Sun Country swim meet • D1
Final days of the Olympic trials • D1 JUNE 30, 2012
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Timber payments: 1 more year • Congress approves $100 million for Oregon, likely for the last time The Associated Press file photo
Booie the chimpanzee died in captivity, one of about 1,000 research chimps in the U.S.
An era of chimp research closes
Bulletin wire reports Members of Congress from timber country came through Friday with a promised oneyear extension of federal payments to rural counties dominated by federal lands.
They are now turning to the thornier problem of how to generate a steady stream of federal revenue for rural counties that were rolling in cash during the logging booms of the 1970s but have fallen on
hard times since protections for fish and wildlife in danger of extinction forced sharp cutbacks on logging in national forests in the 1990s. While voting to approve a compromise version of a
national transportation bill, Congress also authorized the one-time distribution of $346 million to 700 rural counties in 41 states. Oregon gets $100 million of it. A 31 percent reduction from funding levels in 2010, the money is the last anyone expects to see from the Secure
Long fight ahead for plague victim
By Brian Vastag The Washington Post
Tan belly pressed to glass, Torian, a thigh-high, 4-year-old chimpanzee with a freckled face, wants to be scratched. When his veterinarian pretends to tickle Torian through the thick pane, the chimp bounds onto a hanging chain, squealing. With the endless energy of children, he and cagemate Tiffany swing and climb, roll on the floor, and chew blankets and rubber balls. The pair are, in a sense, the last of their kind: Just four chimps remain at this controversial research facility in Rockville, Md. And they won’t be here for long — they will be returning to where they were born. See Chimps / A8
For GOP, the road to repeal isn’t easy New York Times News Service
By Brian Vastag
A former NASA astronaut — worried about asteroids smashing into Earth — is launching a crowd-funded effort to build a space telescope for spotting dangerous space rocks. Plans are for the telescope, Sentinel, to launch in 2017 or 2018, drift toward Venus and then spend 51⁄2 years surveying the inner solar system as it orbits the sun. The telescope’s unblinking eye will spot the warm glow of asteroids larger than about 100 feet across — large enough to destroy a city. While NASA spends millions a year searching for big “planet killer” asteroids — and finding no such threats — no one has surveyed for smaller but still possibly catastrophic space rocks. See Asteroids / A7
HEALTH LAW
By Jennifer Steinhauer
A telescope to spy small but deadly space rocks The Washington Post
Rural Schools Act, which since 2000 has provided $3 billion to rural counties to make up for their declining shares of federal logging revenues. “This is obviously a lifeline, but not a solution,” said Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore. See Timber funds / A4
Submitted photos
Paul Gaylord is in critical condition at St. Charles Bend. The Prineville man was hospitalized with bubonic plague after being bitten by his cat. By Holly Pablo The Bulletin
Relatives of a Prineville man hospitalized with bubonic plague say Paul Gaylord was just trying to save Charlie, a stray cat that became part of the family years ago. Gaylord noticed Charlie had an enlarged neck and appeared to be in pain. After spotting a mouse lodged in the back of the cat’s throat, the 59-year-old tried to yank the rodent out. Charlie bit Gaylord’s hand and the man, unable to help the feline, had to put the cat out of its misery, said Andrea Gibbs, his niece.
At first, Gaylord, who owns three dogs and one other cat, was not alarmed by the bite. But two days later, on June 6, he began feeling ill and showed symptoms of the plague, including enlarged lymph nodes. Gaylord was prescribed antibiotics at an urgent care facility in Redmond. When that didn’t help, he returned to the clinic and was taken to St. Charles Redmond. By June 9, doctors alerted the family that Gaylord might be sick with the plague. The next morning, he was transferred to St. Charles Bend, where he is on life support, Gibbs said. Four days into hospitalization at Bend, Gibbs said, doctors told them there was little hope for recovery. But his condition did not worsen. It is a waiting game, she said, as he is now taking “baby steps” in the right direction. See Plague / A7
“We’ve been told many and many times that this is a once-in-a-lifetime chance to see this in the medical field.” — Andrea Gibbs, niece
Minutes after the Supreme Court ruled to uphold most of the health care law, congressional Republicans vowed to use every ounce of their legislative muscle to repeal it on their own. The court’s ruling that Congress can use its taxing power to assess a penalty fee on Americans who ignore the individual insurance mandate certainly opens a gateway for anti-tax Republicans to attack the law. Should ANALYSIS they win the White House and gain even a narrow majority in the Senate, Republicans would be able to use the same procedural approach Democrats took to get the health care law over the finish line two years ago — known as budget reconciliation — to undo the taxes and federal subsidies that are at the core of the law. But attacking the law by stripping away its layers of taxes, fees and subsidies is not the same as dismantling it. Undoing the major benefits and policies of the law — which include medical coverage for children up to age 26, protections for people with pre-existing conditions and the end of annual and lifetime caps on certain forms of coverage — would require the acquiescence of Senate Democrats, which is highly unlikely. (Plus, these are the provisions that are, actually, quite popular with the public, across the political spectrum.) In essence, Republicans could not muster votes by themselves to undo most of the regulations and benefits of the law — but could for the parts that pay for them. See Repeal / A6
The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper Vol. 109, No. 182, 72 pages, 7 sections
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Correction In a caption with a photo headlined “Living her dream,” which appeared Thursday, June 28, on Page A1, the name of the balloon rider was incomplete. The correct name is Anna May Hoyt. The Bulletin regrets the error.
TOP NEWS EGYPT: As a new leader takes power, a closer look at the Brotherhood, A2 WILDFIRES: Obama visits Colorado as firefighting efforts improve, A3
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
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Wait for it: Earth adds a leap second tonight The Associated Press Today, “you get an extra second,� says Geoff Chester, spokesman at the U.S. Naval Observatory. “Don’t waste it.� International timekeepers are adding a second to the clock at midnight universal time (that’s 5 p.m. Pacific time). Universal time will be 11:59:59 — and then the unusual reading of 11:59:60 before it hits midnight. A combination of factors, including Earth’s slowing down a bit from the tidal pull
NEED TO KNOW of the moon and an atomic clock that’s a hair too fast, means that timekeepers periodically have to synchronize the official atomic clocks, said Daniel Gambis, head of the Earth Orientation Service in Paris that coordinates leap seconds. The time it takes the Earth to rotate on its axis — the definition of a day — is now about two milliseconds longer than it
was 100 years ago, said Chester, whose agency is keeper of the official U.S. atomic clocks. That’s each day, so it adds up to nearly three-quarters of a second a year. Timekeepers add that leap second every now and then to keep the sun at its highest at noon, at least during standard time. This is the first leap second since January 2009 and the 25th overall. (The first was in 1972.) Gambis said the next one probably won’t be needed until 2015 or 2016.
Don’t worry: There should be no noticeable effect or inconvenience on computers or any other technology that requires precise timekeeping because they adjust for these leap seconds, Gambis said. Earlier this year, official timekeepers from across the world discussed whether to eliminate the practice of adding leap seconds. They decided they needed more time (no joke) to think about the issue and will debate it again in 2015.
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org
MEGA MILLIONS
The numbers drawn Friday night are:
28 34 39 45 53 34 x4 The estimated jackpot is now $86 million.
Amr Nabil / The Associated Press
President-elect Mohammed Morsi roused the masses in Tahrir Square on Friday, vowing to fight on behalf of the people and defying the ruling generals by reading a symbolic oath of office a day early at the site where Egypt’s revolution was born. “We love you, Morsi!� the crowd roared as the 60-year-old U.S.-trained engineer left the podium to get closer to the cheering crowd. By Nancy A. Youssef McClatchy Newspapers
CAIRO — When Hassan al-Banna founded the Muslim Brotherhood in 1928, the membership was just seven people — al-Banna and six other workers in the port city of Suez, his only surviving sibling, 91-yearold brother Gamal, recalled recently. The British were in charge of Egypt then, and Hassan al-Banna feared their rule would end Islam. Al-Banna, a teacher and imam who preached in mosques and coffee shops alike, hoped members of the Brotherhood would gradually introduce Islamic thought into the mainstream, so that one day Egypt’s president and the society he led would be imbued with a shared way of thinking. He never contemplated, however, that the Brotherhood would become a political group or its members would seek political office, Gamal said. Yet today, a member of alBanna’s Brotherhood will become Egypt’s president. It’s the most concrete example of how al-Banna’s long-ago goal to save Islam from Western influences in his homeland came to define politics throughout the Arab world, engendering fear in the West and earning the Brotherhood the enmity of many Arab leaders. The rise of Mohammed Morsi to the presidency is the story of the evolution of the Brotherhood, experts say, a tale of how a secret society with a history of violence — al-Banna was assassinated in 1949 — came to accept modern political compromise. One scholar of the Brotherhood called the group the Arab world’s tea party: “dogmatic but politically practical.� The Brotherhood wants to apply Islamic law in a way that’s different from what the United States understands it to be, said former member Kamal al-Helbawy. “It is freedom of expression, justice, shura (an Islamic advisory council) and human rights,� said alHelbawy, who left the Brotherhood last year after a 60-year membership because he disagreed with what he characterized as the furtive way the group now was governed. “The Muslim Brotherhood wants to revive the Islamic civilization. We are trying to bring people back to the right approach of Islam that is based on the Islamic civilization,� said Amr Darrag, a Brotherhood member of the 100-person assembly that’s charged with writing Egypt’s new constitution. “I know (Morsi) on a personal level. He has a strong character and he doesn’t easily surrender. He is a very good choice for this period.� Al-Banna believed Egypt
had lost its Islamic way and could fix its political situation only by changing the thinking of every Egyptian. That required members to integrate themselves into society and urge Egyptians to reconsider every aspect of their lives: education, Arab nationalism, development. Violence wasn’t a part of the group’s early years, but the Brotherhood sent members to fight on behalf of the Palestinians in the war that led to the creation of Israel in 1949. That gave the Brotherhood a cadre of experienced fighters, and gave Egypt’s leaders the fear that it could be plotting a coup. The Brotherhood has renounced violence, but its seemingly conflicting message led to several violent offshoot groups such as al-Gamaa alIslamaya, which the United States considered a terrorist organization. It was during this period of ferment, in 1977, that Morsi joined the Brotherhood, while he was studying engineering in Los Angeles. The period in which he joined continues to shape his thoughts today, according to elSherif. Morsi is both a religious conservative and a believer in moving quickly on reform. “Morsi is a Salafist in how he understands faith but a Qutbist in how he understands organization,� el-Sherif said. By the 1990s, a new type of Brotherhood member had emerged, one who was more liberal than the organization itself. Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh, a onetime leading presidential contender, is a leader among this group. Such members embraced democracy and women’s rights and revived the kind of gradual integration that al-Banna called for. Which strain of the Brotherhood Morsi will represent isn’t yet clear. He’s shown himself to be a willing negotiator. In his first speech after his election was confirmed, he peppered Islamic references with a call for national unity. He issued a 16point plan to be implemented in 100 days that began with instilling Islamic values and creating 700,000 jobs. Perhaps realizing the limitations of power, he later adjusted his timeline to “as soon as possible.� How he deals with Western influences remains to be seen. Expect friction. “The United States must now decide whether it will embrace a democratically elected Islamist or a secular dictator,� al-Helbawy said. However it turns out, Gamal al-Banna, 14 years younger than his brother and never a part of his brother’s organization, is convinced of one thing: Morsi’s election would please his brother. Very simply, he said, his brother would embrace it because “it was God’s will.�
1928: Founded by Hassan al-Banna to spread Islamic morals and charitable works; became involved in politics to drive the British from Egypt. 1948: Dissolved by the Egyptian government for attacking British and Jewish interests; accused of assassinating Prime Minister Mahnoud al Nuqrashi. 1952: Plays a supporting role in the coup ending colonial rule. 1954: Banned after the failed attempt to assassinate President Gamal Abdul Nasser; continues, however, to grow underground. 1964: Writings of one prominent member, Sayyid Qutb, who advocated jihad, inspire the founding of radical groups, including Islamic Jihad and al-Qaida.
8PSMEXJEF TQSFBE Egypt
Additional Middle Eastern and North African nations where the group has a significant presence
Spreads to the U.S. in the 1960s
1980s: Tries to rejoin the political mainstream, forming alliances with major political parties; wins seats in parliament. 2005: Wins 20 percent of parliament seats, leading President Hosni Mubarak to have Egypt’s constitution rewritten, banning religious political parties. 2010-11: Brotherhood-aligned candidates win no parliamentary seats, leading to accusations of fraud; the Arab Spring protests ensue, eventually leading to Mubarak’s ouster. 2012: Brotherhood candidate Mohamed Morsi claims the Egyptian presidency, though a standoff between Morsi and the country's military authority is inevitable. 4PVSDFT 'FEFSBUJPO PG "NFSJDBO 4DJFOUJTUT 6 4 4FOBUF $PNNJUUFF PO )PNFMBOE 4FDVSJUZ BOE (PWFSONFOUBM "GGBJST ##$ ¼ .D$MBUDIZ 5SJCVOF /FXT 4FSWJDF
TODAY It’s Saturday, June 30, the 182nd day of 2012. There are 184 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS • The Tour de France starts its nearly 2,173-mile journey. D1 • Egypt’s new president, the Islamist Mohammed Morsi, will officially be sworn in during a ceremony at the country’s high court. Story at left • Hong Kong’s new leader takes office on the 15th anniversary of the former British colony’s return to China. • Tens of thousands are expected to march in gay pride events, mostly in European cities including Madrid and Sofia, Bulgaria.
IN HISTORY Highlights: In 1859, French acrobat Charles Blondin walked on a tightrope above the gorge of Niagara Falls. In 1908, an asteroid exploded above Siberia, leaving 800 square miles of scorched or blowndown trees (known as the Tunguska Event). In 1936, the epic Civil War novel “Gone with the Wind� was first published. Ten years ago: Leonard Gregg, a part-time firefighter, was charged with starting one of the two wildfires that merged into a monstrous blaze in eastern Arizona. (Gregg later pleaded guilty and was sentenced in 2004 to 10 years in federal prison; he was released in June 2011.) Five years ago: Two men rammed a jeep loaded with gasoline canisters into the main terminal at Glasgow Airport in Scotland, failing to set off an explosion, but seriously burning one of the suspects. One year ago: The U.N.backed Special Tribunal for Lebanon indicted four in the assassination of Lebanon’s former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri; Hezbollah still refuses to extradite the suspects. TV commentator Glenn Beck aired his last show on Fox News.
BIRTHDAYS Actor Tony Musante is 76. Actress Nancy Dussault is 76. Singer Glenn Shorrock is 68. Jazz musician Stanley Clarke is 61. Actor David Garrison is 60. Actor-comedian David Alan Grier is 56. Boxer Mike Tyson is 46. Actress Monica Potter is 41. Actor Rick Gonzalez is 33. Actress Lizzy Caplan is 30. Rhythm-and-blues singer Fantasia (“American Idol�) is 28. Olympic gold medal swimmer Michael Phelps is 27. — From wire reports
2012 Deschutes County Fair Talent Show Sponsored By
Eberhard’s Dairy Wednesday, Aug. 1, 1-4p.m. on the Eberhard’s Food Court Stage Singers, Musicians, Dancers, Bands, Magicians, Jugglers & Acts of all kinds!
4 acts will each win a $250 prize & perform again on Saturday Send a CD, DVD, videotape, (no 8mm or video) and/or photos along with name, age, address, phone number and email to: Deschutes County Fair Talent Show Audition 3800 SW Airport Way Redmond, OR 97756 All Audition materials must be at the fairgrounds by 12:00 noon Friday, July 6!
Notification will be completed by Wednesday, July 11. • Up to 24 acts will be chosen to perform on Wednesday, Aug. 1 between 1:00 and 4:00 p.m. • All acts must be residents of Deschutes County (an act from a neighboring county that does not participate in the State Fair Talent Show is eligible). • A panel of three judges will evaluate each act! • Four acts will be chosen for the $250 prizes and the right to perform again in a 10- to 12-minute set on Saturday, August 4. • Three divisions: children 1-9, youth 10-17, adult 18 and older may qualify for the State Fair Talent Show. • A sound system will be provided with a sound tech and both a CD/tape player. • CD/tape accompaniments must have the lead vocal tracks completely removed! Instrumental and harmony tracks are okay. • Bands will be expected to provide their own amps, keyboards, drums, patch cords, etc., (mics & stands are provided), and must set up and remove equipment. • All performances must be suitable for the family atmosphere at the Stage. • Performers under 16 get a pass and one for a parent/guardian. Performers 16 and over get a pass for themselves. • For more information, call 541-548-2711.
SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
T S Deadly day in Syria, with talks on verge of collapse Bulletin wire reports GENEVA — The United States and Russia failed on Friday to bridge differences over a plan to ease Syrian President Bashar Assad out of power, end violence and create a new government. That set the stage for the potential collapse of a key multinational conference that was to have
endorsed the proposal. Also, Syria’s opposition on Friday reported the deadliest 24-hour period so far — with 139 civilian deaths — and said rebel fighters had seized two Syrian generals, one of them the highest-ranking officer to fall into insurgent hands. On the eve of today’s conference, Secretary of State Hill-
ary Clinton and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov met one-on-one for about an hour in St. Petersburg, Russia, but could not reach agreement on key elements of U.N. envoy Kofi Annan’s proposed plan for a Syrian political transition, officials said. A senior U.S. official traveling with Clinton said areas of
“difference and difficulty” remain and was not optimistic that the gathering in Geneva would produce agreement. The inconclusive results of the Clinton-Lavrov meeting may presage the unraveling of Annan’s plan to end 16 months of brutal violence in Syria by creating a national unity government to oversee the draft-
ing of a new constitution and elections. The U.S. and its allies attending the conference are adamant that the plan will not allow Assad to remain in power as part of the transitional government, but Russia insists that outsiders cannot dictate the ultimate solution to the crisis.
Progress as Obama surveys fires Bulletin wire reports COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — As President Barack Obama arrived here Friday to tour the aftermath of the most destructive wildfire in Colorado history, fire crews said they were slowly hemming in the blaze and beginning to reopen a few neighborhoods where residents had fled gales of ash and smoke. Although plumes of smoke still curled skyward from the mountains above Colorado’s second-largest city, local authorities said the 17,000acre blaze was not spreading and had been 25 percent contained. And some of the 32,000 people evacuated earlier this week returned home, unloading the suitcases, photo albums and pets they had hurriedly packed up as the fires descended down the hillsides. But as officials reported tentative progress, they also offered a clearer picture of the extent of the damage. At least two bodies were found in a burned home, and up to 10 other people were unaccounted for. More than 340 homes have been destroyed. Aerial photographs published by The Denver Post showed blocks of subdivisions reduced to ash and splinters, some homes standing intact while the ones next door were burned flat. In some of the worst-hit neighborhoods, which Obama visited, expensive homes had
collapsed into heaps of rubble, with only their chimneys still standing. Burned trees stood like charred skeletons, and the shells of abandoned cars squatted in the streets. “In some of these subdivisions, the devastation is enormous,” Obama said in brief remarks after he walked through the area. “It’s still early in the fires season, and we’ve still got a lot of work to do.” On Friday, Obama declared a national disaster here and in another fire-stricken county in northern Colorado, making them eligible for federal funds. The blaze, known as the Waldo Canyon Fire, is only one of nearly five-dozen wildfires raging across the arid West. The unusually fierce early-season fires have placed a heavy strain on the government’s firefighting resources, prompting criticism by some Republican politicians that the Forest Service was not moving quickly enough to corral additional large air tankers to douse the blazes. Among the fires elsewhere in the West: • At least 60 homes near Pocatello, Idaho, burned in a fastmoving wildfire that started Thursday evening. • A 70-square-mile wildfire in Utah destroyed at least 160 structures. Another blaze in Utah doubled in size to 70 square miles and was threatening about 75 structures.
Tribune Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON — The day after the Supreme Court dealt him a major victory, President Barack Obama moved on to fighting other fires — literally — traveling to Colorado to check on a blaze that has destroyed hundreds of homes. The moment captured a truth about Obama’s tenure: From the day he took office in the midst of an economic crisis, he has rarely had the luxury of a victory lap. Instead, in a stubbornly lackluster economy, the most that administration officials generally can claim is credit for disasters that don’t happen, achievements typically followed by questions about when that sad state of affairs will improve. Back when the health law passed in 2010, White House officials toasted the victory with Champagne on the Truman balcony. By contrast,
Related • D.C. analyzes the health ruling, A6 • Medicaid at a crossroads, A6 • Campaign 2012 solidifies, A8
since Thursday’s decision upholding the law, the mood has been decidedly heads down. One staff member, in an account typical of others, said he had allowed himself a sigh of relief before turning to other business — including the vote in the Republican-controlled House to hold Attorney General Eric Holder in contempt of Congress. “We don’t really get a chance to celebrate,” said the senior administration official, who spoke anonymously because he was not authorized to discuss the subject publicly. “We have to keep moving on the battle plan.” That plan doesn’t call for much talk about health care between now and November,
Sex scandal envelops Air Force The Washington Post The Air Force is investigating a growing sexual-misconduct scandal in its basic-training operations, with a dozen male boot-camp instructors under suspicion of assaulting, harassing or having sex with female recruits. The case originated with a single complaint filed a year ago by a woman at Lackland Air Force Base in Texas. It has snowballed into potentially the worst sex scandal in the U.S. military since 1996, when 12 male soldiers were charged with abusing female recruits and trainees at the Army’s Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland. The Air Force investigation centers on a unit of boot-camp instructors at Lackland, near San Antonio, where 36,000 recruits undergo basic training each year. One trainer has been charged with raping or sexually assaulting 10 recruits. Senior Air Force officials said they have found problems in other units as well, prompting them to open multiple investigations to determine the extent to which female recruits face harassment.
Justice won’t pursue case against Holder Joe Amon / The Denver Post
President Barack Obama visits firefighters at a neighborhood scorched by the Waldo Canyon Fire in Colorado Springs, Colo., Friday. After declaring a “major disaster” in the state early Friday and promising federal aid, Obama got a firsthand view of the wildfires and their toll on residential communities. More than 30,000 people have been evacuated in what is now the most destructive wildfire in state history. Obama thanked firefighters and other emergency workers, saying: “The country is grateful for your work.”
For the president, there’s little time to celebrate court’s ruling By Christi Parsons and Michael A. Memoli
further dampening any urge to celebrate. White House and campaign aides have pretty much conceded that the law will remain unpopular with large swaths of voters, at least for now. A Gallup poll earlier this year, for example, found that only about one-quarter of Americans felt that the law, once fully in place, would make their family’s health care better, while about a third felt it would make no difference. Almost four in 10, including most Republicans, felt it would make things worse. Administration officials hope that when the health law is fully up and running in 2014 — assuming it survives the election — Americans will warm to its guarantees of coverage and its subsidies to help people buy insurance. They predict, sometimes through gritted teeth, that if they prevail, the law will start becoming popular somewhere around the middle of the decade. For now, though, while they
plan to push back against Republican attacks, Obama’s team doesn’t expect to win a lot of votes by talking about health care — at least not in English. Spanish may be another story. Among Latino voters, health care has been a top priority, and the Obama campaign has advertised the benefits of the law extensively in Spanish. Two sets of figures help explain why: Among all Americans, 16 percent lack health coverage, and therefore stand to benefit directly from the new law. But among Latinos, roughly one-third do. And Latino voters, by 48 percent to 20 percent, believe the health law was a good idea, an NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll showed this week. At the moment, however, it is Republican leaders who seem thrilled to talk about health care. For them, the issue provides an opportunity to intertwine two favorite attacks against the White House — the health care law and new
taxes — into one argument, even if doing so leads away from their more straightforward focus on jobs and the economy. Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Senate’s Republican leader, said Friday that the court “blew the president’s cover” on taxes by labeling as a tax the law’s requirement that uninsured individuals obtain coverage. The decision “turns the president’s campaign rhetoric on its head,” McConnell said.
Tribune Washington Bureau The Department of Justice has promptly told the House of Representatives that it will not pursue a criminal contempt of Congress citation against its boss, Attorney General Eric Holder, asserting that his refusal to release internal documents “does not constitute a crime.” In a letter to House Speaker John Boehner, sent even before House Republicans could refer the criminal contempt citation for prosecution, Deputy Attorney Gen. James Cole cited President Barack Obama’s assertion of executive privilege and other obstacles in refusing to cooperate. But House Republicans passed a second, civil contempt citation that allows them to hire their own attorney and legal staff to file a civil lawsuit asking a judge to force Holder to turn over 1,500 pages of documents related to the Fast and Furious gun-tracking case. It is his refusal to do so that brought the two contempt citations passed by the House on Thursday evening.
5 states get No Child waivers New York Times News Service The Obama administration granted waivers to five more states seeking relief from key conditions of the No Child Left Behind education law Friday. In exchange, the states agreed to enact new standards and evaluate schools and teachers based on students’ academic progress. State officials and critics of the 2001 federal law have long complained that it was unreasonable and unrealistic in requiring every student to demonstrate proficiency in math and English by 2014. Arne Duncan, secretary of education, said the new standards were “ambitious but achievable targets.” The No Child Left Behind law has been up for renewal
since 2007, but Congress has not authorized revisions. Friday’s action by the administration brings to a total of 24 the number of states that have received waivers, and applications from an additional 13 states are under review. The department’s approval of requests from Arkansas, Missouri, South Dakota, Utah and Virginia on Friday came the week after the federal Education Department declined to approve an application from Iowa, on the grounds that the state had not demonstrated that it would adequately measure teacher performance. Critics said they worried that the administration was substituting one set of test-based requirements for another.
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Located in the NorthWest Crossing Neighborhood Center, this Saturday market boasts live music and a variety of vendors and artisans—everything from fresh produce and organic meats, to orchardfresh fruit and berries, herbs, hand-crafted items and so much more! See you at the Market!
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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
Timber funds Continued from A1 “It is getting very, very, very difficult to fund this program,” Walden continued, “and frankly the local governments are frustrated at the sort of yo-yo effect they have to go through depending on direct payments from Congress.” The issue stems from the long-standing practice of the federal government sharing a portion of the money made from cutting timber to the counties where the timber is located. Aside from Oregon, California gets $39.3 million, Idaho $27.4 million, Washington $21.3 million and Montana $20.4 million.
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To submit service information or announcements for religious organizations, email bulletin@bendbulletin.com or call 541-383-0358.
NEW WORLD HERITAGE SITE: THE TRADITIONAL BIRTHPLACE OF CHRIST The Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, the traditional birthplace of Christ, was added (along with the Pilgrimage Route) to UNESCO’s World Heritage List on Friday, a move that was celebrated by Palestinians who hailed it as a significant political and diplomatic achievement as much as a cultural one. Perhaps the biggest tourist attraction in the West Bank, the shrine is administered by the Roman Catholic, Greek Orthodox and Armenian churches. It is run according to a 19th-century codex that assigns responsibilities for upkeep that are jealously guarded by each denomination. The move is not untainted by politics. The venerated church is in what is now a Palestinian-administered part of the Israelioccupied West Bank. It was the first such site to be nominated since Palestine was granted full membership in UNESCO eight months ago. Israel and the United States lobbied strongly against the church’s listing. The vote was 13-6. The Palestinians argued that the church is in urgent need of repairs, particularly a leaky wooden roof. The church is also the site that Palestinian gunmen, clerics and civilians occupied in 2002, taking refuge as Israeli tanks and troops pushed into Bethlehem.
Possible solutions Three bills designed to increase logging on federal lands have been floating around the Republican-controlled House, but none has won the Congressional Budget Office favorable rating required to get a floor vote, and their prospects in the Democratic-controlled Senate appear dim. One bill focuses on Oregon alone. It would turn over 2.6 million acres from the socalled O&C lands in Western Oregon to a trust and log them under state forestry rules to provide maximum revenues to Oregon counties. Developed by Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore., it is also backed by Walden and Rep. Kurt Schrader, D-Ore. Another from Rep. Raul Labrador, R-Idaho, would extend nationwide the same principal of turning federal forests over to trusts that could log it under less-stringent state forestry laws. A third from House Resources Chairman Doc Hastings, R-Wash., would require the U.S. Forest Service to sell enough timber to generate $500 million for timber counties and give the secretary of agriculture the power to ignore environmental laws to do it.
Uncertain future Sen. Ron Wyden, the father of the Secure Rural Schools Act and chairman of the Senate subcommittee on public lands, said he did not know yet what form that long-term solution would take. “I think the instant your central policy is that you are going to say the states are going to take control over federal lands, you’ve got a challenge on your hands,” he said. “I’d rather look to something that can build a more natural coalition, which is to have people who use and extract from public lands and in effect take a creative approach that doesn’t prejudge any one solution.” Meanwhile, conservation groups warned that at currently low timber prices, the federal government could not sell enough timber to pay timber counties what they want without returning to pre-1994 logging levels that threatened the extinction of the northern spotted owl and salmon. “To try to match the revenues they used to get when we clear-cut two square miles a week of old-growth forest and timber prices were high, ain’t gonna happen,” said environmental consultant Andy Kerr, author of a report arguing that thinning projects designed to restore ecological health could increase timber production from federal lands in the Northwest.
Also OK’d: highway, student loan funds Congress also gave final approval Friday to legislation that combines a two-year transportation measure with bills to extend subsidized student loans and revamp federal flood insurance, wrapping up a bruising session with measures that will be popular on the campaign trail. The final $127 billion package angered fiscal conservatives and liberal environmentalists alike, but leaders in both parties wanted to put the issues behind them. The House passed the 596-page legislation, posted Thursday night, by 373-52, the Senate by 74-19. The transportation legislation extends federal highway, rail and transit programs for 27 months. The student loan provision extends the current 3.4 percent interest rate on Stafford loans for one year. — From wire reports
The Associated Press file photo
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ANTIOCH CHURCH: Senior pastor Ken Wytsma; Part One of the series “Creating Culture”; Sunday at 9:30 a.m.; Redux Q-and-A after the service; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St., Bend. BEND CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: Pastor Dave Miller; Part two of the message “The Original Vision”; Sunday at 10 a.m.; 4twelve youth group: Wednesday at 7 p.m.; 19831 Rocking Horse Road, Bend. BEND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE: Pastor Virgil Askren; Part one of the series “Oops! A Look at the Life of Adam and Eve”; Sunday at 10:15 a.m.; 1270 N.E. 27th St., Bend. DISCOVERY CHRISTIAN CHURCH: Pastor Bob Campbell; “Three Little Words,” based on John 9:112; Sunday at 10 a.m.; 334 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend. A continental breakfast will be served Sunday at 9:30 a.m. EASTMONT CHURCH: Pastor John Lodwick; “The Commitment of Faith,” based on Genesis 23, as part of the series “Come Along on the Journey of Faith”; Sunday at 9 and 10:45 a.m.; 62425 Eagle Road, Bend. FAITH CHRISTIAN CENTER: Pastor Mike Johnson; “This Is That”; Sunday at 10:30 a.m.; 1049 N.E. 11th St., Bend. “Restored” youth services: Wednesday at 7 p.m.
FATHER’S HOUSE CHURCH OF GOD: Pastor Randy Wills: “An Upper Room Experience,” as part of the series “Points of Interest”; Sunday at 10 a.m.; 61690 Pettigrew Road, Bend. The youth group meets Wednesday at 7 p.m. THE FELLOWSHIP AT BEND: Pastor Brett Anderson; “The Greatest Commandment” based on Mark 12:28-40; Sunday at 10 a.m.; Morning Star Christian School, 19741 Baker Road, Bend; and Sunday at 6 p.m.; 601 Larch St., Sisters. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH: Pastor Mark Sue; “Engaging One’s Heart in Loving Jesus”; Sunday at 10:30 a.m.; 60 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend. A potluck barbecue will be held after the service. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: Pastor Jenny Warner; “Naked Spirituality — Get Real This Summer: O!”; Sunday at 9 a.m., 10:45 a.m. services and 5:01 p.m. taize service; 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend. FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH: The Rev. Thom Larson; “The Exercise of Eating,” based on Ecclesiastes 2:24-25 and Isaiah 65:17-25; Sunday at 9 and 11 a.m.; 680 N.W. Bond St., Bend. GRACE FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH: Pastor Joel LiaBraaten; “If You Have It All Together … You
Needn’t Show Up This Sunday” and “How Big Is God’s Love?”; Sunday at 9:30 a.m.; 2265 N.W. Shevlin Park Road, Bend. GRACE REFORMED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: Pastor Dan Dillard; “The Holy Spirit and the Nation,” based on Ezekiel 36:22-38; Sunday at 10:30 a.m.; 62162 Hamby Road, Bend. JOURNEY CHURCH: Pastor Keith Kirkpatrick; “Jesus Is a Shepherd and Why That Matters”; Sunday at 10 a.m.; 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend. NATIVITY LUTHERAN CHURCH: Ron Werner Jr.; “It’s Never Too Late”; Sunday at 9 and 11 a.m.; 60850 Brosterhous Road, Bend. A potluck and barbecue will be held after the service. NEW HOPE CHURCH: John Stuthard; “Psalm 8”; today at 6 p.m. and Sunday at 9 and 10:45 a.m.; 20080 Pinebrook Blvd., Bend. REAL LIFE CHRISTIAN CHURCH: Pastor Mike Yunker; “I’ve Fallen and I Can’t Get Up,” based on Romans 7:18-20; Sunday at 8, 9:30 and 11 a.m.; 2880 N.E. 27th St., Bend. SPIRITUAL AWARENESS COMMUNITY OF THE CASCADES: Teresa Leigh Ander; Sunday at 9 a.m.; held at The Old Stone Church, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend. TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH: Pastor Patrick Rooney; “Genuine
Love,” based on 2 Corinthians 8:115; Sunday at 9 a.m.; and “ReFuel” 6 p.m. Wednesday; 2550 N.E. Butler Market Road, Bend. UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP OF CENTRAL OREGON: UUFCO lay leaders Grace Kennedy, Chandra Smith and Nancy Stevens; “Inherent Worth & Dignity — Disability Awareness”; Sunday at 11 a.m.; at the Old Stone Church, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend. UNITY OF CENTRAL OREGON: The Rev. Jane Meyers; “Revolution: The Blessing of Disruption and Impermanence,” as part of the series “Deep Green”; Sunday at 10 a.m.; held at High Desert Community Grange, 62855 Powell Butte Highway, Bend. WESTSIDE CHURCH: Pastor Ken Johnson; “Westside Ink — Museum”; today at 6:30 p.m. and Sunday at 8, 9 and 10:45 a.m.; 2051 N.W. Shevlin Park Road, Bend. WESTSIDE SOUTH CAMPUS: Pastor Scott McBride; “Westside Ink — Museum”; Sunday at 10:30 a.m.; 1245 S.E. Third St., Bend. COMMUNITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: Pastor Rob Anderson; “Can You Be an Agent of Healing?,” based on Mark 5:21-43; Sunday at 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m.; 529 N.W. 19th St., Redmond. EMMAUS LUTHERAN CHURCH: The Rev. Robert Luinstra; “Bless Those
Who Persecute You … Say What?,” based on Romans 12:14-21; Sunday at 10:30 a.m.; 2175 S.W. Salmon Ave., Redmond ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH: Pastor Eric Burtness; “Find Peace for Anxious Days,” as part of the series “Navigating Life’s Challenges with Promise and Purpose”; Sunday at 10 a.m; 1113 Black Butte Blvd., Redmond. AGAPE HARVEST FELLOWSHIP: Youth group Wednesday at 7 p.m.; 52460 Skidgel Road, La Pine. COMMUNITY BIBLE CHURCH AT SUNRIVER: Guest speaker Stephen Williams from Prepare the Way Ministries; “July 4th —A Celebration of History”; Sunday at 9:30 a.m.; 1 Theater Drive, Sunriver. CONCORDIA LUTHERAN MISSION: The Rev. Willis Jenson; “Joseph Must Absolve His Brothers Because of the Gospel,” based on Genesis 50:19; Sunday at 11 a.m.; held at Terrebonne Grange Hall, 8286 11th St., Terrebonne. SOZO CONFERENCE: Inner healing ministry training with a team from Bethel Church in Redding, Calif.; $75 per person or $125 per couple; discount for registering by July 1; 6 p.m. July 13 and 9 a.m. July 14; Eagle Mountain Fellowship, 910 S.E. Wilson Ave., Suite A-1, Bend; contact Sonya at 541-610-2529 or www. eaglemountainfellowship.org.
Once in decline, Catholic schools are at a crossroads By Jim Jaworski Chicago Tribune
CHICAGO — If what has happened to St. Scholastica Academy here illustrates the grand rise and decline of Catholic schooling over the past century, supporters hope Cristo Rey Jesuit High School in Pilsen is more telling of its future. St. Scholastica, a girls Catholic high school founded in the 1860s, has struggled for years with low enrollment and closed this year after holding graduation earlier in June. Meanwhile, the coed Cristo Rey school, which opened in 1996, has more than twice the number of applicants as there are open spots. Experts on parochial schools believe Catholic education may be at a turning point after decades of declining enrollment. The Chicago Archdiocese has seen its second straight increase in elementary enrollment. And the Big Shoulders Fund, a nonprofit that provides financial support and scholarships for inner-city Catholic schools, brought in its largest singleevent haul of $6.25 million at a dinner May 24. “We are going from stopping the bleeding to ‘Let’s have a celebration,’ ” said Sister Mary Paul McCaughey, superintendent of the Archdiocese of Chicago Catholic Schools. But experts warn Catholic schools still face myriad challenges, some that go back at least 50 years. In terms of enrollment and number of schools, Catholic education hit its high point in the 1960s, according to estimates by the National Center for Education Statistics. At the start of that decade, there were close to 13,000 schools across the nation with about 5.3 million students. Both numbers declined steadily over the years — with a period of stabilization in the 1990s — to nearly 7,000 schools and about 2 million students for the 2010-11 year. During that same 50-year
“We are starting to see some positive trends. I’m going to go out on a limb here and say, yes, it is stabilizing.” — Karen Ristau, National Catholic Education Association
period, Chicago Catholic school enrollment dropped from 344,000 to about 86,500. Public school enrollment also dropped starting in the early 1970s, but unlike Catholic schools, it started to rebound in the late 1980s. With the closing of St. Scholastica — announced in March — there will be 255 Catholic schools in the Chicago Archdiocese. There were 526 in 1960. David Figlio, professor of education and social policy at Northwestern University, said Catholic schools had a “century of strength” coming from the initial explosion of construction starting in the late 1800s, but demographics began to shift, spreading out the Catholic population. “Back then, people weren’t living in Mount Prospect,” Figlio said. “They were living in Chicago, they were living in Evanston and Oak Park, a tight area where all the Catholic schools were built. “These schools are expensive,” he continued. “They aren’t on wheels. You can’t just move them to where the Catholics are.” In addition, the city has seen a recent influx of charter and magnet schools, as well as other religious schools, creating new competition. Meanwhile, the finances of public schools have changed, largely because of a drastic shift in who is teaching the students, said the Rev. Tony Dosen, a Catholic priest who has taught at DePaul University for 15 years. Until the 1960s, he said, the classes were taught predominantly by religious sisters and brothers, who got a small stipend they typically reinvested back into the parish or school. “There wouldn’t have even
been a Catholic school system without the sisters, plain and simple,” Dosen said. Now they represent only 3 percent of staff, according to the National Catholic Education Association. As such, the financial burden has largely shifted from the parish to the parents, with tuition and fees covering 74 percent of educational costs, according to the Chicago archdiocese. Some Chicago-area schools have made changes to both improve finances and attract more students. One such change, switching high schools from single-sex to coed, may yield only shortterm benefits, Dosen said. “Those girls, who would have normally gone somewhere else, got drawn into a coed school, which just eats away at (another Catholic school’s) enrollment,” he said. Nationally, about 32 percent of Catholic high schools are single-sex, compared with only 1 percent of elementary schools. Secondary enrollments continue to suffer. Despite a small increase in elementary enrollment in the last two school years, the archdiocese saw a 1 percent decline overall last year and hasn’t had a one-year increase in total enrollment since 1965. As the archdiocese tries to position itself for the future, that may mean closing a school in one area to open one in another with better growth potential, McCaughey said. While some schools struggle, experts point to bright spots like St. Angela School in Austin, which was on the verge of closing in 2005. A large marketing push, financed by the Big Shoulders Fund, has helped double enrollment since then. The group has hired marketing and re-
cruitment directors at about 30 schools, with more planned. “St. Angela’s flies in the face of the enrollment numbers, of anything that is happening nationally,” said Joshua Hale, executive director of Big Shoulders. He argues that the solution to recent enrollment trends is more marketing. Karen Ristau, president of the National Catholic Education Association, feels Catholic schools are hitting a turning point, mostly by focusing on new geographic areas. She pointed to 34 new schools, many in the Southwest, and a greater focus on schools in small to midsize communities. “We are starting to see some positive trends,” she said. “I’m going to go out on a limb here and say, yes, it is stabilizing.” Both nationally and locally, Catholic educators see an enrollment opportunity with Hispanics — the fastest growing group in the United States between 2000 and 2010, rising 43 percent to 50.5 million. Hispanics now represent 13.9 percent of all Catholic school students, according to the National Catholic Education Association. Still, there are a variety of hurdles, including cultural and language barriers, that could be hampering enrollment, said Carmen Aguinaco, president of the Chicago-based National
Catholic Council for Hispanic Ministry. Also, it can still be seen as out of reach for some Hispanics who, even if they can afford it, assume Catholic schools are prohibitively expensive, Aguinaco said. Catholic school tuition has been steadily rising, especially in the last 10 years. The national average tuition for a Catholic secondary school was a little more than $8,000 in 2012, more than double the average tuition of $4,000 in 2002. In primary schools, average tuition is about $3,700, a 67 percent increase from roughly $2,200 in 2002. Cristo Rey is one example experts cite as a creative model for low-income areas. The bilingual school, consisting almost entirely of first-generation Americans with immigrant parents from Mexico, has students attend school for four days and work one day per week at an entry-level job, which covers 70 percent of the tuition cost. Dosen, of DePaul, said Cristo Rey is one example of a new way of thinking that can help Catholic schools adapt to the future. “Previously, we were the only other show in town” besides public schools, Dosen said. “Now, with all these other options — charter schools, magnet schools — where do we see ourselves fitting in?”
– Open House – St. Thomas Parish Center • St. Thomas Academy July 8th - 1:00 pm to 4:00 pm
Formal Dedication 2:00 pm 1720 NW 19th St. • Redmond Cookies, punch and coffee will be served. Tours will be given throughout the day.
SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN “Celtic Cross” Christianity
“The Wheel of Dharma” Buddhism
“Star of David” Judaism
You Are The Most Important Part of Our Services “Omkar” (Aum) Hinduism
“Yin/Yang” Taoist/ Confucianism
“Star & Crescent” Islam
When does your Summer Schedule start?
Assembly of God
Bible Church
FAITH CHRISTIAN CENTER 1049 NE 11th St. • 541-382-8274 SUNDAYS: 9:30 am Sunday Educational Classes 10:30 am Morning Worship
COMMUNITY BIBLE CHURCH AND CHRISTIAN PRESCHOOL 541-593-8341 Beaver at Theater Drive, PO Box 4278, Sunriver, OR 97707
This Sunday at Faith Christian Center, Pastor Mike Johnson will be sharing the Sunday service message titled, “This is That” beginning at 10:30am Childcare is provided in our Sunday morning service. On Wednesdays “Restored Youth” service begins at 7:00 pm A number of Faith Journey Groups meet throughout the week in small groups, please contact the church for details and times. The church is located on the corner of Greenwood Avenue and NE 11th Street. www.bendfcc.com REDMOND ASSEMBLY OF GOD 1865 W Antler • Redmond 541-548-4555 SUNDAYS Morning Worship 8:30 am & 10:30 am Life groups 9 am Kidz LIVE ages 3-11 10:30 am Evening Worship 6 pm WEDNESDAYS FAmILY NIGHT 7Pm Adult Classes Celebrate Recovery Wednesday NITE Live Kids Youth Group
“Transforming Lives Through the Truth of the Word” All are Welcome! SUNDAY WORSHIP AND THE WORD - 9:30 Am. Coffee Fellowship - 10:45 am Bible Education Hour - 11:15 am Nursery Care available • Women’s Bible Study - Tuesdays, 10 am • Awana Kids Club (4 yrs - 6th gr.) Sept. - May • Youth Ministry (gr. 7-12) Wednesdays 6:15 pm • Men’s Bible Study - Thursdays 9 am • Home Bible Studies are also available Preschool for 3 & 4 year olds Call for information Senior Pastor: Glen Schaumloeffel Associate Pastor: Jake Schwarze visit our Web site www.cbchurchsr.org Listen to KNLR 97.5 FM at 9:00 am. each Sunday to hear “Transforming Truth” with Pastor Glen.
Calvary Chapel CALVARY CHAPEL BEND 20225 Cooley Rd. Bend Phone: (541) 383-5097 Web site: ccbend.org Sundays: 8:30 & 10:30 am Wednesday Night Study: 7 pm Youth Group: Wednesday 7 pm Child Care provided Women’s Ministry, Youth Ministry are available, call for days and times. “Teaching the Word of God, Book by Book”
Pastor Duane Pippitt www.redmondag.com
Baptist EASTMONT CHURCH NE Neff Rd., 1/2 mi. E. of St. Charles Medical Center Sundays 9:00 am (Blended worship style) 10:45 am (Contemporary) Sundays 6:00 pm Hispanic Worship Service Weekly Bible Studies and Ministries for all ages Contact: 541-382-5822 Pastor John Lodwick www.eastmontchurch.com
Catholic HOLY REDEEMER CATHOLIC PARISH Fr. Jose Thomas Mudakodiyil, Pastor www.holyredeemerparish.net Parish Office: 541-536-3571 HOLY REDEEMER, LA PINE 16137 Burgess Rd Tuesday, Wednesday & Friday Mass 9:00 am Sunday Mass — 10:00 am Confessions: Saturdays — 3:00–4:00 pm
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH CBA “A Heart for Bend in the Heart of Bend” 60 NW Oregon, 541-382-3862 Pastor Syd Brestel SUNDAY 9:00 Am Sunday School for everyone 10:15 Am Worship Service This Sunday at First Baptist, we will have our first Outdoor Service of the year. Join us at 10:30am for worship in our courtyard followed by a potluck BBQ. Mark Sue will be speaking about engaging one’s heart in loving Jesus. 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 Sunday Worship Services: 8:00 am, 9:30 am, 11:00 am Sunday Bible Fellowship Groups 9:30 am & 11:00 am
HOLY TRINITY, SUNRIVER 18143 Cottonwood Rd. Thurs. Mass 9:30 am; Sat. Vigil Mass 5:30 pm Sunday mass 8:00 am Confessions: Thurs. 9:00 - 9:15 am OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS, Gilchrist 120 Mississippi Dr Sunday Mass — 12:30 Pm Confessions: Sundays 12:00 –12:15 Pm HOLY FAMILY, near Christmas Valley 57255 Fort Rock Rd Sunday Mass — 3:30 pm Confessions: Sundays 3:00–3:15 pm ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI CATHOLIC CHURCH Pastor Rev. James A. Radloff 541-382-3631 NEW CHURCH 2450 NE 27th Street Masses Saturday – Vigil 5:00 PM Sunday 7:30, 10:00 AM & 7:00 PM 12:30 PM Spanish Reconciliation Saturday ~ 3:00 - 4:45 PM
Christian CHRISTIAN CHURCH OF REDMOND 536 SW 10th, Redmond 541-548-2974 www.redmondchristian.org Sunday Worship 9:00 am & 10:30 am Friday Evening Worship 6:30 pm Sunday School for all ages Kidmo • Junior Church Greg Strubhar, Pastor Darin Hollingsworth, Youth Pastor POWELL BUTTE CHRISTIAN CHURCH Cowboy Fellowship Saturdays Potluck 6 pm Music and the Word 7 pm Sunday Worship Services 8:30 am - 10:15 am - 11 am Nursery & Children’s Church Pastors: Chris Blair, Glenn Bartnik & Ozzy Osbourne 13720 SW Hwy 126, Powell Butte 541-548-3066 www.powellbuttechurch.com REAL LIFE CHRISTIAN CHURCH Like Hymns? We've Got 'em! at the RLCC Church, 2880 NE 27th Sunday Services 8 am Traditional Service (No child care for 8 am service) 9:30 am Contemporary Service with full child care 11 am Service (Full child care) For information, please call ... Minister - Mike Yunker - 541-312-8844 Richard Belding, Associate Pastor “Loving people one at a time.” www.real-lifecc.org
Christian Schools
Para la comunidad Latina: servicio de adoracion y escuela dominical 12:30 pm
Bible Church BEREAN BIBLE CHURCH In Partnership with American Missionary Fellowship Near Highland and 23rd Ave. 2378 SW Glacier Pl. Redmond, OR 97756 We preach the good news of Jesus Christ, sing great hymns of faith, and search the Scriptures together. Sunday Worship Service - 10:30 am Bible Study - Thursday, 10:30 am Pastor Ed Nelson 541-777-0784 www.redmondbbc.org
HISTORIC DOWN TOWN CHURCH Corner of NW Franklin & Lava Masses Sunday 4:30 PM Monday – Friday 7:00 AM Monday – Friday 12:15 PM Exposition & Benediction Monday–Friday after AM Mass to 12:00 PM Reconciliation Tuesday after AM Mass – 8:00 AM ST. THOMAS CATHOLIC CHURCH 1720 NW 19th Street Redmond, Oregon 97756 541-923-3390 Father Todd Unger, Pastor Mass Schedule: Weekdays 8:00 am (except Wednesday) Wednesday 6:00 pm Saturday Vigil 5:30 pm First Saturday 8:00 am (English) Sunday 8:00 am, 10:00 am (English) 12:00 noon (Spanish) Confessions on Wednesdays from 5:00 to 5:45 pm and on Saturdays from 4:30 to 5:15 pm
THE SALVATION ARMY 755 NE 2nd Street, Bend 541-389-8888 SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP 541 NE Dekalb Sunday School 9:45 am Children & Adult Classes Worship Service – 11:00 am Major’s Robert & Miriam Keene NEW HOPE EVANGELICAL 20080 Pinebrook Blvd.• 541-389-3436 Celebrate New Life at New Hope Church! Saturday 6:00 pm Sunday 9:00, 10:45 am, Pastor Randy Myers www.newhopebend.com
Foursquare CITY CENTER A Foursquare Fellowship Senior Pastors Steve & Ginny McPherson 549 SW 8th St., P.O. Box 475, Redmond, OR 97756 • 541-548-7128 Sunday Worship Services: Daybreak Café Service 7:30 am Celebration Services 9:00 am and 10:45 am Wednesday Service UTurn - Middle School 7:00 pm Thursdays High School (Connection) 6:30 pm Home Bible Studies throughout the week City Care Clinic also available. Kidz Center School, Preschool
CENTRAL CHRISTIAN SCHOOL www.citycenterchurch.org Pre K - 12th Grade “Livin’ the Incredible Mission” Christ Centered Academic Excellence Fully Accredited with ACSI & NAAS Jewish Synagogues Comprehensive High School TEMPLE BETH TIKVAH Educating Since 1992 Temple Beth Tikvah is a member of the 15 minutes north of Target Union for Reform Judaism. 2234 SE 6th St. Redmond, 541-548-7803 Our members represent a wide range www.centralchristianschools.com of Jewish backgrounds. EASTMONT COMMUNITY We welcome interfaith families and SCHOOL Jews by choice. “Educating and Developing the Whole Our monthly activities include Child for the Glory of God” social functions, services, religious Pre K - 5th Grade education, Hebrew school, Torah 62425 Eagle Road, Bend • 541-382-2049 study, and adult education Principal Lonna Carnahan www.eastmontcommunityschool.com Rabbi Glenn Ettman SAINT FRANCIS OF ASSISI SCHOOL Preschool through Grade 8 “Experience academic excellence and Christian values every day.” Limited openings in all grades. 2450 NE 27th St. Bend •541-382-4701 www.saintfrancisschool.net
Christian Science FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1551 NW First St. • 541-382-6100 (South of Portland Ave.) Church Service & Sunday School: 10 am Wed. Testimony Meeting: 7:30 pm Childcare provided. Reading Room: 115 NW Minnesota Ave. Mon. through Fri.: 11 am - 4 pm Sat. 12 noon - 2 pm
Eckankar ECKANKAR Religion of the Light and Sound of God Experience an Eckankar Community HU Learn how to sing HU, a love song to God: a loving, uplifting, Spiritual Exercise. HU, pronounced like the word hue, is sung for about 20 minutes and is followed by a brief period of sacred contemplation. Regardless of your beliefs or religion, singing HU can bring you greater happiness, love, and understanding. Singing HU can draw us closer in our state of consciousness to the Divine Being. It has helped people of many different faiths open their hearts more fully to the uplifting presence and security of God’s love. Singing HU can help you experience: • Comfort, peace, joy • Expanded awareness • Inner light and/or sound • A subtle sense of Divine Love • The healing of a broken heart • Solace during times of grief • A release of fears • Answers to your questions
Dr. Barry Campbell, lead pastor For complete calender: www.hbcredmond.org
Evangelical
Dates and locations: July 7, 3:00 PM, Prineville Library, 175 NW Meadow Lakes Dr. July 21, 2:00PM, East Bend Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. (off Hwy 20, across the st. from Costco). August 4, 2:00PM, Redmond Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave. August 25, 2:00PM east Bend Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. For more information please visit www.eckankar.org or www.miraclesinyourlife.org or call 541-728-6476.
Episcopal TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH 469 NW Wall St. • 541-382-5542 www.trinitybend.org Sunday Schedule 8 am Holy Eucharist 9:15 am Education for All Ages 10:15 am Holy Eucharist (w/nursery care & Godly Play) 5 pm Holy Eucharist (in St. Helens Hall) The Rev. Roy D. Green, Interim Rector
Friday, July 13 at 6:00 pm Shabbat in the Park Sawyer Uplands Park All services are held at the First United Methodist Church 680 NW Bond Street Temple Beth Tikvah www.bethtikvahbend.org 541-388-8826
Lutheran CONCORDIA LUTHERAN MISSION (LCMS) The mission of the Church is to forgive sins through the Gospel and thereby grant eternal life. (St. John 20:22-23, Augsburg Confession XXVIII.8, 10) 10 am Sunday School 11 am Divine Service The Rev. Willis C . Jenson, Pastor. 8286 11th St (Grange Hall), Terrebonne, OR www.lutheransonline.com/ condordialutheranmission Phone: 541-325-6773 GRACE FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH 2265 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend 541-382-6862 Sunday Worship 9:30 am (Child Care Available) Men’s Bible Study Wednesday 7:15 am High School Youth Group Wednesday 5:30 pm Pastor Joel LiaBraaten Evangelical Lutheran Church in America www.gracefirstlutheran.org NATIVITY LUTHERAN CHURCH 60850 Brosterhous Road at Knott, 541-388-0765 Come worship with us. Sunday, July 1, 9:00 am Informal Service 9:15 am Junior Church 11:00 am Formal Service Sermon title “It’s Never Too Late” given by Ron Werner Jr. (Child care provided on Sundays.) www.nativityinbend.com Evangelical Lutheran Church in America TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH & SCHOOL LCMS 2550 NE Butler Market Road Bend, OR 97701 541-382-1832 SUNDAY WORSHIP 9:00 AM Staffed Nursery provided WEDNESDAYS Mid Week ReFuel 6:00 PM Faith, Fellowship & Food Church Website: www.trinitylutheranbend.org School Website: www.saints.org Pastors: Rev. David Carnahan Rev. Patrick Rooney Principal: Mrs. Hanne Krause
Lutheran
Unitarian Universalist
ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH ELCA Worship in the Heart of Redmond
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISTS OF CENTRAL OREGON “Diverse Beliefs, One Fellowship” We are a Welcoming Congregation
Sunday Worship Service 10:00 am, May 27 - Sept. 2 Summer Sermon Series: “Navigating Life’s Challenges with Promise & Purpose” Children’s Room available during services Come Experience a warm, friendly family of worshipers. Everyone Welcome - Always. A vibrant, inclusive community. A rich and diverse music program for all ages Coffee, snacks and fellowship after each service M-W-F Women’s Exercise 9:30 am Wed. Bible Study at noon 3rd Th. Women’s Circle/Bible Study 1:00 pm 3rd Tues. Men’s Club 6:00 pm, dinner Youth and Family Programs Active Social Outreach 1113 SW Black Butte Blvd. Redmond, OR 97756 ~ 541-923-7466 Pastor Eric Burtness www.zionrdm.com
Messianic LIVING TORAH FELLOWSHIP @ Celebration Church 63830 Clausen Rd Ste 102, Bend Saturday 10:30 am - 2 pm Worship/Dance - Study Food/Fellowship Hebrew Roots Fellowship worshipping in Spirit and Truth 541-410-5337 Children’s Program www.livingtorahfellowship.com
Nazarene BEND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 1270 NE 27 St. • 541-382-5496 Senior Pastor Virgil Askren SUNDAY 9:00 am Sunday School for all ages 9:00 am Hispanic Worship Service 10:15 am Worship Service Nursery Care & Children’s Church ages 4 yrs–4th grade during all Worship Services “Courageous Living” on KNLR 97.5 FM 8:30 am Sunday WEDNESDAY 6:30 pm Ladies Bible Study THURSDAY 10:00 am 50+ Bible Study WEEKLY Life Groups Please visit our website for a complete listing of activities for all ages. www.bendnaz.org
Non-Denominational SOVEREIGN GRACE CHURCH Meeting at the Golden Age Club 40 SE 5th St., Bend Just 2 blocks SW of Bend High School Sunday Worship 10:00 am Sovereign Grace Church is dedicated to worshipping God and teaching the Bible truths recovered through the Reformation. Call for information about other meetings 541-420-1667 http://www.sovereigngracebend.com/
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Sunday, July 1, 11:00 am The Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon begins its summer series based on the Seven Principles of Unitarian Universalism, the first of which is: The inherent worth and dignity of every person. This Sunday’s service will focus on issues related to people with disabilities: how they adapt, how others acceptance impacts their level of independence, and more. Persons from within the congregation will talk about their own experience with a disability, or changes in our society from the perspective of having a family member with a disability. Childcare and religious education are provided! Everyone is Welcome! See our website for more information Meeting place: THE OLD STONE 157 NW FRANKLIN AVE., BEND Mail: PO Box 428, Bend OR 97709 www.uufco.org (541) 385-3908
Unity Community UNITY COMMUNITY OF CENTRAL OREGON Join the Unity Community Sunday 10:00 am with Rev. Jane Meyers Youth Program Provided The Unity Community meets at 62855 Powell Butte Hwy (near Bend Airport) Learn more about the Unity Community of Central Oregon at www.unitycentraloregon.com or by calling 541-388-1569
United Church of Christ ALL PEOPLES UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST Come as you are; continue your progressive journey of faith with fellow seekers. Join us on Sunday, July 1st, at 1824 NW Kesley Lane just south of Terrebonne. Worship is at 11 a.m. You are invited to come early for adult study and discussion at 10 a.m. We gather next on Sunday, July 15th. For details, directions and possible help with car-pooling, email: allpeoplesucc@gmail.com, or call: 541-390-6864
United Methodist FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH (In the Heart of Down Town Bend) 680 NW Bond St. / 541-382-1672 Everyone is Welcome! Rev. Thom Larson
Open Bible Standard CHRISTIAN LIFE CENTER 21720 E. Hwy. 20 • 541.389.8241 Sunday Morning Worship 8:45 am & 10:45 am Wednesday Mid-Week Service Children & Youth Programs 7:00 pm Nursery Care Provided for All Services Pastor Daniel N. LeLaCheur www.clcbend.com
Presbyterian
Sermon Title: “The Exercise of Eating” Scripture: Ecclesiastes 2:24–25 Isaiah 65:17–25 9:00 am ~ Contemporary Service 9:00 am ~ Jubilee Sunday School (Summer) 11:00 am ~ Traditional Service Childcare provided on Sunday *During the Week: Women’s Groups, Men’s Groups, Youth Groups, Quilting, Crafting, Music & Fellowship.
COMMUNITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 529 NW 19th Street (3/4 mile north of High School) Redmond, OR 97756 (541) 548-3367 Rev. Rob Anderson, Pastor Rev. Heidi Bolt, Associate Pastor 8:30 am Contemporary Worship 8:30 Nursery Care 8:45 am Children Sunday School 9:50 am Adult Education 11:00 am Traditional Worship Mondays 6:30 pm Centering Prayer Wednesdays 5:30 pm Prayer Service
Open Hearts. Open Minds. Open Doors. Rev. Thom Larson firstchurch@bendumc.org
CHURCH & SYNAGOGUE DIRECTORY LISTING
Small Groups Meet Regularly (Handicapped Accessible) Please visit our website for a complete listing of activities for all ages. www.redmondcpc.org FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 230 NE Ninth, Bend (Across Ninth St. from Bend High) All Are Welcome, Always! Rev. Dr. Steven H. Koski Lead Pastor “Naked Spirituality ~ Get Real This Summer: O!” 9:00 am Contemporary 10:45 am Traditional 5:01 pm Taize worship and meal Rev. Jenny Warner, preaching Nursery care provided at all services Wednesday 3:00 pm Sound Fourth Concert (Bend High) 4:30 pm BBQ
Effective May 1, 2012 4 Saturdays and TMC: $110 5 Saturdays and TMC: $132 The Bulletin: Every Saturday on the church page. $22 Copy Changes: by 5 PM Tuesday CO Marketplace: The First Tuesday of each month. $22 Copy Changes: by Monday 1 week prior to publication
Call Pat Lynch 541-383-0396
Youth Events See Youth Blog: http://bendfp.org/youth/ Choirs, music groups, Bible study, fellowship and ministries every week 230 NE Ninth Street, Bend www.bendfp.org 541 382 4401
plynch@bendbulletin.com
Directory of Central Oregon Churches and Synagogues
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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
Repeal Continued from A1 “You can’t get everywhere with reconciliation,” said Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, referring to the congressional process that Democrats used, which allows certain budget measures to pass with 51 votes instead of the 60 that would be required to block a filibuster vote on a full repeal. “You will need to use other procedures.” He added later: “We may get a majority. But we will need to work with the other side.” While some Republicans fantasize about a bipartisan solution to undoing the elements of the law, Rep. Tom Price of Georgia, a physician who is the Republican leadership’s point man on health care, said Friday that a health and human services secretary under a Romney administration would dismantle other parts of the law through fiat. That would no doubt attract lawsuits and might leave haters of the law unsatisfied. Either way, whether Republicans lawmakers pull apart some of the law on their own, or if a large number of states opt out of expanding Medicaid, it will spell trouble for the health care industry. It is counting on the expansion of the market through the individual mandate, fees and the newly insured to cover the cost of greater benefits and regulations. “It’s problematic to only take down the pieces with budgetary impact and leave the market reforms,” said Catherine Finley, a health care specialist at Thorn Run Partners, a Washington lobbying and government relations firm. “Doing so would seriously disrupt the functioning of the market.”
Open to change? Both Republicans and Democrats agree in theory that part of the law should be changed, and President Barack Obama has suggested he is open to improvements. But bipartisanship around health care seems unlikely, no matter who runs Washington. The central difficulty is the seemingly irreconcilable differences between the goal of most Democrats, which is to expand health care coverage to as many Americans as possible, and that of Republicans, which is to push down government spending on health care. With costs rising sharply every year, those basic conflicts will remain, and policy solutions inevitably will require a bias toward one of those goals. Further, the partisan bitterness that began long before the Affordable Care Act was even a notion has only deepened during two years of divided government. For example, in 2009 Republicans who supported the expansion of the Children’s Health Insurance Program felt betrayed when Democrats, taking their lead from the new Obama administration, unilaterally dropped several important features that Republicans had managed to win in an earlier bill at some political risk. Democrats opted for a more partisan bill that covered various groups that Republicans had resisted. “I’m a little bitter,” said Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah. “I worked my butt off,” on the measure, he said, only to end up voting against it. “It set the tone.” Democrats feel equally angry that, in spite of packing the health care bill with many ideas, including the individual mandate, that originated with Republicans years ago, they could get no Republican cooperation in the end. Many Republicans also say that they would like to preserve many aspects of the law, including the provisions for dependent coverage for adult children and for lifting annual and lifetime spending caps. However, “it might be difficult for the Romney administration to come back and say, ‘Oh we really like some parts of ACA, we are not going to repeal them,’” said James Brasfield, a professor of management and political science at Webster University in St. Louis. It is possible that governors and legislatures may do some of the congressional Republicans’ work for them by opting out of the Medicaid expansion. But that expansion was going to put 16 million to 21 million additional people into the system.
Plenty of second-guessing of Roberts’ health law ruling By Del Quentin Wilber The Washington Post
Chief Justice John Roberts, under intense scrutiny for his decision upholding President Barack Obama’s health care law, is headed for an overseas teaching gig in Malta. “An impregnable island fortress,” Roberts told a conference of judges and lawyers meeting Friday morning in rural Pennsylvania. “It seemed like a good idea.” Back in Washington, the legal and political worlds are trying to digest the stunning news that one of the court’s most consistent conservatives had pulled Obama’s signature domestic achievement from the brink. Court specialists analyzed Thursday’s 5-to-4 opinion for clues, wondering whether Roberts might have switched his vote from invalidating the law to upholding it largely unscathed.
Conservatives found new ways to express their anger: Radio host Glenn Beck was offering a $30 T-shirt with Roberts’s face and the word “COWARD” boldly printed in yellow. And some liberals were making a 24-hour pivot from praising Roberts’s statesmanship to wondering whether the victory for Obama and congressional Democrats was delivered in a Trojan horse. Roberts gave no further guidance, declining to elaborate on the decision at the conference of the D.C. Circuit. When Chief U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth asked Roberts if it ever bothered him that he “can’t respond to criticism,” the chief justice drew laughter when he simply said, “no” and turned for the next question. In the opinion that stirred this week’s controversy, Roberts wrote that it was the duty of the court to avoid rejecting an act of Congress if there is a plausible reason for saving it. “It is well established that if a
statute has two possible meanings, one of which violates the Constitution, courts should adopt the meaning that does not do so,” Roberts wrote. So he rejected the government’s argument that requiring most Americans to purchase health insurance or pay a penalty was justified under the Constitution’s commerce clause, which gives Congress the power to regulate interstate commerce. But, joined by the court’s four liberals, he said the penalty operated as a tax, and thus was proper under the taxing clause. Some wondered if Roberts originally had joined the court’s four conservatives, pointing at oddities in the opinion. The dissent offered by the conservative justices with whom Roberts usually sides in ideological disputes — Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito — read more like an opinion for the court that had been abandoned, said David Bernstein, a law professor at
George Mason University. Others thought it unlikely Roberts had changed his mind. At the judicial conference at Nemacolin Woodlands Resort on Friday, Roberts was getting credit for defusing a potentially partisan outcome in the health care case. “When I first saw that it was a 5-4 decision and the chief justice was the deciding vote, I wondered, ‘How did this happen?’ ” said John O’Quinn, a Justice Department lawyer during the Bush administration. “Then I read the opinion and the reasoning behind it and realized it was filled with thoughtful reasoning.” If the health care vote led many to the think that Roberts, finishing his seventh term on the court, has mastered the gears and levers that come with being chief justice, the 57-yearold justice said in his conference speech that there are rule changes that could make his job easier. For instance: “The odd historical quirk that the chief justice only gets one vote.”
MEDICAID
Care for poor challenges Republican-led states By Alex Wayne Bloomberg News.
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court ruling on President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul forces Republicans in states that opposed the measure to make a difficult choice. If the states go along with an expansion of the Medicaid program, they get federal money that covers the bulk of the costs. In doing so, they would also have to embrace a portion of a law that they rejected as unconstitutional or too costly. The law was designed to open the state-run program to an estimated 17 million low-income Americans by forcing states to reduce income limits for those who can qualify. The court modified the measure by saying the federal government can’t threaten to withhold existing money from states that don’t fully comply with the Medicaid expansion. “There’s probably a small group, at least initially, who won’t do it,” said Ray Scheppach, the former executive director of the National Governors Association who is now a professor of public policy at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. “It’s part political. It’s part fiscal. There’s pressure on them both ways.”
In the majority Republicans won control of the majority of states in the 2010 elections, when concern about the expanded role of government under Obama boosted turnout among the party’s voters. Republican state leaders have opposed Obama’s 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, and Thursday criticized the Supreme Court’s decision to uphold the core of the law, which requires individuals to obtain health insurance. Republican leaders of states that challenged the health care law in court — including Texas, Florida and Virginia — say they’re not sure they’re going to opt in. Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, a Republican, called a Medicaid expansion “massive” and “unaffordable.” “We will have a choice on Medicaid, which is good,” Bondi told reports outside the state Capitol in Tallahassee. “We do have to decide what to do and we have to do it very quickly.” Texas Health and Human Services Executive Commissioner Tom Suehs said the state is analyzing the ruling to decide how to proceed. “I’m pleased that it gives states more ability to push back against a forced expansion of Medicaid,” he
said in a statement. Virginia Gov. Robert McDonnell, the chairman of the Republican Governors Association, told reporters in Richmond that he is considering the ruling and hasn’t made any decisions. He said the expansion of Medicaid, which now consumes about one- fifth of the state budget, will cost the state an added $2.2 billion over the next decade. “That’s going to be a vast expansion in the amount of money going from the general fund,” he said. The Medicaid expansion would cost states $21 billion through 2019, according to the Kasiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured, a nonprofit group that researches health care. The federal government would contribute $444 billion, the report said. The Medicaid program has put added financial pressure on states after the longest recession since the Great Depression as more residents were thrown out of work. As tax revenue tumbled, states were forced to close more than $500 billion of budget gaps. The law has drawn support from Democratic state leaders, who celebrated the Supreme Court’s decision. “Democratic governors are committed to following the law of the land and working within their states to meet these goals,” Colm O’Comartun, executive director of the Democratic Governors Association, said in a statement. The law signed by Obama expands Medicaid to cover all Americans earning as much as 133 percent of the federal poverty level, or about $30,657 for a family of four this year, overruling eligibility rules that now vary by state. The federal government would pay 100 percent of the costs of the expansion until 2017. After that, states’ share of the expansion rises to a maximum of 10 percent of the cost. With pressure in Washington to curb the federal government’s budget deficits, state leaders may decide not to expand Medicaid out of concern that Congress could decide to force them to cover more of the costs, said Marjorie Baldwin, a professor of economics at Arizona State University who tracks health care. “Given the current state of state budgets, we could expect some states would decide they can’t do that,” she said. While some states may decide against expanding Medicaid, most will likely choose to do so given that the bulk of the funding will come from the federal government, said I. Glenn Cohen, an assistant professor at Harvard Law School who follows health care policy. “It’s possible that some governors will, mostly for political reasons, do it, but I still suspect most governors will decide to expand Medicaid in keeping with what the federal government wants to do,” he
said. “The deal congress has offered them going forward is really, really good.” The law marks the biggest change to the U.S. health system since Medicare and Medicaid were established in 1965. It was designed to expand coverage to at least 30 million people — primarily by expanding Medicaid and setting up online markets where consumers could buy insurance — while controlling the soaring costs of health care. The law was challenged by 26 Republican-controlled states and a small-business trade group. They contended the measure exceeded Con-
gress’s constitutional powers to regulate interstate commerce and impose taxes. The challenge focused on the insurance mandate, which requires Americans to get coverage by 2014 or pay a penalty. The concept was championed by Republicans years ago as an alternative to Democratic proposals for a single government-run health system.
No signing of S.Korea, Japan pact Bulletin wire reports Faced with mounting political pressure at home, the South Korean government Friday abruptly postponed the signing of its first military cooperation pact with Japan since World War II. The deal had been hailed as a significant step by the two governments. Both countries have been struggling to overcome the lingering historical bitterness between their peoples and to cooperate more closely on security matters in the region. Now the fate of the agreement has become uncertain as South Korea’s political look ahead to a presidential election this year.
