Bulletin Daily Paper 11-07-15

Page 1

SATURDAY November7,2015 COMING MONDAY

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OR-25 —It looks like a lone wolf has attacked livestock in northeast Oregon.B1

By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin

Youngsters experimenting with marshmallow

Waking up —Therearea

shooters and toy rockets

few simple things you cando to make it easier.A3

may soon be able to go about their good-natured

mischief without fear of prosecution now that city of

Central OregonSmash

Bend officials aim to pass

— Video gamelovers gather in Bend for tournaments.D1

• Painted Hilsrock , formations, towns,JohnDayRiverwould put the 'scenic' in thisbikeway

2016 election —Findout what's happening.A5

And a Wed exclusive-

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Thedeath of a 24-year-old has cast new light on the potential dangers of cryotherapy. beetibenetie.cern/extras

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more specific regulations on the discharge of weapons within city limits.

Current city code says nobody can fire or discharge "any gun or other weapon, induding springor air-actuated pellet guns, or a weapon which propels a projectile by use of a bow or sling, explosives, or jet or rocket propulsion." That means airsoft guns, paintballs and some science

experiments designed for aspiring astronauts are

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Antelope

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Why juicy

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amendments, first read

JEFFERSON COUNTY -,''

WHEELER COUNTY

tPainted HltlsWir., John ttay Fossil Beds lIiationat Monument .... s...

. . . . . .

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l Kimberly GRANT COUNTY

. . . . . .

Madras

by the City Council on Wednesday, would allow people to use certain non-

lethal weapons in specific circumstances. SeeWeapons/A7

Mitchell I

KEYSTONE REJECTION

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By Michelle Boorstein and Paul Farhi

.

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— m 4.

By Scott Hammerse The Bulletin

Bulletin file photos

The Washington Post

Gossip and internal politicking are so much

CROOK COUNTY

Prineville

I

Red pond

a part of Vatican life that

an old Rome joke goes: Greg Cross/The Bulletin

something you only tell one person at a time." But this week the defi-

of Fossil, Service Creek, Kimberly and Mitchell. Terrain in the area is hilly, with nearly 13,000 feet

Comments about the proposed bikewaycan besent to Alex Phillips at alex.phillips@oregon.gov or to: Oregon Parks andRec. Dept. attn: Alex Phillips 725 Summer St. NE,Suite C Salem, OR 97301-1266

Two Italian journalistsan economicsreporter for

a prominent newsweek-

ly and a muckraking TV fi g ure —published books that

across much of Wheeler County.

passes by the John Day Fossil Beds and the towns

Have acomment?

nition of secret-spilling got blown up.

T

he Oregon Parks and Recreation Department is considering creating a state scenic bikeway east of Madras, a 120-mile route

The proposed Painted Hills Scenic Bikeway follows the John Day River in various places and

I

"In the Church, a secret is

• More about 'Merchants in the Temple,'F4

ceptions for police and those using those weapons in legally justified self-defense. Recent proposed code

I

Spray

Vatican secrets are harder to keep now

Sundey

technically no-nos under the code, which makes ex-

1

Obama's climate

agenda By Coral Davenport

of elevation gain and almost 11,000 vertical feet

New York Times News Service

of downhilL The area has been part of the route during some Cycle Oregon bike tours.

WASHINGTONPresident Barack Obama

The Parks Department has scheduled a public

meeting to take input on the proposal at 5:30 pm. Nov. 19 at the Jean E. Burch Building in Fossil. The state has designated 14 routes as state sce-

nic bikeways, including four in Central Oregon. SeeBikeway/A4

announced on Friday that he had rejected the request from a Canadian company to build the Keystone XL

oil pipeline, ending a seven-year review that had be-

come a symbol of the debate over his dimate policies.

used leaked Vatican data to show in detail the kind of

Obama's denial of the

financial irregularities that

Guinea: The last place onEarth with Ebola

in the past have come out in

dribbles and rumors. And the alleged findings are dramatic, from the top Vat-

proposed 1,179-mile pipeline, which would have carried 800,000 barrels a

day of carbon-heavy petroleum from the Canadian oil sands to the Gulf Coast,

ican official whose swanky Rome penthouse was refurbished by a church charity to the Vatican pension fund's $800 million hole, to

By Dionne Searcey New York Times News Service

TANA, Guinea — Sirens

blared as the convoy of government vehicles made its way down a narrow dirt road

a report that Vatican real

estate is worth about seven times as much as is reported

nearly encased by tall weeds. The prime minister had arrived, and he was there to

on balance sheets.

Even for a place accus-

give this rural community a

serious scolding. "I demand the cooperation

of the population," said the prime minister, Mohamed Said Fofana, nearly hollering from his perch on a makeshift bamboo stage. "Ebola is gone everywhere — except here," Fofana told the nearly 300 people gath-

ered around him. "The eyes

cases in a cluster of villages

of the world are on Tana

in rural Guinea, the country

village." This is the last known

where the outbreak first began.

place on Earth with Ebola.

After nearly 22 months

Liberia, where more than

4,800 people died of the

and more than 11,300 deaths worldwide, the deadliest Eb-

virus, has gone about two months since its last Ebola

ola epidemic in history has come down to a handful of

patient was discharged.

comes as he seeks to build an ambitious legacy on climate change. "America is now a global leader when it comes

to taking serious action to fight climate change," Obama said in remarks from the White House.

SeeObama/A7

See Ebola /A4

tomed to leaks, this week produced a torrent, includ-

ing surreptitiously made recordings of Pope Francis

TODAY'S WEATHER

— a barrier Vatican-watch-

Sun and showers High 56, Low 36 Page B6

ers said had never been crossed before.

See Vatican /A7

b

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

C7-8 Comics B2 Comm. Life Ff-8 Crosswords

F3-4 Dear Abby Df-6 Horoscope F4 Local/State

The Bulletin D6 Obituaries D6 Sports Bf-6 TV/Movies

B5 Cf-6 D6

An Independent Newspaper

Vol. 113, No. 311,

3e pages, 5 sections

Q We use recycled newsprint

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A2 T H E BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015

The Bulletin

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CAIRO — Six days after the crash of a Russian charter

flight from the Egyptian resort area of Sharm el-Sheikh, the government of Egypt is finding itself i n creasingly isolated in its resistance to

orma aw.u

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umpsaii.ln.

James Hall, former head of has dismissed any every sug- the National Transportation gestion of a bombing as "pre- Safety Board who oversaw mature," "surprising" and that investigation, said in an

to Sharm el-Sheikh's resorts,

"unwarranted."

interview.

The widening chasm between Egypt and the world, some say, recalls an earlier crash, in 1999, when Egyptthe possibility that a terror- Air Flight 990 plunged into ist's bomb brought down the the ocean off the coast of plane. Nantucket Island. Although Britain has concluded the U.S. investigators said flight cause was most likely a bomb. records pointed to the deciPresident Barack Obama has sions of an Egyptian pilot, said pointedly that he takes the Egyptian government the possibility "very seriously." blamed a malfunction in the After standing arm-in-arm Boeing airplane, and 17 years with Egypt for six days in dis- later the Egyptian-American couraging any such discus- dispute over the cause is still sion of terrorism, even Presi- unresolved. dent Vladimir Putin on Friday In that case, the Egyptian suspended Russia's flights to investigation was cloaked in Egypt for fear of another at- mystery and, critics say, polittack, stranding tens of thou-

icized from that start.

The desires of Egypt's political leaders to minimize the threat of terrorism would al-

most certainly set the course of its investigators, he said. "The air safety investigators

in Egypt are under the thumb of the government," he said, "and I don't think that has

changed." Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain has declared

most forcefully that a bomb is the most likely explanation. He took th e

e x traordinary

step this week of suspending flights in and out of the airport for more than 24 hours,

until new security measures could be put in place. About

"I don't anticipate the Egyp- 20,000 citizens are in Sharm el-Sheikh, and many were Egypt, critically dependent any more transparent than scrambling to get home Friday on the money tourists bring their work on EgyptAir 990," morning as flights resumed. sands of tourists at the resort. B ut th e

• 0 CO

Indian VOte —Fewgoals havebeen more important to Prime Minister NarendraModi thanwinning this month's elections in the state of Bihar in east India. Although hisnameis not onthe ballot, Modi is hoping to build crucial political momentum byhelping his Bharatiya Janata Party gain control of Bihar.But Modi hasmet his match in two grizzled masters of old-school castepolitics, Nitish KumarandLalu PrasadYadav, who between them havebeen running Biharandwinning elections there for the past 25years. Thebattle for Bihar hasthus evolved into a deeply symbolic clashbetweenthe immovable wall of caste politics and the unstoppableappeal of "mother cow."

FBSIS 5 8 0 om OA Blf

STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?

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restoring controls onSyrian refugeesfleeing war in their homeland and will significantly tighten rulesallowing refugees to bring their families to the country, the Interior Ministry said Friday.Theannouncement followed weeks ofmounting doubt about whether Germanyhasthe capacity to handlealmost 800,000 refugees whohavearrived so far this year and who could total morethan1 million byyear's end.Chancellor Angela Merkel andhergovernment havecome under fire at homeandabroad, accused of triggering the influx of refugeesfrom Syria andelsewhere.

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SetdaCkfOrChriStie — Chris Christie's presidential campaign seemed to begaining altitude: His poll numberswere rising in New Hampshire, and he hadgiven aforceful performance at last week's Republican debate inColorado. Avideo of Christie speaking off thecuff about drug addiction waswidely shared online. But Christie, the governor of NewJersey, wasnot invited to next week's prime-time debate on Fox BusinessNetwork. His diminished standing in national polls, the network announced,will relegate him tothe so-called undercard debate, alongside extremelong-shot candidates such asformer senator Rick Santorum of PennsylvaniaandGov. BobbyJindal of Louisiana.

Migrante iu Germany —TheGermangovernment is considering

DEPARTMENT HEADS

The Bulletin's primaryconcern isthat all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at541-383-0358.

Burundi OIIedge — Western diplomats andanalysts who pay close attention to sub-SaharanAfrica are worried that Burundi is onthe brink of a major conflict and couldexplode inviolence whenadeadline for opposition groups to disarmexpirestoday. Scores of people havebeen killed this year inBurundi, asmall, poor, hilly country in central Africa, since President Pierre Nkurunzizadecided to runfor athird time despite protests that hewasviolating term limits. He won ina turbulent election in July, andthis weekheissued anultimatum to opposition membersto lay down their weapons.

NudephOtOSCandal — At least 100students at a highschool in Canon City,Colorado, tradednakedpictures of themselves, authorities said Friday.Therevelation of the sexting ring, believed tohavebeen orchestrated bythehigh school football team, hasleft parents outraged, administrators searching for missed clues andthe police andthe district attorney's office debating whether to file child pornography chargesincluding felony charges —against some of the participants. George Welsh, the superintendent of theCanonCity school system,said students, some as young as eighth grade, hadbeencirculating 300 to 400 nude photographs ontheir cellphones.

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Street address.......226 NWSixth St. Redmond, OR 97756 Mailing address....P.O.Box788 Redmond, OR 97756 Phone................................ 541-504-2336 Fax .................................... 541 -548-3203

Netanyahu — Democratic members ofCongressfelt the wrath of Prime Minister BenjaminNetanyahuandpro-Israel groups almost immediately after announcing their support for the nucleardealwith Iran. NowNetanyahu,who is tovisit Washington on Mondayfor his first meeting with President BarackObamasince the vote on the Iran deal, is trying to healthedeepwounds. Butboth sides areeyeing eachother warily, nursing rawfeelings andfearing that the bipartisanship that is part of the bondbetweenthe United Statesand Israel maystill be at risk.

GreenpeaCe India — Greenpeace Indiasaidin astatement on Friday that its permit to operate in Indiahadbeenrevoked onthe grounds that it hadfalsified financial documents, the latest in aseries of government actions takenagainst the environmental organization. The move against thegroup is oneof many"clumsy tactics to suppressfree speech anddissenting voices" by thegovernment, Vinuta Gopal, the interim executive director of GreenpeaceIndia, said in thestatement. — From wirereports

Feripe Dana/The Associated Press

A car and two dogs areseen onthe roof of destroyed houses Friday in the small town of Bento Rodrigues after a damburst Thursday in Brazil's central Minas Gerais state. The flood of mud camewithout warning. The only hint the roughly 600 residents of Bento Rodrigues had that a sea ofviscous, clay-red mud wasabout to flow into their village with the destructive power of lava was adeafening clap. The sound of two damsbursting Thursday afternoon at the Samarco iron ore minesent residents running for the hills, and, miraculously, most appear to have survived. Only two people wereconfirmed to have beenkilled

in the accident, which sent some 62million cubic meters of water and iron ore leftovers flooding into the village, which is located some 4miles downhill from the mine, officials said Friday. Fourwereinjured and another 13 weremissing. Still, officials warned that those numbers could rise. Only about 100 of the nearly 600 people thought to live in the areahave beenofficially accounted for. Thecauseoftheaccidentwasnotknown,buta seismology lab at the University of Brasilia reported that several small tremors were registered in the area hours ahead of the disaster, according to 0 Estado de S.Paulo newspaper.

