Director po- yard care, it's all here 8I000 feet, or visiting the The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon is in The Bulletin's sition, Church Office, historic Oregon Trail In- seeking a night time press operator. We are part 60850 B r o sterhous "Call A Service terpretive Center, Baker of Western Communications, Inc. which is a small, family owned group consisting of 7 newsRd., Bend, OR 97702 County welcomes you. papers, 5 in Oregon and 2 in California. Our or c o r ry@nativityin-Professional" Directory ideal candidate must be able to learn our bend.com • Nurse Manager, equipment/processes quickly. A hands-on style Acute Care is a requirement for our 3 I/a tower KBA press. In Pressroom Baker City, Oregon addition to our 7-day a week newspaper, we Night Supervisor have numerous commercial print clients as well. The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, OrRN Positionsa/so In addition to a competitive wage and benefit egon, is seeking a night time press superviavailable: program, we also provide potential opportunity sor. We are part of Western Communications, • ICU for advancement. Inc. which is a small, family owned group con- • OB If you provide dependability combined with a sisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon • Resource RN positive attitude and are a team player, we and two in California. Our ideal candidate will • RN Supervisor, would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable manage a small crew of three and must be float pool environment work environment that provides a great place to able to l e arn o u r e q uipment/processes live and raise a family, let us hear from you. quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for To learnmore & apply Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at our 3 t/a tower KBA press. Prior management/ www.saintal honsus.or anelson@wescom a ers.com with your comleadership experience preferred. In addition to ~bakercit plete resume, references and salary history/reour 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have nuquirements. No phone calls please. Drug test is merous commercial print clients as well. BeOPERATIONS/ required prior to employment. EOE sides a competitive wage and benefit proCLIENT gram, we also provide potential opportunity for SERVICE The Bulletin advancement. If you provide dependability combined with a Growing Bend-based positive attitude, are able to manage people investment adviser and schedulesand are a team player,we Materials Manager office looking for an would like to hear from you. If you seek a operations/client stable work environment that provides a great Job Summary: We are looking for a customer s ervice per s o n. place to live and raise a family, let us hear oriented individual to fill the Materials ManPrior bro k erage/ from you. ager role. This position requires an individual investment adviser Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at capable of managing all raw materials, equipoperations e x perianelson@wescompapers.com with your comment and other supplies required by the faciland financial plete r e sume, r e ferences a n d sa l a ry ence ity, specifically in reference to patient care arknowledge prehistory/requirements. No phone calls please. eas. f erred. M ust be: Drug test is required prior to employment. proficient i n MS EOE. Qualifications: Must be able to demonstrated Office, tech savvy, strong communication and o r ganizational organized, selfskills. Must have High School Diploma or starter, team player, equivalent and have a current Scrub Techniable to work under EXPERIENCED LOADER/ cian Certification. Two years experience in pressure, and have RECEIVING POSITIONS materials management in multispecialty ASC great written & veror similar and two years Scrub experience rebal communication Bright Wood Corporation, a 50 plus year old, quired. Ideal candidate will have excellent s kills. Start i n g family owned wood remanufacturing company customer service and public relation skills. $36,000 plus benin Madras Oregon is looking for two, full time efits. Please email experienced loaders for our Shipping Dept. Position details: Full Time position; Monday y our r e sume t o and one forklift driver for our Receiving Dept. A through Friday. Complete compensation and resume@valentinvalid driver's license is required and you must benefit package including retirement and boeventures.com. pass a drug test. Benefits package after 90 nus plan. days of employment includes medical, dental, vision and life insurance. Vacation benefits Director. I Interested persons should submit a resume available after 6 m o nths o f e m ployment. Planning with cover letter to jobs@bendsurgery.com Applications are beStarting pay rate is $12-$14 per hour depend- l ing accepted for the ing on experience. Position closes Friday, December 9, 2013 i position of Planning Director. For more Please see o ur webs i t e at www.brightwood.com for more information on i details and a job deplease visit our company and the products we manufac- I scription, our w e b site at ture and ship. Please call 541-475-7799 to www.cityofprineville. have an application mailed to you if you live com. Your applicaout of town. Local residents please come to the Personnel Department located at 335 NW i tion and resume' be submitted Hess St., Madras OR 97741 to fill out an appli- l may o nline also at o u r C all 54 /-385-580 9 cation in person.

Schools & Training

Employment Opportunities

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H I P P O FINANCIAL

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All gold jewelry, silver Wanted- paying cash and gold coins, bars, for Hi-fi audio 8 sturounds, wedding sets, dio equip. Mclntosh, class rings, sterling sil- J BL, Marantz, D y ver, coin collect, vin- naco, Heathkit, Santaqe watches, dental sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Lost iPhone at Pappy's Pizza in R e dmond, go1d. Bill Fl e ming, Call 541-261-1808 would the fellow who 541-382-9419. WHEN YOU SEE THIS found it please call Cabella pants, mens 541-408-5382. 46x 32; $20 ~ OO 541-279-9995. Lost small brown metal MorePixatBendbulletin.com suitcase, containing car Carpetu f ro m I n d ia On a classified ad 'ack & other parts, mayAsking $75. 99ux60 go to e downtown near Jack541-279-9995. www.bendbulletin.com alope Grill, Sat. Oct. 29. to view additional Reward! 541-389-7329 Cemetery plot at photos of the item. Tumalo cemetery. A bargain at $450. 541-848-7436 Tools saw, exc cond, w/ cabinet. $25. 541-389-6285

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Home/Rental repairs jobs to remodels ReplaceThatold tired Bedroomset yougot fromyour Parents! Small Honest, guaranteed work. CCB¹151573 Item Priced at: You r Total Ad Cost onl: Dennis 541-317-9768 • Under $500 $29 $650 OBO ERIC REEVE HANDY • $500 to $99 9 $3 9 541-000-000 SERVICES. Home 8 • $1000 to $2499 $4 9 Commercial Repairs, • $2500 and over $59 Carpentry-Painting, Pressure-washing, Includesup to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with Honey Do's. On-time hC Btj.llCt m b or der, full color photo, bold headline and pd i « e. EerYrngCentral Oregon smre 1903 promise. Senior • The Bulletin, • The Central OregonNickelAds Discount. Work guar54 'I 385 58OQ Two dark oak night stands and matchinB head boards condition: No scratches. VerY sturdy Vtas ST200 new offering for only

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s bendbullefin.com

'Prirota pcrtymerchandiseonly -excludespelt & lirestock,ouiot, RVs,motorcycles, boatt, airplanes,ondgaragesale categories.

anteed. 541-389-3361 or 541-771-4463

Bonded & Insured CCB¹181595

Nelson Landscaping Ik Maintenance

Serving Central Oregon Since 2003

Residental/Commercial

Sprinkler Blovvouts Sprinkler Repair

Fall Clean Up Snow Removal Schedule for 2014

•Weekly 8 Monthly Maintenance •Landscape Construction •Water Feature Installation/Maint. •Pavers •Renovations •Irrigation Installation