U.S. aircraft to deploy Also Friday, the United States said it will go ahead with the deployment of 12 MV-22 Osprey aircraft to American bases in Japan in the face of protests sparked by recent crashes. The Ospreys, which can fly like an airplane or like a helicopter, will be sent to the Marine air base in Iwakuni next month, the Pentagon said. Japan asked the U.S. for information about a June crash of the aircraft in Florida that injured five. Tensions from the U.S. military presence in Okinawa have risen over an agreement to relocate a base from one part of the island to another
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SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Asteroids Continued from A1 Sentinel’s mission is designed to give earthlings a head start of several years — or decades — to prepare a mission to deflect any threatening asteroids. Spearheaded by Ed Lu, a physicist who flew on the space shuttle and the International Space Station, the project needs to raise “a few hundred million” dollars to get off the ground. “The chances were pretty minimal somebody else was going to do this,” Lu said. “Federal budgets being what they are, it’s just not going to happen.” The project’s genesis was in 2001, when Lu joined with former Apollo astronaut Rusty Schweickart to start the nonprofit B612 Foundation. The group brought together scientists to draw up plans for how to deflect any asteroids headed toward Earth. In the past year, Lu and the B612 Foundation — named after an asteroid in the 1943 French children’s tale “The Little Prince” — have rounded up a who’s who of space scientists, Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and venture capitalists to lead the campaign. They’ve designed a telescope, tapped a company to
build it — Ball Aerospace of Colorado, which has built other space telescopes — and signed an agreement with NASA to use the agency’s radio dishes for communication. Now they just need the money. The group is negotiating the final price with Ball. The dropping cost of computers, telescope components and rocket launches made the project feasible, Lu said. But another expert is skeptical that the telescope will cost just “a few hundred million” dollars. Tim Spahr of the Minor Planet Center in Cambridge, Mass., which tracks asteroids — and which would eventually analyze data from Sentinel — was part of a team that in 2003 proposed a similar mission to NASA. The cost of that unbuilt project: $400 million. Spahr is also skeptical that Sentinel will spot every possible threat. “It is a spectacular challenge,” he said. The telescope will miss some asteroids that take a long time to orbit the sun and will have to track each asteroid for “years” to determine whether it hit Earth, Spahr said. Still, Lu is confident that his group can pull off the mission. And what will donors get for their contributions? Said Lu: “You get to take part in saving the Earth.”
Cruise, Holmes are divorcing Bulletin wire reports LOS ANGELES — The marriage of Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes, one of Hollywood’s highest profile relationships and a subject of endless tabloid speculation, ended with Holmes’ filing for divorce Thursday. The two share a daughter, 6-year-old Suri, who’s been featured in celebrity media nearly as frequently as her parents. Cruise, who stars in the musical film “Rock of Ages,” turns 50 on Tuesday; Holmes is 33. How the divorce — announced Friday — impacts either of their images or careers remains to be seen, said veteran celebrity publicist
The Associated Press file photo
After nearly six years of marriage, Katie Holmes is divorcing Tom Cruise.
Howard Bragman. “A single Tom Cruise is an interesting phenomenon. I think we’ll be hearing about him dating. … Katie will be fine. I think this raises her to a new level.”
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N B Judge to rule soon on Zimmerman release MIAMI — A month after he ordered George Zimmerman back to jail for misleading the court about his finances, a Florida judge heard arguments Friday on whether Zimmerman, Trayvon Martin’s killer, should be freed again. But after nearly three hours of testimony, the Seminole County Circuit judge left the bench without ruling. He is expected to do so in writing next week.
S.C. governor cleared Submitted photo
Paul Gaylord, far right, with his family. He moved to Prineville in 2007 to help out his mother. “He would do anything to help anyone,” said Gaylord’s niece Andrea Gibbs. “He’s a great, caring, compassionate guy. He doesn’t think twice about himself. He just cares about everyone else.”
Plague Continued from A1 Gibbs said it is a “long, unknown, bumpy road.” Gaylord still cannot breathe on his own and is suffering from multiple organ failure. She said doctors say it will be a long, painful recovery. Gaylord, a full-time welder, relies on the use of his hands. Gibbs said that may no longer be an option. She said doctors said he will lose parts of his fingers and toes. Gaylord’s illness marks Oregon’s fifth case of the plague since 1995, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “We’ve been told many and many times that this is a oncein-a-lifetime chance to see this in the medical field,” Gibbs said. The infectious bacterial agent that causes the plague is called Yersinia pestis. According to the CDC, there were 999 confirmed or prob-
able human plague cases in the United States between 1900 and 2010. Eighty percent of the cases were bubonic plague. From 1990 to 2010, mortality rates in plague cases decreased to 11 percent. Mortality is lower for bubonic plague cases than septicemic or pneumonic plague cases. The mortality rates are 13 percent, 28 percent and 36 percent, respectively. Gaylord moved to Prineville in 2007 to be closer to his mother, who lives a few miles from Gaylord’s home. He has visited her every day to see if she needs anything. Now, his mother has camped an RV outside the hospital. “He would do anything to help anyone,” Gibbs said. “He’s
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COLUMBIA, S.C. — Gov. Nikki Haley was cleared of wrongdoing Friday by state lawmakers who investigated assertions that she had violated ethics rules when she was a state representative by lobbying on behalf of two businesses she worked for. Haley, a Republican, was accused by an influential GOP fundraiser of blurring the lines between her political and business roles. — From wire reports
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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
Chimps Continued from A1 Called Bioqual, the facility’s 30-year run of chimpanzee research here is ending, victim of a historic shift away from using apes in medical experiments. On Monday morning, a truck hauled six chimps from Bioqual. Last week, five others were removed. The last four, including Tiffany and Torian, will depart later this summer. They are returning to where they were born — the much larger New Iberia Research Center, part of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette — where they will be available for more research before they’re retired, someday, to a sanctuary. “This is another indication that chimpanzee research is on the decline,” said Kathleen Conlee, of the Humane Society of the United States, which has painted Bioqual’s chimp research as unethical. While about 1,000 research chimps live in the United States — down from 1,500 in 1997 — a landmark report from the influential Institute of Medicine in December labeled nearly all chimpanzee research as scientifically unjustified. The final National Institutes of Health-funded experiments at Bioqual tested vaccines against norovirus and respiratory syncytial virus, two studies called out in the IOM report as unnecessary. Chimps are no longer needed for such work, the report said. Drug companies, which also fund some chimp research, are also backing away from the practice as lower-cost, highertech alternatives emerge. For animal-rights activists, the departure of the Bioqual chimps represents a victory; they’ve been agitating to close the facility for decades. In 1986, activists calling themselves “True Friends” broke into the unmarked, single-story building and stole four infant chimpanzees. They filmed chimps and monkeys stuffed into metal cages the size of ovens — stark footage soon seen by millions on the national nightly news. The ensuing public outcry galvanized the burgeoning animal rights movement, said Kathy Guillermo, of PETA. “The exposure of those horrors led to so much of the reform we’ve seen today.” John Landon, who had just taken over the company — then called SEMA Inc. — endured a year of protests at his house and threatening latenight phone calls. Under intense pressure from activists and the Agriculture Department, which regulates animal research, Landon invited Jane Goodall — that human face of the plight of the chimp — to the lab. She visited. She cried. Then she worked with Landon to improve the lives of the Bioqual chimps. In the late 1980s, Bioqual tore out the small metal cages and built roomier, nine-foottall enclosures, whose glass walls allowed the great apes to see, gesture at and vocalize with their neighbors — and their keepers. The staff added toys and swings on plasticcovered safety chains. They moved two TVs outside the 26 enclosures — TVs that are still there. Next to one rests an old VHS tape of an animated Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn tale. “Some of them like animal shows and cartoons,” said a Bioqual veterinarian, who’s worked at the company for a decade. He asked for his name to be withheld to avoid harassment from activists. “It’s like child care,” said Landon, who invited a Washington Post reporter to the facility this week but prohibited photography. As Torian pulled himself head-first into a hanging red bucket, feet flopping out, Landon sarcastically remarked, “They look miserable, don’t they?” During a half-hour visit, though, the young ape also behaved like a caged animal — banging on the glass walls, tearing around in circles, pressing his back into a corner. The hundreds of chimps that passed through here typically arrived as 2- or 3-yearolds. (Wild chimps, in contrast, nurse until age 5 or 6.) They were routinely sedated; injected with experimental vaccines; and stuck for blood and swabbed for mucus. Younger chimps were trained to present a thigh for injections. Older, stronger chimps sometimes needed to
San Antonio Express-News file photo
A senior assistant at the Texas Biomedical Research Institute’s behavioral training program works with Veronica, a chimpanzee, as she teaches her body parts and how to move them voluntarily in San Antonio in December. That month, a prestigious scientific group told the U.S. government that chimpanzees should hardly ever be used for medical research, though it stopped short of recommending an outright ban.
be “squeezed,” the veterinarian said — drawn into a cage with collapsible sides. Bioqual never performed more invasive procedures like surgery, said the veterinarian. The staff raised the chimps, rolling around with them in the now-fallow playroom. Landon pulls back the curtain to the room for a few seconds. It’s like a day-care center: Balls and toys lay scattered on the floor, while bright paintings of Scooby Doo and other characters adorn the walls. But animal-rights activists have long argued that keeping chimps in the facility is cruel. After the release of the IOM report last year, the battle heated up. PETA bought $1,000 in Bioqual stock to get a seat at shareholders’ meetings. The Humane Society of the United States posted ads in Metro trains displaying the face of a chimp and the line, “Bioqual … conducts experiments using young chimpanzees. If you have witnessed poor animal
treatment there, call” the Humane Society. Then in May, another activist group, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, escalated the fight: They filed a petition with the USDA, asking for an investigation into alleged violations of the Animal Welfare Act, which requires labs to “promote the psychological well-being” of chimpanzees. The enclosures were still too small, the group said: about the footprint of an office cubicle, 64 square feet. The chimps had no access to the outdoors. And they were often housed alone. Landon responded by inviting representatives of the Humane Society and PCRM to the facility. In late May, a surprise visit from USDA inspectors found only one minor issue, said Dave Sacks, spokesman for the agency’s enforcement office: Too many cockroaches. Two years ago, though, NIH found more serious prob-
lems. Bioqual was housing too many of its primates — social animals — alone, instead of in pairs or groups as generally required by the Animal Welfare Act and NIH regulations. Patricia Brown, director of NIH’s Office of Laboratory Animal Welfare, said the agency had been concerned about inadequate housing of Bioqual’s 1,000-plus rhesus macaques, schnauzer-sized monkeys heavily used for medical research. “We never had a concern about the chimpanzees,” said Brown. By 2011, Bioqual had fixed the macaque housing, she said. “We accepted the changes they made and gave them a quite commendable response at the end.” Brown said NIH accepted Bioqual’s reasons for housing some of its chimps singly. While the housing issue is closed, the USDA does have an open investigation of Bioqual. In May 2011, an 8-year-old chimp died during transport from Rockville to New Iberia Research Center in Louisiana, which owns the chimps housed at Bioqual. Landon jokes that after the last of the chimps leaves, he’ll turn the 26 glass-and-steel enclosures into offices. “No one has taken me up on it,” he said of his 140 workers. Instead, the staff will scrape the colorful, marker-drawn “Tiffany” and “Torian” name tags off the plate glass. Then, Landon said, “I’ll probably dismantle it.” The Bioqual chimps, meanwhile, will join some 350 others of their kind at the much larger Louisiana lab. There, some chimpanzees are kept indoors, in enclosures similar to Bioqual’s. But others get to roam outside, under geodesic domes, in groups, with fresh air to breathe and trees to climb.
Camp aign divides along 2 fault lines biggest advantages over Obama, according to the Increasingly, the 2012 Gallup Poll, comes from represidential election appears ligious whites, who favor the to be dividing along a pair of Republican by better than 2fault lines. to-1. But Latinos have yet to The first is demographic: warm to the GOP candidate, old versus new America. favoring Obama by 2-1 in President Barack several polls. Obama’s re-election ANALYSIS The other divide depends increasof surpassing imingly on a coalition portance in this of minorities and younger year’s presidential election voters, the same groups is geographic: it’s the gulf that helped put him in of- between a relative handful of fice. Their overall numbers “battleground” states, which are increasing, but the pres- are already getting pounded ident’s ability to turn them by campaign commercials, out this year at anywhere and the rest of the country close to 2008 levels remains -—where most of America in doubt (at least among Lati- lives — which has largely nos and younger whites; the been spared. black vote is virtually certain Nationwide, the Obamato be there again for Obama). Romney matchup has been Their potential explains why a dead heat for months. But Democrats have sought to in the battlegrounds, where portray the election as the the election will actually be future against the past. decided, the president has Mitt Romney, meantime, opened up a slight edge. is likely to become president Polling showed that only if he can improve on Obama’s most recent gains John McCain’s performance have come disproportionately among whites, who repre- in battleground states and ensent a declining share of the tirely from what they term the U.S. population. The GOP “rising American electorate,” candidate’s recent campaign made up of younger voters, swings have been through unmarried women, Latinos areas where whites make up and African-Americans — in a disproportionate share of other words, Obama’s base. the population — including “These voters are beginportions of the old Midwest ning to come back,” a DemoRust belt and southwest Vir- cratic polling group reports, ginia. A potential key to mo- based on national surveys. bilizing conservative whites: Obama’s support from voters voter drives by Christian under age 30 has improved organizations to sign up mil- by 15 percentage points since lions of unregistered evan- January but remains “still gelicals; one of Romney’s well short of 2008.” By Paul West
Tribune Washington Bureau
SO L D
FLOYD A. BOYD CO. BEND: 541-633-7611 MADRAS: 541-475-6116
COMMUNITYLIFE
B
TV & Movies, B2 Calendar, B3 Horoscope, B3 Comics, B4-5 Puzzles, B5
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
www.bendbulletin.com/community
MEMORIAL
To the end, Ephron took a road all her own
SPOTLIGHT Library starts literary series Authors Mitch Albom, Jennifer Egan, Stephen Greenblatt and Erik Larson will be the featured guests for the Deschutes Public Library’s new “Author! Author!” literary series, which will run quarterly from this September through June 2013 at Bend High School’s auditorium. Here’s who’s presenting when: • Albom, author of “Tuesdays With Morrie” and “Five People You’ll Meet in Heaven,” will present on Sept. 15. • Egan (“Visit from the Goon Squad,” “The Keep”) will present Jan. 10. • Greenblatt (“The Swerve,” “Will in the World”) will present March 7. • Larson (“Devil in the White City,” “In the Garden of Beasts”) will present June 20. Tickets to the entire series of four presentations cost between $75 and $110, depending on the seat, and can be purchased through www.bendticket.com. Tickets to individual presentations will go on sale Aug. 1. Money raised by ticket sales will benefit the library’s programs and activities. The Deschutes Public Library Foundation will gift 100 seats to area high schools for students to attend. Contact: www. dplfoundation.org or admin@dplfoundation.org.
By Alessandra Stanley New York Times News Service
The museum’s collection of books is available for genealogical research.
A stuffed coyote sits atop a piano at the Redmond Museum.
A PAST
PRESERVED • Museum’s collection showcases Redmond’s colorful history and prominent pioneers
Nature of Words unveils lineup The Nature of Words has announced the lineup for its 2012 festival, which will feature more authors than ever before. The annual literary festival will take place Nov. 7-11. Speakers will include the following writers: • Ayad Akhatar (fiction), author of “American Dervish” and “Disgraced” • Jean Auel (fantasy/science fiction), author of “The Clan of the Cave Bear” and other novels in the Earth’s Children series • Sherwin Bitsui (poetry), author of “Shapeshift” and “Flood Song” • Tracy Daugherty (nonfiction), author of four novels, a book of essays and two biographies • Brian Doyle (fiction), author of “Saints Passionate & Peculiar” and “Two Voices” • Thor Hanson (nonfiction), author of “Feathers” and “The Impenetrable Forest” • Michael Meade (poetry), author of “Fate and Destiny: The Two Agreements of The Soul” and “The World Behind the World” • Aimee Nezhukumatathil (poetry), author of “Lucky Fish” and “At the Drive-In Volcano” • Paisley Rekdal (poetry), author of “The Night My Mother Met Bruce Lee” and “A Crash of Rhinos” • Kevin Gordon, poet and singer-songwriter Dan Wieden, cofounder of the Wieden + Kennedy advertising agency and Caldera Arts, will be the keynote speaker at the festival’s author dinner. Contact: www .thenatureofwords.org or info@thenatureofwords.org. — Bulletin staff reports
Photos by Rob Kerr / The Bulletin
“Don’t you just love it?” Redmond Historical Society’s Kathy Clark, left, said about a dress hanging at the Redmond Museum. She said the garment was in need of cleaning and conservation, tasks for which she has professional training.
By Heidi Hagemeier • The Bulletin it passed down through generations of an area
REDMOND —
O
ne of the latest acquisitions of the
pioneer family and that its machine-made lining is
Greater Redmond Historical Society
still nearly perfect after at least 100 years.
is an ankle-length grizzly bear coat,
The coat is just one of myriad articles on display at
the deep brown fur soft and slightly
the Redmond Museum, which opened a week ago
oily to the touch. It weighs nearly 20 pounds. Standing before the display case in which it
for the season. Housed in a city-owned building and operated by society volunteers, the museum occupies
now hangs, society president Kathy Clark shared
a modest space near Centennial Park. Yet it’s home
how the donor’s father wore the coat every year to
to some intriguing artifacts of the town’s past.
pose as Father Christmas. She marveled at how
If you go What: Redmond Museum When: Open for season noon to 4 p.m. ThursdaySaturday now through Dec.1 Where: 529 S.W. Seventh St., Redmond Cost: $2 suggested donation Contact: Facebook at Greater Redmond Historical Society or 541316-1777
The museum’s collection includes thousands of historic photos, such as this one depicting Redmond’s Railroad Day in September 1911 — the celebration of the arrival of the tracks.
See Museum / B6
In “You’ve Got Mail,” Meg Ryan asks Tom Hanks why it is that men quote “The Godfather” all the time. Tom Hanks explains that “The Godfather” is the I Ching. “ ‘The Godfather’ is the sum of all wisdom,” he says. “‘The Godfather’ is the answer to any question. What should I pack for my summer vacation? ‘Leave the gun, take the cannoli.’ ” That’s what “The Godfather” is for men. For women, Nora Ephron, who died Tuesday at age 71, is the I Ching, the sum of all wisdom. And wit. And what to eat. Basically, anything worth saying about love, loss and, yes, what I wore, was said by Nora somewhere, be it “Heartburn,” “When Harry Met Sally,” “Julie & Julia” and every blog, book and recipe she ever published. So it was more than perfect that Nora married Nicholas Pileggi in 1987 and they lived so happily ever after. Theirs is an implausible yin-yang matchup — Nick, the author of “Wiseguy” and “Goodfellas,” is a Mafia movie; Nora is a romantic comedy. Together they lived up to every lush movie score and snappy line that Hollywood could devise, more glamorous than even the he-andshe of “The Thin Man.” Nora understood the need for a twist, so of course in their partnership, Nick, the Calabrian who hung out with made men, capos and squealers, was the softie; Nora, a Wellesley graduate in an apron and capri pants, was the killer. They were both veterans of previous marriages, and her second, to Carl Bernstein, was a doozy (“Heartburn”). Their midlife courtship was love at last sight: the triumph of experience over hope. And happiness, even more than journalism, screenwriting, directing, cooking, blogging, was Nora’s gift to her fans and to her friends. In 1986, when a Newsweek cover put a metaphorical bullet through the single career women over 40, she refuted all by herself the fear that powerful women repel men, that funny girls go home to their cats, that having it all means enjoying it alone. Nora was powerful. She made Hollywood moguls buckle. She was ambitious, and early on wrote that she wished she could be Barbara Walters. She was competitive, as anyone who played her in Scrabble knew. And she had a brilliant career — actually several at once — and took risks in all of them. She had two sons and true love. She was a feminist who despised self-pity and self-importance. There are many bad things about losing her, but one of them isn’t that she died before having a chance to set the world straight about Anne-Marie Slaughter’s essay on not having it all in The Atlantic Monthly. Nora did it in 1996, in a Wellesley commencement address that was, of course, surprising, hilarious and dead-on: “Maybe young women don’t wonder whether they can have it all any longer, but in case any of you are wondering, of course you can have it all. What are you going to do? Everything, is my guess. It will be a little messy, but embrace the See Ephron / B6
B2
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
TV & M
Online recaps enhance TV viewing experience
L M T
FOR SATURDAY, JUNE 30
REDMOND
BEND
cussions one could have about the epic narcissism inherent I’ve given up on “True in reading someone describe Blood� ever since watching it something you, yourself, have began requiring a Bon Temps just finished watching. Who’s Who (Is she a werewolf What I find interesting is or werepanther?) and since the symbiotic relationship that the cast became so vast that I has developed online between began rooting for all the main show, recapper and reader characters to die. — as if the Internet’s infinite And yet, I watch the show capacity for niche-indulgence every week, not because of has made everyone believe anything that happens on they deserve a concierge televiHBO between sion critic. Sev9 and 10 p.m. eral months ago, TV SPOTLIGHT on Sundays but a reader noticed because of the discussion that that since her favorite writer happens the next day on my had stopped summarizing computer screen. “American Idol� every week, “True Blood,� the show, has she found that she no longer become the raw appetizer liked the show. Watching it had for the main course of “True become too solitary, too empty. Blood,� the recap. I relate: For several seasons, It’s not a unique phenomenon: I watched the PollyannaWant to laugh? Good heav- polygamist TLC show “Sister ens, don’t watch “Real House- Wives,� faithfully accompawives of New Jersey�; it will nied by recaps on TVGasm. only make you sad for human com written by a writer who beings. Do, however, read Tra- went by “TheMiki.� TheMiki’s cie Potochnik’s RHONJ recap, painstaking, sublime descripin all of its withered, withering tion of each episode lent a glory. level of meta-meaning to the A writer in New York maga- viewing experience. I wasn’t zine recently declared that watching “Sister Wives.� I was Twitter is the new watercooler “watching� “Sister Wives,� led — where couch spuds plant by TheMiki on an ironic jourthemselves to discuss the events ney through fundamentalist of last night’s tube. That’s not Mormonism. When TheMiki the half of it. For a certain co- retired, the show lost that layhort of viewers and for certain er of meaning — or rather, my types of shows, the Web isn’t viewership of the show lost its where conversation begins. It’s patina of cultural analysis. I where the viewing experience is wasn’t “watching� anything, I completed. Recaps, the genre of was just watching, and what I Web writing originally invented was watching was bad. to help out viewers who missed In my personal world, “True a few episodes — Carrie broke Blood,� the show, is where I up with Big, again — have, in roll my eyes at Sookie Stacksome cases, transcended the house and wish someone products themselves. would truly drain her blood, The recap isn’t new. Gawker already. “True Blood,� the rewriter Rich Juzwiak recently cap, is where I reflect on the described the succubus-like bizarre society that would creappetite of his readers and the ate and celebrate such a show. frenetic pace at which he pro- It’s no longer must-see TV. But duced copy. And oh the dis- it might be must-read. B y Monica Hesse
The Washington Post
EDITOR’S NOTES: • Open-captioned showtimes are bold. • There may be an additional fee for 3-D movies. • IMAX films are $15. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. • As of press time, complete movie times for Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at the Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX and Regal Pilot Butte 6 were unavailable. Check The Bulletin’s Community Life section those days for the complete movie listings.
Redmond Cinemas 1535 S.W. Odem Medo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777
Regal Pilot Butte 6 2717 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend, 541-382-6347
BERNIE (PG-13) Noon, 3, 6, 9 THE BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:15 MEN IN BLACK 3 (PG-13) 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 9:20 MOONRISE KINGDOM (PG-13) 1:15, 4:15, 7:15, 9:25 SAFETY NOT GUARANTEED (R) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 8:50 SEEKING A FRIEND FOR THE END OF THE WORLD (R) 1, 3:55, 7, 9:30
Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 541-382-6347
ABRAHAM LINCOLN: VAMPIRE HUNTER (R) 3:55, 10:25 ABRAHAM LINCOLN: VAMPIRE HUNTER 3-D (R) 12:50, 7:40 BATTLESHIP (PG-13) 11:05 a.m. BRAVE (PG) 11:15 a.m., 12:15, 2:40, 4:10, 6, 7:15, 9 BRAVE 3-D (PG) 11:30 a.m., 2:55, 6:50, 9:40 MADAGASCAR 3: EUROPE’S MOST WANTED (PG) 12:25, 3:10, 6:05, 9:05 MADAGASCAR 3: EUROPE’S MOST WANTED 3-D (PG) 12:55, 3:30 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (PG13) 11 a.m., 2:25, 6:15, 9:25 MAGIC MIKE (R) 12:10, 3:40, 7:10, 9:50 MEN IN BLACK 3 (PG-13) 3:50, 10:05 MEN IN BLACK 3 3-D (PG-13) 12:40, 7:25
Claudette Barius / The Associated Press
Alex Pettyfer, left, and Channing Tatum star in “Magic Mike.� PROMETHEUS (R) 6:45, 9:45 PROMETHEUS IMAX (R) 11:50 a.m., 3:15, 7, 10 PEOPLE LIKE US (PG-13) Noon, 3:25, 7:05, 9:55 ROCK OF AGES (PG-13) 11:20 a.m., 2:45, 6:20, 9:20, 10:20 SNOW WHITE AND THE HUNTSMAN (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 3, 6:35, 9:35 TED (R) 12:35, 2:30, 4:05, 6:30, 7:30, 9:15, 10:15 THAT’S MY BOY (R) 1, 4:15, 7:45, 10:30
McMenamins Old St. Francis School
ABRAHAM LINCOLN: VAMPIRE HUNTER (R) 7:15, 9:30 BRAVE (PG) 11:15 a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 MADAGASCAR 3: EUROPE’S MOST WANTED (PG) 11:30 a.m., 1:45, 4 MAGIC MIKE (R) 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 TED (R) 11:30 a.m., 1:45, 4, 6:15, 8:30
SISTERS Sisters Movie House 720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800
THE BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG-13) 2:15, 5, 7:30 BRAVE (PG) 2:15, 4:45, 7:15 MAGIC MIKE (R) 3, 5:30, 8 PEOPLE LIKE US (PG-13) 2:30, 5:15, 7:45
700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562
MADAGASCAR 3: EUROPE’S MOST WANTED (PG) 12:35, 2:40, 4:45, 6:50, 9 MAGIC MIKE (R) 2, 4:20, 6:40, 9:05 ROCK OF AGES (PG-13) 3:50, 9:10 SNOW WHITE AND THE HUNTSMAN (PG-13) 1:15, 6:30
PRINEVILLE
CHIMPANZEE (G) 3 THE FIVE-YEAR ENGAGEMENT (R) 9:30 THE HUNGER GAMES (R) 6 THE PIRATES! BAND OF MISFITS (PG) Noon After 7 p.m., shows are 21 and older only. Younger than 21 may attend screenings before 7 p.m. if accompanied by a legal guardian.
MADRAS
Pine Theater
Madras Cinema 5 1101 S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505
ABRAHAM LINCOLN: VAMPIRE HUNTER (R) 12:30, 2:45, 5, 7:15, 9:35 BRAVE 3-D (PG) Noon, 4:40, 7 BRAVE (PG) 2:20, 9:15
214 N. Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014
THE BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG-13) 1, 4, 7 BRAVE (UPSTAIRS — PG) 1:10, 3:30, 6, 8:10 Pine Theater’s upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.
Tin Pan Theater 869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend, 541-241-2271
THE FAIRY (no MPAA rating) 6, 8:15
Saturdays, June 30 - Sept. 22 | 10am-2pm NorthWest Crossing Neighborhood Center
Change your mind. Change your life.
(541) 728-0505 856 NW Bond • Downtown Bend • 541-330-5999 www.havenhomestyle.com
Visit our website at:
www.neurofloat.com
www.nwxfarmersmarket.com
L TV L
SATURDAY PRIME TIME 6/30/12
*In HD, these channels run three hours ahead. / Sports programming may vary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine
ALSO IN HD; ADD 600 TO CHANNEL No.
BROADCAST/CABLE CHANNELS
BD PM SR L ^ KATU KTVZ % % % % KBNZ & KOHD ) ) ) ) KFXO * ` ` ` KOAB _ # _ # ( KGW KTVZDT2 , _ # / OPBPL 175 173
5:00
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KATU News World News KATU News Greatest Pillow! Jeopardy! ‘G’ Wheel Fortune Grey’s Anatomy ’ ‘14’ Ă… News Nightly News Jeopardy! ‘G’ Wheel Fortune Paid Program Evening News The Unit ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Old Christine Old Christine The Closer Time Bomb ‘14’ Ă… KEZI 9 News World News Ugly Betty Icing on the Cake ‘PG’ (4:00) MLB Baseball San Diego Padres at Colorado Rockies (N) Ă… Criminal Minds 52 Pickup ’ ‘14’ This Old House The Lawrence Welk Show ‘G’ Last of Wine Travels to Edge Steves’ Europe NewsChannel 8 Tracktown ’12 Nightly News Straight Talk Inside Edition Grant Getaway (4:00) ›› “Birthâ€? (2004) Ă… MLS Soccer Portland Timbers at Colorado Rapids (N) (Live) Julia’s Kitchen Cooking Class The Return of Sherlock Holmes Backstage Pass ’ ‘G’ Ă…
8:00
8:30
Extreme Makeover: Home Edition U.S. Olympic Trials Swimming (N) CSI: NY Officer Involved ’ ‘14’ Extreme Makeover: Home Edition NUMB3RS Con Job ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Globe Trekker ‘G’ Ă… (DVS) U.S. Olympic Trials Swimming (N) House Baggage ’ ‘14’ Ă… Front Row Center ’ ‘G’ Ă…
9:00
9:30
Extreme Makeover: Home Edition U.S. Olympic Trials Track & Field Blue Bloods ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Extreme Makeover: Home Edition Bones Fragments. ’ ‘14’ Ă… My Family ‘PG’ Outnumbered U.S. Olympic Trials Track & Field House Help Me ’ ‘14’ Ă… Austin City Limits ’ ‘PG’ Ă…
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Castle Dial M for Mayor ’ ‘PG’ KATU News Comedy.TV ‘PG’ The Firm Chapter Twenty (N) ‘14’ News Sat. Night Live 48 Hours Mystery ’ Ă… News Paid Program Castle Dial M for Mayor ’ ‘PG’ News (N) Ă… Inside Edition News Two/Half Men The Finder The Conversation ‘14’ New Tricks Dark Chocolate Ă… Masterpiece Mystery! ’ ‘PG’ The Firm Chapter Twenty (N) ‘14’ NewsChannel 8 Sat. Night Live That ’70s Show That ’70s Show Cheaters ’ ‘14’ Ă… ››› “Meet John Doeâ€? (1941) Gary Cooper, Barbara Stanwyck.
BASIC CABLE CHANNELS
Cajun Justice Cajun Justice Cajun Justice Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Barter Kings Barter Kings *A&E 130 28 18 32 Cajun Justice ››› “The Matrixâ€? (1999, Science Fiction) Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne, Carrie-Anne Moss. A computer hacker ››› “The Matrix Reloadedâ€? (2003, Science Fiction) Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne, Carrie-Anne Moss. Free››› “The Matrix Reloadedâ€? (2003) *AMC 102 40 39 learns his world is a computer simulation. Ă… dom fighters revolt against machines. Ă… Keanu Reeves. Ă… My Cat From Hell Cat Fight! ‘PG’ My Cat From Hell ’ ‘PG’ Ă… My Cat From Hell Cat Fight! ‘PG’ Bad Dog! Home Wreckers ’ ‘PG’ Tanked: Unfiltered (N) ‘PG’ Ă… Bad Dog! Home Wreckers ’ ‘PG’ *ANPL 68 50 26 38 My Cat From Hell Pissed Off! ‘PG’ Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC “Blue Crush 2â€? (2011) Sasha Jackson, Elizabeth Mathis. Premiere. BRAVO 137 44 True Blue: Ten Years Them Idiots Whirled Tour ’ ‘PG’ Ă… My Big Redneck Vacation ‘PG’ Redneck Island All Mixed Up ‘PG’ My Big Redneck Vacation ‘PG’ CMT 190 32 42 53 Blue Collar Comedy The Suze Orman Show (N) Ă… Princess ’ Princess Kezia How I Made My Millions The Suze Orman Show Ă… Princess ’ Princess Kezia Insanity! Hair Loss CNBC 51 36 40 52 How I Made My Millions Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom (N) The Next List Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom (N) The Next List CNN 52 38 35 48 The Next List ›› “Super Troopersâ€? (2001, Comedy) Jay Chandrasekhar. Ă… › “Joe Dirtâ€? (2001, Comedy) David Spade, Dennis Miller. Ă… ›› “Jackass 3.5â€? (2011) Ă… COM 135 53 135 47 › “Saving Silvermanâ€? (2001) Jason Biggs, Steve Zahn. Ă… (4:30) City Club of Central Oregon Talk of the Town Local issues. Cooking Oregon Joy of Fishing Journal Get Outdoors Visions of NW The Yoga Show The Yoga Show Talk of the Town Local issues. COTV 11 Washington This Week CSPAN 58 20 12 11 (4:00) Washington This Week Shake It Up! ‘G’ Austin & Ally ’ Gravity Falls ‘Y’ Lab Rats ’ ‘G’ “Let It Shineâ€? (2012) Tyler James Williams, Coco Jones. ’ ‘G’ Ă… Gravity Falls (N) A.N.T. Farm ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Ă… Good-Charlie Good-Charlie *DIS 87 43 14 39 Good-Charlie Dual Survival Adrift ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Dual Survival Out of Africa ‘PG’ Dual Survival Buried Alive ’ ‘PG’ Dual Survival Hippo Island ‘PG’ Dual Survival ’ ‘14’ Ă… Dual Survival Hippo Island ‘PG’ *DISC 156 21 16 37 Dual Survival Slash and Burn ‘14’ Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians ››› “(500) Days of Summerâ€? (2009) Joseph Gordon-Levitt. Mrs. Eastwood Mrs. Eastwood The Soup ‘14’ Chelsea Lately *E! 136 25 X Games From Los Angeles. (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… ESPN 21 23 22 23 Softball MLS Soccer Los Angeles Galaxy at San Jose Earthquakes (N) (Live) Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) Ă… X Center (N) (Live) X Games Los Angeles (N) Ă… ESPN2 22 24 21 24 (4:30) MLL Lacrosse All-Star Game From Boca Raton, Fla. (N) (Live) ›› “Fallen Champ: The Untold Story of Mike Tysonâ€? (1993) Ă… 30 for 30 Ă… 26 Yrs.: Dewey Bozella The Real Rocky Ă… ESPNC 23 25 123 25 ›› “Fallen Champ: The Untold Story of Mike Tysonâ€? (1993) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. Highlight Express (N) (Live) ESPNN 24 63 124 203 SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… ›› “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chestâ€? (2006, Action) Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom. ››› “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearlâ€? (2003) Johnny Depp, Geoffrey Rush. FAM 67 29 19 41 “Prince of Persia: Sandsâ€? Justice With Judge Jeanine (N) The Five Journal Editorial FOX News Justice With Judge Jeanine The Five Red Eye FNC 54 61 36 50 Huckabee (N) Restaurant: Impossible Chopped A Cornish Mess ‘G’ Chopped Chocolate Challenge Chopped ‘G’ Chopped ‘G’ Iron Chef America *FOOD 177 62 98 44 Iron Chef America ››› “Wantedâ€? (2008, Action) James McAvoy, Morgan Freeman, Angelina Jolie. ›› “Hancockâ€? (2008, Action) Will Smith, Charlize Theron, Jason Bateman. Anger Management ‘14’ BrandX With Louie ‘MA’ FX 131 Junk Gypsies Mom Caves ‘G’ Design Star Hollywood eras. ‘G’ Great Rooms High Low Proj. House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l HGTV 176 49 33 43 Going Yard ‘G’ Curb Appeal ‘G’ House Hunters Hunters Int’l American Pickers ‘PG’ Ă… American Pickers ‘PG’ Ă… Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ *HIST 155 42 41 36 American Pickers ‘PG’ Ă… “Blue Lagoon: The Awakeningâ€? (2012) Denise Richards. ‘14’ Ă… “Fugitive at 17â€? (2012) Marie Avgeropoulos. Premiere. ‘14’ Ă… “Walking the Hallsâ€? (2012) Jamie Luner, Al Sapienza. ‘14’ Ă… LIFE 138 39 20 31 (4:00) “Reviving Opheliaâ€? ‘14’ Lockup: Raw Joining a gang. Lockup: Raw Time to Kill Lockup: Pendleton Angry teens. Lockup: Pendleton Lockup: Pendleton Lockup: Colorado MSNBC 56 59 128 51 Lockup: Raw Killers Among Us Snooki (6:45) Awkward. Resolutions ‘14’ (7:18) The Real World ‘14’ Ă… Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness ›› “Scary Movie 3â€? (2003) ’ MTV 192 22 38 57 Cribs Priciest Pads Countdown iCarly ‘G’ Ă… iCarly ‘G’ Ă… iCarly iBalls ‘G’ Victorious ‘G’ Victorious ‘G’ Victorious ‘G’ How to Rock ‘G’ Big Time Rush Figure It Out ‘Y’ Yes, Dear ‘PG’ Yes, Dear ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ Friends ‘PG’ NICK 82 46 24 40 iCarly ‘G’ Ă… Main Street Unfaithful: Stories of Betrayal ‘14’ Unfaithful: Stories of Betrayal ‘14’ Unfaithful: Stories of Betrayal ‘14’ Unfaithful: Stories of Betrayal ‘14’ Unfaithful: Stories of Betrayal ‘14’ Unfaithful: Stories of Betrayal ‘14’ OWN 161 103 31 103 Main Street Mariners Pre. MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox at Seattle Mariners From Safeco Field in Seattle. (N) (Live) Mariners Post. MLS Soccer Portland Timbers at Colorado Rapids ROOT 20 45 28* 26 MLS Soccer: Sounders at Revolution ›› “The Day After Tomorrowâ€? (2004, Action) Dennis Quaid, Jake Gyllenhaal, Ian Holm. ’ ›› “The Day After Tomorrowâ€? (2004, Action) Dennis Quaid, Jake Gyllenhaal, Ian Holm. ’ SPIKE 132 31 34 46 (3:30) ›› “Rambo IIIâ€? (1988) ’ “Snow Beastâ€? (2011, Suspense) John Schneider, Jason London. “Bigfootâ€? (2012) Danny Bonaduce, Barry Williams. Premiere. ‘14’ “Mega Python vs. Gatoroidâ€? ‘14’ SYFY 133 35 133 45 “Sasquatch Mountainâ€? (2006) Lance Henriksen, Cerina Vincent. Ă… In Touch W/Charles Stanley Hour of Power ‘G’ Ă… Billy Graham Classic Crusades Not a Fan Travel the Road “The One Lambâ€? (2009, Drama) John W. Price, Bryan Forrest. Behind Scenes Virtual Memory TBN 205 60 130 Friends ’ ‘PG’ Friends ’ ‘PG’ Seinfeld ‘PG’ Seinfeld ‘PG’ Big Bang Big Bang The Great Escape ‘14’ Ă… ›› “Tyler Perry’s I Can Do Bad All By Myselfâ€? (2009) Tyler Perry. *TBS 16 27 11 28 Friends ’ ‘PG’ Friends ’ ‘14’ ›››› “Sullivan’s Travelsâ€? (1941) Joel McCrea. Hollywood (6:45) ››› “Christmas in Julyâ€? (1940, Comedy) Dick ››› “The Great McGintyâ€? (1940, Comedy) Brian Donlevy, ›››› “The Lady Eveâ€? (1941, Romance-Comedy) Barbara (11:15) ›››› “Hail the Conquering TCM 101 44 101 29 director turns hobo for social epic. Powell, Ellen Drew, Raymond Walburn. Muriel Angelus, Akim Tamiroff. Stanwyck, Henry Fonda. Ă… Heroâ€? (1944) Ă… Undercover Boss: Abroad (N) ’ Undercover Boss Synagro ‘PG’ Undercover Boss ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Undercover Boss ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Undercover Boss: Abroad ‘PG’ Undercover Boss ’ ‘PG’ Ă… *TLC 178 34 32 34 Undercover Boss ’ ‘PG’ Ă… ›› “Deep Impactâ€? (1998, Drama) Robert Duvall, Tea Leoni, Elijah Wood. Ă… ›› “Deep Impactâ€? (1998) Robert Duvall. Ă… *TNT 17 26 15 27 (4:30) NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup: Quaker State 400 From Kentucky Speedway in Sparta, Ky. (N) Ă… ›› “Planet 51â€? (2009) Voices of Dwayne Johnson, Jessica Biel. ›› “Garfield’s Fun Festâ€? (2008, Comedy) Voices of Frank Welker. Home Movies King of the Hill King of the Hill Family Guy ‘14’ The Boondocks The Boondocks *TOON 84 Tastiest Places to Chowdown Tastiest Places to Chowdown Ghost Adventures Rose Hall ‘PG’ Ghost Adventures ‘14’ Ă… Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Ă… Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Ă… *TRAV 179 51 45 42 Tastiest Places to Chowdown ›› “Crocodile Dundee IIâ€? (1988, Comedy) Paul Hogan. Ă… The Soul Man That ’70s Show Love-Raymond (9:12) Everybody Loves Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens TVLND 65 47 29 35 Crocodile Dun. Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Necessary Roughness ‘PG’ Ă… USA 15 30 23 30 Law & Order: SVU Hollywood Exes ’ ‘14’ Hollywood Exes ’ ‘14’ ››› “Boyz N the Hoodâ€? (1991) Larry Fishburne, Ice Cube. ’ ››› “Baby Boyâ€? (2001, Drama) Tyrese Gibson, Omar Gooding. ’ VH1 191 48 37 54 Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ’ ‘14’ PREMIUM CABLE CHANNELS
“A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriorsâ€? ››› “Shanghai Knightsâ€? 2003 Jackie Chan. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… ››› “The Mask of Zorroâ€? 1998 Antonio Banderas. ‘PG-13’ Ă… ENCR 106 401 306 401 (4:20) ››› “Blade Runner: The Final Cutâ€? 1982 ›› “Cruel Intentionsâ€? 1999, Drama Sarah Michelle Gellar. ‘R’ Ă… › “I Still Know What You Did Last Summerâ€? 1998, Horror ‘R’ Ă… ›› “Urban Legendâ€? 1998, Horror Jared Leto, Alicia Witt. ‘R’ Ă… FMC 104 204 104 120 (4:00) ›› “Urban Legendâ€? 1998 Best of PRIDE Fighting UFC Unleashed UFC Reloaded UFC 68: Sylvia vs. Couture Randy Couture comes out of retirement. UFC: Maynard vs. Guida FUEL 34 PGA Tour Golf AT&T National, Third Round From Congressional Country Club in Bethesda, Md. Ă… Golf Central (N) PGA Tour Golf Champions: Constellation Senior Players, Third Round GOLF 28 301 27 301 PGA Tour Golf HALL 66 33 175 33 I Love Lucy ‘G’ I Love Lucy ‘G’ I Love Lucy ‘G’ I Love Lucy ‘G’ I Love Lucy ‘G’ I Love Lucy ‘G’ I Love Lucy ‘G’ I Love Lucy ‘G’ I Love Lucy ‘G’ I Love Lucy ‘G’ I Love Lucy ‘G’ I Love Lucy ‘G’ I Love Lucy ‘G’ I Love Lucy ‘G’ (4:30) › “Jonah Hexâ€? 2010, Action ›› “Arthurâ€? 2011, Romance-Comedy Russell Brand. An irresponsible playboy ›› “Final Destination 5â€? 2011, Horror Nicholas D’Agosto, True Blood Sookie asks for Pam’s ››› “Unstoppableâ€? 2010, Action Denzel Washington, HBO 425 501 425 501 Josh Brolin. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… must choose between love and money. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… Emma Bell. Premiere. ’ ‘R’ Ă… help. ’ ‘MA’ Ă… Chris Pine. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… ››› “Sin Cityâ€? 2005, Crime Drama Jessica Alba, Devon Aoki, Alexis Bledel. ‘R’ ›› “Ramboâ€? 2008, Action Sylvester Stallone. ‘R’ (9:15) ››› “Cop Landâ€? 1997, Crime Drama Sylvester Stallone, Harvey Keitel. ‘R’ ›› Rambo ‘R’ IFC 105 105 (5:10) ››› “Bridesmaidsâ€? 2011, Comedy Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph, Rose Byrne. A maid of (7:20) ›› “Due Dateâ€? 2010, Comedy Robert Downey Jr., Strike Back Connolly plans to deliver “Recoilâ€? 2011, Action Steve Austin. A cop turns into a (11:35) Strike MAX 400 508 508 honor’s life unravels as the big day approaches. ’ ‘NR’ Ă… Zach Galifianakis. ’ ‘R’ Ă… WMD to Latif. ’ ‘MA’ Ă… vigilante after his family is murdered. ‘R’ Ă… Back ’ ‘MA’ The Truth Behind UFOs: Popped Chasing UFOs Dirty Secrets ‘14’ Chasing UFOs ‘14’ The Truth Behind UFOs: Popped Chasing UFOs Dirty Secrets ‘14’ Chasing UFOs ‘14’ The Truth Behind... ‘PG’ NGC 157 157 Avatar: Air. Odd Parents Odd Parents SpongeBob SpongeBob Fanboy-Chum Fanboy-Chum Invader ZIM ’ Invader ZIM ’ NTOON 89 115 189 115 Power Rangers Power Rangers Iron Man: Armor Iron Man: Armor Avatar: Air. Jimmy Big Time Raglin Outdoors Ultimate Hunt’g Trophy Quest Most Wanted Commander Outfitter Boot Ted Nugent Craig Morgan Sasquatch Commander High Places Timbersports OUTD 37 307 43 307 Trophy Hunt “The Other F Wordâ€? 2011 A generation’s anti-authoritar- (6:40) ››› “The Rockâ€? 1996, Action Sean Connery, Nicolas Cage, Ed Harris. Alcatraz Island ter- Boxing Cornelius Bundrage vs. Cory Spinks Bundrage battles Spinks for the IBF light middleweight title. From Indio, SHO 500 500 ians, punk rockers, become parents. ‘NR’ rorists threaten to gas San Francisco. ’ ‘R’ Calif. (N) ‘PG’ Hard Parts MotoGP Racing MotoGP Racing NASCAR Victory Lane (N) Hard Parts Hard Parts Australian V8 Supercars Hidden Valley SPEED 35 303 125 303 Hard Parts (7:15) › “Zookeeperâ€? 2011, Comedy Kevin James. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… ›› “Cars 2â€? 2011, Comedy Voices of Owen Wilson. ’ ‘G’ Ă… (10:50) ›› “Soul Surferâ€? 2011 STARZ 300 408 300 408 (5:15) › “A Man Apartâ€? 2003, Crime Drama Vin Diesel. ’ ‘R’ Ă… (4:10) “Clashâ€? 2009, Action Thanh (5:50) ›› “Madeâ€? 2001 Jon Favreau. Two mob lackeys ›› “Beastlyâ€? 2011 Alex Pettyfer. A teen must find true (10:35) ››› “Dog Soldiersâ€? 2002, Horror Sean Pertwee, › “The Breedâ€? 2006 Michelle Rodriguez. A pack of muTMC 525 525 Van Ngo. ’ ‘R’ Ă… are given a trial assignment in New York. love to break a curse. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… tated dogs hunts a group of vacationers. ‘R’ Kevin McKidd, Emma Cleasby. ’ ‘R’ Ă… Costas Tonight ‘PG’ U.S. Olympic Trials U.S. Olympic Trials Swimming NBCSN 27 58 30 209 2012 Tour de France Prologue From Liège to Liège. Distance 6.1 km. Ghost Whisperer ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Ghost Whisperer ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Ghost Whisperer ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Ghost Whisperer ’ ‘PG’ Ă… ›› “Two Weeks Noticeâ€? 2002 Sandra Bullock, Alicia Witt. ‘PG-13’ *WE 143 41 174 118 Ghost Whisperer ’ ‘PG’ Ă…
SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
A & A
No restaurant server feels degraded by generous tip Dear Abby: My co-workers and I recently went out to eat and I was put in an awkward situation. One of them announced that I had left a big tip when I paid my bill. Abby, I always leave a generous tip. I was raised well below the poverty line, and my mother’s tips literally determined how much we would be able to eat that day. The co-worker who said it became upset with me and began lecturing me about how “rude� it is to leave a large tip, especially when you’re with other people. She even said it “degrades� the server. My mom may have raised me differently than most people, but I was taught that it’s OK to leave a big tip as long as you don’t announce it to everyone. Was what I did considered rude? — Generous in Connecticut
Dear Generous: No. The person who was rude was your co-worker, for making a spectacle. She probably did it because your tip made hers appear to be stingy. Diners leave tips based upon the quality of the service they receive. If you felt your server merited it, you were right to leave a large tip. P.S. I have never heard of a server feeling “degraded� because of a large tip. Grateful, yes. Degraded, never! Dear Abby: I am dating a man, “Cameron,� I am crazy about. We plan to be married next year once I finish college. There is just one issue that’s stressing me. Cam’s apartment is gross and messy. There are dishes from various dinners scattered all over the place. I find it disgusting, and I’m worried he will be like this after we’re married. I have tried to talk to him about it, but he gets angry and says that it’s HIS place. He says he’ll be neater when we’re married. I’m not sure I believe
DEAR ABBY that. This seems a silly thing to cause discord in a relationship, which is otherwise going well, but I am concerned. Is there anything I can do? — Grossed Out in Bloomington, Ind.
Dear Grossed Out: Yes, there is. You can face the fact that once you marry Cameron he is still going to be the same person he is now — sloppy, messy and defensive when you point out something that needs improvement. People don’t magically change after they say “I do.� If you love him enough to accept him just the way he is, and be the primary housekeeper after you’re married, you may have a happy union. If not, put your foot down now. Dear Abby: Many years ago I shoplifted a $30 item from a department store. Now I’d like to clear my conscience and make amends, but how? I want to remain anonymous, so I can’t send a check. Sending cash by mail seems unwise, and even with Google I have been unable to find a corporate address for an appropriate division. Can you help? — Anonymous in the USA
Dear Anonymous: Because you have made an honest effort and haven’t been able to come up with an address to send the money, try to find out if the department store sponsors an activity for charity and donate to that. Or, alternatively, give the money to a charity of your choice, which may salve your conscience and do a good deed at the same time. — Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Horoscope: Happy Birthday for Saturday, June 30, 2012 By JACQUELINE BIGAR This year you fit in a substantial amount of time for enjoying loved ones and friends. You could be friskier than you have been in the past; however, you will need to juggle this wildness with your daily life. You want structure, plans and a routine for health and exercise. If you are single, try not to put a potential sweetie on a pedestal — your vision of this person is not realistic. You will not want to commit until a year from now. If you are attached, both of you exude a combination of mischief and fun. Spend more time together, and your bond will cement even more. Sagittarius plays a key role in your days and weeks. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Allow others to dominate a conversation. You are looking for some answers, and you will get them if you listen. Note what is not being said. Tonight: Use your dreams as a source of ideas. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Others command the ship today, no matter what. You might as well go along with the present trend; you cannot fight it. Someone close to you will want some personal time. Tonight: Sprinkle in some romance. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Complete a project or venture early on. You’ll want to accept a suggestion or invitation that forces you out and about. Your immediate reaction might be to say no. Don’t. Tonight: Go with a friend’s suggestion. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Your creativity allows more spontaneity than is the norm. Don’t allow yourself to be cornered into a situation or obligation. Play plans by ear, as you could be far more tired than you are aware. Tonight: Know when enough is enough. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You might be slow to get going, but once you do, you could be quite a force to deal with. Many different options mark your decisions. Tonight: Go with the
flow. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHH Squeeze in an important get-together for brunch or early on. You will feel more upbeat as a result. A misunderstanding could become a problem if you do not remain easygoing. Give up being so picky. Tonight: Entertain from home. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH A purchase does not need to break the bank. Do some shopping around and a bit of research. Though you might be confused at first, a resolution will appear soon enough. Tonight: Lots of people, lots of chatter, lots of fun. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH Use the daylight hours to the max, as a misunderstanding could mar your evening. Do not allow it to become a big deal, or you could be sorry. What happens was not intended to be a slight. Tonight: Relish every moment. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Get your key errands done early on. You could be overtired and dragging. A nap also might not hurt. When you perk up, you engage others — especially your immediate circle — in a dynamic manner. You might be taken aback by someone’s offer. Tonight: Let your hair down. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You waver between establishing your presence and becoming more detached. Others might not properly interpret these changes. Verbalize your thoughts and be as clear as possible. Step back and center yourself. Tonight: A force to be dealt with. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH Interactions with friends and loved ones are best had before sundown, if not earlier. Still, you might hit a misunderstanding, as one word you use means something different to someone else. Tonight: Follow the music. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHHH Others seek you out. Be flattered by all the attention rather than feel overwhelmed. You may have to sort through your priorities and make choices accordingly. Tonight: Add more spice to your life. Š 2011 by King Features Syndicate
B3
C C Please email event information to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event� at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
TODAY MT. BACHELOR KENNEL CLUB ALL-BREED DOG SHOW: Featuring obedience, rally and agility events; free; 8 a.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541678-9186 or www.mbkc.org. PRINEVILLE FARMERS MARKET: Free; 8:30 a.m.12:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E. Third St.; 503-739-0643 or prinevillefarmersmarket@ gmail.com. MADRAS SATURDAY MARKET: Free admission; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, B and Seventh streets; 541489-3239 or madrassatmkt@ gmail.com. CENTRAL OREGON SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts from local artisans; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Bend Public Library, 600 N.W. Wall St.; 541-420-9015 or www. centraloregonsaturdaymarket. com. LA PINE FRONTIER DAYS: The Fourth of July celebration includes lawn mower races, a talent show, woodcutter’s jamboree, live entertainment and more; free; 10 a.m.10 p.m.; La Pine Event Center, 16405 First St.; 541-536-7821. NORTHWEST CROSSING FARMERS MARKET: Free; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives, Bend; 541-382-1662, valerie@ brooksresources.com or www.nwxfarmersmarket.com. QUILT SHOW: The La Pine Needle Quilters present a quilting boutique, raffles and more; free admission; 10 a.m.7 p.m.; La Pine Event Center, 16405 First St.; 541-536-6237. SISTERS SUMMER FAIRE: Vendors sell arts and crafts; free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Village Green Park, 335 S. Elm St.; 541-549-0251 or jeri@ sisterscountry.com. SOLAR VIEWING: View the sun using safe techniques; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 11 a.m.-2 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. OBSERVATORY LAUNCH: Meet owls and birds of prey, with solar viewing, nature talks and more; free; noon-2 p.m.; Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245 River Road; 541-593-4442. LA PINE RODEO: Ninth annual rodeo includes riding, roping, barrel racing and more with announcing by Kedo Olsen; $12, $10 seniors and children ages 6-12, free ages 5 and younger; 1-3 p.m.; La Pine Rodeo Grounds, Third Street and Walker Road; 541-5367500, info@lapinerodeo.com or www.lapinerodeo.com. “GREENING THE REVOLUTION�: A screening of the film that investigates globalization and hunger; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-728-4764 or timowoj@ gmail.com. RINDY AND MARV ROSS: The Portland-based musicians, from Quarterflash and The Trail Band, perform; $10 in advance, $14 at the door, free ages 17 and younger; 4-6 p.m., doors open 11 a.m.; Maragas Winery, 15523 S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Culver; 541-546-5464 or www. maragaswinery.com. OLDIES DANCE: Dance to celebrate the grange; donations accepted; 5-8 p.m.; High Desert Community Grange, 62855 Powell Butte Road, Bend; 541-420-2204. ISLE OF PARADISE LUAU: A Polynesian dinner and dance with music by Bill Keale; $25, includes dinner if purchased in advance; 5:30 p.m. dinner, show begins 7:30 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-280-8955 or www. bendticket.com. AN EVENING OF MUSIC AND LAUGHTER: Featuring improv from Triage and music by Bella Acapella; proceeds benefit the Women’s Resource Center; $30; 6 p.m.; Bend’s Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-385-0570 or www.wrcco.org. BENEFIT CONCERT: Featuring blues by Tom Brouliette and Heather Drakulich; bring a drink and appetizer; proceeds benefit Redmond-Sisters Hospice; $10; 6-10 p.m.; 1022 N.W. 15th St., Redmond; 541-480-1917. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Phillip Margolin presents his book “Capitol Murder;� free; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs
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Shore Thing Productions presents a staged concert version of “1776,� a musical about debates leading up to the signing of the Declaration of Independence, today and Sunday at Bend’s Tower Theatre. The show, a benefit for the Tower Theatre Foundation, features an all-female cast. Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. “1776� IN CONCERT: Shore Thing Productions presents a staged concert version of the awardwinning musical about debates leading up to the signing of the Declaration of Independence, with an all-female cast; proceeds benefit the Tower Theatre Foundation; $20; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www .towertheatre.org. ESTOCAR: The Seattle-based pop-rock band performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.com.
SUNDAY MT. BACHELOR KENNEL CLUB ALL-BREED DOG SHOW: Featuring obedience, rally and agility events, and a flyball competition; free; 8 a.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-678-9186 or www.mbkc.org. LA PINE FRONTIER DAYS: The Fourth of July celebration includes lawn mower races, a talent show, woodcutter’s jamboree, live entertainment and more; free; 10 a.m.-10 p.m.; La Pine Event Center, 16405 First St.; 541-536-7821. QUILT SHOW: The La Pine Needle Quilters present a quilting boutique, raffles and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-7 p.m.; La Pine Event Center, 16405 First St.; 541-536-6237. SISTERS SUMMER FAIRE: Vendors sell arts and crafts; free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Village Green Park, 335 S. Elm St.; 541-5490251 or jeri@sisterscountry.com. FRONTIER DAYS BOOK SALE: A sale of books; free admission; noon-5 p.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-3121090. LA PINE RODEO: Ninth annual rodeo includes riding, roping, barrel racing and more with announcing by Kedo Olsen; $12, $10 seniors and children ages 6-12, free ages 5 and younger; 1-3 p.m.; La Pine Rodeo Grounds, Third Street and Walker Road; 541-536-7500, info@lapinerodeo. com or www.lapinerodeo.com. “1776� IN CONCERT: Shore Thing Productions presents a staged concert version of the awardwinning musical about debates leading up to the signing of the Declaration of Independence, with an all-female cast; proceeds benefit the Tower Theatre Foundation; $20; 2 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. NOTABLES SWING BAND: The big band plays favorites from the 1930s-50s; $5; 2-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-639-7734 or www.notablesswingband.com. SUMMER SUNDAY CONCERT: The hip-hop act Mosley Wotta performs; free; 2:30-4:30 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-322-9383 or www.bendconcerts.com. BENEFIT BREWHAHA: Featuring performances by the Moon Mountain Ramblers, The Anvil Blasters, The Prairie Rockets and more; proceeds benefit Patty Meehan, who was in a car crash; $10 suggested donation; 4-9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.com. BLOCK PARTY: Featuring live music, food, kids activities and more; proceeds benefit the college; $5; 4-9 p.m.; Kilns College, 550 S.W. Industrial Way, #44, Bend; 541-389-9166. OPERA FOR ALL OF OREGON: Eugene Opera’s Artist Mentor Program singers perform arias and show tunes; reservations requested; $25; 4 p.m.; House
on Metolius, Forest Road 980, Camp Sherman; 541-480-9999 or house@metolius.com. TAARKA: The Colorado-based world-folk act performs; $5$10; 5 p.m.; Angeline’s Bakery & Cafe, 121 W. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-549-9122 or www. angelinesbakery.com. ENATION: The anthemic rock band performs, with Cadence; free; 7 p.m., doors open 6:30 p.m.; The Sound Garden, 1279 N.E. Second St., Bend; 541-633-6804 or www. thesoundgardenstudio.com.
MONDAY FRONTIER DAYS BOOK SALE: A sale of books; free admission; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-3121090. LA PINE FRONTIER DAYS: The Fourth of July celebration includes lawn mower races, a talent show, woodcutter’s jamboree, live entertainment and more; free; 10 a.m.-10 p.m.; La Pine Event Center, 16405 First St.; 541-536-7821. QUILT SHOW: The La Pine Needle Quilters present a quilting boutique, raffles and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-7 p.m.; La Pine Event Center, 16405 First St.; 541-536-6237. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Ellee Thalheimer talks about her book “Cycling Sojourner: A Guide to the Best Multiday Tours in Oregon�; free; 7-8:30 p.m.; Hutch’s Bicycles Westside Store, 725 N.W. Columbia St., Bend; 620-2886658.
TUESDAY FRONTIER DAYS BOOK SALE: A sale of books; free admission; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-3121090. LA PINE FRONTIER DAYS: The Fourth of July celebration includes lawn mower races, a talent show, woodcutter’s jamboree, live entertainment and more; free; 10 a.m.-10 p.m.; La Pine Event Center, 16405 First St.; 541-536-7821. QUILT SHOW: The La Pine Needle Quilters present a quilting boutique, raffles and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-7 p.m.; La Pine Event Center, 16405 First St.; 541-536-6237. REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 2-6:30 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue; 541-550-0066 or redmondfarmersmarket1@ hotmail.com. TUESDAY MARKET AT EAGLE CREST: Free admission; 2-6 p.m.; Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-633-9637 or info@sustainableflame.com. GREEN TEAM MOVIE NIGHT: Featuring a screening of a film about electric vehicles; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504.
WEDNESDAY FIRECRACKER RIDE: Wear patriotic clothes for a 65-mile bike ride; proceeds benefit Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation; $20 in advance, $25 day of race; 8 a.m.; Alfalfa Market and Johnson Ranch roads, Bend; 541-388-0002, molly@mbsef.org or www.mbsef.org. SPARK YOUR HEART 5K: A 5K run/walk and children’s dash; registration required; proceeds benefit the Children’s Heart Fund; $20 in advance, $40 day of race; 8 a.m.; Riverbend Park, Southwest Columbia Street and Southwest Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-706-6996 or www. sparkyourheartbend.com. BOOK SALE: A sale of recent and vintage used books; proceeds benefit Bend’s sister
city, Condega, Nicaragua; free admission; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Trinity Episcopal Church, 469 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-633-7354. FREE DAY AT DES CHUTES HISTORICAL MUSEUM: In celebration of the Fourth of July, the museum offers free admission and ice cream; free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 N.W. Idaho Ave., Bend; 541-389-1813 or www. deschuteshistory.org. LA PINE FRONTIER DAYS: The Fourth of July celebration includes lawn mower races, a talent show, woodcutter’s jamboree, live entertainment and more; free; 10 a.m.-10 p.m.; La Pine Event Center, 16405 First St.; 541-536-7821. PET PARADE: Bring your leashed pet, no cats or rabbits, to be in the parade, or come to watch the procession of animals; lineup is between Bond and Wall streets, by the Bend-La Pine Schools administration building; free; 9:30 a.m. lineup, 10 a.m. parade; downtown Bend; 541-389-7275. QUILT SHOW: The La Pine Needle Quilters present a quilting boutique, raffles and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-7 p.m.; La Pine Event Center, 16405 First St.; 541-536-6237. REDMOND FOURTH OF JULY PARADE: Themed “A Firecracker 4th of July�; free; 10 a.m., checkin begins at 8:30 a.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-923-5191. SUMMER BOOK SALE: The Friends of the Bend Libraries hosts a book sale featuring thousands of books; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes Library Administration Building, 507 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-389-1622. FREEDOMFEST 2012: With food, power breaking, live music and children’s activities; free; 11 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sam Johnson Park, Southwest 15th Street, Redmond; 541-923-8614 or www. calvarychapelredmond.com. FRONTIER DAYS BOOK SALE: A sale of books; free admission; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-3121090. OLD-FASHIONED FOURTH OF JULY FESTIVAL: With games, live music, food, vendors and more; free; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; 541-389-7275. REDMOND’S OLD FASHIONED FOURTH OF JULY CELEBRATION: A community celebration with games, music, a pie-eating contest and more; preceded by a cruise-in; free; 1-9 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way; 541-548-7275. THE GREAT FISH RACE: Watch fish race down Ochoco Creek; prizes will be awarded to winners; proceeds benefit Crook County CASA, Crook County Kids Club and Lutheran Community Services; $5 per fish; 1:30 p.m.; Ochoco Creek Park, 450 N.E. Elm St., Prineville; 541-815-2401 or development@ casaofcentraloregon.org. MUSIC IN THE CANYON: A Red, White and Redmond Blues Festival; free; 2-7 p.m.; American Legion Community Park, 850 S.W. Rimrock Way, Redmond; www.musicinthecanyon.com. BEND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m.; Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@gmail.com or http://bendfarmersmarket.com. SOUND FOURTH: The Cascade Horizon Band and the Festival Chorus perform patriotic music; followed by a barbecue; donations accepted; 3 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-639-7734, cascadehorizonband@aol.com or www.cascadehorizonband.org. MAC SPLASH: With a barbecue, swimming, music, games and fireworks viewing; $6-$40; 5:30 p.m.; Madras Aquatic Center, 1195 S.E. Kemper Way; 541-475-4253.
B4
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
TUNDRA
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
HEART OF THE CITY
SALLY FORTH
FRAZZ
ROSE IS ROSE
STONE SOUP
LUANN
MOTHER GOOSE AND GRIMM
DILBERT
DOONESBURY
PICKLES
ADAM
WIZARD OF ID
B.C.
SHOE
GARFIELD
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
PEANUTS
MARY WORTH
SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
BIZARRO
B5
DENNIS THE MENACE
SUDOKU Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.
SOLUTION TO YESTERDAY’S SUDOKU
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB
GET FUZZY
NON SEQUITUR
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CANDORVILLE
SAFE HAVENS
LOS ANGELES TIMES DAILY CROSSWORD
SIX CHIX
ZITS
HERMAN
B6
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
Museum Continued from B1 The museum features an 1891 Mason & Reich Vocalion reed organ: “When we play it,” Clark joked, “it can be heard through all of Redmond.” There’s also an array of World War II black and white photographs willed to the society by Redmond resident Sgt. Thomas Stearns, who had the job in the Army of photographing the troops. Antique cameras. Ornate cash registers. Decades-old firefighting equipment. All are spread throughout displays. Until recently, Redmond didn’t have a designated place for these pieces of history. Now the society, formed a year ago, is hoping to launch a capital campaign to one day own a building outright. “I believe in museums and the preservation of history because it gives people a sense of place,” Clark said. “You need a place that preserves history, that says how the community came to be.”
The museum shows the only known picture of Redmond’s original homestead; Frank and Josephine Redmond’s home was located at the junction of what are now Elm and Canal streets. The Redmonds are shown in framed portraits.
Creating a museum The move toward fundraising is part of an evolution in the way history has been handled in Redmond. The Bend-based Deschutes County Historical Society serves all of the county. But in the 1970s, several Redmond residents formed a group that also focused on preserving town history. That morphed into the Redmond Historical Commission, a city entity that managed the collection of historic items donated to the city over the years. Commission members for a time put up a few displays in a room at the Redmond Public Library, although they had to regularly yield it for meetings, Clark said. After a time, however, the commission needed to move. “The city grew by 15,000 in 10 years, so they needed the library space back,” Clark said. After a stint in the New Redmond Hotel, the commission moved into the cityowned space at 529 S.W. Seventh St. in 2009. Commission members decided the best use for it, Clark said, was to quickly put together a small museum. “That was our major goal,” Clark said, “to show our stuff.” The latest development came a year ago, when the city and commission members decided mutually to split. By leaving city auspices and becoming the Greater Redmond Historical Society, which operates the museum, the group can now raise its own funds. It’s in the process of becoming a nonprofit. That will be particularly important down the line. The
Photos by Rob Kerr / The Bulletin
A locked cabinet displays some of the hats of Neva Ferguson, who willed them to the Redmond Museum. It is said that Ferguson never stepped out without a hat.
Kathy Clark says the museum sometimes gets new information from visitors. She hopes for help identifying students in class pictures.
The medical bag of Dr. Robert “Doc” Unger is now on display at the museum. The museum rotates its displays annually.
Relatives of Tech. Sgt. Thomas J. Stearns donated one of his Purple Hearts, as well as his large collection of photos and antique cameras.
Still, Clark said gaining the current space was a huge step. It’s the best venue yet for the public to see the collection, and it allows the museum to grow. “Most people said, ‘We’ll wait until you have a place,’ ” Clark said. “ ‘Then we’ll give you our stuff.’ ” It also means Redmond’s artifacts are finally in one place. “Everything we had was stored all over town,” Clark said. “Literally. We had it in garages. We had it in barns. Public Works had some stuff. We had no idea what we had.” “Stuff just kept coming and coming,” society board member Lois Frey recalled of the day a moving truck brought all the goods to the museum. “And I said, “Where has all this stuff been?’ I was just flabbergasted. There’s some really wonderful stuff.”
Appreciating the past
city intends to at some point redevelop its city hall and the space the museum now occupies. City Manager David Brandt said it’s not imminent, but at some point the society
will need to move. “It is in their long-term interest to look for a new space,” he said. “They’re looking preferably for a historic building. We support that.”
The Redmond Museum is using that varied collection to change exhibits every year. This season’s displays feature the military, emergency services, a typical home setting, a general store and a doctor’s
a protege’s book party, or make a photo album to celebrate a Continued from B1 friend’s 50th birthday. She not mess. only showed up at a last-minute “It will be complicated, but Super Bowl party, she brought rejoice in the complications. It a huge block of chopped liver will not be anything like what she had molded into the shape you think it will be like, but of a football — with ketchup surprises are good lacing. for you. And don’t A lot of female be frightened: “It will not be writers are faYou can always anything like mous for not havchange your mind. what you think ing happy endings I know: I’ve had — besides Virginfour careers and it will be like, ia Woolf. Nora adthree husbands.” mired and wrote a but surprises Most of all, Nora are good for play about Mary was happy. It made McCarthy and her generous, you. And don’t Lillian Hellman, with her friends, be frightened: two writers fawith collabora- You can mous for fighting tors who needed a each other in old screen credit, with always change age, and also for younger writers your mind. I fiery love affairs looking for a break know: I’ve had that didn’t last. — or a party invi(Though Mary McCarthy did tation — and even four careers with hairdressers. and three apparently find happiness with She invited the husbands.” two young Rusher last husband, sian stylists who — Nora Ephron, James R. West, a blew out her hair addressing a diplomat). to the premiere of A lot of women graduating class “You’ve Got Mail.” at Wellesley College write humor piecShe let her friends in 1996 es now. Almost — and their kids everyone writes — be extras in her a blog. Some of movies. And then the memoirists took them to dinner at Baltha- are shrewd and funny about zar during breaks. themselves. Nora wrote about It’s hard to be funny without herself but she was shrewd malice, and discontent is so and funny about the world. often the flint for humor. Nora She drew lessons not just turned dross to gold and didn’t from her own life but those hold on to rancor. She suffered around her. Literally. I was fools. a fan long before I became a That fundamental good hu- friend, and it took a while to mor was a high-octane fuel learn what “everything is copy” that let her produce five times really meant. I laughed out loud as much as anyone else and the first time I read the characstill find the time — effortlessly ter Mark in “Heartburn” refer — to host a dinner, show up at to his ex-wife as “the first Jew-
ish Kimberly.” It was 10 years before I realized that one of Nora’s great friends, the Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen, had been married briefly to a Kimberly and came up with the line. It wasn’t until a few weeks ago that it finally clicked that the reason Ken Auletta and Amanda (Binky) Urban have a huge, unwieldy wagon wheel coffee table in their Bridgehampton house is that one of their early fights about it inspired a scene in “When Harry Met Sally.” As Binky said: “What could I do? Once she put it in the movie, I couldn’t throw it out.” “My Blue Heaven” was a 1990 movie Nora wrote that
starred Steve Martin as a Mafioso under witness protection; it didn’t occur to me then that Nick was the inspiration — Nick, who not only wrote about the mob turncoat Henry Hill, but also took Hill’s phone calls from undisclosed FBI locations and even lent him money. And it’s likely that plenty of memorable Nora Ephron lines were first uttered by her husband. One story Nora’s son Jacob tells is that Nora was dating the serial bachelor Mort Zuckerman when Nick, who always liked her, asked a mutual friend if she was single. “She’s dating Mort Zuckerman,” he was told. “Oh, in that case, I’ll call her in a few weeks,” Nick said.