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A 4th SupremeCourt go-round for the AffordableCareAct

As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawnFriday night are:

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vania, Texas and Washington, D.C.

contraceptives for women. In that c a se, th e c o u rt

ers are Bishop David Zubik,

The Associated Press

head of the Catholic Diocese in

WASHINGTON — Religion, birth control and P resident

Pittsburgh, the Little Sisters of

Barack Obama's health care overhaul are converging in yet another high-profile dispute at the Supreme Court. The justices on F r iday stepped into the fourth legal challenge to the law since Obama signed the Affordable Care Act in 2010. This time, the issue is the ar-

rangement the Obama admin-

Oregon Lottery results

than two dozen nursing homes forimpoverished seniors,and evangelical and Catholic colleges in Oklahoma, Pennsyl-

— including in a decision in June that upheld the broad availability of subsidies to help pay for insurance premiums. But in a ruling last year, the justices allowed some "closely held" businesses with religious objections to refuse to pay for

By Mark Sherman

istration worked out to spare

faith-based hospitals, colleges and charities from paying for contraceptives for women cov-

ered under their health plans, while still ensuring that those women can obtain birth control at no extra cost as the law

requires. The groups complain that the arrangementleaves them complicit in making available

the Poor, nuns who run more

White House spokesman agreed by a 5-4 vote with the Josh Earnest said the admin- Hobby Lobby chain of craft istration is confident "that the stores and other companies policy that we have in place that said their rights were beappropriately balances the ing violated under the 1993 Reneed for millions of Americans ligious Freedom Restoration to have access to birth control Act. The nonprofit groups while also protecting the right are invoking the same law in of religious freedom that is asking that the government protected in our Constitution." find a way that does not inArguments will take place volve them or their insurers if in late March. it wishes to provide birth conThe high court has twice trol to women covered by their preserved the health overhaul health plans. •

i •

the contraceptives in violation

of their religious beliefs be-

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cause their insurers or insur-

ance administrators assume responsibility for providing birth control.

The faith-based groups "can't help the government with its contraceptive delivery

system," said Mark Rienzi, a lawyer who represents the groups. Among the challeng-

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Saturday, Nov. 7, the 311th

day of 2015. Thereare 54days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS HiStOriC Summit —Taiwanese President MaYingjeau and ChinesePresident Xi Jinping will hold a summit in Singapore today.

MISCONCEPTIONS

urns ou, ou're wain u wron With apologies to Ben Franklin, the very act that's supposed to make you healthy, wealthy and wise can also be a royal pain.

HISTORY Highlight:In1940, Washington state's original Tacoma Narrows Bridge, nicknamed "Galloping Gertie," collapsed into Puget Sound during a windstorm just four months after opening to traffic. In1861,former U.S. President John Tyler waselected to the Confederate House ofRepresentatives (however,Tyler died before he could take his seat). In1914,the first issue of The New Republic magazinewas published. In1916, Republican Jeannette Rankin ofMontanabecame the first woman elected to Congress. In1917,Russia's Bolshevik Revolution took place as forces led by Vladimir Lenin overthrew the provisional government of Alexander Kerensky. In1944, President Franklin Roosevelt won anunprecedented fourth term in office, defeating Republican Thomas Dewey. In1964, the CBSNewsprogram "Face theNation" premiered with TedKoop ashost; the guest was Sen.Joseph R. McCarthy, R-Wis. In1962, Republican Richard Nixon, having lost California's gubernatorial race, held what he called his "last press conference," telling reporters, "You won't have Nixon to kick around anymore." Former first lady Eleanor Roosevelt, 78, died in NewYork City. In1972, President Richard Nixon was re-elected in a landslide over Democrat George McGovern. In1973,Congress overrode President Richard Nixon's veto of the War PowersAct, which limits a chief executive's power to wage war without congressional approval. In1974, British peer Richard John Bingham, 7th Earl of Lucan, disappearedafter his children's nanny, Sandra Rivett, was bludgeoned to death at his family' s Londonhome; hehas not been seensince. In1989, Douglas Wilder won the governor's race in Virginia, becoming the first elected black governor in U.S. history; David Dinkins was elected New York City's first black mayor. Ten years age:President GeorgeW. Bush,inPanama, defended U.S. interrogation practices and called the treatment of terrorism suspects lawful, saying, "We donot torture." A suicide bomber blew up his vehicle at acheckpoint south of Baghdad, killing four American soldiers. Five years age:Scientists at the world's largest atom smasher, the LargeHadron Collider near Geneva, re-created the state of matter shortly after the Big Bangusing collisions of lead ions. One year age:President Barack Obama authorized a broad expansion of the U.S. military mission in Iraq that called for boosting the total number of American troops there to about 3,100.

BIRTHDAYS Evangelist Billy Graham is 97. Former U.S.Sen.Rudy Boschwitz, R-Minn., is 85. Actor Barry Newman is77. Singer Johnny Rivers is 73. Former supermodel JeanShrimpton is 73. Singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell is 72. Former CIA Director David Petraeus is 63. Actor Christopher Knight (TV: "The Brady Bunch" ) is58. Rock musician TommyThayer (KISS) is 55. Actress Julie Pinson is 48. Rockmusician Greg Tribbett (Mudvayne) is 47. Actors JeremyandJason London are 43.Actress Yunjin Kim is 42. Actor AdamDeVine is 32. Actor Lucas Neff is 30. Rapper Tinie Tempah is27. Rock singer Lorde is 19. — From wire reports

By Seth Porges

sleeping through constant low-frequency noises, like the sound of street traffic; and waking up in complete darkness (yet another reason to let the sun in in the morning).

Bloomberg News

As the literal first thing you

do in the morning, waking up can easily set the tone for how

productive and happy you' ll be for the day. Yet getting out of bed early and rested is a challenge for millions of people. A study last year by the

Skip the intense workout You can probably guess that exercising in the morning, or really any time you can squeeze it in, is a good idea. But according to Costas Karageorghis, a sports psychologist

•a WI

American Sleep Foundation

found that 39 percent of people reported being at least a little bit tired during the previous week, and most of those people wished they got more shut-eye on workdays. Fortunately, science is on the case: Hundreds of researcher

;8

5

4

at Brunel University London

who studies performance, a w ake-up routine is not t h e

I • I I

place for vigorous workouts such as heavy weightlifting or

hours have been devoted to un-

sprinting, or activities that re-

derstanding why so many of us struggle to sleep soundly and wake up refreshed.

quire more attention than your drowsy brain can deliver, like cycling on high-traffic roads. "Injury risks are heightened in the early morning be-

Harness the light

Thinkstock

Blackout blinds come with a conundrum: While the pitch

A few simple changes canmakegetting up in the morning a lot easier.

cause the muscles, joints and

supporting structure are less supple following a night of be-

dark may let you sleep like a baby, it can make rolling out tinged bulb when it comes to ology and behavior at the Uni- are at war with the snooze butof bed come daybreak much suppressing melatonin and versity of California at Irvine, ton, our bodies fight mightily to harder. The reason: Light sup- giving you energy, according whose lab has researched the get us out of bed. One tactic: an presses the production of the to Randy Nelson, the chair of topic. early-morning spike in the ensleep-inducing hormone mela- neuroscience at Ohio State While a few recent reports ergy-boosting hormone cortitonin. Without those morning University's Wexner Medical have touted the wisdom of a sol, which tends to rise roughly rays, it's simply harder to get Center. single best time to drink your 50 percent soon after we open up. coffee in the morning (typical- our eyes. And despite cortisol's early(and If your appointed in-time re- Drink caffeine ly about an hour after waking reputation as a "stress horquires you to wake up before potentially often) up), Yassa is skeptical. Just mone," this so-called cortisol the sun does, plenty of comYou probably know that make sure you grab your joe awakeningresponse is actualpanies make artificial lights your morningcoffee can boost before hitting the road: A 2000 ly a good thing for an up-andthat you can program to turn a ttention, vigilance and f o - study published in the journal at-'em day. It's also a fragile thing, with on when you need to be up, cus-ideal traits for powering up Psychophysiology s uggests some of which mimic the nat- your productivity — but recent caffeine can significantly re- research suggesting that nuural creep of daylight into your research also suggests it can duce the risk of getting into merous factors — including morning. For the best morning bolster memory. an accident during a morning many that are completely with"We found that caffeine commute. in our control — can reduce the jolt, select a light with a bright blue glow. Bluish-white light seems to let people memorize response and our a.m. energy such as that produced by fluo- things better and for longer Maximize your natural with it. Things that can dull the rescent bulbs is more effective periods," said Michael Yassa, awakening response cortisol awakening response than a warm orange or red- assistant professor of neurobiWhile our conscious minds include consuming aspirin;

ing almost motionless," Kara-

georghis said. "My advice is that people engage in low- to moderate-intensity

Take acoldshower If it feels like a cold shower

knocks some sense into your sleepy head, that's because it does: Research has long shown that exposure to cold watereither through taking a shower or by drinking a glass of ice water — can activate the sympathetic nervous system (that' s the oneresponsible for your fight-or-flight response) and give you an eye-opening spike in adrenaline.

FACT CHECK

Americansaresmoking more after longdecline By Jennifer Kaplan Bloomberg News

For the first time more than

a decade, Americans appear to be smoking more. A confluence of factors — from a better jobs market to cheaper gasoline to reductions in government anti-smoking programs — are driving a monthslong pickup in cigarette sales, analysts say. If current trends hold, 2015 could mark the first year

some are using the money they' re saving at the pump to buy cigarettes. "Those gas price savings are a big benefit," said Vivien Azer, an analyst at Cowen &

Co. Sixty percent of cigarette sales happen at convenience stores and gas stations, she

sard. Tobacco companies continue to spend aggressively on marketing, and the industry — and its investors — have

since 2002 that sales volumes been profiting from those increase. efforts. Not even tobacco compaAt Reynolds American nies are suggesting the long- Inc., the second-largest U.S. term decline in smoking in tobacco seller, cigarette volthe U.S. is reversing itself. umes rose 12 percent during Indeed, executives predict the first nine months of 2015, annual volumes will keep including sales from its refalling over time. cently acquired N ewport But recent data pointing to brand, according to company a slight increase in pack sales filings. Altria Group Inc., the this year nonetheless under- No. I seller and the maker of score worrisome trendsfor Marlboro, reported a 1.5 perpublic health officials. While cent increase. the number of smokers in the Both companies' share United States has steadily prices are hovering near redeclined, some smokers now cord highs. Reynolds has seem to be lighting up more. gained 44 percent this year, O thers are t u r ning t o closing at $46.63 Friday. Alchewing tobacco and elec- tria is up 18 percent for the tronic cigarettes to supple- year, at $57.08. ment cigarette habits rather Both companies say inthan quit. dustrywide volume actually To public health groups, fell marginally during the any signs that the declines first nine months of the year. in smoking might be leveling Many executives predict that offiscause for alarm and re- over time U.S. pack sales will newed anti-smoking efforts. continue to fall by 3 percent "Anytime cigarette sales to 4 percent annually. aren't going down, that' s Since 1964, when the U.S. cause for concern," said Vince Surgeon General released Willmore, spokesman for the the first report on smoking Campaign for Tobacco Free and health, the smoking rate Kids. "We' re talking about among U.S. adults has fallen the No. I cause of preventable to 18percentfrom 42 percent, death in our country." as of data released in 2014. This y e a r' s a p p arent "Yearafteryear afteryear, bounce largely reflects the if you average any sort of improving economy, partic- collection of t i m e t ogether, ularly rising employment, you' re going to see that 3 to 4 analysts say. Gasoline prices percent when you' re looking are alsoa factor.Smokers as at the long term," said Sarah a group tend to have lower in- Knakmuhs, Altria's vice prescomes than nonsmokers, and ident of investor relations.

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015

Michigan city is first to elect a Muslim-majority city council , T>1 l i ffe' •

r

Samuel Aranda / The New York Times

A World Health Organization worker checks the temperature of one of Seydouba Soumah's sons in Tana, Guinea. Both of Soumah's wives died of Ebola, and he has children who are infected.

Ebola

Guinea, and the flow of people

checkpoint where she regis-

across porous national bound- tered a fever but was allowed

Continued fromAf

aries is a chief reason the virus to continue, Doctors Without was able to spread throughout Borders says, and dodged oth4,000 died, is hoping to be de- the region so easily. ers by taking back roads. clared officially free of Ebola Fofana came to Tana himA t eam o f i n t ernational today, a milestone defined as self on a search mission. health workers soon swooped "A woman is missing and into the village, fanning out going 42 days without a single I can't understand why," the to identify everyone the girl new infection. And while the virus once prime minister shouted, casti- had been in contact with, but raged in Guinea, now it is gating residents to monitor the encountering resistance from merely smoldering, with seven sick. residents who were wary of new cases reported in recent The woman, Aminata Ca- disclosing personal details to weeks. Yet it is proving frus- mara, had cared for a friend strangers. tratingly difficult to stamp out who died of Ebola, making her Workers trying to ensure Sierra Leone, where nearly

altogether.

a likely next victim. Then Cam ara vanished. No one offered

Hard to halt

any clues after she went into Getting to zero — as the hiding, so the authorities jailed effort to finally stop the out- her husband, a heavy-handed break is known — has be- approachmeant to convey the deviled governments and seriousness of the problem.

that Ebola victims were safe-

ly buried in this region were beaten this year. In September 2014, eight people — health workers, local officials and journalists — were killed, a

reflection of longstanding political tensions that have made fighting Ebola in Guinea all

international health experts

Fofana announced that if she

for months. Workers from aid groups have descended on the villages where the virus is still spreading, a promising experimental vaccine is being given to adults who have been

did not turn up soon, he would fire the village chief. the more difficult. "Getting to this stage has The fact that Guinea was never hit as hard as Sierra taken massive resources, but Leone or Liberia may also ex- getting to zero and staying plain why Ebola has been so there requires the most medifficult to wipe out here. ticulous, difficult work of all,"

in contact with a victim, and

government officials, once reluctant to acknowledge the dangerous outbreak, are helping to wipe it out. But even with hundreds of millions of dollars spent to fight this outbreak, the ap-

proach to stamping out the disease remains uneven, at best. Workers on th e f r ont

lines are still making rookie mistakes. Guards at

E b ola

"In Guinea, we never had this apocalyptic transmission

read a recent Doctors Without Borders bulletin. "We cannot like in Liberia and Sierra Le- lose focus now." one; we never had bodies in the streets," said Ranu Dhill-