Senior Discounts Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB¹8759



F4 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOV 23, 2013

DAILY B R I D G E

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

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wi!I Sh ortz

C L U B s aturday, November 23,2013

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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

My friend the English professor says that of all the people in all the blood groups, Type 0's make the most spelling errors. I can't say what type of players would make the same mistake as today's West, but I hope their number is few. Against four spades, West led the queen o f h e arts, and E a st overtook with the king and led the ace and a third heart. When South ruffed with the ten of trumps, West overruffed with the jack. West next led a club, but declarer won and took the A-K of trumps. When East's queen fell, South drew the last trump and claimed.

spade and he bids two hearts. You jump to four clubs, and partner tries four diamonds. What do you say? ANSWER: Partner's second bid was a "reverse"; he has a great hand. His four diamonds is an ace-showing cue bid and a try for slam. Cue-bid four spades. Even if he signs off at five clubs, bid six clubs. If he cuebids five hearts, bid seven clubs. North dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 476 (et 9863

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THIRD HEART WEST 4I J532

West made an elementary error: It is seldom right to overruff with a high trump that will be a winner anyway. If West discards on the third heart, South can take the A-K of trumps next, but the fall of East's Q-8 and dummy's 7-6 will promote West's lowly five. West will have the J-5 behind South's 9-4 and will score two trump tricks to beat the contract. I hope you found no typos in this column. I'm A-negative.

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puzzles, nyiimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nyiimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

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Print your answer here (A06wers Monday)

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responses 61 Crow cousin

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

I D E L L I G A V E E N I T E S M U V E N T 0 S company E S S S N E 14 Acts altruistically T O S E A 21 Bash, affectedly A L A C E D E 23 Tasteless C O M P U T E R 25 Rushes E L P A S 0 N 28 Co-star of Steve in "The S E I S Magnificent L O U T T E C Seven" A S S A M S U 32 They may be dug S H U S C A L UP E E R R A M P 33 Circus elevator R A P P L E A 34 Godfather, xwordeditor@aol.com sometimes 1

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02013 Tnbune ContentAgency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

EUNNOR

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DOWN 1 Lesser Antilles island 2 Sealed 3 Old drugstore chain 4 "Can't Help Lovin' Man" 5 Word on a bill 6 Storage medium 7 Actor Yaphet of "Midnight Run" 8 Swell 9 Formerly 10 Yankee foe 11 Some flatbreads 12 Selling using servers 13 Kyoto-based entertainment

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33

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By John Lieband David Quarfoot (c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

11/23/1 3


THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY NOVEMBER 23 2013 F5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 54t -385-5809

5

4

SutIoku

7

8 3

High Fives How to play: Sudoku High Fives consists of five regular Sudoku grids sharing one set of 3-by-3 boxes. Each row, column and set of 3-by-3 boxes must contain the numbers 1 through 9 without repetition. The numbers in any shared set of 3-by-3 boxes apply to each of the indivudual Sudokus.

The Bulletin

4

5

7

3 1 6 3 1

2 8

1 8

5

9 7 9 4

L AST W E E K ' S S O L U T I O N

5 3 7 4

8 2 3 9

3 9 6 5 2

6 8

9 6

9 2 6

7 6

5 8

2 3

2

4

8 7

6 8

4

2 © JFS/KF

9 6

2 1 8 9

4 2

7 2

7 1

4

1

2

8 7

6 9

3

5 3

7 3 9 5 2 8

880

8 9 7 4 3 1 8 9

1 5

6 7 9 3

EXT, in good condition, $1000. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.

Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5000. 541-771-0665

860

885

ATVs

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1901

Ads published in ewa-

tercraft" include: Kayks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For • "boats" please see Class 870. ~541-385-5809

The Bulletin

Motorhomes

Eagle performance,

too many options to list, $8900. 541-388-8939

Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, LOADED, 9500

miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32,000 in bike, only $23,000 obo. 541-318-6049

NATIONAL DOLPHIN 37' 1997, loaded! 1

Head south for the winter!

1997 Tropical by National RV. 35-ft,

870

Boats & Accessories

COACHMAN Freelander 2008 32' Class C, M-3150 Pristine - just 23,390 miles! Efficient coach has Ford V10

Chevy Vortec engine, new awnings, everything works, excellent condition, 1 owner, non-smokers, $15,000 OBO. 541-408-7705

w/Banks pwr pkg, 14' slide, ducted furn/ Call The Bulletin At Sunchaser Pontoon AC, flat screen TV, 541-385-5809 boat - $19,895 16' awning. No pets/ Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 20' 2006 Smokercraft smkg. 1 ownerAt: www.bendbulletin.com cruise, S-8521. 2006 a must see! $52,500. 75hp. Mercury. F u ll 541-548-4989 camping e n c losure. Pop u p cha n ging room/porta-potty, BBQ, Reduced $10k! swim ladder, all gear. Trailer, 2006 E a syloader gal v anized. P urchased new, a l l Providence 2005 records. 541-706-9977, Fully loaded, 35,000 Fleetwood Discovery cell 503-807-1973. miles, 350 Cat, Very 2008 40X, Corian clean, non-smoker, 13' Seaswirl P14, 15hp counters, convection/ 3 slides, side-by-side motor + trailer, $500. micro, 2-door fridge/ refrigerator with ice 541-410-2308 freezer, washer/dryer, maker, Washer/Dryer, central vac, new tile 8 Flat screen TV's, In carpet, roof sat., 3 TVs, motion satellite. window awnings, level$95,000 ers, ext'd warranty, multi541-480-2019 media GPS, 350 Cummins diesel, 7.5 gen. 16'gv Larson All Ameri- Many extras! $119,900. Get your 541-604-4682 can, 1971, V-hull, 120hp business I/O, 1 owner, always garaged, w/trlr, exc cond, Im $2000. 541-788-5456

Harley Davidson Sport- inboard 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, s ter 2 0 0 1 , 12 0 0 c c motor, great 9,257 miles, $4995. Call cond, well maintained, Michael,541-310-9057 $8995obo.541-350-7755

$17,000

Suzuki DRZ400 SM 2007, 14K mi.,

4 gal. tank, racks, recent tires, fully serviced. $3900 OBO.

19' Seaswirl 1969 I/O, 160hp 6-cyl Mercruiser, heavy duty trailer, $1000 obo. 541-389-1473 Check out the classifieds online www.bendbuiietin.com Updated daily 21' Crownline Cuddy Cabin, 1995, only 325 hrs on the boat, 5.7 Merc engine with outdrive. Bimini top & moorage cover, $7500 obo. 541-382-2577

541-383-2847.