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office. They transport visitors to a time a century ago when Frank and Josephine Redmond set up their homestead tent, far from anything resembling civilization. “They had to go clear to Cline Falls with a wagon to get any water — any,” Clark said. Within a decade, Redmond had canals for water and the railroad. Frank Redmond’s leather work gloves, a gift to him from a Native American woman who made them by hand, are there in a museum case. A picture shows the touring car the Redmonds eventually owned, driven by Josephine. The general store imagines what Lynch & Roberts Store on Evergreen Avenue was like in the 1910s. It contains goods ranging from old bottles of molasses and vanilla to an ornate Singer sewing machine. Volunteers even looked up prices from Sears Roebuck Co. catalogs to label items — a fine china tea set goes for $14.95. Other pieces take visitors several decades past pioneer times, with a Frankenstein-
And that brings things back to Nick and Nora. Nora didn’t just invent love stories. She lived one.
looking wart removal machine used into the 1950s or a case containing hats donated by longtime Redmond resident Neva Ferguson, who is reputed to never have left the house without hat and gloves. Last season, society members devised a Redmond Museum scavenger hunt, leading visitors throughout the space for answers and exposing them to all the exhibit details along the way. The exhibits will continue to evolve, Clark said. The society has a basement full of items, some still awaiting sorting and cataloging. “This is the tip of the iceberg,” she said. Frey said she particularly likes it when school groups visit the museum, which also opens for larger parties by appointment. Frey grew up on a dairy farm outside town and has lived her entire life in Central Oregon. “I think it’s really important for kids to know the history of their community,” she said. “Not even just Redmond. The canal, the railroad — they should know about the hard work of our forefathers.” Clark said the museum helps illustrate that it’s not just about the stuff of history, it’s about the stories. She particularly hopes that people who are more recent to Redmond — she and her husband moved here in the late 1990s — come see it. “What we have here are parts and parcels of people’s lives,” she said. “When you have a sense of place and know the history,” she continued, “you’re more likely to have ownership. You’re more likely to take care of it.” — Reporter: 541-617-7828, hhagemeier@bendbulletin.com
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LOCALNEWS
Reader photo, C2 Business, C3-5
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
LOCAL BRIEFING Juveniles arrested in Sunriver spree Three juveniles were arrested Thursday and Friday in connection with a spree of graffiti, theft and damage to property, Sunriver police said. The incidents occurred in May and June, in which the juveniles allegedly vandalized pathways, tunnels, cars, houses, the Sunriver Village Mall and Sunriver Lodge, causing close to $9,000 in damage. The juveniles also allegedly stole $360 worth of personal items. One of the suspects is a 12-year-old, and the other two are 14. Two were cited and one of the 14-year-olds was taken to the Deschutes County Juvenile Detention Center. — From staff reports
www.bendbulletin.com/local
EMERGENCY RESPONSE
Central Oregon agencies consider streamlining their radio systems • Departments hope to upgrade equipment to get everyone using the same standard By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
A 2006 head-on collision between two semitrailers on U.S. Highway 97 in south Bend is one of the most dramatic local crashes in recent memory. When the trucks collided that November afternoon, they instantly burst into flames and explosions shook the area. The drivers were killed and it took firefighters three hours to extinguish the flames. As police, firefighters and state transportation workers rushed to the scene, many had no way of communicating with each other directly because they were using different radio systems, said
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Rick Silbaugh, public safety systems manager for Deschutes County’s 911 district. Since then, the Oregon Department of Transportation in Bend outfitted its emergency response trucks with radios that are compatible with the system used by city police and the Sheriff’s Office. Local public safety officials hope to improve the situation by possibly purchasing a radio system that can be shared by, or is compatible with, all police and fire agencies in Deschutes County, and possibly even by Jefferson and Crook counties and state agencies, Silbaugh said. See Radio / C2
Communication breakdown Agencies throughout Central Oregon rely on two radio communication standards that are not compatible. Currently, much interagency communication must be done via mobile phone or relayed through Deschutes County dispatch, which has both radio systems installed. A proposed plan could get all agencies on the same radio system, but would cost at least $6 million. Agencies using 800 MHz radio
Agencies using VHF radio Bend Fire Dept. Sunriver Fire Dept. Redmond Fire & Rescue Deschutes Black Butte Ranch County Rural Fire Dist. Sisters-Camp Sherman Dispatch Fire Dist. La Pine Rural Fire Protection Dist. Cloverdale Rural Fire Protection Dist.
Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office Black Butte Ranch Police Dept. Bend Police Dept. Sunriver Police Dept. Redmond Police Dept.
Source: Staff research Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin
A fierce competition
The Bulletin
C
Obituaries, C7 Weather, C8
Park district relocates Drake Park goslings By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
Hatched in and around Drake Park this spring, 65 goslings are now at Summer Lake Wildlife Area. The Bend Park & Recreation District rounded up the young Canada geese June 21 and hauled them more than 100 miles south of the park, Paul Stell, natural resources manager for the district, said this week. It was the second year the district moved goslings to Summer Lake, with 58 driven south last year. Moving the young geese is part of the district’s solution to lower the number of geese at Drake Park, and the amount of goose droppings littering the lawn, without killing adult geese. The current program also involves workers and volunteers smearing corn oil on eggs to prevent them from hatching and dogs and kayaks chasing geese away. See Goslings / C2
Call a reporter: Bend ................ 541-617-7829 Redmond ........ 541-977-7185 Sisters............. 541-977-7185 La Pine ........... 541-383-0348 Sunriver ......... 541-383-0348
Lost hiker rescued near Pacific Crest Trail
Deschutes ...... 541-617-7837 Crook .............. 541-617-7837 Jefferson ........ 541-617-7837 Salem ..............541-554-1162 D.C. .................202-662-7456 Business ........ 541-383-0360 Education .......541-633-2161 Public lands .....541-617-7812 Public safety.....541-383-0387 Projects .......... 541-617-7831
Submissions: • Letters and opinions: Mail: My Nickel’s Worth or In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Details on the Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin@bendbulletin.com
• Civic Calendar notices: Email event information to news@bendbulletin.com, with “Civic Calendar” in the subject, and include a contact name and phone number. Contact: 541-383-0354
• School news and notes: Email news items and notices of general interest to pcliff@bendbulletin.com. Email announcements of teens’ academic achievements to youth@bendbulletin.com. Email college notes, military graduations and reunion info to bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Details: School coverage runs Wednesday in this section. Contact: 541-383-0358
• Obituaries, Death Notices: Details on the Obituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com
• Community events: Email event information to communitylife@bend bulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event” at www .bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Details: The calendar appears on Page 3 in Community Life. Contact: 541-383-0351
Correction In an editorial headlined “Don’t sacrifice openness in Oregon’s health care reform,” which was published Friday, June 29, on Page C6, the program being reformed was incorrectly stated. It is the state Medicaid program, also called the Oregon Health Plan, that is being revamped with the use of coordinated care organizations. The Bulletin regrets the error.
Photos by Joe Kline / The Bulletin
J
udge Terry Rheinlander, above, of Austin, Texas, examines a deer and mountain lion mount
in the open division during the Oregon Association of Taxidermists’ annual competition Friday at the Crook County Fairgrounds in Prineville. RJ Simington, right, of Klamath Falls and Fairbanks, Alaska, demonstrates how to add ridges and details to the head of a zebra mount. Simington, who operates PRO Taxidermy, is assembling the life-sized zebra throughout the weekend and giving information on the process. The show continues today and is open to the public from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Oregon’s court filing system going digital • Crook and Jefferson will be among the first counties to test it By Erik Hidle The Bulletin
Oregon’s judicial system is going digital, and Crook and Jefferson counties are among the first to make the switch. But Deschutes County is still a few years away from making the leap from a court information system that dates to the 1980s. The courts system is rolling out a $93 million upgrade to how it manages documents. For years, the state and the
county circuit courts have kept physical files behind closed doors, tasking a staff of clerks with managing the hundreds of criminal, civil and other legal filings that pass before a judge. The Oregon Judicial Information Network, an antiquated computer system commonly shortened to the acronym OJIN, has been the public’s best tool for accessing court proceedings. Users can
log on to a computer terminal at the courthouse and, after maneuvering the nuances of the 28-year-old program, can find reference numbers for the files they need to request from the clerks. It’s a time-consuming and inconvenient process the state believes will be eliminated with the introduction of a new eCourt system. Court filings are scanned or submitted digitally to the courts. Users can
access the files electronically from the new eCourt terminals. And more than one user can view files at any given time, which means no wait for documents being reviewed by a judge. Over the next year, the state plans to roll out test launches at courts of varying sizes. Yamhill County Circuit Court was the first to join the system, going live earlier this month. Next will be Crook and Jefferson counties. See eCourt / C2
Bulletin staff report Search and rescue teams found a hiker from California early Friday morning, nearly 10 hours after his wife reported him lost on the Pacific Crest Trail. Francis Fitzgerald, 47, was found safe about five miles northwest of the Elk Lake trailhead shortly after 1 a.m. His wife, Monica Fitzgerald, contacted authorities around 3 p.m. to report her husband was lost, noting he was not prepared to spend the night outdoors. Sixteen members of the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office Search and Rescue team were dispatched Thursday to the trailhead near Elk Lake to begin the search. A tracking team followed a single set of footprints heading west off the main trail, through patches of snow and downed trees, before locating the man. The Fitzgeralds, of Walnut Creek, Calif., were hiking Thursday on the Pacific Crest Trail. When Monica and two other hikers decided to turn around about four miles into the trip, Francis told them he wanted to walk for 10 more minutes, thinking he could see Horse Lake. But Francis called his wife 10 minutes later to tell her he was lost. His wife told 911 he turned his phone off to conserve its battery, but would turn the device on periodically. Authorities were not able to text or call his phone. Francis reportedly tried calling 911 numerous times but was unable to connect because of poor cellphone reception. Earlier in the night, dispatchers were able to map two possible locations from the attempted calls, but an Airlink helicopter was unable to find the man. He was escorted back to the trailhead by search and rescue personnel shortly before 4 a.m.
C2
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
N R
Well shot! R E ADE R PHOTOS Can you work a camera, and capture a great picture? And can you tell us a bit about it? Email your color or black and white photos to readerphotos@ bendbulletin.com and we’ll pick the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358. Bend Police Department
Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:06 a.m. June 27, in the 100 block of Southwest McKinley Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 5:17 p.m. June 27, in the 61000 block of South Queens Drive. Prineville Police Department
Criminal mischief — An act of
eCourt Continued from C1 The two counties are considered a joint-court system, one of six such courts in Oregon, as they share several resources and judges between the jurisdictions. “Our current plan, our funded ability through June of next year, is to do Yamhill, Crook and Jefferson, Linn then Jackson,� said Phil Lemman, spokesman for the Office of the State Court Administrator. “And then we will start on Multnomah County, which is kind of the 500-pound gorilla because of the size of the courts. Doing that, through next year, we will have the system in small counties, in a multicounty system, a midsized (county) and partly in our largest courts. Then we can see how it works.� Lemman admits that is a long answer for saying there is no time line for getting Deschutes
criminal mischief was reported at 6:01 a.m. June 28, in the area of Northeast Court Street.
at 2:11 a.m. June 29, in the area of Neff Road and Northeast 27th Street in Bend.
Theft — A theft was reported at 11:07 a.m. June 28, in the area of Southeast Fifth Street.
BEND FIRE RUNS
Theft — A theft was reported at 3:29 p.m. June 28, in the area of Northwest Beaver Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 3:52 p.m. June 28, in the area of Northeast Elk Street. Oregon State Police
Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 10:45 p.m. June 28, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 near milepost 104. DUII — John B. Reuber, 25, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants
County on the new system. Because Deschutes wasn’t chosen as a test site, it will need to be scheduled for installation after the state’s next budget cycle in 2013. That means that for a few years, Central Oregonians will be accessing different systems for court documents in different counties. The best answer the state can give on when Deschutes will switch over, Lemman said, is that “we want to have (the entire state) done at the end of the 2015-17 budget period.� The time line is spread out because of the sheer amount of information the state intends to transfer to the new system. Not every old piece of paper will be scanned in, but basic court and trial information dating back to the 1980s will be transferred. Current cases will also need to be uploaded, and financial information will need to be linked as well. On top of that, everything must be double-checked for accuracy.
Thursday 3:58 p.m. — Unauthorized burning, in the area of Cinder Butte Road. 4:52 p.m. — Smoke odor reported, in the area of Northeast Second Street. 5:49 p.m. — Unauthorized burning, in the area of Jade Court. 13 — Medical aid calls.
Press logs from other Deschutes County police departments are currently unavailable, due to a police department system update.
“We’re very busy right now working on our local configuration and data migration,� said Amy Bonkosky, trial court administrator for the joint Crook and Jefferson counties’ circuit courts. “We will start (scanning documents) once we are ready to go live. We plan to work the Saturday and Sunday before, and then when we come in the morning of Dec. 10, OJIN will be no more.� She said the change marks a drastic increase in efficiency and access. “Right now you can run all over the courthouse looking for files,� she said. “I just know that is extrapolated out in the larger counties. Files move around so much and that is always an issue. So this switch means I will never see that email again, the one asking if someone knows where a file is and everyone goes looking.� — Reporter: 541-617-7837 ehidle@bendbulletin.com
P O DUSK ON THE CARHART RANCH
For The Bulletin’s full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.com/officials.
Elisabeth Kokesh-Carhart, a 2012 graduate of Sisters High School, shot this photo with a Canon EOS 5D Mark II and a 50mm f/1.4 lens at f/1.4, ISO 200 and 1/125 sec.
CONGRESS U.S. Senate
Radio Continued from C1 The radio system used by police agencies and the county Sheriff’s Office is 15 years old, and Silbaugh said it’s becoming difficult and expensive to order replacement parts when something breaks. At a June 20 work session with the Bend City Council, Police Chief Jeff Sale told councilors it is only a matter of time until this radio system breaks down. “This system will fail,� Sale said. A new radio system will not be cheap: It could cost at least $6 million just for a new system for all police agencies in Deschutes County, and more to bring on fire districts. Silbaugh said this is the first time in his 30-year career in public safety that he has seen agencies working together to improve their communications system. The next step will be for public safety agencies to hire
Goslings Continued from C1 The district wants to keep the goose population in and around Drake Park to about 150 birds, Stell said. “It seems like we can keep the park cleaned up pretty well with that number,� he said. While the geese hadn’t been counted recently, Stell said Thursday that he thinks the population is around the goal. Trying to lower the goose population two years ago, the district killed 109 adult geese, spurring protests and a vigil for the slain geese. The district killed the birds by putting them in gas cans and filling the cans with carbon dioxide.
a consultant to research what type of system they need. Sheriff Larry Blanton said the agencies are creating a board of representatives to solicit proposals for the consulting job. Blanton said Wednesday it’s unclear how much the study will cost. Sale said the study could take as long as a year. Each type of radio system has its benefits, said Jon Sholes, communications officer with the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office. The VHF radios used by fire agencies and many state and federal agencies can transmit farther because of the frequency they use, Sholes said. However, there is a shortage of channels. The 800 megahertz radio system used by law enforcement agencies in Deschutes County can handle more conversations at one time. Sholes said the 1990 Awbrey Hall Fire on the west side of Bend revealed some of the shortcomings of VHF systems. There were not enough channels for all the
While he said it is a bit heartbreaking to separate the young geese from their parents, Foster Fell, who organized the 2009 goose vigil, said it is better than killing geese. “We are kind of stuck with having to do that to keep the population stabilized,� he said. He said he’d like to see the district focus its efforts in coming years on finding more nests, which the resourceful birds hide around town, and oiling eggs. Goose advocates like Fell and Marilyn Miller, who are members of an ad hoc group called the Goose Watch Alliance, are tracking closely how the district handles the
people working on the fire, and many people ended up talking over each other on the same channels. “It was just a real menagerie of conversations, and you couldn’t carry on a clear conversation with anybody,� Sholes said. “You couldn’t communicate.� Todd Mundinger, the Bend maintenance coordinator for the Oregon Department of Transportation, said the communication problems faced by local public safety agencies and other emergency responders are common across the nation. Communication problems during the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in New York City prompted agencies across the country to discuss ways to allow different agencies to talk to one another, a goal Mundinger described as “interoperability.� “But getting to interoperability means lots of money to get there,� Mundinger said. “We’re slowly getting there.�
Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore.: 107 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 107 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-330-9142
— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com
Treasurer Ted Wheeler, Democrat 159 Oregon State Capitol 900 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer @state.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us Attorney General John Kroger, Democrat 1162 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian 800 N.E. Oregon St., Suite 1045 Portland, OR 97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax: 971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail@state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli
U.S. House of Representatives
Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River 2182 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 Web: http://walden.house.gov/ Bend office: 1051 N.W. Bond St., Suite 400 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452
STATE OF OREGON
— Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
Drake Park geese. While Stell has said the district doesn’t have plans to kill any geese this year, it does have a federal permit allowing it to kill 100 of the birds. “I’m never going to give up on this,� Miller said. “My goal is never to have Bend Park and Rec murder another goose.�
@state.or.us Web: www.ode.state.or.us
Gov. John Kitzhaber, Democrat 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov Secretary of State Kate Brown, Democrat 136 State Capitol Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us
LEGISLATURE Senate
Sen. Ted Ferrioli, R-District 30 (includes Jefferson, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-323 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli
Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-District 28 (includes Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-303 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett House
Rep. Jason Conger, R-District 54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-477 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger Rep. John Huffman, R-District 59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. N.E., H-476 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman Rep. Mike McLane, R-District 55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-385 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-District 53 (portion of Deschutes County) 900 Court St. N.E., H-471 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant
Sen. Chris Telfer, R-District 27 (includes portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-423 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.christelfer@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/telfer
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SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
B U S IN E SS s
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IN BRIEF Preparers urged to take tax exam The Internal Revenue Service is urging people who prepare federal tax returns for compensation to take a competency test before Dec. 31, 2013. In Oregon, 54 tax preparers have passed the 120-question test, while 2,581 have not, IRS spokesman Richard Panick wrote in an email. Starting in 2014, only those who pass the test or are certified public accountants, attorneys or enrolled agents may file tax returns for compensation.
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Bend company gets $1M federal grant • OnTo Technology LLC plans to develop a system for recycling electric-car batteries By Jordan Novet The Bulletin
OnTo Technology LLC, a Bend-based company, will receive a two-year, $1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to develop a means to recycle electric-car batteries on a large scale, ac-
cording to a news release. The company plans to make the use of lithium-ion electric-car batteries more commercially viable for manufacturers, said the company’s owner, Steve Sloop. “We’re addressing the inevitable — what happens at the
end of (electric-car battery) life,” Sloop said. “Today, it’s a cost, and what we’re trying to do is reduce and eliminate and perhaps reverse that cost, so that there becomes a market-driven recycling industry that’s focused on that battery.” Since its establishment in 2004, OnTo has produced prototypes of recycled batteries, Sloop said. The new funding
will help the company figure out how to turn used electriccar batteries into reusable ones. According to lists of projects the Small Business Innovation Research program is funding this year, OnTo is the only one to have secured federal dollars for a project involving energy storage for electric vehicles. See OnTo / C5
Geothermal plant ready to operate The operator of Oregon’s first geothermal plant near Vale says it will start generating electricity this summer. In an update Wednesday to Malheur County officials, U.S. Geothermal environmental manager Scott Nichols said the first of three power plant units will start July 6. The second will follow later in July and the third by the end of the summer. The Argus Observer reports the U.S. Energy Department provided a loan for the project at Neal Hot Springs. The plant uses the hot underground water to turn refrigerant into vapor that turns a turbine and runs a generator. The water is injected back into the ground.
Sara Krulwich / New York Times News Service
A-B InBev buys maker of Corona
Kelley and Javier Arau, with their daughters Juliet, 4, left, and Maya, 7, refinanced for a mortgage at 3.5 percent this week. Qualifying for a mortgage rate beginning with a 3 is not impossible, but you will have to jump through more hoops than ever.
Anheuser-Busch InBev agreed Friday to buy the share of Grupo Modelo that it did not already own for $20.1 billion, concluding a multiyear effort to take full control of the maker of Corona Extra beer. The deal will solidify Anheuser-Busch InBev’s position as the world’s biggest brewer and as one of the industry’s most tenacious consolidators. The deal, the second-biggest in the company’s history, will add Corona to a stable of brands that already includes Budweiser and Stella Artois.
A mortgage rate under 4 percent?
Sony closes $2.2B EMI acquisition An investor group led by Sony closed its $2.2 billion acquisition of EMI Music Publishing on Friday, creating a giant force in music publishing. The deal will give Sony control over a catalog of more than 2 million songs, and a global market share of about 31 percent, according to an estimate by the trade publication Music and Copyright. — From wire reports
Greek bonds Greece’s interest rate continues to illustrate the country’s debt problems, but the Mediterranean nation is not the only euro nation coping with high interest rates.
10-year bond interest rates Greece
10.14
Portugal Ireland*
7.12
Spain
6.93
Italy
6.20
Germany
1.57
U.S.
1.62
*9-year bond rate Source: Bloomberg © 2012 McClatchy-Tribune News Service
C3
Weekly market review, C4-5 People on the Move, C5
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
C3
How do I get one? M
CLOSE $27.580 CHANGE +$1.333
Markets heartily approve Europe’s new plan By Paul Wiseman and David McHugh The Associated Press
BRUSSELS — Europe’s leaders finally rose to the challenge Friday, backing bold ideas to help weak countries and frail banks ravaged by a debt crisis that has crippled economic growth and threatened the global financial system. Markets roared their approval after leaders of the 27 European Union countries agreed on an aggressive plan to fix the financial crisis. For the first time in 19 summits since the start of the crisis, the EU leaders declared they would: • centralize regulation of European banks and, if necessary, bail them out directly, instead of funneling loans through governments that already have too much debt; • ease borrowing costs on Italy and Spain, the eurozone’s third- and fourthlargest economies; • stop mandating painful budget cuts to every country in need of emergency financial aid; and • tie their budgets, currency and governments more tightly. The decisions made at the EU summit in Brussels won’t end the crisis that has gripped Europe for nearly three years. Plenty of questions remain about how the bank bailouts would work, whether there’s enough money committed to rescue banks and governments and whether impoverished, indebted Greece will be forced out of the 17-nation euro club. See Europe / C5
By Tara Siegel Bernard • New York Times News Service
ortgage rates have never looked this good. They are at about 3.81 percent for a second week, a record low. But who gets that rate? What does it actually take to secure a mortgage rate that begins with the enviable number 3?
One mortgage broker joked the other day that it required “a good mortgage broker and a prayer.” But in reality, the borrower tends to look a lot like Javier Arau, who refinanced his $265,000 mortgage this week at 3.5 percent. He and his wife, Kelley, live in a two-bedroom co-op in the New York City borough of Queens. They have a respectable set of credentials, yet they are not entirely unattainable for reasonably employed people either. They have no debt, with the exception of about $30,000 in student loans. They have about 20 percent in home equity, and Arau said they
considered themselves savers. By getting out of their original mortgage, which carried a 6.25 percent rate, their monthly payment will drop nearly $600 to $1,200. “Having $600 less to deal with each month will be a huge relief,” said Arau, who also has two young daughters. “It’s probably going to pump itself back into my business and give us a little bit of breathing room.” (He said they paid about $2,000 to reduce the original rate they were offered, or 3.75 percent, because they knew they planned to stay in their apartment for several more years.) Still, qualifying for that rate — actual-
ly, qualifying for a mortgage at all — required a bit of patience. The couple, both in their mid-30s, wanted to refinance a few years ago, but their mortgage broker told them at the time that they would probably be turned down. The earnings of a freelance saxophonist and a part-time prekindergarten teacher were too inconsistent to pass muster with the banks. Since then, however, Arau has opened a music school, the New York Jazz Academy, and has been able to generate a consistent stream of income for two years. See Mortgage / C5
Peter Madoff says he didn’t know about fraud By Peter Lattman and Ben Protess
Peter Madoff leaves federal court Friday in New York after pleading guilty to criminal charges.
New York Times News Service
NEW YORK — Peter Madoff, the former No. 2 executive at Bernard Madoff Securities, stood before a judge Friday and admitted to committing numerous crimes. He avoided paying taxes on tens of millions of dollars in income, he said. He put his wife on the firm’s payroll even though she never worked there. He submitted false filings to securities regulators. But he also emphasized that at no time was he aware that his brother, Bernard, was orchestrating the largest Ponzi scheme in history, wiping out $65 billion in paper wealth and shattering lives around
John Minchillo The Associated Press
the globe. “I was in shock, and my world was destroyed,” said Peter Madoff, describing his reaction when his brother told him about the fraud in December 2008. “I always looked up to and admired him.” Later in the hearing he said, “I truly believed my brother
was a brilliant trader.” In a deal cut with prosecutors before his court appearance, Peter Madoff, 66, agreed to serve 10 years in prison, a sentence that still requires a judge’s approval. He has also agreed to forfeit all of his assets, including the proceeds from the sale of a co-op on the
Upper East Side of Manhattan; two homes on Long Island and one in Palm Beach, Fla.; and a 1995 Ferrari 355 Spyder. Judge Laura Taylor Swain of U.S. District Court in Manhattan accepted the plea, and set him free on bail until his Oct. 4 sentencing. He and his wife, Marion, must turn over their passports and remain in the New York metropolitan area, the judge ordered. The 10-year sentence was a point of contention between federal prosecutors and the FBI. After Peter Madoff struck the deal with prosecutors, some officials at the FBI questioned whether he got off too easy, according to people close to the case. See Madoff / C5
Wal-Mart suspends supplier over slew of labor violations By Steven Greenhouse New York Times News Service
Wal-Mart Stores has suspended one of its seafood suppliers in the South as an advocacy group for foreign workers pressed the retailer to improve working conditions there and at a dozen other suppliers cited for hundreds of federal labor violations. The advocacy group, the National Guestworker Alliance, said Friday that it had found terrible conditions at C.J.’s Seafood, a crawfish company in Breaux Bridge, La. Several immigrant workers said they had been forced to work 16-24 hours consecutively and had even been locked into the plant. Guest workers said they sometimes labored more than 80 hours a week, had been threatened with beatings to press them to work faster, and had been warned that their families in Mexico would be hurt if they complained to government agencies. See Wal-Mart / C5
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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
The weekly market review New York Stock Exchange Name
Last Chg Wkly Name
A-B-C ABB Ltd d16.32 +.73 +.51 ACE Ltd 74.13 +1.83 +1.85 AES Corp 12.83 +.21 +.75 AFLAC 42.59 +1.59 +1.48 AGCO 45.73 +2.47 +5.10 AK Steel 5.87 -.23 +.32 AOL u28.08 +.58 +.92 AT&T Inc 35.66 +.27 +.49 AU Optron 4.02 +.12 +.06 AbtLab u64.47 +1.56 +2.15 AberFitc d34.14 +2.64 +3.43 Accenture 60.09 +3.46 +2.53 AccoBrds 10.34 +.39 -.19 AccretivH 10.96 +.27 -.96 Actuant 27.16 +1.49 +1.43 Acuity 50.91 +2.01 -.78 AdvAuto 68.22 +2.51 +.29 AMD 5.73 +.32 ... AdvSemi d4.07 +.11 -.27 AdvActBear 23.32 -.83 -.72 AecomTch d16.45 +.47 +1.29 Aeropostl 17.83 +1.41 +1.39 Aetna 38.77 -1.08 -2.92 Agilent 39.24 +1.62 +.31 Agnico g 40.46 +1.31 -.10 Agrium g 88.47 +1.19 +4.23 AirProd 80.73 +2.68 +3.39 Airgas 84.01 +2.75 +2.32 AlaskAir s 35.90 -.10 -.23 Albemarle 59.64 +1.75 +.90 AlcatelLuc 1.63 +.10 -.03 Alcoa 8.75 +.24 +.13 AllegTch d31.89 +1.66 +3.22 Allergan 92.57 +2.54 +.98 AlliBInco 8.32 +.02 +.08 Allstate u35.09 +.95 +1.01 AlphaNRs d8.71 +.35 +.45 AlpTotDiv 4.17 +.04 +.04 AlpAlerMLP 15.98 +.20 +.37 Altria u34.55 +.52 +.68 AmBev 38.33 +2.00 +1.74 Amdocs 29.72 +.58 +.07 Ameren 33.54 -.02 +.52 Amerigrp 65.91 +.44 +2.83 AMovilL s 26.06 +.78 +.91 AmAxle 10.49 +.31 +.40 AmCampus 44.98 +1.00 +1.97 AEagleOut 19.73 +.99 +.36 AEP 39.90 -.03 +.65 AEqInvLf 11.01 +.31 +.24 AmExp 58.21 +1.52 +1.42 AmIntlGrp 32.09 +1.25 +.65 AmTower u69.91 +.23 +2.27 AmWtrWks 34.28 +.25 +.94 Ameriprise 52.26 +1.46 +1.44 AmeriBrgn 39.35 +.61 +1.42 Ametek 49.91 +1.87 -.40 Amphenol 54.92 +1.69 -.19 Anadarko 66.20 +2.95 +4.27 AnglogldA 34.34 +.44 -.07 ABInBev u79.65 +5.86 +9.36 Ann Inc 25.49 +.97 +.83 Annaly 16.78 +.14 +.20 Anworth 7.05 +.03 +.08 Aon plc 46.78 +1.06 +.60 Apache 87.89 +2.66 +5.64 AptInv 27.03 +.35 +.45 AquaAm u24.96 +.07 +.66 ArcelorMit 15.27 +.92 +.37 ArchCoal d6.89 +.39 +.76 ArchDan 29.52 +.38 +.24 ArcosDor 14.78 +.33 +.72 ArmourRsd 7.11 +.06 +.10 ArrowEl 32.81 +.70 -.75 Ashland 69.31 +.93 +1.26 AsdEstat 14.95 +.06 +.35 Assurant 34.84 +.22 +.69 AssuredG 14.10 +.90 +1.83 AstraZen 44.75 +.36 +1.43 AtlPwr g 12.81 +.08 -.66 AtwoodOcn 37.84 +1.32 +.84 AuRico g 8.01 +.20 +.06 AutoNatn 35.28 +.83 -.59 Autoliv 54.66 +2.00 +.71 AutoZone 367.17 +8.74 -15.59 AveryD 27.34 +.61 -.17 Avnet 30.86 +.96 ... Avon d16.21 +.76 +.71 AXIS Cap 32.55 +.42 +.59 BB&T Cp 30.85 +.65 +.46 BHP BillLt 65.30 +3.31 +1.99 BHPBil plc 57.19 +2.80 +1.69 BP PLC 40.54 +2.01 +2.17 BPZ Res 2.53 +.19 +.14 BRE 50.02 +1.19 +1.65 BRFBrasil d15.19 +.33 +.06 BabckWil 24.50 +.78 +.25 BakrHu d41.10 +1.14 +1.96 BallCorp 41.05 +.48 -.59 BcBilVArg 7.07 +.60 +.28 BcoBrad pf 14.87 +.74 +.26 BcoSantSA 6.56 +.41 +.23 BcoSBrasil 7.75 +.41 +.11 BkofAm 8.18 +.44 +.24 BkAm pfL 975.00 +7.00 +26.12 BkA pfBcldu25.08 ... +.96 BkNYMel 21.95 +.91 +.75 Bankrate 18.39 +.69 +.20 Barclay 10.30 -.54 -2.31 Bar iPVix d15.21 -1.05 -.68 BarnesNob 16.46 +1.21 +1.23 BarrickG 37.57 +1.34 -.35 BasicEnSv d10.32 +.39 +.81 Baxter 53.15 +1.57 +1.28 Beam Inc 62.49 +1.29 +.79 BeazerHm 3.25 +.23 +.35 BectDck 74.75 +1.61 +.76 Bemis 31.34 +.24 -.31 BerkH B u83.33 +.99 +1.46 BerryPet 39.66 +2.38 +5.40 BestBuy 20.96 +.08 +1.77 BigLots 40.79 +.67 +1.81 BBarrett 21.42 +.63 +4.15 BioMedR 18.68 +.44 +1.11 BlkHillsCp 32.17 -.37 -.53 BlackRock 169.82 +3.73 -2.18 BlkEEqDv 7.24 +.12 +.15 Blackstone 13.07 +.50 +1.07 BlockHR 15.98 +.13 +.51 Boeing 74.30 +2.72 +2.34 Boise Inc 6.58 +.05 -.22 BorgWarn 65.59 +1.08 +.09 BostProp 108.37 +3.51 +5.61 BostonSci 5.67 +.12 -.03 BoydGm 7.20 +.14 -.05 Brandyw 12.34 +.42 +1.09 Braskem 13.31 +1.10 +1.46 Brinker 31.87 +1.25 +1.05 BrMySq u35.95 +.87 +.59 BroadrdgF 21.27 +.41 +.35 Brookdale 17.74 +.69 +.86 BrkfldAs g 33.10 +1.03 +1.32 BrkfldOfPr 17.42 +.44 +.89 BrwnBrn 27.27 +.34 +.58 BrownShoeu12.91 +1.11 +1.28 Brunswick 22.22 +.96 +.88
Last Chg Wkly Name
Buenavent 37.98 +.68 +.18 BungeLt 62.74 +1.46 +3.42 BurgerK n 14.97 -.25 -.88 C&J Egy n 18.50 -.23 -.08 CBL Asc u19.54 +.78 +1.23 CBRE Grp 16.36 +.61 +.49 CBS B 32.78 +1.02 +1.33 CF Inds 193.74 +3.70 +16.05 CIT Grp 35.64 +.54 +1.19 CMS Eng 23.50 +.17 +.26 CNO Fincl 7.80 +.28 +.29 CRH 19.24 +1.22 +1.80 CSX 22.36 +.48 +.73 CVS Care u46.73 +.74 +.83 CYS Invest 13.77 +.11 +.12 CblvsNY s 13.29 +.33 +.88 CabotOG s 39.40 -.92 +3.00 Calpine 16.51 +.04 +.46 Cameco g 21.95 +.26 +.65 Cameron d42.71 +1.43 +1.60 CampSp 33.38 +.86 +1.32 CampusCC 10.39 +.14 -.35 CdnNRs gsd26.85 +1.13 +.51 CP Rwy g 73.26 +2.17 +.66 CapOne 54.66 +1.20 +1.73 CapitlSrce 6.72 +.19 +.16 CapsteadM 13.91 +.01 +.29 CardnlHlth 42.00 +1.04 +.56 CareFusion 25.68 +.82 +.75 CarMax 25.94 +.72 +.21 Carnival 34.27 +.53 +.61 CarpTech 47.84 +1.77 +3.93 Carters 52.60 +1.53 -.02 Caterpillar 84.91 +2.28 -.05 Celanese 34.62 +1.02 -.99 Cellcom d6.10 +.16 -.75 Cemex 6.73 +.27 +1.02 Cemig pf s 18.42 +.32 +1.10 Cencosd tpu16.46 +.25 +.31 CenovusE 31.80 +1.41 +1.09 Centene 30.16 -.43 -.49 CenterPnt 20.67 +.05 +.33 CenElBras 7.03 +.29 +.44 CntryLink 39.49 +.69 +.85 ChesEng 18.60 +.82 -.01 Chevron 105.50 +2.04 +5.06 ChicB&I 37.96 +1.10 +1.61 Chicos 14.84 +.62 +.84 Chimera d2.36 ... -.07 ChinaMble 54.67 +1.31 +2.58 ChinaUni d12.55 +.29 -.05 Chipotle 379.95 +3.00 -35.53 Chubb 72.82 +1.31 +1.49 ChurchDwtu55.47 +1.24 +2.01 Cigna 44.00 -.18 -1.15 Cimarex d55.12 +4.41 +5.88 CinciBell 3.72 +.06 +.16 Cinemark 22.85 +.52 +1.48 Citi pfJcld 25.06 -.02 ... Citigroup 27.41 +1.02 -.58 CleanH s 56.42 +1.58 +.33 CliffsNRs 49.29 +2.14 +1.66 Clorox 72.46 +.58 +1.32 CloudPeak 16.91 +.51 +.99 Coach 58.48 +2.36 -1.31 CobaltIEn 23.50 +1.58 +2.81 CocaCola u78.19 +1.62 +3.25 CocaCE 28.04 +1.43 +1.09 Coeur 17.56 +.63 +.05 Colfax 27.57 +1.08 -1.25 ColgPal u104.10 +2.11 +4.20 CollctvBrd u21.42 ... +.13 Comerica 30.71 +.65 +.43 CmclMtls 12.64 +.37 +.80 CmtyHlt u28.03 +.49 +2.92 CompSci 24.82 +1.06 +.92 ComstkRs 16.42 +1.28 +2.41 Con-Way 36.11 +1.46 +.40 ConAgra 25.93 +.40 +.58 ConchoRes 85.12 +3.92 +4.04 ConocPhil s 55.88 +1.35 +2.47 ConsolEngyd30.24 +.93 +1.98 ConEd 62.19 +.12 +.69 ConstellA u27.06 +5.30 +7.69 ContlRes 66.62 +3.65 +1.62 Cnvrgys u14.77 +.35 +.37 CooperCo 79.76 +2.43 -.84 Cooper Ind 68.18 +1.78 +1.12 CooperTire 17.54 -.01 +.16 CoreLabs 115.90 +3.87 +.80 CoreLogic u18.31 +.28 +.59 Corning 12.93 +.34 +.07 CorrectnCp 29.45 +.53 +2.87 Cosan Ltd 12.69 +.67 +.61 CovantaH 17.15 +.28 +.31 CoventryH 31.79 -.67 -2.41 Covidien 53.50 +1.01 +.86 CS VS3xSlvd21.70 +2.24 +.89 CSVS2xVxSd4.91 -.57 -.60 CSVelIVSt 11.25 +.72 +.47 CSVSVixSTd32.83 -2.30 -1.41 CredSuiss d18.33 +.90 -.47 CrwnCstle u58.66 +.68 +2.01 CrownHold 34.49 +.71 +.30 CubeSmart 11.67 +.51 +.63 Cummins 96.91 +4.65 +6.52 CurEuro 125.88 +2.08 +.95
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Last Chg Wkly Name
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FranceTel FrankRes FMCG Freescale Frontline Fusion-io
Last Chg Wkly 13.11 110.99 34.07 10.25 4.56 20.89
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G-H-I GMX Rs .81 GNC 39.20 Gafisa SA 2.54 GameStop d18.36 Gannett 14.73 Gap 27.36 GardDenv d52.91 GaylrdEnt 38.56 GencoShip d3.05 GnCable 25.94 GenDynam 65.96 GenElec 20.84 GenGrPrp 18.09 GenMills 38.54 GenMotors 19.72 GMot wtB d6.78 GenOn En 1.71 GenuPrt 60.25 Genworth 5.66 Gerdau 8.76 GlaxoSKln 45.57 GlimchRt 10.22 GlobPay 43.23 GolLinhas 4.41 GoldFLtd 12.81 Goldcrp g 37.58 GoldmanS 95.86 Goodrich u126.90 GoodrPet 13.86
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Name
How to Read the Market in Review Here are the 1,133 most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange, the 830 most active on the Nasdaq National Market and 255 most active on American Stock Exchange. Stocks in bold changed 10 percent or more in price. Name: Stocks are listed alphabetically by the company’s full name (not its abbreviation). Company names made up of initials appear at the beginning of each letter’s list. Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. Chg: Loss or gain for last day of week. No change indicated by “…” mark. Wkly: Loss or gain for the week. No change indicated by … Name: Name of mutual fund and family. Sell: Net asset value, or price at which fund could be sold, for last day of the week. Wkly: Weekly net change in the NAV. Stock Footnotes: cc – PE greater than 99. cld - Issue has been called for redemption by company. d - New 52-week low. dd – Loss in last 12 mos. ec - Company formerly listed on the American Exchange's Emerging Company Marketplace. g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h - temporary exmpt from Nasdaq capital and surplus listing qualification. n - Stock was a new issue in the last year. The 52-week high and low figures date only from the beginning of trading. pf - Preferred stock issue. pr - Preferences. pp - Holder owes installments of purchase price. q – Closed-end mutual fund; no PE calculated. rt - Right to buy security at a specified price. s - Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. wi - Trades will be settled when the stock is issued. wd - When distributed. wt - Warrant, allowing a purchase of a stock. u - New 52-week high. un - Unit,, including more than one security. vj - Company in bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of the name. Dividend Footnotes: a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement. i - Sum of dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. j - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred. k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date. Mutual Fund Footnotes: e – Ex-capital gains distribution. f – Previous day’s quote. n - No-load fund. p – Fund assets used to pay distribution costs. r – Redemption fee or contingent deferred sales load may apply. s – Stock dividend or split. t – Both p and r. x – Ex-cash dividend.
Source: The Associated Press and Lipper, Inc. Sales figures are unofficial.
Last Chg Wkly Name
MolsCoorB 41.61 +1.85 +2.65 Molycorp 21.55 +1.13 -.27 Monsanto 82.78 +2.53 +4.33 MonstrWw 8.31 +.22 -.27 Moodys 36.55 +1.00 +1.52 MorgStan 14.59 +.72 +.45 Mosaic 54.76 +.71 +4.18 MotrlaSolu 48.11 +1.18 +.23 MuellerWat 3.46 +.14 +.16 MurphO 50.29 +2.03 +5.72 NCR Corp 22.73 +1.16 +1.28 NRG Egy 17.36 +.53 +1.75 NV Energy u17.58 ... +.12 NYSE Eur 25.58 +.41 +.47 Nabors 14.40 +.56 +1.21 NBGrce rs 1.71 +.18 -.08 NatFuGas 46.98 -.47 +2.09 NOilVarco 64.44 +2.30 +1.35 NatRetPrp u28.29 +.22 +1.34 Nationstr nu21.52 +.50 +2.09 Navistar 28.37 +2.81 +1.35 NetSuite u54.77 +2.99 +2.73 NeuStar 33.40 +1.01 +1.96 NwOriEd s 24.50 -.54 -1.04 NY CmtyB 12.53 +.07 +.11 NY Times 7.80 +.14 +.91 Newcastle 6.70 +.19 +.45 NewellRub 18.14 +.67 +.13 NewfldExpd29.31 +1.81 +2.77 NewmtM 48.51 +1.39 +.55 NewpkRes 5.90 -.13 +.24 Nexen g 16.89 +.30 +1.06 NextEraEn u68.81 +.88 +2.19 NiSource 24.75 +.23 +.44 NielsenH 26.22 +.59 -.74 NikeB 87.78 -9.11 -11.62 NipponTT 23.14 +.01 +1.18
Last Chg Wkly Name
PepcoHold 19.57 PepsiCo 70.66 PerkElm 25.80 PetrbrsA d18.14 Petrobras d18.77 Petrolog n d10.76 PtroqstE 5.00 Pfizer 23.00 PhilipMor 87.26 PhilipsEl 19.67 Phillips66 n 33.24 PiedmOfc 17.21 Pier 1 16.43 PilgrimsP 7.15 PinWst 51.74 PionDrill 7.97 PioNtrl 88.21 PitnyBw 14.97 PlainsEx 35.18 PlumCrk 39.70 Polaris s 71.48 PolyOne 13.68 Polypore 40.39 PortglTel 4.45 PostPrp 48.95 Potash 43.69 PwshDB 25.75 PS Agri 28.22 PS Oil 24.56 PS USDBull 22.47 PS SP LwVu27.58 PSHYCpBd 18.73 PwShPfd u14.52 PShEMSovu28.83 PSIndia 17.31 Praxair 108.73 PrecCastpt164.49
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www.highdesertbank.com *Free at all on-premises Instant Cash ATMs. Loans subject to credit approval. EnbrdgEPt 30.77 EnCana g 20.83 EndvrIntl 8.40 EndvSilv g 8.12 Energen 45.13 EngyTEq 41.02 EngyTsfr 44.19 EnergySol 1.69 Enerpls g d12.87 ENSCO 46.97 Entergy 67.89 EntPrPt 51.24 Equifax 46.60 EqtyOne 21.20 EqtyRsd 62.36 EsteeLdr s 54.12 ExcoRes 7.59 Exelis n 9.86 Exelon d37.62 Express 18.17 ExterranH 12.75 ExtraSpce 30.60 ExxonMbl 85.57 FMC Cp s 53.48 FMC Tech 39.23 FTI Cnslt d28.75 FairchldS 14.10 FamilyDlr 66.48 FedExCp 91.61 FedInvst 21.85 Ferro 4.80 FibriaCelu 7.49 FidlNFin 19.26 FidNatInfo 34.08 Fifth&Pac 10.73 FstHorizon 8.65 FstInRT 12.62 FstRepBk 33.60 FT RNG 16.42 FirstEngy 49.19 FlagstBcp .84 Flotek 9.34 Flowserve 114.75 Fluor 49.34 FEMSA u89.25 FootLockr 30.58 FordM 9.59 FordM wt d1.12 ForestLab 34.99 ForestOil s 7.33 Fortress 3.37 FBHmSc n 22.27
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Goodyear 11.81 vjGrace 50.45 GrafTech d9.65 Graingr 191.24 GtPlainEn 21.41 GreenbCos 17.58 GpTelevisa 21.48 Guess 30.37 HCA Hldg 30.43 HCP Inc u44.15 HDFC Bk s 32.60 HSBC 44.13 HalconR rs 9.44 Hallibrtn d28.39 Hanesbrds 27.73 Harbinger u7.79 HarleyD 45.73 Harman 39.60 HarmonyG 9.40 HarrisCorp 41.85 Harsco 20.38 HartfdFn 17.63 HarvNRes 8.55 HatterasF 28.60 Headwatrs u5.15 HltCrREIT u58.30 HltMgmt 7.85 HealthNet 24.27 HlthSouth 23.26 Heckmann 3.38 HeclaM 4.75 Heinz 54.38 HelixEn 16.41 HelmPayne 43.48 Herbalife 48.33 Hersha 5.28 Hershey u72.03 Hertz 12.80 Hess d43.45 HewlettP d20.11 Hexcel 25.79 HighwdPrp 33.65 Hillshire n 28.99 HollyFrt s 35.43 HomeDp 52.99 HomeProp 61.36 Honda 34.66 HonwllIntl 55.84 Hormel 30.42 Hornbeck 38.78 Hospira 34.98 HospPT 24.77
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Nasdaq National Market Name
Last Chg Wkly Approach 25.54 +1.14 +1.37
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SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Europe
P M Jeff Billingsley has joined Deschutes Brewery in Bend as marketing director. Billingsley has a bachelor of science from Arizona State University and has worked in the beverage and beer industries for 18 years. He is relocating from Chicago, where he was previously working with Billingsley MillerCoors. He will oversee all of the company’s marketing functions in his new position. John Stembridge has Wells joined John L. Scott Real Estate in Bend. Stembridge has 30 years of management and sales experience Headley in the residential real estate industry. Kate Wells has joined PacificSource Health Plans in Bend as Orr director of community health. In this role Wells will work to build coordinated care organizations in Cen- Lindberg tral Oregon and the Columbia Gorge as well as leading other health improvement projects. Before joining PacificSource Wells was the director of community outreach for St. Charles Health System, where she developed the Kids@Heart program. Melissa Hamilton has joined Premiere Real Estate team The Buccola Group, based out of Bend, as the new transaction coordinator. Hamilton has more than 10 years of ex-
OnTo Continued from C3 Including the $1 million grant, OnTo has received $2.5 million to date, Sloop said. Other companies in the United States are engaged in similar types of research, although Sloop said he did not know of any trying to turn the physical batteries — instead of the raw materials inside them — into new ones, as his is. Sloop said he isn’t sure how
Madoff Continued from C3 Preet Bharara, the top federal prosecutor in New York, addressed the severity of the sentence in a statement on Friday, casting the penalty as steep. Peter Madoff “will now be jailed well into old age, and he will forfeit virtually every penny he has,” Bharara said. A dispute also emerged about the earlymorning arrest. The FBI dispatched agents to arrest Peter Madoff at his lawyer’s office in Manhattan, and later drove him past a crowd of television cameras. Some officials wondered if the show was necessary since he had already agreed to plead guilty.
perience in office work and has previously worked as an executive assistant and office manager. Tom Headley, of Century West Engineering in Bend, has recently completed the requirements to become a professional engineer in the state of StemOregon. Headley bridge has been with Century West since 2010 and works on municipal and aviation projects. Brandon LuzHamilton ier has joined Tye Engineering and Surveying Inc. in Bend. Luzier graduated from Oregon State University, Luzier where he studied civil engineering with an emphasis in structural engineering. He will be assisting with engineerLipscomb ing and surveying projects. Oregon State University-Cascades Campus recently announced faculty awards for 2012: Matthew Orr, a biology instructor, received the Outreach Award. Shannon Lipscomb, an assistant professor of human development and family science, received the Scholarship and Creative Activity Award. Marty Beidler, manager for admission and records, received the Outstanding Staff Award. Kreg Lindberg, an associate professor in Tourism and Outdoor Leadership, received the Sustainability Award. Natalie Dollar, associate dean of new programs and an associate professor of speech, received the Teaching Excellence Award.
the company will fit into the production process, but one option is to recycle the batteries for manufacturers. The news comes a couple of weeks after reports surfaced of layoffs at another Bend-based energy company, IdaTech, which makes fuel cells. Of the approximately 50 employees the company laid off worldwide, most were in research and development. — Reporter: 541-633-2117, jnovet@bendbulletin.com
Peter Madoff acknowledged that, despite his role as the firm’s top legal and compliance officer, he failed to perform any meaningful oversight of his brother’s investment activities, enabling a fraud that played out for decades, during which he was considered among Wall Street’s most highly regarded money managers. “I am deeply ashamed of my actions,” Peter Madoff, reading from notes in a gravelly voice reminiscent of his brother’s, said at the hearing before Swain. “I want to apologize to anyone who was harmed and to my family, and I’m here today to take responsibility for my conduct,” he said, choking back tears.
Continued from C3 But for EU leaders who have consistently underwhelmed their exasperated publics and nervous financial markets, Friday’s efforts marked a breakthrough. The prime minister of Ireland — one of the five eurozone countries that have required emergency funds — said the plans marked a “seismic shift in European policy.” British Prime Minister David Cameron said that “for the first time in some time we have actually seen steps
Wal-Mart Continued from C3 “It’s one of the worst workplaces we ever encountered anywhere,” said Scott Nova, executive director of the Worker Rights Consortium, a university-sponsored monitoring group that was asked by the guest-worker advocates to investigate C.J.’s Seafood. “The extreme lengths of the shifts people were required to work, the employer’s brazenness in violating wage laws, the extent of the psychological abuse the workers faced, and the threats of violence against their families — that combination made it one of the most egregious workplaces we’ve examined, whether here or overseas.” Guest workers are temporary workers from abroad who typically receive special visas to do seasonal work.
Mortgage Continued from C3 So qualifying for the best rates is not impossible, as long as you have a job with steady income that’s easy to document. Of course, millions of people aren’t that fortunate.
Terrified lenders While lending standards are considerably tighter than they were during the anything-goes days of the housing boom, some mortgage brokers and lenders said they believed the rules were still lenient, at least in some ways, including the amount of total debt you’re allowed to carry. The much greater challenge, they say, has become documenting your income and every bit of information on your application, down to the last $200 your mother sent you for your birthday. “What’s tougher today is the level of scrutiny and documentation and analysis and reverification around assets, income, employment and appraisals,” said Bob Walters, chief economist at Quicken Loans. “Lenders are terrified, literally terrified, of repurchases. What that means is if a lender makes a mistake, or there’s a difference in opinion, and they close the loan and it goes into default, Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac could require them to repurchase the loan.” Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are the two government agencies that buy or guarantee about twothirds of all new mortgages. While one set of factors influences your overall ability to qualify, another
... to get ahead of the game.” There was an immediate sign that Europe’s latest plan was easing fear in financial markets: The cost for the troubled government of Spain to borrow fell dramatically. The interest rate, or yield, on the country’s 10year bonds fell by more than half a percentage point, to 6.34 percent. The Dow Jones industrial average recorded its secondbiggest gain of the year, and stocks advanced even further in Europe — in strong and weak countries alike. The benchmark stock index in Germany rose 4.3 percent,
by far its best performance this year. Germany has the biggest economy in Europe, and a warm reaction there was a crucial sign of approval for the plan. Prices for oil and other commodities shot higher, another sign that the plan may remove a big barrier to a healthier economy. At first it looked like the summit would produce little more than a modest plan to stimulate growth in Europe. But Italy and Spain, whose borrowing costs have soared to dangerous levels, refused to sign off on the $150 billion spending plan unless some-
thing was done to ease their financial burdens. After an all-night standoff, the leaders agreed to expand the use of Europe’s bailout funds — and do so without imposing strict austerity measures on countries that are meeting existing pledges to control spending. The bailout money could be used to buy bonds to drive down a country’s borrowing costs. Or it could be loaned directly to troubled banks, which EU leaders said would help break “the vicious cycle” in which weak banks and weak governments threaten to drag each other down.
On Friday, the National Guestworker Alliance released a list of 644 federal citations at 12 other Wal-Mart food suppliers that employ guest workers and used that list to assert that the retailer had fallen short on ensuring that its suppliers complied with its standards. Lorenzo Lopez, a Wal-Mart spokesman, said the retailer had begun its own investigation of C.J.’s, which supplied its Sam’s Club warehouse stores, and had uncovered violations of some of its supplier standards. “We have suspended C.J.’s Seafood as a supplier, pending the outcome of the investigation,” Lopez said. He said that the U.S. Labor Department and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration were conducting their own investigations of the seafood processor.
C.J.’s did not respond to several phone messages left at its main office. The Worker Rights Consortium’s investigation of C.J.’s found that some women worked from 2 a.m. to 6 p.m., that the workers were on average paid 42 percent less than legally required, and that when the workers tried to complain to their managers, they were threatened with discharge, deportation and blacklisting. One worker told investigators that he was once forced to stay when he sought to leave after working 38 of the previous 48 hours. After finding serious problems at C.J.’s, the Guestworker Alliance said, it decided to examine 18 other Wal-Mart food vendors that used guest workers. The alliance said it had discovered the 644 citations at 12 of the companies. While many
of them go back to the 1980s, there were 201 safety and other labor violations over the last five years, including 132 that OSHA had deemed serious. While acknowledging problems at C.J.’s, Lopez strongly objected to the Guestworker Alliance’s report and its suggestion that the citations at the other 12 suppliers indicated a possible problem with forced labor there. “This report, crafted by a union-funded, union-backed group, has little to do with solving real issues,” he said. “It simply repackages old data from up to more than 20 years ago in an attempt to make people believe they have uncovered something new. “We work with more than 60,000 suppliers in the U.S., and we have rigorous standards in place that our suppliers are required to follow,” Lopez said.
overlapping set helps determine your interest rate. To qualify, borrowers seeking a conventional loan — typically $417,000 or less, or up to $625,500 in certain highercost areas — generally need to be approved by Fannie or Freddie’s automated underwriting engines used by brokers and lenders. The formula is a bit of a black box, and some lenders may layer on their own stricter requirements. But generally speaking, the agencies and lenders look at your credit score, income, employment history, liquid assets, down payment, property value, type of property — a single-family home versus a multifamily, for instance — and how much money you have left after closing. Fannie generally wants two months of housing payments in the bank, brokers said, which I found surprisingly low though banks sometimes require more. With the more conservative standards, the average borrower today has a significantly stronger financial profile than at the height of the boom. The average FICO credit score on a new Fannie or Freddie Mac mortgage is about 765, up from about 720 in 2006, according to Inside Mortgage Finance. On loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration, the average score has increased to 700 from about 680 in 2006. But what interest rate you receive will be strongly influenced by the strength of your credit combined with how much equity have in your home, numbers that have derailed many deals or forced
families to pay a higher rate. Your equity stake depends on the property’s assessed value. So a disappointing appraisal could mean you’ll have to pay a higher rate unless you come up with more cash at the closing.
The lowest rates For the week that ended Thursday, the average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage was 3.66 percent along with a fee of 0.7 percent of the mortgage amount, or a rate of 3.81 percent with no fee, according to Freddie Mac. That’s the lowest level since the agency began tracking the numbers in 1971, and Freddie Mac said, probably ever. Rates stood at 4.51 percent at this time last year. To secure the absolutely lowest rates, you generally need to have a credit score of 740 or better and to make a down payment of 25 percent or more (or have that much in home equity if you’re refinancing), preferably in a single-family house. That said, you will probably only pay a tiny bit more with at least 20 percent in home equity. Those with a credit score of 720 to 739 will also pay slightly more, but not that much, brokers said, as long as they also meet the general approval standards. But if you’re financing a much smaller amount of your home’s value and have a lower credit score, you may still be able to qualify for the same low
rate as someone with a higher score. “Say you have a 700 score but you are only financing 50 percent of the home’s value,” said Mark Maimon, director of sales at Universal Mortgage in Brooklyn. “You might get the same rate as someone who has an 800 score doing 75 percent financing.” Someone with a 620 credit score and 20 percent in home equity can expect to pay a rate that’s nearly 4.4 percent, depending on the lender, compared to a person with a score of 740 or higher and an identical equity stake (or the person with the lower score can pay the lender 2.75 percent of the loan amount to receive a much lower rate), experts said. But as your score decreases, the two agencies want to see either a large down payment or a lot of money left in the bank. Otherwise, you may not qualify at all. That’s why it’s no surprise that so many more borrowers have turned to the Federal Housing Administration’s loan program, which is much more lenient. “At a FICO 620, there is no penalty which drives the rates higher, and a borrower can have as small an equity position as 3.5 percent,” said Keith Gumbinger, vice president of HSH.com, a mortgage information website, though the loans typically carry other fees. “Costs may be higher but the interest rate remains at rock bottom.”
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Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com
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The weekly market review American Stock Exchange Name
Last Chg Wkly
AbdAsPac 7.64 AbdAustEq 9.98 AbdnChile 15.24 Acquity n u9.85 AdmRsc 41.92 AdcareHlt 3.67 AdvPhot .54 Adventrx .51 AlexcoR g d4.41 AlldNevG 28.38 AlmadnM g 2.10 AlphaPro 1.34 AmApparel .86 AmDGEn 2.27 AoxingPh .33 Argan 13.98 AtlatsaR g .16 Augusta g 1.66 Aurizon g 4.51 AvalnRare 1.46 AvinoSG g d1.25 Bacterin 1.34 BakerM 26.09 Ballanty 5.97 Banro g 3.65 BarcUBS36 40.18 BarcGSOil d20.70 BarcGsci36 30.76 BrcIndiaTR 51.57 BioTime 4.60 BlkMuIT2 16.19
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BlkMunvst 10.92 BovieMed 2.39 BrigusG g .85 BritATob 102.12 CPI Aero 11.00 CAMAC En .63 Cardero g .97 CardiumTh .24 CelSci .38 CFCda g 19.79 CentGold g 60.40 CheniereEn14.74 CheniereE 22.61 ChiBotanP .65 ChiGengM .49 ChiMarFd .84 ChinaPhH .34 ChinaShen .71 ClaudeR g .63 CloughGA 13.02 CloughGEq 12.09 ClghGlbOp 10.75 ComndSec d1.02 ComstkMn 2.47 CnsTom 28.78 ConsEP 1.58 Contango 59.20 CornstProg 5.30 CornstTR 6.39 CornerstStr 7.13 CrSuisInco 3.92 CrSuiHiY 3.12
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Crosshr g d.18 CubicEngy .42 DejourE g .23 DelaMN2 14.75 DeltaAprl 13.66 DenisnM g 1.34 DocuSec 4.03 DryfMu u10.97 EV CAMu 12.27 EV LtdDur 16.30 EVMuniBd 13.31 EV NYMu 13.99 ElephTalk 1.68 EllswthFd 7.03 eMagin 3.09 EnovaSys d.07 EntGmg rs 2.88 EntreeGold d.64 EurasnM g 1.96 EvolPetrol 8.34 ExeterR gs d1.67 ExtorreG g 4.12 FTEgyInco 30.52 FrkStPrp 10.58 FrTmpLtd 14.05 GSE Sy 2.30 GamGldNR 13.41 GasNatural 10.10 GascoEngy .18 Gastar grs 1.93 Gastar pfA 19.25 GenMoly 3.14
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GeoGloblR .38 Geokinetics .27 GeoPetro .13 GigOptics 2.69 GoldRsv g 3.49 GoldResrc 25.99 GoldStdV g 1.92 GoldenMin 4.51 GoldStr g 1.16 GldFld 2.28 GormanR 29.80 GrahamCp 18.62 GranTrra g 4.91 GrtBasG g .64 GtPanSilv g 1.67 GreenHntr 2.04 GpoSimec 9.44 GugFront 19.52 HSBC CTI d6.02 Hemisphrx .28 HooperH .60 HstnAEn d1.12 IEC Elec 6.08 iParty .23 iBio .76 ImmunoCll 3.75 ImpOil gs 41.72 IndiaGC .23 InfuSystem 1.89 InovioPhm .46 Intellichk 1.72 IntTower g 2.78
-.01 +.03 -.00 +.01 +.01 -.01 +.22 +.21 +.18 -.21 +.85 -.73 +.04 -.12 +.32 +.06 +.08 -.05 +.05 +.05 +.67 +1.16 +1.33 +.75 +.20 +.29 -.02 -.06 +.05 -.08 -.03 -.02 +.28 -.01 +.42 +.59 -.14 -.37 -.01 -.02 +.01 -.01 -.05 -.35 +.07 -.01 +.01 +.02 -.02 -.05 +.10 +.02 +1.22 +1.85 -.02 -.02 -.14 -.20 -.01 -.03 +.08 +.02 +.11 -.39
Inuvo .68 InvVKAdv2 13.16 InvVKSelS 13.06 IsoRay 1.01 Iteris 1.36 KeeganR g 2.95 KimberR g .73 LadThalFn 1.54 LkShrGld g .89 Lannett 4.24 Libbey 15.37 LongweiPI 1.27 LucasEngy 1.47 MAG Slv g 8.70 MGTCap rs u6.29 MadCatz g .51 MagHR pfC 25.67 Medgen wt u4.24 Medgenicsu10.80 MeetMe 2.35 Metalico 2.20 MdwGold g 1.39 MincoG g d.45 MinesMgt 1.35 NTN Buzz d.13 NTS Inc .71 NavideaBio u3.72 NeoStem .49 NeuB HYld 14.10 NBIntMu 16.85 NBRESec 4.41 Neuralstem d.92
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Nevsun g 3.24 NwGold g 9.50 NA Pall g 2.03 NDynMn g d2.34 NthnO&G 15.94 NovaBayP 1.26 NovaCpp n 2.01 NovaGld g 5.28 NCaAMTFr 14.95 NuvCADv2 15.50 NCADv3 13.82 NvDCmdty 20.40 NuvDiv2 15.38 NuvDiv3 14.93 NvDivAdv 15.27 NuvAmtFr 14.86 NMuHiOp 13.36 NuvREst 10.86 OrientPap 2.58 OrionEngy 2.20 Pacholder 9.33 PalatinTch .50 ParaG&S 2.40 ParkNatl 69.75 PernixTh 7.29 PhrmAth 1.39 PionDvrsHi 20.15 PlatGpMet d.88 PolyMet g .82 ProlorBio 5.01 Protalix 5.73 Quaterra g d.47
Biggest mutual funds +.03 +.26 +.01 +.01 +.53 -.02 +.08 +.14 +.09 +.06 +.08 +.40 +.08 +.05 +.04 +.03 +.02 +.26 -.04 +.05 ... -.02 +.09 +1.85 +.53 +.05 +.05 +.03 +.02 +.12 +.10 +.02
-.23 -.03 -.14 -.08 -.05 +.01 +.01 -.17 +.22 +.18 +.33 +.30 +.13 -.03 +.13 +.02 +.14 +.11 +.36 +.06 ... +.06 -.06 +2.10 +.24 -.06 +.37 -.04 -.08 +.31 -.46 +.06
QuestRM g 1.65 RMR RE 16.64 RareEle g 4.95 ReavesUtl 26.62 RELM 1.64 Rentech 2.06 RevettMin 3.29 RexahnPh d.32 Richmnt g d4.63 Rubicon g 3.04 SamsO&G d1.10 SaratogaRs 5.88 SilverBull .44 SinoHub .28 Solitario 1.32 SondeR grs d1.73 SparkNet 5.16 SprottRL g 1.45 SuprmInd 3.91 SynergyRs 3.08 SynthBiol 1.98 Talbots wt .00 TanzRy g 4.15 Taseko 2.66 TasmanM g 1.43 Tengsco .80 ThaiCap 11.04 TimberlnR d.28 Timmins g 1.83 Tompkins 37.68 TrnsatlPet 1.08 TravelCtrs 5.07
+.11 -.08 +.37 +.76 +.05 -.06 +.27 -.24 +.02 +.08 +.03 +.23 +.14 -.23 +.02 +.01 +.16 -.46 +.10 -.10 +.11 -.12 +.23 -.86 ... +.01 -.02 -.03 +.03 +.07 +.10 +.15 -.31 -.28 +.06 ... +.16 +.11 +.20 +.42 +.14 -.02 ... -.00 +.20 -.01 +.15 -.02 +.03 -.11 -.00 +.11 +.34 +.29 +.02 -.01 +.03 +.08 +.23 -.21 +.02 +.02 +.03 -.02
TriangPet 5.58 Tucows g 1.10 TwoHrb wt .21 UQM Tech d.87 US Geoth .40 USAntimny 4.04 Univ Insur 3.41 Ur-Energy d.73 Uranerz 1.45 UraniumEn 2.29 VangMega 46.79 VangTotW 45.67 VantageDrl 1.50 VirnetX 35.25 VistaGold 2.91 VoyagerOG 1.76 Vringo 3.86 WalterInv 23.44 WFAdvInco 10.06 WFAdMSec 15.25 WFAdUtlHi 11.24 WellsGard 2.26 WstnAsInt 10.42 WstC&G gs d.75 WidePoint .63 WirelessT 1.24 WT DrfChn 25.21 WT Drf Bz 18.69 WizrdSft rs 2.06 YM Bio g 1.99 ZBB Engy .40
+.32 +.37 +.06 +.04 ... ... +.17 -.06 +.01 ... -.03 -.17 +.01 +.09 +.01 -.03 +.13 +.13 +.21 +.20 +1.17 +.93 +1.43 +1.10 +.07 +.03 +.52 +1.62 +.09 -.12 +.04 ... -.07 +.01 +.64 +.73 +.10 +.28 +.06 +.21 +.15 -.20 +.07 +.07 ... -.13 +.05 -.02 +.05 -.02 +.01 +.03 +.04 +.02 +.54 +.43 +.01 -.02 +.07 +.05 +.01 +.05
Name PIMCO Instl PIMS: TotRet n Vanguard Idx Fds: TotStk n Vanguard Instl Fds: InstIdx n Fidelity Invest: Contra n American Funds A: CapInBldA p Vanguard Admiral: 500Adml n American Funds A: GwthFdA p American Funds A: IncoFdA p Vanguard Admiral: TotStkAdm n American Funds A: CapWGrA p American Funds A: InvCoAA p Vanguard Instl Fds: InsPl n American Funds A: WshMutA p Frank/Temp Frnk A: IncoSerA p Dodge&Cox: Stock x Dodge&Cox: Intl Stk Vanguard Instl Fds: TSInst n Vanguard Admiral: TtlBdAdml n Vanguard Admiral: WelltnAdm n American Funds A: BalA p
Obj IB XC SP XG BL SP LC BL XC GL LC SP LC BL LC IL XC IB BL BL
Total Assets Ttl Rtrn/Rnk ($Mins) 4-wk 157,531 67,292 62,536 56,819 54,842 54,161 53,417 53,307 52,966 43,069 42,743 42,262 38,121 37,006 36,796 34,241 34,216 33,328 33,142 31,929
+0.2 +6.7 +6.7 +5.1 +5.3 +6.7 +5.8 +5.4 +6.7 +7.5 +6.3 +6.8 +7.0 NA NA NA +6.7 -0.3 +4.6 +5.2
12-mo +7.0/C +4.8/A +6.5/A +7.1/A +4.0/B +6.5/A +0.8/D +5.7/A +5.0/A -4.9/B +3.6/C +6.5/A +7.2/A NA NA NA +4.9/A +7.5/B +6.0/A +7.0/A
Min 5-year
Init Invt
+55.5/A 1,000,000 +2.8/A 3,000 +1.3/A 5,000,000 +15.5/B 2,500 +2.2/E 250 +1.2/A 10,000 -2.4/C 250 +7.7/C 250 +3.3/A 10,000 -8.3/B 250 -3.9/C 250 +1.4/A 200,000,000 -0.1/B 250 NA 1,000 NA 2,500 NA 2,500 +3.4/A 5,000,000 +39.1/C 10,000 +19.5/A 50,000 +14.4/B 250
Percent Load NL NL NL NL 5.75 NL 5.75 5.75 NL 5.75 5.75 NL 5.75 4.25 NL NL NL NL NL 5.75
NAV 11.30 33.90 124.74 74.81 51.16 125.55 31.54 17.36 33.91 33.86 29.10 124.75 30.09 2.16 107.36 29.22 33.91 11.10 56.83 19.41
G – Growth. GI – Growth & Income. SS – Single-state Muni. MP – Mixed Portfolio. GG – General US Govt. EI – Equity Income. SC – Small Co Growth. A – Cap Appreciation. IL – International. Total Return: Change in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%, E in bottom 20%. Percent Load: Sales charge. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. NA – Not avail. NE – Data in question. NS – Fund not in existence.
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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
E
The Bulletin
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
B M C G B J C R C
Chairwoman Publisher Editor-in-Chief Editor of Editorials
Wise choice to wait on 911 levy vote
W
hen the Deschutes County 911 taxing district’s permanent tax base increase was defeated this spring, it was by a relatively narrow margin,
only 1,358 votes out of 29,550 cast. That alone might have persuaded those who oversee the district to rush to a new vote this fall; wisely, they’ve decided to put it off until 2014. That defeat was something of a surprise, no doubt. The tax base increase would not have raised taxes, for one thing, and, in fact, would have lowered them for a time. What it would have done is replace a smaller tax base and a temporary tax levy with a single tax base equal to the other two combined. It seems unlikely that the May defeat was a reflection of dissatisfaction with 911 service — if it had been, the margin against the proposal surely would have been greater. More likely, many voters simply misunderstood what they were being asked to do. We say that because it’s pretty much impossible to believe that a majority of Deschutes County residents and the small handful of Jefferson County residents in the 911 district do not think 911 service is valuable. True, most of us never have reason to use the service, but we want it there, and staffed by professionals, when we do need it. Supporters of the May 911 tax base proposal ran what can best be described as a quiet campaign for their cause, and in the end, it
Supporters of the May 911 tax base proposal ran what can best be described as a quiet campaign for their cause, and in the end, it apparently failed to do the job. apparently failed to do the job. Now, the district’s directors must make up for that failure by generating more public support for their cause. Because they’re barred by law from doing more than providing information about the proposal, they must enlist the help of friends of the district to do their campaigning for them. They have time. Next year they almost certainly will ask voters to extend the temporary levy that keeps the district operating smoothly. Assuming that is approved — and again, getting their message out is critical to success — they will have six months, if not a full year, to help voters understand why the larger tax base is worth voting for.
From the Archives Editor’s note: The following editorial from Dec. 14, 1973, does not necessarily reflect the views of The Bulletin’s editorial board today.
Nothing illicit in Nixon’s personal finances In disclosing his private financial affairs President Nixon offers proof positive of his memorable assertion on television: “I am not a crook.� But he will be disappointed if he expects full public approval of his real estate dealing, his avoidance of income taxes, and his causing millions in tax money to be spent on office and living space for his extensive staff and Secret Service at two far away and lavish homes which he prefers to museum quarters in the White House. All of us who pay income taxes know how important it is to figure all possible deductions — interest, donations, losses, heavy medical expenses. So we can’t very well blame the President for taking all the deductions the law or Lyndon Johnson said he was entitled to. Call them loopholes or whatever, we all deduct what the law allows, and if that is wrong, the law can be changed, as it was in the case of public officials ascribing vast values to their old files before donat-
ing them to some archive. Nixon’s vice-presidential files worth $576,000? A dealer in old books and manuscripts, who was paid handsomely for his appraisal, said so. But we would like to see his face if the papers were offered to him at that figure. As for the President enriching himself after taking office in 1968, this is conceded, but it wasn’t because he was moonlighting. He simply had two wealthy admirers — Rebozo the banker and Abplanalp the aerosol valve inventor — who did for him what most of us wish someone would do for us — let us in on some deals where you can make a lot of money in a hurry. Real estate purchased by an occupant of the White House has a way of increasing in value when put on the market, it seems. The unprecedented disclosures by Nixon may well impress others more than it does the public, those others being members of Congress who must decide whether to go the impeachment route or not. How many congressmen, one can wonder, would dare lay bare all their sources of income since taking office? Finding enough without guilt to cast an effective barrage of first stones may be difficult.