By Sarah Pulliam Bailey

said University of M ichi- of citizenship from Banglagan-Dearborn associate pro- deshis who showed up at the Hamtramck, a historical- fessor Sally Howell, who has polls. "There's a history of outly Polish-Catholic enclave written a book on Michigan of Detroit, rose to national and U.S. Muslims. Dearborn side agitators coming in, but prominence more than a has many Arab-American it's not like Dearborn," Howdecade ago when its City immigrants, but Hamtramck ell said. "Dearborn is where Council gave permission to a likely became the first city to people make a statement mosque to broadcast its call have a Muslim-majority pop- about Muslim Americans." to prayer from speakers on ulation in 2013. She estimates Saad A lm a smari , a its roof. that about 50 percent of the 28-year-old from Yemen who At the time, opponents city is made up of Muslims, was elected to the City Counwere angered by what they and the city has at least sev- cil with the most percentage saw as an intrusion of Is- en mosques, more mosques of votes (22 percent), moved lamic practice onto a public per capita than anywhere to Hamtramck in 2009 and space. The City Council's else in the country. received his citizenship in "The growth is t aking 2011. He is working on his approval of an ordinance to allow mosques to broadcast place in these Muslim com- bachelors in business from The Washington Post

the Islamic call to prayer onto

munities, and they are trans-

Wayne State University.

public streets made it one of forming the cityscape," HowAlmasmari said he faced the few cities in the United ell said. "It's become much some opposition when he ran States to approve the prac- more visible in the last 15 for the primary when about tice, according to a 2004 sto- years." half of his 100 yard signs ry in the Detroit News. "This The city's emerging demo- were spray painted with an is about uniting our commu- graphic is a striking contrast X in the summer. He said the nity,"Shabad Ahmed, the from the Hamtramck of the new Muslim-majority City first and only Muslim member of the Hamtramck City

1970s, when Polish-Catho-

lics made up 90 percent of Council, told the newspaper. the city. As younger Poles Fast forward to 2015, when fled to the suburbs for bigthe city of some 22,000 peo- ger homes, Hamtramck beple physically surrounded by came a place for Asian and but politically separate from Arab immigrants to f l o ck Detroit has elected a Mus- to, especially those from lim-majority city c ouncil, Yemen, Bangladesh and believed to be the first in the Bosnia-Herzegovina. nation. On Tuesday, the city Dearborn, which is part elected six city council mem- of the Detroit metro area,

Council is not about Muslim unity.

"Although we are Mus-

lims, it d oesn't have any-

thing to do with serving the community," he said. "It's not about religion. It's not about

Muslim unity. We are planning to work for everyone." Mayor s of

H a m t ramck

have been Polish for the past several decades. For

bers, four of Muslim faith.

attracts most of the national

Hamtramck history

attention over its Arab popu- jewski, who could not be lation, but its Muslim popula- reached immediately for

Hamtramck was original- tion is not as concentrated as ly settled by Germans, but Polish-Catholic immigrants

Hamtramck.

Controversies

flooded into the area when

instance, Mayor Karen Macomment, is Polish. Dawud

Walid, executive director of the Michigan chapter of the Council on American-Islam-

ic Relations, said with more number of political contro- and more Muslims being Irish and German Catholics versies in the last decade, elected to office, it's becomdominated the Detroit politi- Howell said. In the last de- ing less unusual. "What took place in Hamcal scene, so Poles gravitated cade, a group harassed Musto Hamtramck. lim candidates, associating tramck is a very American But the Muslim population at least one candidate with endeavor," Walid said. "It' s in Hamtramck has grown terrorism, and election work- only a matter of time before steadily due to immigration, ers have asked to see proof we' ll see a Muslim mayor." the Dodge Brothers plant opened in 1914. At that time,

Hamtramck has seen a

on, a public health expert advising the president's office in Guinea. "We never had that same kind of critical moment in terms of national response."

Motherlesschildren

checkpoints skip over some On a recent afternoon, Seyvehicle passengers for fever douba Soumah sat dazed on checks. Health workers use a bench as his young children bare hands to touch people ran in c i rcles around him. who might harbor the virus. They are motherless, and he is Isolated communities experiencing Ebola for the first time

a widower twice over. Both of

trust aid workers.

infection, too. He stared ahead

his wives died recently of Ebare reluctant to take meticu- ola, and he has other children lous precautions and do not who are hospitalized with the The risk of a flare-up is still in silence as health workers very real. Nearly 150 people took his temperature. He, were in close contact with the

too, is at great risk of the dis-

new victims, so they are now ease, and so are the children at risk of becoming contam- underfoot. "The prime minister is right inated themselves. Beyond that, more than 200 people to ask the community to mowho had brief contact with bilize," said Makhissa Sako, one victim, maybe sharing a a mother of five in a village taxi, cannot be traced at all. smack in the middle of the "We are all holding our current outbreak. "This sickbreath, frankly," said Christo- ness is hard. Ebola kills." pher Dye,directorofstrategy The chain of recent infecat the World Health Organiza-

A hfagazine Highlightingthe Vari ety of Organizations That Connect Your Community. Central OregOn COmmunitieS COntinue to grOW due to a natiOnally-reCOgniZed aPPreCiatiOn fOr the region'S quality Of life. FrOm PrOViding the mOStbaSiC needS Of food, Shelter and SeCurity, to Creating and maintaining

tions in this part of Guinea ar-

tion who is heading the Ebola rived in mid-September, after epidemiology response. a girl staying with relatives in Officials in

S ierra L eone the capital, Conakry, returned home to seek care from a traborder is less than 20 miles ditional healer and died. She from the new cases here in passed through one Ebola

are particularly on edge. Their

s

-

positive social, educational, recreational and PrOfeSSiOnal enVirOnmentS, Central Oregon'S nOnPrOfit COmmunity iS a fOundatiOn fOr Our

Bikeway

a scenic bikeway does not involve any physical improveContinued fromA1 ments to the roads included Alex Phillips, bicycle rec- beyond signage. The state reation specialist with the promotes the routes to visitors department, said local pro- to the state, who, according to ponents of the bikeway have figures compiled by the scebeen working on the proposal nic bikeways program, tend forseveralyears,developing a to spend more money per plan to build awareness of the day than the average Oregon route and working with gov- tourist. ernment agencies that manPhillips said the state has age the roads involved. The typically encountered minnext step, she said, is to win imal resistance to proposed the approval of the state parks scenic bikeways. The Twin commission. Bridges Scenic Bikeway, a As the name suggests, the loop from Bend through the visual beauty of an area is the Tumalo area, generated more primary factor the state con- pushback than any other scesiders when deciding whether nic bikeway proposed, she a route should be designated said, primarily from people a scenic bikeway. Natural and concerned an influx of cyclists man-made sights along the would impede traffic. route are considered, she said, Simon Graves, owner of a as are the sounds and smells a bike shop at the Dayville Merrider would encounter along cantile in nearby Dayville, the way, and the condition and said anything that boosts incapacity of the roads. terest in cycling in his part of Phillips said the proposed the state would be a plus. He route scored high for natural said there's not a large road beauty. cycling culture in the area, but "It's one of the parts of the he's met many cyclists passing state, you can live in Oregon through to ride the Old West your whole life and never go to S cenic Bikeway or o n t h e Fossil, which is really sad be- coast-t o-coast TransAmerica cause the scenery is just spec- Trail. tacular," she said. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, Designation of a route as

shammers@bendbulletin.corn

area's success and sustainability. Hundreds Of OrganiZatiOnS and thOuSandS Of VOlunteerS

make up this nonprofit network. ThrOugh the PubliCatiOn Of COnneCtiOnS, The Bulletin Will bOth define and PrOfile the

organizations that make up this network. Connections will provide readers with a thorough look at nonprofit organizations in Deschutes, Jefferson, and Crook Counties. SALES DEADLINE: DECEMBER 5tI1 CALL 541.382.1811 TO RESERVE YOUR SPACE TODAY. I '

I

I

ATTENTION CENTRAL OREGON NONPROFIT GROUPS The Bulletin is in theprocess ofverifying and compiling a comprehensive list of nonprofit entities in Central Oregon.Pleasefill out this form to verify information in order to be considered for publication in Connections. Mail backto: The Bulletin, Attn: Karl Mauser, P.O. Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. E-mail information to connections©bendbulletin.corn or call 541-383-0379 Name of Nonprofit Group Contact Person

E-mail

Organization Phone Number

Website

Nonprofit Mission Statement/Purpose


SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A5

IN FOCUS:2016 PRESIDENTIAL RACE

arson ees areo ron -runners's o i By Steve Peoples

ROTC, while in high school.

WASHINGTON

Republican presidential candidate

"I was offered a full schol-

The Associated Press

Ben arship to West Point," Carson

-

Carson was not offered a for- wrote in the 1996 book. "I mal scholarship to West Point didn't refuse the scholarship

Ben Carson's campaign says the

as he wrote in his autobiogra-

outright, but I let them know phy, his campaign said Friday, that a military career wasn' t

acknowledging the latest in a

where I saw myself going. As series of misstatements from overjoyed as I felt to be offered the retired neurosurgeon who such a scholarship, I wasn't rehas surged to the top of the ally tempted." GOP's presidential field. Carson has repeated the sto"I guess it could have been ry over the years, including in more clarified," Carson said an interview in October with in an interview with Fox News Charlie Rose. broadcast Friday night. "I told Campaign spo k esman it as I understood it." Carson, a newcomer to na-

tional politics, has developed a passionate following based

Has BernieSanders'

campaignpeaked? By Sahil Kapur Bloomberg News

W ASHINGTON —

Ber-

nie Sanders' long-shot bid to speed past Hillary Clinton and become the Democratic presidential nominee seems to have hit a rough patch.

The Vermont senator's impressive, populist campaign has featured massive crowds, double-digit leads in New Hampshire, competitive contrasts with Clinton

in Iowa and steady growth in national surveys. Yet an analysis of the most recent

polling numbers shows that the sel f-described democratic socialist may already have peaked. "Sanders is not so much

Policypush Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders is launching an aggressive push aimedat regaining ground in the Democratic primaries. The Democratic presidential candidate plans a series of ads, policy speeches andappearances in hopes of boosting his bid against front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton. Much of his effort will focus on attracting minority voters, starting with events this weekend with black voters in South Carolina and Hispanics in Nevada.

declining, but has maximized his potential support — The Associated Press and bumping up against his ceiling," said Ken Goldstein, a professor of politics at the unions fall in line behind HilUniversity of San Francis- lary Clinton now." co and polling analyst for A Monmouth poll in OcBloomberg Politics. tober found that 87 percent

Clinton's outlook

NBC/Wall Street Journal.

But after a strong debate performanceand an unimpressive interrogation by Republicans on the House Select Committee on Benghazi, her lead has widened to as big as 31 points in last week's N BC/Wall Street Journal polL Early state surveys have shifted in Clinton's direction. Sanders is trailing by double digits in Iowa. His lead in New Hampshire through August and September has since diminished or evaporated, depending on the poll. In South Carolina, Clinton

71 percent; Sanders' was 42

percent.

'Invisible primary' Sanders is also lagging

been challenged for accuracy. During last month's presidential debate, Carson said it

might not believe because I believe in the Bible," Carson said Thursday. The idea was dismissed by ing people restore a healthy his church, and experts said it diet. is acceptedscience the pyraOn Wednesday, Carson mids were tombs for pharaohs. wrote on his Facebook page Republican rival D onald that "every signer of the Decla- Trump, now looking up at ration of Independence had no Carson in some recent preferelected office experience." But ence polls, seized on Carson' s

was "absolutely absurd" to say

about halfhad experience as

AFSCME and the National

it deficit and defeated her

confrontational

in a grueling primary. But Obama had at least one

with Clinton, raising questions in an interview published Wednesday by the

major asset that S anders

ap p r oach

does not: strong support Wall Street Journal about among Afri c an-Ameri- the front-runner's "characcans, a crucial Democratic

constituency. "The overall Democratic primary electorate is com-

ter," citing her inconsistency on the Asia trade deal and

pledges to regulate Wall Street d e spite

r e c eiving

posed of w h ite l iberals, "large sums of money" from union members, more mod- financial institutions. erate whites, African-Ameri-

In the Journal interview,

cans and Hispanics with the size of each of those groups varying by state," Goldstein said. "The math for Obama in 2008 was getting white lib-

Sanders conceded that he has "a long way to go" in winning over black and Hispanic voters. "But we' re working hard," he said, "and

erals ... and African-Amer-

I think at the end of the day

icans. Bernie has the white we are going to pull off one liberals but has no place of the major political upsets else to grow — especially as in American history."

troubles in a series of tweets on

he had a formal relationship elected members of colonial as- Friday. "With Ben Carson wanting with the company Mannatech. semblies, and Watts admitted But Carson is featured in the

the error to The Washington

company's videos, including Post. one from last year in which he Also this week, a CNN recreditsMannatech's glyconu- port raised questions about tritional supplements with help- the accuracyofCarson'soft-re-

to hit his mother on head with a

hammer, stab a friend and Pyramids built for grain storage — don't people get it?" Trump tweeted.

be forced to give up air time of equal value to Trump's "SNL" appearance to another candidate, she said.