21' Sun Tracker Sig. series Fishin' Barge, Tracker 50hp, live well, fish fndr, new int, extras, exc cond, Triumph Day t ona $7900. 541-508-0679 2004, 15K m i l es, Ads published in the perfect bike, needs "Boats" classification nothing. Vin include: Speed, fish¹201536. ing, drift, canoe, $4995 house and sail boats. Dream Car For all other types of Auto Sales watercraft, please go 1801 Division, Bend to Class 875. DreamCarsBend.com 541-385-5809 541-678-0240 Dlr 3665

Fleetwood D i scovery 40' 2003, diesel motorhome w/all options-3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's,w/D, etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. Wintered i n h e ated shop. $84,900 O.B.O.

G ulfstream S u n sport 30' Class A 1988 ne w f r i dge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, wheelc hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W g enerator, Goo d condition! $12,500 obo 541-447-5504 Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motor-

home, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.

$25,000.

541-548-0318 (photo aboveis of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)

The Bulletin

Just too many collectibles? Motorhome Tow Car, 2005 PT Cruiser, h o u seboat, 38,000 miles. Tow $85,000. 541-390-4693 bar, and bike rack inwww.centraloregon cluded. $5,295. 541 383 0521 houseboat.com.

Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds Beautiful

541-385-5809

2 9 1 7 5 4 8 3 6

3 5 2 4 8 9 7 1 6 8 2 3 5 4 9 1 7 3 6 2 8

2 6 4 7 3 8 9 5 1

1 3 7 5 9 4 8 2 6

8 9 5 1 6 2 3 7 4

5 6 4 3 1 7 9 2 8 3 1 7 4 6 5 7 2 8 1 9 3

7 2 9 3 1 8 5 4 8 9 2 6 6 5 4 7 3 1 2 4 5 8 9 6 1 2 8 9 7 3 9 6 3 1 4 5 5 4 2 7 6 8

with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Rexair 28-ft motorhome, 1991Ideal for camping or hunting, it has 45K miles, a 460 gas engine, new tires, automatic levelers, Onan generator, king-size bed, awning. Nice condition Sell or trade? $8700. 541-815-9939

6

880

881

Travel Trailers

6 1 2 7 4 5 3 8 9

1 7 3 2 6 4 8 9 5

8 4 6 9 5 1 2 3 7

9 2 5 8 7 3 1 6 4

6 3 4 5 9 1 7 8 2

5 7 9 3 8 2 6 1 4

8 2 1 4 6 7 9 3 5

7 1 8 2 5 6 3 4 9

3 5 2 1 4 9 8 6 7

9 4 6 8 7 3 2 5 1

r ///~y ~

I • ~ 's: Orbit 21'2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,51 1 OBO.

WEEKEND WARRIOR Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/

appearancein good

condition. Smoke-free.

Tow with 1/s-ton. Strong

541-382-9441

Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader how the item will help them in someway. This advertising tip brought to you by

The Bulletin

suspension; can haul ATVs snowmobiles, even a small car! Great price - $8900. Call 541-593-6288 Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales

Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $15,000 obo (or trade for camper

Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

that fits 6 1/s' pickup

bed, plus cash). 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121

541-385-5809

'SUIV R A'l l W ' I I IKIK'1

~nna)vt~~ EVENT

2012 MercedesBenz Hard 2012BMW X5 Diesel 2004 Lexus330AWD to Find,Loadedw/Options, HugeValue! Only 60 000 Miles 1 Owner

C3004-Matic,SportPkg,AMGWheels, HardToFind!

~i

~32, 8 7 5

¹4011A

¹39 53

~49 , 8 7 5

~S8,475

¹34 004A

2011 RangeRover LR4 2011PorscheCayenneS 2011AcuraMDXAdvangePkg Hard to Find, LowMiles, Loaded, Like New

Porsche Certified!

46 , 2 4 5

f40 43

~49, 8 7 5

Loaded with All Options, 1 Owner!

~36,875

f40 26

' ,I I I

I I

I

2013 BMW 328i

'i i

I 'I

2011 Audi Q7 TDI Prestige

BMW Certified, AWD, Why Buy New? ¹73084................................................

~39,875

Rare Diesel Powertrain, Like New

¹4014............................................................ @54,945

2011 BMW X3 X-Drive

Navigation, Low Miles, Like New! A'4037...........................................

Low Miles, PanoRoof, Navigation //4037................................................

2013 Porsche Cayenne Diesel

2009 Buick Enclave CXL

.................~34,875

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 8 air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174

4 5 9 6 3 8 7 1 2

Travel Trailers

In

F leetwood Am e r i - Need to get an ad cana W i l liamsburg in ASAP? 2006. Two king tent end beds w/storage t runk b e lo w on e , Fax it to 541-322-7253 slideout portable din ette, b e nch s e a t , cassette t o i le t & The Bulletin Classifieds shower, swing level galley w/ 3 bu r n er cook top an d s ink. outside grill, outside shower. includes 2 propane tanks, 2 batteries, new tires plus bike trailer hitch on back bumper. Dealer 541-480-6900 serviced 2013. $8500 Layton 27-ft, 2001 541-948-2216 Front 8 rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, Want to impress the oven, microwave, air relatives? Remodel conditioning, patio your home with the awning, twin propane tanks, very Winnebago Suncruiser34' help of a professional nice, great floor plan, from The Bulletin's 2004,35K, loaded, too $8895. "Call A Service much to list, ext'd warr. 541-318-1388 thru 2014, $49,900 Den- Professional" Directory nis, 541-589-3243

201I BMW X3

TIFFINPHAETON QSH 2007 with 4 slides, CAT 350hp diesel engine, $125,900. 30,900 miles, new Michelin tires, great cond! Dishwasher, w/d, central vac, roof satellite, aluminum wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays 8 3TV's. Falcon-2 towbar and Even-Brake included. Call 541-977-4150

3 8 7 1 2 9 4 5 6

Travel Trailers

Keystone Laredo 31' RV 2006 w ith 12' 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 shower. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking $18,600

9

Motorhomes

¹4048

541-548-4807

8 5 3 2 6 1 7 4 9

6 7 4 1 5 2 3 8 9 6 4 5 7 1 2 9 8 6 3 5 4

541-447-8664

19 96

Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.

4 7 6 3 9 8 5 1 2

Winnebago Aspect 2009 - 32', 3 slideslide, Corian surfaces, outs, Leather intewood floors (kitchen), r ior P o wer s e at 2-dr fridge, convection locks, microwave, Vizio TV & Aluminum windows, heels. roof satellite, walk-in 17 n Flat w S creen, shower, new queen bed. so u n d, White leather hide-a- Surround bed & chair, all records, camera, Queen bed, no pets or s moking. Foam mattress, Awning, Generator, In$28,450. verter, Auto Jacks, Call 541-771-4800 Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or p ets. L i k e ne w , $74,900

Motorhomes

Honda TRX 350 FE 2006, 4 wheel drive, electric start, electric s hift, n ew t ire s , $2500, 541-980-8006.