My Nickel’s Worth Distinguish fact, opinion There has been a lot of talk about how to decide which letters to the editor and In My View submissions to print. I would like to suggest one improvement. Please stop printing headlines that make statements rather than opinions. In the Friday, June 22 edition of The Bulletin, the In My View submission from Bill Logan was headlined, “Obama didn’t save auto jobs; he exported them to China.� Whether this is true or not, it was presented as fact. This happens on all sides of issues. Lots of people read just the headlines of stories and believe them to be true. I ask that The Bulletin staff use nonprejudicial headlines in the future and let those of us who choose to read the entire article decide the truth. Pamela Moritz Bend
Tired song and dance The letter “End state-funded abortions� by Jeff Jimerson is nothing more than a not-so-cleverly-designed attempt at taking away a woman’s right to choose. It’s a faintly different spin on the same old tired song and dance. A quick Internet search of this initiative clearly reflects the pro-life, religious backing of this initiative. While you will not get an argument from me, a taxpayer, as to how illogical government spending can be, to use the angle that taxpayers have a right to agree to every dollar spent by their government is somewhere between laughable and deranged. Since Jimerson purports to want to give choice to taxpay-
ers as it’s their “checkbook,� after all, let’s do some math. An abortion costs approximately $500. An uncomplicated birth costs around $10,000; a complicated birth could cost hundreds of thousands. The cost to raise a child to 18 is approximately $200,000, paid sometimes entirely by taxpayers. Now times these figures by 3,500. If taxpayers looked solely at financial cost as their only concern, the math makes it a pretty simple decision, doesn’t it? It’s not just about the money. It’s about judgment and finding ways to limit personal choice activities that Jimerson and a limited number of other individuals find personally inexcusable. Jimerson’s “growing grass-roots movement� is nothing but old turf. Gina McCrea Bend
Eaton a great person Ashton Eaton made sports history, but that is not why I admire him. It is the man he has become that makes him extraordinary. From the moment he entered Hayward Field for the Olympic trials, Eaton demonstrated focus and commitment. Eaton hardly seemed to notice the biblical deluge as he effortlessly leapt over the high jump bar. He made no excuses in the 400-meter race and ran through sheets of rain with strength and grace. As he set a new world record, Eaton shared the spotlight with all those who helped him reach that lofty goal. The emotion shared with his mother and fiancee touched everyone. He acknowledged the help given by his fans and his fellow competitors. Eaton kept ask-
ing “Where’s Harry?� because he wanted to share the moment with his coach, Harry Mara. He even took a moment to wave to his elementary school P.E. teacher who was cheering him from the stands. This young man knew that no one reaches great heights without support from others. I will never forget the 2012 Olympic decathlon trials and its emotional crescendo. I also hope I never forget the lessons of preparation, focus, passion and humility that Eaton demonstrated every moment he was competing. Eaton achieved athletic greatness at the Olympic trials, which may overshadow what a great human being he is. Torree Abrams Bend
Don’t use tax money Perhaps I don’t grasp the concept involved for private sector businesses trying to get Redmond-to-Los Angeles air service as presented in the June 23 story, “Group seeks direct flights between Redmond, LA.â€? If this looked like a viable link that would run at a profit, it would seem that airlines would decide to provide the service. Since that has not happened, and other links from RDM have been dropped over time due to insufficient revenues, it makes no sense to me to use my tax dollars to â€œâ€Ś help less-populated areas strengthen air service.â€? If local businesses want to lobby for this service, let them do it with their own money, not mine. Stephen Clark Bend
Letters policy
In My View policy
How to submit
We welcome your letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250 words and include the writer’s signature, phone number and address for verification. We edit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhere and those appropriate for other sections of The Bulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed piece every 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550 and 650 words, signed and include the writer’s phone number and address for verification. We edit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating with national columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed piece every 30 days.
Please address your submission to either My Nickel’s Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Write: My Nickel’s Worth / In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804 Email: bulletin@bendbulletin.com
Holder has squandered the promise he once showed B y K eith Sime ntellectually gifted, Eric Holder graduated from Columbia Law School while clerking for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, earned his law degree in 1976 and was given a job at the Department of Justice as part of the attorney general’s honors program. He served as the first African-American in several positions under President Clinton and, appointed by President Obama, is currently serving as the first AfricanAmerican AG. Unfortunately, over his career, he has squandered all his earlier promise. Holder was appointed deputy attorney general in 1997 by President Clinton. Holder’s first notoriety came from his part, as The Washington Post explained it, as “the gatekeeper for presidential pardons.� He was a key figure entrusted with the task of vetting the Clinton administration’s 176 last-minute pardons in January 2001. Among the many beneficiaries of those pardons were Weather
I
IN MY VIEW Underground members Marc Rich and 16 former members of a Puerto Rican terrorist group. All these were pardoned with a stroke of President Clinton’s pen. On Election Day 2008 in Philadelphia, members of the Black Panther party were videotaped in front of a polling place, dressed in militarystyle uniforms and allegedly hurling racial slurs while one brandished a night stick. Holder chose to not pursue this case, apparently in keeping with DOJ policy as attested to in testimony by J. Christian Adams, an exJustice official who quit over the handling of the Black Panther case. Holder gratuitously brought on the fiasco of the KSM (Khalid Sheikh Mohammed) trial in New York that didn’t get to first base for obvious reasons. Holder is on the wrong side of the immigration issue. To stem the tide of
Holder has no place in the DOJ as he has totally abrogated his responsibilities as the supreme law enforcement official in the country. illegal aliens and mitigate the costs associated with them, six states have passed their own immigration laws because of DOJ inactivity. Not only has the DOJ refused to act against state and local governments endorsing “sanctuary� policies, the DOJ has sued four of these states. On May 30, in what was arguably an overtly political speech, Holder told the Council of Black Churches that their “sacred� right to vote was under assault everywhere and that only the Obama administration could protect them. His target: efforts in about a dozen states to implement voter ID laws aimed at curbing fraud. Currently Florida and the DOJ are in a stand-off over Florida’s effort to remove illegal voters.
Under Holder, the DOJ helped arm Mexican cartels through the wellknown Operation Fast and Furious. As a consequence of this botched operation, U.S. agents Brian Terry and Jaime Zapata — plus untold others — have been killed by some of the at least 2,000 guns that the DOJ allowed to be sold illegally. Only after the DOJ stonewalled a congressional investigation for months and cries arose for Holder’s resignation did the president claim executive privilege — an act insufficient to prevent the Congress from citing Holder for contempt of Congress. In response to what has been described as major leaks about current top-secret operations by highly placed administration officials, Hold-
er has showcased the definition of “conflict of interest� by designating two internal DOJ lawyers to conduct the investigation. Both are beholden to Holder for their jobs, and one is a political contributor and campaign supporter of the president himself. Based on the foregoing and other Holder politically motivated decisions, he is arguably the most incompetent and/or the most blatantly partisan AG in modern times, or as Charles Krauthammer has concluded, nothing more than “a political hack.� As such, Holder has no place in the DOJ as he has totally abrogated his responsibilities as the supreme law enforcement official in the country who is entrusted with upholding the rule of law and the Constitution. He should be replaced with someone who will faithfully execute the duties of the AG. However, based on precedent, this won’t happen unless we replace the president in November. — Keith Sime lives in Sunriver.
SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
OREGON NEWS
O D N Barboura Jo Shannon, of Bend July 7, 1931 - June 27, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend (541) 382-0903 Services: A memorial service will be held at the Sunrise Village Lodge in Bend, (19560 Sunshine Way) on Sunday, July 1, at 11:00 a.m.
Harry Levinson, 90, psychologist of the workplace By Claudia Deutsch New York Times News Service
Harry Levinson, a psychologist who helped change corporate America’s thinking about the workplace by demonstrating a link between job conditions and emotion- FEATUR ED al health — a OBITUARY progressive notion when he began developing his ideas in the 1950s — died Tuesday in Delray Beach, Fla. He was 90. His death was confirmed by his son Marc. As a management consultant and an educator at Harvard, MIT and other universities, and through books, seminars and his own research institute, Levinson showed how psychoanalytical theories and methods could be used to motivate employees. He was among the first psychologists to postulate a connection between thwarted career aspirations and depression. Many of his management theories are now practically truisms. But to the gray-flannel corporate culture of the postwar years, they were novel, compelling many managers to think beyond the traditional reward system of promotions and paychecks to motivate employees. One of Levinson’s ideas, put forth in his book “The Exceptional Executive� (1968), held that companies must be “learning organizations� and that their leaders must be teachers. The concept was adopted and popularized decades later by John Welch Jr., the former General Electric chairman and one of corporate America’s most influential leaders. Levinson argued that a psychological contract existed between employees and employers, laying out the expectations each had of the other. Employees who feel that their employers have violated that contract will feel depressed, he said, and may well become underachievers. He envisioned an even more dire situation in which employees despair of ever reaching their full potential — in psychological parlance, when they face a wide gap between their self-image and their ego ideal. It did not matter if such discontented employees were reacting to workplace unfairness or to their own inherent insecurities, he said; in either case, they were likely to feel helpless and depressed, and thus be underproductive or even disruptive. Levinson was an early promoter of the idea that companies, like people, had distinct personalities, or cultures, that grew out of their history and the demographics of their workforce. He developed methods to identify and isolate the elements of a company’s culture and discern their impact on workers. His 1972 book on the subject, “Organizational Diagnosis,� has been used widely as a business school text. Harry Levinson was born on Jan. 16, 1922, in Port Jervis, N.Y. He was the oldest of three children of David Levinson, a tailor, and the former Gussie Nudell Levinson, both Jewish immigrants from Russia. Harry’s career goal as a teenager was to teach, but as a Jew in a time of virulent anti-Semitism, he believed his
DeLoris Faye Hansen, of Bend May 10, 1934 - June 23, 2012 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471, www.niswonger-reynolds.com
Services: No service will be held at her request.
Shane Michael Munoz, of Bend July 25, 1978 - June 24, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A public viewing/visitation will take place on Sunday, July 1, 2012 at 11:00 AM-1:00 PM at Baird Funeral Home, located at 2425 NE Tweet Place in Bend, OR. A Celebration of Life will follow at 2:00 PM at the family home, located at 1651 NE Crestridge Drive in Bend, OR. Contributions may be made to:
Shane M. Munoz Memorial Fund at any Wells Fargo Branch.
Valerie Frieda McKie, of Bend Aug. 2, 1973 - June 25, 2012 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471, www.niswonger-reynolds.com
Services: A remembrance will be held Sat., June 30, at 4:00 PM in the Shevlin Park Aspen Meadow Pavilion. A workplace gathering will follow on Mon., July 2, 2012 at 2:00 PM at St. Charles Medical Center, Bend. Contributions may be made to:
Any wildlife organization and would be greatly appreciated.
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines: Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and noon Saturday. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by 1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail: Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
chances of landing a teaching job in New York State were slim. When a friendly high school guidance counselor persuaded him that he would do better in the Midwest, he enrolled in Kansas State Teachers College (now Emporia State University). After receiving his bachelor of science degree in 1943, Levinson joined the wartime Army, serving mostly in Italy, where he often tried to teach illiterate Army friends how to read. In 1946, he married his childhood sweetheart, Roberta Freiman, and then earned a master’s degree from Emporia State and a doctorate in clinical psychology from the University of Kansas. As part of his doctoral studies, Levinson spent two weeks observing the way mentally ill patients were treated at the Topeka State Hospital in Kansas, then submitted a paper describing how their treatment could be improved. His ideas fell on receptive ears; the hospital hired him. He then spent more than three years instituting better ways of keeping track of patients, treating their ailments and raising the hospital’s profile with legislators and potential donors. The young doctor’s methods were soon noticed by William Menninger, a co-founder of the Menninger Clinic in Topeka, which was renowned for innovative psychiatric methodologies. Menninger, whose clinic later moved to Houston, invited Levinson to join the clinic, and to shift his emphasis from curing sick people to helping well people stay well. There Menninger seized on a theory that experiences at work were a visceral part of being well, and he began visiting corporations to see what they were doing to ensure the mental health of their employees. He was stunned to discover that few, if any, were paying attention to it. From then on, he devoted his career to filling that knowledge gap. In 1954 he created the Division of Industrial Mental Health at the Menninger Foundation and began developing seminars on how to apply psychoanalytic theory to leadership and management. In 1968, Levinson moved to Cambridge, Mass., taught graduate classes at the Harvard Business School and became a professor of clinical psychology at the Harvard Medical School. His career thrived at Harvard, but his marriage did not; he and his first wife were divorced in 1970. Twenty years later, he married Miriam Lewis, whom he had met on a blind date. Levinson wrote or edited 16 books as well as numerous articles in The Harvard Business Review and other management publications. He was a visiting professor of both psychology and business at the Sloan School of Management at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Kansas and Texas A&M University. He ran the Levinson Institute until 1991, when he sold it to Gerald Krines. Macular degeneration began destroying Levinson’s eyesight in 2001, effectively ending his days of reading and writing. Levinson had lived in Delray Beach since 1997.
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Deaths of note from around the world: Pat Cummings, 55: Played 12 seasons in the NBA, including four seasons at power forward with the New York Knicks in the 1980s. Was found dead on Tuesday at an apartment in Greenwich Village. The cause was apparently a heart attack, his mother, Delores Cum-
mings, said. Doris Singleton, 92: Actress who played one of Lucy and Ricky Ricardo’s lesser-known neighbors on “I Love Lucy.� Walter Haefner, 101: The world’s oldest billionaire. Gained his riches from importing cars to Switzerland and then becoming the biggest shareholder of U.S. software-
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maker CA Inc. Died June 19. Brigitte Engerer, 59: A Russian-trained French pianist known for her immense sound, prodigious technique and probing musicality. Ranked among the world’s foremost pianists, Engerer was better known in Europe than in North America. Died June 23 in Paris. — From wire reports
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
Rosenblum becomes Oregon’s first female AG By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press
SALEM — Ellen Rosenblum became Oregon’s first female attorney general Friday, breaking through one of the last remaining glass ceilings in Oregon politics a century after the state first allowed women to vote. The retired judge and former federal prosecutor was feted in a ceremony at the state Capitol before Gov. John Kitzhaber administered the oath of office. “As attorney general I will lead the Department of Justice so citizens are represented at the highest level of ethics, professionalism and devotion to public service,� Rosenblum told dozens of her family and friends, along with leaders of the politics and the legal community. Rosenblum replaces Democrat John Kroger, who is leaving office six months early to become president of Reed College in Portland. Kitzhaber selected Rosenblum to finish Kroger’s term after she won the Democratic primary for the office last month. She is the front-runner against Republican James Buchal in November. “I didn’t appoint her to this position because she’s a woman, but because she’s the most qualified person to
Don Ryan / The Associated Press
Ellen Rosenblum, right, is sworn in as Oregon Attorney General by Gov. John Kitzhaber on Friday in Salem. Rosenblum replaces John Kroger, who is leaving office early to become president of Reed College in Portland.
be Oregon’s top lawyer,� Kitzhaber said. Barbara Roberts, Oregon’s first female governor, celebrated the achievement for Rosenblum, noting that women have been elected to most other statewide offices. Rosenblum, 61, retired last year after more than 20 years as a judge, first for the Multnomah County trial court and later for the state appeals court. Before taking the gavel, she was a federal prosecutor and a lawyer in private practice in Eugene. In her new job, she be-
comes one of the state’s highest-profile officials with a bully pulpit and a budget of more than $400 million. And she will be chief of the state’s largest law firm, employing 1,200 people, including nearly 300 lawyers. Rosenblum grew up outside Chicago and moved to the West Coast in 1970 to attend the University of Oregon, where she earned a bachelor’s degree and her law degree. Her husband, Richard Meeker, is publisher of Willamette Week, and they have two children.
State Board of Education approves guidelines for teacher evaluations By Steven DuBois The Associated Press
PORTLAND — The state Board of Education has approved guidelines for how Oregon teachers and administrators will be evaluated. Starting in 2013, multiple measures will be used to evaluate how well individual teachers are doing in three broad areas: professional practice, professional responsibility and student learning and growth. The evaluations
will not be made public and standardized test scores will not be the sole measure of student progress. The Oregon Legislature approved a bill last year to create statewide teaching standards, and Friday’s action satisfied that requirement. Moreover, states seeking waivers from the Bushera No Child Left Behind law must have teacher evaluation systems that factor in student progress. State education of-
ficials hope to obtain a waiver in the next week or two. The board endorsed guidelines rather than the specific framework for evaluations, which is still being modified as the state seeks the waiver. Oregon officials hope to scrap the federal law’s push to continually improve test scores with a new plan based on achievement compacts that school districts sign with the state.
Barboura Jo Walters Shannon July 7, 1931 – June 27, 2012
With saddened hearts we said good-bye to our dear mother and grandmother, Barboura Jo Walters Shannon “Babas� on June 27, 2012. She passed peacefully in her home with her children and grandchildren present.
kids the love of getting their hands dirty and the joy of watching the new flowers bloom. She was a fabulous knitter and left us with many beautiful afghans to wrap ourselves in. She had hopes that once our children were raised we might find the time to also take up knitting.
Barboura was born July 7, 1931 to Chuck and Metta Walters in Miles City, Montana. She attended Custer High School in Miles City, where she graduated in 1949. Barboura completed her freshman year at Macalester College in St. Paul, MN, and subsequently transferred to the University of Arizona, where she graduated with a degree in Elementary Education. During and after college, Barboura travelled on many fun trips with her sorority sisters and friends to New York, Chicago, New Orleans, and a six week trip to Mexico in a 12-car caravan. After graduation she and four of her sorority sisters were travelling through Carmel, California and they called the superintendent of schools on a whim. They were all hired. The following year they applied and were hired to teach at the Air Force base on Coronado Island in San Diego, and Barboura later taught at Fairchild AFB in Spokane. She loved her years of teaching.
We always knew what a great Mom we had, but she touched the lives of many people outside our family as well. Through the years she opened her house to many people. She had a way of making everyone feel important and always took the time to learn people’s story. Her home was open to anyone and everyone. She was a great cook and there was never a shortage of food in her kitchen.
In 1956, Barboura married Bob Shannon and together they had six children and 16 grandchildren. She was many things to all of us, but most of all, she was a devoted and generous mother and grandmother who loved her family with all her heart. Although Barboura had many interests, her greatest joy was spending time with her children and grandchildren whether it was pitching the ball, a trip to the lake, cuddling on the couch, or watching a reality show. Barboura spent countless hours and travelled thousands of miles to watch her grandchildren perform in school programs or compete in sporting events. The knowledge that she would no longer be here to watch their upcoming games and events saddened her deeply. Our Mom was a voracious reader who had a full library in her house and was always recommending and loaning books to friends and family. She was never without a book or magazine, and kept us all current on everything from world events to the latest fashions. Barboura was also a great gardener and taught all her
Mom inherited her mischievous spirit from her father. Those who spent any time with her were sure to be lovingly pinched, poked with a toothpick, have a purse go missing or a dessert eaten when you weren’t looking.
One of her greatest gifts to us was the value she placed on honesty and hard work. She could frequently be heard teaching her grandchildren the importance of these attributes. Through her unconditional love for all of us, she taught us to love one another, to always be forgiving, and that we would be the happiest when we were doing for others. Mom had a humble and selfless spirit. She was an inspiration to all of us. Mom, we will miss you more than you could ever know. We love you Babas. No‌ we love you more! And now, as your letters to us always ended, “May God Bless and Keep You, Safe, Well and Happy.â€? Barboura is survived by her husband Bob Shannon, her six children, and 16 grandchildren: Chuck & Pam Shannon and children Kelly, Lindsay and Connor; Karie & Tim Regan and children Collette, Timmy, Emily and Matthew; Dr. Robert & Susan Shannon and children, Riley, Tucker and Casey; Greg & Lori Shannon and children Katherine and Carson; Becky & Dan Schanz and children, Danny, Hannah, Ellie, and Benjamin; Lori & Mike Catterall; her sister Beckye Quesenberry, nieces and nephew, Kathy, Jack and Jill Quesenberry. She was preceded in death by her parents, and a granddaughter Gracie Jo Regan. A memorial service will be held at the Sunrise Village Lodge (19560 Sunshine Way) on Sunday, July 1st at 11:00 am. Funeral Services will be held on July 7th in Miles City, MT. Baird Funeral Home in Bend, OR is in charge of the memorial arrangements.
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
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W E AT H ER FOR EC A ST Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2012.
TODAY, JUNE 30 Today: Mainly cloudy, numerous showers, heaviest in the afternoon and evening.
HIGH Ben Burkel
75
Bob Shaw
SUNDAY Tonight: Mainly cloudy, isolated showers.
LOW
HIGH LOW
55
74 46
FORECAST: STATE WEST Showers are likely across the region today.
Astoria 66/54
Seaside
60/53
Cannon Beach 60/54
Hillsboro Portland 71/58 70/56
Tillamook 67/54
Salem
60/52
75/58
82/61
Maupin
Corvallis 72/57
Yachats
72/55
66/54
73/50
Oakridge
Cottage Grove
74/52
73/52
Coos Bay
Crescent
63/54
60/54
Gold Beach
John Day
Chemult
73/60
Unity 84/54
85/54
Vale 94/65
Nyssa 90/57
83/51
83/50
Jordan Valley
82/52
Silver Lake
72/47
87/56
Rome
Klamath Falls 76/51
Ashland
61/55
Rome
73/49
81/60
Brookings
• 90°
81/56
Chiloquin
Medford
59/55
Yesterday’s state extremes
91/55
Paisley
80/59
86/54
Frenchglen
78/50
Grants Pass
92/64
Juntura
Burns Riley
Christmas Valley
Port Orford
EAST Scattered thunderstorms in the Ontario northern part of 94/65 the region today.
86/54
Hampton 72/50
CENTRAL Showers and thunderstorms will be the rule today.
Baker City
Brothers 74/49
Fort Rock 75/51
72/48
67/43
Roseburg
75/55
La Pine 74/49
Crescent Lake
64/54
Bandon
Spray 87/56
Prineville 74/54 Sisters Redmond Paulina 70/50 75/52 77/53 Sunriver Bend
Eugene
Florence
86/56
78/47
72/50
62/55
82/54
Union
Mitchell 76/55
77/56
Camp Sherman
82/53
Joseph
Granite
Warm Springs
Enterprise
Meacham 84/58
77/55
Madras
80/49
La Grande
Condon
78/58
Wallowa
75/50
81/57
85/59
77/57
72/56
87/59
Ruggs
Willowdale
Albany
Newport
Pendleton
89/63
81/57
70/57
60/54
Hermiston 88/62
Arlington
Wasco
Sandy
Government Camp 61/46
69/56
87/61
The Biggs Dalles 83/60
71/55
McMinnville
Lincoln City
Umatilla
Hood River
74/56
• 43°
Fields
Lakeview
McDermitt
89/58
79/53
Lakeview
88/56
-30s
-20s
-10s
Yesterday’s extremes
0s
10s
Vancouver 64/55
(in the 48 contiguous states):
20s
Calgary 77/52
Saskatoon 82/62
Smyrna, Tenn.
Rockport, Texas
San Francisco 68/53
Las Vegas 105/82
Cheyenne 91/58 Denver 97/64 Albuquerque 102/66
Los Angeles 70/64
Phoenix 112/83
Honolulu 86/72
Tijuana 77/59 Chihuahua 99/69
Anchorage 62/51
La Paz 93/68 Juneau 54/46
Mazatlan 87/76
70s
80s
90s
Halifax 83/61 Portland 85/65 Boston 94/71
To ronto 89/61
Green Bay 86/65 Chicago Des Moines 90/75 94/74
Omaha 95/75
100s 110s
Quebec 82/57
Thunder Bay 84/58
Rapid City 92/65
Salt Lake City 96/69
60s
Winnipeg 83/62
Stanley, Idaho
• 1.82”
50s
St. Paul 89/72
Boise 92/58
• 30°
40s
Bismarck 89/61
Billings 90/61
Portland 71/58
• 113°
WEDNESDAY
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
83 48
Mostly sunny and mild.
Mostly sunny and mild.
Mostly sunny and warmer.
Mostly cloudy and chance of showers early, evening clearing.
HIGH LOW
76 45
78 47
BEND ALMANAC
PLANET WATCH
TEMPERATURE
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury . . . .7:38 a.m. . . . . 10:17 p.m. Venus . . . . . .3:38 a.m. . . . . . 6:05 p.m. Mars. . . . . .12:16 p.m. . . . . 12:29 a.m. Jupiter. . . . . .3:09 a.m. . . . . . 6:01 p.m. Saturn. . . . . .2:14 p.m. . . . . . 1:32 a.m. Uranus . . . .12:45 a.m. . . . . . 1:10 p.m.
Yesterday’s weather through 4 p.m. in Bend 24 hours ending 4 p.m.*. . 0.00” High/Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73/57 Month to date . . . . . . . . . . 0.30” Record high . . . . . . . . 97 in 1948 Record low. . . . . . . . . 29 in 1968 Average month to date. . . 0.68” Year to date . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.37” Average high . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77 Average low. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Average year to date. . . . . 5.70” Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.30.03 Record 24 hours . . .0.52 in 1997 *Melted liquid equivalent
Sunrise today . . . . . . 5:26 a.m. Sunset today . . . . . . 8:52 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow . . 5:26 a.m. Sunset tomorrow. . . 8:52 p.m. Moonrise today . . . . 5:53 p.m. Moonset today . . . . 2:27 a.m.
Moon phases Full
Last
New
First
July 3
July 10
July 18
July 26
OREGON CITIES
FIRE INDEX
Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Precipitation values are 24-hour totals through 4 p.m.
Bend, west of Hwy. 97...Mod. Bend, east of Hwy. 97......Low Redmond/Madras ........Low
Astoria . . . . . . . .66/58/0.08 Baker City . . . . . 77/56/trace Brookings . . . . . 63/56/trace Burns. . . . . . . . . .81/53/0.00 Eugene . . . . . . . .75/58/0.01 Klamath Falls . . .77/55/0.01 Lakeview. . . . . . .81/43/0.00 La Pine . . . . . . . .72/53/0.00 Medford . . . . . . .83/59/0.02 Newport . . . . . . .64/57/0.00 North Bend . . . . . .66/57/NA Ontario . . . . . . . .87/60/0.00 Pendleton . . . . . .86/62/0.00 Portland . . . . . . 77/62/trace Prineville . . . . . . .74/56/0.00 Redmond. . . . . . .78/52/0.00 Roseburg. . . . . . 76/60/trace Salem . . . . . . . . 73/60/trace Sisters . . . . . . . . .79/52/0.00 The Dalles . . . . . 84/63/trace
Mod. = Moderate; Ext. = Extreme
. . . .66/54/sh . . . . .67/52/sh . . . .86/54/pc . . . . . .74/47/t . . . .61/55/sh . . . . .69/51/sh . . . .86/51/pc . . . . .77/48/sh . . . .72/55/sh . . . . .73/51/sh . . . . . 76/51/t . . . . .77/44/sh . . . . . 79/53/t . . . . .75/49/sh . . . . . 74/49/t . . . . .72/40/sh . . . .81/60/sh . . . . .82/59/sh . . . .60/54/sh . . . . .61/52/sh . . . .64/56/sh . . . . .62/52/sh . . . .94/65/pc . . . . .84/61/pc . . . . . 87/59/t . . . . .85/57/sh . . . .71/58/sh . . . . .72/54/pc . . . . . 74/54/t . . . . .77/50/pc . . . . . 81/54/t . . . . .78/47/sh . . . .73/60/sh . . . . .75/54/sh . . . .70/57/sh . . . . .73/52/sh . . . . . 75/52/t . . . . .72/47/sh . . . . . 82/61/t . . . . . .82/58/c
PRECIPITATION
WATER REPORT Sisters ...............................Low La Pine.............................Mod. Prineville........................Mod.
The following was compiled by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as a service to irrigators and sportsmen.
Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie . . . . . . . . . . . . 44,888 . . . . . . 55,000 Wickiup. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 184,265 . . . . . 200,000 Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . . . . 79,724 . . . . . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir . . . . . . . . 37,435 . . . . . . 47,000 Prineville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132,092 . . . . . 153,777 The higher the UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Index is River flow Station Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie . . . . . . . 488 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup . . . . . . . . . . 1,200 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake . . . . . . . 116 LOW MEDIUM HIGH V.HIGH Little DeschutesNear La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . 174 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend . . . . . . . . . . . . . 235 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls . . . . . . . . . 1,812 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . . 18 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . 222 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow Ochoco Res. . . . . . . . . . 14.4 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne . . . . . . . . . . . 174 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 LOW MEDIUM HIGH or go to www.wrd.state.or.us
To report a wildfire, call 911
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 8
POLLEN COUNT
TRAVELERS’ FORECAST NATIONAL 30s
Seattle 68/56
TUESDAY
Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation, s-sun, pc-partial clouds, c-clouds, h-haze, sh-showers, r-rain, t-thunderstorms, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, rs-rain-snow mix, w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace
NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS -40s
MONDAY
Detroit 91/70
Buffalo
84/65
New York 96/71 Philadelphia 97/77 Washington, D. C. 99/76
Columbus 96/74 Louisville 105/77 St. Louis Charlotte 106/80 104/78 Oklahoma City Nashville Little Rock 100/72 106/76 105/76 Atlanta 102/77 Birmingham Dallas 105/76 97/75 New Orleans 93/78 Orlando Houston 95/76 89/76 Kansas City 100/77
Miami 91/79 Monterrey 97/69
FRONTS
Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX . . . . . .98/75/0.00 . . . 98/73/s . 96/74/pc Akron . . . . . . . . . .96/73/0.01 . . . 94/69/t . . .89/69/t Albany. . . . . . . . . .92/69/0.01 . .90/66/pc . 89/64/pc Albuquerque. . . . .99/73/0.00 . . 102/66/t 100/68/pc Anchorage . . . . . .61/48/0.00 . .62/51/sh . 63/51/sh Atlanta . . . . . . . . .98/74/0.00 102/77/pc 101/76/pc Atlantic City . . . . .94/69/0.08 . . . 88/75/t . 87/72/pc Austin . . . . . . . . . .96/73/0.00 . . . 93/74/t . . .89/74/t Baltimore . . . . . .103/77/0.00 . .99/76/pc . 99/79/pc Billings . . . . . . . . .98/62/0.00 . .90/61/pc . 97/61/pc Birmingham . . . .103/74/0.00 . .105/76/s . 102/77/s Bismarck. . . . . . . .90/52/0.00 . . . 89/61/s . . 90/70/s Boise . . . . . . . . . . .88/58/0.00 . .92/58/pc . 82/54/pc Boston. . . . . . . . . .89/66/0.05 . .94/71/pc . 91/69/pc Bridgeport, CT. . . .91/69/0.06 . . . 90/68/t . 91/69/pc Buffalo . . . . . . . . .84/71/0.00 . .84/65/pc . 80/66/pc Burlington, VT. . . .92/62/0.02 . .87/62/pc . 82/63/pc Caribou, ME . . . . .83/56/1.00 . . . 82/58/t . 78/54/pc Charleston, SC . . .97/75/0.00 . .99/78/pc . 97/74/pc Charlotte. . . . . . .104/66/0.00 104/78/pc 101/76/pc Chattanooga. . . .106/70/0.00 . .104/73/s . 103/74/s Cheyenne . . . . . . .93/58/0.00 . .91/58/pc . 91/59/pc Chicago. . . . . . . . .88/69/0.27 . .90/75/pc . . .89/76/t Cincinnati . . . . . .101/70/0.33 100/75/pc . . .99/72/t Cleveland . . . . . . .94/78/0.00 . . . 85/72/t . . .88/73/t Colorado Springs .95/58/0.00 . . . 93/63/t . 94/66/pc Columbia, MO . .104/77/0.00 . .104/75/s . 101/74/s Columbia, SC . . .109/71/0.00 106/79/pc 104/78/pc Columbus, GA. . . .98/75/0.00 105/74/pc . 102/75/s Columbus, OH. . . .98/71/0.28 . . . 96/74/t . 94/72/pc Concord, NH. . . . .92/57/0.09 . .88/61/pc . 90/61/pc Corpus Christi. . . .96/80/0.00 . . . 89/78/t . . .88/79/t Dallas Ft Worth. . .97/79/0.00 . . . 97/75/s . 93/73/pc Dayton . . . . . . . . .99/66/0.06 . . . 96/74/t . 95/72/pc Denver. . . . . . . . . .98/63/0.00 . . . 97/64/t . 98/65/pc Des Moines. . . . . .93/73/0.15 . .94/74/pc . . .92/73/t Detroit. . . . . . . . . .94/73/0.00 . .91/70/pc . . .86/70/t Duluth. . . . . . . . . .86/59/0.00 . .82/63/pc . 82/62/pc El Paso. . . . . . . . .105/78/0.00 . . 105/80/t 101/79/pc Fairbanks. . . . . . . .68/52/0.00 . . .73/51/c . . .75/55/t Fargo. . . . . . . . . . .88/56/0.00 . . . 90/68/t . . 90/68/s Flagstaff . . . . . . . .87/54/0.00 . . . 87/50/s . . 87/52/s
Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Grand Rapids . . . .89/69/0.00 . .92/67/pc . 90/68/pc Green Bay. . . . . . .87/65/0.00 . .86/65/pc . 89/65/pc Greensboro. . . . .102/70/0.00 103/78/pc 102/76/pc Harrisburg. . . . . . .99/70/0.01 . . . 95/69/t . 94/68/pc Hartford, CT . . . . .94/71/0.00 . . . 94/67/t . 92/67/pc Helena. . . . . . . . . .89/52/0.00 . .85/56/pc . 85/54/pc Honolulu. . . . . . . .86/74/0.01 . . . 86/72/s . . 86/73/s Houston . . . . . . . .92/75/0.00 . . . 89/76/t . . .88/76/t Huntsville . . . . . .106/71/0.00 . .104/74/s . 103/74/s Indianapolis . . . .103/73/0.00 . . . 97/74/t . . .96/75/t Jackson, MS . . . .100/74/0.00 . .100/75/s . 100/73/s Jacksonville. . . . . .94/69/0.00 . .99/77/pc 100/75/pc Juneau. . . . . . . . . .50/48/1.41 . .54/46/sh . 52/45/sh Kansas City. . . . .102/72/0.00 . .100/77/s . . 99/76/s Lansing . . . . . . . . .89/68/0.00 . .90/65/pc . . .88/69/t Las Vegas . . . . . .105/82/0.00 . .105/82/s . 106/80/s Lexington . . . . . .102/71/0.00 . .101/73/s . 98/75/pc Lincoln. . . . . . . . . .91/75/0.00 . . . 97/73/t . 98/74/pc Little Rock. . . . . .106/74/0.00 . .105/76/s . 103/75/s Los Angeles. . . . . .70/60/0.00 . . . 70/64/s . . 68/62/s Louisville. . . . . . .105/78/0.00 . .105/77/s 101/77/pc Madison, WI . . . . .92/57/0.00 . .93/68/pc . . .92/68/t Memphis. . . . . . .103/79/0.00 . .104/81/s . 101/79/s Miami . . . . . . . . . .89/80/0.00 . .91/79/pc . 88/80/pc Milwaukee . . . . . .86/68/0.00 . .86/68/pc . . .83/69/t Minneapolis . . . . .90/64/0.00 . . . 89/72/t . 91/70/pc Nashville. . . . . . .109/70/0.00 . .106/76/s . 103/75/s New Orleans. . . . .94/78/0.00 . . . 93/78/s . 95/76/pc New York . . . . . . .93/68/0.21 . . . 96/71/t . 94/74/pc Newark, NJ . . . . . .97/73/0.11 . . . 97/70/t . 93/72/pc Norfolk, VA . . . . .100/74/0.00 100/79/pc . 97/76/pc Oklahoma City . . .99/68/0.00 . .100/72/s . . 97/74/s Omaha . . . . . . . . .91/78/0.07 . . . 95/75/t . . .96/76/t Orlando. . . . . . . . .90/70/0.00 . .95/76/pc . 94/77/pc Palm Springs. . . .110/74/0.00 . .107/72/s . 104/73/s Peoria . . . . . . . . . .96/79/0.00 . . . 95/74/t . 94/74/pc Philadelphia . . . . .98/72/0.01 . . . 97/77/t . 96/75/pc Phoenix. . . . . . . .110/90/0.00 112/83/pc . 111/83/s Pittsburgh . . . . . . .97/79/0.00 . . . 92/71/t . . .92/69/t Portland, ME. . . . .80/60/0.01 . .85/65/pc . 85/61/pc Providence . . . . . .84/64/0.09 . .93/69/pc . 92/67/pc Raleigh . . . . . . . .105/71/0.00 104/78/pc 103/77/pc
Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Rapid City . . . . . . .95/61/0.00 . .92/65/pc . . 96/70/s Reno . . . . . . . . . . .90/54/0.00 . .86/57/pc . . 83/58/s Richmond . . . . . .103/73/0.00 104/76/pc 100/75/pc Rochester, NY . . . .89/73/0.00 . .91/66/pc . 83/66/pc Sacramento. . . . . .84/57/0.00 . .87/58/pc . . 86/60/s St. Louis. . . . . . . .106/78/0.00 . .106/80/s . 103/77/s Salt Lake City . . . .98/72/0.00 . . . 96/69/s . . 98/64/s San Antonio . . . . .95/75/0.00 . . . 91/75/t . . .89/75/t San Diego . . . . . . .73/62/0.00 . . . 69/62/s . . 69/61/s San Francisco . . . .68/56/0.00 . .71/54/pc . . 68/53/s San Jose . . . . . . . .74/59/0.00 . .79/57/pc . . 77/56/s Santa Fe . . . . . . . .97/62/0.00 . .92/63/pc . 91/62/pc
Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Savannah . . . . . . .93/73/0.00 101/77/pc . 98/77/pc Seattle. . . . . . . . . .71/59/0.01 . .68/56/sh . 66/54/pc Sioux Falls. . . . . . .89/65/0.06 . . . 91/72/t . 93/72/pc Spokane . . . . . . . .75/60/0.00 . . . 82/58/t . . .75/55/t Springfield, MO . .99/71/0.00 . .102/72/s . . 98/72/s Tampa. . . . . . . . . .87/73/0.00 . .92/75/pc . . .92/76/t Tucson. . . . . . . . .106/79/0.00 108/77/pc 106/79/pc Tulsa . . . . . . . . . .101/80/0.00 . .100/74/s . . 98/73/s Washington, DC 104/78/0.00 . .99/76/pc 100/76/pc Wichita . . . . . . . .104/73/0.00 . .102/75/s . . 99/75/s Yakima . . . . . . . . 87/54/trace . . . 84/59/t . 83/56/pc Yuma. . . . . . . . . .110/81/0.00 . .112/76/s . 110/76/s
INTERNATIONAL Amsterdam. . . . . .72/61/0.00 . .71/56/sh . 65/53/pc Athens. . . . . . . . . .87/71/0.00 . . . 94/71/s . . 86/72/s Auckland. . . . . . . .59/43/0.00 . .55/49/pc . 55/48/pc Baghdad . . . . . . .109/88/0.00 . .107/81/s . 108/80/s Bangkok . . . . . . . .95/82/0.00 . . . 94/80/t . . 91/77/c Beijing. . . . . . . . . .75/68/0.00 . . . 94/70/s 100/75/pc Beirut . . . . . . . . . .84/79/0.00 . . . 85/76/s . . 87/76/s Berlin. . . . . . . . . . .86/61/0.00 . . . 83/68/t . . .77/64/t Bogota . . . . . . . . .64/46/0.00 . .64/51/sh . 63/50/sh Budapest. . . . . . . .88/63/0.00 . . . 96/69/s . . 91/69/s Buenos Aires. . . . .68/52/0.00 . .64/57/pc . 72/56/sh Cabo San Lucas . .97/77/0.00 . .91/72/pc . 91/73/pc Cairo . . . . . . . . . . .93/75/0.00 . . . 97/75/s . . 98/75/s Calgary . . . . . . . . .75/54/0.00 . . . 77/52/t . . .75/54/t Cancun . . . . . . . . .86/79/0.00 . .90/78/pc . 88/77/pc Dublin . . . . . . . . . .66/55/0.00 . .59/49/sh . 63/54/sh Edinburgh. . . . . . .66/55/0.00 . .63/50/sh . 57/50/sh Geneva . . . . . . . . .91/66/0.00 . .90/63/pc . . .72/58/t Harare. . . . . . . . . .73/48/0.00 . . . 70/45/s . . 70/43/s Hong Kong . . . . . .93/82/0.00 . . . 87/79/t . . .87/80/t Istanbul. . . . . . . . .86/68/0.00 . . . 84/70/s . . 84/72/s Jerusalem . . . . . . .86/65/0.00 . . . 88/66/s . . 87/66/s Johannesburg. . . .70/46/0.00 . . . 65/42/s . . 66/40/s Lima . . . . . . . . . . .68/64/0.00 . .71/64/pc . 72/65/pc Lisbon . . . . . . . . . .75/61/0.00 . .73/58/sh . . 77/59/s London . . . . . . . . .70/55/0.00 . .67/51/pc . 63/53/sh Madrid . . . . . . . . .88/72/0.00 . . . 88/59/s . 81/55/pc Manila. . . . . . . . . .90/79/0.00 . . . 86/77/t . . .83/77/t
Mecca . . . . . . . . .109/86/0.00 . .108/84/s 109/86/pc Mexico City. . . . . .77/57/0.00 . . . 74/57/t . . .71/55/t Montreal. . . . . . . .88/66/0.00 . .86/64/pc . 79/67/pc Moscow . . . . . . . .66/50/0.00 . .66/49/pc . . 74/51/s Nairobi . . . . . . . . .70/48/0.00 . .73/51/pc . 75/56/pc Nassau . . . . . . . . .90/77/0.00 . .91/74/pc . 91/75/pc New Delhi. . . . . .109/88/0.00 110/91/pc . 113/90/s Osaka . . . . . . . . . .86/70/0.00 . . . 82/73/t . . .81/73/t Oslo. . . . . . . . . . . .59/45/0.00 . .69/50/sh . 64/50/sh Ottawa . . . . . . . . .91/64/0.00 . .86/63/pc . 81/65/pc Paris. . . . . . . . . . . .72/61/0.00 . .73/52/sh . 68/52/pc Rio de Janeiro. . . .84/68/0.00 . .79/63/pc . . 79/63/s Rome. . . . . . . . . . .86/66/0.00 . . . 93/71/s . . 94/72/s Santiago . . . . . . . .59/48/0.00 . .54/38/sh . 53/31/sh Sao Paulo . . . . . . .75/55/0.00 . .75/58/pc . . 75/58/s Sapporo . . . . . . . .81/72/0.00 . .77/59/pc . 77/64/sh Seoul. . . . . . . . . . .88/72/0.00 . . . 81/70/r . 84/68/pc Shanghai. . . . . . . .91/79/0.00 . . . 88/76/t . . .87/75/t Singapore . . . . . . .90/81/0.00 . . . 87/81/t . . .85/79/t Stockholm. . . . . . .72/54/0.00 . .68/56/sh . 70/56/sh Sydney. . . . . . . . . .68/52/0.00 . . . 62/44/s . 60/42/pc Taipei. . . . . . . . . . .93/82/0.00 . .94/79/pc . 93/78/pc Tel Aviv . . . . . . . . .88/75/0.00 . . . 90/73/s . . 88/73/s Tokyo. . . . . . . . . . .77/68/0.00 . .77/66/sh . 77/68/sh Toronto . . . . . . . . .90/72/0.00 . .89/61/pc . 85/64/pc Vancouver. . . . . . .72/59/0.00 . .64/55/sh . 64/53/sh Vienna. . . . . . . . . .90/63/0.00 . .91/68/pc . 91/70/pc Warsaw. . . . . . . . .79/59/0.00 . .88/68/pc . 91/70/pc
Judge sets deadline to resolve Port of Portland dispute B y Steven D ubo is The Associated Press
PORTLAND — A federal judge has set a Tuesday deadline for a deal to end a dispute that has slowed the flow of cargo at the Port of Portland. At a hearing Friday, former Gov. Ted Kulongoski told U.S. District Judge Michael Simon no agreement has been reached between the unions representing longshoremen and electrical workers. The unions disagree about which workers should plug in and unplug refrigerated shipping containers — the equivalent of two full-time jobs. Simon appointed Kulongoski last week to broker a settlement. If there’s no deal by Tuesday, the judge said he may act on a request for a temporary restraining order that would
require the longshoremen to stop a work slowdown that has disrupted port operations for more than three weeks. Simon could also act on a separate temporary restraining order sought by the longshoremen. It asks the judge to give them the disputed work. More than 1,000 regional businesses depend on the container terminal to get their goods to or from international markets. The conflict has led the two main shipping lines that serve the port’s Terminal 6 — Germany’s Hapag-Lloyd AG and South Korea’s Hanjin — to divert their ships to other ports. A Hapag-Lloyd ship, however, is tentatively scheduled to arrive at Terminal 6 late Tuesday or early Wednesday. A quartet of lawyers — rep-
Rick Bowmer / The Associated Press
The Port of Portland’s Terminal 6 is the site of a dispute between two unions representing longshoremen and electrical workers. The unions disagree about who should plug in and unplug refrigerated containers — the equivalent of two full-time jobs.
resenting the electrical workers, the Port of Portland, the National Labor Relations Board and the company that operates the terminal — urged Simon to immediately grant a
temporary restraining order compelling the longshoremen to boost production. The slowdown is doing irreparable harm to the region, they said, and must end before the
Hapag-Lloyd ship arrives. “If this vessel comes and if it has a problem, it’s highly unlikely we’ll see any other vessels for a long time,” said Randy Foster, an attorney representing the port. But Rob Remar, attorney for the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, told the judge that an order against the longshoremen would destabilize negotiations, and the attorneys seeking it were only trying to obtain bargaining leverage. “They seem to want to win the war for themselves,” Remar said. “We’re trying to win the peace for everyone.” The judge decided to give the parties “one more chance” to negotiate a settlement. He scheduled a Tuesday morning hearing.
If there’s no deal by then, “I’m going to assume and conclude the parties have been unable to work out an agreement and I will act accordingly,” he said. The electrical workers have maintained the reefers for decades under an agreement with the Port of Portland. The question of whether they should continue to perform it arose after the port leased Terminal 6 operations to ICTSI Oregon Inc., a subsidiary of a company in the Philippines. Now that a private company is in control, the longshoremen say the jobs must switch to them because of the collective bargaining agreement between the ILWU and the Pacific Maritime Association that covers all West Coast ports.
SPORTS
Scoreboard, D2 Tennis, D3 Golf, D3
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
www.bendbulletin.com/sports
TRACK & FIELD: U.S. OLYMPIC TRIALS
WCL BASEBALL Late surge leads Bears over Elks Seven runs in the final two innings allowed Cowlitz to pull away from a tight game with Bend as the Elks fell to the Black Bears 9-3 in West Coast League baseball action on Friday in front of 1,117 fans at overcast Vince Genna Stadium. The Elks (9-12) knotted the score at 2-2 in the bottom of the seventh when Logan Frandsen scored an unearned run, but the Black Bears (8-12) plated three unearned runs and four earned in the final two innings to take a commanding 9-2 lead. Bend’s Shawn O’Brien scored from third base on a Jordan Copeland single in the bottom of the ninth inning for the final margin. Cowlitz reliever Taylor Williams picked up the victory on the mound, while Daniel Chavez suffered the loss in relief for Bend. Elks starter Darin Gillies threw seven innings and struck out seven. Will Sparks led Bend at the plate with a three for four performance and one RBI. Steven Halcomb and O’Brien each had a double. The Elks return to action tonight when they conclude their two-game series with Cowlitz in Bend. First pitch is slated for 6:35 at Genna Stadium.
SWIMMING: SUN COUNTRY INVITATIONAL
Athletes prepare for final days in Eugene
Below, competitors dive off the starting block while competing in the 200-meter individual medley on the opening day of competition in the annual Sun Country Invitational swim meet on Friday. The three-day meet, hosted by the Bend Swim Club, is taking place at Juniper Swim & Fitness Center in Bend. Scores of top swimmers age 13 and older from around the state are taking part in the meet, which continues today with preliminary races at 9 a.m.; finals begin at 5 p.m. Sunday’s events are set to start at 9 a.m. Spectators are welcome. Right, Connor Brenda a member of the Bend Swim Club, competes in the 200-meter individual medley.
By Pat Graham The Associated Press
Heating up the pool
— Bulletin staff report
GOLF
Photos by Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin
CYCLING: TOUR DE FRANCE PREVIEW
Hunter Mahan looks on while standing on the 18th green during the second round of the AT&T National on Friday in Bethesda, Md.
Mahan beats heat, takes lead Golfer shoots seven birdies in 100-degree temperatures to take a two-shot lead at the AT&T National, D3
TENNIS
Roger Federer reacts after winning a third-round men’s singles match against Julien Benneteau at Wimbledon on Friday.
Federer hangs on at Wimbledon Six-time champion holds off Julien Benneteau to advance to the fourth round, D3
D
Swimming, D3 Motor sports, D3 MLB, D4
EUGENE — Maybe the response just slipped. Or maybe the question completely caught her off guard. As Allyson Felix sauntered away from the crowd and toward the safety of a restricted area, she actually broke her vow of silence. “Feeling good,” she said in almost a hushed voice. And then she was off again, escorted by coach Bobby Kersee. Felix is looking solid on the track even in the midst of controversy, winning her semifinal heat at the Olympic trials on Friday. Same with training partner Jeneba Tarmoh, who moments earlier captured her race convincingly, too. After the 200 final today, these two sprinters will finally address what everyone is anxious to know: Just how they will break their thirdplace tie in the 100 and decide who earns the final spot to the London Games in the event. A runoff? A flip of the coin? Soon, there will be a choice. Maybe even something as simple as one of them surrendering the spot to the other. The controversy has overshadowed everything at the trials. Including this: Some of the biggest names in U.S. sprinting were missing from the starting blocks in the opening round of the men’s 200 meters. Justin Gatlin and Tyson Gay were expected to sit out this race after securing spots to London in the 100. See Trials / D5
COLLEGE SPORTS
Tour looking to be two-man race University • The 99th edition of the premier cycling event begins today with a prologue By Jon Brand New York Times News Service
LIEGE, Belgium — The Tour de France has every reason to be lackluster this year. Alberto Contador, professional cycling’s best rider, is serving a doping ban. Andy Schleck, a perennial contender, is sidelined with an injury. And the Olympic road race in late July, just days after the Tour’s end, has some competitors thinking about saving themselves for the one-day event. But the 99th edition of cycling’s premier race may prove to be one of the most compelling in recent years, thanks to Bradley Wiggins of Britain and the defending champion, Cadel Evans of Australia. As the Tour starts its nearly 2,173-mile journey today, the yellow jersey spotlight is fixed firmly on Wiggins and Evans. Wiggins, 32, is the favorite to stand atop the podium in Paris three weeks from now. With a lanky frame and modish sideburns that hearken to 1960s-era Britain, he looks as if he would be more at home in an Antonioni film than in a bike race. The extra facial hair has not increased Wiggins’ drag coefficient this season. The Team Sky captain, Wiggins has had a torrid start to 2012, winning three of the five stage races he has entered. See Tour / D5
Inside • A map of the complete course route for the 99th Tour de France, D5
athletics’ broken model • Schools make cuts to varsity programs as costs rise in football and men’s basketball Liz Clarke The Washington Post
Christophe Ena / The Associated Press
George Hincapie of the U.S., right, uses his smart phone to take pictures of Australia’s Cadel Evans, 2011 Tour de France cycling race winner, left, during a training ride near Liege, Belgium, Friday. The Tour de France cycling race starts today with the prologue.
USADA files formal charges against Armstrong AUSTIN, Texas — The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency has filed formal charges against Lance Armstrong, accusing the seven-time Tour de France winner of using performance-enhancing drugs throughout the best years of his career. The agency notified Armstrong, former team manager Johan Bruyneel and several other Armstrong team associates of the charges in a letter on Thursday. The charges came after a USADA review panel examined evidence in the case, which now goes to an arbitration panel to decide. If found guilty, Armstrong could be stripped of the Tour de France titles he won from 1999-2005. This year’s Tour de France begins today. Armstrong maintains his innocence. Armstrong attorney Robert Luskin called the charges “wrong and baseless.” Also charged are team doctors Pedro Celaya Lezama and Luis Garcia del Moral; team trainer Pepe Marti, and consulting doctor Michele Ferrari. Because they are so closely linked, USADA rolled all of the charges into a single case. — The Associated Press
With its multimillion-dollar deficit mounting and no deep-pocketed donor to cover the shortfall, the University of Maryland’s athletic department will proceed with plans to cut at least seven of its 27 varsity teams this weekend. The downsizing is an attempt to correct an unsustainable pattern many households know well: Spending more than you earn. But the forces behind the bleak reality in College Park aren’t unique to Maryland. Athletic departments at nine out of 10 public universities that compete in big-time sports spent more money than they generated last year — and many are grappling with the question of whether dropping some sports is the solution. Unless runaway spending is brought under control, according to financial data and those who study them, it’s only a matter of time before other schools are forced to follow Maryland’s lead. Over the past five years, 205 varsity teams have been dropped in NCAA Division I, the top ranks of college sports — 133 for men, 72 for women. Men’s tennis, gymnastics and wrestling have been hit particularly hard. Rutgers cut six sports in 2007 to address a multimillion-dollar deficit. See Broken / D5
D2
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
O A
SCOREBOARD
TELEVISION Today TENNIS 5 a.m.: Wimbledon, early rounds, ESPN. CYCLING 5 a.m.: Tour de France, prologue, NBC Sports Network. GOLF 5:30 a.m.: European Tour, Irish Open, third round, Golf Channel. 11:30 a.m.: Champions Tour, Senior Players Championship, third round, Golf Channel. Noon: PGA Tour, AT&T National, third round, CBS. 2 p.m.: LPGA Tour, NW Arkansas Championship, second round, Golf Channel. 4:30 p.m.: Nationwide Tour, United Leasing Championship, third round, Golf Channel. EXTREME SPORTS 10 a.m.: X Games, ABC. Noon: X Games, ESPN. 6 p.m.: X Games, ESPN. SOFTBALL 10 a.m.: World Cup, teams TBA, ESPN2. Noon: Men’s softball, General Tire Border Battle IV: Canada vs. United States, ESPN2. 4 p.m.: World Cup, teams TBA, ESPN2. BASEBALL 10 a.m.: MLB, Chicago White Sox at New York Yankees or Kansas City Royals at Minnesota Twins, MLB Network. 4 p.m.: MLB, San Diego Padres at Colorado Rockies, Fox. 7 p.m.: MLB, Boston Red Sox at Seattle Mariners, MLB Network. 7 p.m.: MLB, Boston Red Sox at Seattle Mariners, Root Sports. SOCCER 10:30 a.m.: Women’s friendly, United States vs. Canada, NBC. 4:30 p.m.: MLS, Seattle Sounders FC at New England Revolution, Root Sports. 6 p.m.: MLS, Portland Timbers at Colorado Rapids, CW. 7 p.m.: MLS, Los Angeles Galaxy at San Jose Earthquakes, ESPN2. 10:30 p.m.: MLS, Portland Timbers at Colorado Rapids (same-day tape), Root Sports. GYMNASTICS 1 p.m.: U.S. Olympic Trials, men’s finals, NBC. SWIMMING 3:30 p.m.: U.S. Olympic Trials, qualifying heats (same-day
tape), NBC Sports Network. 8 p.m.: U.S. Olympic Trials, finals (same-day tape), NBC. LACROSSE 4:30 p.m.: MLL, All-Star game, ESPN2. MOTOR SPORTS 4:30 p.m.: NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Quaker State 400, TNT. TRACK & FIELD 9 p.m.: U.S. Olympic trials, finals (same-day tape), NBC.
Sunday CYCLING 5 a.m.: Tour de France, Stage 1, NBC Sports Network. GOLF 5:30 a.m.: European Tour, Irish Open, final round, Golf Channel. 11:30 a.m.: Champions Tour, Senior Players Championship, final round, Golf Channel. Noon: PGA Tour, AT&T National, final round, CBS. 2 p.m.: LPGA Tour, NW Arkansas Championship, final round, Golf Channel. 4:30 p.m.: Nationwide Tour, United Leasing Championship, final round, Golf Channel. SOFTBALL 10 a.m.: World Cup, teams TBA, ESPN2. BASEBALL 11 a.m.: MLB, Chicago White Sox at New York Yankees, TBS. 1 p.m.: MLB, Boston Red Sox at Seattle Mariners, Root Sports. 5 p.m.: MLB, New York Mets at Los Angeles Dodgers, ESPN. SOCCER 11:30 a.m.: UEFA European Championship, finals, Italy vs. Spain, ESPN. YACHTING 11:30 a.m.: America’s Cup, NBC. EXTREME SPORTS Noon: X Games, ESPN2. 2 p.m.: X Games, ESPN. MOTOR SPORTS 3 p.m.: NHRA, O’Reilly Auto Parts Route 66 Nationals, ESPN2. TRACK & FIELD 7 p.m.: U.S. Olympic trials, finals (same-day tape), NBC. SWIMMING 8 p.m.: Olympic Trials, finals (same-day tape), NBC. GYMNASTICS 9 p.m.: U.S. Olympic Trials, women’s finals, NBC.
RADIO Today
Sunday
BASEBALL 4 p.m.: MLB, New York Mets at Los Angeles Dodgers, KICE-AM 940.
BASEBALL 5 p.m.: MLB, New York Mets at Los Angeles Dodgers, KICE-AM 940. SOCCER 11:30 a.m.: UEFA European Championship, finals, Italy vs. Spain, KICE-AM 940.
Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations.
SOFTBALL Little League Oregon District 5 All-Stars At Madras 11-12 Softball Friday Results At Juniper Hills Park Bend North/South 22, Hood River 2 Redmond 27, Sisters 8
TENNIS Professional Wimbledon Friday At The All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club Wimbledon, England Purse: $25.03 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles Men Second Round Sam Querrey, United States, def. Milos Raonic (21), Canada, 6-7 (3), 7-6 (7), 7-6 (8), 6-4. Third Round Viktor Troicki, Serbia, def. Juan Monaco (15), Argentina, 7-5, 7-5, 6-3. Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Radek Stepanek (28), Czech Republic, 4-6, 6-2, 6-2, 6-2. Xavier Malisse, Belgium, def. Fernando Verdasco (17), Spain, 1-6, 7-6 (5), 6-1, 4-6, 6-3. Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan, def. Alejandro Falla, Colombia, 6-3, 6-4, 3-6, 7-6 (5). Richard Gasquet (18), France, def. Nicolas Almagro (12), Spain, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4. Mikhail Youzhny (26), Russia, def. Janko Tipsarevic (8), Serbia, 6-3, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3. Florian Mayer (31), Germany, def. Jerzy Janowicz, Poland, 7-6 (5), 3-6, 3-6, 6-3, 7-5. Roger Federer (3), Switzerland, def. Julien Benneteau (29), France, 4-6, 6-7 (3), 6-2, 7-6 (6), 6-1. Women Second Round Jana Cepelova, Slovakia, def. Anabel Medina Garrigues (26), Spain, 6-7 (7), 7-6 (5), 6-3. Third Round Sabine Lisicki (15), Germany, def. Sloane Stephens, United States, 7-6 (5), 1-6, 6-2. Maria Sharapova (1), Russia, def. Hsieh Su-wei, Taiwan, 6-1, 6-4. Peng Shuai (30), China, def. Arantxa Rus, Netherlands, 6-1, 6-2. Angelique Kerber (8), Germany, def. Christina McHale (28), United States, 6-2, 6-3. Agnieszka Radwanska (3), Poland, def. Heather Watson, Britain, 6-0, 6-2. Kim Clijsters, Belgium, def. Vera Zvonareva (12), Russia, 6-3, 4-3, retired. Maria Kirilenko (17), Russia, def. Sorana Cirstea, Romania, 6-3, 6-1. Camila Giorgi, Italy, def. Nadia Petrova (20), Russia, 6-3, 7-6 (6). Wimbledon Show Court Schedules Today At The All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club Wimbledon, England Play begins on Centre Court and No. 1 Court at 5 a.m. PDT; all other courts at 3:30 a.m. Centre Court Serena Williams (6), United States, vs. Zheng Jie (25), China David Ferrer (7), Spain, vs. Andy Roddick (30), United States Marcos Baghdatis, Cyprus, vs. Andy Murray (4), Britain
BASEBALL WCL WEST COAST LEAGUE ——— League standings East Division W Wenatchee AppleSox 18 Kelowna Falcons 13 Bellingham Bells 13 Walla Walla Sweets 10 West Division W Corvallis Knights 17 Bend Elks 9 Cowlitz Black Bears 8 Kitsap BlueJackets 6 Klamath Falls Gems 4 Friday’s Games Cowlitz 9, Bend 3 Corvallis 3, Kitsap 1 Klamath Falls 8, Kelowna 7 Walla Walla 10, Bellingham 2 Today’s Games Cowlitz at Bend, 6:35 p.m. Kitsap at Corvallis, 6:40 p.m. Kelowna at Klamath Falls, 7:05 p.m. Bellingham at Walla Walla, 7:05 p.m. x=nonleague
L 3 6 8 13 L 5 12 12 21 18
Friday’s summary
Black Bears 9, Elks 3 Cowlitz 101 000 043 — 9 12 3 Bend 100 000 101 — 3 9 4 Galusha, Williams (7), Gauna (9) and Hazard. Gillies, Chavez (8), Fielding (8), Zandona (9), Snyder (9) and Chase, Guinn. W — Williams. L — Chavez. 2B — Cowlitz: Diemer (2), Frattali; Bend: Halcomb, O’Brien.
Football • Guidelines established for NFL teams looking to move to L.A.: Sensing for the first time in years that stadium issues are solvable in Los Angeles, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell has established guidelines for a franchise’s potential move to the area. In a memo sent by the commissioner Friday and obtained by The Associated Press, Goodell said no single team has any “presumptive right” to play in Los Angeles and that only the league as a whole can make a decision on relocation. Any franchise interested in relocating there for the 2013 season must apply between Jan. 1 and Feb. 15 of that year, and prove it has exhausted all attempts to remain in its current location. • Lions extend contract with coach Schwartz: The Detroit Lions have accomplished one more goal this offseason, keeping another cog in the franchise’s turnaround. Detroit and coach Jim Schwartz, who had one year left on his deal, agreed on a contract extension. Lions spokesman Bill Keenist said Friday night that the team won’t disclose details of the new contract. Schwartz and the team consistently refused to comment on negotiations this offseason.
Basketball • Williams returning to
Jazz; Odom heads to L.A.: Mo Williams will be reunited with the Utah Jazz as part of a fourteam deal that will send Lamar Odom back to Los Angeles for a second chance with the Clippers. William’s agent, Mark Bartelstein, initially told The Associated Press the deal was finalized Friday, and the Jazz and Clippers officially announced it in releases three hours later. The deal initially was believed to involve only three teams, but a fourth, the Houston Rockets, got involved after Thursday’s draft. The Rockets received the rights to the Clippers’ 53rd overall pick, Furkan Aldemir, and the Jazz sent the team’s trade exception to Dallas.
Gymnastics • Wieber halfway to London after first day of trials: Jordyn Wieber looks ready for London. As for the rest of the U.S. women, they still have some work to do. The reigning world champion was about the only one not affected by nerves Friday, breezing through the first night of the Olympic trials and all but assuring herself of the lone guaranteed spot on the fivewoman London team. Wieber finished with 61.7 points, 0.3 points ahead of Gabby Douglas, who had to work out of a hole after making a big error on uneven bars, her first event. — From wire reports
WNBA WOMEN’S NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PDT ——— Eastern Conference W L Pct Connecticut 10 3 .769 Indiana 8 5 .615 Chicago 7 5 .583 Atlanta 7 7 .500 New York 4 9 .308 Washington 2 10 .167 Western Conference W L Pct Minnesota 13 1 .929 Los Angeles 10 6 .625 San Antonio 6 5 .545 Seattle 6 7 .462 Phoenix 4 9 .308 Tulsa 2 12 .143 ——— Friday’s Games Connecticut 77, Washington 64 Atlanta 102, Tulsa 92 Phoenix 84, Chicago 81 Today’s Game Seattle at New York, 1 p.m. Sunday’s Games Minnesota at San Antonio, noon Phoenix at Washington, 1 p.m. Seattle at Connecticut, 2 p.m. Atlanta at Chicago, 3 p.m.
70-72—142 70-72—142 74-68—142 70-72—142 75-67—142 74-68—142 69-73—142 70-73—143 72-71—143 75-68—143 72-71—143 73-70—143 70-73—143 74-69—143 73-71—144 73-71—144 72-72—144 71-74—145 70-75—145 73-72—145 73-72—145 72-73—145 70-75—145 72-73—145 72-73—145 71-74—145 74-72—146 70-76—146 73-73—146 75-71—146 72-74—146 76-70—146 74-72—146 75-71—146 72-74—146 72-74—146 70-76—146 70-76—146 73-73—146 75-72—147 72-75—147 71-76—147 74-73—147 76-71—147 72-75—147 71-76—147 77-70—147 72-75—147 74-73—147 78-69—147 79-69—148 77-71—148 76-72—148 72-76—148 73-75—148 72-76—148 74-74—148 74-74—148 73-75—148 74-74—148 76-72—148 75-74—149 75-74—149 73-76—149 80-69—149 73-77—150 76-74—150 75-75—150 78-72—150 75-75—150 76-74—150 74-76—150 71-79—150 75-75—150 75-75—150 76-75—151 73-78—151 76-75—151 76-75—151 77-74—151 77-74—151 74-77—151 80-72—152 79-73—152 75-77—152 75-77—152 78-75—153 76-77—153 78-75—153 73-80—153 76-77—153 75-79—154 77-77—154 78-77—155 74-82—156 82-77—159 83-77—160 75-86—161 75—WD 79—WD 78—DQ
LPGA Tour
BASKETBALL
S B
John Mallinger Nick Watney Bobby Gates Brandt Jobe Adam Scott Trevor Immelman Billy Hurley III Charles Howell III Greg Chalmers Sang-Moon Bae Patrick Cantlay Troy Matteson Daniel Summerhays Brian Davis Andres Romero Bud Cauley Chez Reavie Harris English Charlie Wi Sean O’Hair George McNeill Brian Harman Greg Owen Kevin Chappell John Huh Beau Hossler Hunter Haas James Driscoll Jim Furyk Justin Leonard Gary Woodland Heath Slocum Ricky Barnes Martin Flores K.T. Kim Ryuji Imada Dustin Johnson Davis Love III Erik Compton D.J. Trahan Blake Adams Brendan Steele Roberto Castro Chris DiMarco J.J. Killeen Vaughn Taylor Ben Crane Kyle Stanley Rory Sabbatini Bryce Molder Jeff Overton J.J. Henry Arjun Atwal William McGirt Will Claxton Brendon Todd Bob Estes Graham DeLaet Ryan Moore Ben Curtis Y.E. Yang Failed to qualify Matt Bettencourt Robert Allenby Johnson Wagner Lucas Glover Tom Gillis Kevin Streelman Jordan Spieth Tom Pernice Jr. Michael Thompson Chris Couch Billy Mayfair Angel Cabrera Cameron Beckman Tim Herron Kevin Stadler D.A. Points Scott Piercy Notah Begay III John Merrick Spencer Levin Josh Teater Kris Blanks K.J. Choi Boo Weekley Kyle Reifers David Mathis Chris Kirk Camilo Villegas Brian Gay Dicky Pride Chad Campbell Sung Kang Jeff Maggert Kelly Kraft Nick O’Hern Mark Anderson Tommy Gainey Chris Stroud Michael Bradley Danny Lee
GB — 2 2½ 3½ 6 7½ GB — 4 5½ 6½ 8½ 11
GOLF PGA Tour AT&T National Friday At Congressional Country Club, Blue Course Bethesda, Md. Purse: $6.5 million Yardage: 7,569; Par: 71 Second Round Hunter Mahan 70-65—135 Brendon de Jonge 68-69—137 Jimmy Walker 68-69—137 Robert Garrigus 70-67—137 Pat Perez 69-69—138 Seung-Yul Noh 70-68—138 Rod Pampling 71-67—138 Stewart Cink 70-68—138 Vijay Singh 68-70—138 Cameron Tringale 74-65—139 Bo Van Pelt 67-73—140 Tiger Woods 72-68—140 Charley Hoffman 72-68—140 Marc Leishman 70-70—140 Martin Laird 72-69—141 Jason Day 69-72—141 Ryan Palmer 74-67—141 Jhonattan Vegas 71-70—141 J.B. Holmes 72-70—142
NW Arkansas Championship Friday At Pinnacle Country Club Rogers, Ark. Purse: $2 million Yardage:—6,356; Par—71 (36-35) First Round Veronica Felibert 33-32—65 Shanshan Feng 33-33—66 Mi Jung Hur 34-33—67 Karine Icher 34-33—67 Inbee Park 31-36—67 Ai Miyazato 35-33—68 Anna Nordqvist 35-33—68 Ryann O’Toole 35-33—68 Beth Bader 35-34—69 Laura Diaz 34-35—69 Katie Futcher 34-35—69 Jessica Korda 35-34—69 Catriona Matthew 36-33—69 Azahara Munoz 34-35—69 Angela Oh 34-35—69 Ji Young Oh 33-36—69 Yuki Sakurai 34-35—69 Jenny Shin 34-35—69 Kyeong Bae 36-34—70 Na Yeon Choi 35-35—70 Sandra Gal 34-36—70 Katherine Hull 37-33—70 Stacy Lewis 35-35—70 Mo Martin 37-33—70 Mika Miyazato 33-37—70 Becky Morgan 36-34—70 Suzann Pettersen 35-35—70 Gerina Piller 35-35—70 Jane Rah 35-35—70 Jennifer Rosales 36-34—70 So Yeon Ryu 35-35—70 Victoria Tanco 37-33—70 Momoko Ueda 36-34—70 Sun Young Yoo 37-33—70 Christel Boeljon 37-34—71 Paula Creamer 38-33—71 Meredith Duncan 34-37—71 Moira Dunn 36-35—71 Julieta Granada 37-34—71 Sophie Gustafson 36-35—71 Eun-Hee Ji 36-35—71 Tiffany Joh 35-36—71 Haeji Kang 36-35—71 Jimin Kang 34-37—71 Candie Kung 38-33—71 Jennie Lee 39-32—71 Meena Lee 35-36—71 Brittany Lincicome 36-35—71 Stephanie Louden 37-34—71 Stacy Prammanasudh 36-35—71 Karin Sjodin 37-34—71 Sarah Jane Smith 36-35—71 Angela Stanford 33-38—71 Lexi Thompson 37-34—71 Sandra Changkija 38-34—72 Kathleen Ekey 39-33—72 Jennifer Gleason 34-38—72 Numa Gulyanamitta 37-35—72 Nicole Hage 35-37—72 Marcy Hart 38-34—72 Lorie Kane 37-35—72 Danielle Kang 37-35—72 Cindy LaCrosse 37-35—72 Ilhee Lee 34-38—72 Pernilla Lindberg 36-36—72 Paige Mackenzie 37-35—72 Haru Nomura 37-35—72 Jin Young Pak 36-36—72 Reilley Rankin 39-33—72 Beatriz Recari 35-37—72 Dewi Claire Schreefel 36-36—72 Jessica Shepley 39-33—72 Wendy Ward 38-34—72 Michelle Wie 37-35—72 Amy Yang 38-34—72 Karlin Beck 36-37—73 Amanda Blumenherst 37-36—73 Nicole Castrale 38-35—73 Chella Choi 37-36—73 Cydney Clanton 35-38—73 Wendy Doolan 38-35—73 Jodi Ewart 38-35—73 Hee-Won Han 37-36—73
Cristie Kerr Christina Kim Brittany Lang Maude-Aimee Leblanc Rebecca Lee-Bentham Kristy McPherson Na On Min Se Ri Pak Pornanong Phatlum Lizette Salas Hee Kyung Seo Giulia Sergas Elisa Serramia Yani Tseng Danah Bordner Laura Davies Caroline Hedwall Maria Hjorth Vicky Hurst Janice Moodie Belen Mozo Hee Young Park Jane Park Samantha Richdale Stephanie Sherlock a-Emily Tubert Mina Harigae Maria Hernandez Ayaka Kaneko Mindy Kim Song-Hee Kim Karen Stupples Mariajo Uribe Alison Walshe Michelle Ellis Anna Grzebien Natalie Gulbis Pat Hurst Jeong Jang I.K. Kim Sydnee Michaels Alena Sharp Jennifer Song Kris Tamulis Dori Carter Irene Cho Lisa Ferrero Meaghan Francella Amy Hung Heather Bowie Young Taylor Coutu Juli Inkster Leta Lindley Tanya Dergal Morgan Pressel Christine Song Hannah Yun Jacqui Concolino Stephanie Kono Jee Young Lee Seon Hwa Lee
38-35—73 36-37—73 38-35—73 37-36—73 38-35—73 38-35—73 37-36—73 36-37—73 39-34—73 34-39—73 36-37—73 36-37—73 36-37—73 37-36—73 38-36—74 36-38—74 34-40—74 36-38—74 37-37—74 37-37—74 40-34—74 39-35—74 36-38—74 38-36—74 39-35—74 39-35—74 36-39—75 39-36—75 38-37—75 39-36—75 39-36—75 38-37—75 37-38—75 39-36—75 39-37—76 38-38—76 39-37—76 36-40—76 41-35—76 37-39—76 38-38—76 36-40—76 38-38—76 39-37—76 38-39—77 40-37—77 41-36—77 44-33—77 37-40—77 37-40—77 39-39—78 40-38—78 42-36—78 39-40—79 41-38—79 42-37—79 42-37—79 41-39—80 40-42—82 WD WD
Champions Tour Senior Players Championship Friday At Fox Chapel Golf Club Pittsburgh Purse: $2.7 million Yardage: 6,710; Par: 70 Second Round Fred Couples 66-63—129 Joe Daley 66-64—130 Tom Lehman 66-67—133 Bill Glasson 67-67—134 Mark Calcavecchia 69-65—134 Michael Allen 66-68—134 Jay Don Blake 69-65—134 Olin Browne 73-62—135 Larry Mize 70-65—135 Jeff Freeman 70-65—135 Willie Wood 70-66—136 Kenny Perry 68-69—137 Fred Funk 65-72—137 Tom Watson 70-67—137 Steve Pate 68-69—137 Jim Thorpe 67-70—137 Steve Jones 72-66—138 David Eger 70-68—138 Roger Chapman 70-68—138 Bruce Vaughan 64-74—138 Morris Hatalsky 71-67—138 Tom Kite 71-68—139 Joel Edwards 73-66—139 Bobby Clampett 68-72—140 Corey Pavin 70-70—140 Hale Irwin 72-68—140 Jim Carter 74-66—140 P.H. Horgan III 72-68—140 Kirk Triplett 71-69—140 Craig Stadler 70-70—140 Jay Haas 71-69—140 David Frost 71-69—140 David Peoples 70-71—141 Mike Goodes 74-67—141 John Huston 74-67—141 Chien Soon Lu 74-67—141 Gil Morgan 70-71—141 Greg Norman 67-74—141 John Cook 74-67—141 Jeff Sluman 73-68—141 Ted Schulz 69-72—141 Tommy Armour III 74-67—141 Peter Senior 69-73—142 D.A. Weibring 73-69—142 Sandy Lyle 73-69—142 Brad Faxon 69-73—142 Rod Spittle 68-74—142 Tom Purtzer 69-73—142 Jim Gallagher, Jr. 73-69—142 Steve Lowery 73-69—142 Hal Sutton 74-68—142 Russ Cochran 71-71—142 Chip Beck 71-71—142 Eduardo Romero 73-70—143 Jim Rutledge 74-69—143 Loren Roberts 70-73—143 Jeff Hart 70-73—143 Larry Nelson 72-72—144 Mark Brooks 73-71—144 Mark Wiebe 71-73—144 Tom Jenkins 73-71—144 Peter Jacobsen 71-73—144 Bob Tway 72-72—144 Brad Bryant 69-76—145 Gary Hallberg 71-74—145 Andy Bean 74-71—145 Phil Blackmar 72-73—145 Lonnie Nielsen 71-75—146 Andrew Magee 71-75—146 Bob Gilder 73-73—146 Bobby Wadkins 75-71—146 Gene Jones 76-70—146 Scott Simpson 72-76—148 Dan Forsman 75-73—148 Jerry Pate 75-74—149 Dick Mast 79-70—149 Bruce Fleisher 73-77—150 Mark McNulty 76-75—151 Ben Crenshaw 74-78—152 Wayne Levi 80-75—155 Tony Jacklin 81-80—161
SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER All Times PDT ——— Eastern Conference W L T Pts GF D.C. 9 5 3 30 31 New York 9 4 3 30 31 Sporting Kansas City 9 5 2 29 20 Chicago 8 5 3 27 21 Houston 5 5 5 20 20 Columbus 5 5 4 19 14 New England 5 7 3 18 20 Montreal 5 9 3 18 24 Philadelphia 3 8 2 11 12 Toronto FC 2 10 2 8 16 Western Conference W L T Pts GF San Jose 10 3 3 33 31 Real Salt Lake 10 5 2 32 28 Vancouver 7 4 5 26 18 Seattle 7 5 4 25 19 Los Angeles 6 8 2 20 22 Colorado 6 8 1 19 21 Chivas USA 5 7 4 19 11 Portland 4 6 4 16 14 FC Dallas 3 9 5 14 16 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. ——— Friday’s Game Chicago 1, Sporting Kansas City 0 Today’s Games New York at Toronto FC, 4 p.m. Seattle FC at New England, 4:30 p.m. Montreal at D.C. United, 4:30 p.m. Real Salt Lake at Columbus, 5 p.m. Philadelphia at Houston, 5:30 p.m. Portland at Colorado, 6 p.m.