Airing political programming has long been considered a part of TV's public service mission. But in the current environment, the TV networks

"are not doing the candidates a favor," said Ken Goldstein, a politics professor at University

„t C

one week after NBCUniversal took heat from the other side

NBCvia The Associated Press

of the political spectrum — the Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, seen here with Republican National Commit-

"Saturday Night Live" cast member Cecily Strong, will host the

of SanFrancisco who consults for Bloomberg Politics. "The candidates are doing them a

favor."

tee and Republican candidates, show tonight. induding Trump himselfover moderators' q uestions

at a debate hosted by one of tisers have spent $14 million the company's cable affiliates, on air time during the first four CNBC. presidential debates, according The travails of the Com- to research firm Kantar Media. cast-owned company raise By comparison, they spent less larger questions about the than $500,000 for the first four relationship between the can- debates in 2011. didates and the media. TradiUnderscoring the value of tionally, it has been adversar- the Trump "SNL" appearance: ial. Now, it's more symbiotic. The network is allowing it to In an era of fragmented media go aheadeven though i t could and increased competition for raise legal challenges. Meread dollars, candidates are not dith McGehee, a policy director

of the Campaign Legal Center, a political watchdog group, said that because local broad-

cast TV affiliates are required by law to give each candidate

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only news sources but revenue

sources as well. The campaigns recognize their financial value

former CNN a nchor A aron Brown said in a n i nterview

with Bloomberg. "I worry, as long there's money in a tough e conomic environment

for

Why, for instance, would NBC choose to rekindle its relationship with Trump, giving him one of the biggest plat-

leads by a whopping 71-15 Education Association. percent in a Winthrop Poll A S anders c ampaign released Wednesday. spokesman didn't return a History haunts Clinton. message seeking comment In 2008, then-Sen. Barack about his showing in the Obama famously overcame polls and plan for victory. a long-persisting double-dig- Sanders has signaled a more

latest Carson statement that has

urday Night Live" as protests throb at its front door, complete with a petition signed by more than half a million people. The controversy erupted just

not see the danger."

Sherrod Brown of Ohio and

The story, first reported Fri-

day by Politico, concerns the

as the host of the storied "Sat-

comes: endorsements from

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, as well as unions like

Suspectstatements

Donald Trump as immigration advocates led furious protests over his allegations of Mexican immigrant "rapists." Tonight, the network is presenting him

of presidential primary out-

— including populist progressive Democrats like Sen.

lieve a lot of things that you

David Zaluhowski I The Associated Press file photo

NBC's Iowa affiliates might

journalists, that news organizations will take the money and

ers have endorsed Clinton

raphy.

In June, NBC cut ties with

in a metric that tends to be an important determinant

party elites and leaders, the so-called "invisible primary." Numerous politicians and political groups that are ideologically close to Sand-

West Point as he wrote in his autobiog-

equal opportunity for air time,

to leverage that to change the debate formats to their terms. "It's really dangerous journalistically an d e t hically,"

ers. Among Hispanics, Clinton's favorable rating was

Carson also came under

scrutiny this week for standing by his assertion that Egypt's great pyramids were built by the biblical figure Joseph to store grain. "I happen to be-

By Gerry Smith

to the networks and are trying

improving for Clinton. Her lead shrunk to high single digits in two late-September polls by Bloomberg and

Pyramid theory

Bloomberg News

Clinton favorably, compared to just 42 percent for Sand-

alive and well."

Trump on'SNL'puts media ethics infocus

of African-Americans view

Nationally the picture is

is. And I know the person is

Academy at

in part on hi s i nspirational

ANALYSIS

to name the person involved, but Watts said Friday that he

knows "exactly who the person

to the United States Military

by his ROTC supervisors." "They told him they could Christian values. The only Af- help him get an appointment A West Point spokesman rican-American in the Repub- based on his grades and per- on Friday said the academy lican 2016 class, Carson grew formance in ROTC. He con- "cannot confirm whether anyup in inner-city Detroit and sidered it but in the end did not one during that time period often speaks about his brush- seek admission," Watts said. was nominated to West Point es with violence and poverty Students granted admission if they chose not to pursue during his early years. to West Point are not awarded completion of the application His campaign on Friday scholarships. Instead, they are process." sought to clarify a statement said to earn appointments to Asked on Fox whether he about the U.S. Military Acad- the military academy, which had lied about his past, Caremy in his breakout book, comes with tuition, room and son said, "Lying, I believe, is "Gifted Hands," in which he board and expenses paid, a grave sin and there's just outlines his participation with in exchange for five years no way that I would be sitting the Reserve Officers' Training of service in the Army after here lying about something Corps, commonly known as graduation. like this."

er. Citing privacy concerns, the Carson campaign has refused

hopeful was not offered scholarship

personal story and devotion to

stab a dose friend as a teenag-

White House a formal

Doug Watts said Carson was "the top ROTC student in the city of Detroit" and "was introduced to folks from West Point

peated claim that he tried to

K SK48 K > M K

EÃ8"

Take a Darkness to Light Training and help save a child from abuse.

forms in late-night TV, just months after its parent com-

pany fired the real estate mogul from the reality TV show "Celebrity Apprentice" over his politically incorrect comments'? Lauren Roseman, a spokes-

woman for "Saturday Night Live," dedined to comment. But no one summarized the rationale more pithily than the cam-

paign's reality TV veteran. "The networks are making a fortune with the debates,"

Trump said in a recent interview with Bloomberg's With

All Due Respect. He suggested the stars of the show ought to be getting a cut. "We should be like a basketball player," Trump said. "We should go on strike and say we want money for W ounded Warriors or a great charity." T here's data to b ack u p

Trump's claims: In August the Republi can debate on Fox

News drew 24 million viewers,

the biggestU.S. audience ever for a cable telecast other than a sports event. In September,

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the Republican debate averaged 22.9 million total viewers

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Those big audiences have drawn big ad dollars. Adver-

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015

Apache leaderwho

ina moves o era< own criticized Redskins oncoun e ei isne rou s is sorry forblackface

By Neil Gough New York Times News Service

By Michael E. Miller

showing him with a group of children. "Pleasebesafe." "I had fun tonight at the Two years ago, San Carlos Apache chairman Terry Bylas Halloween Carnival,"

HONG KONG — Foreign brands have put up with ram-

Rambler was at the White

The Washington Post

pant counterfeiting in China for years, but at least one com-

dent Barack Obama to dis-

cuss the "racially offensive" "I joined up with the Bylas name of the Washington Wellness Program and gave

W a s hington Times reported.

pany appears to have found a fairy godmother. On Thursday, a Chinese government agency singled out the Walt Disney Co. as the focus

Redskins.

out information & candy and

of a new nationwide "special

Last week, Rambler was set up a ring toss booth. It in blackface. was so awesome seeing the

action" aimed at stamping out imitation goods that infringe

h e w r o t e n ext t o a n other

House, meeting with Presi- photo posted Sunday, the

On Sunday, the A r i zo -

h a p py and enthusiastic faces

on Disney's trademarks.

na tribe leader posted a o f our children." Producers and p eddlers Facebook photo of himself In th e secondphoto, Ram- of fake Snow White dolls or "Frozen" backpacks were put dressed asBob Marley for blermakesapeacesign. Halloween, complete with The photos quickly stirred on notice by the State Adfake dreadlocks and black- a b a cklash, even among ministration for Industry and face makeup. members of Rambler's own Commerce, which pledged in The picturehas caused San CarlosApache tribe. a statement to carry out a spe"Natives out here trying outrage, especially given cial one-year "crackdown on Rambler's own public pro- t o f i ght cultural appropri- infringement of Disney's registests against racism toward ation and stereotypes but tered trademarks." Native Americans. then our chairman is doing China has for years waged "This is a man who has t h i s'?" one man comment- periodic campaigns against derided sports organizations ed on Facebook on Sunday counterfeit goods, but those who have done morning. "It' s have tended to focus on broad the very same 2 015 get o u t industries or product categot hing," R e v . pn Ha jjpI?Iieen, ries. For example, one national o f he r e with Jarrett Maupin, Rambler ppSteda that. blackface. action this summer, called Red SMH" (shaka civil r ights Shield Net Sword, targeted campaigner pj I p f p pf j )~rnSejf ing m y h ead). the online sale of counterfeit "Black and Four d ays goods. dreSSed jn Lives Matter" would Pass, But the latest campaign apblaCkfaCe, fake activist, told the however, bepears to be giving Disney top d"ea d l pCkSa BBC. "It's hard fore R a mbler billing. "I would describe it as unfor meto accept RaStafarjan hat, a ppeared t o that he didn't have realized usual," said Edward Chattera Ejpb Marje~ know what he

was doing or the message he has conveying. "We are v ery ups e t

his mistake.

Pne ~PVe

"Recently,

T-Shjrj and a n I

post ed o n

my Facebook page a picture of my Hallow-

4rjzpna Cardinals neCklaCe.

about it," said

een c o stume

Maupin, who is dressed up in also from Arizona and has reggae style," he wrote on T h u r sday."I did this think-

worked with Rambler and

other tribal leaders to corn- ing I wanted to dress up batdiscrimination.Hecalled as one of my favorite muRambler's blackface c os -

s i c i ans, Bo b M a r ley. But

tume a "betrayal." in hindsight, it was a poor The costume was "a huge choice I made. I am not a statement considering he's

r a c ist and I did not mean to

the leader of a sovereign na- offend anyone but I realize I tion," Maupin told the BBC, did. There is no one to blame calling for Rambler to step

b u t me. I take full responsi-

down.

bility for my action. "So this morning, I asked years ago that Rambler and my Creator to forgive me for 11 other tribal leaders met the poor choice I made, as It was almost exactly two

with Obama in the W hit e House's Roosevelt Room to

I d i d not mean to offend his c h i l dren. I love my Creator's

discuss, among other things, children. With the humbling discrimination against Na- experience I have had in tive Americans by American life, I appreciate and respect sportsteams, according to my surroundings more, esUSA Today. pecially the people. I will On that day, Rambler ap- continue to ask my Creator plauded Obama for the pres- for forgiveness as I am not ident's previous comments

p e r fect but I realize asking

that he would "think about f o rforgivenessmeansnotrechanging" the team's name peatingthe action. "I ask for forgiveness from if he were the owner, something actual team owner t h e public and to anyone I Daniel Snyder has refused to may have offended. "As a public official, as a consider. Since then, Rambler has leader and Chairman of the continued to play a promi- g reat San Carlos Apache

ton, a partner at the law firm

+40

Lam Yik Fei/The New YorkTimes filephoto

A Chinese government agency announcedThursday that a nationwide "special action" will focus on eliminating imitation goods that infringe on the Walt Disney Co.'s trademarks.

"I would describe it as unusual. l don't think I' veseen a specific brand being protected jn

one of the survey's authors. "It's an ongoing concern for companies, but the trajectory is positive," he added.

this sort pf comprehensive way before." — Edward Chatterton, partner at the law firm DLA Piper in Hong Kong

popular Disney movies. "We are authorized, we have a li-

cense," he added. Other retailers did not claim

DLA Piperin Hong Kong, who to be authorized resellers but specializes in intellectual prop- nonetheless vouched for the erty work related to China. "I authenticity of their goods. don't think I' ve seen a specific Bargaining is common. A brand being protected in this saleswoman atanother store sort of c omprehensive way offered a toy doll of Andy, a before." character from the movie "Toy Representatives for Disney Story," for an asking price of did not immediately respond to 420 renminbi (about $66). "Our products are from facemails seeking comment. The trademark agency said tories that export," she said. the move was meant to coin- "They are better quality." cide with the opening next year Foreign businesses say that of the Shanghai Disney Resort, China has made progress in the first such theme park in recent years in cracking down mainland China, which Dis- on fakes, induding the introney is building alongside state- duction last year of tougher owned companies for $5.5 bil- penalties for trademark violalion. In addition to heightened tions, but that huge room for national action against fake improvement remains. Disney goods, the push also includes designating an area

A survey this year by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in China, published with Bain & Co., a consulting firm based in

F or Disney and fo r

trademark enforcement agen-

cy's new campaign will be determined by how stringently it is enforced. It also remains to

be seen whether its effects can of respondents said they be- outlast the one-year period for Boston, found that 85 percent lieved China's enforcement of

the action.

"It's a no-lose situation for intellectual property rights had improved in the last five years. authorities really," said Jack However, 80 percent said Clode, who is based in Hong ineffective enforcement still re- Kong and is a co-founder of mained a concern. Two-thirds the Blackpeak Group, a resaid that the risks of intellec- search and advisory firm that tual property or data being has worked on trademark enleaked were greater in China forcement issues in mainland than in other countries. China. "On the intellectual property "Authorities will keep Disfront, with trademarks and pat- ney happy and will get a few ents, what we' ve seen is histor- wins against counterfeitersically people said China's leg- but the question is, What sort islation is pretty good, but the of long-term effect will t h is real problem is enforcement," have'?" he said. "People will be said Stephen Shih, a partner in watching with great interest to the Beijing office of Bain and see how this develops."

of 2.7square miles around the

Shanghai park as a "Disney trademarkkey protectedarea." The objective was to "safe-

guard the legitimate rights and interests of consumers, promote a market environment

of fair competition and uphold China's international image in protecting intellectual property rights," the agency said. The push started last month, it added. On a visit Thursday to Silk Market in Beijing, an indoor bazaar of shops that has been

known for selling counterfeit or unlicensed branded goods, nent role in the push to re- T r i be, Iaskmypeopleforforand also for being the subject move "racially offensive" giveness, as I did not mean to of periodic raids by trademark mascot names, including shine a negative light on my enforcement officials, plenty that of the Redskins. people nor my family." of toys and dothes featuring On Halloween, Rambler Fr o m his Facebook apolo- characters from Disney tales posted a photo of himself gy, it appears as if Rambler w ere for sale.Some carried ofdressed in blackface, fake c u t short his visit to Washficial-looking logos; others did dreadlocks, a R a stafari- i n gton. Thursday was the not. an hat, a Bob Marley "One seventh annual White House At a shop called Luodinuo, Love" T-shirt and an Arizo- T r i bal N ations Conference, one salesman said the store na Cardinals necklace. the same forum at which started selling Disney dresses "Trick o r t r e at. H appy h e a n d other tribal leaders a month ago. "The most popular ones Halloween," he wrote along- d i s cussed discrimination toside a photo — later reposted ward Native Americans with are from 'Frozen' and 'Snow by IndependentJournal — Obama two years ago. White,'" he said, referring to

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Mormon churchsaysit will bar children ofsame-sexcouples By Laurie Goodstein

gregations around the world. means Mormons in same-sex New York Times News Service The church made no public an- marriages will be subject to disChildren of same-sex cou- nouncementofthe change,but ciplinary hearings that result in ples will not be able to join the it was leaked to the news me- excommunication. Mormon church until they turn diaand confirmed by a church Some liberal Mormons ex18 — and only if they move spokesman. pressed outrage online at the "The church has long been new policies. Jana Riess, a out of their parents' homes, disavow all same-sex relation- on record as opposing same- columnist with Religion News ships and receive approval sex marriages," the spokesman, Service, said she was livid that from the church's top leader- Eric Hawkins, said in a state- children born to those living ship as part of a new policy ad- ment. 'While it respects the law out of wedlock, as well as rapopted by The Church of Jesus of the land and acknowledges ists and murderers, can be bapChrist of Latter-day Saints. In addition, Mormons in

the right of others to think and

act differently, it does not persame-sex marriages will be form or accept same-sex marconsidered apostates and sub- riage within its membership." ject to e xcommunication, a Before the handbook change, more rigid approach than the bishops and congregational church has taken in the past. leaders had more discretion in The new policies were con- whether to discipline Mormons tained in a handbook for lay in same-sex marriages. Now leaders that was disseminated same-sex marriage has been Thursday to those who admin- added to a list of conditions ister the church's 30,000 con- considered apostasy, which

tized and blessed, but not chil-

dren of monogamous same-sex couples. "It's heartbreaking for me to see my church drawing this line in the sand, which leaves faithful LGBT members with

an impossible choice: They can either be excluded from lifelong love and companionship, or excluded from the blessings of the church," she said.