L

HDFatBo

3 8 4 6 2 7 1 9 5

1 8 9 7 3 6 4 5 2 9 7 1 6 3 8 5 4 2 9 7 1

541-447-4805

880

Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming

9 6 7 4 1 5 2 8 3

GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigborhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.

Motorcycles & Accessories

2013 Harley Davidson Dyna Wide Glide, black, only 200 miles, brand new, all stock, plus after-market exhaust. Has winter cover, helmet. Selling for what I owe on it: $15,500. Call anytime, 541-554-0384

1 2 5 8 3 9 4 6 7

6 9

@ 20132013 UFS, Dist. b Univ. Ucficft for UFS

870

Motorcycles & Accessories Boats 8 Accessories

: 0 0 1994 Arctic Cat 580

9 3 8 5 6 1 2 4 7

7

8 2

Snowmobiles

4 2 6 3 7 8 1 9 5

3 5

11-17-13

850

7 1 5 2 9 4 8 6 3

Travel Trailers

3 6

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

®

8 6 3 9 4 7 5 2 1

4 1

9 2 5 7 3

5 4 1 6 2 3 9 7 8

6 9

2 3

2 9 7 8 1 5 6 3 4

.........$33,875

Loadedwith Options,Wh y Buy New?

Only 27,000 Miles, Loaded, Hurry!

f53083.......................................................... 6 9,8 4 5

//A34047A ..................................................... 25, 8 4 5

2008 BMW X3 - 6 Speed Manual

201l Au%! Avant Wagon AWD

Rare Manual Transmission, Low Miles

S-Line Sport Package, PanoRoof, Rare

k'4136............................................................ 1 8,92 5

¹4048............................................................@36,445

2009 BMW X5 AWD

2013 Volvo S60 TS Premier

Great List of Options, Like New

AWD, Like New, HugeValue!

¹A33197B .................................................... 2 8,4 4 5

¹4032............................................................32, 875

2010 Mini Cooper

2008 Honda RV EX-L

Like New, Low Miles, Hard to Find

AWD, Low Miles, OneOwner, Hurry!

¹4035............................................................1 6,875

¹94001A ....................................................... 1 7,42 5

4 BRANDS, A THOUSAND POSSIBILITIES

1045 SE 3rd St • Bend • OR• 541-382-1711 ,=ffl

Xtttx G000 ~~~

www.carreramotors.com


F6 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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

882

Fifth Wheels

931

Fifth Wheels

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Alpenlite 2002, 31' with 2 slides, rear kitchen, very good condition.

getstone Challenger 2004 CH34TLB04 34'

541-382-2577

n Say ngoodbuy

to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds

fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 18' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. ins ide 8 o u t . 2 7 " T V dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details. Only used 4 times total in last 5

5 41 -385-580 9

-

I „.„„,„...

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles l

•~ CASH? Bridgestone Bli z zak Use classified to sell Studless Ice 8 Snow those items you no Tires, 235 / 4 0R18. longer need. Paid $750; used 2 Call 541-385-5809 seasons, $450 OBO. BMW X3 2 0 07, 9 9 K (541) 410-2944 miles, premium packGMCrI!on 1971,Only Tgerstng hecentral B uoregon l l esince t i n1903 age, heated lumbar FJ Toyota 4 snow tires $19 7PPl Ori inal I o w n seats, panon 17 rims, $495 mile, exceptional, 3rd Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD supported oramic moo n roof, obo. 541-420-3277 owner. 951-699-7171 SLT quad cab, sport box, Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe.~ ~ auto, A C , high mileage, non headlights, tan 8 Hancook DynaPro tires t• W ~ black leather interior, $12,900. 541-389-7857 s tudded, o n ri m s , n ew front 8 rea r 225/70R/16, like new brakes O 76K miles, $375. 541-593-4398. one owner, all records, very clean, $16,900. Les Schwab Mud & 541-388-4360 GMC Sierra 1977 short Snow blackwall bed, e xlnt o r i ginal Murano BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS cond., runs 8 drives P245/50/R-20 1 02T great. V8, new paint Ford Supercab 1992, Search the area's most Observe G02, used and tires. $4750 obo. brown/tan color with comprehensive listing of 1 winter. Pd $1200. m atching f ul l s i z e classified advertising... 541-504-1050 Will take reasonable c anopy, 2WD, 4 6 0 real estate to automotive, offer. 541-306-4915 over drive, 135K mi., merchandise to sporting full bench rear seat, goods. Bulletin Classifieds slide rea r w i ndow, appear every day in the USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! bucket seats, power print or on line. seats w/lumbar, pw, Call 541-385-5809 Door-to-door selling with HD receiver 8 trailer www.bendbullettn.com fast results! It's the easiest MGA 1959 - $19,999 brakes, good t i res. Convertible. O r igiGood cond i t ion. way in the world to sell. nal body/motor. No Sersng Centralttngons ncstggs $4900. 541-389-5341 rust. 541-549-3838 The Bulletin Classified

kgQQ

nn

Non-smokers, no pets. $19,500 or best offer.

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

t/g

years.. No pets, no smoking. High r etail

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, 27 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks an d s c issor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566

$27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including slidi ng hitch that fits i n your truck. Call 8 a.m.

-

' Ia~e

to 10 p.m. for appt to see. 541-330-5527.

Arctic Fox 2003 Cold Weather Model 34 5B, Have an item to licensed thru 2/15, exlnt cond. 3 elec slides, solar sell quick? panel, 10 gal water htr, If it's under 14' awning, (2) 10-gal propane tanks, 2 batts, '500 you can place it in catalytic htr in addition to The Bulletin central heating/AC, gently used, MANY features! Classifieds for: Must see to appreciate! $19,000. By owner (no dealer calls, please). Call '10 - 3 lines, 7 days '16 -3 lines, 14 days or text541-325-1956. (Private Party ads only)

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...

Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room 5th wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition. $42,500 or best offer. Call Peter, 307-221-2422,

2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.

on the first day it runs to make sure it isn correct. nSpellcheck 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

Bs

+~™~

The Bulletin

541-385-5809

~OO

932

Find It in

Antique & Classic Autos

t

541-385-5809 •

U NITED

• Fass

MONTANA 3585 2008,

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo.

Call Dick, 541-480-1687.

541-420-3250

rrara

1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located O Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, O $400/mo. 541-948-2963

@g SUsnessnosennn B ARU. oon 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

tg (sKI VW Bug Sedan, 1969, fully restored, 2 owners, with 73,000 total miles, $10,000. 541-382-5127 VW Golf, 1985 r uns, drives, needs work. $750 obo. 4 studded ties on rims incl. 541-678-2028 Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com

541-385-5809 Pickups

Price Reduced!

Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 engine, power everything, new paint, 54K orig. miles, runs great, exc. cond.in/out. $7500 obo. 541-480-3179

Chevy Silverado 3500 HD 2007, Crew cab, L T pickup, V8, 6 .0 l iter, a u t o , all o y wheels. Vin¹ 546358 $35,488

matching canopy, 30k original miles, Plymouth B a r racuda possible trade for classic car, pickup, 1966, original car! 300 motorcycle, RV hp, 360 V8, centerlines, 541-593-2597 $13,500. In La Pine, call 928-581-9190

I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 t on dually, 4 s p d. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950.

Chevy Tahoe 1998, 4x4, 5.7L V8, 197K

mi., good

c o nd.,

runs great, w/studded tires on extra factory nms. $3000 OBO. 541-480-8060

541-41 9-5480.

Chevy Tahoe 2001 5.3L V8, leather, air, heated seats, fully loaded, 120K mi. $7500 obo 541-460-0494

iphoto forillustration onlyi

Toyota 4Runner Limi!ed 20 08, au to, 5 s pd, 4 W D all o y wheels, tow pkg. Roof rack, running boards.

Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809

Vin¹069188

$26,988

CLASSIC 1966 Ford F250 3/4 ton, 352 V8, 2WD,

BRE A S T

CANCER FOUNDASave money. Learn TION. Providing Free to fly or build hours Mammograms & with your own airBreast Cancer Info. c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o 888-592-7581. Commander, 4 seat, (PNDC) 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 Wanted: canopy that fits obo. Contact Paul at 1980 Toyota long bed. 541 -447-51 84. Call 5 4 1 -306-0412, ask for Joel.

(pltoto forillustration only)

FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4

The Bulletin Classifiedst

I

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat 8 air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.

e

MorePlxatBendbuletin,com

541-815-3636

RV space avail. in 1921 Model T Tumalo, 30 amp hk-up, Delivery Truck $375. 541-419-5060 In Madras, call 541-475-6302 Restored & Runs Look at: $9000. Keystone Raptor, 2007 Bendhomes.com 541-389-8963 37' toy hauler,2 slides, Peterbilt 359 p o table The Bulletin for Complete Listings of generator, A/C, 2 TVs, water t ruck, 1 9 90, To Subscribe call satellite system w/auto Area Real Estate for Sale 3200 gal. tank, 5hp Chevy 1955 PROJECT n seek, in/out sound sys541-385-5800 or go to p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, car. 2 door wgn, 350 n • • • en tem,sleeps 6,m any excamlocks, $ 2 5,000. small block w/Weiand • I \ • ee www.bendbulletin.com tras. $32,500. In Madras, 541-820-3724 8 dual quad tunnel ram call 541-771-9607 or Dramatic Price Reducwith 450 Holleys. T-10 Advertise your car! 541-475-6265 tion Executive Hangar 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Add A Picture! at Bend Airport (KBDN) Reach thousands of readers! Weld Prostar wheels, 60' wide x 50' deep, Call 541-385-5809 extra rolling chassis + RV Transport w/55' wide x17' high bi- The Bulletin Classifieds extras. $6500 for all. Local or Long Disfold dr. Natural gas heat, 541-389-7669. tance: 5th wheels, 925 offc, bathroom. Adjacent camp trailers, toy to Frontage Rd; great Utility Trailers haulers, etc. visibility for aviation busiAsk for Teddy, Monaco Lakota 2004 ness. 541-948-2126 or 541-260-4293 5th Wheel email 1jetjock©q.com 34 ftn 3 s lides; immaculate c o ndition; Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, l arge screen TV w / Chevy Wagon 1957, s based in Madras, alg entertainment center; 4-dr., complete, ways hangared since reclining chairs; cen$7,000 OBO / trades. new. New annual, auto New 2013 Wells Cargo ter kitchen; air; queen Please call pilot, IFR, one piece V-nose car hauler, 8t/g' x bed; complete hitch 541-389-6998 windshield. Fastest Ar- 20', 5200-Ib axles. Price and new fabric cover. cher around. 1750 to- new is $7288; asking $18,000 OBO. tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500.$6750. 541-548-3595 (541) 548-5886 541-475-6947, ask for 929 Rob Berg. Automotive Wanted TURN THE PAGE Aircraft, Parts For More Ads DONATE YOUR CAR& Service FAST FREE TOW- Ford Model A 1930 The Bulletin ING. 24 hr. Response Coupe, good condition, Tax D e duction.$16,000. 541-588-6084 • 0

CHECKYOUR AD

dump truck, good paint, recent overhaul, everything works! $3995.

Need help fixing stuff?

Call A Service Professional find the help you need.

Economical flying in your own IFR equipped Cessna 172/180 HP for only $13,500! New Garmin Touchscreen avionics center stack! Exceptionally clean! Hangared at BDN. Call 541-728-0773

Ford 1965 6-yard

( in La Pine )

WILL DELIVER

SuperhawkOnly 1 Share Available

1/5th interest in 1973 Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low FIND IT! BUY IT! time on air frame and engine, hangared in SELL IT! Bend. Excellent per- The Bulletin Classifieds formance 8 afford916 able flying! $6,500. 541-410-6007 Trucks & Heavy Equipment

1974 Bellanca 1730A

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1 /3 interest i n w e llequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located K BDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510

P/S, straight body, runs good. $3000. 541-410-8749

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2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

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Ford Edge SEL2011, 4 door, V-6, 3.5 l iter, automatic 6 s p e ed with overdrive, AWD.

Where can you find a helping hand? Vin¹A20212 Chevy 1986, long bed, From contractors to $16,988 four spd., 350 V8 re- yard care, it's all here built, custom paint, l f@ S Usoeseoosennn B A R Uoon. in The Bulletin's great tir e s and "Call A Service w heels, ne w t a g s , 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 $5000 obo. Professional" Directory 541-389-3026 Dlr ¹0354

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On approved creditthroughVolkswagen Credit. Supplies limited. Photos for illustration only(2013 modelsshown). Offer ends 12/31/2013. ©2013 VolkswagenofAmerica, Inc.


THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23 2013 F7

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 975

~Sport Utility Vehicles

Autom o biles

975

Automobiles

Automobiles •

Porsche 911 Carrera 993cou e

Automo b iles

Automobiles

Porsche 911 Turbo

Subaru Imp r eza 2006, 4 dr., AWD, silver gray c o lor, auto, real nice car in great shape. $6200. 541-548-3379.

PR

lnfiniti FX35 2012, Platinum silver, 24,000 miles, with

factory wa r ranty, f ully l o aded, A l l Wheel Drive, GPS, sunroof, etc. $35,500. 541-550-7189

BMW M-Roadster, 2000, w/hardtop. $19,500 57,200 miles, Titanium silver. Not many M-Roadsters available. (See Craigslist posting id ¹4155624940 for

additional details.) Serious inquiries only. 541-480-5348

Mercedes C300 2009 4-door 4-Matic, red with black leather interior,

2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality t i res, and battery, Bose premium sound stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, perfect condition $5 9 ,700.