GA 22 24 16 19 23 15 20 29 15 28 GA 19 19 19 16 23 21 18 17 26
Los Angeles at San Jose, 7 p.m.
International 2012 European Championship Glance Time PDT ——— FINAL Sunday, July 1 At Kiev, Ukraine Spain vs. Italy, 11:45 a.m.
MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Quaker State 400 Lineup After Friday qualifying; race today At Kentucky Speedway Sparta, Ky. Lap length: 1.5 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 181.818 mph. 2. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 181.421. 3. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 181.147. 4. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 180.367. 5. (39) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 180.337. 6. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 180.228. 7. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 180.222. 8. (2) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 180.204. 9. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 180.036. 10. (56) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 179.964. 11. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 179.754. 12. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 179.509. 13. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 179.336. 14. (51) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 179.206. 15. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 179.075. 16. (22) A J Allmendinger, Dodge, 179.045. 17. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 178.992. 18. (20) Joey Logano, Toyota, 178.867. 19. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 178.737. 20. (17) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 178.23. 21. (13) Casey Mears, Ford, 177.825. 22. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 177.801. 23. (83) Landon Cassill, Toyota, 177.02. 24. (95) Scott Speed, Ford, 176.505. 25. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 176.217. 26. (78) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 175.97. 27. (87) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 175.73. 28. (47) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 175.615. 29. (31) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 175.211. 30. (26) Josh Wise, Ford, 175.08. 31. (42) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 175.063. 32. (30) David Stremme, Toyota, 174.757. 33. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 174.695. 34. (93) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 174.402. 35. (98) Michael McDowell, Ford, 174.402. 36. (23) Scott Riggs, Chevrolet, 174.345. 37. (19) Mike Bliss, Toyota, 174.272. 38. (10) David Reutimann, Chevrolet, 173.511. 39. (55) Michael Waltrip, Toyota, 172.199. 40. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, Owner Points. 41. (32) Ken Schrader, Ford, Owner Points. 42. (36) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 43. (33) Stephen Leicht, Chevrolet, 173.132. Failed to Qualify 44. (49) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 172.612. 45. (52) Mike Skinner, Toyota, 171.876.
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL American League CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Placed RHP Brian Bruney on the 15-day DL, retroactive to June 25. Selected the contract of RHP Brian Omogrosso from Charlotte (IL). MINNESOTA TWINS — Recalled RHP Kyle Waldrop from Rochester (IL). Agreed to terms with C Ryan Doumit on a two-year contract through 2014. NEW YORK YANKEES — Claimed RHP Chris Schwinden off waivers from Cleveland and optioned him to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Designated RHP Danny Farquhar for assignment. Optioned RHP Ryota Igarashi to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Recalled RHP David Phelps from Tampa (FSL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Optioned RHP Tyson Ross to Sacramento (PCL). Recalled 1B Chris Carter from Sacramento. Announced they have extended their player development contract with Vermont (NYP) through the 2014 season. SEATTLE MARINERS — Agreed to terms with RHP Cameron Copping on a minor league contract. Placed OF Franklin Gutierrez on the seven-day DL. Recalled RHP Steve Delabar from Tacoma (PCL). TEXAS RANGERS—Placed RHP Mark Lowe on the 15-day DL, retroactive to June 26. Recalled RHP Yoshinori Tateyama from Round Rock (PCL). National League CHICAGO CUBS — Assigned RHP Randy Wells outright to Iowa (PCL). COLORADO ROCKIES — Optioned LHP Edwar Cabrera to Colorado Springs (PCL). Recalled RHP Tyler Chatwood from Colorado Springs. HOUSTON ASTROS — Reinstated RHP Bud Norris from the 15-day DL. Optioned LHP Xavier Cedeno to Oklahoma City (PCL). LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Agreed to terms with OF Yasiel Puig on a seven-year contract, placed him on the temporary inactive list and optioned him to the Arizona League Dodgers. Transferred INF Justin Sellers to the 60-day DL. SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS—Purchased the contract of RHP Brad Penny from Fresno (PCL). Placed RHP Shane Loux on the 15-day DL, Transferred LHP Eric Surkamp to the 60-day DL. FOOTBALL National Football League DETROIT LIONS — Signed coach Jim Schwartz to a multiyear contract extension. HOCKEY National Hockey League CALGARY FLAMES — Signed RW Lee Stempniak and D Cory Sarich to two-year contract extensions. COLORADO AVALANCHE—Signed F Steve Downie to a two-year contract. MINNESOTA WILD — Re-signed LW Matt Kassian to a two-year contract. Agreed to terms with D Chay Genoway on a two-year contract. MONTREAL CANADIENS — Signed F Petteri Nokelainen and D Brendon Nash to one-year contracts. Named Jean-Jacques Daigneault assistant coach. NEW JERSEY DEVILS — Re-signed F Steve Bernier, F Ryan Carter, F Stephen Gionta, F Cam Janssen and D Peter Harrold. PHILADELPHIA FLYERS — Named Terry Murray coach of Adirondack (AHL). PHOENIX COYOTES — Re-signed C Andy Miele to a one-year, two-way contract. WASHINGTON CAPITALS — Re-signed C Mike Carman to a one-year contract extension. SOCCER Major League Soccer MLS — Suspended Montreal M Parice Bernier one game and fined him an undisclosed amount for his reckless challenge that endangered the safety of an opponent during Wednesday’s game against Toronto. D.C. UNITED — Signed M Branko Boskovic. COLLEGE BOSTON COLLEGE—Announced F Andrew Van Nest will join the men’s basketball team. GEORGIA—Dismissed TB Isaiah Crowell from the football team. OHIO STATE — Named Kelly Kovach Schoenly softball coach. STANFORD — Reinstated LB Shayne Skov to the football team and suspended him one game after he was arrested and jailed earlier this year for driving under the influence. UNC GREENSBORO — Named Sammy Towne women’s assistant soccer coach. UNLV — Named Matt Armstrong men’s assistant soccer coach, Richie Louis director of men’s soccer operations and Andre Boudreaux men’s soccer goalkeeper coach. WASHINGTON & JEFFERSON — Announced the resignation of volleyball coach Fred Wallace, who will become volleyball and softball coach at Morrisville State College. WILLIAM SMITH — Announced the retirement of lacrosse coach Pat Genovese, who will remain as associate athletic director. Named Brighde Dougherty interim lacrosse coach.
FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Thursday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 1,458 269 426 162 The Dalles 1,047 239 231 62 John Day 986 135 88 37 McNary 1,360 124 110 26 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Thursday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 210,976 13,713 12,819 3,990 The Dalles 156,309 11,466 4,043 1,503 John Day 139,161 10,577 3,428 1,854 McNary 132,002 6,564 6,242 2,601
SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
D3
GOLF ROUNDUP
TENNIS: WIMBLEDON
Mahan leads at Congressional
Down 2 sets, Federer comes back
The Associated Press BETHESDA, Md. — A punishing golf course. Temperatures that topped 100. Hunter Mahan still managed to make Friday at Congressional feel like a breeze. Mahan finally had a good score to match the efficient way he has been swinging the club. He made seven birdies in the stifling heat for a 6under 65, giving him a two-shot lead going into the weekend at the AT&T National as he goes after a PGA Tour-leading third win of the year. Chris Couch sought medical attention and struggled to finish in the oppressive conditions. One caddie had to stop after nine holes, and another vomited to the side of the 13th green from drinking too much water. Tiger Woods stayed in the game with a 68 in the morning, when it was still so hot that towels were used to wipe sweaty faces more than to clean clubs. He talked about the value of staying fit and strong to survive days like this. He was five shots behind. Mahan, though, has set himself apart for two days. “I hit a lot of good shots,” said Mahan, who missed only two fairways and three greens. “I hit so many fairways and greens, I made it easy on myself. This is a pretty punishing golf course if you get off line a little bit. I put myself in some great spots to make putts. And I felt like I played well on the back, when it was getting really hot and you’re getting a little bit more tired.” Mahan was at 7-under 135. His two rounds fulfilled what his swing coach, Sean Foley, said Thursday when describing his ball-striking as “a laser show.” Robert Garrigus had his sixth straight sub-par round at Congressional — that includes last year at the U.S. Open when he became a footnote in history as only the fourth American to break par all rounds of a U.S. Open — with a 67 and was two shots behind, along with Jimmy Walker and Brendon De Jonge, who each had a 69. Stewart Cink, who draped a towel over his head waiting his turn to putt on the 14th green, showed signs of a resurgence with a 68 that put him in the group three shots behind, along with Vijay
Patrick Semansky / The Associated Press
Hunter Mahan hits from the 13th tee during the second round of the AT&T National golf tournament at Congressional Country Club in Bethesda, Md., Friday.
Singh (70), Pat Perez (69) and Rod Pampling (67). Woods was at 2-under 140, in a tie for 11th. More telling than only 18 players who remained under par was the cut at 148. It was one shot higher than the cut for the U.S. Open last year at Congressional, and it was the highest score to make the cut at a regular PGA Tour event since 149 at The Barclays in 2009. Congressional was tough — fast and firm on the course, scorching in the air — but it was fair. Mahan twice had to save par over the last five holes. He came up short on the 14th, but he had a couple of options. With the pin all the way to the back behind a ridge,
he could run it up the slope to the hole, or even play long and have it roll back to the hole. He chose to lag it to the hole, hit it thin, and got away with the slight miss when it rolled back to 2 feet. “I expected to hit it a little bit cleaner off the club face, but that how you shoot 65,” he said. “Get good breaks like that.” He was more pleased with the 17th, which he called the one loose swing of the day. Mahan missed the green to the right, but saved par. On the 18th, he ripped a tee shot and sand wedged into the green to 12 feet for one last birdie. Woods was as happy about two pars as he was with his 50-foot eagle putt on the 16th hole that put him
under par for the first time all week. He was in trouble early after a few tee shots were caught in the dense rough that makes Congressional feel like a U.S. Open and forced him to hack out short of the green. Both times, he hit wedges that landed by the hole, bounced 15 feet by and caught the slope to come back within 3 feet. “The pars at 14 and 15 were something I needed to have happen,” Woods said. “I hit two good wedge shots in there after two poor drives and gave myself a couple good looks, made those, and then I rewarded all that hard work at the next hole with eagle.” Also on Firday: Couples leads Senior Players Championship PITTSBURGH — Defending champion Fred Couples birdied the final three holes for a 7-under 63 and the second-round lead in the Senior Players Championship, the third of five Champions Tour majors. Couples, the winner last year at Westchester Country Club in Harrison, N.Y., had an 11-under 129 total on the Fox Chapel course. He won the Mississippi Gulf Resort Classic in March for his seventh victory on the 50-and-over tour. Joe Daley was a stroke back after a 64. Rookie Felibert takes NW Arkansas lead with 65 ROGERS, Ark. — Veronica Felibert shot a career-best 6-under 65 to take the first-round lead in the LPGA Tour’s NW Arkansas Championship. Felibert, a rookie from Venezuela who made the field as the second alternate, had seven birdies and needed only 27 putts at Pinnacle Country Club. The round came after the former Southern California player missed the cuts in her previous three tournaments, and one week after switching to a new putter. Bourdy opens narrow lead, McIlroy edges back PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland — Frenchman Gregory Bourdy opened a one-shot lead in the second round of the Irish Open as Rory McIlroy edged his way back toward the leaderboard. Bourdy had an eagle on his second hole and six birdies and three bogeys to move to 12-under 132. Englishman Mark Foster (67) was second.
MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP
Rookie dominates Nationwide race The Associated Press SPARTA, Ky. — No one had driven the No. 3 car since Dale Earnhardt’s death on the track at the 2001 Daytona 500. On a warm night in the Bluegrass state, Austin Dillon lived up to the legend, then had the victory called into question when the car failed its postrace inspection. Dillon took the lead early and was on top for 192 of the 200 laps to win the NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Kentucky Speedway on Friday night. “I love running the 3,” Dillon said. “It pressures me every week to give 110 (percent).” Roughly an hour after the trip to victory lane, the No. 3 car failed the inspection for being too low in the rear. NASCAR announced it would issue a ruling early next week. A similar situation took place earlier this season at Iowa where a car also failed a postrace inspection. The crew chief was fined $10,000 and six points were subtracted from the team.
Garry Jones / The Associated Press
Austin Dillon (3) heads into Turn 1 early in the NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Kentucky Speedway in Sparta, Ky., Friday.
Reached at the garage, Dillon’s crew chief, Danny Stockman, wiped sweat from his forehead as he left a meeting with officials. “We’ve had an issue before. We addressed it in a meeting,” Stockman said. “It should have been addressed. That’s the only
comment I’ve got.” The No. 3, of course, was driven to fame by Earnhardt, who raced for the Childress team. Childress is Dillon’s grandfather and also his team owner. As Dillon was clinching the win, his grandfather said over the radio, “Dale would have been
proud of that.” It was the first Nationwide victory for Dillon, a rookie who captured the Truck Series title a year ago. Also on Friday: Johnson grabs pole at Kentucky Speedway SPARTA, Ky. — Five-time NASCAR Sprint Cup champ Jimmie Johnson overcame blustery wind to capture his first pole in more than a year when he edged Kyle Busch for the top spot for today’s race at Kentucky Speedway. A freakish storm with high wind that lifted tents and littered the area with debris caused qualifying to be suspended. Force takes first night of Route 66 NHRA qualifying JOLIET, Ill. — John Force topped Funny Car qualifying at the Route 66 NHRA Nationals. The 63-year-old Force powered his Ford Mustang to a 4.050-second run at 310.77 mph during the first of two night qualifying sessions for the event. The 15-time champ won the season-opener race in Pomona, Calif.
By Howard Fendrich The Associated Press
WIMBLEDON, England — A day after Rafael Nadal’s stunning exit at Wimbledon, the only other men who have won the tournament since 2003 — six-time champion Roger Federer and defending champion Novak Djokovic — found themselves trailing far-less-accomplished opponents, too. Here we go again? Not quite. Federer sure came close to following Nadal out the door, though. The owner of a record 16 major trophies, and a quarterfinalist or better at 32 consecutive Grand Slam tournaments, the third-seeded Federer dropped the first two sets against 29th-seeded Julien Benneteau of France, then was two points away from losing six times, before coming all the way back Friday to pull out a 4-6, 6-7 (3), 6-2, 7-6 (6), 6-1 victory in the third round. “Oh, my God, it was brutal,” Federer said. “The thing, when you’re down two sets to love, is to stay calm, even though it’s hard, because people are freaking out, people are worried for you. ... You don’t have, obviously, many lives left out there. You just try to play tough and focus point for point. Sounds so boring, but it’s the right thing to do out there.” He should know. This was the eighth time in Federer’s illustrious career that he overcame a two-set hole, including against 2009 U.S. Open champion Juan Martin del Potro in the French Open quarterfinals 3 1⁄2 weeks ago. “Mentally, he’s a rock. He’s two sets down and he doesn’t show anything. And after that, if your level is a little bit lower — right here, right now, he takes the opportunity,” said Benneteau, whose cramping thighs were massaged by a trainer during two final-set changeovers. “At the beginning of the third set, I was not as good as I was in the first two sets, and in 5 minutes, it’s 4-0.” Actually, that took about 10 minutes. Still, it hardly was the last key moment. With Federer serving while down 6-5 in the fourth set, Benneteau hit a forehand winner to get to 15-30, putting him two points from the upset. Federer hit a forehand winner that made it 30all, still two points away for Benneteau. The game had two deuces, too — each one placing Benneteau that close again. But Federer held there, the crowd roaring with each point he won. “I appreciate their support for so many years out here,” Federer said. “Tonight was special.” In the tiebreaker, Federer was two points from being gone at 5-all, then 6-all. But on the latter, a nine-stroke exchange ended with Benneteau netting a backhand. That gave Federer his second set point — he already had wasted three others in the second set — and a powerful forehand forced a Benneteau forehand error. Federer jogged to his chair, showered with a standing ovation. That was the beginning of the end for Benneteau, and it allowed Federer to avoid the sort of surprise that befell the second-seeded Nadal, whose five-set loss Thursday night to the 100th-ranked and previously unknown Lukas Rosol was still reverberating around the All England Club. “You cannot take for granted anybody. You can’t underestimate any opponent. I don’t think Rafa did,” said the top-seeded Djokovic, who faced Nadal in each of the previous four Grand Slam finals, winning at Wimbledon, the U.S. Open and the Australian Open, before losing at the French Open. “It’s Wimbledon. Everybody wants to come up with their best game, especially when you’re playing one of the top players, one of the favorites,” Djokovic added. “You have nothing to lose.” Like Federer and Nadal, Djokovic fell behind against someone he was expected to beat easily: The Serb ceded the first set, getting broken at love by No. 28 Radek Stepanek, Rosol’s Davis Cup teammate for the Czech Republic. But quick as can be, Djokovic turned things around, breaking Stepanek to begin each of the next three sets for a 4-6, 6-2, 6-2, 62 victory that moved him closer to a semifinal showdown against Federer.
SWIMMING: U.S. OLYMPIC TRIALS
Upset in 200 breast: Weltz beats Hansen, Shanteau By Paul Newberry The Associated Press
OMAHA, Neb. — Brendan Hansen and Eric Shanteau were the favorites. The race was a different matter. In another major breaststroke upset, Scott Weltz won the 200 meters at the U.S. Olympic swimming trials Friday night, leaving Hansen and Shanteau with only one individual event at the London Games. On a night when Ryan Lochte and Michael Phelps were focused on getting through semifinal races, Nathan Adrian won the 100 freestyle and Cullen Jones claimed the second spot for London, while Natalie Coughlin barely kept alive her
last chance to make it back to the Olympics. But the men’s 200 breast was the real stunner, just as shocking as the women’s 100 breast, which was won by Breeja Larson over Rebecca Soni and Jessica Hardy. At least Soni got second place, still good enough for a do-over in the Olympics. Neither Hansen nor Shanteau were as fortunate. “My whole body was kind of tingling and I was like, ‘I’m feeling it and something is different, this is the time,’” Weltz said. “I was smiling behind the blocks, I wasn’t nervous. I felt great going into it.” Clark Burckle claimed the second spot on the Olympic team, another
big surprise. Shanteau finished third and Hansen faded to fourth, the two of them forced to settle for only swimming the 100 breast in London after going 1-2 in that event at the trials. “I think you guys are as surprised as I am,” Hansen said. “I can’t believe Eric and I are not swimming the 200.” The 25-year-old Weltz moved up on the third lap and surged to the finish to win in 2 minutes, 9.01 seconds. Burckle was next in 2:09.97, edging Shanteau with the touch. “When I turned at the wall, I saw I wasn’t a body length and a half behind, I was like, ‘I’ve only got to make up maybe a half-body length.
I can do this,’” Weltz said. “From then on, it was like a freight train going forward.” Shanteau, who competed in the 200 breast at Beijing after being diagnosed with testicular cancer, considers the longer event his better race and thought the 100 was just a bonus. Now, it’s his only Olympic race, which is why he was especially distraught when he looked up at the board and saw that Burckle got him by eight-hundredths of a second. Shanteau took off his cap and goggles and hung on the lane rope, his head dropping back against the wall he didn’t get to quite fast enough. Hansen finished in 2:10.25.
Anja Niedringhaus / The Associated Press
Roger Federer of Switzerland returns a shot against Julien Benneteau of France during a third round men’s singles match at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships at Wimbledon, England, Friday.
D4
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012
MA JO R L EAG U E BASEBALL STANDINGS, SCORES AND SCHEDULES
AL Boxscores Red Sox 5, Mariners 0 Boston Nava lf Pedroia 2b Ortiz dh Saltalamacchia c Ad.Gonzalez 1b Middlebrooks 3b C.Ross rf Kalish cf a-Lillibridge ph-cf Aviles ss Totals
AB 4 3 4 4 4 4 4 3 1 4 35
R 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 5
H 1 0 1 1 1 2 1 1 0 1 9
BI 1 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 5
BB 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
SO 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 3
Avg. .311 .264 .307 .255 .268 .307 .277 .235 .167 .267
Seattle AB R H BI BB SO Avg. I.Suzuki rf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .272 C.Wells cf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .277 Seager 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .253 J.Montero dh 3 0 0 0 0 1 .253 Jaso c 3 0 1 0 0 0 .277 Smoak 1b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .205 Ackley 2b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .238 Figgins lf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .187 Ryan ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 .176 Totals 28 0 2 0 0 2 Boston 000 032 000 — 5 9 1 Seattle 000 000 000 — 0 2 0 a-flied out for Kalish in the 9th. E—Aviles (7). LOB—Boston 6, Seattle 1. 2B—Ortiz (24), Aviles (20). HR—Middlebrooks (10), off Noesi; C.Ross (12), off Noesi; Nava (3), off Noesi; Saltalamacchia (15), off Noesi. DP—Boston 2; Seattle 1. Boston IP H R ER BB SO NP A.Cook W, 2-1 9 2 0 0 0 2 81 Seattle IP H R ER BB SO NP Noesi L, 2-10 5 7 5 5 1 0 87 Kelley 2 0 0 0 0 1 20 O.Perez 2 2 0 0 1 2 31 Noesi pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. T—2:18. A—23,094 (47,860).
Oakland Crisp cf J.Weeks 2b Cespedes lf J.Gomes rf Reddick rf Inge 3b D.Norris dh Carter 1b Hicks ss b-S.Smith ph K.Suzuki c Totals
AB 4 4 4 4 0 4 4 3 3 1 3 34
R 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 3
H 1 2 2 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 9
BI 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3
BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
SO 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 2 0 1 7
Avg. .223 .221 .284 .246 .260 .207 .348 .333 .188 .252 .212
Texas AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Kinsler 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .277 Andrus ss 4 1 1 0 0 1 .302 Hamilton lf 3 1 1 0 1 1 .316 Beltre 3b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .325 Mi.Young 1b 2 1 0 0 2 0 .275 N.Cruz rf 3 1 1 1 1 0 .259 Dav.Murphy dh 1 0 0 0 1 0 .288 a-Gentry ph-dh 1 0 1 3 0 0 .356 Napoli c 4 0 0 0 0 3 .237 L.Martin cf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .240 Totals 29 4 4 4 5 6 Oakland 000 110 001 — 3 9 1 Texas 000 000 04x — 4 4 0 b-grounded out for Hicks in the 9th. E—Inge (4). LOB—Oakland 5, Texas 7. 3B— J.Weeks (5), Gentry (2). HR—Carter (1), off Scheppers. SB—Andrus (16). DP—Texas 2. Oakland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Griffin 6 2 0 0 2 4 109 1.50 Blevins H, 4 1 0 0 0 0 1 13 2.51 Balfour L, 1-2 H, 9 2-3 1 4 4 3 0 25 3.49 R.Cook BS, 3-9 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 5 1.59 Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Harrison W, 11-3 8 8 2 2 1 7 121 3.16 Scheppers S, 1-1 1 1 1 1 0 0 13 9.31 T—2:39. A—46,013 (48,194).
Royals 4, Twins 3 Kansas City A.Gordon lf Y.Betancourt 2b Moustakas 3b Butler dh Francoeur rf Hosmer 1b S.Perez c Bourgeois cf Dyson cf A.Escobar ss Totals
AB 5 5 5 2 4 4 4 3 1 4 37
R 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 4
H 2 2 0 1 0 1 2 1 0 2 11
BI 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 4
BB 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
SO 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 4
Avg. .270 .258 .272 .298 .260 .221 .350 .263 .247 .318
Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Mendoza W, 3-4 8 5 1 1 0 5 115 4.50 Broxton S, 20-23 1 2 2 2 1 0 17 2.05 Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Duensing L, 1-4 4 8 3 3 0 1 66 4.10 Swarzak 2 1 0 0 1 1 25 4.58 T.Robertson 2-3 1 1 1 0 2 11 11.57 Waldrop 1 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 25 0.00 Al.Burnett 1 0 0 0 1 0 14 1.88 Duensing pitched to 3 batters in the 5th. T—2:50. A—33,359 (39,500).
Blue Jays 7, Angels 5 AB 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 2 1 35
R 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 0 5
H 1 3 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 12
BI 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 5
BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1
SO 3 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 9
Avg. .342 .281 .273 .277 .314 .265 .273 .255 .288 .222
Toronto AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Lawrie 3b 5 0 0 0 0 0 .287 Rasmus cf 5 0 0 0 0 2 .258 Bautista rf 4 1 1 0 1 2 .238 Encarnacion dh 3 2 2 1 0 0 .289 K.Johnson 2b 1 0 0 0 2 0 .241 Y.Escobar ss 4 1 3 2 0 0 .255 R.Davis lf 4 1 2 0 0 0 .280 Lind 1b 3 2 2 4 1 1 .202 Arencibia c 4 0 1 0 0 1 .222 Totals 33 7 11 7 4 6 Los Angeles 001 110 200 — 5 12 1 Toronto 000 500 11x — 7 11 0 a-struck out for Hester in the 9th. E—Callaspo (5). LOB—Los Angeles 5, Toronto 8. 2B—Pujols (21), K.Morales (8), Bautista (10), Y.Escobar (9), R.Davis (7), Arencibia (11). HR—Hester (3), off Richmond; Lind (4), off E.Santana; Lind (5), off Takahashi. SB—Trout (22), Encarnacion 2 (8), R.Davis 2 (20). DP—Los Angeles 1; Toronto 2. Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP E.Santana 5 7 5 5 3 2 85 D.Carpenter 1 0 0 0 0 1 6 Walden L, 2-2 1 2 1 1 1 1 34 Takahashi 1 2 1 1 0 2 28 Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP Villanueva 5 7 3 3 1 6 92 Richmond BS, 1-1 1 1-3 3 2 2 0 1 24 Cordero W, 3-4 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 6 Oliver H, 7 1 1 0 0 0 0 20 Janssen S, 9-10 1 0 0 0 0 2 15 E.Santana pitched to 2 batters in the 6th. T—3:12. A—24,538 (49,260).
National League
East Division Pct GB WCGB .605 — — .553 4 — .532 5½ 1½ .532 5½ 1½ .506 7½ 3½ Central Division Pct GB WCGB .545 — — .500 3½ 4 .481 5 5½ .473 5½ 6 .400 11 11½ West Division Pct GB WCGB .628 — — .558 5½ — .474 12 6 .418 16½ 10½
East Division Pct GB WCGB .587 — — .538 3½ — .526 4½ 1 .474 8½ 5 .456 10 6½ Central Division Pct GB WCGB .553 — — .539 1 — .519 2½ 1½ .447 8 7 .416 10½ 9½ .355 15 14 West Division Pct GB WCGB .564 — — .551 1 — .513 4 2 .395 13 11 .359 16 14
New York Baltimore Boston Tampa Bay Toronto
W 46 42 41 41 39
L 30 34 36 36 38
Chicago Cleveland Detroit Kansas City Minnesota
W 42 38 37 35 30
L 35 38 40 39 45
Texas Los Angeles Oakland Seattle
W 49 43 37 33
L 29 34 41 46
Friday’s Games Chicago White Sox 14, N.Y. Yankees 7 Baltimore 9, Cleveland 8 Toronto 7, L.A. Angels 5 Tampa Bay 4, Detroit 2 Texas 4, Oakland 3 Kansas City 4, Minnesota 3 Boston 5, Seattle 0
ERA 5.12 4.44 3.00 4.33 ERA 3.52 7.71 4.50 1.59 2.64
L10 5-5 3-7 7-3 3-7 5-5
Str Home Away L-2 23-16 23-14 W-1 22-18 20-16 W-1 21-21 20-15 W-1 22-16 19-20 W-1 20-16 19-22
L10 7-3 4-6 4-6 6-4 4-6
Str Home Away W-4 19-21 23-14 L-1 20-18 18-20 L-1 17-18 20-22 W-4 14-23 21-16 L-3 14-25 16-20
L10 8-2 7-3 5-5 4-6
Str Home Away W-4 26-14 23-15 L-1 22-17 21-17 L-2 19-19 18-22 L-1 14-22 19-24
Today’s Games Chicago White Sox (Peavy 6-4) at N.Y. Yankees (Kuroda 7-7), 10:05 a.m. L.A. Angels (Richards 2-0) at Toronto (H.Alvarez 4-6), 10:07 a.m. Kansas City (J.Sanchez 1-3) at Minnesota (Diamond 6-3), 10:10 a.m., 1st game Cleveland (Tomlin 3-5) at Baltimore (Eveland 0-0), 1:05 p.m. Detroit (Porcello 5-5) at Tampa Bay (Hellickson 4-3), 4:15 p.m. Kansas City (Hochevar 5-7) at Minnesota (De Vries 1-1), 4:15 p.m., 2nd game Oakland (Milone 8-5) at Texas (M.Perez 0-0), 4:15 p.m. Boston (Beckett 4-7) at Seattle (Er. Ramirez 0-2), 7:10 p.m.
Washington New York Atlanta Miami Philadelphia
W 44 42 40 36 36
L 31 36 36 40 43
Cincinnati Pittsburgh St. Louis Milwaukee Houston Chicago
W 42 41 40 34 32 27
L 34 35 37 42 45 49
San Francisco Los Angeles Arizona Colorado San Diego
W 44 43 39 30 28
L 34 35 37 46 50
Friday’s Games Chicago Cubs 4, Houston 0 Miami 6, Philadelphia 2 Washington 5, Atlanta 4 Arizona 9, Milwaukee 3 Colorado 10, San Diego 2 Pittsburgh 14, St. Louis 5 N.Y. Mets 9, L.A. Dodgers 0 Cincinnati 5, San Francisco 1
Diamondbacks 9, Brewers 3
L10 6-4 6-4 5-5 3-7 4-6
Str Home Away W-1 20-14 24-17 W-3 23-17 19-19 L-2 17-19 23-17 W-2 20-22 16-18 L-3 17-24 19-19
L10 4-6 6-4 6-4 4-6 4-6 5-5
Str Home Away W-1 23-16 19-18 W-3 23-13 18-22 L-2 17-17 23-20 L-1 18-19 16-23 L-2 23-19 9-26 W-1 17-20 10-29
L10 6-4 1-9 7-3 5-5 4-6
Str Home Away L-1 25-15 19-19 L-6 24-14 19-21 W-2 20-17 19-20 W-2 18-23 12-23 L-1 16-24 12-26
Today’s Games Pittsburgh (Karstens 0-2) at St. Louis (Lynn 10-3), 11:15 a.m. Cincinnati (Latos 6-2) at San Francisco (Zito 6-5), 1:05 p.m. Houston (Happ 6-7) at Chicago Cubs (Garza 3-6), 1:05 p.m. Washington (Strasburg 9-2) at Atlanta (Minor 3-6), 1:05 p.m. Philadelphia (Hamels 10-3) at Miami (Buehrle 6-8), 1:10 p.m. Arizona (Miley 9-3) at Milwaukee (Fiers 2-2), 4:15 p.m. N.Y. Mets (J.Santana 5-4) at L.A. Dodgers (Eovaldi 0-4), 4:15 p.m. San Diego (Volquez 4-7) at Colorado (Friedrich 4-5), 4:15 p.m.
American League roundup
National League roundup
• Red Sox 5, Mariners 0: SEATTLE — Aaron Cook threw a two-hitter and Will Middlebrooks, Cody Ross and Daniel Nava all hit solo homers in the fifth inning for Boston. Making his third start of the season, Cook (2-1) struck out two, walked none and needed just 81 pitches for his third career shutout and 12th complete game. • White Sox 14, Yankees 7: NEW YORK — A.J. Pierzynski homered twice, Paul Konerko and Alexei Ramirez also connected and Chicago pounded New York so hard that the Yankees brought in outfielder Dewayne Wise to pitch in the romp. • Rays 4, Tigers 2: ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Tampa Bay’s Desmond Jennings homered twice and David Price outpitched Justin Verlander to become the AL’s first 11-game winner. • Blue Jays 7, Angels 5: TORONTO — Adam Lind hit two home runs and Yunel Escobar had a tiebreaking double in the seventh inning for Toronto. Promoted from Triple-A Las Vegas last Monday after spending more than a month in the minors, Lind hit a three-run homer off Ervin Santana in the third inning, then added a solo drive off Hisanori Takahashi in the seventh. • Royals 4, Twins 3: MINNEAPOLIS — Luis Mendoza allowed one run over a career-high eight innings and Salvador Perez homered as Kansas City won its fourth straight. • Rangers 4, Athletics 3: ARLINGTON, Texas — Craig Gentry’s bases-loaded triple in the eighth capped a four-run rally and Matt Harrison pitched eight strong innings to win his 11th game, lifting Texas past Oakland. • Orioles 9, Indians 8: BALTIMORE — Ryan Flaherty singled in the tiebreaking run in the seventh inning, Matt Wieters hit a three-run homer, and Baltimore broke out of its scoring funk with a victory over Cleveland.
• Diamondbacks 9, Milwaukee 3: MILWAUKEE — Aaron Hill hit for the cycle for the second time in 12 days and Ian Kennedy pitched seven strong innings, leading Arizona over Milwaukee. Brooklyn’s Babe Herman is the only other major leaguer to hit for two cycles in one season since 1900, according to STATS LLC. He accomplished the feat in 1931. • Nationals 5, Braves 4: ATLANTA — Michael Morse had four hits, including the go-ahead homer in the eighth inning after Washington had blown a four-run lead, and the Nationals beat Atlanta. • Marlins 6, Phillies 2: MIAMI — Josh Johnson pitched six strong innings to help Miami win consecutive games for the first time in nearly a month and keep Cliff Lee winless. • Cubs 4, Astros 0: CHICAGO — Paul Maholm pitched into the ninth inning to earn his first win in seven weeks and Chicago hit three homers in the victory. • Pirates 14, Cardinals 5: ST. LOUIS — Clint Barmes, pinch-hitter Alex Presley and Garrett Jones each homered in a four-run sixth inning that snapped a tie, and Pittsburgh beat St. Louis. • Rockies 10, Padres 2: DENVER — Jeff Francis pitched six scoreless innings, and Rex Brothers bailed out newly recalled Tyler Chatwood before Colorado broke out for a victory over San Diego. • Reds 5, Giants 1: SAN FRANCISCO — Mike Leake pitched a nine-hitter for his first career complete game and homered off Matt Cain, and Cincinnati beat San Francisco. • Mets 9, Dodgers 0: LOS ANGELES — R.A. Dickey allowed three hits over eight innings to become the major leagues’ first 12-game winner, Daniel Murphy drove in five runs and New York sent Los Angeles to its season-worst sixth straight loss.
off Quintana. SB—Rios (12).
Rays 4, Tigers 2
Minnesota AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Span cf 3 1 0 0 1 0 .274 Revere rf 4 1 2 0 0 1 .327 Mauer c 4 0 2 1 0 0 .324 Willingham lf 4 0 0 1 0 1 .267 Morneau 1b 4 0 2 0 0 0 .234 Plouffe 3b 4 1 0 0 0 1 .238 Doumit dh 3 0 1 1 0 1 .272 Dozier ss 3 0 0 0 0 1 .223 J.Carroll 2b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .251 Totals 32 3 7 3 1 5 Kansas City 110 010 100 — 4 11 0 Minnesota 010 000 002 — 3 7 0 LOB—Kansas City 10, Minnesota 3. 2B—A.Gordon (24), Y.Betancourt (8), Mauer (17). HR—S.Perez (2), off Duensing. DP—Kansas City 1; Minnesota 1.
Los Angeles Trout cf Tor.Hunter rf Pujols 1b K.Morales dh Trumbo lf Callaspo 3b H.Kendrick 2b Aybar ss Hester c a-M.Izturis ph Totals
American League
ERA 4.32 ERA 5.69 3.74 1.69
Rangers 4, Athletics 3
T—2:21. A—32,891 (41,009).
Detroit A.Jackson cf R.Santiago 2b Mi.Cabrera 3b Fielder 1b D.Young dh Raburn rf Jh.Peralta ss Laird c Berry lf Totals
AB 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 28
R 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2
H 1 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 5
BI 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 2
BB 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
SO 3 2 1 0 0 0 2 2 0 10
Avg. .324 .224 .309 .297 .269 .179 .257 .293 .308
Tampa Bay AB R H BI BB SO Avg. De.Jennings lf 4 2 2 2 0 1 .241 C.Pena 1b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .196 B.Upton cf 4 0 1 0 0 2 .247 Scott dh 4 0 0 1 0 2 .212 Zobrist rf 3 1 2 1 1 0 .252 Conrad 3b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .304 S.Rodriguez 3b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .214 J.Molina c 3 0 0 0 0 2 .195 E.Johnson ss 3 0 1 0 0 1 .271 Rhymes 2b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .214 Totals 31 4 7 4 1 11 Detroit 000 010 100 — 2 5 0 Tampa Bay 101 110 00x — 4 7 0 LOB—Detroit 0, Tampa Bay 4. 2B—R.Santiago (4), E.Johnson (6). HR—D.Young (6), off Price; De.Jennings 2 (5), off Verlander 2; Zobrist (10), off Verlander. SB—B.Upton (14), Zobrist (7). DP—Tampa Bay 3. Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Verlander L, 8-5 6 6 4 4 1 8 120 2.69 Dotel 2 1 0 0 0 3 32 4.07 Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Price W, 11-4 7 5 2 2 1 7 78 2.92 McGee H, 9 1 0 0 0 0 1 15 1.73 Rodney S, 22-23 1 0 0 0 0 2 13 1.04 WP—Dotel. T—2:38. A—19,557 (34,078).
White Sox 14, Yankees 7 Chicago De Aza cf Youkilis 3b E.Escobar 3b A.Dunn dh Konerko 1b Rios rf Pierzynski c Viciedo lf Al.Ramirez ss Beckham 2b Totals
AB 6 3 3 4 5 6 5 4 5 5 46
R 1 0 0 1 1 1 2 3 3 2 14
H 1 0 0 1 3 2 3 2 4 3 19
BI 2 1 0 1 1 1 3 0 3 2 14
BB 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 4
SO 2 1 1 2 0 2 0 0 0 1 9
Avg. .295 .236 .206 .215 .337 .306 .285 .258 .252 .246
New York AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Jeter ss 4 1 1 0 1 0 .303 Granderson cf 4 1 1 2 1 3 .242 Teixeira 1b 5 1 1 0 0 1 .247 Al.Rodriguez 3b 4 1 1 0 1 2 .269 Cano 2b 5 0 1 1 0 1 .305 Swisher rf 3 2 2 0 1 1 .269 An.Jones dh 4 1 2 2 0 0 .226 J.Nix lf 3 0 1 2 0 1 .231 a-Ibanez ph-lf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .236 C.Stewart c 3 0 1 0 0 0 .264 b-Er.Chavez ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .265 R.Martin c 0 0 0 0 0 0 .193 Totals 37 7 11 7 4 10 Chicago 042 011 204 — 14 19 1 New York 400 200 100 — 7 11 1 a-struck out for J.Nix in the 8th. b-lined out for C.Stewart in the 8th. E—Al.Ramirez (7), C.Stewart (4). LOB—Chicago 9, New York 7. 2B—De Aza (14), Viciedo (5), Al.Ramirez (10), Beckham 2 (12), Jeter (13), Teixeira (18), An.Jones 2 (4), J.Nix (3). HR—Pierzynski (13), off Warren; Konerko (14), off Warren; Pierzynski (14), off Phelps; Al.Ramirez (2), off Wade; Granderson (22),
Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Quintana W, 3-1 6 8 6 6 3 5 101 2.19 Thornton 1 3 1 1 0 1 13 3.24 N.Jones H, 5 1 0 0 0 1 2 19 2.97 Septimo 1 0 0 0 0 2 14 0.00 New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Warren 2 1-3 8 6 6 2 1 77 23.14 Phelps L, 1-3 3 1-3 4 2 2 1 5 64 3.16 Rapada 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 4 3.09 Wade 2 1-3 7 6 6 1 3 58 5.79 Wise 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 7 0.00 T—3:24. A—44,265 (50,291).
Orioles 9, Indians 8 Cleveland Choo rf A.Cabrera ss Kipnis 2b Brantley cf Damon lf Cunningham lf Kotchman 1b Chisenhall dh 1-Duncan pr-dh Hannahan 3b Marson c Totals
AB 5 6 5 4 4 1 5 2 2 4 4 42
R 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 2 0 1 8
H 3 2 3 1 0 0 2 1 2 1 1 16
BI 2 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 7
BB 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 4
SO 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 6
Avg. .282 .292 .279 .278 .207 .181 .228 .278 .207 .248 .250
Baltimore AB R H BI BB SO Avg. B.Roberts 2b 5 1 1 0 0 1 .197 Avery lf 4 1 1 2 1 0 .221 Hardy ss 5 1 0 1 0 1 .239 Ad.Jones cf 5 1 2 0 0 0 .297 Betemit 1b 5 1 2 1 0 1 .274 C.Davis dh 3 2 2 1 1 0 .272 Wieters c 3 1 1 3 1 0 .253 Flaherty rf 3 0 1 1 1 1 .183 Andino 3b 2 1 0 0 2 1 .234 Totals 35 9 10 9 6 5 Cleveland 101 300 201 — 8 16 2 Baltimore 300 013 11x — 9 10 0 1-ran for Chisenhall in the 5th. E—Kotchman (3), A.Cabrera (9). LOB—Cleveland 12, Baltimore 8. 2B—Kotchman (8), Duncan (6), Betemit (9). HR—A.Cabrera (11), off Arrieta; Wieters (11), off D.Lowe; Avery (1), off C.Perez. SB—B.Roberts (1), Flaherty (1), Andino (4). DP—Cleveland 1; Baltimore 1. Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA D.Lowe 5 1-3 6 7 4 3 2 100 4.42 Accardo 2-3 0 0 0 2 0 18 3.98 J.Smith L, 5-2 1 2 1 1 1 1 28 3.44 C.Perez 1 2 1 1 0 2 21 2.76 Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Arrieta 3 2-3 8 5 5 2 2 89 5.81 Patton 2 1-3 2 1 1 2 2 46 3.13 O’Day BS, 2-2 2-3 4 1 1 0 0 19 2.38 Lindstrom W, 1-0 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 3 1.80 Strop H, 13 1 0 0 0 0 1 5 1.25 Johnson S, 23-24 1 2 1 1 0 1 15 1.30 Patton pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. T—3:28. A—24,779 (45,971).
NL Boxscores Marlins 6, Phillies 2 Philadelphia Rollins ss Pierre lf Utley 2b Ruiz c Pence rf Victorino cf Polanco 3b Mayberry 1b Cl.Lee p Valdes p a-Luna ph Horst p Totals
AB 3 4 3 4 4 4 4 3 2 0 1 0 32
R 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
H 0 1 1 0 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 7
BI 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
BB 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
SO 0 0 2 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 6
Avg. .266 .314 .444 .356 .280 .253 .282 .229 .231 --.255 ---
Miami AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Reyes ss 5 1 1 0 0 1 .268 H.Ramirez 3b 4 1 1 0 0 0 .259 Stanton rf 3 2 2 1 1 0 .278 Morrison lf 4 1 2 1 0 1 .232 M.Dunn p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Webb p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Ruggiano cf-lf 4 1 3 2 0 1 .388 Infante 2b 3 0 1 1 0 0 .288 G.Sanchez 1b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .193 J.Buck c 4 0 1 1 0 1 .182 Jo.Johnson p 3 0 0 0 0 2 .048 Mujica p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Cousins cf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .212 Totals 34 6 11 6 2 7 Philadelphia 000 100 001 — 2 7 0 Miami 102 030 00x — 6 11 0 a-flied out for Valdes in the 8th. LOB—Philadelphia 5, Miami 7. 2B—Reyes (16), H.Ramirez (17), Morrison (12), Ruggiano (8). HR— Pence (15), off Jo.Johnson. SB—Rollins (14), Pierre (19), Ruggiano (2). DP—Miami 2. Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Cl.Lee L, 0-5 4 2-3 10 6 6 2 3 96 4.13 Valdes 2 1-3 1 0 0 0 2 34 2.84 Horst 1 0 0 0 0 2 11 0.00 Miami IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Jo.Johnson W, 5-5 6 4 1 1 2 6 108 3.80 Mujica 1 1 0 0 0 0 10 4.46 M.Dunn 1 0 0 0 0 0 11 6.60 Webb 1 2 1 1 0 0 17 5.08 T—2:50. A—28,246 (37,442).
Cubs 4, Astros 0 Houston Bixler ss Bogusevic rf Ca.Lee 1b J.D.Martinez lf C.Snyder c 2-Keuchel pr C.Johnson 3b M.Downs 2b Schafer cf B.Norris p Abad p a-Lowrie ph R.Cruz p Totals
AB 4 4 4 4 3 0 4 2 3 1 0 1 0 30
R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
H 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 4
BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
SO 1 1 0 1 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 7
Avg. .250 .225 .290 .231 .184 .000 .275 .182 .236 .174 --.261 ---
Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. DeJesus cf 4 0 2 0 0 0 .272 S.Castro ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .297 Rizzo 1b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .273 A.Soriano lf 4 1 2 1 0 1 .274 Re.Johnson rf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .285 LaHair rf 4 1 3 0 0 0 .288 1-Campana pr-lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .276 Clevenger c 3 1 1 2 1 0 .271 Barney 2b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .267 Valbuena 3b 3 1 1 1 0 0 .234 Maholm p 3 0 0 0 0 1 .069 Marmol p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 32 4 9 4 2 3 Houston 000 000 000 — 0 4 0 Chicago 010 201 00x — 4 9 1 a-flied out for Abad in the 8th. 1-ran for LaHair in the 8th. 2-ran for C.Snyder in the 9th. E—S.Castro (13). LOB—Houston 6, Chicago 6. 2B—Ca.Lee (12). HR—Valbuena (3), off B.Norris; Clevenger (1), off B.Norris; A.Soriano (15), off B.Norris. SB—Campana (25). DP—Houston 1. Houston B.Norris L, 5-5 Abad R.Cruz Chicago Maholm W, 5-6 Marmol S, 6-8
IP 6 1 1 IP 8 1-3 2-3
H 7 1 1 H 4 0
R 4 0 0 R 0 0
ER BB SO NP 4 1 1 87 0 0 1 11 0 1 1 21 ER BB SO NP 0 1 6 98 0 0 1 13
ERA 4.90 3.14 6.75 ERA 4.84 5.40
Arizona Bloomquist ss A.Hill 2b J.Upton rf Kubel lf Goldschmidt 1b C.Young cf R.Roberts 3b H.Blanco c I.Kennedy p c-G.Parra ph Ziegler p Zagurski p Totals
AB 5 5 5 5 4 5 4 4 3 1 0 0 41
R 3 2 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9
H 2 4 1 2 4 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 14
BI 0 3 1 1 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 9
BB 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
SO 0 1 1 2 0 3 1 1 1 0 0 0 10
Avg. .297 .302 .278 .298 .299 .219 .231 .173 .045 .269 .500 ---
Milwaukee AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Aoki rf 4 1 2 0 0 1 .289 Morgan cf 4 0 2 0 0 1 .239 Braun lf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .310 Ar.Ramirez 3b 4 0 0 1 0 0 .262 Hart 1b 4 1 0 0 0 1 .246 R.Weeks 2b 4 1 0 0 0 2 .182 Kottaras c 2 0 0 0 1 1 .230 d-M.Maldonado ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .253 C.Izturis ss 4 0 2 2 0 1 .206 Wolf p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .130 Dillard p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --a-Ishikawa ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .243 L.Hernandez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 b-Green ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .205 Veras p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Loe p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --M.Parra p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 e-C.Gomez ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .237 Totals 35 3 7 3 1 10 Arizona 015 201 000 — 9 14 1 Milwaukee 100 002 000 — 3 7 1 a-struck out for Dillard in the 5th. b-flied out for L.Hernandez in the 6th. c-flied out for I.Kennedy in the 8th. d-struck out for Kottaras in the 9th. e-struck out for M.Parra in the 9th. E—I.Kennedy (2), R.Weeks (7). LOB—Arizona 6, Milwaukee 7. 2B—Bloomquist (16), A.Hill (17), Goldschmidt 2 (21), H.Blanco (2), C.Izturis (2). 3B—A.Hill (5). HR—Goldschmidt (11), off Wolf; A.Hill (11), off Wolf. SB—A.Hill (7). DP—Milwaukee 1. Arizona IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA I.Kennedy W, 6-7 7 6 3 1 1 7 108 4.20 Ziegler 1 0 0 0 0 1 8 2.40 Zagurski 1 1 0 0 0 2 14 5.21 Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Wolf L, 2-6 4 9 8 7 0 6 76 5.78 Dillard 1 1 0 0 0 1 13 4.15 L.Hernandez 1 2 1 1 0 1 17 5.13 Veras 1 1 0 0 1 1 21 3.82 Loe 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 3.34 M.Parra 1 1 0 0 0 0 15 4.67 T—2:50. A—38,030 (41,900).
Nationals 5, Braves 4 Washington Lombardozzi lf S.Burnett p Clippard p Harper cf-rf Zimmerman 3b LaRoche 1b Morse rf Ankiel cf Desmond ss Espinosa 2b Flores c Detwiler p Bernadina lf Totals
AB 4 0 0 5 5 5 4 1 4 4 4 3 1 40
R 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 5
H 1 0 0 1 2 0 4 1 1 1 2 1 1 15
BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 1 0 5
BB 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
SO 0 0 0 2 1 3 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 10
Avg. .257 ----.280 .238 .246 .294 .225 .275 .226 .250 .059 .241
Atlanta AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Bourn cf 4 0 1 1 0 0 .306 Simmons ss 5 1 1 2 0 0 .314 Heyward rf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .272 C.Jones 3b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .291 McCann c 4 0 0 0 0 2 .230 M.Diaz lf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .234 F.Freeman 1b 2 1 1 0 1 0 .261 J.Wilson 2b 3 1 1 0 0 0 .179 Durbin p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Venters p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Hinske ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .208 Delgado p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .273 C.Martinez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 a-J.Francisco ph 0 0 0 0 0 0 .224 Varvaro p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Prado ph-2b 1 1 1 1 1 0 .322 Totals 32 4 7 4 2 3 Washington 012 100 010 — 5 15 1 Atlanta 000 000 400 — 4 7 2 a-was hit by a pitch for C.Martinez in the 5th. bsingled for Varvaro in the 7th. c-flied out for Venters in the 9th. E—Detwiler (1), J.Wilson (2), Simmons (3). LOB—Washington 9, Atlanta 7. 2B—Lombardozzi (10), Flores (10), M.Diaz (5), F.Freeman (16). HR— Flores (3), off Delgado; Morse (3), off Durbin; Simmons (3), off Detwiler. DP—Washington 1; Atlanta 1. Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP Detwiler 6 2-3 5 4 4 1 1 93 S.Burnett W, 1-1 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 2 22 Clippard S, 13-14 1 1 0 0 1 0 18 Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO NP Delgado 4 8 4 2 0 3 90 C.Martinez 1 2 0 0 0 1 15 Varvaro 2 1 0 0 0 2 32 Durbin L, 3-1 2-3 2 1 1 0 1 10 Venters 1 1-3 2 0 0 1 3 31 T—3:15. A—32,299 (49,586).
ERA 3.30 1.57 1.89 ERA 4.52 4.42 5.40 4.11 3.86
Rockies 10, Padres 2 San Diego Denorfia rf a-Venable ph-rf Forsythe 2b Headley 3b Quentin lf Alonso 1b Maybin cf Ev.Cabrera ss Hinshaw p c-Guzman ph Jo.Baker c Marquis p Amarista ss Totals
AB 2 1 3 4 4 4 4 3 0 1 4 1 2 33
R 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2
H 1 1 0 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 8
BI 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
BB 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
SO 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 4
Avg. .278 .261 .258 .272 .322 .259 .203 .246 .000 .233 .255 .286 .240
Colorado AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Fowler cf 3 1 0 0 1 2 .288 Scutaro ss-2b 3 1 2 1 0 0 .287 C.Gonzalez lf 3 2 1 2 1 0 .338 Cuddyer 1b 4 2 2 2 0 1 .259 Colvin rf 4 1 1 1 0 2 .308 Pacheco 3b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .301 Chatwood p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Brothers p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-E.Young ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .243 Belisle p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Nelson 2b-3b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .274 W.Rosario c 4 2 2 2 0 0 .246 Francis p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 J.Herrera ss 2 0 0 0 0 1 .245 Totals 32 10 9 8 2 8 San Diego 000 000 110 — 2 8 2 Colorado 101 004 04x — 10 9 0 a-singled for Denorfia in the 8th. b-grounded out for Brothers in the 8th. c-flied out for Hinshaw in the 9th. E—Ev.Cabrera (2), Forsythe (4). LOB—San Diego 7, Colorado 2. 2B—Denorfia (12), Amarista (5), Scutaro (13), Cuddyer (24). 3B—C.Gonzalez (4), Colvin (5). HR—Quentin (7), off Chatwood; Cuddyer (12), off Hinshaw; W.Rosario (12), off Hinshaw. DP—Colorado 1. San Diego IP H R ER BB SO NP Marquis L, 1-4 6 6 6 5 1 6 88 Hinshaw 2 3 4 4 1 2 41 Colorado IP H R ER BB SO NP Francis W, 1-1 6 3 0 0 1 1 82 Chatwood 1 4 2 2 1 0 24 Brothers H, 8 1 0 0 0 0 2 11 Belisle 1 1 0 0 0 1 11 Chatwood pitched to 3 batters in the 8th. T—2:46. A—42,785 (50,398).
ERA 3.06 5.30 ERA 5.47 7.00 3.41 1.93
Pirates 14, Cardinals 5 Pittsburgh Sutton lf Lincoln p d-J.Harrison ph-2b Tabata rf A.McCutchen cf
AB 4 1 1 4 5
R 0 1 0 3 4
H 0 1 0 2 4
BI 0 0 0 0 3
BB 0 0 0 2 1
SO 2 0 0 1 0
Avg. .333 .125 .228 .230 .344
G.Jones 1b c-McGehee ph-1b Walker 2b Resop p P.Alvarez 3b Barajas c Barmes ss Correia p a-Presley ph-lf Totals
4 2 5 0 5 5 5 2 3 46
2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 14
2 1 3 0 1 0 2 1 2 19
2 1 2 0 4 0 1 0 1 14
0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 5 8
.256 .237 .269 .000 .224 .218 .201 .182 .236
St. Louis AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Furcal ss 3 1 0 0 1 0 .280 Jay cf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .323 Holliday lf 4 0 2 0 0 2 .303 S.Robinson rf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .246 Beltran rf 4 1 1 1 0 1 .311 Rzepczynski p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Craig 1b 4 2 2 3 0 1 .314 Y.Molina c 4 0 0 0 0 1 .311 Freese 3b 4 0 1 1 0 0 .284 Descalso 2b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .230 Wainwright p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .063 E.Sanchez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Schumaker ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .297 Salas p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 S.Freeman p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --M.Carpenter lf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .293 Totals 34 5 7 5 2 8 Pittsburgh 200 034 023 — 14 19 0 St. Louis 014 000 000 — 5 7 0 a-homered for Correia in the 6th. b-grounded into a fielder’s choice for E.Sanchez in the 6th. c-singled for G.Jones in the 8th. d-lined out for Lincoln in the 9th. LOB—Pittsburgh 10, St. Louis 4. 2B— A.McCutchen (16), P.Alvarez (14), Craig (11). HR— Barmes (4), off Wainwright; Presley (6), off Wainwright; G.Jones (10), off E.Sanchez; A.McCutchen (15), off Rzepczynski; Craig (10), off Correia. Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Correia W, 4-6 5 6 5 5 2 3 90 4.32 Lincoln 3 1 0 0 0 4 33 3.21 Resop 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 3.76 St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Wainwright L, 6-8 5 11 7 7 1 7 100 4.75 E.Sanchez 1 3 2 2 0 0 17 6.60 Salas 1 1 2 2 2 0 21 6.04 S.Freeman 1 1 0 0 1 1 21 6.00 Rzepczynski 1 3 3 3 1 0 25 6.00 Wainwright pitched to 2 batters in the 6th. Salas pitched to 3 batters in the 8th. T—3:09. A—45,382 (43,975).
Reds 5, Giants 1 Cincinnati Cozart ss Stubbs cf Votto 1b B.Phillips 2b Bruce rf Ludwick lf Rolen 3b Mesoraco c Leake p Totals
AB 5 4 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 39
R 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 5
H 1 0 3 1 4 1 0 1 2 13
BI 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 5
BB 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
SO 1 0 0 1 0 1 2 2 1 8
Avg. .246 .235 .354 .287 .258 .230 .184 .200 .357
San Francisco AB R H BI BB SO Avg. G.Blanco rf-cf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .259 Theriot 2b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .272 Me.Cabrera lf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .354 Posey c 4 0 1 0 0 0 .300 Pagan cf 3 0 1 0 0 0 .296 Hensley p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Kontos p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --a-Burriss ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .211 Sandoval 3b 3 1 2 1 1 0 .313 Belt 1b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .253 B.Crawford ss 4 0 1 0 0 2 .231 M.Cain p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .176 Schierholtz rf 1 0 1 0 0 0 .250 Totals 34 1 9 1 1 4 Cincinnati 300 001 100 — 5 13 0 San Francisco 000 000 001 — 1 9 1 a-lined out for Kontos in the 9th. E—Sandoval (6). LOB—Cincinnati 8, San Francisco 7. 2B—Votto (33), Bruce 2 (19), Mesoraco (5), Sandoval (11), B.Crawford (15). HR—Cozart (8), off M.Cain; Leake (2), off M.Cain; Sandoval (6), off Leake. SB—B.Phillips (4), G.Blanco (14), Theriot (8). DP—Cincinnati 2; San Francisco 1. Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Leake W, 3-5 9 9 1 1 1 4 111 4.12 San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA M.Cain L, 9-3 6 2-3 11 5 5 1 7 105 2.53 Hensley 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 18 3.41 Kontos 1 1 0 0 0 0 11 1.13 T—2:28. A—41,960 (41,915).
Mets 9, Dodgers 0 New York An.Torres cf Tejada ss D.Wright 3b I.Davis 1b Duda rf Dan.Murphy 2b Nieuwenhuis lf Thole c Dickey p b-Ju.Turner ph Hefner p Totals
AB 5 5 4 4 4 5 4 5 3 1 0 40
R 1 2 1 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 9
H 0 4 1 1 2 2 0 2 1 1 0 14
BI 0 1 1 1 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 9
BB 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 4
SO 2 0 0 1 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 8
Avg. .208 .318 .359 .198 .258 .276 .271 .269 .176 .271 .333
Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg. D.Gordon ss 3 0 0 0 0 1 .225 E.Herrera 3b-rf 4 0 1 0 0 2 .257 Hairston Jr. 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .305 Abreu lf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .262 A.Ellis c 4 0 1 0 0 1 .289 Loney 1b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .236 Van Slyke rf 2 0 0 0 0 2 .162 Sh.Tolleson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Jansen p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --a-A.Kennedy ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .221 J.Wright p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Gwynn Jr. cf 3 0 1 0 0 0 .257 Harang p 1 0 1 0 0 0 .071 Uribe 3b 2 0 0 0 0 1 .208 Totals 30 0 4 0 1 10 New York 002 030 400 — 9 14 1 Los Angeles 000 000 000 — 0 4 2 a-flied out for Jansen in the 8th. b-singled for Dickey in the 9th. E—I.Davis (6), Hairston Jr. (4), D.Gordon (14). LOB—New York 11, Los Angeles 5. 2B—Tejada (12), I.Davis (12), Dan.Murphy (20), Gwynn Jr. (7). HR—Dan.Murphy (3), off Sh.Tolleson. DP—New York 1; Los Angeles 1. New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Dickey W, 12-1 8 3 0 0 1 10 116 2.15 Hefner 1 1 0 0 0 0 18 5.14 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Harang L, 5-5 5 2-3 7 5 4 4 3 116 3.97 Sh.Tolleson 1 1-3 5 4 3 0 1 43 7.71 Jansen 1 0 0 0 0 2 14 2.36 J.Wright 1 2 0 0 0 2 15 4.01 T—3:06. A—49,763 (56,000).
3,000 Hits Through Friday’s games (x-active; y-played prior to 1901) Player 1. Pete Rose 2. Ty Cobb 3. Hank Aaron 4. Stan Musial 5. Tris Speaker 6. Carl Yastrzemski 7. y-Honus Wagner 8. Paul Molitor 9. Eddie Collins 10. Willie Mays 11. Eddie Murray 12. y-Nap Lajoie 13. x-Derek Jeter 14. Cal Ripken 15. George Brett 16. Paul Waner 17. Robin Yount 18. Tony Gwynn 19. Dave Winfield 20. Craig Biggio 21. Rickey Henderson 22. Rod Carew 23. Lou Brock 24. Rafael Palmeiro 25. y-Cap Anson 26. Wade Boggs 27. Al Kaline 28. Roberto Clemente SOURCE: MLB
Hits 4,256 4,191 3,771 3,630 3,514 3,419 3,415 3,319 3,315 3,283 3,255 3,242 3,185 3,184 3,154 3,152 3,142 3,141 3,110 3,060 3,055 3,053 3,023 3,020 3,011 3,010 3,007 3,000
SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Broken
Touring the French countryside The 99th Tour de France runs from June 30 to July 22, and consists of one prologue, 20 stages and two rest days. The race covers a total distance of 2,173 miles and features nine new stage towns. BELGIUM Tournai
Boulogne-Sur-Mer
3
2 Vise
Abbeville
Orchies
5
Saint-Quentin
FINISH
Epernay
Paris Rambouillet
19
Liege
1
4 Rouen
START
Seraing
20
LUX.
6
Tomlaine
Chartres
7
Bonneval
La Planche des Belles Filles Belfort Besancon 8
Stage 1
FRANCE
Route
GER.
Metz
Porrentruy
9
Stage start
Arc-et-Senans Bellegarde Sur Valserine
Mâcon
Finish
SWITZ.
10
Time trials
Albertville
Brive-la-Gaillarde
La Toussuire
Travel
12
Annonay Davezieux
18
Atlantic Ocean
15 Pau
16
Samatan
17
Peyragudes Bagneres de-Luchon
SPAIN
Blagnac
13
11
ITALY
Saint-Jean De-Maurienne Saint-Paul Trois-Chateaux
Foix
14 Limoux
ANDORA
Le Cap D’agde
Mediterranean Sea
Source: Tour de France
0
100 mi
AP
Tour Continued from D1 That includes a victory over a field that included Evans in the Criterium du Dauphine in June. “Bradley is in form and on the up,” said the Team Sky sport director Sean Yates. “He’s done so much in the last six months, and he’s the favorite for the Tour now.” Though Wiggins has often made the short list of contenders in recent years, his Tour performances have proved inconsistent. A former Olympic champion track cyclist, he finished fourth in the 2009 Tour, his best result, before struggling to 24th place in 2010. Last year, he adjusted his pre-Tour training regime with the help of Tim Kerrison, a former coach for the Australian national swimming team. But he failed to see the fruits of his labor in the Tour, breaking his collarbone during Stage 7 and abandoning the race. Fully recovered, Wiggins has benefited from his increased fitness this season. “With that improvement, and with race results, comes confidence, and there’s a snowball effect,” Yates said. Wiggins’ chief challenger will be Evans, who last year became the first Australian to win the Tour. Evans, the 35-year-old Team BMC Racing leader, has not enjoyed as much success leading to July as he did last year. A sinus infection forced his withdrawal from Amstel Gold, a one-day race in the Netherlands in April, and he returned to form only recently, finishing third at the Dauphine. For the notably private Evans, who has sought inner peace in past Tours by locking himself in hotel bathrooms with noise-canceling headphones, spending the spring under the radar has helped him prepare mentally for the title defense. “In some ways, I suppose not having the best race results keeps people’s attention away from me and helps make my life a little easier,” he said in a teleconference last week. The two riders are similarly matched. Their teams, among the highest-salaried in the Tour this year, have world-class support riders. And both Wiggins and Evans are excellent allaround riders, as comfortable in the mountains as in individual time trials, stages in which riders race one by one against the clock. Last year, Evans won the race during the individual time trial in Grenoble, snatching yellow from the leader, Schleck, with an inspired ride. Time trials will play a more important role this Tour than in the recent past. In 2009 and 2010, there were two solo time trials; last year,
just one. This year the course, which winds clockwise around France, features three individual time trials. For those like the Team Garmin-Sharp director of competition, Allan Peiper, who was a support rider for Bernard Hinault in the 1980s, increased emphasis on racing against the clock is a welcome change of pace for a race that has become increasingly centered in the mountains. “Every year it has looked more and more like a climber’s Tour,” he said. “When I rode with Hinault, the course was more tailor-made for an all-arounder.” In addition to their time trial prowess, having a reduced number of serious rivals will help Evans and Wiggins. Contador, a two-time Tour winner, is serving a backdated two-year doping suspension and will not return to competition until Aug. 6. As a result of the doping ban, Contador relinquished his 2010 Tour title to Schleck. But Schleck will not challenge for his second yellow jersey this year after he suffered a fractured pelvis during the Dauphine. Instead, it will be his older brother and teammate, Frank Schleck, who will battle Evans and Wiggins for the title. Frank Schleck heads a group of secondary contenders that includes Vincenzo Nibali of Italy, Robert Gesink of the Netherlands and Ryder Hesjedal of Canada, a Team GarminSharp rider who won Giro d’Italia in May. After spending a few weeks recovering in his European base of Girona, Spain, Hesjedal is ready to tackle the challenge of winning two Grand Tours in three months. As if he had not already had enough racing, Hesjedal was recently selected to represent Canada in the Olympic road race, a grueling one-day challenge of 149 miles that takes place six days after the Tour riders get to Paris. The Olympics are already imposing themselves on the Tour. Some riders, like Tom Boonen of Belgium and Geraint Thomas of Wales, are skipping the race to focus on Olympic gold. Others like Mark Cavendish of Britain, the sport’s strongest sprinter in recent years, have modified their Tour goals to accommodate the Olympics. Cavendish, who won five stages in the Tour last year, lost weight in the offseason and improved his climbing abilities expressly for the Olympic road race, which finishes with nine climbs of Box Hill in Surrey, England. “My sprint has suffered a little bit,” he said in a news conference last week. “I will not be as successful in the Tour de France as I have in the past.”