Obama Continued fromA1 "And frankly, approving this project would have undercut that global leadership." The move was made ahead

of a major U.N. summit meeting on climate change in Paris in December, when Obama

hopes to help broker a historic agreement committing the world's nations to e nacting

new policies to counter global warming. While the rejection of the pipeline is largely symbolic, Obama has sought to telegraph to other world leaders that the United States is se-

rious about acting on climate change.

A political symbol

Vatican

the nine cardinals who are

Continued from A1 For an institution long ac-

customedtosome standard of deference, one thing is becoming clear. The Catholic Church is in a new era. " Cardinals living in f at

members. "There is definitely more comingout,becausethereare more documents to be leaked. We' ve never before had a C9 and KPMG and Promontory

figure in a 2012 scandal called Vatileaks, reporting from leaked documents about financial improprieties and infighting. Many Vatican watchers believe Nuzzi's reporting on the out-of-control bureau-

and mountains of studies," said Philip Pullella, a senior apartments for free — we' ve Reuters correspondent in known that since the dawn of Rome for more than three time. But this is a new level of decades. Leaking goes in cystuff spilling out. It's the Cath- cles, he said. "We were in a olic version of people-have- bear market and now we' re the-right-to-know," said John in a bull market. Now things Allen, a longtime reporter on will get a bit more difficult the Vatican and Catholicism (for journalists.) But things who is associate editor of will come around again. You Crux, a Catholic site owned have to remember this is the by the Boston Globe. Of the Vatican, and Italy; we' re in the Vatican, Allen said, "I think land of Machiavelli." they' re living in a world that Despite the arrests, it's not doesn't exist anymore." clear who Nuzzi and Fittipaldi Vatican officials obvious- relied upon, though both said ly want to deter the kind of their sources included clergy extensive leaks that fueled and lay people.

cracy may have in part led to Pope Benedict's historic resignation and the prominence at Pope Francis' election of the topic of economic reform.

into the orbit of the Vatican,

different at the Vatican than

Everyone knew there were

power struggles, but he added concrete detail. Problems were well known.

"These are the reasons Francis was instituting the r e-

forms," said John Thavis, recently retired after covering the Vatican for many years for the Catholic News Service. What's new, Thavis and

others agreed, is Francis. "He's a high-profile newsmaker of great interest to Emiliano Fittipaldi's "AvariFittipaldi, who writes for the many people because he's dozia" (" Avarice" ) and Gianlu- newsweekly L'Espresso, sug- ing things differently," Thavis igi Nuzzi's "Merchants in gested that his book was made SBld. the Temple,"and Monday possible by thedesireformore Francis said when he was announced they'd arrested expansive reforms. elected that the Vatican's in"For 2,000 years the church ner workings needed far more two insiders on suspicion of leaking. One was a Vatican has always tried to wash its transparency, and he was sebureaucrat and monsignor, dirty laundry behind its holy cretly quoted — according to the other an Italian PR maven walls. And even in r ecent Nuzzi's book — as demanding called "the pope's lobbyist." years, regardless of the an- m ore opennessafter finding nounced new transparency "unofficial budgets" that itemBureaucracy reform that was supposed to wipe out ized money allegedly misused Neither reporter, interest- economic and financial scan- by Vatican officials. ingly, is part of the Vatican's dals, corruption and personal But others don't see a draextensive press corps, dozens enrichment, the Vatican tried matic change in openness. "The very positive tone of of journalists called "Vatican- to keep the skeletons hidden in isti." But recent years have the doset," he told The Wash- coverage (of Francis) gives an been unusual at the Vatican, ington Post. "There are sourc- impression of openness bewith Pope Benedict launch- es, especially for what con- cause there's more coverage, ing and then Pope Francis cerns my book, who decided but there's more coverage becontinuing a major effort to that transparency shouldn' t cause there's more interest," reform the bureaucracyremain a promise. Too many said the Rev. John Wauck, a in particular the V atican's scandals to uncover, even in former political speechwriter finances. the age of Francis, too many who has taught communicaThese partnerships have enemies aspiring to boycott tions at the Pontifical Univerbrought in an unprecedented Francis' difficult reforms. Too sity of the Holy Cross in Rome. "The only really noticeable number of secular consultants many fake reforms." from firms like McKinsey & There were many referenc- change is the heightened (meCo., the KPMG internation- es in the books to COSEA, a dia) interest in the Vatican." al accounting firm and the commission Francis estabAllen said the sentiment Promontory Financial Group lished a few months after his about whistle-blowing is a bit March 2013 election in order

meaning dozens more out- to suggest economic reforms.

The once-obscure Keystone project became a political symbol amid broader clashes over energy, climate change and

siders have access to internal

files, and many on the inside Vatileaks are stirred up in ways that This is the third book on might make them want public the Vatican by Nuzzi, a TV

for reporters covering, say, a major corporation or the White House. "From their point of view it' s

not principally a matter of polattention. journalist who has a sensa- icy but of spiritual loyalty" AlFrancis also created a new tional style of writing but len said. For such leakers, "you high-level cardinal adviso- whose work has had a mas- inject a degree of moral agony ry board nicknamed C9 for sive impact. He was a central or something."

the economy. The rejection of

a single oil infrastructure project will have little impact on efforts to reduce greenhouse gas pollution, but the pipeline plan gained an outsize profile after environmental activists spent

four years marching and rallying against it in front of the White House and acrossthe

country. Pablo Martinez Monsivais / The Associated Press Obama said that the pipeline Secretary of State John Kerry listens Friday as President Barack has occupied what he called Obama announces he's rejecting the Keystone XL pipeline be"an overinflated role in our po- cause he does not believe it serves the national interest. litical discourse." "It has become a symbol

too often used as a campaign cudgel by both parties rather

Both sides saw the Keystone rejection as a major symbolic than a serious policy matter," step, a sign that the president he said. "And all of this ob- was willing to risk angering scured the fact that this pipe- a bipartisan majority of lawline would neither be a silver makers in the pursuit of his bullet for the economy, as was environmentalagenda. And promised by some, nor the ex- both supporters and critics of press lane to climate disaster Obama saw the surprisingproclaimedby others." ly powerful influence of en-

Obama's climate push

v ironmental activists in t h e

put into this fight." Environmentalists h ad sought to block construction of

the pipeline because it would have provided a conduit for petroleum extracted from the

Canadian oil sands. The process of extracting that oil produces about 17 percent more

planet-warming greenhouse gases than the process of ex-

decision. "Once the grass-roots moveThe rejection of the pipeline is one of several actions ment on the Keystone pipeline Obama has taken as he in- mobilized, it changed what it tensifies his push on dimate meant to the president," said change in his last year in of- Douglas Brinkley, a historian

tracting conventional oil.

fice. In August, he announced

burned, because it was already being extracted and moving

at Rice University who writes

his most significant dimate about presidential environpolicy, a set of aggressive new mental legacies. "It went from regulations to cut emissions of a routine infrastructure project planet-warming carbon pol- to the symbol of an era." lution from the nation's power plants.

Republicans and the oil industry had demanded that the president approve the pipeline, which they said would create jobs and stimulate economic growth. Many Democrats, particularly those in oil-producing states such as

An 'environmental leader' Environmental

But numerous State Department reviews concluded that construction of th e p ipeline

would have little impact on whether that type of oil was to market via rail and existing

pipelines. In citing his reason for the decision, Obama noted the State Department findings

that construction of the pipe-

act i v i sts line would not have created

cheered the decision as a vin- a significant number of new dication of their influence. jobs, lowered oil or gasoline "President Obama is the prices or significantly reduced first world leader to reject a U.S.dependence on foreign oil. "From amarketperspective, project because of its effect on the climate," said Bill Mc- the industry can find a differKibben, founder of the activist ent way to move that oil," said North Dakota, also supported group 350.org, which led the Christine Tezak, an energy the project. In February, con- campaign against the pipeline. market analyst at ClearView gressional Democrats joined "That gives him new stature as Energy Partners, a Washingwith Republicans in sending an environmental leader, and ton firm. "How long it takes is Obama a bill to speed approval it eloquently confirms the five just a result of oil prices. If pricof the project, but the president years and millions of hours of es go up, companies will get vetoed the measure. work that people of every kind the oil out."

04 I

ggpiig @gjQi g I I

Weapons

A7

Jim Porter told the Bend City

Council during its meeting Continued fromA1 Wednesday. For example, under the Bend Police Capt. Ben Gregproposed ordinance, Ben- ory says the department fredites could use airsoft guns or quently receives complaints paintball markers on private about airsoft g u ns, w hose property if the projectiles re- plastic pellets are currently main on that property. banned by city code. ComBend Police say the change p laints have also come i n is an effort to give both res- about use of construction tools idents and o fficers more such as nail guns, which are straightforward g u idelines prohibited. in an age when weapon-inGregory said amending the spiredtoys have gotten more code is an effort to distinguish sophisticated in the decades between legal and illegal acsince Ralphie Parker begged tivity a bit more clearly, but it his parents for a Red Ryder BB still leaves some room for officer discretion. gun. "We had a problem where "Slingshots used to fire steel technology overtook our or- bearings would still be prodinances," Bend Police Chief hibited," Gregory wrote in an

e

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email Wednesday. "A child playing with a toy slingshot may not be." The proposed amendments,

which permit carpentry tools used "for their intended purpose," also would allow agencies to take animal control measures — for example, the U.S. Department of Agriculture uses paintball markers to deter geese from public parks in city limits.

Though the clear, biodegradable pellets aren't shot at the birds, they are aimed at the

Forum Center, Bend

water to scare the geese away, according to Jeff Amaral of

541-617-8840

the USDA, who testified at

Wednesday's meeting. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, cwithycombeibend bulletin.corn

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© www.bendbulletin.corn/local

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015

BRIEFING 2 men arrested in kidnappingcase Bend Police say a man was kidnappedand compelled to arrange a meeting with two men who were later assaulted by two others in a northeast Bendbaseball field Thursday afternoon. The incident that prompted a brief lockout at nearby Mountain View High School. Travis Michael Seaton, 19, of Bend,was arrested early Friday, hours after allegedly kidnapping Austin Albin, 18, at gunpoint and forcing him to set up a meeting with two Bend teenagers whomSeaton and an acquaintance planned to assault, according to a newsrelease from BendPolice. Seaton and Miguel Moreno-Valles, 19, a Utah resident, allegedly assaulted the two teens at the baseball field east of Trinity Lutheran School. Seaton and Moreno-Valles fled the scene after parking Seaton's gray Cherokeeon NE Jackson Street. Police arrested Seaton and Moreno-Valles just after midnight Thursday andexecuted a search warrant at Seaton's homeand on the Cherokee. Police found the firearm used in the incident and "several other pieces of evidence"thatlinked both suspects to the reported kidnapping andassault, the news releasesaid. The two suspects were acquaintances of Albin and the two other victims. Seaton was arrested on suspicion of first-degree kidnapping, third-degree assault, unlawful use of aweapon and menacing,while Moreno-Valles was arrested on suspicion of first-degree kidnapping and third-degree assault. Seaton remainedin Deschutes County custody, according to thejail, as of Fridayafternoon. Nore briefing, B3

lanes closedon Colorado, Arizonaavenues The south lanes of Colorado/Arizona avenueswill be closed between Industrial AvenueandWall Street through Nov.30. Crews will be working on acity sewer project. Onelane of ArizonaAvenuewill be closed for sewer construction as it moves eastward. This will progress throughwinter and into next spring.

0

BF S Redmond searching for flight

I S C c I , W OLIA S 0

• Lights, soundmncChinareset upin effort tospookawayOR-25inIdamathCounty

Bend along U.S. Highway 97.

tack," according to the report.