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

navigation, panoramic roof, loaded! One owner, only 29,200 miles. $23,000 obo. 541-475-3306 People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Day through

975

l The Bulletin l

(photo for illustrationonly)

Nissan Pathfinder SE 2005, V6, auto, 4WD, roof rack, moon roof, t ow pk g . , all o w wheels. Vin¹722634 $12,888

4 @ S U B A R U. BUBBRUOPBBND COM

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

CHECK YOUR AD Please check your ad on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes ins tructions over t h e phone are misunderstood and an e rror can occur in your ad. If this happens to your ad, please contact us the first day your ad appears and we will be happy to fix it as

J

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the court, th e P e rsonal Representative, or the Attorney for the

LEGAL NOTICE Estate of Wesley C. Pierson. NOTICE TO Personal Representa- INTERESTED PERPWRF tive. Dated and first SONS. Case Number: published November 13PB0134. No t i ce: 16, 2013. P ersonal The Circuit Court of Representative: Suthe State of Oregon, (photo for illustrationonly) san G . Mas s e y, for the County of DesSubaru Forester 2.5X 60669 Teton Court, chutes, h a s apPremium 2010, 4 Bend, Oregon 97702. pointed Elizabeth King Cyl., auto, AWD, panAttorney for Personal as Personal Repreorama roof, privacy sonal Representative Representative: David sentative of the Esglass, roof rack, alloy of t h e Es t at e o f E . P etersen, O S B t ate of W e sley C . wheels, Vin¹751051 Merrill Pierson, deceased. All Reginald L. Massey, ¹82104, $19,888 O'Sullivan, LLP, 805 persons having claims d eceased. All p e r S UBA R U . against the estate are sons having claims SW Industrial Way, S uite 5, B e nd, O r against the estate are required to p r esent 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. egon 97702, Office: the same, with proper Chevy C r uz e LT required to p r esent ( 541) 389-1770 o r 877-266-3821 vouchers to the PerSedan 2012, 4 C yl., the same, with proper Facsimile: Dlr ¹0354 (541) sonal Representative, Turbo, auto, F W D, vouchers to the Per389-1777, Email: red- c/o David E. Petersen, running lights, alloy sonal Representative, side © merrill-osulliMerrill O'S u l livan, c/o David E. Petersen, wheels. Vin ¹103968 Merrill O'Su l livan, van.com. LLP, 805 SW Indus$13,988 t rial Way, S uite 5 , LLP, 805 SW Indust rial Way, S uite 5 , B end, O R 97 7 0 2 , ) SU B A R U . within four m o nths B end, O R 97 7 0 2 , JuSt too many (photo for illustration only) 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. from the date of first within f ou r m o nths Subaru Outback 2.5i 877-266-3821 collectibles? publication of this nofrom the date of first Limited Wagon Dlr ¹0354 tice as stated below, publication of this no2006, 4 C y l., a u to, or t he y m a y be Cr u iser tice as stated below, Sell them in AWD, dual moon roof, Chrysler P T or t he y m a y be barred. All p ersons rear spoiler, roof rack, 2005, 3 8 ,000 m i l es. barred. All p ersons whose rights may be alloy wheels. White, in good condition. whose rights may be The Bulletin Classifieds affected by this proP remium w heels 5 Vin¹359757 ceeding may obtain Yakima bike rack incl. affected by this pro$16,888 additional information ceeding may obtain $4,995. 541-383-0521. 541.385-5809 from the records of additional information . SU B A R U . from the records of the court, th e P e r2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 • Le g al Notices • Legal N otices • Legal N otices BUBBRUOPBRND COM

BUBBRUOPBRND COM

BUBBRUOPBRND COM

Corvette 1979

Vin¹050581

LEGAL NOTICE

CUSTOMER NOTICE OF PROPOSED CHANGES TO WATER SERVICE RATE TARIFFS FILED WITH THE PUC DATE: 11/20/13

$22,988

©

S UBA R U .

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

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

CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport -4 LT loaded, clear bra hood 8 fenders.

New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000. 503-358-1164.

541-385-5809

AGATE WATER COMPANY (Agate) submitted a general rate filing to the Commission on 11/7/13 Agate is seeking to increase our annual revenues by $ 1 91,748 above the $525,977 collected in 2012. The purpose of this announcement is to provide you with general information regarding the proposed rates and the effect the filing may have on you. We anticipate the increase will change average monthly water service rates as follows: Line Size

Current Average Monthly Bill

R esidential Pd SDC

Toyota Highlander 2012 15,540 mi. Blizzard $26,988 Oregon Aatnsource

541-598-3750 aaaoregonautosource.com

Vans

Honda Accord LX, 2004, 4-door, silver exterior with charcoal interior, great condition, 67,000 miles, asking $9000. Call 435-565-2321 (located in Bend) Get your business

GMC 1995 Safari XT, A/C, seats 8, 4.3L V6, studs on rims, $1500 obo. 541-312-6960 ,

975

Automobiles

a ROWI N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Honda Civic 1991 runs good, needs clutch. Asking $900 Corvette Coupe 1996, 350 auto,

135k, non-ethanol fuel/synthetic oil, garaged/covered. Bose Premium Gold system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell! 541-923-1781

Just too many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809 BMW 525 2002

Luxury Sport Edition, V-6, automatic, 8 loaded, 18 new tires, 114k miles. $7,900 obo (541) 419-4152

P r o posed Average Monthly Bill

$38. 8 5

$51.91

$46.49

$51.91

Residential Not Pd

soc

white, ¹161242

541-480-3179 Lexus RX 350 2013

Nebula Gray, 15,500 mi. ¹171298 $43,995 Oregon Autnsnurce

541-598-3750

www.aaaoregonauto-

source.com

We~". Lincoln LS 2001 4door

sport sedan, plus set of snow tires. $6000.

1. Agate is seeking the above changes increase in rates because: The utility is seeking this change in rates because it has been seven years since the utility requested an increase; operating expenses have increased; and new utility plant needs to be included in rate base. In addition the Oregon Business Development Department is offering Agate a loan restructuring and an additional loan forgiveness of approximately $500,000. However the offer is contingent upon Agate receiving a dedicated revenue stream for its annual loan payment to the Safe Drinking Water State Revolving Loan Fund and a reserve. This is a limited time offer dL!e to EPA funding. OBDD is willing to guarantee the loan forgiveness if Agate can meet its conditions. 2. Copies of the Litility's application, testimony, and exhibits are available at: Agate Water Company 60107 Minnetonka Lane Bend OR 97702 541-382-2855 Agateh20© bendbroadband.com 3. Agate can provide additional information about the rate filing. If you are interested please contact: Laura at the contact information above. 4. To request to receive notices of the time and place of hearings on the matter, contact the PUC at 1-800-522-2404; TTY 711, or mail request to: PUBLIC UTILITY COMMISSION OF OREGON ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS DIVISION PO Box 2148 SALEM OR 97308-2148

541-317-0324.