Continued from D1 Brigham Young, Clemson, Washington and UCLA have also pared offerings. And cash-strapped California Berkeley announced in 2010 it was cutting five sports because of budget problems, before an aggressive fundraising blitz spared the teams. No major university has cut as deeply as Maryland, however, and some point to its budget woes as a warning that the current model of college sports, marked by overzealous spending in pursuit of success in football and men’s basketball, is broken. “Quite frankly, I think we’ve gotten ourselves in a terrible situation with intercollegiate athletics, with the cost of running a program really out of proportion to the basic purpose of our universities,” said William E. “Brit” Kirwan, chancellor of the University System of Maryland and a co-chairman of the Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics. Added John Nichols, cochairman of the Coalition on Intercollegiate Athletics, the leading faculty voice on the issue: “What seems to be happening all too often nationwide is that the breadth and depth of athletic departments are being cut. It’s becoming the victim of a financial need to feed this commercial beast.” Texas, Ohio State and a handful of other universities aren’t feeling the pain. That’s because their football teams are so wildly successful they bankroll their entire athletics department — and more. But that’s the exception. According to USA Today’s most recent annual survey of sports spending, culled from data supplied to the NCAA, just 22 of 227 public universities in NCAA Division I turned a profit in 2011. The rest lost money. There are several factors behind the escalating financial pressures. Spending on sports is rising at nearly twice the rate of spending on academics, according to the Knight Commission. Coaching salaries and construction costs are up dramatically, as football-playing schools, chasing the holy grail of a major bowl appearance, expand stadiums and lure big-name coaches capable of filling them. Scandalplagued Ohio State in November, for example, guaranteed Urban Meyer a $4 million base salary. Meanwhile, state appropriations for higher education are declining, which heightens pressure on athletic departments to sell out venues and boost fundraising. In this environment, a downturn in ticket sales, coupled with a heavy debt burden, can be catastrophic. Athletic Director Kevin Anderson, who was hired two years ago, says Maryland’s student-athletes have
“What seems to be happening all too often nationwide is that the breadth and depth of athletic departments are being cut. It’s becoming the victim of a financial need to feed this commercial beast.” — John Nichols, co-chairman of the Coalition on Intercollegiate Athletics
been under-served as a result of the athletic department’s chronic operating deficits and deserve better. “I did not come to the University of Maryland to cut sports,” he said, “but dire situations require decisive action.” The reality is that in the hyper-competitive environment of college sports, in which athletic departments must spend money to make money, Maryland’s budget priorities are more the norm than the exception. No one needs to explain that to NCAA President Mark Emmert. He was president of the University of Washington in 2009 when the athletic department dropped its nationally ranked men’s and women’s swim teams to address a $3 million deficit. The same year, Washington hired a head football coach whose annual salary was more than the budget of both teams combined. According to R. Scott Kretchmar, a Penn State professor of exercise and sport sciences, it’s all but impossible for university presidents to ramp down spending on the revenue sports of football and men’s basketball, even as they confront deficits. “Presidents are obligated to raise money, and it’s the football and basketball events that bring the big donors and trustees in,” said Kretchmar, who served as Penn State’s faculty athletic representative to the NCAA for 10 years. “There’s virtually nothing else at the university that has the cachet and excitement that big-time sports does. Presidents are saying, ‘I can’t go down that road of scaling back big-time sports.’ Unilateral disarmament is nothing that will fly.” Some hope that the fourteam college football playoff that was approved this week will bail out athletic departments in distress. A playoff could generate as much as $500 million in new revenue, according to industry insiders. That could mean an additional $2 million-3 million apiece for the 120 schools in the NCAA’s most prestigious football division, the Football Bowl Subdivision. But if past is prelude, the newfound playoff money will only increase the cost of competing and widen the gulf between college sports’ “haves and have-nots,” Kretchmar predicted. “Every cash cow that has
D5
come down the line that I have seen has been a temporary stop-gap,” Kretchmar said. “A playoff system is not going to be a panacea in any sense of the word. It will help balance the books of schools in the red, but with the escalation of salaries and facilities, it’s a black hole.” So what’s the remedy for college sports’ spending compulsion? The Knight Commission, a group of university presidents, trustees and former athletes who advocate for reform in college sports, offered a road map in a 2010 report, “Restoring the Balance: Dollars, Values and the Future of College Sports.” In it, the panel recommended the NCAA require colleges to publish the true cost of their athletic programs in comparable, complete terms, reflecting not only revenue and expenses but also the often-hidden debt service on facilities and subsidies from their universities’ general funds. It also proposed that the NCAA cap the number of “non-coaching” jobs on certain teams — an expense that has ballooned in football, for example, with the addition of directors of football recruiting, operations, player development and strength-and-conditioning coaches for every position. And it recommended the NCAA reduce the number of football scholarships allowed by at least 10 from the current 85. To date, none of those recommendations has gained traction. “The people who could and should be responsible for fixing what almost certainly is going to be a train wreck are either unwilling or unable to do it,” Nichols said. “Unless you assume that television money is a bottomless pit — and there are no limits to the amount of money that television networks will invest — there is going to be a day of reckoning.” That leaves two options for substantive change — both of them political and neither particularly palatable. One: Persuade Congress to grant an antitrust exemption that would permit the NCAA to cap spending — whether on coaches’ salaries, scholarship costs or recruiting. Two: Wait until the headlong rush for more money becomes so nakedly transparent that the Internal Revenue Service declares college sports a forprofit enterprise and revokes its tax-exempt status. That’s a doomsday scenario but one Kirwan believes is plausible. “Absolutely,” he said. “We’re moving further and further from the stated purpose of intercollegiate athletics. It has just become a big business. “Maybe it sounds like we’re crying wolf. But sometimes the wolf is really at the door. And it will be if we continue with this madness.”
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Trials Continued from D1 But the absence of Olympic bronze medalist Walter Dix was a bit of a surprise. Dix was hampered by a lingering left hamstring injury that slowed him in the 100, but he thought he might be ready for the 200. Now, Dix’s only option for making it to London will be as a member of the 400 relay team. Dix tweeted his disappointment Friday at not being able to run and later that he heard he had been nominated for an ESPY Award in the category of best track and field athlete: “It’s an honor!!! Thanx for the love and support...very much appreciated.” This was one of the sprinters the Americans were counting on, too, especially after Dix captured bronze in both the 100 and 200 in Beijing. “We’re missing Tyson, Walter and Justin — that’s U.S. best right there,” said 34year-old Doc Patton, who advanced in his heat. “The door is open for anyone in the field
right now.” That’s one way to look at it. The other is the road to gold may have just gotten a whole lot easier for Jamaican sensation Usain Bolt, the worldrecord holder who looked so dominant in Beijing and really has no one — other than perhaps training partner Yohan Blake — to push him in the 200. Wallace Spearmon had the fastest 200 Felix time in the prelims, showing he’s rounding back into form. Spearmon has been bothered recently by a sore left Achilles tendon. “It’s the first round. You’re not supposed to run that hard,” Spearmon said. “It was a good run.” In the only finals on Friday, University of Colorado standout Emma Coburn won the steeplechase and Jillian Camarena-Williams captured the shot put crown. But these days and at these trials, the overriding topic is the one involving Felix and Tarmoh. Just how they’re going to settle the matter is
something that’s now been hanging over the competition for the past week. USA Track and Field didn’t have any procedure in place to break the dead heat. Immediately after the 100 race last Saturday, the organization quickly scrambled to put together some options for the athletes. The sprinters have elected to not say anything until after the 200. That way, they can focus on making the team in that event. Only, Felix blabbed — if two words can be considered that. Usually so polite and always open to talk, Felix has been hurried away by Kersee the past two days. He’s highly protective of both his sprinters, also whisking away Tarmoh with an arm around her shoulder. But maybe Kersee is softening, too, with the resolution so close. As he ushered Felix away, he was asked how Felix is looking. Without even turning around, Kersee raised his right arm and gave a
thumbs-up. All the attention may be on Tarmoh and Felix heading into the final, but they have some pretty tenacious competition. Carmelita Jeter will be a factor along with Sanya Richards-Ross, who won the 400 earlier at trials. She keeps getting stronger with every round. “I felt good. My body felt really good,” Richards-Ross said after turning in the top time of 22.15 seconds in the semis. “Yesterday I was little tight and today I felt fresh. “Hopefully, tomorrow I’ll go even faster and put together another great race to win it.” Hyleas Fountain leads the heptathlon after the first day of competition, while reigning Olympic champion Angelo Taylor had the top time in the semis of the 400 hurdles. The qualifying round of the 110 hurdles went as expected with Aries Merritt, Jason Richardson, David Oliver and David Payne all advancing. “There were some nerves involved and I just have to stay focused,” Merritt said.
2012
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Alusky puppies, 8 wks, male & female, $500. 541-280-3884. Aussie Mix, Toy, 1st shots, dewormed, $150, 541-977-0035 Barn cats/rodent specialists ready to work in your barn or shop in exchange for safe shelter, food & water. Altered, shots. We deliver! 541-389-8420 Blue Heeler pups, $250. Beautiful, must see! 3 left, Families will be screened. Please call 503-777-3541
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Bill Fleming, Bend 541-318-1501 sanctuary! www.craft541-382-9419. www.redeuxbend.com cats.org or CraftCats GENERATE SOME on Facebook.com EXCITEMENT Lab pups, AKC, 10 yel- The Bulletin reserves IN YOUR the right to publish all low, master hunter NEIGBORHOOD. ads from The Bulletin sired. 541-447-7972 Plan a garage sale and newspaper onto The Lab Pups AKC, black don't forget to adverBulletin Internet web& yellow, Master tise in classified! site. Hunter sired, perfor541-385-5809. mance pedigree, OFA GET FREE OF CREDIT cert hips & elbows, CARD DEBT NOW! Call 541-771-2330 240 www.kinnamanretrievers.com Cut payments by up to half. Stop creditors Crafts & Hobbies Labradoodles - Mini & from calling. med size, several colors 866-775-9621. Rock, Slab, Slice pol541-504-2662 (PNDC) isher, 27” Vibro Lap, www.alpen-ridge.com $700, 541-548-3225 LOUISIANA PELLET Maltese Toy AKC Reg. GRILL $475 champion bloodlines, 242 541-548-7171 extremely small, 7 wks. Exercise Equipment $700. 541-420-1577 Louvered tailgate, 4’6”, treadmill Vitamaster, Exercise bike, Easy fridge; dorm type, Cycle BF620, like new, bbq; 3/16” steel, $65. 541-617-1286 unique, exc. cond., 3 ft. stand. Each $35. 245 541-330-5819 Golf Equipment Poodle pups, toy, for MANTIS Deluxe Tiller. SALE. Also Rescued Golf Clubs: Odyssey 2 NEW! FastStart enPoodle Adults for ball putter, $50; Taygine. Ships FREE. adoption, to loving lor Made Burner, 9.5°, One-Year Moneyhomes. 541-475-3889 SOLD; Scotty CamBack Guarantee when eron California putter, Queensland Heelers you buy DIRECT. Call standard & mini,$150 & SOLD; 541-389-9345 for the DVD and up. 541-280-1537 http:// FREE Good Soil Golf Clubs: Titlist 909D rightwayranch.wordpress.com book! 877-357-5647. driver, 8.5°, $75, Ti(PNDC) Siberian Husky AKC 5 tleist Vokey wedges, yrs., gray fem., blue Rockhounds: Genie 654° & 58°, $50, Caleyes, $350 laway Diablo 3 fair- wheel diamond polisher, 541-977-7019. way tour, $50, Taylor $950. 541-350-7004 Siberian Husky AKC! Made R9 8.5°, $75; The Bulletin Offers Black/white female,8 mo. Taylor Made R11 Free Private Party Ads $450. 541-977-7019 fairway 3 metal, $90, • 3 lines - 3 days 541-389-9345 • Private Party Only Yorkie Pups, AKC, ador• Total of items adverable, 2 boys, 1 girl, 246 small,health guarantee, tised must equal $200 Guns, Hunting $850+, 541-316-0005. or Less • Limit 1 ad per month & Fishing 210 • 3-ad limit for same Furniture & Appliances item advertised within CASH!! 3 months For Guns, Ammo & Call 541-385-5809 Reloading Supplies. A1 Washers&Dryers Fax 541-385-5802 541-408-6900. $150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also TOW BAR, Eaz-Lift Pro Deluxe Stoeger Coach wanted, used W/D’s Star, 26” bars, 10,000 gun, 12 ga., as new. 541-280-7355 lb towing capacity, $450. Ruger 44 mag $290. 541-480-7823 semi-auto carbine, Bdrm. Set: moving, excellent, $600. Tracer CX wheel chair must sell queen bed, 541-475-3984 $75; 24" charcoal grill new Serta mattress & $75; Oval oak table 3 box spring, $450 chairs $75; Oak ent. DO YOU HAVE OBO; Queen hidecenter $75; Leather SOMETHING TO a-bed, couch $250. MC jackets $50-$75; SELL 541-350-3222 Kitchen table $10; sofa FOR $500 OR $20 541-548-7171 Bench, artist carved ceLESS? dar, exquisite, new, Non-commercial Wanted- paying cash $200, 541-385-0178 advertisers may for Hi-fi audio & stuplace an ad dio equip. McIntosh, Chair, wing-back, ready with our JBL, Marantz, Dyfor reupholstering. "QUICK CASH naco, Heathkit, San$25. 541-389-2028 SPECIAL" sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Dishwasher, portable, 1 week 3 lines $12 Call 541-261-1808 Whirlpool,gently used, or 261 $65, 541-923-7688 2 weeks $20! Ad must Medical Equipment Dresser, antique, faux include price of paint, w/beveled mirror. single item of $500 ATTENTION DIABET$100. 541-389-2028 or less, or multiple ICS with Medicare. Gazebo, 10’x10’, used items whose total Get a FREE talking one month. Being does not exceed meter and diabetic sold at Fred Meyers $500. testing supplies at NO for $199. Asking COST, plus FREE $100. Couch, 3 Call Classifieds at home delivery! Best cushions, dark 541-385-5809 of all, this meter elimigreen faux suede, www.bendbulletin.com nates painful finger exc. cond. $300. pricking! Call 541-410-8084 888-739-7199. Hunting dog kennel, (PNDC) GENERATE SOME explastic, portable, lg/xl, citement in your $50. 541-408-4528 262 neighborhood! Plan a Commercial/Ofice garage sale and don't PINE COUNTRY forget to advertise in Equipment & Fixtures OUTFITTERS classified! Your local provider 541-385-5809. SHARP fax machine of quality firearms UX105 with manual Love Seat/Double Reand worldwide des$20. 541-383-4231 cliner, beige velure, tinations for hunting, $200, 541-923-6303 fishing and adven263 ture travel, is acTools NEED TO CANCEL cepting consignYOUR AD? ments of firearms, 10’ Table saw w/stand, The Bulletin western art and colbelt/disc sander 2/3 Classifieds has an lectables, taxidermy, HP, 9’ bandsaw, each "After Hours" Line traditional and his$60. 541-330-5819 Call 541-383-2371 torical art, and other 24 hrs. to cancel 265 interesting items of your ad! value. Please call for Building Materials Patio Set: 7-piece, table an appointment: with 6 rocking/swivel 541-508-8409. Bend Habitat chairs, like new. Paid RESTORE $540 new; sell $400. Remington 243 788 car- Building Supply Resale 541-639-2006 Quality at LOW bine, scope, sling, nice! $500. 541-788-8137 PRICES Table, oak, 4x4 square 740 NE 1st with 4 chairs. $100. Wanted: Collector 541-312-6709 541-389-2028 seeks high quality Open to the public. fishing items. The Bulletin Call 541-678-5753, or Tile, natural slate, color r ecommends extra Tiger, 76 pcs, 12”x12” 503-351-2746 caution when pur$200. 541-593-6495 chasing products or 248 269 services from out of Health & the area. Sending Gardening Supplies Beauty Items cash, checks, or & Equipment credit information may be subjected to Over 30 Million Woman 14 gal. 12V weed Suffer From Hair FRAUD. For more sprayer w/ 5' boom , Loss! Do you? If So information about an and hand sprayer We Have a Solution! advertiser, you may $125. 541-548-7171 CALL KERANIQUE call the Oregon TO FIND OUT MORE State Attorney For newspaper 877-475-2521. General’s Office delivery, call the Consumer Protec255 Circulation Dept. at tion hotline at 541-385-5800 Computers 1-877-877-9392. To place an ad, call 541-385-5809 THE BULLETIN reor email quires computer adclassified@bendbulletin.com vertisers with multiple Call The Bulletin At ad schedules or those selling multiple sys541-385-5809 tems/ software, to disPlace Your Ad Or E-Mail close the name of the SUPER TOP SOIL At: www.bendbulletin.com business or the term www.hersheysoilandbark.com "dealer" in their ads. Screened, soil & com212 post mixed, no Private party advertisAntiques & rocks/clods. High huers are defined as Collectibles mus level, exc. for those who sell one flower beds, lawns, computer. gardens, straight Antiques wanted: tools, furn., fishing, marbles, screened top soil. 260 old sports gear, cosBark. Clean fill. DeMisc. Items tume jewelry, rock liver/you haul. posters. 541-389-1578 541-548-3949.
Hound Puppies (3), 7 Betty Boop Ceramic weeks, lots of color, Doll, asking $100, $150 ea.,541-447-1323 541-923-6303.
Found on 6/25, prescription glasses, in case, on Ferguson Rd. 541-300-9536. Found on 6/26, Prescription glasses by Mirror Pond, call 541-550-7036.
Employment
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Schools & Training
High-tech manufacturer seeks a detail-oriented electronic test & manufacturing technician. RESPONSIBILITIES: Acceptance testing & results evaluation; documenting test results & procedures; providing technical assistance w/any problems found; troubleshooting instruments or equipment; electronic assembly fabrication; customer tech support. QUALIFICATIONS: Understand 120-600VAC and 0-900VDC system safety; proficient w/ spreadsheets/word processing software, test equipment & PCBA experience; knowledge of power systems and 3-phase metering a plus; ability to read schematics. EDUCATION: Associates Degree in Electronics or 2 yrs equivalent exp. FT position available immediately. Competitive salary & full benefits package. Resume & cover letter to
HELP YOUR AD TO stand out from the AIRLINES ARE HIRrest! Have the top line ING - Train for hands in bold print for only on Aviation Mainte$2.00 extra. nance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Housing availLost black trailer gate. able. Call Aviation In27th or Greenwood. stitute of 541-480-2299. Maintenance. 1-877-804-5293. Lost Droid X2, on 6/28, (PNDC) possibly at Costco or COLLEGE NE Bend area. Re- ATTEND ONLINE from Home. ward. 541-480-7390. *Medical, *Business, Lost precious 7lb Po*Criminal Justice, meranian female, all *Hospitality. Job black, white face, miplacement assistance. crochipped, “Ebony,” Computer available. 5/22, 78th St beFinancial Aid if qualitween Bend & Redfied. SCHEV certified. mond. 541-639-3222 Call 866-688-7078 REMEMBER: If you www.CenturaOnline.c have lost an animal, om (PNDC) don't forget to check TRUCK SCHOOL The Humane Society www.IITR.net in Bend 541-382-3537 Redmond Campus Redmond, Student Loans/Job 541-923-0882 jobs@dentinstruments.com Waiting Toll Free Prineville, 1-888-438-2235 Home Cleaning crew 541-447-7178; member, weekdays OR Craft Cats, 476 only. No weekends, 541-389-8420. Employment evening or holidays. 541-815-0015. Opportunities Farm Look at: ADMINISTRATIVE Market Bendhomes.com ASSISTANT for Property Manage- for Complete Listings of ment firm. Familiarity Area Real Estate for Sale with Word, Publisher, Bookkeeping, Data Medical entry. Part time to Jefferson County EMS District currently has a start. Send resume to position for an EMT PO Box 271, Bend 325 with a minimum 2 OR 97709. Hay, Grain & Feed years exp. working on an ALS ambulance. 1st quality grass hay, JCEMSD is a small 70-lb bales, barn stored, special district that $220/ ton. Roger Langeliers covers a large rural Patterson Ranch, Construction area. Benefits and Sisters, 541-549-3831 has openings for expesalary package are rienced Concrete based on experience. Bailer Twine Finishers & Laborers. Most Common Sizes Deadline for applicaVeterans are encourQuarry Ave. Hay & Feed tions is 7/13/2012. aged to apply. Mostly Request or send appli541-923-2400 public wage work with www.quarryfeed.com cations to: PO Box full benefit package. 265, Madras, OR Want to buy Alfalfa RLC is an Equal Op97741, 541-475-7476 standing, in Central portunity Employer for more information. Ore. 541-419-2713 and drug-free company. Call Medical Wheat Straw: Certified & 541-948-0829 or Bedding Straw & Garden PT-PTA-OT-COTAStraw;Compost.546-6171 541-948-0315 for inSLP-CCC/CF terview & application. Select Rehabilita341 tion is seeking Horses & Equipment DO YOU NEED therapists to join our team in the Bend, A GREAT SADDLES: 15" smooth OR area. Exc. EMPLOYEE seat, $125; 15" tooled comp. & benefits, RIGHT NOW? needs stirrup, $200 bonuses avail for Call The Bulletin 541-548-7171 select sites, relocabefore 11 a.m. and tion assistance, and get an ad in to pub345 tuition reimburselish the next day! Livestock & Equipment ment. Full-time, 541-385-5809. part-time, & PRN VIEW the are available. Email Classifieds at: resume to www.bendbulletin.com resumes@selectrehab.com, fax TURN THE PAGE resume to 847-441-4130. For More Ads 1977 14' Blake Trailer, Traveler positions refurbished by The Bulletin also available. Frenchglen Blacksmiths, a Classy ClasELECTRONIC OFFICE sic. Great design for HARDWARE multiple uses. Over- DESIGN ENGINEER Warm Springs National Fish Hatchery head tack box (bunk- High-tech manufacturer house) with side and seeks an experienced Warm Springs, OR 97761 easy pickup bed ac- hardware engineer for Office Assistant cess; manger with left the development of 1st Salary $34,907-$45,376 side access, windows class power measuring U.S. Fish and and head divider. Toyo instrumentation Wildlife Service and radial tires & spare; data acquisition equip- Applications are to be new floor with mats; ment. submitted online center partition panel; Responsibilities: through USAJobs.gov bed liner coated in key Develop hardware for Current Federal appliareas, 6.5 K torsion power measuring in- cants use announceaxles with electric strumentation; partici- ment #R1-12-680214-KL brakes, and new paint, pate on R&D team to US Citizens use an$10,500. Call John at develop new products nouncement # 541-589-0777. and enhance current R1-12-681635-KL products; work indepen- Applications accepted dently to execute project starting June 27, 2012 Good classiied ads tell plans & provide status. the essential facts in an Plumber Journeymen, Qualifications: interesting Manner. Write needed for new con5+ years experience defrom the readers view - not struction. Start immedisigning analog and the seller’s. Convert the ately. Call Gary, digital electronics; Bachfacts into beneits. Show 541-410-1655. elor of Science in Electhe reader how the item will trical Engineering; embedded system develhelp them in some way. Probation opment; switching power Officer supplies, A/D circuitry and signal processing; U.S. Probation is UL & CE compliance seeking applicants testing; AC single & for a probation of3-phase power meaficer position in surement. Beef calves, 300-900 FT permanent position in Bend. Position may lbs, pasture ready, vac- a casual environment involve assignment cinated. Delivery avail- with growth opportunias a presentence able. 541-480-1719 writer, supervision ties located in Bend, caseload officer, or a BOER and Nubian OR. Software/Firmware combination of both. positions goats, does, wethers Engineering Please contact and bucks. also available. CompetiNicole Webb at tive salary and benefits. 541-923-7116 Nicole_Webb@orp.u Send resume & cover 350 scourts.gov letter to jobs@DENTInstruments.com Horseshoeing/ Farriers Electrician General Journeyman Warm Springs Composite Products is looking HOOF TRIMMING for an individual to help a growing innovative www.nilssonhoofcare.com light manufacturing plant. 541-504-7764 Basic Duties: Assist in troubleshooting and 358 repairs of plant equipment. Install, repair and maintain all electrical and electronic equipFarmers Column ment. Able to read and revise electrical schematics, Must be able to perform both electriWant to buy Alfalfa cal and mechanical preventive maintenance standing, in Central requirements and report, PLC experience. Ore. 541-419-2713 Minimum Skills: A minimum of 5 years in the 383 industrial maintenance field with a valid Oregon State Electricians License in ManufacProduce & Food turing. A strong mechanical aptitude with the ability to perform light welding and fabrication THOMAS ORCHARDS duties. Successful applicant shall supply the Kimberly, OR The fruit stand will open normal hand tools required for both electrical for the season, Fri.6/29. and mechanical maintenance. U-Pick or Ready picked, Benefits: Full Family Medical, Vision, Dental, Sweet dark cherries. Life, Disability, Salary Incentives, Company BRING CONTAINERS Bonuses, Pension and 401K w/Company Open 7 days/week Matching and Above Pay Rate Scale. 8 am - 6 pm only Please remit resume to: 541-934-2870 Warm Springs Composite Products Visit us on Facebook Buying Diamonds PO Box 906, Warm Springs, OR 97761 for updates /Gold for Cash Weed Whacker, 16” cut, Also we are at the Bend Phone: 541-553-1143, Fax: 541-553-1145 Saxon’s Fine Jewelers 25CC, like new, $50, Farmer’s Market at Drake Attn: Mac Coombs, mcoombs@wscp.com Park & St. Charles. 541-389-6655 541-408-4528
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Concrete Construction
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Loans & Mortgages
RV Salesperson LOCAL MONEY:We buy Big Country RV, Inc., secured trust deeds & Central Oregon’s note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley Largest RV Dealer541-382-3099 ext.13. ship, is growing and adding to our strong Reverse Mortgages sales staff. We are by local expert looking for the right Mike LeRoux person who wants a NMLS57716 career in one of the Call to learn more. fastest growing in541-350-7839 dustries in Central Security1 Lending Oregon. Great opNMLS98161 portunity for someone 573 with prior vehicle sales experience. Ex- Business Opportunities ceptional inventory of New and Used RVs. A Classified ad is an Unlimited earning EASY WAY TO potential with an exREACH over 3 million cellent benefit packPacific Northwesternage to include: ers. $525/25-word • IRA classified ad in 30 • Dental Plan daily newspapers for • Medical Insurance 3-days. Call the Pa• Up to 35% commiscific Northwest Daily sion Connection (916) • Great Training 288-6019 or email elizabeth@cnpa.com Must be able to work for more info (PNDC) weekends and have a passion for the RV Advertise VACATION business. Please apSPECIALS to 3 milply in person, or drop lion Pacific Northresume off at: westerners! 30 daily Big Country RV, Inc. newspapers, six 3500 N. Hwy 97 states. 25-word clasBend, OR 97701 sified $525 for a 3-day or email a resume to ad. Call (916) accounting@bigcrv.com 288-6019 or visit www.pnna.com/advert Software Engineer/ ising_pndc.cfm for the Windows Software Pacific Northwest Development in Daily Connection. C++ and MFC (PNDC) High-tech manufacturer seeks an experienced Extreme Value Adversoftware engineer to join tising! 30 Daily newstheir team for developpapers $525/25-word ment of first-class power classified, 3-days. measuring instrumentaReach 3 million Pation and data acquisicific Northwesterners. tion equipment. For more information Responsibilities: call (916) 288-6019 or Assist in the developemail: ment of Windows softelizabeth@cnpa.com ware applications, prifor the Pacific Northmarily XP & Windows 7 west Daily Connecplatforms. tion. (PNDC) Qualifications: Programming skills in Mi- SOCIAL SECURITY crosoft Windows using DISABILITY BENC and C++; 5+ yrs expeEFITS. WIN or Pay rience using MFC; expeNothing! Start Your rience debugging and Application In Under testing new software; 60 Seconds. Call Toexperience implementday! Contact Disabiling networked applicaity Group, Inc. Litions; experience with censed Attorneys & SVN, Bugzilla & NSIS BBB Accredited. Call installer scripting a plus; 888-782-4075. experience working with (PNDC) and debugging embedded systems a plus. FT permanent position in a casual environment with growth opportuniBoats & RV’s ties. Competitive salary and benefits. Send resume and cover letter to jobs@DENTInstruments.com
The Bulletin Recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to FRAUD. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.
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Snowmobiles Polaris 2003, 4 cycle, fuel inj, elec start, reverse, 2-up seat, cover, 4900 mi, $2500 obo. 541-280-0514 860
Motorcycles & Accessories
CRAMPED FOR CASH?
Use classified to sell those items you no longer need. Call 541-385-5809
Veterinary Technician: Immediate opening for Certified Veterinary Technician. Redmond Harley Davidson SoftVeterinary Clinic is Tail Deluxe 2007, seeking outgoing, perwhite/cobalt, w/passonable, energetic, mosenger kit, Vance & tivated individual with Hines muffler system the ability to multi task. & kit, 1045 mi., exc. 3 doctor mixed animal cond, $19,999, practice offering the 541-389-9188. highest in medical and surgical care. Full-time Harley Heritage position available with Softail, 2003 wages starting at $10/ $5,000+ in extras, hr-$13/hr plus compre$2000 paint job, hensive benefit pack30K mi. 1 owner, age. All applicants shall For more information provide a resume to: please call office@redmondvetclinic.com 541-385-8090 or 209-605-5537 Where can you ind a helping hand? HD FAT BOY From contractors to 1996 yard care, it’s all here Completely rebuilt/ in The Bulletin’s customized, low miles. Accepting of“Call A Service fers. 541-548-4807 Professional” Directory
Graphic Designer Position Available The Bulletin’s Creative Services team is seeking a full-time graphic designer. The ideal candidate possess practiced design skills and excellent communication skills in order to work with account executives and local businesses to design and produce advertisements that get results for that advertiser. Proficiency using Adobe InDesign, Illustrator, and Photoshop softwares to create basic and advanced ad layouts and designs is a must. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an equal opportunity employer that provides competitive wages and benefits. Send a resume with qualifications, skills, experience and a past employment history to: The Bulletin, attention: James Baisinger 1777 S. W. Chandler Ave P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
E2 SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD
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Boats & Accessories
Boats & Accessories
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
Used out-drive parts - Mercury OMC rebuilt marine motors: 151 $1595; 3.0 $1895; 4.3 (1993), $1995. 541-389-0435
Coachman Freelander 2011, 27’, queen bed, 1 slide, HD TV, DVD player, 450 Ford, $49,000, please call 541-923-5754.
Edited by Will Shortz
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Motorcycles & Accessories
Motorcycles & Accessories
ATVs
ATVs
HD Heritage Classic 2003, 100 yr. Anniv. model. 10,905 Miles, new tires, battery, loaded w/ custom extras, exhaust & chrome. Hard/soft bags & much more. $11,995, 541-306-6505 or 503-819-8100.
Honda VT700 Shadow 1984, 23K mi, many new parts, battery charger, good condition. Now for $1000, cash! 541-598-4351
Honda 1500 Trike 1994 ‘08 Champion conversion, metallic red, always garaged, low mi, lots of options $18,000, pics avail, Call 541-598-7718
(Scott, formerly with Bend Recreation)
New shop NOW OPEN to serve your maintenance & repair needs! Call 541-728-0875 or
scottsmotorsportservice.com
Honda Rebel 250 2005, 6500+ miles., $2500, please call 541-280-9438 for more info.
Need help ixing stuff? Call A Service Professional ind the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com
We buy motorcycles, ATV’s, snowmobiles & watercrafts. Call Ken at 541-647-5151. Yamaha Raptor 2005 660R sport quad w/ reverse; new pipe & in new cond. $2400/obo Call 541-647-8931 FIND IT! Yamaha Grizzly 700 FI BUY IT! 2009, 543 mi, 2WD/ SELL IT! 4WD, black w/EPS, fuel injection, indepen- The Bulletin Classiieds dent rear suspension 870 winch w/handle conBoats & Accessories trols & remote, ps, auto, large racks, exc. cond., $7850, 541-322-0215
The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
12’ Smoker Craft, 5hp motor, located in Sunriver. Now $775 obo. 503-319-5745.
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Estate Sales
Sales Southwest Bend
Sales Northeast Bend
Sales Northeast Bend
Estate Sale Everything must go! Bunkbeds, dressers, armoire, tables, chairs, room decor, dishes, and much more. Sat. only, June 30, 8-5. 1499 City View Drive, Bend.
20 + garage Sales
at A-1 Westside Storage. Sat. only, 8-4. Accepting donations for Bethlehem Inn & The Stylish Stork. Free ice cream cones at lunch time. Food vendors on-site. 317 SW Columbia St.
Estate Sale Sat., 10-5, Sun., 11-5, Numerous household items & furnishings! Western art & decor, refrig, washer/ Fri. & Sat., 8-4, 19204 Riverwoods Dr., dryer, leather couch, DRW. Household various side chairs, pine goods, IMac combunk bed set, queen full bdrm set, TVs, stereos, puter, outdoor tools, antiques. tools, bikes hand tools, size 4 All high-quality items! women’s clothes. #14 Muir Lane, (follow signs to Nature Ctr, off HUGE 4-family Estate Sale, Sat. only, 9-5. Circle 3) in Sunriver. Take Cinder Butte, L on Minnetonka, R to 19202 Cherokee 541-382-6773 282 Sales Northwest Bend Moving/Estate Sale, ALL must go! Piano, armoire, 1880 NW Newport Hills desk, big scrn TV, bunk Dr., 8:30-3, Fri. 6/29 & beds, more! Fri-Sat 9-3, Sat. 6/30, household, 18882 Shoshone (DRW) collectibles, sports, vintage kids books & Moving Sale: Sat. 6/30, toys, ski related, roller Sun, 7/1, 8-4, fridge, skis, antique snow clothes, linens, furnishoes & camera ture, butter churn, equip., & much more! bakers table, dishes, glassware, yard stuff, antiques, collectibles, 2973 NW Merlot, Sat. 8 books, bookcase, lots a.m., home gym, of stuff! 61388 treadmill, couch, W/D, Elkhorn St. studded tires, antique sewing machine, Multi-Family Sale: Fri. decorative items. & Sat, 7-3, 19663 Alexandrite Dr., Follow signs from BrookEstate/Garage Sale: Fri, swood & Poplar, Sat & Sun, 8-5, Antiques, vintage clothes, Multi-family yard sale more,63058 Angler Ave 6/30 only, 8-?. 19417 Indian Summer Rd., DRW. Camping/backGarage Sale of The Century! Lots of cool packing, traditional stuff, everything must archery/bow hunting, go! All day Sat., WW kayak, queen starting at 7:30, Sun. bedframe, area rugs, until 1 pm, stragglers books, toys, housewelcome! 1145 NW hold, youth BMX, Cumberland at corboys clothes, youth ner of 12th. baseball stuff & bike, nice adult clothes. G. Sale, Fri & Sat, 10-2, Yard Sale: Fri.-Sat. 9-3, 3322 Morningwood Ct. 19280 Galen Rd. (Shevlin Rd, to Shevlin sporting goods, houseMeadow, follow signs) hold, GMC Yukon Moving Sale, Fri. & Sat. 9-4, 3225 NW Fairway Heights. Antiques glass, elliptical machine, and more.
Yard Sale: Sat June 30, 8:30-4. No earlybirds! 19973 Powers Rd, west of Brookswood. Multi-family serious downsize sale! We’re overstuffed! HELP! Too much stuff to list.
Multi-Family Sale! 1164 Redfield Circle, 7am-2pm Sat only. Baby items & lots more!
Sales Northeast Bend
Multi-Family Sale: Fri. & Sat. 8-3, 65635 White Rock Lp, Tumalo, New Crafts, Beads, jewelry, household, guy stuff.
A Yard Sale w/o Rain! Fri. & Sat. 9-3. Lots of really good stuff. 50% off sale price. No junk. Large collection woodworking mag. 2870 NE Waller.
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Baby, Book, and Misc. Moving Sale, Sat. only, 8am-? Tandem bike, garage sale Fri. Sat. dining set, couch & 8-noon only! 20725 loveseat, LOTS more! Beaumont Dr. Baby 2025 NE Shepard (off furniture, lots of books, Neff) 541-419-7001 CDs, 5-disc home stereo, aquarium, doll house, and more! Multi-Family Garage Sale: Sat. 8am, 20655 Estate Sale: Everything Sierra Dr., recliner, from 50 cents to $100s! clothes, & much more! 21378 Puffin Dr. 6/28 -6/30,Thurs Fri Sat, 8-2
18.5’ ‘05 Reinell 185, V-6 Monaco LaPalma 37’, Volvo Penta, 270HP, 2004 w/ 2 slides, 25k low hrs., must see, mi., loaded, $42,500. $17,500, 541-330-3939 541-923-3510. 875 19.5’ 1988 373V Watercraft Ranger Bass Boat, Mercury 115 Motor, Ads published in "WaRanger trailer, trolling tercraft" include: Kayelec. motor, fish finder aks, rafts and motor& sonor, 2 live wells & National Sea Breeze ized personal Country Coach Intrigue all accessories, new 2002, 40' Tag axle. 2004 M-1341 35’, gas, batteries & tires, great watercrafts. For 400hp Cummins Die2 power slides, upcond., $6500. "boats" please see sel. Two slide-outs. graded queen mat541-923-6555. Class 870. 41,000 miles. Most tress, hyd. leveling 541-385-5809 options. $110,000 system, rear camera OBO 541-678-5712 & monitor, only 6k mi. A steal at $43,000! 541-480-0617 RV CONSIGNMENTS 19-ft Mastercraft ProWANTED Star 190 inboard, We Do The Work, You 1987, 290hp, V8, 822 Keep The Cash, hrs, great cond, lots of On-Site Credit Fleetwood Discovery extras, $10,000 obo. Inflatable Raft,Sevylor 40X 2008, 31K miles, Approval Team, 541-231-8709 Fishmaster 325,10’3”, MUST SELL SOON, 3 Web Site Presence, complete pkg., $650 slides, 1-owner, great We Take Trade-Ins. Firm, 541-977-4461. shape, $129,975 OBO, Free Advertising. call Bill 541-771-3030 BIG COUNTRY RV Bend 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254 CAN’T BEAT THIS! Look before you 19’ Glass Ply, Merc buy, below market cruiser, depth finder, value ! Size & miletrolling motor, trailer, Kawasaki 1200cc 190hp age DOES matter, $3000, 541-389-1086 Class A 32’ HurriJet Skis, ‘02 & ‘03, very or 541-419-8034. cane by Four Winds, low hrs, trailer, $5950. 2007. 12,500 mi, all Southwind 35.5’ Triton, 541-382-6101 amenities, Ford V10, 2008,V10, 2 slides, DuKayaks: Dagger Trinidad lthr, cherry, slides, pont UV coat, 7500 mi. tandem w/rudder, $200. like new, can see Avg NADA ret.114,343; 20.5’ 2004 Bayliner Dagger Dynamo kids asking $99,000. anytime, $58,000. 205 Run About, 220 kayak, $400. Prineville, Call 541-923-2774 541-548-5216 HP, V8, open bow, 509-301-4521 exc. cond., very fast w/very low hours, Klepper Kayak dbl Aerius Gulfstream Scenic lots of extras incl. Expedition, state of the Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, tower, Bimini & art folding Kayak, Cummins 330 hp diecustom trailer, bought new, never in sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 $19,500. salt water, only lakes in in. kitchen slide out, 541-389-1413 Central Oregon. Known new tires,under cover, Winnebago Outlook for their stability, it hwy. miles only,4 door 32’ 2008, Ford V10 breaks down into 3 fridge/freezer ice- eng, Wineguard sat, bags. Extras incl. maker, W/D combo, TV, sur- round sound $2900. 541-318-8047. 870 Interbath tub & stereo + more. Re$49,000. shower, 50 amp pro- duced to 20.5’ Seaswirl Spy- Klepper Kayak Sgl Aerius Boats & Accessories or pane gen & more! 541-526-1622 der 1989 H.O. 302, Expedition, state of the 541-728-6793 $55,000. 285 hrs., exc. cond., art folding Kayak, 13’ Smokercraft 541-948-2310 stored indoors for bought new, never in Take care of 1997, Alaskan Fish life $11,900 OBO. salt water, only lakes in Boat w/ 9.9 Merc & your investments Central Oregon. Known 541-379-3530 elec. motor, swivel for their stability, it with the help from seat, fish finder, anbreaks down into 3 Ads published in the chor, cover & top, bags. Extras incl. Hunter’s Delight! PackThe Bulletin’s "Boats" classification age deal! 1988 Wintrailer, $2450, $2300. 541-318-8047. include: Speed, fish“Call A Service nebago Super Chief, 541-977-2644. ing, drift, canoe, 38K miles, great Professional” Directory house and sail boats. shape; 1988 Bronco II For all other types of 4x4 to tow, 130K 14’ Classic P-14 881 watercraft, please see mostly towed miles, Seaswirl, 20HP Class 875. Travel Trailers nice rig! $15,000 both. motor, Bimini Top, 541-385-5809 541-382-3964, leave new seats, Eagle Necky Manitou 14 Kayak, msg. fish finder, trailer, used 1 season; retractready to go, $1600, able skeg; quick seal Itasca Sun Cruiser Fleetwood 28’ Pio541-923-2957. Boat trailer spare tire, hatches; adjustable 1997, 460 Ford, Class neer 2003, slide, 165x80x13, new, $70. seat & leg braces. A, 26K mi., 37’, living sleeps 6, walk 541-408-4528 $800. 541-504-5224 room slide, new awaround bed, nings, new fridge, 8 GENERATE SOME ex$11,500, please call Just too many new tires, 2 A/C, 6.5 citement in your neig541-548-4284. Onan Gen., new batborhood. Plan a gacollectibles? 17’ Seaswirl, teries, tow pkg., rear rage sale and don't 175HP in/ outboard, Williamstowing TV, 2 tv’s, new Fleetwood forget to advertise in Sell them in open bow, new uphydraulic jack springs, burg 2006 tent trailer, 2 classified! 385-5809. tandem axel, $15,000, kings, slide-out dinette, holster, $2900, The Bulletin Classiieds indoor toilet / shower, 541-385-1782 541-389-9684. outside shower, fridge, 541-385-5809 furnace, water heater, stove, sink, BBQ grill, awning, storage trunk, Jayco Greyhawk electric brakes. $5,900. 2004, 31’ Class C, 503-791-6721 (Bend) 6800 mi., hyd. jacks, new tires, slide out, SPRINGDALE 2005 exc. cond, $49,900, 27’, has eating area 541-480-8648 Sea Kayaks - His & slide, A/C and heat, Hers, Eddyline Wind new tires, all conDancers,17’, fiberglass tents included, bed288 290 boats, all equip incl., Kodiak 23’ 2001, 350 ding towels, cooking ford, 43K mi., A/C, paddles, personal floSales Southeast Bend Sales Redmond Area and eating utensils. gen., new tires. stored tation devices,dry bags, Great for vacation, undercover. Comfortspray skirts,roof rack w/ Moving Sale: 2828 SW LETS MAKE A fishing, hunting or able & enjoyable. towers & cradles -Just Volcano Ct., Fri. 9-3, DEAL! living! $15,500 $24,000. add water, $1250/boat Sat. 10-2,2 tv’s, ‘50s Everything must go! 541-408-3811 541-548-2640. Firm. 541-504-8557. chair, oak cabinet,misc. 61532 American Loop. Unit #1. Take Reed Mkt to Multi-Family Sale: Sat. American Lane, right 8-3,1737 SW 31st, lots on American Loop, of great stuff, somenext to thing for everyone! American Towing. Fri. & Sat., 8-6. 292
Multi-Family Sale: FriSales Other Areas Sun, 8-3, collectibles, Sales Southeast Bend electronics, household, 20639 Wild Rose Ln, 2nd Hoarder’s Barn SaleCulver: Fri. & Sat., 9-4, 127 SE Airpark. Fri.Larkspur subdivision, 4664 SW Smith, Pulled Sat., 8-2. Household, out more boxes of colkitchen, sewing, Multi Family Sale: Fri.lectibles, milk & deSun. 8-5, Lots of baby crafts, good clean stuff. pression glass, lamps, stuff, speakers, stechina, 2 Pendleton reos etc., 535 SE 1 DAY ONLY. blankets,iron leg school Wildcat Dr. Sat. 6/30/12 desks (4),military items, Crafts/Yard Sale! truck bed trailer, doll & Elderly health Sundance Meadows, SALE! Barbi collectibles.Worth kids stuff, house60335 Arnold Market aides, a trip, priced to go! hold items, 20580 KlahRd., Bend. 9 a.m. - 6 ani Dr., off Brosterhous p.m., 541-389-7003. Rd., 10-3 Fri.; 9-3 Sat. Huge Sisters Moving Call for directions. Sale: Fri. & Sat., 9-6, 290 18440 McSwain Dr 2-Family Garage Sale, Sales Redmond Area cement mixer, welders, Fri & Sat., 9-3 (more household,great prices! stuff on Sat!) Kitchen 12” Hanging Basket Sale items, table saw, odds $10 ea, “Callies”, Petu& ends. 61000 Brosternias, Ivy Geraniums, tv Moving Sale, Lots of hous, Space #577 adult / children’s cloth& stand, treadmill, 2315 ing, appliances, campSW 29th St, off Salmon ing/outdoor equipment, 3-Family Garage Sale! Ave Sat. Only 8-? electronics, furniture, Sat-Sun, 6/30-7/1, 10-5, 6/29 - 7/1, 8-4, 1018 20676 Whitecliff Circle. Barn/Yard Sale! Rope SW Kenwood Dr. off Bargains galore! bed, furniture, houseCulver Hwy, Madras. hold, fabrics, crafts, 5753 SW Wickiup 4th Annual Multi-Family Ave., Fri-Sat, 8-4. Sale - Corner of Orion Moving Sale, Sat., 6/30 Dr. and Reed Mkt. Rd. 9-5, 2608 NW Century COOL GARAGE SALE! Shopsmith Mark-V, Sat., June Dr., Prineville. 2000W 30, 8-4, 2144 engine hoist, & other generator, 25 gallon air NW Jackpine Ct., 1 household items. Sat., compressor, tools, mile N of RHS. ConJune 30, 8-4 p.m. household, quality fursignment quality misniture, & much more! ses & juniors clothing, Community Wide Yard cool swivel chair, Sale. Sat., 6/30, 2 X-country skis, Christ- Shabby Chic, vintage, & communities in Bend's mas Village & the Vilcollectibles, Fri.-Sat., South eastside: Foxlage People, Bearing9:30-4, 18238 Fadjur borough & Larkspur. ton Bunny collection, all Ln, Sisters,Cash only. Enter off Brosterhous seeing Meade telesee Craigslist for pics. Rd to Foxborough scope. Manly tools and/or Larkspur. modern & vintage. A most excellent com- Sisters - Moving Sale! puter set-up & much Estate/Downsizing Sale! Sat. & Sun., 8-4, 154 more - bring a BIG rig! Large amount of items. E. Washington, (in Thurs 9am-?; Fri-Sat, Alley). Lots of good Sale: Fri. & 7am-? 1102 SE Gate- Garage stuff for any age. Sat. 10-4, electronics, wood Pl., Tanglewood. kitchen, linens, invisible fence, gas blower, Tumalo - Sat. Only, FIRST EVER Sat. 8-4. kid toys, collectibles, 9am - 4pm, 19875 7th Power tools, artwork, decorative accessoSt., 1 block north of RV/car/sports equip., ries & much more! Hwy 20 off Cook Ave. NEW quilts/crafts, 3133 SW 34th St. Antiques and Vintage MORE. 20377 Pine Flea Market. Vista Dr. (Woodside Garage Sale, Sat. 6/30 only, 9-? Something Ranch), inside. for everyone - come NOTICE see!! 1832 NE 8th St. Garage Sale - Tools, anRemember to remove tiques, sewing ma- Huge Annual 10 Family your Garage Sale signs chine, Christmas, yarn, (nails, staples, etc.) Sale: Fri.-Sat. 9-3, Furgarden pots. & much after your Sale event niture,kids clothes/toys, more! Fri & Sat, 8-3, is over! THANKS! men’s items, name 20960 Gardenia Ave. From The Bulletin brand clothes, 2744 & and your local utility 2807 NW Canyon Dr. Huge Yard Sale! Fri. companies. & Sat. 8-2. 2149 SE Huge Yard Sale, Sat. Harley Lane. Old only 9-4, 4719 NW china, jewelry, kids Maple Ave. Many toys & household. items to choose from. www.bendbulletin.com 288
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Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES: • 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For “Garage Sale Success!”
PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at
1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702
Garage Sale: Sat.-Sun. 9-5,Wet/Dry shop vac, tools, ladders, saws, work table, pictures, desk-59”x29.5”, 2426 NE Rosemary Dr., 541-350-3222 Heavenly Aroma candles, antiques, collectables, kids stuff, yard art. Sat. 9-4, Sun. 9-2, 1861 NE Tombstone Way. Huge Multi-Family Sale, Trinity Lutheran High School Gym, 2550 NE Butler Market Rd, 6/30, 9-2. Clothes, furniture, household items, exercise equip, children’s items, lots more! HUGE SALE! Husband passed away, guy stuff, clothes - XL, household, furniture, everything. 20583 Shaniko Ln. Fri. & Sat. 7:30am - 2pm. LARGE COMMUNITY SALE! Sat. July 30, 8 -3 The Commons at Pilot Butte, next to Pilot Butte trailhead. Moving Sale, Fri. & Sat., 9-5, 63310 Overtree Rd. Weber bbq, baby stuff, lots of furniture, 2007 Cadillac Escalade, & much more. Everything must go! Don’t miss! Moving Sale, priced to sell! Sat., 8-4, 63440 Hamehook Road, between Hamby & Deschutes Market Rds.
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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by ROBERT L. PALEN AND DENISE A. PALEN, as Grantors, to AMERITITLE, as Trustee, in favor of BANK OF THE CASCADES, as Beneficiary, dated September 13, 2006, recorded September 18, 2006, in the Records of Deschutes County, Oregon, in Volume 2006 at page 63100, and as Instrument No. 2006-63100, covering the following described real property: LOT 27, BLOCK 17, TALL PINES FOURTH ADDITION, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON - commonly known as 53258 Woodstock Drive, LaPine, OR, 97739. The Beneficiary and Successor Trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed, and Notice of Default was recorded pursuant to ORS 86.735(3). The default for which the foreclosure is made is: Grantors' failure to make monthly payments of principal and interest in the amount of $1,083.09 from October 25, 2011, through present, together with late fees and collection and other charges as of April 1, 2012, as follows: Late Fees - $324.90,and Collection and Other Charges - $275.00. Due to the default described above, the Beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following: A. Principal = $56,858.21, plus interest thereon at the rate of 8.990% per annum from April 2, 2012 until paid in full; B. Accrued Interest as of April 1, 2012 = $1,927.44; C. Late Charges as of April 1, 2012 = $324.90; D. Collection and Other Charges as of April 1, 2012 = $275.00; and E. Beneficiary's costs, expenses and attorney fees incurred enforcing the loan agreement with Grantors. NOTICE: The undersigned trustee, on September 19, 2012, at 11:00 a.m., in accordance with ORS 187.110, on the Front Steps, RiverPointe One Building (Office of Karnopp Petersen LLP), 1201 N.W. Wall Street, the City of Bend, the County of Deschutes, the State of Oregon, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the real property described above which the Grantors had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by them of said trust deed, together with any interest that the Grantors or Grantors' successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of the sale, including a reasonable charge by the Trustee. NOTICE: Any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the Beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee and attorney fees not exceeding the amounts provided by ORS 86.753, and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under said trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter; singular includes the plural; the word "Grantor" includes any successor in interest to the Grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the trust deed; and the words "Trustee" and "Beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. DATED this 11th day of May, 2012. /s/ Tamara E. MacLeod. Tamara MacLeod, Karnopp Petersen LLP, Successor Trustee, tem@karnopp.com, 1201 NW Wall Street, Bend, OR 97701, TEL: (541) 382-3011 FAX: (541) 383-3073. STATE OF Oregon, County of Deschutes ) ss. I, the undersigned, certify that I am the duly appointed Successor Trustee and one of the attorneys for the above-named Beneficiary and that the foregoing is a complete and exact copy of the original Trustee's Notice of Sale. /s/ Tamara E. MacLeod Tamara MacLeod, Successor Trustee and Attorney for Beneficiary
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809 881
881
Travel Trailers
Travel Trailers
Springdale 29’ 2007, slide,Bunkhouse style, sleeps 7-8, excellent condition, $16,900, 541-390-2504
Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler 28’ 2007,Gen, fuel station, exc cond. sleeps 8, black/gray interior, used 3X, $24,999. 541-389-9188 882
Fifth Wheels
Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 29’, weatherized, like new, furnished & ready to go, incl Winegard Satellite dish, $26,995. 541-420-9964
Alfa Ideal 2001, 31’, 3 slides, island kitchen, AC/heat pump, generator, satellite system, 2 flatscreen TVs, hitch & awning incl. $16,000. (Dodge 3500 1 ton also available) 541-388-1529;408-4877
Teardrop 2011, 2 doors, rear kitchen, sleeps 2, $5900, 541-480-7820
Viking Tent trailer 2008, clean, self contained, sleep 5, easy to tow, great cond. $6500. 541-383-7150.
Alpha “See Ya” 30’ 1996, 2 slides, A/C, heat pump, exc. cond. for Snowbirds, solid oak cabs day & night shades, Corian, tile, hardwood. $12,750. 541-923-3417.
Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Meet singles right now! At: www.bendbulletin.com No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect you St. Jude & live. Try it free. Call Thank Sacred Heart of now: 877-955-5505. Jesus. - RWS
personals
personals
CALL A SERVICE PROFESSIONAL Call 541-385-5809 to promote your service
Building/Contracting
Landscaping/Yard Care
NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: OREGON law requires anyLandscape Contracone who contracts tors Law (ORS 671) for construction work requires all busito be licensed with the nesses that advertise Construction Conto perform Landtractors Board (CCB). scape Construction An active license which includes: means the contractor planting, decks, is bonded and infences, arbors, sured. Verify the water-features, and contractor’s CCB liinstallation, repair of cense through the irrigation systems to CCB Consumer be licensed with the Website Landscape Contracwww.hirealicensedcontractor. tors Board. This com 4-digit number is to be or call 503-378-4621. included in all adverThe Bulletin recomtisements which indimends checking with cate the business has the CCB prior to cona bond, insurance and tracting with anyone. workers compensaSome other trades tion for their employalso require addiees. For your protectional licenses and tion call 503-378-5909 certifications. or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to Computer/Cabling Install check license status before contracting QB Digital Living with the business. •Computer Networking Persons doing land•Phone/Data/TV Jacks scape maintenance •Whole House Audio do not require a LCB •Flat Screen TV & Inlicense. stallation 541-280-6771 Nelson Landscape www.qbdigitalliving.com Maintenance CCB#127370 Elect Lic#9-206C
Debris Removal
JUNK BE GONE
I Haul Away FREE
For Salvage. Also Cleanups & Cleanouts Mel, 541-389-8107
Serving Central Oregon Residential & Commercial
•Sprinkler Repair •Back Flow Testing •Thatch & Aerate • Summer Clean up
•Weekly Mowing •Bi-Monthly & Monthly Maintenance •Flower Bed Clean Up Quality Builders Electric •Bark, Rock, Etc. • Remodels •Senior Discounts • Home Improvement Electrical Services
• Lighting Upgrades • Hot Tub Hook-ups 541-389-0621 www.qbelectric.net CCB#127370 Elect Lic#9-206C Handyman
Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB#8759
Call The Yard Doctor for yard maintenance, thatching, sod, sprinkler blowouts, water features, more! Allen 541-536-1294 LCB 5012 Aeration / Dethatching BOOK NOW!
ERIC REEVE HANDY SERVICES. Home & Commercial Repairs, Carpentry-Painting, Weekly / one-time service Pressure-washing, avail. Bonded, insured, Honey Do's. On-time free estimates! promise. Senior Discount. Work guar- COLLINS Lawn Maint. Call 541-480-9714 anteed. 541-389-3361 or 541-771-4463 Bonded & Insured Tick, Tock CCB#181595 Tick, Tock... I DO THAT! Home/Rental repairs ...don’t let time get Small jobs to remodels away. Hire a Honest, guaranteed work. CCB#151573 professional out Dennis 541-317-9768 of The Bulletin’s Landscaping/Yard Care “Call A Service Professional” Directory today!
More Than Service Peace Of Mind
Spring Clean Up
•Leaves •Cones •Needles •Debris Hauling •Aeration •Dethatching Compost Top Dressing
Maverick Landscaping Mowing, weedeating, yard detailing, chain saw work & more! LCB#8671 541-923-4324
Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales
Weed free Bark & flower beds
Find them in The Bulletin Classiieds
ORGANIC PROGRAMS
541-385-5809
Landscape Maintenance
Holmes Landscape Maint
Full or Partial Service •Mowing •Edging •Pruning •Weeding Sprinkler Adjustments
• Clean-up • Aerate • De-thatch • Free Est. • Weekly / Bi-wkly Svc. call Josh 541-610-6011 Painting/Wall Covering
Fertilizer included with monthly program WESTERN PAINTING Weekly, monthly or one time service. EXPERIENCED Commercial & Residential Free Estimates Senior Discounts
541-390-1466 Same Day Response
CO. Richard Hayman, a semi-retired painting contractor of 45 years. Small Jobs Welcome. Interior & Exterior. ccb#5184. 541-388-6910
Quality Painter Fast Friendly Service Steve King Painting, CCB#60218, 541-977-8329
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 E3
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LEGAL NOTICE ADOPTION OF ORDINANCE Adoption of Emergency Ordinance No. 12-01, amending Section 12 of Ordinance No. 02-01; repealing all subsequent amendments thereto; setting a sewer service charge; and declaring an emergency. Rate analysis indicates that the district cannot meet debt service or other District obligations without raising rates. This Ordinance was adopted on June 21, 2012 and takes effect on July 1, 2012. A copy is on file at the District office and at the office of the Deschutes County Clerk available for public inspection. LEGAL NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF DESCHUTES PROBATE DEPARTMENT In the Matter of the Estate of PATRICK FRANZEN, Deceased. Case No. 12 PB 0058 NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS
The undersigned has LEGAL NOTICE been appointed perOn June 30, 2012, at sonal representative 10:00 am at 257 SE of the Estate of 2nd St., Alliance StorPATRICK FRANZEN, age, LLC will handle Deceased, by the Dethe disposition of the schutes County Cirentire contents of Unit cuit Court of the State #184, 10x10, Kimof Oregon, probate berly & Jeremy number12 PB 0058. McGregor, #288, All persons having 5x10, James Parker, claims against the #74, 5x10, Elliott estate are required to Michaels, to satisfy present the same with said lien of the above proper vouchers named. within four (4) months after the date of first FIND YOUR FUTURE publication to the un- HOME IN THE BULLETIN dersigned or they may be barred. Additional Your future is just a page information may be away. Whether you’re looking obtained from the for a hat or a place to hang it, court records, the unThe Bulletin Classiied is dersigned or the atyour best source. torney. Every day thousands of Date first published: buyers and sellers of goods June 23, 2012 and services do business in Leigh Ann Franzen these pages. They know Personal you can’t beat The Bulletin Representative Classiied Section for c/o Craig P. Emerson selection and convenience Attorney at Law - every item is just a phone Bryant Emerson & call away. Fitch, LLP PO Box 457 The Classiied Section is Redmond OR 97756 easy to use. Every item is categorized and every cartegory is indexed on the Say “goodbuy” section’s front page. to that unused Whether you are looking for a home or need a service, item by placing it in your future is in the pages of The Bulletin Classiieds The Bulletin Classiied.
541-385-5809
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LEGAL NOTICE Oregon Notice of Sale Note Well: The bold print words and phrases herein are defined on Identifying Data attached hereto. The persons and things to which those words and phrases apply to herein are also stated on Identifying Data attached hereto. Only Identifying Data is attached to the copy hereof that is published. (1) Not a Payment Demand. This is not a demand that any person make any payment on The Debt or an assertion that any person has personal liability on The Debt. (2) Defaults. The Defaults have occurred on The Debt. (3) Election to Sell. Because of The Defaults, The Foreclosing Party has elected to sell and intends to sell or cause to be sold The Collateral at a public foreclosure sale for cash in U.S. currency. The Collateral may be subject to other liens and encumbrances that may not be extinguished by the Foreclosure Sale. Before bidding, it is your legal duty to research the status of title. (4) Foreclosure Sale. The foreclosure sale shall be held: Date: September 13, 2012. Place: Deschutes County Courthouse. Time: 10:00 a.m. 1164 NW Bond, Bend, OR 97701. (5) Cure Right, Payoff Right. You may have a right to pay The Defaults (i.e., a Cure Right under ORS 86.753) or payoff all amounts owed on the Debt (i.e. Payoff Right) if paid before the foreclosure sale. The Trustee will provide those cure and payoff amounts to you if you request them. A Cure or Payoff will nullify this Notice and its Foreclosure Sale. No Cure or Payoff in the next 30 days will cause additional costs (recording, transmitting, publication, etc.) to be incurred, cause publication of The Defaults and advertise the Collateral's Foreclosure Sale. (6) Redemption Right/Redemption Period. Redemption, i.e., the right to pay the successful bid at the foreclosure sale for a period of time after the sale, is not permitted, except when there is an IRS lien, IRS may redeem during the 120 days after the Foreclosure Sale. (7) Court Right. This foreclosure will not involve any judge or court. You have a right to ask a court to be involved in this foreclosure by filing a lawsuit asking for a court's involvement. Philip M. Kleinsmith, Attorney for Foreclosing Party and/or Present Trustee, Atty. Reg. No. #3931, 6035 Erin Park Dr., #203, Colorado Springs, CO 80918, Phone: 1-800-842-8417, Fax: 1-719-593-2193, E-mail: klein@kleinsmithlaw.com. THIS IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. State of Colorado) County of El Paso) On June 12 ,2012, before me personally appeared Philip M. Kleinsmith as said attorney and/or trustee, personally known to me. Under oath and penalty of perjury, he stated that this Notice and its attachments are true to the best of his knowledge. The Foreclosing Party: has actual or construction possession of The Debt, and; he has authority to exercise the power of sale in The Lien pursuant to the Foreclosing Party's instructions. Witness my hand and official seal. My commission expires: 2-14-16. Name and Address of Notary: Name: Angelica J. Smith, 6035 Erin Park Dr., #203, Colorado Springs, CO 80918. ailing Note: This Notice with Identifying Data and Notice to Residential Tenants attached: (a)The original was mailed, certified mail, return receipt requested, for recording; (b)Copies were mailed, regular and certified mail, return receipt requested, to each Interested Party at each of their addresses on Schedule 3. (c)When the IRS and/or an Oregon government agency is/are Interested Parties on Identifying Data, its/their copy was mailed with, in addition, with a copy of its/their recorded lien. (d)Copies were mailed to be served and/or posted. (e)A copy was mailed for publication with only Identifying Data attached. Dated: June 12, 2012. Ashley Caviness, Signature of Mailer. NOTICE TO RESIDENTIAL TENANTS: The property in which you are living is in foreclosure. A foreclosure sale is scheduled for the date stated in the Notice of Sale to which this Notice is attached. Unless the lender who is foreclosing on this property is paid, the foreclosure will go through and someone new will own this property. After the sale, the new owner is required to provide you with contact information and notice that the sale took place. The following information applies to you only if you are a bona fide tenant occupying and renting this property as a residential dwelling under a legitimate rental agreement. The information does not apply to you if you own this property or if you are not a bona fide residential tenant. If the foreclosure goes through, the new owner will have the right to require you to move out. Before the new owner can require you to move, the new owner must provide you with written notice that specifies the date by which you have to move out. If you do not leave before the move-out date, the buyer can have the sheriff remove you from the property after a court hearing. You will receive notice of the court hearing. PROTECTION FROM EVICTION: IF YOU ARE A BONA FIDE TENANT OCCUPYING AND RENTING THIS PROPERTY AS A RESIDENTIAL DWELLING, YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO CONTINUE LIVING IN THIS PROPERTY AFTER THE FORECLOSURE SALE FOR: THE REMAINDER OF YOUR FIXED TERM LEASE, IF YOU HAVE A FIXED TERM LEASE; OR AT LEAST 90 DAYS FROM THE DATE YOU ARE GIVEN A WRITTEN TERMINATION NOTICE. If the buyer wants to move in and use this property as a primary residence, the new owner can give you written notice and require you to move out after 90 days, even if you have a fixed-term lease with more than 30 days left. You must be provided with at least 90 days' written notice after the foreclosure sale before you can be required to move. A bona fide tenant is a residential tenant who is not the borrower (property owner) or a child, spouse or parent of the borrower, and whose rental agreement: Is the result of an arm's length transaction; Requires the payment of rent that is not substantially less than fair market rent for the property, unless the rent is reduced or subsidized due to a federal, state or local subsidy; and Was entered into prior to the date of the foreclosure sale. ABOUT YOUR TENANCY BETWEEN NOW AND THE FORECLOSURE SALE: RENT - YOU SHOULD CONTINUE TO PAY RENT TO YOUR LANDLORD UNTIL THE PROPERTY IS SOLD OR UNTIL A COURT TELLS YOU OTHERWISE. IF YOU DO NOT PAY RENT, YOU CAN BE EVICTED. BE SURE TO KEEP PROOF OF ANY PAYMENTS YOU MAKE. SECURITY DEPOSIT: You may apply your security deposit and any rent you paid in advance against the current rent you owe your landlord as provided in ORS 90.367. To do this, you must notify your landlord in writing that you want to subtract the amount of your security deposit or prepaid rent from your rent payment. You may do this only for the rent you owe your current landlord. If you do this, you must do so before the foreclosure sale. The business or individual who buys this property at the foreclosure sale is not responsible to you for any deposit or prepaid rent you paid to your landlord. ABOUT YOUR TENANCY AFTER THE FORECLOSURE SALE: The new owner that buys this property at the foreclosure sale may be willing to allow you to stay as a tenant instead of requiring you to move out after 90 days or at the end of your fixed term lease. After the sale, you should receive a written notice informing you that the sale took place and giving you the new owner's name and contact information. You should contact the new owner if you would like to stay. If the new owner accepts rent from you, signs a new residential agreement with you or does not notify you in writing within 30 days after the date of the foreclosure sale that you must move out, the new owner becomes your landlord and must maintain the property. Otherwise: You do not owe rent; The new owner is not your landlord and is not responsible for maintaining the property on your behalf, and; You must move out by the date the new owner specifies in a notice to you. The new owner may offer to pay your moving expenses and any other costs or amounts you and the new owner agree on in exchange for your agreement to leave the premises in less than 90 days or before your fixed term lease expires. You should speak with a lawyer to fully understand your rights before making any decisions regarding your tenancy. IT IS UNLAWFUL FOR ANY PERSON TO TRY TO FORCE YOU TO LEAVE YOUR DWELLING UNIT WITHOUT FIRST GIVING YOU WRITTEN NOTICE AND GOING TO COURT TO EVICT YOU. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR RIGHTS, YOU SHOULD CONSULT A LAWYER. If you believe you need legal assistance, contact the Oregon State Bar and ask for the lawyer referral service. Contact information for the Oregon State Bar is 800-723-3638. If you do not have enough money to pay a lawyer or are otherwise eligible, you may be able to receive legal assistance for free. Information about whom to contact for free legal assistance can be obtained by calling 800-452-7636.
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-09-331238-SH Reference is made to that certain deed made by KEVIN L PALOTAY & MAREN J PALOTAY as Grantor to AMERITITLE, as trustee, in favor of ALPINE MORTGAGE, LLC, as Beneficiary, dated 3/24/2004, recorded 04/05/2004, in official records of Deschutes County, Oregon, in book / reel / volume number fee / file / instrument / microfile / reception number 2004-18526, , covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to wit: APN: 109199 *SEE EXHIBIT "A" ATTACHED* Schedule "A" LEGAL DESCRIPTION A parcel of land in the Southwest Quarter of the Northeast Quarter (SW1/4NE1/4) of Section Nineteen (19), Township Seventeen (17) South, Range Thirteen (13) East of the Willamette Meridian, Deschutes County, Oregon, more particularly described as follows: Beginning at the center quarter corner of Said Section 19; thence North 00º13'11" East, 660.76 feet to the true point of beginning; thence continuing North 00º13'11" East, 644.38 feet; thence North 89º59'45" East, 330.00 feet; thence South 00º13'11" West, 306.13 feet; thence North 89º58'45" East, 15.30 feet; thence South 00º13'11" West, 338.14 feet; thence South 89º58'45" West, 345.30 feet to the true point of beginning. Commonly known as: 22224 NELSON ROAD, BEND, OR 97701 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 9/1/2009, and all subsequent installments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent property taxes, insurance premiums, advances made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries efforts to protect and preserve its security, all of which must be paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Monthly Payment $1,825.43 Monthly Late Charge $74.99 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: The sum of $245,569.96 together with interest thereon at the rate of 5.3750 per annum from 8/1/2009 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the undersigned trustee will on 10/9/2012 at the hour of 01:00 PM , Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statutes, At the front entrance to the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond St., Bend, OR 97701 County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-573-1965 or Login to: www.priorityposting.com. 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 an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington. If there are any irregularities discovered within 10 days of the date of this sale, that the trustee will rescind the sale, return the buyer's money and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the Beneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holder's rights against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Dated: 6/4/2012 Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as Trustee Signature By: Timothy Donlon, Assistant Secretary Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 For Non-Sale Information: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington c/o Quality Loan Service Corp. 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 Fax: 619-645-7716 NOTICE TO RESIDENTIAL TENANTS The property in which you are living is in foreclosure. A foreclosure sale is scheduled for 10/9/2012. The date of this sale may be postponed. Unless the lender that is foreclosing on this property is paid before the sale date, the foreclosure will go through and someone new will own this property. After the sale, the new owner is required to provide you with contact information and notice that the sale took place. The following information applies to you only if you are a bona fide tenant occupying and renting this property as a residential dwelling under a legitimate rental agreement. The information does not apply to you if you own this property or if you are not a bona fide residential tenant. If the foreclosure sale goes through, the new owner will have the right to require you to move out. Before the new owner can require you to move, the new owner must provide you with written notice that specifies the date by which you must move out. If you do not leave before the move-out date, the new owner can have the sheriff remove you from the property after a court hearing. You will receive notice of the court hearing. PROTECTION FROM EVICTION IF YOU ARE A BONA FIDE TENANT OCCUPYING AND RENTING THIS PROPERTY AS A RESIDENTIAL DWELLING, YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO CONTINUE LIVING IN THIS PROPERTY AFTER THE FORECLOSURE SALE FOR: o THE REMAINDER OF YOUR FIXED TERM LEASE, IF YOU HAVE A FIXED TERM LEASE; OR o AT LEAST 90 DAYS FROM THE DATE YOU ARE GIVEN A WRITTEN TERMINATION NOTICE. If the new owner wants to move in and use this property as a primary residence, the new owner can give you written notice and require you to move out after 90 days, even though you have a fixed term lease with more than 90 days left. You must be provided with at least 90 days' written notice after the foreclosure sale before you can be required to move. A bona fide tenant is a residential tenant who is not the borrower (property owner) or a child, spouse or parent of the borrower, and whose rental agreement: o Is the result of an arm's-length transaction; o Requires the payment of rent that is not substantially less than fair market rent for the property, unless the rent is reduced or subsidized due to a federal, state or local subsidy; and o Was entered into prior to the date of the foreclosure sale. ABOUT YOUR TENANCY BETWEEN NOW AND THE FORECLOSURE SALE: RENT YOU SHOULD CONTINUE TO PAY RENT TO YOUR LANDLORD UNTIL THE PROPERTY IS SOLD OR UNTIL A COURT TELLS YOU OTHERWISE. IF YOU DO NOT PAY RENT, YOU CAN BE EVICTED. BE SURE TO KEEP PROOF OF ANY PAYMENTS YOU MAKE. SECURITY DEPOSIT You may apply your security deposit and any rent you paid in advance against the current rent you owe your landlord as provided in ORS 90.367. To do this, you must notify your landlord in writing that you want to subtract the amount of your security deposit or prepaid rent from your rent payment. You may do this only for the rent you owe your current landlord. If you do this, you must do so before the foreclosure sale. The business or individual who buys this property at the foreclosure sale is not responsible to you for any deposit or prepaid rent you paid to your landlord. ABOUT YOUR TENANCY AFTER THE FORECLOSURE SALE The new owner that buys this property at the foreclosure sale may be willing to allow you to stay as a tenant instead of requiring you to move out after 90 days or at the end of your fixed term lease. After the sale, you should receive a written notice informing you that the sale took place and giving you the new owner's name and contact information. You should contact the new owner if you would like to stay. If the new owner accepts rent from you, signs a new residential rental agreement with you or does not notify you in writing within 30 days after the date of the foreclosure sale that you must move out, the new owner becomes your new landlord and must maintain the property. Otherwise: o You do not owe rent; o The new owner is not your landlord and is not responsible for maintaining the property on your behalf; and o You must move out by the date the new owner specifies in a notice to you. The new owner may offer to pay your moving expenses and any other costs or amounts you and the new owner agree on in exchange for your agreement to leave the premises in less than 90 days or before your fixed term lease expires. You should speak with a lawyer to fully understand your rights before making any decisions regarding your tenancy. IT IS UNLAWFUL FOR ANY PERSON TO TRY TO FORCE YOU TO LEAVE YOUR DWELLING UNIT WITHOUT FIRST GIVING YOU WRITTEN NOTICE AND GOING TO COURT TO EVICT YOU. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR RIGHTS, YOU SHOULD CONSULT A LAWYER. If you believe you need legal assistance, contact the Oregon State Bar and ask for the lawyer referral service. Contact information for the Oregon State Bar is included with this notice. If you do not have enough money to pay a lawyer and are otherwise eligible, you may be able to receive legal assistance for free. Information about whom to contact for free legal assistance is included with this notice. Oregon State Bar: (503) 684-3763; (800) 452-7636 Legal assistance: www.lawhelp.org/or/index.cfm P955476 6/9, 6/16, 6/23, 06/30/2012
Clearance. Clearance. Clearance.