A livestock producer in the

Data collected from OR-25's

Upper Williamson River area found an injured 350-pound

collar, which regularly sends

location information to a satellite along with transmitting

heifer in a 100-acre pasture

By Dylan J. Darling

The "RAG box" has strobe

The Bulletin

lights and produces loud noises, induding recorded booms

The next time OR-25 — a lone collared wolf — tries to

sneak up on calves in northern Klamath County he' ll likely be in for a surprise. Responding to what agencies believe was the wolf's recent attack on livestock, John

Stephenson, Oregon wolf coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, set up lights around a pasture Wednesday night and a radio-activated guard box Thursday morning.

and shouts, when an animal

affixed with an active tracking collar comes near. "It works pretty well with

collared animals to scare them away," he said. Once a member of the Imna-

Oct. 31, according to an Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife report. Sunday morning, the producer found a dead calf in the same pasture and Mondaymorning another injured calf. The state agency investigated.

a radio signal, show the wolf w as at ornearthedeadcalf five times between Oct. 28 and

Monday. The collar's radio signal is what will trigger the RAG box. Livestock will remain in the pasture until the end of the month when it's moved

"For the two injured calves,

the large size, spacing and length of the canine tooth

ha Pack in northeast Oregon, OR-25passed through Central marks and amount of severe Oregon last spring before wan- tissue damage to the medial dering south. Since May he has portion of the hind legs of both frequented woods near Chilocalves (commonly observed quin, about 110 miles south of attack points) indicates wolf at-

to Phoenix By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

REDMOND — The hunt

for a daily flight to Phoenix is on.

On Tuesday, the Red-

away to winter range, Stephenson said. The lights he put up Wednesday night flash through the night in ever changing patterns intended to spook a wolf like OR-25.

mond City Council accepted

SeeWolf /B5

stop air travel from the Redmond Airport to Phoenix Sky Harbor International. The grant, which was first

a $500,000grantfrom the U.S. Department of Transportation to be used exclu-

sively to recruit a major airline to provide daily, non-

announced in September, will make up the bulk of a $770,000 air service program designed to secure flights to Phoenix, the only

READY TO RIDE

major air hub in the western United States in which the Redmond Airport is not connected directly.

According to staffreports from airport business r,

manager Zach Bass, the $500,000 provided by the grant will serve as a reve-

nue guarantee if an airline chooses to provide flights from Redmond to Phoenix. Additionally, the airport

will waive $95,000 in landing fees to that airline

and the city will provide another $175,000 in revenue guaranteesand marketing. American Airlines is being targeted, but other airlines could come into the mix if

American declines, Bass sard "We did just meet with

American last Friday," Bass said. "No commitment has been made,but they're look-

ing into this quite a bit." Bass' optimism is well founded. The Redmond AirJoe Kline/The Bulletin

and in each instance landed

ountain bikers pedal through a

a new daily, nonstop flight.

- BQ Creek j o « ~

section of the new parking lot at Phil's Trailhead in Bend on Friday.

—3

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The lot was constructed by compressing I

loose rock and isn't covered with asphalt. The pressed rock will remain as such to see how

port has secured the same type of grant twice before

'--~

Program grant was used to

I

secure flights to Salt Lake City, and in 2012, flights to

\

,,'; Phil's ", Tiailhead M .C . H ITT E S @M ONAL

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well the method fares.

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In 2003, a Small Community Air Service Development

Los Angeles were acquired via American using the same type of grant. That Los Angeles flight was

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discontinued in September, but earlier this week airport

- S-~ =- - - - - ' Bulletin file

officials announced American was bringing back daily, nonstop service to Los Angeles International Airport starting on Dec. 17.

Bend Ci Council to hold office hours • Program is intended to foster dialogue

"COAST (The Central Oregon Air Service Team) has a track record of suc-

cess for leveraging these grants," said Bass, who estimated Redmond couldhave

By Tyler Leeds

Council is planning to hold

get outside my echo chamber are limited to three minutes as much as possible and talk regardless of the topic. Now, to to folks. Any opportunity for foster more in-depth exchang- people to come in and talk to

The Bulletin

open office hours for commu-

es, the council has decided to

us about their concerns, I see

flights to Phoenix by the end of summer 2016. According to Bass and Jodi Burch, the city's deputy director of central services,

hold office hours where res-

as a good thing."

revenue guarantees are

summon memories of college,

nity members. It's not common, but City

7

but in Bend it may soon be

Council meetings sometimes

Southlane-

associated with municipal government. While only two

end after midnight, which results in some laws in Bend being voted on by tired policymakers. To keep meeting times reasonable, visitors who

,CIOSell

The term office hours may

of its members hold doctorates

and theoretically have a shot at tenure somewhere, the City

=g COIOrallO AVe,' brlllge CIOS el

I

L--4 through Nov.17 Greg Cross/The Bulletin

Correction In the EventCalendar that appeared Friday, Nov.6, on page16of Go! Magazine, the time of "Jury Room" was reported incorrectly. The correct time of the event is 2 and 7p.m. today at Mountain View High School. The correct event information appears in today's calendar. The Bulletin regrets the error.

wish to address the council

idents can come to City Hall and have a conversation with

a councilor without a time limit.

"We all live in echo chambers," said Councilor Barb Campbell. "I honestly try to

Anne Aurand, the city' s

community relations manager,

used to ensure the airlines don't lose money during

said that with only three minutes, visitors often feel rushed,

their first year or two of op-

and the council isn't able to hear about anything in-depth. SeeHours/B2

familiarize themselves with

erations while passengers new flight options. See Flight /B5

Cold caseof manwho went missingwhile headedto Bendrevived By Claire Withycombe

enteredOregon, according to

ed in the National Missing and

The Bulletin

OSP Lt. Bill Fugate. However,

Oregon State Police are reviving efforts to find a then20-year-old man who was last seen 35 years ago today hitchhiking from Wisconsin

police in Oregon, Idaho and Wisconsin are calling for any

Unidentified Persons System. Leach is missing person num-

to Bend.

Randall Dean Leach was last glimpsed walking away from a dairy farm in Idaho Falls, Idaho, Nov. 7, 1980. He' d

left his family's home in Wisconsin six days earlier, intend-

ing to reach his sister's home in Bend. State police were never able

to confirm whether Leach, who went by Randy, arrived at his desired destination or even

information possibly relevant

to Leach's case the public can provide. When he was last seen, Leach was described as white, about 5 feet 8 inches tall, about 140 to 160 pounds and with

ber 7429.

The Sheboygan County Sheriff's Office in Wisconsin has stayed involved in the case

since Leach's disappearance was reported in February 1981, and the Bonneville County

brown hair and blue eyes. Investigators have uploaded Leach's dental records and his family members' DNA

Sheriff's Office in Idaho is also investigating. Anybody in Oregon with relevant information is asked to contact the Oregon State Police

to national databases where

Northern Command Center

offici alscan compare those records with others registered

at 503-375-3555 and reference

across the country. An entry

for Leach has also been creat-

case number SP15-348371. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, cu ithycombe@bendbulletin.corn

Submitted photo

Randall "Randy" Dean Leach went missing on his way to his sister's home in Bend in1980 at age 20. He was last seen in Idaho.


B2

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015

E VENT TODAY

ENDA R

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click "Add Event" at least 10 days before publication.

Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.corn, 541-383-0351.

SUNDAY

LORD'S ACRE DAY: Featuring a WILDFIREPOTTERY SHOWCASE: craft sale, baked goods, live music, Featuring work by more than 25 a barbecue dinner, an auction, a10K ceramic artists, with clay activities run and 5K walk to benefit Powell for kids, raffles and more; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; free; Highland Elementary Butte Christian Church projects; School, 701 NWNewport Ave., 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.; free admission, Bend; 541-420-5889. $20 race registration, $25 day of; Powell Butte Christian Church, OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS 8404 SW Reif Road, Powell Butte; SUNDAY JAM:All ageswelcome, www.powellbuttechurch.corn or listen and dance;1 to 4 p.m.; free, 541-548-3066. donations accepted; Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SWReif WILDFIREPOTTERY SHOWCASE: Road, Powell Butte; 541-410-5146. Featuring work by more than 25 ceramic artists, with clay activities SECOND SUNDAY:T.GERONIMO for kids, raffles and more; 10a.m. JOHNSON:Join writer T. Geronimo to 5 p.m.; free; Highland Elementary Johnson, author of "Hold It School, 701 NWNewport Ave., Bend; 'Til It Hurts," and "Welcome to 541-420-5889. Brag gsvile," and OSU-Cascades MFA students; 2 to 3 p.m.; STRIPED SOCK WALK:A fun 1.3- or 2.6-mile walk/run at the Bend Ronald free; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; McDonald House,looping around www.deschuteslibrary.org or St. Charles, to benefit The Ronald 541-350-3537. McDonald House;10a.m .tonoon; $35 for adults, $10 for kids 7 and AUTHOR!AUTHOR! JAMES older, free for 6 and under; Ronald MCBRIDE:Jazz artist and novelist McDonald House Charities of Central performs with Good Lord Bird Oregon, 1700 NEPurcell Blvd., Bend; Gospel Band;4 p.m.;$25;Bend High www.stripedsockwalkbend.org or School, 230 NESixth St., Bend; 541-318-4950. www.deschuteslibrary.org. "JURY ROOM": A playby C.B. "HOME ALONE":25TH Gilford, about jurors making ANNIVERSARY:Celebrate the 25th discoveries as they act out a anniversary of this classic holiday testimony;2 and 7 p.m .;$5; film; 4:30 and 7:30 p.m.; $12.50; Mountain View High School, 2755 Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, NE 27th St., Bend; 971-645-3982. 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 844-462-7342. HOEDOWN FOR HUNGER: An all-you-can-eat chili dinner, with "TRAILRUNNING FILM FEST live music; to benefit the Feedthe TOUR":Featuring films about trail Hungry program; 3to10 p.m.; $20, running; 6 p.m.; $20; Volcanic $10 for kids and seniors, free for kids Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, 5 andyounger;Bend'sCommunity Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.corn Center, 1036 NEFifth St., Bend; or 541-323-1881. www.bendscommunitycenter.org or 541-312-2069. MONDAY "SLEDFILM15":Featuring backNO EVENTSLISTED. country snowmobile films, different eachnight;6 p.m.;$9 plusfees,$7 for 17 and younger; Tower Theatre, TUESDAY 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. KNOW SCANDAL:MISSING MASTERPIECES:Community RISING APPALACHIA:The worldLibrarian Paige Bentley-Flannery folk band performs, with Arouna investigates notable heists of the art Diarra; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 world; noon to1 p.m.; free; Sisters p.m.; $17 plus fees in advance, Public Library, 110 N.Cedar St., $20 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Sisters; www.deschuteslibrary.org Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; or 541-312-1032. www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or "PAPER TIGERS":A screening of 541-323-1881.

i~Wi

v

Submitted photo

Singer-songwriter David Ryan Harris, who recently released his fourth solo album, "Lightyears," will playsolo at 8 p.m. Thursday at the Astro Lounge. the documentary about traumainformed education; 6 p.m., doors open at5 p.m.; free; La Pine High School, 51633 Coach Road, La Pine; 541-355-8405. "THE MASKYOU LIVE IN": Featuring a screening of a Sundance 2015 selection, about boys and young men struggling with America's narrow definition of masculinity; 6 to 8 p.m.; $12 plus fees in advance, $14 at the door; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700.

Pan Theater, 869 NWTin Pan Alley, Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1034. VETERANSDAYCONCERT: Featuring The Notables Swing Band, Betty Berger and TheHarmonettes; 6:30 p.m.; $8-$18 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. THE BLACKBERRYBUSHES STRINGBAND:The modern acoustic

group performs; 7p.m.;free;

WEDNESDAY 16TH ANNUALVETERANS DAY PARADE:Bend commemorates the 70th anniversary of the end of WWII and the 40th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War, this year's parade will honor our "Living Legacies"; 11 a.m. to noon; free; Parade Starts, Harmon Blvd., Bend; 541-382-3221. "HOME ALONE":25TH ANNIVERSARY:Celebrate the 25th anniversary of this classic holiday film; 4:30 and 7:30 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 844-462-7342. KNOW SCANDAL:"CHINATOWN": See the classic movie, as part of the Know Scandal series at the library; 6 p.m.; free, limited seating; Tin

McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.cor n or541-382-5174. JEFFREYFOUCAULT:The blues musician performs; 7 p.m.; $15 plus fees in advance, $18 at the door; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.corn or 541-815-9122. HEAD FOR THE HILLS: The bluegrass band from Colorado performs, with Trout Steak Revival;

9 p.m.; $10plus feesin advance,

$12 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.

THURSDAY THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "Euphoria" by Lily King; noon to1 p.m.; free; Redmond Public Library, 827 SWDeschutes Ave., Redmond; 541-312-1055.

HARVESTDINNERFUNDRAISER:A harvest dinner to raise money for the proposed new Montessori charter schools in Bend and Redmond; 5 to 9 p.m.; $10, $30 for a family, $7 for children, free for 3 and younger; American Legion Post44,704 SW Eighth St., Redmond; 541-213-8682. "TIMEFOR A LAUGH" DINNER SHOW:Featuring live comedy by Bri Pruit and Alex Falcone; 6 p.m.; $35 in advance; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.corn or 541-815-9122. "BALLETHISPANICO:CARMEN. MAQUIAANDCLUBHAVANA": Featuring a showing of two Latininspired ballets; 7 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX,680 SW Powerhouse Drive,

Bend; www.fathomevents.cornor 844-462-7342. DAVE MASON'STRAFFIC JAM: The co-founder of the band Traffic performs; 7:30 p.m.; $28 to $53 plus fees; The Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. LOCALS:Featuring Helga, Strange Rover and Victor Johnson; 8 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. ADAM BATHEANDJAKE SILBERMAN:The comedians

perform; 8 to10 p.m.; $8 inadvance, $10 at the door; The Summit Saloon 8 Stage, 125 NWOregon Ave.,

Bend; www.bendcomedy.cornor

541-419-0111. DAVID RYAN HARRIS: The indierock and soul guitarist performs, with Tyler Lyle; 8 p.m.; $12 plus fees in advance, $15at the door; The Astro Lounge, 939 NWBond St.,

Bend; www.astroloungebend.cornor

541-388-0116.