5. The Commission is located at 550 Capitol St. NE Ste. 215, Salem, Oregon;

Mercedes Benz E500 4-matic 2004 86,625 miles, sunroof with a shade, loaded, silver, 2 sets

6. The calculations and statements contained in the water utility's announcement and filing are not binding on the Commission.

of tires and a set of chains. $13,500. 541-362-5598

Garage Sales

MorePixatBendbulletin,corn On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.

Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them

in The Bulletin

Classifieds 54 1 8385-5809

Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com

cc: PUC Administrative Hearings Division, PO Box 2148, Salem, OR 97308-2148.

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof o f service on t h e plaintiff's a t t orney or, if t h e p l aintiff does not have an a ttorney, proof o f service on the plaintiff. If you have any Personal Representa- questions, you t ive: David E . P e - should see an attorney immediately. If tersen, OSB ¹82104, Merrill O'S u l livan, you need help in LLP, 805 SW Indus- finding an attorney t rial Way, S uite 5 , you may contact the Bend, Oregon 97702, Oregon State Bar's Ref e rral Office: (541) Lawyer 3 89-1770 o r Fac - S ervice online a t simile: (541) www.oregonstatebar.org or by calling 389-1777, Email: redside@merrill-osulli(503) 684-3763 (in the Portland metrovan.com. p olitan a rea) o r LEGAL NOTICE toll-free elsewhere IN TH E C I R CUIT in Oregon at (800) COURT FOR THE 452-7636. This STATE O F O Rsummons is issued EGON IN AND FOR pursuant to ORCP THE COUNTY OF 7. RC O L E G AL, DESCHUTES. P.C., Michael BotFANNIE MAE U thof, OSB ¹113337, NA ( FEDERAL mbotthofI rcolegal. T IONAL MOR T com, Attorneys for GAGE A S S O CIA- P laintiff, 51 1 S W TION"), its 10th Ave., Ste. 400, successors in interPortland, OR 97205, est and/or assigns, P: (503) 977-7840 Plaintiff, v . UNF: (503) 977-7963. KNOWN HEIRS OF MICHAEL H. LEGAL NOTICE T H E CIR C U IT PRAGER; PALMER IN COURT O F THE MICHAEL STATE OF OREGON PRAGER; EMPIRE FOR THE COUNTY C ROSSING HO M EOWNERS A S OF DES C HUTES Probate Department. SOCIATION; THE In the Matter of the REAL PROPERTY Estate o f MARY LOCATED AT M ARGARET P O W 6 3099 FA IRE Y ELL, Deceased. Case C OURT, BEN D , No. 13PB0116. NOOREGON 9 7 7 0 1; T ICE T O INT E R AND OCCUPANTS O F T HE PREESTED P ERSONS. NOTICE IS HEREBY MISES, Defendants. G IVEN tha t Ed n a Case No. Powell has been ap1 3CV0203. S U M pointed Personal RepMONS BY P UBLIresentative. All p erC ATION. TO T H E sons having claims DEFENDANTS: against the estate are UNKNOWN HEIRS required to p r esent O F M ICHAEL H . them, with vouchers P RAGER: I n t h e attached, to the unname of the State of dersigned P e rsonal O regon, you a r e Representative's athereby required to t orney at 3 3 9 S W appear and answer Century Drive, Suite the complaint filed 101, Bend, Oregon against you in the 9 7702, w i thin f o u r above-entitled Court months after the date a nd cause on o r of first publication of before the expirat his notice, o r t h e tion of 30 days from claims may be barred. the date of the first All persons whose p ublication of t h is r ights may b e a f summons. The date f ected by t h e p r o of first publication in this matter is Noceedings may obtain additional information vember 9, 2013. If from the records of you fail timely to apthe Court, the P e rpear and answer, sonal Representative, plaintiff will apply to the a b ove-entitled or the lawyers for the A dministrator, W i d court for the relief m er Mensing L a w p rayed for i n i t s Group, LLP. Dated complaint. This is a and first published on judicial foreclosure November 23, 2013. of a deed of trust in Personal Representawhich the p l aintiff tive: E dna P o well, r equests that t h e 1633 N E Wa t son, plaintiff be allowed B end, O R 977 0 1 , to f oreclose your interest in the f o l(541) 598-6558. Jeflowing d e s cribed frey S . Pa t terson, OSB ¹ 024193, 339 real property: LOT SW Century Drive, 73 OF PARKWAY Suite 101, Bend, OrVILLAGE, PHASES egon 97702, Ph: (541) 1, 2 AND 3, CITY 318-3330, Fax: (541) O F B E ND, D E S 323-1030, e-m a i l: CHUTES COUNTY, O REGON. C o m - jeff@bendlawgroup. Attorney for the Perm only known a s : sonal Representative. 63099 Fairey Court, B end, Oreg o n 97701. NOTICE TO sonal Representative, or the Attorney for the Personal Representative. Dated and first published November 16, 2013. P e rsonal Representative: Elizabeth King, 1718 Chateau Court , McLean, Virg i nia 22101. Attorney for

DEFENDANTS: READ THESE PAPERS CAREFULLY! A l a w suit

has been s tarted against you in the above-entitled court bUy F a nnie M a e ( Federal N ational Mortgage Association"), plai n t iff. Plaintiff's claims are stated in the written complaint, a copy of which was filed with the a b ove-entitled C ourt. You mu s t "appear" in this case or the other side will win a u tomatically. To "appear" you m ust file with t he court a legal document called a Umotion" or "answer." The "motion" or Uanswer" (or "reply") must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publ i cation s pecified her e i n

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...

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1000

1000

Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE Estate of REGINALD s oon as w e c a n . L. MASSEY. NOTICE Deadlines are: Week- TO INTE R ESTED days 12:00 noon for PERSONS. Cas e next day, Sat. 11:00 Number: 13PB0126. a.m. for Sunday; Sat. Notice: Th e C i r cuit 12:00 for Monday. If Court of the State of we can assist you, Oregon, f o r the please call us: County of Deschutes, 541-385-5809 has appointed Susan The Bulletin Classified G. Massey as Per-

L82- 4 speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 (photo for illustrationonly) Toyota F J Cru iser years. Never damaged or abused. 2007, V6, auto, tow pkg., alloy w heels, $12,900. r unning boar d s , Dave, 541-350-4077

Looking for your next employee?

Toyota Celica Convertible 1993

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-

L'"" '" "

Automo b iles

©

r- „;.„-,. v .