541-385-5809
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
E4 SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN 882
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Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Ford 2007 LCF 45, V6 Power Stroke, 21,500 mi.,14’ utility bed/box. Like new cond., FM, CD, Bluetooth, Nav., back-up camera, Sold new in 2010, still has drive-train warranty. $24,000 OBO, 530-401-1754
Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, $15,000 OBO, trades, please call 541-420-5453.
Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 by Carriage, 4 slideouts, inverter, satellite sys, fireplace, 2 flat screen TVs. $60,000. 541-480-3923
Sundance 29’ 2009, 3 slides, quality queen mattress, non smoking, elec. jacks, upgrades, oak cabinets, fully loaded, $18,500 OBO; 541-610-5178
Taurus 27.5’ 1988
Everything works, $1750/partial trade for car. 541-460-9127 Fleetwood Wilderness 36’, 2005, 4 slides, rear bdrm, fireplace, AC, W/D hkup beautiful unit! $30,500. 541-815-2380
Wilderness Advantage 31’, 2004. 2 slides, 2 TVs, micro, solar sys, $17,950. (Also avail: 2003 Ford F250 Diesel X-cab.) 541-385-5077
INT. Dump 1982, w/arborhood, 6k on rebuilt 392, truck refurbished, has 330 gal. water tank w/pump & hose. Everything works, Reduced - now $5000 OBO. 541-977-8988
885 Montana 3400RL 2008, 4 slides, no smokers or Canopies & Campers pets, limited usage, 5500 watt Onan gen, Lance 11.6 camper Mdl solar panel, fireplace, 1130, 1999. Ext’d cab, dual A/C, central vac, fully self-contained. elect. awning w/sunIncl catalytic heater, Peterbilt 359 potable screen arctic pkg, rear water truck, 1990, TV/VCR combo. Very receiver, alum wheels, 2 3200 gal. tank, 5hp well taken care of, TVs, many extras. pump, 4-3" hoses, clean. Hauls easily, $35,500. 541-416-8087 camlocks, $25,000. very comfortable. 541-820-3724 $6999. 541-382-1344
Montana 34’ 2003, 2 slides, exc. cond. throughout, arctic winter pkg., new 10-ply tires, W/D ready, $18,000, 541-390-6531
925
Autos & Transportation
Utility Trailers
Big Tex Landscaping/ ATV Trailer, dual axle flatbed, 7’x16’, 7000 lb. GVW, all steel, $1400. 541-382-4115, or 541-280-7024.
908
Aircraft, Parts & Service MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, lrg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $37,500. 541-420-3250
931
Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories 1/3 interest in Colum- (4) 215/6012-16 snow tires, fits 2002 Subaru bia 400, located at Forester. $50/all. Sunriver. $138,500. 541-420-3395. Call 541-647-3718 1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, located KBDN. $55,000. 541-419-9510
Executive Hangar
Car Rotisserie, air over hydraulic jacks, supports up to 3000 lbs, $1850. 1500-lb engine stand, $125. 1000-lb engine stand, $75. 1500 lb engine stand & dolly, $75. Plasma cutter, Cutmaster 80XL, $900. Assortment of adjustable roller stands. 541-390-1470
at Bend Airport (KBDN) 60’ wide x 50’ deep, w/55’ wide x 17’ high bi-fold door. Natural gas heat, office, bathroom. Parking for 6 Thule Evolution Carrier, cars. Adjacent to for sports equip. $200. Frontage Rd; great 541-330-8774 visibility for aviation bus. 1jetjock@q.com We Buy Junk 541-948-2126 Cars & Trucks! Cash paid for junk vehicles, batteries & catalytic converters. Serving all of C.O.! Call 541-408-1090
Pilgrim 27’, 2007 5th wheel, 1 slide, AC, TV,full awning, excellent shape, $23,900. 541-350-8629
Regal Prowler AX6 Extreme Edition 38’ ‘05, 4 slides,2 fireplaces, all maple cabs, king bed/ bdrm separated w/slide glass dr,loaded,always garaged,lived in only 3 mo,brand new $54,000, still like new, $28,500, will deliver,see rvt.com, ad#4957646 for pics. Cory, 541-580-7334
Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds Chrysler 300 Coupe 1967, 440 engine, auto. trans, ps, air, frame on rebuild, repainted original blue, original blue interior, original hub caps, exc. chrome, asking $9000 or make offer. 541-385-9350.
Chrysler SD 4-Door 1930, CDS Royal Standard, 8-cylinder, body is good, needs some restoration, runs, taking bids, 541-383-3888, 541-815-3318 COLLECTOR CAR AUCTION Sat. July 7th, ROSEBURG , OR a Graffiti Weekend Event, call now for info 541-689-6824
petersencollectorcars.com
900
Open Road 37' 2004 3 slides, W/D hookup, large LR w/rear window. Desk area. Asking $19,750 OBO Call (541) 280-7879 visit rvt.com ad#104243920 for pics
Advertise your car! Add A Picture!
Reach thousands of readers!
ONLY 2 OWNERSHIP SHARES LEFT! Economical flying in your own Cessna 172/180 HP for only $10,000! Based at BDN. Call Gabe at Professional Air! 541-388-0019
FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, door panels w/flowers & hummingbirds, white soft top & hard top, Reduced! $5,500. 541-317-9319 or 541-647-8483 Ford Mustang Coupe 1966, original owner, V8, automatic, great shape, $9000 OBO. 530-515-8199
GMC ½ ton 1971, Only $19,700! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171
Mercury Monterrey 1965, Exc. All original, 4-dr. sedan, in stor- Ford F350 2010, Gas V8, age last 15 yrs., 390 5.4L, 4WD, X-cab, High Compression 8000 mi., loaded w/extras, always garaged, engine, new tires & liFord warranty,$30,850, cense, reduced to Home: 541-549-4834 $2850, 541-410-3425. Cell: 541-588-0068.
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Antique & Classic Autos
Chevy Pickup 1951,
restored. $13,500 obo; 541-504-3253 or 503-504-2764
*** Ford Ranger XLT Chevy Suburban BMW 525i 2004, CHECK YOUR AD 1998 X-cab LTZ 2007, white, New body style, Please check your ad 2.5L 4-cyl engine, approx. 26,600 mi., Steptronic auto., on the first day it runs 5-spd standard trans, cold-weather packleather, to many opto make sure it is corlong bed, newer moage, premium packtions for ad. Excelrect. Sometimes intor & paint, new clutch age, heated seats, lent-Excellent Con- Porsche Cayenne 2004, structions over the & tires, excellent conextra nice. $14,995. dition! $39,000 Firm. 86k, immac, dealer phone are misdition, clean, $4500. 503-635-9494. 541-410-8932 maint’d, loaded, now understood and an error Call 541-447-6552 $17000. 503-459-1580 can occur in your ad. Buicks Galore! No If this happens to your Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 junk! LeSabres, Laad, please contact us 4x4. 120K mi, Power Crosse & Lucernes the first day your ad seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd Range Rover 2005 priced $5000-$8500 row seating, extra appears and we will HSE, nav, DVD, GMC ½-ton Pickup, for serious buyers tires, CD, privacy tintbe happy to fix it local car, new tires, 1972, LWB, 350hi only. All are ‘03’s and ing, upgraded rims. as soon as we can. 51K miles. motor, mechanically newer. 541-318-9999. Fantastic cond. $7995 Deadlines are: Week$24,995. A-1, interior great; Ask about Free Trip to Contact Timm at days 12:00 noon for 503-635-9494 body needs some Washington, D.C. for 541-408-2393 for info next day, Sat. 11:00 TLC. $4000 OBO. WWII Veterans. or to view vehicle. a.m. for Sunday; Sat. Call 541-382-9441 12:00 for Monday. If Ford Thunderbird 1988, People Look for Information we can assist you, 3.8 V-6, 35K actual mi., Find exactly what About Products and Just bought a new boat? please call us: new hoses, belts, tires, Sell your old one in the Services Every Day through you are looking for in the 541-385-5809 battery, pb, ps, cruise, The Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin Classified classiieds! Ask about our CLASSIFIEDS A/C, CD, exc. cond. in Super Seller rates! *** & out, 2nd owner, 541-385-5809 maint. records, must Chevy Trailblazer see & drive! $4500, Range Rover, 2005, gold, LS 4X4, 541-330-0733 2006 Sport HSE, 6 cyl., auto, A/C, pdl, Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4, nav, AWD, heated new tires, keyless Mitsubishi 3000 GT 1995, extended cab, International seats, moonroof, Flat entry, 66K mi., exc. 1999, auto., pearl long box, grill guard, local owner, Bed Pickup 1963, 1 cond. $9,399. white, very low mi. running boards, bed Harman Kardon, ton dually, 4 spd. 541-598-5111 $9500. 541-788-8218. rails & canopy, 178K $23,995. trans., great MPG, miles, $4800 obo. 503-635-9494 could be exc. wood 208-301-3321 (Bend) Need to sell a hauler, runs great, Vehicle? new brakes, $1950. 940 Call The Bulletin 541-419-5480. Find It in Ford Excursion and place an ad toVans The Bulletin Classifieds! 2005, 4WD, diesel, day! exc. cond., $19,900, 541-385-5809 Mazda B4000 2004 Ask about our Honda Odyssey 2000, call 541-923-0231. Cab Plus 4x4. 4½ yrs "Wheel Deal"! 1 owner, 135K mi., or 95,000 miles left on Chevy Silverado 1998, for private party new catalytic conext’d warranty. V6, black and silver, pro advertisers verter, snow tires, GMC Denali 2003 5-spd, AC, studded lifted, loaded, new 33” battery, brakes & loaded with options. tires, 2 extra rims, tires, aluminum slot windshield, maint. Exc. cond., snow tow pkg, 132K mi, all wheels, tow pkg., drop records, garaged, 541-385-5809 tires and rims inrecords, exlnt cond, hitch, diamond plate $6500, SE Bend, cluded. 130k hwy $9500. 541-408-8611 tool box, $12,000, or 541-508-8784. miles. $12,000. possible trade for newer Check out the 541-419-4890. Tacoma. 541-460-9127 Ram 1500 1997 V8 classiieds online NISSAN QUEST Magnum steel flatbed www.bendbulletin.com 1996, 3-seat mini truck, $6,500 • 1989 Dodge 1500 2001, 4x4 van, extra nice in and Updated daily sport, red, loaded, Dakota convertible out $3,900. Sold my rollbar, AND 2011 pickup $2500 • 1978 Windstar, need anPORSCHE 914 1974, Moped Trike used 3 Ford 330 industrial V8 other van! Roller (no engine), months, street legal. ex-U-Haul, $2295 541-318-9999, ask lowered, full roll cage, call 541-433-2384 541-548-7171 for Bob. Ask about 5-pt harnesses, racfree trip to D.C. for Jeep Cherokee 1990, ing seats, 911 dash & Ford F150 2008 Super935 WWII vets. 4WD, 3 sets rims & instruments, decent crew 4x4. $25,995. Sport Utility Vehicles tires, exlnt set snow shape, very cool! tires, great 1st car! $1699. 541-678-3249 975 $1800. 541-633-5149 Automobiles Toyota Camry Solara Sport Coupe 2004, 4 cyl, AT, sunroof, clearCHEVY AUDI QUATTRO #B08376 541-598-3750 coat black, 32mpg, lots SUBURBAN LT aaaoregonautosource.com CABRIOLET 2004, of extras, 30K miles, 2005, low miles., extra nice, low milelike new, $11,950. good tires, new Ford F250 XLT ‘95, 4WD age, heated seats, 541-388-8887 auto, long bed, 3/4 ton, brakes, moonroof new Michelins, all Jeep Willys 1947,custom, 8600 GVW, white,178K Reduced to wheel drive, small block Chevy, PS, Volvo XC70 2002, leather mi, AC, pw, pdl, Sirius, $15,750 $12,995 OD,mags+ trailer.Swap sunroof, loaded, drives tow pkg., bedliner, bed 503-635-9494. for backhoe.No am calls great! Extra set of tires, 541-389-5016. rail caps, rear slide $7600, 541-410-3386. please. 541-389-6990 window, new tires, radiator, water pump, hoses, brakes, more, $5200, 541-322-0215
Plymouth Barracuda 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 V8, centerlines, (Original 273 eng & wheels incl.) 541-593-2597
Ford F-350 XLT 2003, 4X4, 6L diesel, 6-spd manual, Super Cab, short box, 12K Warn winch, custom bumper & canopy, running boards, 2 sets tires, wheels & chains, many extras, perfect, ONLY 29,800 miles, $27,500 OBO, 541-504-8316.
SM OLICH MO T OR S
2012 Subaru Forester 2.5X
$
21,341
OR AS LOW AS
0.9 % *
Only 1
A.P.R. UP TO 36 MOS
MSRP $23,270 VIN: CH452594. Installed options, tax, title, license doc. not included. *Tier 1 financing. On Approved Credit. CFB-21
2012 Subaru Legacy 2.5i Premium
$
22,499
OR AS LOW AS
*
0.9
UP TO 36 MOS
Heated Seats, Alloy Wheels, CVT
MSRP $23,845. VIN: C3040762. Installed options, tax, title, license doc. not included. *Tier 1 financing. On Approved Credit. CAD-02
0% 72 MO*
2012 Subaru Outback 2.5i Base Manual
$
23,999
OR AS LOW AS
NEW 2012 SUZUKI $ SX4 AWD
255/mo.
VIN: C6304106. Stock#: Z12001. MSRP $19,995. Down Payment $2,000. 0% for 72 months. On approved credit.
0.9 % *
A.P.R. UP TO 36 MOS
MSRP $25,370 VIN: C3292074. Installed options, tax, title, license doc. not included. *Tier 1 financing. On Approved Credit. CDB-01
2012 Subaru Outback 2.5i Premium
$
26,399
OR AS LOW AS
0.9
* UP TO 36 MOS
Heated Seats, Alloy Wheels, CVT
MSRP $27,909. VIN: C3294106. Installed options, tax, title, license doc. not included. *Tier 1 financing. On Approved Credit. CDD-02
NEW 2011 SUZUKI KIZASHI SE AWD
$
21,888
VIN: B6111075. Stock#: Z11011. MSRP $24,698. Smolich Discount $2,810.
NEW 2012 SUZUKI $ KIZASHI SE AWD
H
O
SM
$
21,888
Subaru Certified Pre-Owned
VIN: B4103044. Stock#: Z11006. MSRP $23,983. Smolich Discount $2,095.
0%
0%
72 MO*
72 MO*
2012 SUZUKI $ 319/mo. NEW GRAND VITARA 4x4 299/mo.
VIN: C6101355. Stock#: Z12004. MSRP $25,124. Smolich Discount $525. Down Payment $2,000. 0% for 72 months. On approved credit.
C LI
NEW 2011 SUZUKI GRAND VITARA 4x4
2012 Subaru Impreza WRX STi Sedan
$ VIN: CL009010
38,999
11,000 MILES, PREMIUM WHEELS, REAR SPOILER, 6-SPEED MANUAL
2011 Subaru Outback Wagon 2.5i Limited Loaded, Leather, CVT
$
29,999
VIN: B3354649
VIN: C4100574. Stock#: Z12005. MSRP $24,719. Smolich Discount $831. Down Payment $2,700. 0% for 72 months. On approved credit.
2987 HWY 97 • REDMOND 541- 548 -1448 VISIT SMOLICHSUZUKI.COM All vehicles subject to prior sale, tax, title, license & registration fees. All financing, subject to credit approval. *On approved credit, $13.89 per $1000 financed. Pictures for illustration purposes only. Offers expires June 30, 2012.
UNDER THE BIG AMERICAN FLAG Thank you for reading. All photos are for illustration purposes – not actual vehicles. All prices do not include dealer installed options, documentation, registration or title. All vehicles subject to prior sale. All lease payments based on 10,000 miles/year. *Tier 1 financing. On approved credit. Prices good through July 1, 2012.
REAL ESTATE www.bendhomes.com
For homes online
T H E BULLETIN
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S AT U R D AY, J U N E 3 0 , 2 0 12
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ADVERTISING SECTION F
New Model Home At Antler Ridge!
Privacy on a Quiet Cul-de-sac A stones throw from the Broken Top Clubhouse and located on the 10th fairway. 6200 sq. ft. of grand living space with 4 bedroom suites, 5.5 baths, media room and wine cellar, plus a huge 4 car garage. Wood beams and vaulted ceiling in great room with floor to ceiling stone fireplace, soaring picture windows, wood floors, a divine kitchen, center island with gas cooktop, walkin pantry and morning room with fireplace. Executive style office with built-in cherry cabinetry and desk. Call Cate for a viewing and complete amenities list. Short sale. $975,000!
Discover Antler Ridge - Conveniently located on the Southwest side of Redmond. With new homes starting at only $119,990 and seven floor plans to choose from, you are certain to find one to call your own. Come visit our NEW model home! Directions: Hwy., 126 west, north on SW 35th St., to SW Cascade. Call 541-548-5011 or find us on the web at www. hayden-homes.com for more information.
ANTLER RIDGE WWW.HAYDEN-HOMES.COM 541-548-5011
BEND PREMIER REAL ESTATE WWW.CENTRALOREGONRESORTLIVING.COM Paid Advertisement CATE CUSHMAN • 541-480-1884
Paid Advertisement
Building in Central Oregon Again Could an uptick in building mean more jobs and a strengthening housing market? by Sondra Holtzman, for The Bulletin Advertising Department After a lengthy drought in residential construction in Central Oregon, there seems to be a marked upsurge on the horizon. NorthWest Crossing is alive with the sound of banging hammers, and Pahlisch Homes is back at work on their Deschutes Landing development in southwest Bend. In addition to the Deschutes Landing project, Pahlisch Homes is actively building in eight communities. “We’re building four to eight homes at any one time in each community,” said Dan Pahlisch, co-owner of the company. “The three most significant communities include Newport Landing on the west side of Bend, The Bridges at Shadow Glen, and McCall Landing.” Pahlisch noted that in most of the communities, the company is building for the first time in about four
comes what he refers to as “additional home maintenance expense.” This could include roofs that need replacing, plumbing issues, and appliances that are faulty or not included. When comparing the price of a new home to that of an older one that requires out-of-pocket investments for upkeep and maintenance, people sometimes see greater value in a new home. “In all the neighborhoods where our company has a presence, you don’t have neighbors who have short sales or have abandoned their homes,” said Pahlisch. “We’re cautiously optimistic and feel blessed we’ve been able to continue to make a living with new construction. Every builder is approaching building in Central Oregon with a set of checks and balances to ensure the business approach is sound.” Woodhill Homes is a company whose focus is on building affordable energy-efficient homes. The company has been in business in Bend since 2002 and has built more
lation that exceeds code. A blower door test is also conducted to measure the air tightness of a home. Based in Redmond, Hayden Homes is the largest home builder by volume in Central Oregon. The company recently ranked No. 40 on Builder Magazine’s “Builder 100” list of America’s top builders based on of the number of home sales in 2011. The company was recently honored with the Central Oregon Builders Association’s (COBA) “Builder of the Year” award. “During the economic downturn, we’ve stayed focused on providing value to our customers, and people have responded favorably by continuing to purchase our homes,” said Dennis Murphy, president of Hayden Homes. “We’re excited to see an increase in sales this spring in the majority of our communities and are committed to our mission of providing quality homes at exceptional values.” Due to a growing demand, Hayden Homes will be opening a new com-
“Due to the increased demand for new homes, we are looking for additional opportunities in Central Oregon and are very excited to open some new communities in the coming months.”
Above: A partially completed condominium in the Deschutes Landing complex reflects the view its new homeowners will enjoy. Bottom left: Subcontractors continue work on new homes in Hayden Homes’ Aspen Rim development. Bottom right: Warren Herman of Performance Building Products prepares a garage door for installation at a home in the Woodhill Homes Forest Meadows development. Photos by Nicole Werner
years and is experiencing a pre-sale ratio. This means that for every four homes built that are unsold, the company has another home that is under construction that is already sold. “The most significant thing is the feedback we receive from people in our model homes and what their shopping experience has been so far,” said Pahlisch. “It’s amazing how quickly conditions are changing out in the open market. Inventory rentals dropped to the point where — depending on your individual price point — it became very difficult to track down the home you wanted for the price you were willing to pay.” The company is spending a portion of its time focusing on these prospects while endeavoring to educate prospective buyers on the value of a new home versus an influx of distressed homes on the market. Pahlisch explains that along with the lower price of a distressed home
63339 NW Britta #1, Bend SPACIOUS & BRIGHT TOWNHOME located in Bend’s north side. Fully applianced kitchen. Utility room w/washer & dryer. Close to Cascade Village & easy access to 97 & $895 the by-pass. Single car garage. W/S/G & yard care included. No pets please.
$1,595
18820 Peony, Bend AMAZING 3000 SQ. FT. HOME IN WIDGI CREEK! 4 bedroom, 3 bath. Rock fireplace. Granite kitchen island. Gorgeous woodwork and beautiful hardwood floors. Fully applianced kitchen. Air conditioning. Walk-in closets. Washer/Dryer hookups. Double car garage.
$2,500
15 NW Portland #111, Bend BEAUTIFUL CONDO IN RIVERFRONT CONDOMINIUMS overlooking the Deschutes River and just blocks from downtown Bend! Spacious deck with grill and fully applianced, stainless steel kitchen.
than 400 homes in Central Oregon. In the last five years, all of Woodhills’ homes have been built to Energy Star standards and are certified Earth Advantage. “There’s definitely a surge in the market now,” said Jay Campbell, owner of Woodhill Homes. “Our company is growing again.” Forest Meadows is a newer Woodhill Homes development in southwest Bend with homes near the $250,000 price point. Woodhill homes also has plans to begin building a new development this summer. “We’re getting ready to start an entry-level subdivision at the $150,000 price point in July,” said Campbell. “Those homes will also be energyefficient third-party [certified], which means they have earned the Energy Star certification.” Requirements for Energy Star or Earth Advantage certifications include high-efficient windows, a higher-efficiency furnace, and insu-
$2,050
19448 Blue Lake Lp., Bend BEAUTIFUL HOME W/PRIVATE GUEST QUARTERS. Located in The Parks at Broken Top. Community pool! Fully applianced stainless kitchen w/gas cooking. Open living room w/wet bar & spacious dining room-great for entertaining. Family room w/gas fireplace.
If you are a Rental Property Owner, I invite you to call me. I pledge to strongly represent your management interests and surpass your expectations … Always. You have my word on it. Proudly serving Bend, Redmond, Sisters & Prineville
munity in northeast Bend which is expected to open for sale toward the end of July. Prices will start at $110,000. Hayden Homes developments with homes for sale also include Antler Ridge, located in Redmond, and The Village at Cold Springs in Sisters. As the housing market begins to turn around, Hayden Homes plans to branch out into new areas of the Northwest and looks forward to more growth in 2012. “Sales have been great this year in Central Oregon,” said Deborah Flagan, vice president of sales and marketing for Hayden Homes. “Our home buyers have been motivated to purchase now because interest rates are low, and they don’t want to miss a specific homesite. Due to the increased demand for new homes, we are looking for additional opportunities in Central Oregon and are very excited to open some new communities in the coming months.”
$1,3
60885 South Highway 97, Bend THIS IS A MUST SEE, ONCE YOU SEE THE INSIDE YOU WILL FALL IN LOVE! 3 bedroom, 2 bath. 1737 sq. ft., single level home on 11 acres, partially fenced. New kitchen cabinets. New Profile appliances. Pets OK 95 on approval.
541-389-2486 1199 NW Wall Street, Bend, OR 97701 www.investoregon.com
krestine@investoregon.com KEVIN RESTINE, General Manager/ Property Manager
F2 SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Rentals
600 604
Storage Rentals 8’ x 20’ Container, $80 per month. Secure area. Pay 2 months, 3rd month free. Call 541-420-6851. 605
Roommate Wanted Share mobile home in Terrebonne, $350 + utilities. 1-503-679-7496 630
Rooms for Rent Mt. Bachelor Motel has rooms, starting $150/ week or $35/nt. Incl guest laundry, cable & WiFi. 541-382-6365 Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classiieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates!
541-385-5809
Studios & Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro & fridge. Utils & linens. New owners.$145-$165/wk 541-382-1885 634
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
Alpine Meadows Townhomes 1, 2 & 3 bdrm apts. Starting at $625. 541-330-0719
Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.
CHECK OUT THIS HOT DEAL!
$299 1st month’s rent! * 2 bdrm, 1 bath $530 & 540 Carports & A/C incl! Fox Hollow Apts. (541) 383-3152
Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co *Upstairs only with lease*
Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc. Located by BMC/Costco, 2 bdrm, 2 bath duplex, 55+,2350 NEMary Rose Pl, #1, $795 no smoking or pets, 541-390-7649 648
Houses for Rent General 3 Bdrm 2 bath, appls, storage bldg, covered deck, paved road. (Sunriver area). No pets/smkg. $795/mo + dep. 541-550-6097, or 541- 593-3546
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
648
650
Houses for Rent General
Houses for Rent NE Bend
3 Bdrm, 2 bath, dbl garage, fenced yard, gourmet kitchen, appls, DW. (Sunriver area). No pets/smkg. $895mo + dep. 541-550-6097 or 541-593-3546
Real Estate For Sale
700
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, currently receiving over 1.5 million page views, every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
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PUBLISHER'S Timeshares for Sale NOTICE All real estate adverGreat location with Detising in this newspaschutes River views! per is subject to the Nicely appointed, Fair Housing Act turn-key fully-furwhich makes it illegal nished, 2 bdrm, 2 to advertise "any bath, 1/10th Timepreference, limitation share/fractional. Enor discrimination joy the serenity of the based on race, color, flowing river below, religion, sex, handiblue sky above & all cap, familial status, the beauty Central marital status or naOregon and Eagle 652 tional origin, or an inCrest Resort have to Houses for Rent tention to make any offer. $10,500 such preference, MLS#201203509, NW Bend limitation or discrimiJohn L. Scott Real nation." Familial sta- Gorgeous 5 bdrm,3 bath, Estate 541-548-1712 tus includes children fully furnished,NW Flaunder the age of 18 gline Dr.,minimum 1 yr. 730 living with parents or lease, $3200/mo, call New Listings legal custodians, Robert 541-944-3063 pregnant women, and 11 ACRE VIEW LOT 654 people securing cus$150,000 Houses for Rent tody of children under Level view lot, easy to 18. This newspaper SE Bend build on. Close to Dewill not knowingly acschutes River and cept any advertising 3/1, w/single car garecreational trails. On for real estate which is rage; 24x36 shop paved road in area of in violation of the law. w/220, fenced backfine homes. Our readers are yard w/patio & greenMLS#201204315 hereby informed that house, W/D, all appli. Diane Lozito, Broker all dwellings adverPets neg. $980/mo. 541-548-3598 tised in this newspa1st/last + $150/dep. per are available on Avail. 8/1. leave msg. an equal opportunity at 541-410-9064. basis. To complain of 658 discrimination call HUD toll-free at Houses for Rent 1-800-877-0246. The Redmond toll free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1422 NW Peak Beautiful newer home 4 1-800-927-9275. bdrm, 2½ bath, 2 story, finished 2-car AWBREY BUTTE Rented your propgarage, large fenced $899,000 erty? The Bulletin yard w/sprinklers, A/C Stunning home with Classifieds gas fireplace & heat, views from Jefferson has an "After Hours" dog on approval, borto Mt. Hood and twinLine. Call ders Tom McCall Elkling city lights at 541-383-2371 24 ementary School. One night. Black walnut hours to year lease. $1300 + floors, blue eyed cancel your ad! $1500 dep. granite, 2 master 541-480-7444. suites & wine cellar. 4 650 bedroom, 3.5 bath, Clean 2 Bdrm + den, 2 Houses for Rent 4938 sq. ft. bath, dbl garage, NE Bend MLS#201204524 $900/mo. 9199 SW Panarama, CRR. No Margo Degray, Broker, Luxury Home, 2450 ABR, CRS smkg. 541-504-8545 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2.5 541-480-7355 maintained 3 bath, office, 3 car ga- Well bdrm 2 bath home, rage, mtn views., avail great location, avail 7/20. 2641 NE Jill Ct. July 5. $1000 mo. $1750/mo. + dep. 541-410-8247 541-420-3557.
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745
New Listings
New Listings
Multiplexes for Sale
Homes for Sale
Homes for Sale
NW BEND | $499,900 Overlooking the Deschutes River from the back and River's Edge golf course from the front. 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 2612 sq. ft. Master suite sitting area opens to river view. MLS#201204300 Virginia Ross, Broker, ABR, CRS, GRI 541-480-7501
Three Rivers South Lots 3 treed lots on a paved road near rivers & National Forest. Park your RV, play in the forest, go 4-wheeling or fish. Close to the Village & new aquatic center in Sunriver. 0.92 to 1.07 acres. $12,000 each. MLS#201204473 Lynne Connelley, EcoBroker, ABR, CRS 541-408-6720
Large duplex in Bend’s desirable westside. $394,800. Ad #8932 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com
Where can you ind a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it’s all here in The Bulletin’s “Call A Service Professional” Directory
SE BEND | $189,000 New construction in quiet area on the edge of town. Single level, master bedroom separation. Tile counters in kitchen, distressed hardwood floors, wood wrapped windows & doors. Corner lot. MLS#201204514 Greg Floyd, P.C., Broker 541-390-5349
Houses for Rent Sunriver
VILLAGE PROPERTIES Sunriver, Three Rivers, Call 541-385-5809 to La Pine. Great place your Selection. Prices range Real Estate ad. $425 - $2000/mo. View our full USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! inventory online at Village-Properties.com Door-to-door selling with 1-866-931-1061 fast results! It’s the easiest 660 way in the world to sell. Houses for Rent The Bulletin Classiied La Pine La Pine - Nice 3 Bd, 2.5 Ba, in Crescent Creek subdivision. Gas appliances & fireplace, dbl garage, fitness center, park. $800 mo; $900 deposit. 541-815-5494
BROKEN TOP $1,350,000 The Pinehurst at Broken Top by Steven VanSant/Pacwest Homes! Unmatched quality & craftsmanship! Single-level, 3car garage, custom cabinetry & trim, 0.55 acre golf course view lot. No expense spared! MLS#201204424 David Gilmore, Broker 541-312-7271
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AVAILABLE BEND AREA RENTALS
Houses for Rent Madras
•2 Bdrm/1Bath Apt. W/D hookups. Some hardwood floors, large kitchen, private patio, huge New custom craftsman home for lease, 3 common maintained yard. $575 WST bdrm, 2 bath, great •Spacious 2 Bdrm/1 Bath SE Duplexes - Sgl. gaview, near aquatic rage. Large fenced back deck. All new appl. carcenter & COCC campet, paint. W/D hook-ups. No pets. $650 WST. pus, $1250/mo, owner •Very nice 2 Bdrm/2½ bath Unit in Quad. - W/D pays sewer, water & included. Private back patio. Single garage. Gas landscaping. No smkg/ cooking. GFA heat. Close to Old Mill Dist. Pets pets. 541-504- 9284 or under 20#?? $750.00 TS 541-905-5724 •In NW near COCC - 3 bdrm/1.5 bath home with fireplace. Sgl. garage. W/D hookups. Large Need to get an fenced-in back deck. Pets considered. $900. ad in ASAP? •Quiet Country Living - 3 bdrm, 2 bath, mfd home on 2.5 acres. Fenced yard area. Detached triple You can place it garage. $950 online at: www.bendbulletin.com AVAILABLE REDMOND RENTALS
NE BEND | $45,000 2 bedroom, 1 bath condo in Burning Tree Village, close to Hollinshead Park. Unit located away from parking lot traffic in quiet wooded setting for added privacy. MLS#201204302 Lynne Connelley, EcoBroker, ABR, CRS 541-408-6720
•4 Bdrm/2 Bath Sgl. Level Home. Corner lot in 541-385-5809 NE. 2400 sq. ft. Pets under 20#s?? Fenced back yard. Auto sprinklers. Master separated, Has 687 garden tub. Must see. $1100. Commercial for •3 Bdrm/2 bath Home in NE - Cute craftsman style w/double garage in rear. Oak cabinets. Tile Rent/Lease counters. All appliances plus microwave in kitchen. W/D included. Pets ?? Only $850. Warehouse - Industrial People Look for Information *** FOR ADDITIONAL PROPERTIES *** unit for rent. 5600 About Products and CALL 541-382-0053 &/or Stop By the Office at sq.ft., $2250/month, Services Every Day through 587 NE Greenwood, Bend near Bend High. The Bulletin Classifieds 541-389-8794.
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Commercial/Investment Properties for Sale
NW BEND | $525,000 Panoramic city views, custom built 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath Craftsman, modern touches. Walnut hardwoods, concrete counters, alder cabinets, granite, slate, cork floors, plantation shutters & private backyard. MLS#201204489 Amy Halligan, Broker 541-410-9045
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When buying a home, 83% of Central Oregonians turn to
541-385-5809
730
740
Condo/Townhomes for Sale $169,000 1168 sq. ft. 3br/2bath townhome w/ custom touches, on private, quiet cul-desac with golf course frontage, in the gated community of the resort side of Eagle Crest. Home-ID 928. Eagle Crest Properties™ 866-722-3370 745
Homes for Sale
2 bedrooms, 2 baths. 2029 sq. ft. This gorgeous single level home has been completely remodeled. Located on a corner lot surrounded by landscaped common area in the private gated community of Mountain High.
60897 Willow Creek Loop Directions: From Knott Rd enter Mountain High. Turn left and proceed to Willow Creek. Turn right. Home is on the corner.
$289,000
Broker
to High Lakes Loop.
Listed by: ROBERT EGGERS/ KATRINA SWISHER Principal Brokers
Hosted by: CAROLYN BOSTWICK Principal Broker
541-306-3365
$605,000
Hosted & Listed by:
JOHN R. GIST Principal Broker
541-815-5000
$1,695,000
Hosted by:
Cascadia Properties
PAULA MELLON Broker
541-977-4009
Principal Broker
Hosted by:
$784,900
B ecky B reeze
&
Co m pa n y Real Estate
STUNNING VIEW SATURDAY 12:00 - 3:00 PM
SAT 12-3
End of the road on the Deschutes River. 2 homes on 2.6 acres with two 3-car garages. REAL gourmet kitchen 20015 & vaulted beam Chaney Rd, ceilings. Property Bend unlike any other! www.tourfactory.com Directions: OB Riley to Glen /856573. Vista MLS#201202209
Listed by:
BECKY BREEZE
541-788-2281
BEND COUNTRY ESTATE (SPECIAL PREVIEW FOR NEIGHBORS 11 AM) Hilltop custom home with magnificent views on 2.5 acres. 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths with loads of extras. Irrigation pond and 2 water features, large circular drive and RV with full hookups. MLS#201202160
Great location, 2600+ sq.ft. & RM zoned. $179,900. Ad#2572 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com
5020 sq. ft. 5 beds, 4 baths, two offices, playroom, .37 of an acre lot that backs up to Overturf Butte. Gorgeous finishes, 205 NW 17th Street, Bend lovely views. D i re c t i o n s : West on Galveston, Left on 17th.
Broker
541-480-5157
SAT & SUN 1PM–5PM
36+ acres. Bend Cascade Nursery. $795,000. Ad #8452 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com
205 NW 17TH STREET
LaRONDA ACUFF-SACK
SUSAN SEALOCK
RIVERFRONT ESTATE
Home + shop w/office, beautiful mtn views. $250,000. Ad #2082 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com
SATURDAY NOON-3PM
Hosted & Listed by:
Northwest Crossing home features 3 bed. 2880+/- sq. ft. home plus a 1 bed. street level apartment w/garage renting for $750 p/m. 2191 NW High Lakes Lp. Separate courtyards give Directions: Mt. Washington private leisure areas.
Magnificent views, ranch home on 10+ acres. $449,987. Ad#2122 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com Single Level on 1 acre. 3 bdrm/2 bath, 1716 Call The Bulletin At sq. ft., master separa541-385-5809 tion, office, fenced, flower garden, RV Place Your Ad Or E-Mail parking. $145,000. At: www.bendbulletin.com MLS# 201007848 Gorgeous Bend Pam Lester, Principal acreage, 4 Bdrm home Broker Century 21 + shop, $235,000 Gold Country Realty, Ad #2072 Inc. 541-504-1338 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Big River Meadows Re- Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 sort home on the www.BendOregon river! $375,000 RealEstate.com Ad#8532 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Gorgeous cedar home Prudential High Desert on almost 16 acres, Realty 541-312-9449 $474,900 www.BendOregon Ad #2632 RealEstate.com TEAM Birtola Garmyn Exquisite home on Prudential High Desert acreage with a view, Realty 541-312-9449 $699,900. www.BendOregon Ad #3192 RealEstate.com TEAM Birtola Garmyn Upgraded Bend home Prudential High Desert on 1/3 acre lot. Realty 541-312-9449 $199,987. www.BendOregon Ad #2972 RealEstate.com TEAM Birtola Garmyn Classic NW Style home Prudential High Desert in SE Bend. Realty 541-312-9449 $349,900. Ad #3232 www.BendOregon TEAM Birtola Garmyn RealEstate.com Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 1.5 acres adjoining forest land, $189,900. www.BendOregon Ad #2802 RealEstate.com TEAM Birtola Garmyn Check out the Prudential High Desert classiieds online Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon www.bendbulletin.com RealEstate.com Updated daily
SW BEND | $198,500 Updated, energy efficient home. 500 sq. ft. guest suite above detached garage. Just too many Meditation hut, collectibles? stamped concrete patio & walkways, water Sell them in feature, fire pit, rock outcroppings, native The Bulletin Classiieds trees & RV parking. MLS#201204328 541-385-5809 Shelly Hummel, Broker, CRS, GRI, CHMS 541-383-4361 Powell Butte Hwy 126 Frontage. $239,000. .69 Acre lot, 4176 sq.ft. building, great community and location for Ag oriented Business. Scott McLean, Princ. Broker, 541-408-6909 Realty Executives International Central The Ultimate Hideout Oregon. $749,500 637 private acres, 87 Prime Hwy 97 Commiles from Bend. mercial! $129,900 Buck Creek flows year Updated in 2006, 850 round. 2 LOP Tags for sq. ft., plenty of parkbucks & bulls. Asing in rear, central air. pens, Ponderosas, & MLS201003034 Pam Rimrocks. Propane & Lester, Principal Brosolar for the cabin. ker, Century 21 Gold Large barn for storCountry Realty, Inc. age. Horse corral. 541-504-1338 MLS#201204217 Riverside Market, 285 Steve Payer, NW Riverside Blvd., Broker, GRI Bend. Great invest541-480-2966 ment, outstanding tenant. Super location. Property only. $350,000. Scott McLean, Princ. Broker, 541-408-6909 Realty Executives International Central Oregon.
SATURDAY 1PM–4PM
SAT & SUN 11AM–3PM
Energy efficient home, 20 acres w/irrigation. $625,000 Ad#2242 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com
140 ft. of Big 13735 Commercial Deschutes views. Loop, CRR. Commer$499,490 Ad#2322 cial building with 900 TEAM Birtola Garmyn sq. ft. of office space Prudential High Desert and break room. 2400 Realty 541-312-9449 sq. ft. of open warewww.BendOregon house /manufacturing RealEstate.com area with concrete floor and two roll up Enchanted river setting on 2+ acres. doors. Owner terms or $527,700. Ad# 2022 lease option is available. $179,000 MLS# TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert 201109200 Realty 541-312-9449 Juniper Realty, www.BendOregon 541-504-5393 RealEstate.com Commercial Lots In Crooked River Ranch. Northwest lodge style home w/views! Great opportunity to $1,649,000 Ad#2152 start a business or relocate an existing TEAM Birtola Garmyn business. Near res- Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 taurants, hotel and www.BendOregon golf course. Owner RealEstate.com terms avail. Business Circle, Lot 82 - 1.05 Unique Luxury acres $25,000; Broken Top Commercial Loop, Lot Craftsman home 49 - 1.26 acres. Lot $955,000. Ad #3472 50 - 1.30 acres. Lot TEAM Birtola Garmyn 51 - 1.23 acres. Prudential High Desert $35,000 each or purUpdated 4 bdrm Realty 541-312-9449 chase all 3 for charmer in Bend’s www.BendOregon $90,000. West Hills, $475,000 RealEstate.com Juniper Realty, Ad #3462 Equestrian facility, 541-504-5393 TEAM Birtola Garmyn home w/ Cascade Prudential High Desert Great Iinvestment views $849,900. Realty 541-312-9449 RV PARK! 43+ spaces. Ad#2772 www.BendOregon An ALL-year, ALL TEAM Birtola Garmyn RealEstate.com -season resort a stone Prudential High Desert throw away from Realty 541-312-9449 Custom home on alOchoco Reservoir most an acre in Bend. www.BendOregon Recreation district & $224,900. Ad #3032 RealEstate.com minutes away from TEAM Birtola Garmyn 4 Bdrm Bend home with Ochoco National ForPrudential High Desert 2 suites. $239,999. est. Full service RV Realty 541-312-9449 Ad #3342 Park, laundry faciliwww.BendOregon TEAM Birtola Garmyn ties, showers, camp RealEstate.com Prudential High Desert sites, storage availRealty 541-312-9449 Rustic home on 2+ able, propane and www.BendOregon acres close to town. more. $1,325,000. RealEstate.com $249,000. Ad #2592 MLS#201103365. TEAM Birtola Garmyn Bruce Dunlap Prudential High Desert Find exactly what 541-604-4200 Realty 541-312-9449 Central Oregon Realty you are looking for in the www.BendOregon LLC CLASSIFIEDS RealEstate.com 541-316-1306
MOUNTAIN HIGH
INCOME OR IN-LAW?
Large 4000+ sq.ft. Live close to parks, home with wine cellar, river and downtown. $499,987. Ad#3122 $574,900. Ad #2782 TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon www.BendOregon RealEstate.com RealEstate.com
63495 NE Old Deschutes Rd, Directions: From 18th St., head NE on NE 18th towards Morningstar Dr., Turn right into Scottsdale Dr., take 2nd left onto Old Deschutes Rd. House will be on the left.
$667,000
This 3500+ sq. ft. floor plan will amaze you by its livability! Stunning golf course view. Widgi Creek.
60733 Golf Village Loop.
Hosted by
Directions: Century Dr. heading west, take right on 7th Mountain Dr., then left onto Golf Village Loop.
SHELLY REA Broker
541-350-8256 Listed by:
KIP LOHR
$1,100,000
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Homes for Sale
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120 Private acres of Central Oregon Beauty. $499,900. Ad#2692 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com Newer 4500 sq.ft., Craftsman, almost 1 acre. $774,900. Ad#2312 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com 1512 sq. ft. w/fireplace, family, living, 3 bdrm, dbl. garage. Adjoins public land. $119,900. MLS#201203420 Call Nancy Popp Broker, 541-815-8000 Crooked River Realty 17135 Upland Dr., Bend. Executive get away or full time living fit this exquisite location on the Big Deschutes River. Easy drive from Sunriver. this fantastic home offers much more. .68 Acre river front lot, 5 bdrm, 3.5 baths, separate office and bonus, attached 3 car garage, detached 2 car garage, storage building, private boat dock, fire pit, RV Parking. Call for your private tour today. $839,000. Call 888-583-1888 - property code #52189 or text 52189 to 35620. Scott McLean, Princ. Broker, 541-408-6909 Realty Executives International Central Oregon. 2044 NE FULL MOON $74,900 Spacious Condo in NE Bend with 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, 1104 sq. ft. ~ close to medical offices & shopping, laminate flooring, sunny & bright with fruit trees and fenced yard. www.johnlscott.com /34064 Kathy Caba, Principal Broker 541-771-1761 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend
$207,000 Country Living Close to Town…Great location and close to Tumalo Park!!! Over ½ an acre with property backing up to the common area, enhancing the open feel of the property. Casual living and a must see! Aaron Ballweber, Broker 541-728-4499 541-389-7910 Hunter Properties 214 SW M STREET, MADRAS 14+ % CASH RETURN. 5 APT. UNITS IN MADRAS. ONLY $122,000; $34,000 DOWN PAYMENT. Three studios & two 2-bedroom apartments. All renovated inside & outside. Alex Robertson, Broker 541-280-2117 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend
$2,199,000 TRULY ONE OF A KIND HOME! Sits on 2 lots with Cascade Mtn. & golf course views. Master suite w/ fireplace & multiple decks. Elevator, private oval office, & 4 car garage. Aaron Boehm, Broker 541-647-8851 541-389-7910 Hunter Properties $228,000 River Canyon Estates! Beautifully maintained 3 bedroom; 2.5 bath home, on a corner lot with a great open floor plan. Loft area that can be used as office space or bonus room. Susan Pitarro, Broker 541-410-8084 541-389-7910 Hunter Properties 25-Acre View Estate. Panoramic Cascade Views. $1,499,000. MLS #201101049 Cate Cushman, Principal Broker 541-480-1884 www.catecushman.com 263 NW OUTLOOK VISTA DRIVE Hot tub, mtn. views, westside ... what more could you want! Spacious 3503 sq. ft., 4 Bdrm, 3.5 bath, office. Two master suites, large upper & lower decks, wood flooring, large open kitchen w/recent upgrades. Tons of storage! Offered at $349,900. MLS#201202642. Shelley Arnold, Broker 541-771-9329 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend
$299,900 DESIRABLE RIVER CANYON ESTATES! This beautiful home is wonderful for entertaining, Fully fenced yard with a beautiful water feature & garden area. This home has been well cared for. Aaron Boehm, Broker 541-647-8851 541-389-7910 Hunter Properties
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$339,500 BROKEN TOP The Best That River $399,000 Canyon Estates Has Spotless & stylish, 3 To Offer! This beautibedroom, 3 1/2 bath, ful River Canyon Es2703 sq. ft. 2 master tate home offers 4 bdrms & den on main Bedrooms, 3 full level, stainless, granbaths, bonus room, ite, hardwood, tile, and den. High end stone fireplace. Enstainless appliances, closed gated patio granite counters, new w/pergola. More paint, trex deck, and photos: private landscaped www.johnlscott.com/4 yard. Amenities in3199 clude club house, Peggy Lee Combs, pools, parks, tennis Broker 541-480-7653 courts, & a workout John L. Scott Real facility. This is a must Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend see. Aaron Boehm, Broker Broken Top Beauty, 3 541-647-8851 bdrm, 4.5 baths, gor541-389-7910 geous finishes. New Hunter Properties Price $1,425,000. MLS # 201109001. $369,500 Cate Cushman, PRICE REDUCTION! Principal Broker This home boasts of a 541-480-1884 fabulous kitchen, www.catecushman.com granite counters, upgraded stainless steel CHARMING appliances, beautiful RETREAT walnut floors & cabiLOCATED IN nets. This is a must WOODSIDE RANCH see! 2 Bdrm + den (potential Mike Everidge, Broker 3rd bdrm), 2 bath in 541-390-0098 1408 sq.ft. on .78 541-389-7910 acre. Beautiful flag Hunter Properties stone hearth in living room ready for wood 3 bed 2 bath, Custom or gas stove. Kitchen home, huge shop. has tile floor, counters $299,000. & back splash plus MLS#201203307 Whirlpool Estate apCall Julie Fahlgren pliances in silvertone. 541-550-0098 Garage has huge Crooked River Realty bank of cabinets. Home completely re4270 sq ft, 6 bdrm, 6 ba, furbished. Nestled in 4-car, corner, .83 acre the trees w/easy care mtn view, by owner. natural landscaping & $590,000 541-390-0886 a tree house too. Tall See: bloomkey.com/8779 vaulted ceilings, $499,000 beams, natural wood OVER 5 ACRES. & stone accents. Set in the Ponderosa Leaded beveled glass pines at the end of the in living room & foyer. cul-de-sac. Double Newer 30 yr roof & ext master, one on main, paint. $199,900. gourmet kitchen w/IsMLS#2711853 or visit land. 3 car garage, johnlscott.com/66140 plus a detached RV Bobbie Strome, barn/boat, separate Principal Broker shop 1/2 bath! John L Scott Real EsMike Wilson, Broker tate 541-385-5500 541-977-5345 Classic Craftsman, Im541-389-7910 maculately mainHunter Properties tained, perfect location. Offered at BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS $209,00. MLS Search the area’s most #201200799 comprehensive listing of Cate Cushman, classiied advertising... Principal Broker real estate to automotive, 541-480-1884 merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classiieds www.catecushman.com appear every day in the Country living near print or on line. Sisters. Immaculate 3 bdrm single story Call 541-385-5809 home on over an acre www.bendbulletin.com near Sisters. Tile radiant floors, maple kitchen, stone fireplace and land51871 Hollinshead. scaped. Short sale 2259 sq. ft. 4 bdrm, bargain. $249,900. 2½ bath, bonus room, 17160 Mountain View A/C, gas fireplace. Rd., Sisters. $149,900. High Lakes Gary Everett, CCIM Realty & Property Principal Broker Management 541-480-6130 541-536-0117 Remax 57650 TAN OAK LANE CUSTOM LA PINE Light & bright home w/7 A-FRAME skylights. Special Charming modified glass entry doors, A-frame, corner lot, masonry granite fire1.17 acre, 1304 sq. ft. place, vaulted ceiling. 3 bdrm/1.5 bath, blue Granite kitchen buggy pine interior, w/large custom island. excellent use of space Master w/large exer& storage, two-story, cise area, walk-in small deck top floor. 2-person shower, 2 30 mi. to Mt. Bachmaster closets & prielor, $144,900. vate deck. Library upMLS#201108595 stairs. Lg. pond, spa & Sarah Eraker, Broker privacy off deck. 503-680-6432 MLS#201204154 John L. Scott Real Sharon Abrams, Broker Estate, Bend 541-280-9309 www.JohnLScott.com/Bend John L. Scott Real Cute, turn-key stick built Estate, Bend 1270 sq. ft. home. www.JohnLScott.com/Bend $139,900. 60439 ZUNI ROAD MLS#201202978 Impeccable one-level Call Linda Lou home on large 0.6 Day-Wright acre, 4 BD, 2 BA, 541-771-2585 2360 sq. ft. w/up- Crooked River Realty graded kitchen, living DARNEL ESTATES & family rooms, 440 sq. ft. bonus room for 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath in 2558+/sq. ft. home home business, guest built in 2005 on an quarters, etc., shop. 8712+/- sq. ft., lot. Serene deck overBeautiful Eastside looking canal. A best home with easterly buy $219,900. mountain views. www.DavidFoster.Biz/ Hardwood floors, Zuni granite countertops David Foster, Broker and hickory cabinets 541-322-9934 in kitchen. Master John L. Scott Real suite w/large walk-in Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend closet & jetted tub. All bedrooms have large 60845 LARSEN ROAD closets. Bathrooms Custom 4338 sq.ft. and utility room with home on 18 acres, 10 stone tile floors & irrigated. Private & countertops. Large lot, peaceful setting. 5 fully fenced, water bdrm/3.5 bath. Masfeature and RV/boat ter on main. 60x48 parking. Lots of storAG building, 60x36 age space throughout barn. Fenced & the home. Open great Xfenced. Quality uproom floor plan. grades inside and out. $240,000. Call for your personal MLS#201203996. tour. MLS# Bobbie Strome, 201204063 Principal Broker Candice Anderson, John L Scott Real Broker 541-788-8878 Estate 541-385-5500 John L. Scott Real DESCHUTES RIVER Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend WOODS 3 Bedroom, 1.75 bath in 63245 SILVIS ROAD 1329 sq. ft. custom Gated small “farm” with home on DRW acre. 4000+ sq. ft. home on Great room floor plan 6.95 underground irriwith vaulted ceiling. gated acres. 3600 sq. All kitchen appliances ft. shop, barn with are included. Both restalls, and greencessed & under cabihouse. Home innet lighting in kitchen. cludes walk-thru panLaundry room w/skytry, wet bar, vaulted lite & large pantry. ceiling & Cascade New interior paint. Mtn. views, and 3 Garage is heated & fireplaces. finished w/work MLS#201204145 bench. Super fenced Sharon Abrams, Broker yard w/mature Pon541-280-9309 derosas, storage John L. Scott Real building, double Estate, Bend canopy carport or www.JohnLScott.com/Bend storage structure. This home is move-in Adorable cottage style ready. $259,000. Call home. 3 bdrm, 1½ Bobbie at bath, 1336 sq.ft., 541-480-1635 about landscaped with MLS#2802056 garden area. Bobbie Strome, $89,500. MLS Principal Broker 201203069. John L Scott Real EsCall VIRGINIA, Printate 541-385-5500 cipal Broker 541-350-3418 Downtown Penthouse, Redmond RE/MAX Top floor, mountain Land & Homes views, 2 bdrm, New Real Estate Price $695,000. MLS 201100839 BANK OWNED HOMES! Cate Cushman, FREE List w/Pics! Principal Broker www.BendRepos.com 541-480-1884 bend and beyond real estate www.catecushman.com 20967 yeoman, bend or
EQUESTRIAN’S HOLLOW PINES DREAM ESTATES Gorgeous 5180 sq. ft. 3 bedroom, 2 bath in home with breathtak1898 +/- sq. ft., single ing mountain views! level home with an Arenas, barn, guest open floor plan built in house all on 20+ irri2002 on 16,553+/- sq. gated acres. ft., lot. Large lot is reRhonda Garrison & plete with a variety of Chris Sperry trees, shrubs and Principal Broker flowers. Fenced yard & Broker with pergola and large 541-279-1768 & concrete patio and 541-550-4922 paver and cinder John L. Scott Real walkways. Light and Estate, Bend bright, easy-to-live-in www.JohnLScott.com/Bend floor plan with a good separation of bedFamily Home room. Great room livExtraordinaire! ing with gas log fireStunning one-of-a-kind place. Solar panels master craftsman reprovide power and the model by builder and solar water heater interior designer. heats the water for the Master perennial garhome. The systems dens and huge fenced are well set up and lawn in beautiful efficient. $250,000. old-tree neighborBobbie Strome, hood on Awbrey Butte Principal Broker close to Newport MarJohn L Scott Real ket with play and dog park at end of street. Estate 541-385-5500 4 bdrm, 2.5 bath Ex- IL zoned 7200 sq. ft. quisite master suite building. Convenient with wood windows, location with easy acFrench doors opencess to Parkway. Built ing onto oversized in 2007 by Sun West decks with pergola. Builders. Approx. 1.54 Room sized walk-in acres, completely closets with custom lifenced with lock gate brary style built-ins. at entrance. Flat usMaster spa bath has able lot w/out buildsoaking tub, walk-in ings, lots of parking, glass block shower sprinklers. Multi-bay and separate toilet. building all with pull Specialty glass, wood through overhead doors and windows. doors. Flex space deHardwood flooring. sign for future use, Custom copper loads of storage. Apkitchen counters with prox. 1500 sq. ft. ofPratt Larson mosaic fice space. Attractive bar counter. Specialty financing terms availlight fixtures, fully able. Current occuwired for cable. pant would like to stay Built-in antique and rent back. screens and bath MLS#201009395. cabinet, glass bowl $1,000,000. and custom hardware. Melody Luelling CRS 2 offices, built-in cabiPC Principal Broker, nets and large exerHasson Company cise room w/ woodRealtors, burning stove. 541-330-8522 Storage and washer/dryer space. Incredible 4 Bdrm home in NW Bend. Energy Spacious entertaining efficient 4 bdrm home areas on 2 levels outon large corner parside, wood decks and cel. Huge rim rock pavers. Fully landfeature in private back scaped with irrigation yard. Features a great system. New fireproof room w/open maple steel roofing. Paver kitchen, granite slab circular driveway, counters, GE Profile stone walls, exterior Stainless appl, and lighting and garage pantry. 3300 sq.ft., built-ins. living room, w/gas Builder/owner is in the fireplace, formal dinprocess of replacing ing, entertainment kitchen cabinets and room and office. putting a few finishing Master suite with altouches on house. cove tub, walk-in This is a very special closet. $525,000. house in a wonderful 19193 NW Chiloquin. neighborhood. Owner Gary Everett, CCIM has 7 animals. 24 hr. Principal Broker notice. No lock box. 541-480-6130 $470,000. Remax MLS#201200147 Bobbie Strome, Madison Park. Principal Broker Now under ConstrucJohn L Scott Real Estion....New Amercian tate 541-385-5500 Made Homes. $184,950. 3219 NE FANTASTIC SMITH Spring Creek Place. ROCK VIEWS 3 Bdrm, 2.5 bath, 1687 Very private property! 3 sq.ft., tile and wood, bedrooms, 1.75 baths stainless steel appliin a 1782 sq. ft. home ances, custom landon 4.97 acres. Poscaped and fenced. tential to buy irrigaGary Everett, CCIM tion. Potential to subPrincipal Broker divide. $150,000. 541-480-6130 Short Sale! MLS# Remax 201104469 or visit johnlscott.com/32752 Metolius riverfront Bobbie Strome, property! Rare 2 Principal Broker bdrm, 2 bath cabin in John L Scott Real Camp Sherman. Estate 541-385-5500 Wonderful vacation property that has French Country Esnewer septic system, tate, 4 bdrm, 4 bath, community water, upmasterful design, ofdated electric, pellet fered at $2,395,000. stove & more. Camp MLS #201200479 Sherman Store & KoCate Cushman, kanee Cafe nearby. Principal Broker Step out your door to 541-480-1884 hiking, fishing, biking. www.catecushman.com A truly unique property. Call a Pro MLS#201008454. $495,000. Whether you need a Melody Luelling CRS fence ixed, hedges PC Principal Broker, trimmed or a house Hasson Company Realtors, built, you’ll ind 541-330-8522 professional help in MOUNTAIN VIEW The Bulletin’s “Call a PARK Service Professional” 3 bdrm, 2 bath in 1792+/- sq. ft., on a Directory 7405+/- sq. ft. lot. 541-385-5809 Beautiful 1997 home located in a secure Gardenside gated community. Now under ConstrucPool, hot tub, picktion....New Amercian leball court & RV Made Homes. parking. HOA fee of $209,950. 21279 $75/mo., covers front Daylily Ave. 3 Bdrm, 2 yard landscape bath, 1802 sq.ft., tile & maintenance, snow wood, stainless appliplowing, recreation & ances, customized, security amenities. landscaped, fenced, Wrap around porch Tropicana Model. with mtn. views. Level Gary Everett, CCIM driveway will accomPrincipal Broker modate 40’ RV 541-480-6130 w/30amp service. Remax Large lot w/beautiful landscaping. Private Grand Forest Retreat. 3 fenced patio & back Bdrm suites, near yard. Light & bright Bend, Sunriver. w/lots of windows. $1,499,000. MLS Horse shoe kitchen #201109698 with breakfast nook. Cate Cushman, $174,900. Principal Broker MLS#201204045. 541-480-1884 Bobbie Strome, www.catecushman.com Principal Broker Great Opportunity. John L Scott Real Es$349,950. tate 541-385-5500 3220 NE MOUNTAIN VIEW Sandlewood Dr. PARK This is a great opportunity to own this spa- 3 bedroom, 2 bath in 1404 sq. ft. This 2001 cious 4 + bdrm home home is on 5663 sq. at an affordable value. ft. lot in a secure It features 2 master gated community with suites, oak kitchen swimming pool, hot with breakfast nook tub, pickleball court and formal living room and RV parking. Conw/fireplace. The lower venient to shopping, level has 3 huge schools and medical rooms for entertainfacilities. Comfortable ing. affordable living for all Gary Everett, CCIM ages. Home has large Principal Broker covered front porch & 541-480-6130 smaller covered rear Remax patio. Easy-to-live-in floor plan with great Great West Side Home, separation of bed$349,900. 2977 NW rooms, easy care Wild Meadow Dr. flooring, well-planned 3 Bdrm home with kitchen and bathroom apartment on corner cabinetry, vaulted lot. Quality crafted ceilings & plentiful with cherry kitchen, windows. $156,000. huge mast suite, ofMLS#201203533. fice and RV parking. Bobbie Strome, Gary Everett, CCIM Principal Broker Principal Broker John L Scott Real 541-480-6130 Estate 541-385-5500 Remax
Northcrest. Now under Construction....New American Made Homes. $189,950. 3383 NE Lamoine Lane. 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1588 sq.ft., single story, tile and wood, stainless steel appliances, customized, landscaped and fenced. Gary Everett, CCIM Principal Broker 541-480-6130 Remax
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NOTICE:
All real estate advertised here in is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified ONE-OF-A-KIND LOG HOME Custom log home, 4344 sq. ft., 3 bdrm/2.5 bath, views of Cascades, gourmet kitchen with top-of-the-line appliances. Huge deck for outdoor living. 62775 NW Idanha, Bend. $459,000. www.johnlscott.com/d aniellesnow Danielle Snow, Broker 541-306-1015 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale ON THE DESCHUTES Located on N. end of highly desirable RIVER’S EDGE VILLAGE. This townhome offers 2300 sq. ft. 3 bedroom/2.5 bath & a complete 700 sq. ft. apartment is as close to the river & park as you can get. Rarely used, like new condition & ready for you! Gail Rogers, Broker 541-604-1649 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend
Own a spacious home on a large 1/2 acre lot close to shopping & schools. Well maintained home w/newer roof, furnace and water heater. Detached oversized 2 car garage w/3/4 bath & office/studio behind, not included in house sq. ft. Reverse living, great room concept w/wood burning fireplace. Master suite with access to hot tub & decks, kitchen & living & 1/2 bath on main level. Downstairs offers 3 beds, 1 bath, family room + office. Lots of room for everyone. MLS# 201202932. $250,000. Melody Luelling CRS PC Principal Broker, Hasson Company Realtors, 541-330-8522 PEACEFUL & PRIVATE RETREAT 3-car garage w/add. detached 36x28 shop w/RV bay. New fully fenced & gated, custom chicken coop & covered walkway. MLS#201204072. www.johnlscott.com/6 3172 Rhonda Garrison, Principal Broker 541-279-1768 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend
PRICE REDUCTION $99,500 Small Acreage & Minutes From Town. 2 small cabins, shop & a charming chalet nestled among pines. Imagine country living, enjoying the tranquility & peace from the deck in the backyard. This property has been very well maintained. Mike Everidge, Broker 541-390-0098 541-389-7910 Hunter Properties REMARKABLE RIVERFRONT HOME Riverfront home with outstanding river views in gated community! Beautiful Santa Fe home, 3 masters, triple garage, huge shop, 13.46 acres. A must see! MLS#2010104670 www.johnlscott.com/9 2475 $1,250,000 Kellie Cook, Broker 541-408-0463 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend
F4 SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
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True riverfront property Riverfront Estate! SUNTREE VILLAGE GREAT LOCATION NW Bend/Marken SW BEND | $749,000 in town. Approx. 100’ Two Residences. Two #219 • $35,400 5565 sq. ft. home on $239,900 Heights | $409,900 of low bank access Great Westside locaTriple Garages. Two 3 bedroom, 2 bath, New construction on 2.38 acres in Sunset tion close to downw/private dock. Home Bend's Westside. View Estates. 5 bedLots! This amazing 2000 Marlette. Open town and The Old Mill offers huge living rooms, 4.5 bathfloor plan, vaulted. 2322 sq. ft. home has waterfront estate feaDistrict. 2 lots with 1 room w/gas fireplace, rooms and 2 offices Large kitchen, oak 3 bedrooms, den, and tures 265 feet of Desbedroom, 1 bath spacious formal dinwith a bank vault in cabinets. Attached gabonus room. Quality chutes River frontage home. RM zoned in ing. Both have hardthis spacious floor rage. Master suite, upgrades, fully landand river views from the historic district. wood flooring. Kitchen plan. walk-in closet, master scaped, plus Casevery room. 4300+ MLS#201203906 was remodeled in MLS#201109296 bath with garden tub cade Mountain Views! sq. ft. main house w/3 JJ Jones, Broker 2004. 2nd level has a & shower. Beautifully Darrin Kelleher, Broker MLS#201203945 bedrooms and 2.5 living area, bedroom, landscaped. The Kelleher Group Diane Robinson, Brobaths 900+ sq. ft. 541-610-7318 3/4 bath & sitting area MLS#201202310. ker, ABR guest home with 3 541-788-3678 541-788-0029 w/own entrance. Main bedrooms and 1 bath. Marilyn Rohaly, Broker 541-419-8165 level master plus 541-322-9954 Gourmet kitchen with great room off of John L. Scott Real waterfall edge granite kitchen. Beautiful Estate, Bend counters. Office loft grounds abundant space. Six-car ga- www.JohnLScott.com/Bend w/roses, fruit trees, rage, 900 ft. deep SUNTREE VILLAGE shrubs & flowers. well, well house, shop #91 • $34,900 Deck access from to the middle of the Beautifully maintained master, family room & river with deeded ac1991 Guerdon home sitting room. Great cess. Radiant heated offers 3 bdrm/2 bath, central location. floors and interior 1456 sq.ft., large NW BEND | $215,000 MLS#201201109 waterfall. sunny kitchen NW CROSSING: Lightly lived in one- Lovely Tick, Tock $525,000. MLS#201202209. w/breakfast area, up4 bdrm, 3 bath level. Private master 20015 Chaney Road, dated appliances. Melody Luelling CRS home w/ great room, Tick, Tock... suite with upgraded PC Principal Broker, Bend, OR Open floor plan, master suite, loft bath & large closet, Hasson Company www.tourfactory.com/85 fenced backyard family area. ...don’t let time get vaulted great room, OPEN Sat. & Sun 1-4, Realtors, 6573. $1,695,000 w/new patio deck & kitchen with eating away. Hire a 541-330-8522 John R. Gist, garden area. Move in 2361 NW Lemhi Pass bar, dining area. Low Principal Broker. ready! $34,900. professional out Dr, $523,800, maintenance, fenced TUCKED BACK FOR Cascadia Properties www.johnlscott.com/6 541-550-0333. of The Bulletin’s backyard with rock PRIVACY 541-815-5000 8358 outcropping. 3 bdrm, 3.5 baths in “Call A Service 747 Maralin F. Baidenmann, SET-UP FOR MLS#201203216 3262 sq.ft. on 10.29 Broker 541-325-1096 Southwest Bend Homes Professional” HORSES! $129,000! Jim Moran, Broker acres. This property is John L. Scott Real 4.75 fenced level acres. Directory today! meticulously main541-948-0997 Estate, Bend ONE STORY, RIVER Outbuildings include: www.JohnLScott.com/Bend tained & set up for RIM LOW DOWN, EZ shop, woodshed, gareasy care use & enQUALIFY. 2000 sq. ft. 748 den shed, green- This home & property joyment. 4 acres of ir3/2 + den. $307,000. Northeast Bend Homes offer it all! Updated, house and barn with rigation with 2 ponds 541-322-7309 well maintained 4+ heated-auto-waterer, & irrigation equipbeds, 3.5 bath home, run-in sheds. Mt. View Park, exlnt ment includes self SINGLE LEVEL slab granite, hard$129,000. view! 1500 sf, 3 bdrm priming pumps. 1400 $193,000 wood floors, 3 wood www.johnlscott.com 2 bath, dbl garage, sq. ft. barn with tack Lovely home on 1/2 burning fireplaces, /76771 nice open plan, large room & runs, fenced & acre. 1644 sq. ft. with formal & casual living Peggy Lee Combs, Trex deck, lrg corner cross fenced with dioversized living room, plus bonus room, oflot. Community pool & Broker, 541-480-7653 rect access to BLM updated kitchen, and fice & flex space on hot tub. By owner, John L. Scott Real (ride out from home). hardwood floors. 10+- acres. 7 auto$209,000. Garage Sales Estate, Bend 3 bedroom suites, full Quiet street with RV matic, underground irwww.JohnLScott.com/Bend Call 541-388-4209 mud room/utility room parking. rigated acres. Fenced or 541-536-4243 plus pantry, soaring Garage Sales MLS#201204686 SHOWS LIKE A & cross-fenced w/8 river rock fireplace, Garage Sales Cathy Del Nero, Broker MODEL HOME stall barn & tack room, large farm style 541-410-5280 Beautiful home in a 110x220 irrigated Say “goodbuy” kitchen, 4 car garage great neighborhood, Find them arena, 24x24 shop, with shop area, covto that unused this home features a chicken coop, 2 in ered porch. $539,900 spacious kitchen, tile ponds, garden area item by placing it in MLS# 201203843 or countertops, hardThe Bulletin that all adjoins acres The Bulletin Classiieds visit wood floors and much of BLM Public Land Classiieds johnlscott.com/65053 more. plus Cascade mounBobbie Strome, Barbara Jackson, Brotain views. Adjoining 541-385-5809 541-385-5809 Principal Broker ker 541-306-8186 10+- acres also availJohn L Scott Real John L. Scott Real able. $695,000 Estate 541-385-5500 Estate, Bend NW BEND | $289,900 MLS#201201941. 749 www.JohnLScott.com/Bend Palmer built, NW SW BEND | $305,900 Melody Luelling CRS Southeast Bend Homes 746 Craftsman, Earth AdWestside home with PC Principal Broker, Take care of vantage Certified, open floor plan, hardHasson Company Northwest Bend Homes home overlooks Harwood, slate & cork 2.4 ACRES - SE BEND Realtors, your investments $339,900 vest Park. 2 master Awbrey Butte Great flooring, and granite & 4 bedroom, 541-330-8522 2.5 bath, with the help from suites, den/office + Price | $375,000 tile counters. Alley acTrue Log Home, 4 Cozy home on large 2417 sq. ft. home on bonus room. Leaded cess, excellent locaThe Bulletin’s bdrm, 4.5 baths, 17 2.4 acres, 2 irrigated, glass windows and nicely landscaped lot tion next to the comacres. Offered at Mountain Views, close “Call A Service built-in bookshelves with views of Pilot munity park with $1,295,000. MLS to town. Large 36x24 surround the fireplace. Butte, city lights & recreation trail out Professional” Directory #2101203960 shop, 4 single car MLS#201200288 great southern expoyour back door. Cate Cushman, garages, major reAmy Halligan, Broker sure. Bright throughMLS#201204974 SINGLE LEVEL HOME Principal Broker model & addition in 541-410-9045 out. Designer colors, Jerry Stone, Broker IN LA PINE 541-480-1884 2002, lovely master vaulted ceilings, on 541-390-9598 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath www.catecushman.com suite. one of the nicest home on just under an MLS#201201242 streets, a must see. Good classiied ads tell acre. Fireplace in livGreg Miller, P.C., MLS#201103293 the essential facts in an ing room, wood stove Broker, CRS, GRI Debbie Johnson, Broker in family room, wood interesting Manner. Write 541-408-1511 541-480-1293 floors, kitchen island, from the readers view - not shop area off garage, the seller’s. Convert the fenced backyard. facts into beneits. Show MLS#201200584. the reader how the item will $129,900 help them in some way. Ellen Clough, ABR, Need help ixing stuff? CRS, Broker The Bulletin Call A Service Professional 541-480-7180 To Subscribe call ind the help you need. John L. Scott Real 541-385-5800 or go to Estate, Bend www.bendbulletin.com www.bendbulletin.com www.JohnLScott.com/Bend
60881 Willow Creek Loop, Bend
Quiet living in Mt. High ; 2 bdrm, 2 bath, office, deck, nicely landscaped; dbl. garage; main floor 1905 sq.ft. + finished attic bonus area 328 sq.ft.; .19 acre + adjacent common area; Community pool, tennis, commons. Park-like setting! A Traditional sale ready for you. $295,000. MLS# 201109548
Gary Fiebick,
Principal Broker -
541-390-1602
John L Scott Bend Real Estate www.johnlscott.com/ garyfiebick FIND IT! BUY IT! SELL IT! The Bulletin Classiieds Ridgewater - SE Bend $340,000 Frank Lloyd Wright inspired custom built, 3 bedroom, 3 bath, 2408 sq. ft. & 3 car garage. Custom wood work, SS appliances, hardwood & tile floors, 2 private patios & fully landscaped fenced yard. MLS#201204385 Deborah Benson, P.C., Broker, GRI 541-480-6448
SE BEND | $269,000 Currently being used as a 6 bedroom with separate office & large playroom. Granite and stone kitchen. Stainless Steel appliances. Breakfast bar. Slate fireplace. Tons of storage. Private backyard. MLS#201106138 Jane Strell, Broker, ABR, GRI 541-948-7998
$204,000 Beautifully SE BEND | $95,000 situated on the 14th Cute little home in tee box/fairway of the mid-town. Close to Ridge Golf Course. everything. 1178 sq. This 1328 sq. ft. ft., 2 bedroom, 1 bath, 3br/2ba Sun Forest single garage, fenced built chalet is ready yard with deck, sun for you! Home-ID831 room and small office. Eagle Crest MLS#201202090 Tenbroek-Hilber Properties™ 866-722-3370 Group, LLC 541-550-4944 $235,000 One owner 1871 sq. ft. 3br/2.5ba Creekside Village townhome overlooking the pond & creek with a very private setting. Property is in immaculate condition Home-ID877 Eagle Crest Properties™ 866-722-3370 750 $499,000 If you like golf Redmond Homes this 2680 sq. ft. with 2 master suites & guest RESIDENTIAL/Investbdrm & bath is the ment | $99,000 home for you, full view •Rental house & shop of the 7th green of the building on large inRidge Course, plus dustrial zoned lot views of the 7th & 8th •Recent remodel w/new fairways of the Ridge windows, doors, paint, Course. Home-ID718 and flooring. •Rent house and use Eagle Crest Properties www.eagle-crest.com shop for your busi866-722-3370 ness or personal use •House and shop have $289,500 This beautiful separate power, have 1655 sq. ft. 2 bdrm/ 2 been rented together bath home is located and separate. in The Falls, our 55 MLS#201203189 and older Active Adult Call Fred Crouch, Community, and situ541-350-1945 ated on the 15th fairCentral Oregon Realty way of the Challenge Group LLC Golf Course. Home-ID857 Eagle Advertise your car! Crest Properties™ Add A Picture! 866-722-3370 Reach thousands of readers! Call 541-385-5809 $289,900 1747 sq. ft, The Bulletin Classifieds 2br/2ba 55 and older Active Adult Commu$289,000. Immacu- nity. Fabulous one lately maintained and level home with prirarely used 2018 sq. vacy and outstanding ft. 3 bdrm, 20189 bath landscaped yard single level Forest backing to the golf Ridge townhome with course. Home-ID882 double car garage. Eagle Crest Properties hardwood floors, ceil- 866-722-3370 ing fans, jetted tub www.eagle-crest.com and hot tub. 2 bdrm, 2 bath on 1.12 Home-ID869 acres. $139,900. Eagle Crest MLS#201203821 Properties™ Linda Lou Day-Wright, www.eagle-crest.com Broker, Crooked River 866-722-3370 Realty, 541-771-2585 Large lot with RV park- $329,950 REDMOND ing. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, VIEW HOME 4 1483 sq. ft., .24 acre bdrm + den, 2 1/2 lot, large patio, low baths, Master on maint. landscaping main, Private fenced with sprinklers. lot, RV parking, $129,900. MLS killer kitchen. De#201202432. Pam sign Quality makes Lester, Principal Broit a Show Stopper!! ker, Century 21 Gold MLS#20123413 Country Realty, Inc. Call Dale Pilon, Prin541-504-1338 cipal Broker 541-390-2901 New Listing! Large Redmond RE/MAX single story 3 bdrm, 2 Land & Homes bath, 2408 sq. ft. Real Estate home, hardwoods, granite counters, .23 Want to impress the acre lot, mtn. views, relatives? Remodel low maint. landscapyour home with the ing. $149,000. MLS #too new for listing#! help of a professional Pam Lester, Principal from The Bulletin’s Broker Century 21 “Call A Service Gold Country Realty, Professional” Directory Inc. 541-504-1338
Hours: Monday - Friday 7:30am to 5:00pm • Telephone Hours: Monday - Friday 7:30am - 5:00pm • Saturday 10:00am - 12:30pm
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 F5
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Family home in Redmond’s only golf community. Immaculate 3 bdrm, 3 bath home with living & family rooms, overlooking the course and beautifully landscaped backyard with water feature, large deck w/awning, oversized garage with room for a shop or cart, RV gated parking. A must see property. $257,500. MLS#201204230 Highland Realty, 541-948-3503, Tena Grabar broker.
Immaculate Custom New Construction | home! Spectacular $159,900. Craftsman panoramic views. Pri- style single-level floor plan, 3 bdrms, 2 vate, fenced 0.44 acre baths, 1529 sq. ft., yard landscaped to Hickory cabinets, SS perfection. Over 1000 whirlpool appliances, sq. ft. of decking & gas fireplace in living water feature w/3 room, master w/ ponds. Single level home features hard- double sinks & walk-in wood flooring, granite closet. Covered outcountertops, eating door living in back bar, Triple garage with yard. mls#201201879 shop area & RV parkCall Jim Hinton ing. $324,750 541-420- 6229 MLS#201203630 Central Oregon John L. Scott Real EsRealty Group tate 541-548-1712 New Construction Just bought a new boat? completed! 1528 sq. Sell your old one in the ft. 3 bdrm, 2 bath. classiieds! Ask about our dual sinks in master Super Seller rates! bath. $154,900. 541-385-5809 MLS 201201718. Jeanne Scharlund, Immaculate SW RedPrincipal Broker. mond 3 bdrm, 2 bath 541-420-7978 home, 1482 sq. ft., Redmond RE/MAX Pergo and tile floors Land & Homes throughout. $129,900. Real Estate MLS201204434 MLS# 201201105. Pam POINT! Lester, Principal Bro- STERLING This high quality 1528 ker, Century 21 Gold sq. ft. home is situCountry Realty, Inc. ated on a 9136 sq. ft. 541-504-1338 lot in one of Redmond’s finest LAKESIDE: The views neighborhoods. It has don’t get any better a large fenced back than this from your yard with complete patio! 3 bdrm/2 bath, privacy and RV park1871 sq. ft. Creeking. MLS#201204024 side Townhome in $150,000 Eagle Crest - partially John L. Scott Real Esfurnished. $239,950 tate 541-548-1712 MLS#201202466 John L. Scott Real EsTraditional Sale! 3 tate 541-548-1712 bdrm, 2 bath, 1548 sq. ft., gas fireplace, Cute 2 bedroom cothardwood floors, 7841 tage on the southsq. ft. corner lot, west side of town, fenced, landscaped, close to shopping, large deck. $155,000. easy access to Hwy MLS 201204155 97, recently remodeled. $93,000 This is Pam Lester, Principal Broker Century 21 a must see! Gold Country Realty, MLS#201202320. Inc. 541-504-1338 D&D Realty Group LLC 866-346-7868
Beautiful well cared for ranch-style home on .51 acre. 3 bdrms, 2 baths, over 2000 sq.ft., all on one level. Home has 9’ ceilings, Great getaway on .73 triple garage and view acre, 2496 sq. ft. of Smith Rock and the w/office/den, bonus Cascades. Tons of room, RV area, + upgrades, this is a another family roomhome you will defiliving area. nitely want to see. $165,500. MLS# $223,500. 201107685. Jeanne MLS#201107890 Scharlund, Princ. John L. Scott Real Brkr. 541-420-7978 Estate 541-548-1712 Redmond RE/MAX Land & Homes Between Bend & Real Estate Redmond, 1252 sq. ft., 30'x36' shop. Great Golf Community! $220,000. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1815 MLS#201106279 sq. ft. on .23 acre lot, TRAVIS HANNAN, open floor plan, Principal Broker vaulted, jetted master 541-788-3480 tub, landscaped, RV Redmond RE/MAX parking. $163,000. Land & Homes MLS 201203186. Real Estate Pam Lester, Principal Broker, Century 21 Gold Country Realty, Find It in Main level living... ExInc. 541-504-1338 cept for bonus room The Bulletin Classifieds! upstairs! Granite Home on .57 acres 541-385-5809 counters, wood floorinside city limits 3 ing, gas range. bdrm, 2 bath, 1497 Cascade View Estates. Double up/down sq. ft., gated parkGorgeous double blinds. Den/office. 3 ing for your toys, master home on 1/4 car garage and RV attached dbl. car gaacre w/amazing unparking behind gate. rage, additional 2 obstructed views of Fully landscaped with story shop/barn with the eastern buttes & sprinkler system. bath & office. Lots of mountains. $198,400 MLS#201204020 space & possibiliMLS#201201196 John L. Scott ties. $219,900. MLS John L. Scott Real Real Estate #201202257. Call Estate 541-548-1712 541-548-1712 Kelly Starbuck, Broker 541-771-7786 Charming Home. Now MOVE IN NOW! A Redmond RE/MAX available in NW RedLittle TLC & ready Land & Homes mond. Good size lot for summer bbq’s. 3 Real Estate with adorable cottage bdrm, 1.5 bath, style, three bdrm 1169 sq. ft. close to home with basement What are you Dry Canyon and plus detached, double schools. $84,900. looking for? garage. Wood floors MLS#20120189 and fireplace add Call VIRGINIA, PrinYou’ll ind it in warmth, as does the cipal Broker gas heat. $64,000 The Bulletin Classiieds 541-350-3418 MLS#201204495 Redmond RE/MAX D&D Realty Group Land & Homes 541-385-5809 866-346-7868 Real Estate
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
51839 Fordham Dr. - 53435 Deep Woods. LaPine. $299,000. $210,000, 3 bdrm, 2 1782 sq. ft., updated, bath, Vaulted great 1 acre, 1800 sq. ft. room, tile, granite, shop with upstairs ofhardwoods. High fice. High Lakes ReLakes Realty & Propalty & Property Manerty Management, agement 541-536-0117 541-536-0117 14781 Sugarberry LaPine, $94,900. Up- 53610 Brookie Way dated 2 bdrm, 2 bath, $380,000 LaPine. guest quarters, gaCustom 2500 sq. ft. rage, 1 acre. High plus guest suite with Lakes Realty & Propmini kitchen and full erty Management bath. High Lakes Re541-536-0117 alty & Property Management 52381 Glenwood Drive. 541-536-0117 La Pine. Cute A-Frame Cabin On The Little Deschutes Have an item to River, nice deck. sell quick? $270,000. High Lakes Realty & Property If it’s under Management $ 500 you can place it in 541-536-0117
11727 Mare Court $113,900. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, backs to BLM. Community pool & rec room. High Lakes Realty & Property Management Craftsman style home 3 541-536-0117 bdrm, 1.5 bath, & 3 bdrm, 2bath, 2-car at- master on main level. Hickory floor, tile tached garage RV counter tops, private hook up inc. water, 753 patio, gas fireplace. power & sewer. 1296 Too many extras to Sisters Homes sq. ft. 1996 mfd home, list! $185,000 wood stove on a MLS#201204253 CHARMING COTTAGE fenced 1 acre lot. Cascade Realty, Fenced yard with sprin$114,900. MLS Dennis Haniford, Princ. kler system; across from #201203349 Broker park. By owner, 541-536-1731 $207,000. 541-549-1446 1-541-536-1731 Cascade Realty
• Beautiful Asian influences throughout • 5 Master suites, 6118 sq. ft. • Downstairs family room w/kitchen • Large theater room • Stunning Cascade Mountain views MLS #201201150
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Gorgeous Awbrey Butte Home | $1,600,000
• Stunning Cascade views on over an acre • Formal great room, entertaining deck & courtyard • Gourmet kitchen, home theater room • 4 spacious suites, 6674 sq. ft. MLS #201201967
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Spectacular Home in North Rim | $1,695,000
Call Deb Tebbs Group, Brokers | 541-419-4553
Call Deb Tebbs Group, Brokers | 541-419-4553
Deb Tebbs Group | Like us on and follow us on www.debtebbsgroup.com
Deb Tebbs Group | Like us on and follow us on www.debtebbsgroup.com
This Property Has It All | $879,900
877 Theater Dr. | $785,000 • NW Contemporary Townhome in Deschutes Landing • Unmatched views of Deschutes River and Cascade Mtn. Range • Detailed Craftsmanship with exquisite finishes • Retractable sliding doors expand great room to outdoor entertaining MLS# 201201850
• Just minutes to medical, shopping, & schools • Single level, open great room • Great for entertaining • Private setting, borders BLM • Separate entrance for home office • Formal dining/living, chef’s kitchen
The Bulletin
16621 Prairie View, Classiieds for: $87,000. 2 bdrm, 2 bath, 2.79 acres. Must $ be sold with 10 - 3 lines, 7 days MLS201204093. $ 16 - 3 lines, 14 days High Lakes Realty & Property Manage- (Private Party ads only) ment 541-536-0117 138107 Manzanita, Gil- Bank owned & reduced to $96,900! 4 bdrm, christ. $79,900. Ador3 bath 2276 sq. ft. able updated cottage. frame home on 1.11 Heat pump, garage. acres. Some interior High Lakes Realty & work downstairs Property Manageneeds to be comment 541-536-0117 pleted for extra room. Attached garage. MLS 52970 Walker Way. 201202051Cascade $189,000. 3 bdrm, 2 Realty, Dennis Hanibath, vaulted ceilings, ford, Princ. Broker skylights, attached ga1-541-536-1731. rage. High Lakes Realty & Property ManBig Deschutes Cabin agement $299,000 541-536-0117 Deschutes riverfront 152106 Silver Spur cabin on 1.26 acres in $160,000. 1620 sq. ft., Haner Park. Direct 4-car detached gaswimming & boating rage, 40x60 shop. on access steps from the 1 acres. High Lakes porch. 1160 sq. ft., 1 Realty & Property bedroom, 1 bath with Management large kitchen. Bunk541-536-0117 house, outhouse, storage shed, & ga14315 Fern Dell, La rage. Pine. 28x30 garage; MLS#201204647 48x42 RV garage/ Craig Smith, Broker shop. Comfortable 541-322-2417 1008 sq. ft. home. High Lakes Realty & Property Management 541-536-0117
Country living near Ma- 123 S. Main, Prineville Three Rivers South dras with the conve- Large 4 bdrm, 3 bath, $204,900 tucked in just off nience of town close Rustic log home nicely main street minutes by. Large park-like lot situated on a half-acre from downtown. as well as numerous lot in south DesEasy care landoutbuildings for storchutes County. Open scaping & RV parkage. 3 car attached floor plan, tile ing. Craftsman style garage, 4 bdrms, 2 counters, detached home has 2703 sq. baths Ready for your garage & nicely treed. finishing touches! ft. of living. This one Close to all Central $79,900 is worth looking at. Oregon winter & MLS#201108820 $169,000 summer activities. DD Realty Group LLC MLS#201203228 MLS#201202245 866-346-7868 Call Don Chapin, BroDarryl Doser, ker, 541-350-6777 Broker, CRS Custom home near Redmond RE/MAX 541-383-4334 CRR entrance and Land & Homes golf! Has garage, Real Estate shop, greenhouse. Reduced to $144,900. MLS 201200663. Need to get an ad Call Nancy Popp Broin ASAP? ker 541-815-8000 Crooked River Realty Juniper Butte in Culver. Fax it to 541-322-7253 3 bdrm., 2.5 bath, 756 1910 sq. ft., 2.39 The Bulletin Classiieds acres, spectacular Jefferson County Homes mtn. views, large rear deck. $209,900. MLS Best Place To Live In Private nice area close Prineville! Over 201203539. Pam in at Crooked River 2000 sq. ft. 3 bdrm, Lester, Principal BroRanch. 3 bdrm., 2 2.5 bath, quiet ker, Century 21 Gold bath, very nice DBL neighborhood. TraCountry Realty, Inc. car garage, $116,900, ditional sale at 541-504-1338 MLS 201202001. $189,000. Call Julie Fahlgren MLS#201202762 Broker 541-550-0098 NEW TOWNHOME - Call Travis Hannan, Very clean, new conCrooked River Realty Principal Broker struction in Madras. 541-788-3480 1.05 Acres, Jefferson Well built, dbl. garage Redmond RE/MAX view, $149,900, with landscaped front Land & Homes MLS#20120184 Call yard and fenced Real Estate Linda Lou Day-Wright backyard. Don’t miss 541-771-2585 this one! $75,000 Crooked River Realty MLS#201201561 The Bulletin’s DD Realty Group LLC “Call A Service 1976 sq. ft. triple wide 866-346-7868 Professional” Directory mfd. w/ Cascade views, dbl. garage, Price Reduced 1783 sq. is all about meeting family + living + dinft. LOG HOME 1.49 your needs. ing room $179,900. acre rim lot. Double MLS 201203416. Call Call on one of the garage. $259,000. Nancy Popp Broker professionals today! MLS 201109591. 541-815-8000 Call Nancy Popp BroCrooked River Realty ker 541-815-8000 LARGE LOT - This is a nice 2 bdrm, 1 bath CENTRAL LOCATION - Crooked River Realty home with a 2 car $61,900. Very cute Well kept home just off detached garage. home situated on pavement, close to Close to downtown comfortable city lot. school and easy acand lots of room for all Low maintenance, cess to highway. your toys. $37,500 shed and double gaMove-in ready with MLS#201202393 rage as well as 3 kitchen appliances DD Realty Group LLC comfortable bedand washer & dryer. 866-346-7868 rooms & much more. Enclosed carport MLS#201108141 gives feeling of gaOCHOCO HEIGHTS DD Realty Group LLC rage. Wall AC in din- Cozy 2 bedroom, 1 bath 866-346-7868 ing room, 3 bdrms/ 2 home in the highly baths. Small fenced Charming end of desirable neighborbackyard. $52,900 cul-de-sac home. with hood. Hardwood MLS#201203697 western motif. Living flooring, gas fireplace D&D Realty Group room is plumbed for insert, detached ga866-346-7868 natural gas, wood & rage with covered tile floors throughout. walk way to porch. 757 Large landscaped lot Fenced large backwith sprinkler system Crook County Homes yard. Close to and a fenced backschools, shopping and yard. $119,900! Newer Prineville Home! hospital. $87,500 MLS#201109122. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1296 MLS#2012021442 DD Realty Group LLC sq. ft., vaulted, skyJohn L. Scott Real 866-346-7868 lights, master bdrm Estate 541-548-1712 separation, covered Close to schools - Nice deck, RV area. This will sell quick! 3 bdrm Madras home $105,000. MLS# New Don’t miss this 2 bdrm, in town. Landscaped Listing! Pam Lester, 1 bath in Prineville. with fenced yard, RV Principal Broker, MLS# 201204298 parking too! $79,900 Century 21 Gold $53,900 MLS#201106963, Country Realty, Inc. D&D Realty Group LLC DD Realty Group LLC 541-504-1338 866-346-7868 866-346-7868
Tetherow ~ High Desert Casual | $986,900
Call Ray Bachman, Broker, GRI | 541-408-0696
Call The Norma DuBois and Julie Moe Team, Brokers | 541-312-5151 www.TeamNormaAndJulie.com
Equestrian Meadows | NOW $750,000
Rare PointsWest Resale! | $549,000
• 3 bed, 4 bath, 4302 sq. ft. • Wrap around porch • 15.5 acres/8.6 irrigation • 50'x60' Barn - 40'x50' Shop • 7040 NE 11th St., Redmond MLS # 201107133
Call Mary Stratton, Broker | 541-419-6340
Call Shelly Swanson, Broker | 541-408-0086
Call Rod Hatchell, Broker | 541-728-8812
www.BendRiverTownhome.com
Rod.hatchell@bendluxuryhomes.com
MLS #201203220
Call Rod Hatchell Broker | 541-728-8812
Call Carol Osgood, Broker | 541-419-0843
Rod.Hatchell@bendluxuryhomes.com
www.carolosgood.com
Two Cozy Homes on the Deschutes River in the middle of Outdoor Recreation Wonderland Cozy River Front Log Home | $379,500 Cozy River Front Chalet | $375,000 • 3 bedroom + den/office or 4th bedroom, 1.5 bath • 1732 sq. ft. w/great room and river views that fill the picture windows • 3-car garage/shop. Dock. • Yards from trailhead to La Pine St. Park • 16213 Mtn. Sheep Lane MLS #201202339
• Possibly the most beautiful site on the river • Mt. Bachelor view from master bdrm w/ full length balcony • Tastefully rustic wood interior • 3 bed/1.5 bath, nearly 1800 sq. ft. • Extensive beautiful decking & dock MLS #201204195
Call Greg Barnwell, Broker | 541-848-7222 | www.gregsellscentraloregon.com
SA O T HO PE & U N SU SE N 13
North Redmond | $189,900
Brand New Listing! | $179,900
Call Joanne McKee, Broker | 541-480-5159
Call Bruce Lilleston, Broker | 541-815-3842
www.joanne@joannemckee.com
www.bendluxuryhomes.com
w w w.cascadesothebysrealty.com Sothebys Mobile App at http://m.sir.com/m/sothebys/sir/
JordanLHaase@gmail.com
• Hard to find small acreage, views of Cinder Butte & Cascades • 14.69 acres w/13 ac of irrigation • Year-round pond. Grazing fields. • Newer fencing, 2 older barns • 1977 MFG home, well depth recently increased. Spruce up or build dream home close to town MLS #201203816
• 6634 NE Olney • 3 bdrms, 2 baths, 1866 sq. ft. • Like new inside & out • A total remodel here • Nice large lot on the NE side MLS #201204914
Call Rod Hatchell Broker | 541-728-8812
Call Mary Stratton, Broker | 541-419-6340
Rod.Hatchell@bendluxuryhomes.com
maryselhms@coinet.com • maryselhms@gmail.com
Mountain Style Condo | $115,000
Fractional Ownership offered at $9,500!
!
• Perfect starter home or rental • 2 bdrms, 1 bath, 888 sq. ft. • 2 Acres w/1 acre irrigation • Fully fenced & gated • Bordering canal • Close to BLM lands MLS #201205189
• Spacious 3 bed/2.5 bath home • 2550 sq. ft. w/17’ vaulted ceilings • 3-car tandem garage • Well maintained & move-in ready • Nicely landscaped w/fenced yard • Great SW Bend location MLS #201204490
Call Jordan Haase, Principal Broker | 541-420-1559
Country Charmer! | $149,000
• .71 Acre lot in Pinebrook Subdivision, 1635 sq. ft. home • 3 larger bdrms, 1.75 bath • Living, dining, laundry area • Newer roof, RV area, large double garage, shop & storage shed • Wood & Elect. heat, all appliances in home included
River Canyon Estates | $265,000
• NorthWest Crossing cottage • Great room living, light & bright • Perfect 2nd or starter home • Move-in ready • Private outdoor living • 2 bed, 2.5 bath, 1,177 sq. ft. • Close to parks, schools, amenities
MLS #201204279 Call The Norma DuBois and Julie Moe Team, Brokers | 541-312-5151 www.TeamNormaAndJulie.com
LD
New to Market - Traditional Sale | $150,000
• Luxury Townhome in a gated community • Huge walk-in shower in main level master • Extensive use of hardwoods, granite, rock work • Beautiful setting on the 15th fairway of Widgi Creek Golf Course MLS# 201200154
Call Robin Yeakel, Broker, CRS | 541-408-0406 Resort Properties Specialist
758 NW Mt. Washington Dr | $285,000
RE PR D IC U E CE D
• Single level • 5 Acres w/inground irrigation • Barn • 3-Car attached garage • Private location • Beautifully landscaped w/irrigation canal MLS #201204232
SO
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Tumalo Small Perfect Acreage | $469,000
• Beautiful single level home on the 8th green • 4 bed/2.5 baths, 2567 sq. ft. • Large great room for entertaining • Gourmet kitchen, center island w/cooktop • Formal & casual dining • Large deck overlooking the 8th green
• Beautiful Awbrey Butte home • Spacious great room living • Custom finishes throughout • Beautiful, chef’s kitchen • Lg bonus room, laundry/craft rm • Dream garage, shops & storage • 4 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 4274 sq. ft. MLS #201204990
www.RayBachman.com
maryselhms@coinet.com • maryselhms@gmail.com
Awbrey Glen | $519,000
Stunning Cascade Mountain Views | $895,000
• 3657 SF, 3 bed/3.5 bath • Earth Advantage home • Quality throughout • Optional bonus or guest room • To be built by Bend Trend Homes • Golf membership included MLS #201104447
PR NE IC W E!
BANK OWNED! 3 bdrm, 2 bth, 1008 sq. ft., new carpet, new paint, tile floors, granite countertop in kitchen, fenced. $77,500. MLS 201202178. Pam Lester, Principal Broker, Century 21 Gold Country Realty, Inc. 541-504-1338
Eagle Crest! Custom Single Level! Mtn Views! 3 bdrm, 3 bath, w/office, gated golf community. MLS#201201743 $375,000 Call VIRGINIA, Principal Broker 541-350-3418 Redmond RE/MAX Land & Homes Real Estate
R PR $1 EDU ICE 25 CE ,00 D 0
770 NE Quince Ave., Redmond, 3 bdrm, 2 bath in quiet NE neighborhood near public park. Upgraded tile & wood. This home shows pride of ownership. $158,000. MLS#201202761 Call Don Chapin, Broker 541-350-6777 Redmond RE/MAX Land & Homes Real Estate
• 2 bedroom, 2 bath loft overlooking the National Forest • Fully appointed & beautiful • Slate, granite, stainless steel kitchen appliances • Located near pools, hot tubs, mini golf & the Adventure Center • Substantial rental income
Call Robin Yeakel, Broker, CRS | 541-408-0406 Resort Properties Specialist
• Spring Special Offering! • 1/6th deeded ownership in a beautiful 1 bed/ bath condo overlooking the National Forest • Can be used or traded through RCI • Great rental income • Great investment for friends & family MLS#201200361
Call Robin Yeakel, Broker, CRS | 541-408-0406 Resort Properties Specialist
Downtown Bend
The Old Mill
Sunriver
Sisters
541.383.7600 821 NW Wall Street
541.383.7600 650 SW Bond St., Ste. 100
541.593.2122 Sunriver Village Bldg 2
541.383.7600 102 Main Avenue
F6SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
Free Classified Ads! No Charge For Any Item $ 00
Under 200
1 Item*/ 3 Lines*/ 3 Days* - FREE! and your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com
CALL 541-385-5809 FOR YOUR FREE CLASSIFIED AD *Excludes all service, hay, wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals and employment advertising, and all commercial accounts. Must be an individual item under $200.00 and price of individual item must be included in the ad. Ask your Bulletin Sales Representative about special pricing, longer run schedules and additional features. Limit 1 ad per item to be sold.
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To receive this special offer, call 541-385-5809 Or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave.
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 F7
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Homes with Acreage
Homes with Acreage
Homes with Acreage
Homes with Acreage
Farms & Ranches
Lots
Acreages
Acreages
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
CROOKED RIVER RANCH $265,000 Cozy log home with Cascade views Craftsmanship & charm abound in this home kept in pristine condition. Check out the extra space in the bunk house/storage building. 3 stall horse barn and tack room, enormous shop with separate room for hobbies, fenced and cross-fenced. On a paved road, enjoy all CRR has to offer: birds, bunnies, deer, golf, hiking, swimming, and rich community life. MLS#201203985 Gail Day 541-306-1018 Central Oregon Realty Group LLC Powell Butte custom home on 7+ acres, Cascade views, 3 bdrms/2 bath, 2146 sq. ft., living room PLUS a family room and separate office. Tile, granite, hickory. 2016 sq. ft. shop. MLS#201106497 $369,900. John L. Scott Real Estate 541-548-1712 Fantastic mountain views! Beautiful Powell Butte log home on 5.81 acres with 2 bed 2 bath, with master on the main. Den/loft upstairs leading out to porch and fantastic mountain views. Traditional sale. $278,000. MLS#201200717 John L. Scott Real Estate 541-548-1712 $179,900 -CRR Go to www.crookedriver-or.co m for Virtual Tour. MLS#201105681 Call Linda Lou Day-Wright, Broker, 541-771-2585 Crooked River Realty 464 Pinney St. $250,000. 2400 sf, 5.564 acres, large shop, covered RV parking. High Lakes Realty & Property Management, 541-536-0117 Log home on 2+ acres | $269,000 Mtn views with rustic feeling, two acres irrigation, New tile in master bath. New paint & carpet. Great small acreage w/privacy, room for animals & your toys. Detached shop, huge covered porch, master on main, nice kitchen, laundry room w/lots of storage, counters and sink. MLS#201200600 Fred Crouch, 541-350-1945 Central Oregon Realty Group LLC 16755 Elk Ct., LaPine. 2100 sq. ft., 9.9 acres, amazing views of Mt. Bachelor. $297,000. High Lakes Realty & Property Management 541-536-0117
Butte! 10 52970 Sunrise Blvd. 3 Powell Acres! Views! Cusbdrm, 2 bath, hardtom home, spawoods, detached gacious & light, gourrage, 1.5 acres. met kitchen, office & $92,000. High Lakes more. $875,000. Realty & Property MLS#201106428 Management Call VIRGINIA, Prin541-536-0117 cipal Broker 5 acres with mountain 541-350-3418 views, 3 bdrm, 2 bath Redmond RE/MAX 1620 sq. ft., irrigated, Land & Homes 36x40 shop, fenced, Real Estate extensive sprinkler system. $279,000. POWELL BUTTE MLS2809225. $210,000 Pam Lester Principal RARE opportunity for Broker Century 21 11 acres in Twin Gold Country Lakes Ranch. May be Realty Inc. dividable. Home sits 541-504-1338 well off the road for a quiet, private setting. 69090 Hurtley Ranch Spectacular Smith Rd., Sisters. UnobRock views. Fenced structed mtn. views & cross fenced. Backs from this 2059 sq. ft., to public land! 3 bdrm, 3 bath home MLS#201108416 on 6.82 acres. 10 stall Kathy Powell, Broker horse barn, 50x120’ 541-383-4342 hay barn and 40x60’ shop. 3.5 acres of the property is irrigated. MLS #201202206. $499,000 Juniper Realty, 541-504-5393
Views! Views! Views! 79.69 acres w/27 acres of irrigation. Barn, shop, & guest quarters w/almost 2200ý sq. ft. house. $400,000. MLS#201200048 Call TRAVIS HANNAN, Principal Broker 541-788-3480 Redmond ReMax Land & Homes Real Estate Well maintained 3 bdrm, 2 bath manufactured home on 20 acres. Vaulted ceiling, den, and large kitchen with pantry. Reduced to $159,000 MLS#201107445 541-536-1731 Cascade Realty WEST POWELL BUTTE ESTATES! 21+/- acres! Traditional Sale! Gorgeous home, large RV/ shop, views! $459,000! MLS#201104899 Call VIRGINIA, Principal Broker 541-350-3418 Redmond RE/MAX Land & Homes Real Estate
8403 SW Crescent Pl. Many upgrades on this remodeled home. Hardwood & tile Quiet country living on 2 Wonderful home on SW floors, efficient heat acres in CRR, this side of Redmond on a pump. Spacious 2 chalet style home has large corner lot w/exbedroom, 2 bath on had numerous uptra parking on the 1.61 acres with dates and is waiting side, the 2 car garage mountain views. Gafor your final touches. is 4’ longer than a rage has finished ofKnotty alder kitchen normal garage. This 3 fice space. $129,900. cabinets, tongue and bdrm, 2.5 bath has an MLS# 201203132 groove, and exposed open floor plan, Juniper Realty, beams are just some walk-in closet, pantry 541-504-5393 of the unique features and built-in desk in adorning this home. Between Bend & Redthe kitchen, large bedBring your paint brush mond, 4 bdrm, 2.75 rooms. Very close to and fresh ideas, this 3 bath, 2485 sq.ft., 2.24 schools and shopping. bdrm, 2 bath home is acres, 30x30 shop w/ $148,500 Must See! waiting to be made RV bay, huge rear MLS#201203870 your home. Shop and DD Realty Group LLC deck. $369,000. MLS shed on property as #201103219. Pam 866-346-7868 well. $60,000. Won’t Lester, Principal Brolast long at this price! 763 ker, Century 21 Gold MLS#201201779 Country Realty, Inc. Recreational Homes DD Realty Group LLC 541-504-1338 & Property 866-346-7868 Close to sports comBorders government Recent price reduction!! plex! 5.52 acres! 3 lands this 3 bedroom Custom home on 7+ bdrm, 3 bath 3008 Gilchrist home has acres. Cascade sq. ft., 3200 sq. ft. walk-in closets in views, 2146 sq.ft., 3 shop w/office. each bedroom & ceilBdrm/2 Bath, living $180,000. ing fans. Front deck room PLUS a family MLS#201108429 has been made into a room & separate ofCall VIRGINIA, Prinsunroom. Oversized fice. Tile, granite and cipal Broker 2-car garage with hickory. 2016 sq.ft. 541-350-3418 propane heater plus shop. $379,900. Redmond RE/MAX extra RV cover. MLS#201106497 Land & Homes $89,000 John L. Scott Real EsReal Estate MLS#201200073 tate 541-548-1712 Custom home! 20 541-536-1731 Redmond. 109ý acres acres in West PowCascade Realty with 64 acres COI. ell Butte Estates! Crescent Lake Full Cascade Mtn. Cascade Views, 4 141038 Crescent Moon views. $599,000. bdrm/4 bath, 5494 Dr. 3bd/2ba, vaulted MLS#201006080 sq. ft., 4-car garage, ceilings, custom timCall TRAVIS HANdetached shop, ber accents, tile, NAN, Principal Brobank approved marble and bamboo ker, 541-788-3480 price. $729,900 wood flooring. GaRedmond RE/MAX MLS#201006747 rage w/2 doors & livLand & Homes Call VIRGINIA, Prining area above. Ideal Real Estate cipal Broker for vacationer. Sleep 541-350-3418 6 comfortably. TUMALO | $539,000 Redmond RE/MAX $299,000 Fantastic Cascade Land & Homes Mountain Views. 4 MlS#201108836 Call Real Estate Linda 541-815-0606 bedroom, 3 bath, Cascade Realty Custom home and out2800 sq. ft. home on standing Cascade 4.83 acres. 90 x 60 Crescent Lake Views! $299,450 indoor arena, 4 box 19138 Alpine Breeze MLS#201204034 stalls & foaling stall, Ct, Great mountain Call Melody Curry, tack & vet room, hay feel! 2 bed/1.5 bath Broker storage. Short dislodge style home on 541-771-1116 tance to mountain one acre. Travertine People Look for Information Crooked River trails. tile bath, vaulted ceilAbout Products and Realty MLS#201201589 ings, massive accent Services Every Day through Craig Long, Broker log beams. Has ample Golf course home, 2363 The Bulletin Classifieds 541-480-7647 room to grow. Losq. ft., 3 masters, one cated in Diamond 10 acres custom with sitting room and Peaks. Great vacahome shop in Powkitchenette, 243 sq. ft. tion property. ell Butte! Unique bonus room, $189,500 floorplan with in$299,000. MLS# 201200662Linda door spa room, wide MLS#201103975 541-815-0606 hallways, single Call Nancy Popp Cascade Realty level. $375,000. Broker, 541-815-8000 MLS#201108648 Crooked River Realty Eagle Crest Income Call Virginia, Principroperty and/or your Lodge-style home on pal Broker own vacation get-aDeschutes River, 5 TUMALO | $799,950 541-350-3418 way on the fairway. Lush Tumalo Ranch acres, approx. 575 ft. Redmond RE/MAX Completely turn-key with 19.5 acres, 18.5 of riverfront, Cascade Land & Homes ready to use. irrigated. Custom views, 5 bdrm, 5 bath, Real Estate $194,900. home with 4330 sq. 4649 sq.ft., 2 master 12250 NW Dove Rd. MLS#201203443 ft., 1 acre vineyard, suites, horses OK. Custom cedar sided John L. Scott Real landscaped, barn, $689,000. MLS home with floor to Estate 541-548-1712 fenced garden and #201007307. Pam ceiling windows to orchard, and much Lester, Principal Brotake in the mtn., more. Great horse ker, Century 21 Gold OWN PROPERTY views. Immaculate property! Country Realty, Inc. IN CENTRAL 1841 sq. ft., 3 bdrm, 2 MLS#201106678 541-504-1338 OREGON bath home, tongue & Brandon Fairbanks, PARADISE... groove vaulted ceil- MOTIVATED SELLER! Broker, SRES, ings, gas free stand- 41 acres with a custom GRI, CDPE ing stove, and wood 3135 sq. ft. home. 541-383-4344 accents throughout. Open living area with Completely fenced large river rock fire4.81 acres. $385,000 place, heated bathMLS# 201101447 room floor, granite Come Play on Juniper Realty, counters & more. 25 Lake Billy Chinook 541-504-5393 acres of COI irrig. Add’l horse & shop Properties start at 12851 SW Deer bldgs. RV hookup. $35,000 and go Crossing. Remodeled $599,000 MLS up to $649,000. 3 bdrm 2 bath 1440 #201107246 John L. For cabins & sq. ft. CRR home. Scott Real Estate homes Granite counters, Turn-key Ranch w/ 541-548-1712 ‘to die for’! hickory cabinets, Cascade mtn. views! bamboo wood floors, Impeccable custom Built in 1993, 38+ vinyl windows, uphome! 3 bdrm, 2½ acres w/ 26+ irrig., Three Rivers Rec Area is a gated commudated plumbing, new bath bonus room, barn, shop, hay shed, nity w/private roof, the list goes on. den, 2633 sq. ft., fenced. $550,000. Garage, carport and marina access to the hardwood, on 5ý MLS #201003925. RV covered parking. Metolius River arm of acres, large rear deck. Pam Lester, Principal Large back deck with Lake Billy Chinook. $299,000. MLS# Broker, Century 21 hot tub. Home is on 2 201201384. Pam Gold Country Realty, tax lots totaling 2.29 www.lakebillychinook Lester, Principal BroInc. 541-504-1338 properties.com acres. $109,000 MLS ker, Century 21 Gold 201204410 Country Realty, Inc. Find exactly what Elaine Budden, Juniper Realty, 541-504-1338 Broker you are looking for in the 541-504-5393 541-480-3860 CLASSIFIEDS 16800 SW Bullhead Rd. NE BEND | $239,500 Coldwell Banker Like new built in 2010, 4.14 acres within minDick Dodson Realty utes to town. Fenced 1701 sq. ft., 3 bed& irrigated land with a Two permitted homeelaine-3rivers@coldroom, 2 bath home on sites! 39ý acres. 36x48 barn, ready for wellbankermadras.com 5.31 fenced acres. Gorgeous Unobhorses. 5 stalls, 220v, Open floor plan with structed Cascade water & plenty of storRV lot, or build your an efficient wood Mountain Views! age. Single level, dream home! $44,900 stove that keeps the Possible OWC. 1864 sq ft home with 3 MLS#201008906 home cozy during $325,000. bedrooms & 2 baths. Call Melody Curry, those winter days. MLS#201201125 MLS#201200520 Broker Large shop with conCall Charlie, Desig541-771-1116 crete floors and a Nicolette Jones, Broker nated Broker 541-241-0432 Crooked River greenhouse. MLS# 541-350-3419 Realty 201200391 $299,000 Redmond RE/MAX Juniper Realty, Land & Homes 764 541-504-5393 Real Estate Farms & Ranches 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 30x48 Very private 10 fenced RV/Auto Garage, 1.66 acres with 2000 sq. ft. 40 acre horse property, acre rim lot, golf 175’x275’ arena, 60’ custom home, 60 x 36 course and Cascade round pen, 3 stall barn insulated shop with views. Price Reduced with 24’x 100’ padattached guest quarto $159,900, ters. Mtn. views, Trex docks off stalls, MLS#201202284 decking, RV hook-up, 225’x375’ turn out Call Nancy Popp, Princ. PANORAMIC VIEWS! loafing shed, private area, heated & insuGreat location 3 miles Broker 541-815-8000 well, plenty of room to lated 12’x24’ shop, NW of Redmond. Crooked River Realty park toys and have 12’x12’ tack room, Views of Smith Rock animals, No CC&R’s 12’x12’ storage room, 3 bedroom, 2 bath & Ochocos. Custom or HOA, easy access newer carpet, vinyl, beautiful home. Barn, built 2478 sq. ft. home to Bend, Redmond or paint, too much to list. shop, 3-car garage. on 4.74 acres. 1800 Sisters. $498,750 $179,900. MLS $145,000. sq. ft. shop w/RV bay. MLS #201203090. #201204056 CasMLS#201204133 MLS#201202726 Call Tena Grabar at Call Julie Fahlgren, cade Realty, Dennis $447,000. Highland Realty Broker, Crooked River Haniford, Princ. BroJohn L. Scott Real 541-923-2311 Realty, 541-550-0098 ker 1-541-536-1731. Estate 541-548-1712
VIEWS IN The Highlands at BroBeautiful Prineville BEST BRASADA | $169,900 ranch $1,490,000. ken Top. 10 acres Scenic, secluded and Large corner lot, beaugated, private well, tiful views, no buildhas 1746 seeded utilities at lot, apable lots on either acres, offers grass proved for cap-fill side, close to the top meadows, sloping septic. $535,000. Equestrian facility, hills w/juniper, 6 reMLS# 201200937 golf, athletic center corded wells, 2 stock Pam Lester, Principal w/pools. Awesome loponds (600 gpm). AtBroker, Century 21 cation to build your tractive log home, with Gold Country Realty, home on 1.34 acre lot. breathtaking panInc. 541-504-1338 MLS#201107309 oramic views. New 5 acres adjoins public Vicci Bowen 3000 sq ft shop, storland over Deschutes 541-410-9730 age and hay barn with River. $79,900. MLS horse stalls. Fenced, Central Oregon Realty #201102328. Group, LLC borders BLM/3 sides Call Linda Lou + 3 LOP tags. Build Your Dream Day-Wright, Broker, MLS#201106700 Home | $62,900 541-771-2585 Vicci Bowen Large .47 acre lot on Crooked River Realty 541-410-9730 desired Fairway Central Oregon Realty 20 ACRES Heights Drive. BeauGroup, LLC - TERREBONNE tiful views of the city, Cascade Pilot Butte, eastern Incredible 771 Mountain, Smith Rock mountain range, and Lots and valley views! Two a glimpse of the golf 10-acre parcels with course. Nestled in North Powell Butte | 3 well & septic appine trees. Close to lots! Buildable, rare, proved. Great area to river trail. 9.97 acre parcel build! Bank Owned. MLS#201105195 $95,000; 10.29 acres $149,900. Jackie French, Broker $95,000; 17.36 acres www.johnlscott.com/46 541-480-2269 $125,000. Irrigation 964 canal running through, Lisa McCarthy, Broker, lots of trees, Cascade SRES 541-419-8639 views, quiet area. John L. Scott Real Vicci Bowen Broker, Estate, Bend 541-410-9730 www.JohnLScott.com/Bend Central Oregon Realty Group 32.42 acres in urban growth boundary adCheck out the jacent to The Greens, classiieds online kitty-corner to new www.bendbulletin.com Canyon Dr., Redmond Ridgeview High 1.13 acres with access School. $599,000. Updated daily from two streets proMLS# 201203198 • 10 Acre, zoned for 5 viding you many Pam Lester, Principal acre lots $28,500. building site options. Broker, Century 21 AD# 2922 Owner terms availGold Country Realty, • 1+ Acre, cement sep- able. $58,500 MLS# Inc. 541-504-1338 tic installed $29,995. 201106385 AD# 3442 4.38 acre view lot, Juniper Realty, • 2.5 Acres, Lake & backs to BLM, Cas541-504-5393 Mountain views cade mtn and Smith Driveway in and mtn. $65,000. AD# 8602 Rock view, corner lot, views. 1.02 acres. • 2 Acres, Cascade Mtn. approved for stan$53,900 views $79,900. dard septic. $199,000. MLS#201103466 AD# 2512 MLS #2809381. Pam Call Melody Curry, • .63 Acre, Deschutes Lester, Principal BroBroker, 541-771-1116 River $81,500. ker, Century 21 Gold Crooked River Realty AD# 2542 Country Realty, Inc. • 1.24 Acre, NW Bend Driveway in, mountain 541-504-1338 acreage $95,000. views! $44,900 5-acre corner lot, flat AD# 2962 MLS#201108471 & fully treed. $49,900 • 5 Acre, improved lot, Melody Curry, Broker MLS#201109114 big pines $98,950. 541-771-1116 Call Nancy Popp, AD# 2332 Crooked River Principal Broker • 1.7 Acre, backs comRealty 541-815-8000 mon & river $115,000. Level city lot in the Crooked River AD# 2372 heart of Culver. All Realty • 5 Acre, backs to BLM utilities are at the land $119,000. street ready to be in*** AD# 3302 stalled. This lot just CHECK YOUR AD • 1.83 Acre, Deschutes needs your new Please check your ad River lot $124,000. home. $38,200 MLS on the first day it runs AD# 2182 201203505 to make sure it is cor• 10 Acres, Paulina Juniper Realty, rect. Sometimes inViews $150,000. AD# 541-504-5393 structions over the 3062 phone are misunder• .27 Acre, SR Resort Nice flat lot in Terre stood and an error corner lot $159,900. bonne, .56 acres, can occur in your ad. AD# 2232 paved street, apIf this happens to your TEAM Birtola Garmyn proved for cap-fill ad, please contact us Prudential High Desert septic. Utilities are at the first day your ad Realty 541-312-9449 the lot line. $42,000. appears and we will www.BendOregon MLS# 201201172 be happy to fix it as RealEstate.com Pam Lester, Principal soon as we can. Broker, Century 21 $94,900 Fabulous CasDeadlines are: WeekGold Country Realty, cade Mountain View days 11:00 noon for Inc. 541-504-1338 Lot!! Now is the time next day, Sat. 11:00 to build your dream Owner will carry! fana.m. for Sunday and home on this .39 of an tastic 1/2 acre lot with Monday. acre lot, backs to views. $59,900. MLS 541-385-5809 open space!! Enjoy all 201008725 Thank you! Eagle Crest ameni- Call Julie Fahlgren, The Bulletin Classified ties. Homesite-ID795 Broker 541-550-0098 *** Eagle Crest Crooked River Realty Properties™ Chinook Dr., Crooked River Front Lot in 866-722-3370 River, Smith Rock & Tumalo | $389,000 mtn. views. Owner $175,000 Extraordinary Come and build your terms available. 6.9 opportunity to own a dream house on this acres with all utilities golf course lot at rare 1.47 acre River & custom home plans. Eagle Crest in gated Front property in Tu$189,000 MLS# community. One half malo. Close to town. 201008671.• 5.68 acre lot on the 12th Bring your horses and acres has many green/Resort Course. enjoy your own pribuilding sites. Homesite-ID925. vate island on the De$225,000 MLS# Eagle Crest schutes. Great fishing 201106408 Properties™ spot. Juniper Realty, 866-722-3370 MLS#201204776 541-504-5393 Carolyn Priborsky, P.C., 1.12 acre, mtn. views Broker, ABR, CRS Chipmunk Rd., CRR. $35,000 541-383-4350 Level 5.19 acres with MLS#201201382 Call mtn. views. Well treed Linda Lou Day-Wright with several possible 541-771-2585 building sites. Comm. Crooked River Realty water & power avail. $159,000 Probably the at street. Owner finest golf course lot terms. $69,000 MLS# remaining. Located 20110609 behind a private gate Juniper Realty, of upscale homes. 541-504-5393 Looks east at the mountains & sits on Septic installed, backs Elkhorn Lane. Amazing the #17 hole of the mountain views. Level to pasture. $55,000 golf course. Level & MLS#201203940 6.18 acres, well treed, easy to build. Homesgood possible buildMelody Curry, Broker ite-ID 870 Eagle Crest ing sites. Close to the 541-771-1116 Properties™ entrance of CRR. Crooked River 866-722-3370 $74,750 MLS# Realty 201106579. Juniper $35,000. 9148 sq. ft. lot Realty, 541-504-5393 on cul-de-sac, util. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! stubbed in PUE, close Golden Mantel Rd., to West Canyon Rim Door-to-door selling with CRR. 5 acre lot Park and access to fast results! It’s the easiest ready to build. There Dry Canyon Trail. way in the world to sell. is an old rock building MLS 201005021. adding to the charm of Pam Lester, Principal The Bulletin Classiied the property with outBroker. Century 21 standing views of the 541-385-5809 Gold Country Realty, Cascades and plenty Inc. 541-504-1338 of privacy. $155,000 Three Rivers South MLS# 201200629 $80,000 AGENCY LAKE BeauFlat .48 of an acre Juniper Realty, tiful 1/3 ac near lake. building lot on corner 541-504-5393 Views, water, vacawith canal along one tion dream! Sacrifice, 39.75 side, canal flows di- GORGEOUS $5800. 505-577-3141 ACRES!! You get it all rectly into the Big Dewith this one! Huge AMAZING WEST schutes River. Area Cascade Mountain HILLS LOT Over 1/3 has boat launch & views, awesome river acre West Hills Lot on dock, clubhouse and frontage, natural juniuphill side of the road maintenance. per, all topped off with street. Views to the MLS#201105237 unique natural rock south, southeast and Don Kelleher, Broker outcroppings! CUP city lights. Home site 541-480-1911 has been granted. has been partially Adjacent to miles of cleared. $145,000. Public Lands. MLS# 201010522 or MLS#201201017 visit $199,000 johnlscott.com/50798 John L. Scott Real EsBobbie Strome, tate 541-548-1712 Principal Broker John L. Scott Real Estate 541-385-5500 www.coguide.com Vista Rim at Eagle Awbrey Butte Lot Crest Resort $139,000 Westside, mountain & homesites are avail. for the very first time. city views-you'll love This upscale comthis .26 acre lot lomunity perched on the cated near the top of gentle slopes of Cline Awbrey Butte on the Butte, features views southwest face. Build of Smith Rock, and your energy efficient Whether you’re the surrounding home by taking adlooking for a hat or a mountains. Starting at vantage of southerly place to hang it, $42,500, this is the solar exposure! perfect opportunity to your future is just MLS#2713949 build your dream Greg Floyd, a page away. home. The Lakeside P.C., Broker Sport Center, fitness 541-390-5349 club, and tennis courts are just a short walk and owners receive preferred access to the Resort’s Thousands of ads daily golf courses ad more. in print and online. Allow us to show you To place your ad, visit these incredible values at Eagle Crest www.bendbulletin.com or call 541-385-5809 Resort 866-722-3370
Where buyers meet sellers
Nice mountain views, 3.09 acres, $95,950 MLS#201101554. Call Linda Lou Day-Wright, Broker, 541-771-2585 Crooked River Realty NW Dove Rd., Terrebonne. Mtn. views from these 5.12 acres located in a desirable area. Save time & money with septic, well & power already installed. $98,500 MLS# 20120135 Juniper Realty, 541-504-5393 Powell Butte 6 acres, 360 views, great horse property, 10223 Houston Lake Rd. $99,900. 541-350-4684 Shop and septic installed! $108,430 MLS#2802042 Melody Curry, Broker 541-771-1116 Crooked River Realty SW Geneva View Rd. , Terrebonne. Level 1.14 acres that will be easy to build on. Well treed with an abundance of wildlife passing through. $41,500 MLS# 201102002 Juniper Realty, 541-504-5393 SW River Rd. Exc.view from top of property. 2.79 acres walking distance to the Deschutes River & Steelhead Falls. Hike, bike, ride horses, fly fish. Quiet & natural setting is ideal for vacations or year round living. $49,000 MLS# 201009429 Juniper Realty, 541-504-5393 Waterhole Pl. Unique properties with several possible building sites. Natural setting for pond or daylight basement.Nicely treed & private at end of cul-de-sac. Lot 5 - 3.2 acres $60,000 • MLS 201201076; Lot 4 4.78 acres $70,000 • MLS 201201074 Juniper Realty, 541-504-5393 775
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
Snowberry Village #120 $119,000 • 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 1674 sq. ft. 2000 Silvercrest • Corian counters, Tile floors • Trex decking, Solar Tubes • Formal living & dining rooms • Enormous kitchen with island and bay window breakfast area • Master suite 2 walk-in closets and huge bath • Den or 3rd bedroom with French doors • 3-Car Garage • Central A/C, 1 year AHS warranty Call Marilyn Rohaly, Broker, 541-322-9954 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com Suntree Village #87 $33,800. 2 Bdrm, 2 bath, Large bonus /hobby room (372 sq.ft.) 1991 Guerdon, vaulted, open plan - lots of windows. Designer paint, new wood laminate, new carpeting. lots of upgrades. Call Marilyn Rohaly, Broker, 541-322-9954 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com 12’x40’, 1/1, lots of upgrades, Senior Park. north side of Bend. $6,500. 541-382-6530 3 Bdrm., 2 bath, just under 2 fenced acres, 2001 manufactured in great cond., $79,900, MLS#201201999, Call Julie Fahlgren, Broker, 541-550-0098 Crooked River Realty Marlette Mfd Home in 55+ mobile home park, Madras Area, for sale or rent, 541-480-6200
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GROWIN
with an ad in The Bulletin’s “Call A Service Professional” Directory
Snowberry Village #46 $89,150. Very nice, well maint, 2/2, near Costco/Fo3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1600+ Senior Park sq.ft., 1994 Silver- rum, w/pool, $39,500, call crest, living room, owner, 541-280-0955. separate dining room and large kitchen with 780 eating area, huge Mfd./Mobile Homes covered BBQ deck, nice views, pellet with Land stove, large laundry room and 2 car at- Fully fenced 1 acre with tached garage. 3bdrm/2bath home Call Marilyn Rohaly, that is well mainBroker, 541-322-9954 tained and has been John L. Scott Real upgraded. Garage, 2 Estate, Bend sheds, metal roof, www.JohnLScott.com covered porches and deck. RV site with full Snowberry Village #56 hookups & plenty of $55,000 storage. $102,500 • 3 bedrooms, 2 baths MLS#201104080 • 1248 sq. ft. Silvercrest 541-536-1731 • Open plan w/lots of Cascade Realty light • FA heat plus heat Palm Harbor mfd. home pump (A/C) with 4 bdrm, 3 full • Attached 2-car garage baths. Open floor • Close to clubhouse plan, all appliances, • 1 year AHS warranty lots of storage space included and block perimeter • Private backyard foundation. All this on Call Marilyn Rohaly, 9.52 acres. $223,000 Broker, 541-322-9954 MLS#201105757 John L. Scott Real Cascade Realty Estate, Bend 541-536-1731 www.JohnLScott.com 145055 Birchwood Rd. Snowberry Village #119 LaPine. $39,500. 2 $144,500. bdrm, 1 bath, 840 sq. 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, ft., 1 acre. Good rental 1920 sq.ft., 2000 Sil- history. High Lakes vercrest - triplewide. Realty & Property Living room, family Management room, dining room, 541-536-0117 remodeled kitchen w/breakfast bar, pri- 1904 sq. ft. home on 1+ acre, 3-car garage, vate master suite w/walk in closet, mas- covered RV/auto park, Outstanding Cascade ter bath w/garden tub views. $148,900. & double shower, gas FA heat plus air condi- MLS#201106356 tioning, immaculate - Call Nancy Popp Broker 541-815-8000 too many upgrades to Crooked River Realty list! Call Marilyn Rohaly, 4 bdrm/2 bath beautiful Broker, 541-322-9954 home with big shop. John L. Scott Real $118,900. Estate, Bend MLS#201106461 www.JohnLScott.com Call Julie Fahlgren 541-550-0098 Suntree Village #93 Crooked River Realty $37,800. 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1876 BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS sq.ft., 1982 Fleet- Search the area’s most wood, vaulted living comprehensive listing of and formal dining, classiied advertising... huge kitchen/family real estate to automotive, room with fireplace, merchandise to sporting two carports plus front goods. Bulletin Classiieds deck and back patio. appear every day in the $2500 carpet credit print or on line. 1 year AHS warranty Call 541-385-5809 included. www.bendbulletin.com Call Marilyn Rohaly, Broker, 541-322-9954 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend Rental or build your www.JohnLScott.com dream home! Suntree Village #219 $56,230 $35,400. MLS#201201421 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, Melody Curry, 2000 Marlette, Open Broker floor plan - vaulted, 541-771-1116 Large kitchen - oak Crooked River cabinets, Attached gaRealty rage, Master suite walk-in closet, Master Call a Pro bath w/garden tub & Whether you need a shower, Beautifully landscaped. fence ixed, hedges Call Marilyn Rohaly, trimmed or a house Broker, 541-322-9954 built, you’ll ind John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend professional help in www.JohnLScott.com The Bulletin’s “Call a Snowberry Village #88 Service Professional” $60,000. Directory 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1404 541-385-5809 sq.ft., 1994 Silvercrest, spacious living room with dining area The perfect trio and huge kitchen, gas $149,900 Spacious heat and air condition- quality Fuqua home. ing, separate laundry Enjoy gigantic mounroom, finished and in- tain views over your sulated 2 car garage, morning coffee and close to clubhouse. pastry. Enjoy moseyCall Marilyn Rohaly, ing through your deBroker, 541-322-9954 lightful flower garden John L. Scott Real MLS# 201200450 Gail Estate, Bend Day 541-306-1018 www.JohnLScott.com Central Oregon Realty Group
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809
F8 SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
COLDWELL BANKER MORRIS REAL ESTATE
541-382-4123 REALTOR
Thousands of listings at www.bendproperty.com This Week’s New Listings NE BEND | $620,000
THE PARKS AT BROKEN TOP | $349,000
RIDGEWATER - SE BEND | $340,000
BIG DESCHUTES CABIN | $299,000
WESTSIDE BUNGALOW CHARMER | $269,000
Beautiful and private 2.5 acre lot with Cascade views. 4 bedroom plus den & bonus room. Separate 1200 sq. ft., 2-bay RV garage & storage area. 1 year home warranty included. MLS#201204530 (730)
Former model with upgraded finishes, draperies & perfect location across from park. Classic great room, large upscale eat-in kitchen, dining room. 2 built-in offices, luxury master suite with fireplace. MLS#201204528 (730)
Frank Lloyd Wright inspired custom built, 3 bedroom, 3 bath, 2408 sq. ft. & 3 car garage. Custom wood work, SS appliances, hardwood & tile floors, 2 private patios & fully landscaped fenced yard. MLS#201204385 (730)
Deschutes Riverfront cabin on 1.26 acres in Haner Park. Direct swimming & boating access steps from the porch. 1160 sq. ft., 1 bedroom, 1 bath with large kitchen. Bunkhouse, storage shed, & garage. MLS#201204647 (730)
2 bedroom, 2 bath + bonus room! Move-in ready, Remodeled by licensed contractor. New paint, carpet, fireplace, landscaping! Enjoy nearby Drake Park! Lots of windows, large kitchen with SS appliances. MLS#201204436 (730)
MEGAN POWER, BROKER, GRI, CDPE 541-610-7318
LYNNE CONNELLEY, ECOBROKER, ABR, CRS 541-408-6720
DEBORAH BENSON, PC, BROKER, GRI 541-480-6448
CRAIG SMITH, BROKER 541-322-2417
BONNIE SAVICKAS, BROKER 541-408-7537
SE BEND | $210,000
NE BEND | $197,000
NW REDMOND | $128,900
SE BEND | $99,900
FOR LEASE | $2,115/MONTH
House needs some work but there is potential. 2210 sq. ft., 7 bedroom, 2.5 bath, SS countertops & slate flooring in kitchen, fireplace in living room, large 2-car garage with living space above. MLS#201204657 (730)
Turnkey property, 1206 sq. ft., 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Close to Pine Nursery Park, dog park, medical and shopping. Lots of upgrades including hardwood floors, tile countertops and A/C. Ready to move in to. MLS#201204680 (730)
2 story, 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 1313 sq. ft. located in Pine Tree Meadows. Nice fenced backyard with mountain views. Newer carpet and paint. Tandem garage. Bank owned. MLS#201204537 (730)
3 bedroom, 1 bath, 1192 sq. ft., located on a .40 acre lot with room for toys and/or RV. Buyer responsible for verifying zoning and uses. MLS#201204612 (730)
Middle of Bend location, excellent visibility, high traffic center. Anchored by Safeway, Ace Hardware, and Dental office. Good parking. MLS#201204560 (730)
SYDNE ANDERSON, BROKER, CRS, WCR, CDPE, GREEN 541-420-1111
AMY HALLIGAN, BROKER 541-410-9045
MARK VALCESCHINI, P.C., BROKER, CRS, GRI 541-383-4364
MARK VALCESCHINI, P.C., BROKER, CRS, GRI 541-383-4364
PAULA VANVLECK, BROKER 541-280-7774
Visit our office conveniently located at 486 SW Bluff Dr. in the Old Mill District, Bend. Visit us online or call 541-382-4123 | Visit us at: CASA MARIPOSA | $3,990,000
NW BEND | $1,500,000
BROKEN TOP | $1,350,000
THREE RIVERS SOUTH | $649,000
BROKEN TOP | $625,000
Magnificent prairie style 8676 sq. ft. home. 6 bedroom suites. Mt. Bachelor to Mt. Jefferson views. 4000 sq. ft. Casita/Shop. Garages for 8 cars & 2 RVs. 9.78 acres between Bend & Sisters. Grand Ridge Estates. MLS#201106412 (762)
Executive home with Cascade views, master his/her bathroom & closets, junior master suite, media room, exercise room, shop/studio, oversized 3 car garage, professional cook’s kitchen & elevator. MLS#201200510 (746)
The Pinehurst at Broken Top by Steven Van Sant/Pacwest Homes! Unmatched quality & craftsmanship! Singlelevel, 3-car garage, custom cabinetry & trim, 0.55 acre golf course view lot. No expense spared! MLS#201204424 (747)
Gorgeous RIVERFRONT craftsman home, built in 2005. Gated entry, great room design, all one level except for big 3rd bedroom. Attached 3-car garage AND RV garage! Private, 1.22 acre lot with dock. MLS#201203850 (755)
Beautiful home on the 17th fairway with lake views. 3 bedroom, 3.5 bathroom, spacious living room, well-appointed kitchen, formal dining, den, 4 gas fireplaces. First floor patio, 2nd floor deck. MLS#201204742 (747)
MEGAN POWER, BROKER, GRI, CDPE 541-610-7318
SUSAN AGLI, BROKER, SRES 541-383-4338 • 541-408-3773
DAVID GILMORE, BROKER 541-312-7271
JULIA BUCKLAND, BROKER, ABR, ALHS, CRS, GRI 541-719-8444
SHELLY HUMMEL, BROKER, CRS, GRI, CHMS 541-383-4361
RIVER FRONT PROPERTY | $545,000
SW BEND | $539,000
OLD MILL DISTRICT | $539,000
NW BEND | $500,000
DOWNTOWN BEND | $475,000
Imagine hearing the river in every room in your home. This home has it all! 5 bedroom, 3 bath, 3 car garage, 2985 sq. ft., incredible outdoor living with breathtaking river and mountain views! MLS#201204920 (747)
Treasure of a home in River Rim! Warm & inviting single level built by Schumacher. Extensive use of woods & custom window coverings. A must see to appreciate the extensive amenities! MLS#201108147 (747)
UNOBSTRUCTED MTN & RIVER VIEWS! 1633 sq. ft. corner unit, 2 master suites, Secure parking & storage. Quick access to river, shops & restaurants. Fully furnished, lease option & owner terms available. MLS#201106900 (740)
Fantastic Investment Opportunity! Three beautifully remodeled rental units in Bend’s NW Historic District with two units in nightly rental with great history. Close to downtown & the Old Mill District. MLS#201108450 (746)
Recently updated 4 bedroom, 2.75 bathroom, 2200 sq. ft. home across the street from the Deschutes River. Large two car garage and shop area. Near Drake Park and Downtown. MLS#201201264 (746)
MELANIE MAITRE, BROKER 541-480-4186
JIM & ROXANNE CHENEY, BROKERS 541-390-4050 • 541-390-4030
LISA CAMPBELL, BROKER 541-419-8900
LESTER FRIEDMAN, P.C., BROKER 541-330-8491
SCOTT HUGGIN, BROKER, GRI 541-322-1500
HOME & SHOP ON ACREAGE | $459,000
MOUNTAIN VIEWS | $450,000
WYNDEMERE | $425,000
NW CROSSING | $405,000
SE BEND - 9.06 ACRES | $399,900
Over 3000 sq. ft. home! 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, downstairs master, den, media room, formal dining and living room. 4.42 acres, 1600 sq. ft. shop with 12’ and 14’ doors. MLS#201202244 (762)
Cascade Mountain views from 6.46 acres with large garage/RV area, barn, cross-fenced pastures & underground sprinklers. SolAire home with updated kitchen, huge family room, deck & wrap-around porch. MLS#201201805 (749)
Custom 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 3704 sq. ft. on .59 acre. Spacious kitchen, formal living room, family room, large master suite, formal & informal dining spaces. Cascade views, 2 outdoor living areas. MLS#201203112 (746)
Wonderful open floor plan, beautiful use of woods, vaulted ceilings & extraordinary light in this custom Craftsman. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, office, deep front porch. Delightful gardens. MLS#201202992 (746)
Beautifully treed 9.06 acre parcel offers elevated vistas with mountain views to build your dream home. Borders BLM land. All utilities are to the property. Quiet setting minutes from town. MLS#201205047 (773)
JUDY MEYERS, BROKER, GRI, CRS 541-480-1922
SUE CONRAD, BROKER, CRS 541-480-6621
JOHN SNIPPEN, BROKER, MBA, ABR, GRI 541-312-7273 • 541-948-9090
LYNNE CONNELLEY, ECOBROKER, ABR, CRS 541-408-6720
SHERRY PERRIGAN, BROKER 541-410-4938
RIVER RIM | $359,900
ACREAGE IN SE BEND | $350,000
NW BEND | $339,900
NW BEND | $315,000
19.5 ACRES - VIEWS | $299,000
D CE DU E R
3 bedroom + office, open great room floor plan with low maintenance yard. Vaulted ceilings, spacious bedrooms, gourmet kitchen with hardwood floors, alder cabinetry & island with granite slab counters. MLS#201201245 (747)
Great 4 bedroom remodeled home on 2.6 acres in desirable Dobbin Acres. Features mountain views, hardwood floors, spacious bedrooms, bonus room, office, plus fenced and has a large shop. MLS#201203592 (762)
Nicely finished home in sought after NW Location. 2315 sq. ft., 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 2 car garage. Granite counters, Viking stove, wood flooring. Greenhouse, beautifully landscaped yard and patio. MLS#201203724 (746)
Beautifully maintained home just a short distance from the river trail. Wood floors, gas fireplaces, stainless steel appliances, large master suite. Gorgeous fenced yard, paver patio, wrap around decks. MLS#201203962 (746)
NATALIE VANDENBORN, BROKER 541-508-9581
PATTI GERAGHTY, BROKER 541-948-5880
MARK VALCESCHINI, P.C., BROKER, CRS, GRI 541-383-4364
MARGO DEGRAY, BROKER, ABR, CRS 541-480-7355
STEVE PAYER, BROKER, GRI 541-480-2966 BELINDA DUNCAN, BROKER 541-815-1308
EAGLE CREST | $279,900
SUNRIVER | $249,900
SUNRIVER | $245,000
NW BEND | $215,000
SE BEND | $199,000
G N I D N PE S Y A D IN 7
Well, barn/shop & tack house are all in, now just add a home! Parcel has a permanent CUP in place for farm dwelling. Cascade Mountain views! 16 acres of COI water rights. Near Badlands Wilderness Area. MLS#201204953 (773)
EN 3 OP 12T A S
ONE-OF-A-KIND lodge style chalet! Floor to ceiling rock fire place. Easterly views and 6th tee of the Ridge golf course from the patio, privacy screen, hot tub & BBQ. Completely furnished. MLS#201103111 (750)
Spacious open plan with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, and nicely furnished, sleeps nine! Big deck with built-in seating plus a private deck with hot tub. Convenient location with a quiet, wooded setting. MLS#201204910 (755)
This exceptional home was extensively remodeled in 2005. Beautiful custom Hickory cabinets, hardwood floors, carpet, solid wood doors, upgraded light fixtures, and much more! Large paved driveway. MLS#201204871 (755)
Lightly lived in one-level. Private master suite with upgraded bath & large closet, vaulted great room, kitchen with eating bar, dining area. Low maintenance, fenced back yard with rock outcropping. MLS#201203216 (746) 63235 Britta St. (Off OB Riley)
Well priced, spacious 4 bedroom, formal living/dining rooms, kitchen with Alder cabinets, stainless appliances & tiled counters opens to great room. Big fenced back yard with concrete patio. MLS#201203080 (749)
SYDNE ANDERSON, BROKER, CRS, WCR, CDPE, GREEN 541-420-1111
KARIN JOHNSON, BROKER 541-639-6140
PAT PALAZZI, BROKER 541-771-6996
VIRGINIA ROSS, BROKER, ABR, CRS, GRI 541-480-7501
TENBROEK - HILBER GROUP, LLC 541-550-4944
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY | $187,000
NW BEND LOT | $119,000
SW BEND LOT | $36,000
FOR LEASE | $0.40/SQ. FT.
TWO RIVERS NORTH LOTS
Fishing Guide Business including all equipment, boats, and permit. Spin & fly fishing in Central Oregon. 28 years in Business MLS#201201397 (732)
3/4 acre homesite on Awbrey Butte. Quiet cul-de-sac and city views. Bring your builder! Directions: Mt Washington Drive to Summit Drive to Lucus Court. 2830 NW Lucus Court. MLS#201203022 (771)
Great lot in Romaine Village to put your manufactured home on. Nearly a third of an acre, lots of mature trees and fenced on 3 sides. Just minutes from Downtown and the Old Mill District. MLS#201202702 (771)
Beautiful, open, second floor space of 3100 sq. ft., 2 restrooms, full mountain views, operable windows. MLS#201203060 (732)
A RIVER RUNS THROUGH IT IN TWO RIVERS NORTH. Beautiful 1.26, 1.45, & 1.84 acre river front parcels. Owner will consider carrying. Priced from $124,900, multi-lot discount possibilities. Fish on! MLS#201104945 (771)
MICHELLE TISDEL, PC, BROKER 541-390-3490
BECKY BRUNOE, BROKER 541-350-4772
ROOKIE DICKENS, BROKER, GRI, CRS, ABR 541-815-0436
PAULA VANVLECK, BROKER 541-280-7774
DANA MILLER, BROKER 541-408-1468