Automobiles •

Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. (Photo for lllustrahon only) Toyota Prius IV HatchYour classified ad back 2010, 4 C y l . , will also appear on G T 2200 4 c y l , 5 Hybrid, 1.8 liter, auto, bendbulletin.com speed, a/c, pw, pdl, which currently reFWD, leather, spoiler, nicest c o n vertible alloy wheels. ceives over 1.5 milaround in this price Vin¹013282 lion page views range, ne w t i r es, every month at $15,488 wheels, clutch, timno extra cost. Bulle(Photo for lllrrstration only) S UBA R U . ing belt, plugs, etc. tin Classifieds BUBBRUOPBBND COM Subaru lmpreza WRX 111K mi., remarkGet Results! Call 2006, 4 Cyl., Turbo, 6 able cond. i n side 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 385-5809 or place 877-266-3821 spd, A WD , Vin and out. Fun car to your ad on-line at Dlr ¹0354 ¹L525608 d rive, M ust S E E ! bendbulletin.com $26,988 $5995. R e dmond. 541-504-1993 S UBA R U . WHEN YOU SEE THIS 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. ~ OO

541-322-9647 BUBBRUOPBRND COM 541-322-9647 ELK HUNTERS! The Bulletin Cfassifieds Jeep CJ5 1979, orig. ' e RR Find exactly what 877-266-3821 Resf<owner, 87k only 3k on Buick LaCrosse Good classified ads tell Dlr ¹0354 you are looking for in the new 258 long block. 2 005, loaded, CXS the essential facts in an new CLASSIFIEDS C lutch p kg , W a r n battery/tires, perfect Vehicle? interesting Manner. Write Check out the hubs. Excellent run- $8495. 541-475-6794 Call The Bulletin from the readers view - not and place an ad classifieds online ner, very dependable. the seller's. Convert the Northman 6~/s' plow, Cadillac El Dorado today! Porsche Carrera 911 www.bendbulletin.com facts into benefits. Show A s k about our 2003 convertible with Warn 6000¹ w i nch. 1994 Total Cream Puff! l Updated daily the reader how the item will "Whee/ Deal"! hardtop. 50K miles, Body, paint, trunk as $9500 or best reahelp them in some way. new factory Porsche showroom, blue l f o r private party l sonable offer. This motor 6 mos ago with Subaru STi 2010, leather, $1700 wheels 541-549-6970 or advertisers advertising tip 18 mo factory war16.5K, rack, mats, cust 541-815-8105. w/snow tires although ranty remaining. brought to youby snow whls, stored, onecar has not been wet in $37,500. owner, $29,000, 8 years. On trip to 541-322-6928 The Bulletin 541.410.6904 Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., $4800. 541-593-4016.s

+

Au t o mobiles

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...

...don't let time get

away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today! LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CIR C U IT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON FOR D E S CHUTES C OUNTY. PE T E RSON MA C H INERY

CO., an Oregon corporation, Plaintiff, v. D. KING LOGGING

L.L.C., a n O r e gon limited liability company, Def e n dant. Case No. CV130464. SUMMONS. TO:DEF ENDANT D. K i n g L ogging L.L.C. I N THE NAME OF THE

Legal Notices STATE OF OREGON: You are hereby re-

quired to appear and defend the complaint filed against you in the above case w i t hin thirty days after the first date of publication of this summons, and if you fail to appear and defend, the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded i n the

complaint. Th e o bject of the complaint and the demand for relief are: The plaintiff seeks a breach of contract claim against defendant in the principal a m o un t of $9,058.78, plus accrued interest in the amount of $ 853.56, plus accruing interest on t h e pri n cipal amount at the rate of 18% per annum from 2/28/13, until p a i d, plus attorney's fees and costs. NOTICE TO DEF E NDANT: R EAD THESE P A PERS CAREFULLY! You must "appear" in this case or the other side will win automatic ally. T o "appear" you must file with the court a l egal document called a "motion" or " answer." Th e "motion" or "answer" must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days a long with th e r e q uired filing fee. I t must be i n p r o per form and have proof o f service o n t h e plaintiff's attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have a n at t orney, proof of service on the plaintiff. If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may call the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral S ervice a t (503) 684-3763 or toll-free in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. H E R S HNER HUNTER, LLP,

Legal Notices

cent per annum from May 6, 2009 to September 27, 2010, and 18 percent per annum from September 28, 2010, until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and a ll t r ustee's f e e s, foreclosure costs and any sums advance by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms and conditions of the said d eed of trust . W HEREFORE, n o tice is hereby is given that unde r signed trustee will on March 17, 2014, at the hour of 10:00 a.m., Standard of Time, as est ablished b y OR S 1 87.110. At Des chutes County Circuit Courthouse, 1100 NW B ond Street, in t he City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the i nterest in t h e r e a l property d e s cribed above w h ic h the g rantor had or h ad power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed t ogether with a n y int e rest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expense of sale, including a r e asonable charge by the trustee Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date of the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the t rust d eed r einstated b y p a y ment to the beneficiary of t h e e n tire a mount t he n du e (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no d efault occurred), and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance r equired under t h e o bligation o r tr u s t deed, and in addition to paying those sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and t r ust deed, together with trustee and attorney fees not e x ceeding the amounts provided by ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing a n o b ligation, t h e performance of which is secured by s a id trust deed, the words "trustee" and Bbeneficiary" includes their respective s u c cessors in interest, if any. Dated: October 31, 2013. /s/ Samuel E. Sears, Suc c essor Trustee. Samuel E. Sears, 570 Liberty St. SE, Ste. 240, Salem, Oregon 97301. I certify that I am the attorney for th e a b ove named trustee and that the foregoing is a complete and exact copy of the original t rustee's notice o f sale. /s/ Samuel E. S ears. S a muel E . S ears, Attorney f o r Trustee.

By Nancy K. C a r y, OSB No. 902254, Of Attorneys for Plaintiff, 1 80 East 1 1th A v enue, Eugene, Oregon 97440, T e lephone: (541)686-8511, Fax: (541)344-2025, Email: ncary@hershnerhunter.com. Date of First Publication: November 2, 2013. LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE - R e ference is made to that certain deed made by Christian Schuster, as Grantor to AmeriTitle, as Trustee, in favor of Vick 8 Glantz, LLP, as B eneficiary, dat e d J une 4 , 2 0 09 , r e corded on June 15, 2009, in offi c i al records of Deschutes C ounty, Oreg o n, Number 2009-25095 covering the following described real property situated in said County an d S t a te, to-wit: Lot Two (2), Block One (1) LADERA, Desc h utes C ounty, Oreg o n. Commonly referred to as: 6 1185 L a dera, Bend, Oregon 97702. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the o b ligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursua nt to Secti o n 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes; the default for which the foreclosure is made in grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: $32,971.70. By this reason of the default just described, the beneficiary has d eclared al l su m s owing on the obligaTake care of tion secured by trust deed immediately due your investments and payable, those with the help from sums being the folThe Bulletin's l owing, to-wit; T h e sum of $25,110.42 to"Call A Service gether with i n terest thereon at 6.5 per- Professional" Directory


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