FRIDAY ANNUALCHILI FEED:Featuring a chili feed, a bakesale, a raffle to benefit Deschutes County Historical Society; 10a.m. to 2 p.m.; free; DesChutes Historical Museum, 129 NWIdaho Ave. Bend www.deschuteshistory. org or 541-389-1813. "UNBRANDED":A showing of the film about four men, 16mustangs and 3,000 miles, to benefit Warm

Springs Horse Network; 6:30 p.m.; $10; Madras Performing Arts Center, 412 Buff St., Madras; www.

wshorsenetwork.myevent.cornor 541-905-3381. "THISCHANGES EVERYTHING":A film about seven powerful portraits of communities on the front lines

of climatechange,from Montana's Powder River Basin to the Alberta Tar Sands, from the coast of South India to Beijing and more; 6:30 to 8 p.m.; $5 suggesteddonation;The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend; www.envirocenter.org or 541-385-6908. AUTHOR!AUTHOR! ELIZABETH GILBERT: Join Elizabeth Gilbert, author of "Eat Pray Love," "The Signature of All Things," "Committed," "Stern Men," "The Last American Man" and her most recent book, "Big Magic"; 7 to 9 p.m.; $25 to $80;Bend High School,230 NESixth St., Bend; www.dplfoundation.org or 541-312-1032. "JAMESANDTHEGIANT PEACH": Featuring a magical peach, an imprisoned boy, several insect friends and an incredible journey, based on the book byRoald Dahl; 7 p.m.; $15 for adults and seniors, $10 for students 18 andyounger; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.beatonline.org or 541-419-5558. OPERATHEATREPERFORMANCE:

An evening ofsongsand scenes from their upcoming 2016 season; 7 to 8 p.m.; free; Pinckney Center for the Arts, PenceHall, 2800 College

Way, Bend; www.operabend.org or 541-350-8563. "THE SALTOFTHEEARTH": A showing of the 2014 documentary nominated for Best Documentary Feature; 7:30 p.m.; free; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. NEW IBERIANS: The Zydeco Champions from Portland perform, with Left Coast Country; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.

WEST NEWS

Hours

Tribesgetaccessto crim e databases in push to close gap

Continued from 61 "This will let the council

a n d c o m m unity s i t

down and have areal conBy Martha Belllsle

Francesca Hillery, a tr ibal spokeswoman. One problem was logistics. Therewas no uniform way for

versation " Aurand said.

gram unveiled at the annual SEATTLE — Ten Am e r- White House Tribal Nations ican Indian tribes are gain- Conference in Wa s hington, ing access to national crimi-

tribes to enter criminal infor-

urban, and that pr ocess

mation directly.

has resulted in a variety of new ch allengesfor

Idaho will take part in the pro-

The Associated Press

D.C.

"This innovative program nal databases after a deadly shooting in Washington state will allow an unprecedented helped reveal f l aws in t h e sharing of critical informaway federal authorities and tion between tribal, state and tribal go vernments share federal governments, inforinformation. mationthat could help solvea Tribes can now conduct crime or evensave someone' s thorough background checks life," Deputy Attorney Generand add cr i m i nal r e c ords al Sally Quillian Yatessaid. to the databases,the U.S. Tulalip Chairman Melvin Department of Justice said Sheldon Jr. said the program Thursday. It co mes after a will empower tribal law enmember of the Tulalip Tribe forcement nationwide by givwas able to buy a gun later ing them the tools they have used by his son to kill four sought for years to protect classmates and himself at a their communities. "It has consistently been our high school last year. A do mestic v iolence re- position that having the abilistraining order issued by a ty to independently report and tribal court in 20 01 should access criminal information have stopped the father from is the very best wayto protect buying firearms. our citizens," he said. "Gaps in data sharing alWyn Hornbuckle, a Juslowed a prohibited person tice Department spokesman, to purchase a handgun and said the agency has focused possess it at his home," U.S. on improving tribal access Attorney Annette Hayes said. to the federal databases, but "That gun was used in the their participation hinged on school shootingwith the trag- regulations in the state where ic consequences that we all they are located.A working now know." group came up with solutions Two tribes from Washing- to those roadblocks, leadingto ton and two f rom Ar i z ona, the newprogram. plus one each from OklahoThe shift allows tribes to ma, North Ca rolina, Michi- conduct background checks, gan, New York, Oregon and especially when they need to

In Washington state, when a state court issues a restrain-

ing order, the cl erk sends the record to the sheriff, who puts it in the database, said Heath-

er Anderson, with the Wash-

City ManagerEric King emphasized that the city is rapidly becoming more

residents.

"The community needs direct accessto the council so that they' re able to

Raymond Fryberg, whosesonstole and used his firearm In a

inconsistent.

mass shooting, walks out of the FederalCourthouse in Seattle in April. Fryberg should not have been able to purchase his firearm but Inconsistencies in criminal records between states and tribes allowed him to.

The program "will help us understand the information gaps and thebest ways to use this serviceto strengthen public safety in Indian country,"

talk about those changes and how to manage them," King said. The plan for now is to try out office hours and see how it goes — one concern is no one will show up. However, King noted having councilors hang around City Hall could be a good thing on its own, as they'll be able to see the city staff at

ington State Patrol's criminal

records division. But the reporting process between state authorities and Ted s. warren /The Associated press file photo

placea child with a foster parent in an emergency situation,

Sheldon said. Plus, they can enter tribal restraining orders

the 29 federally recognized tribes in Wa shington was

said Yates, the deputy attor-

work.

used oneof his father's guns in a massshooting at Marysville-Pilchuck High School in

ney general. The tr ibes participating

them to wa nder around

October 2014.

lalip and Suquamish tribes of Washington; the Pascua

in the program are: the 1Lt-

County clerk or entered into the National Instant Criminal

R aymond Fryberg w a s not charged in the shooting Yaqui and White Mountain but later was convicted of six Apache tribes of Ar i zona federal countsof illegally pos- tribes;the Cherokee Nation of sessing firearms. He's sched- Oklahoma; the Eastern Band uled to be se ntenced early of Cherokee Indiansof North next year. Carolina; th e Kew e e naw The Tulalip Tribe urged the Bay Indians of Michigan; the U.S. attorney general to grant Oneida Indian Nation of New tribes accessto the databases York; the Umatilla of Oregon;

BackgroundCheck System. His 15-year-old son,Jaylen,

in 2005, 2010 and 2013, butno system was established, said

into federal databases, which

are used by gun dealers to ensure legal sales,he said. The re s training o r d e r against Raymond Fryberg, which should have prevented him from buying guns, was never sent to the Snohomish

and the Shoshone-Bannock

Tribes inIdaho.

"It's an opportunity for

and see what's happenLng,"he said. Dates and times haven't been set, but the city

is ta lking a bout e ach councilor spending a n hour a m o n th in o f f i c e

hours, with most openings during the day and a few at night. Theprogram is likely to start in early 2016. — Reporter:541-633-2160, tfeedsibendbulletin.corn

NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in thePolice Log when such arequest is received. Any new information, such asthe dismissal of charges or acquittal, must beverifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at12:34 p.m. Nov.1, in the1100 block of NWElgin Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 7:13 p.m. Nov. 1, in the 100block of NWHood Place. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at8:58a.m. Nov. 2, in the 2700 block of NE 27th Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at11 a.m.Nov. 2, inthe 200block of NE

Sixth Street. Theft — A theft was reported at11:53 a.m.Nov. 2, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Unauthorized use —A vehicle was reported stolen, a theft occurred andarrests were made at 8:06 a.m. Nov. 3, in the2500 block of NE Butler Market Road. Theft —Atheft was reported and anarrest made at10:21 a.m. Nov. 4, inthe 2200 block of NE U.S.Highway 20. Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:16 a.m. Nov. 5, in the 61100block of Montrose Pass Street. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2:06 p.m.Nov. 5,in the 300 block of SWPowerhouse Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 5 p.m. Nov.3, in the 300 block of NE RevereAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:15 p.m. Nov. 4,inthe20200blockofReed Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at10:21 a.m. Nov. 5, in the 800 block of NEWatt Way.

DESCHUTES COUNTY SHERIFF'8 OFFICE Theft — A theft was reported at1:02 p.m. Nov. 4, in the 25300 block of Bachelor Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:26 p.m. Nov. 4, in the 700 block of S.Buckaroo Trail. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:52 p.m. Nov. 4, in the area of NE33rd Street and NEO'Neil Way. DUII —lla MayHuff, 34, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influenceof intoxicants at 3:13p.m. Nov. 4, inthe area of U.S. Highway 97and S. Century Drive.

BEND FIRE RUNS Wednesday 9:22a.m.— Brush or brush-and-grass mixture fire, 59728NavajoRoad.

4:09p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 21133 Reed Market Road. 17 —Medical aid calls.

CIVIL SUITS Filed Oct. 28 15CV29203 —JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. v. Ricky Saunders,MichelleL.Saunders,Cascade View Estates Homeowners' Association, dba CascadeView Homeowners' Association, State of Oregon, complaint, $203,235.80, plus interest costs andfees

fees 15CV29647 —DeannaRukavenov.American Family Insurance, complaint, $75,000, plus interest costs andfees 15CV29760 —Carrington Mortgage Services LLC v. Allan E.Orton, Lillian J. Orton, Beneficial Oregon Inc., complaint, $208,694.68, plus interest costs andfees

Filed Nov. 3 15CV29761 —JanaVanAmburg, MD, v. John D. Blizzard, MD,complaint, $218,471.75, plus interest costs andfees 15CV29827 —Federal National Mortgage Association (FannieMae)v. David P.Harms, Filed Oct. 30 Kindra L. Jividen, akaKindra L Harms, JP 15CV29463 —RayKlein Inc.v. Kristin Nisbet ChaseBankN.A.,Midland Funding and Jeremy Nisbet, complaint, $10,582.24, plus Morgan LLC, complaint, $98,788.74, plus interest costs interest costs andfees and fees Filed Nov. 2 15CV29828 —Pearl Capital Rivis VenturesLLCv. 15CV29615 —Martha Cruzv. Loren Gitthens, Prajit Atonprachachit, dbaChakamThai Kitchen, complaint, $90,632.54, plus interest costs and complaint, $12,610,plusinterest costs andfees


SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

ma eris oan u i n insurer 0 a The Associated Press PORTLAND — Oregon Health and Science University pumped $50 million into struggling insurer Moda Health be a risky move. The secret loan i ssued last year was the largest in OHSU's history, the Oregonian reported Thursday. OHSU officials say they

nounced it was pulling out of the Washington and Califor-

made the loan in part because

the company is not in financial jeopardy and will repay

of the Moda deal. turns and more about health The largest was a $7.8 mil- care transformation, universilion equity stake in Life Flight, ty officials said. the air ambulance company. OHSU wanted to support The OHSU board of direc- Moda, a key ally in its growth tors unanimously approved plans. The officials also felt the loan to Moda, which is un- Moda deserved support for secured and has few strings the prominent role the insurer attached, at a December meet- played in covering previously ing closed to the public. OHSU uninsured Oregonians. officials said minutes weren' t OHSU is pushing hard to taken. compete against the estabOHSU transferred the $50 lished giants of Oregon health million to Moda on Dec. 15, care — Kaiser Permanente

the debt.

2014.

Plan Inc. in what turned out to

Moda acceptedpeople gaining access to insurance under President Bar ack Obama's health care law. "Moda, like OHSU, stepped forward and played a critical role in the rollout of the Af-

when the federal government drastically cut into the millions of dollars it was expected to send Moda to help with Af-

fordable Care Act expenses. L ast w e ek ,

M o d a an -

nia health care markets.

Moda officials declined to talk in detail with the Oregonian about the loan and said

Meanwhile, the Affordable Moda is to make quarterly Care Act has proved a finan- payments of $500,000 over 10 cial boon for OHSU. Furnstahl years, and has remained cursaid the university brought in rent on the debt. The next pay$70 million more than expect- ment is due Dec. 15. fordable Care Act," said Law- ed in 2014 and 2015 largely beFurnstahl said that in recrence Furnstahl, OHSU chief cause more of its patients were ognition of the risky nature financial officer. "We were covered by insurance, which of the transaction, OHSU, for very proud that they did that. reduced the amount of charity accounting purposes, considThey didn't sit on the sidelines care. ers the Moda loan now to be until the thing sorted itself OHSU, which is funded in worth $33.5 million — a loss out." part with tax money, has nev- of about $16.5 million. He said, The p atients, h owever, er loaned its investment funds however, OHSU still expects turned out to be much costli- before. It previously made full repayment. er than expected.Moda took another financial hit this fall,

seven investments in outside

companies,none nearthesize

The motivation for the loan was less about investment re-

and Providence Health. Unlike Kaiser and Providence,

OHSU does not have its own health insurance company, which OHSU officials feel is

crucial to competing. An insurer offers a feast of claims data that health care

providersneed to lower costs, Furnstahl said.

AROUND THE STATE Kit Plane CraSh —Authorities in Linn County said a pilot and passenger sustained nonlife-threatening injuries after a small airplane crashed onto the roof of a building near Lebanon.Theairplane's pilot tried to land the planetwice on a private landing strip. The plane went down on the third try after failing to clear astand of trees. Pilot Marion Knox built the airplane from akit manufactured in Aurora by Van's Aircraft. A similar kit planewas involved in afatal crash outside of Scio in 2012. And afatal crash in Newport in 2014, also involving a kit plane, led to a$35 million lawsuit. The Federal Aviation Administration and the Linn County Sheriff's Department are investigating the cause of the crash. POliCe ShOOting —Portland Police said officers shot and killed a suicidal manwho pointed a gunat his head,was screaming and ranting and hadfired two rounds outside a Portland hospital. Officers responded to thearea shortly before 6 a.m. Friday.They couldn't immediately tell what hewasholding, but could see it was agun once the sun cameup. Police contained the areaaround himand crisis negotiators spokewith him. Twotactical officers shot and killed the man as they moved in to relieve thepatrol officers who initially responded. Sgt. Pete Simpsonsaid it's still unclear what prompted them to shoot. No one at thehospital was harmed. SOh. SlllOld WOh't i'llll —Oregon state Sen.Chip Shields said he won't run for re-election. ThePortland Democrat announcedhis decision Friday. Shields said in anemail to his supporters that it's time to step aside after 10years in the Legislature. Hesaid he'll devote more time to his position on theboard of the Oregon Foster Parent Association. Shields is known asoneof the Senate's most liberal members and for bills targeting insurance companies. Shields' decision opens the door for a contentious Democratic primary in the North Portland district. — From wire reports

"At OHSU, we want to pro-

vide a better alternative, an Oregon-based system, to Kaiser, frankly," he said. "We need to link the claims experience and the medical care data to make this happen."

LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from Bf

Bend manstruck crossing U.S.20

Man pleads'no contest' to firebombing mosque By Nathan Bruttell Corvallis Gazette-Times

CORVALLIS — The 29-yearold who pleaded "no contest" Tuesday in connection with the Nov. 28, 2010, arson at Corvallis' Salman Al-Farisi said

he is not admitting guilt but is "done fighting" to plead his innocence.

Cody Seth Crawford pleaded "no contest" Tuesday in US District Court in Eugene to a

charge of damaging religious property. Crawford was indict-

III II QI IQiII

0 tk, IIIII I

I rsvp 1 I:I il l

II

1l®

ed in August 2011 on one count

of damage to religious property and one count of use of fire to commit a felony. The no contest

plea allows Crawford to not admit guilt, "but accept a finding of guilt by the court," according to court documents. With the no contest plea, the government agreed to drop the count of use

of fire to commit a felony. The Nov. 28, 2010, fire hap-

Rick Bowmer/The Associated Press file photo

penedaftersomeone reported- Cody Seth Crawford poses in Corvallis in 2010. Crawford, accused of firebombing aCorvallis mosque ly broke out a mosque window five years ego, pleaded "no contest" Tuesday to acharge of damaging religious property. Prosecutors and threw in a two-liter soda

bottle of flammable liquid, according to investigators. The fire extensively damaged an office at the mosque, which was repaired as a community effort. Investigators reportedly recovered a soda bottle, cap and flashlight that initially tested positive for Crawford's DNA,

according to court documents. As recently as a few months ago, federal prosecutors and the defense sparred over the DNA evidence, postponing the jury trial for the case. "I have never once admitted I was guilty of this crime at the Islamic center, I feel that it

was a very unfortunate thing that took place," Crawford said in an emailed statement to the

Gazette-Times, adding that he wanted to take the "safe bet."

"The (no contest) plea is me saying 'I am done fighting, my

will ask that he be sentenced to five years of probation.

"I hopeto leave here some- lam. Islam is a religion of peace. day with my full faculties and Read about Islam and you will I will not let them.' I have al- without a broken spirit," Craw- feel sorry for yourself." ready lost so much of my life to ford concluded in his emailed Wanly then recalled the retemble things; I have faith that statement. sponse from the community in there is a light at the end of this Mozafar Wanly,a mosque the days following the fire. Ortunnel." elder at Salman Al-Farisi, egon State University students Crawford added that he has said that Crawford "is already held a peace rally the day after been housed for the past 14 forgiven." the fire in front of the Memori"From the beginning, we al Union. On Dec. 1, 2010, more months in the Oregon State Hospital. Crawford was orig- have said we are not against than 300 people gathered at the inally placed on home deten- him with anything," Wanly mosque to speak of unity and tion following his August 2011 said Wednesday. "We have peace. "From our side, the only conindictment, but Crawford was nothing against him." committed to the Oregon State Wanly recalled a reporter cern is we need the commuHospital in May 2014 after asking him the day after the nity to continue that message pleading guilty except for in- fire, if he could speak to the per- of peace and safety," Wanly sanity to a charge of unlawful son who did it, what he might said. "We need and want this use of a weapon in Polk Coun- say. community to b e s afe. Not "On that first day I said the just the Muslim community, ty,according to courtrecords. Crawford was sentenced to the same thing I say today," Wanly the Christian community, the mental institution for up to five said. "I will tell him you have Jewish community, the whole years. wrong information about Is- community." family wanted to take the stand

and defendmy innocence,but

A Bend manwasstruck by a car while runningacross U.S. Highway 20 inthe Sisters area early Friday,according to theDeschutes CountySheriff's Office. Tharon Crofoot, 28, sustained serious but nonlife-threatening injuries after beingstruck bya Honda Accord driven byColby Wise, 25, of Sisters ataround4:42 a.m. Friday. Crofoot hadbeenwalking west along the westboundshoulder attempting to hitch aride. Dueto cold weather, hedecided to hitch back toward Bend.Seeingeastbound vehiclesapproaching, he ran across theroad in aneffort to attract the drivers' attention and was struck byWise. Wise stoppedand helpedCrofoot out of the road.Sisters Fire Department arrived atthescene and transported Crofoot to St. Charles Bend. The highwaywaspartially closed for aroundthree hours following the incident.

County needsdudget panel memders Deschutes County is looking for new members tojoin the county budget committee. The county will beaccepting applications for thevolunteer position until 5 p.m.Dec.7. Members of thecommittee review proposedbudgets with the Deschutes CountyCommission andmakearecommendation.The committee terms last for three years. Committee meetingsseven in all —take placefrom December until the endof June. The county will beconducting interviews soon.Committee membersmustbeDeschutesCounty residents.

Applications areavailable at deschutes.org/jobs. Click onBudget Committee undervolunteer openings.

Items missingfrom Sunriver home ASunriver resident camehome to an unfamiliar car in his driveway late Fridaymorning to find that items hadbeenstolen from his house. The homeownerparkedhis vehicle at11:10a.m.andsawthat an adult male, about 6feettall with facial hair, waswalking to afaded red station wagon,according to a news releasefrom Sunriver Police. Themansaid heworked for a hot tub companyandleft. Several items, including televisions, weremissing from the home,which is inthe vicinity of Circle 9 inthe north endof Sunriver. Anyone with information about the incident is asked to call the

Sunriver Police Departmentat 541-593-1014 orDeschutes County 911 at541-693-6911.

ShreddingdaltNov.21 • i Prineville Drop off documents for shredding or unwantedprescription drugs from ga.m. to noon Nov. 21 attheCrook County Sheriff's Office, 308 NE Second St. in Prineville. The sheriff's office will work with Data Delete ofOregonto shred up tothree boxes perparticipant of personal documents. Thedocumentscanhavestaples and paper clips, andspiral notebooks andhanging folders can also be shredded. In exchangefor the freeshredding, the sheriff's office asksfor a donation of nonperishableholiday food for the HolidayPartnership Food Baskets. — Bulletin staff repair

Malheur Co unty backs permit for afly farm The Associated Press

Eugeneproposal would havelandlords appoint localagent The Associated Press about unruly parties, excessive EUGENE — A group of noise, garbage accumulation rental owners in Oregon is con- and improper parking. cerned about a proposal that Kelly Putnam is the Eugene would require Eugene land- Police Department's public lords to designate a local agent safety program manager and

care of the property. "But if there is no one to monitor the property, that is when things can get out of hand," said

chooses, including "a nextdoor neighbor, or someone else that is able to quickly respond to a problem and solve it," said

Putnam. Several landlords, howev-

Rachelle Nicholas.

if they don't live in the area.

er, question the need for the

Still, Politi argues that such a person won't be any more The regulation is meant to lords about problems with their rule, according to Lane Coun- helpful than the p roperty make things easier for city of- Eugene rentals. The landlords ty Rental Owners Association owner. "Are there bad actors in the ficials and police if there is a contact their tenants and the President Tia Politi. "Why aren't the rules on the landlord community' You bet problem at a local rental prop- tenants say the problem will erty, reported The (Eugene) be resolved, but Putnam said books already good enough to there are," she said. that's often not the case. "This rule is not going to Register-Guard. deal with problems?" she said. "The value of having a local She also complained that the change their unwillingness to By requiring landlords who live more than 60 miles out- r epresentative would be t h e proposal has vague wording be of assistance. What I see side of Eugene to appoint a lo- person could go to the rental and needs clarification. this rule doing is burdening "What level o f a u thority responsible rental owners with cal representative, they hope house and make sure those emergencies, code violations things have been taken care does this (agent) need to have?" unnecessary regulations." and other issues will get a fast- of," said Kelly Putnam, Eugene asked Politi. "Does this person City officials are taking puber response. Police Department's public need tobe a licensed property lic comment on the proposal City officials said they often safety program manager. manager?" until Monday. have trouble getting in touch She said most landlords are Eugene's code compliance City Manager Jon Ruiz with property owners after reasonable and want the ten- supervisor says no: The agent has the authority to enact the neighborhood co m plaints ants to be respectful and take could be whoever the landlord regulation. talks with out-of-state land-

would be contained. VALE — T h e M a l heur Joseph Holton said he is County Court t e ntatively worried that the manure's approved a permit for a fly odor would a t t ract even

farm despite neighbors' pleas for the operation to buzz off. After a lengthy hearing at its Wednesday session, the court — which is the county's governing bodyupheld the planning commission's decision to back the permit, The Argus Observer reported. Fly Farm Products owner

more flies. Lindsey Johnson said she is concerned about the proposed fly farm opening within a few miles of a school. Cockerum said the flies

would be contained in tents. If a tent can keep out mosquitoes, it could certainly

contain a larger fly, he said. In testimony before the planning com m i ssion, Skip Cockerum, of Ontario, Cockerum said the manure said his company produces will be liquefied and the fish bait and feed for caged flies eat bacteria and yeast or wild birds. He said his from it. The process turns property is large enough the manure into what look for the small-scale project, like dried coffee grounds in which includes bringing in five days and then it is takfresh cow manure for the en away, he said. flies to eat. The city clerk in nearby About 20 people who live Payette, Idaho, said in a letnear Cockerum have voiced ter to the court that Cockerconcerns about the fly farm um operated his business lowering property values, in Payette for several years the effect of manure on wa- and the city did not receive ter and whether the f lies any complaints


B4

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015

EDjTO

The Bulletin

s

e ousin ee s ou e raise o revious eve

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end city councilors are poised to restore an affordable housing fee that was reduced slightly during the recent recession. It's agood idea. Currently, builders of all types of structures, from homes to hardware stores, pay one-fifth of 1 percent of the value of every new building into the affordable housing fund. When it was originally put in place in 2006, the fee was set at one-third of 1 percent. Then came the recession that began in 2007. Construction, which had been a substantial part of the city's economy, slowed dramatically. Thus, in the third quarter of 2005, before the housing slowdown began,the cit y issued an average of more than 400 building permits per month.By March of2008,that number had plummeted to only 45 permits for the month. In contrast, the city issued 73 permits for detached single-family homes just last month. The money collected from builders provides no- and low-interest revolving loans to other builders who are workingon affordable housing projects. To date the city has lent some $10 million that was used to put up 615 affordable units.

The permits' value doesn't end there. The fee itself is an ongoing demonstration of the city's willingness to find ways to expand its affordable housing base, and as such, it has been helpful in attractingnearly $63 million in competitive state and federal funds. If somebody has a persuasive argument against the fee increase, he or she should speak up. As fee/tax increases go, the building permit charge goes toward helping the city get something it badly needs. The city collects about $374 on a construction project valued at slightly more than $187,000. That number will rise to a bit above $561 if the fee is restored. As has been noted before, no one thing will end Bend's affordable housing squeeze, but a collection of relatively small things can, when combined, begin to make a dent in the problem. The council was right to cut the housing fee when times were bad; now is the time to restore it.

Farmers needhelp with sick leave rules O ne thing the state must do to get ready for a new paid sick leave requirement is come up with rules to govern it. The Bureau of Labor and Industries is in the process of writing those rules now, and it has some in agriculture worried. Surely BOLI can find a way to ease the burden on an industry where,for many, the margin of success is narrow. A bill granting nearly all businesses in Oregon to provide paid sick leave to employees was approved by the 2015 Legislature. Employers with fewer than 10 employees, meanwhile, must offer unpaid sick leave to their workers. BOLI recently came out with proposed rules for the sick leave program, and the Oregon Farm Bureau sees problems ahead, according to an article in the Capital Press agricultural newspaper. Among itsconcerns is a proposal that would treat workers supplied by a labor contractor as being employed both by the contractor and thefarmer.That would mean, among other things, a duplication of record keeping, for both the farmer and theemployment agency would be obligated to track earned sick leave hours for each worker. The state argues the requirement

FarmerS alSOare COnCerned abOut a

PrOViSiOn that WOuld allOW

WOrkerS tO take SiCkleaVe in One-hOur inCrementS unleSS dOing SOCreated a hardShiP fOr the COmPany. That, tOO,COuld be a real PrOblem fOr farmerS. makes sense because sometimes workers who begin as temps are hired outright by farmers. While that may be true, surely BOLI could require that employment agencies make workers' sick leave records available when it occurs. Farmers also are concerned about a provision that would allow workers to take sick leave in onehour increments unless doing so created a hardship for the company. That, too, could be a real problem for farmers. As the farm bureau spokesman noted, finding replacement pickers for short blocks of time during such things as fruit harvests would be nearly impossible. It may well be that groups other than farmers and ranchers have similar problems with the proposed rules. In any case, BOLI officials should listen carefully.

/

I 4

M nickel's Worth Welcome to RAFO-land

taxpayers. It states that unwanted material would have to be removed

As you resume driving, the texter is

month for an option on the property,

fears it will cause economic harm to

now within 10 feet of your bumper. I think it's probably safe to assume it Driving the speed limit is too slow will develop the site.

local communities (as noted in the

em Oregon is an amazing place to fish and enjoy the stunning scenery. R AFO means Rules Ar e F o r from the site and 136,000 cubic I have only recently become familiar Others. Let's say you' re driving up yards of fill dirt would be have to be with the Owyhee, but I hope to get Mt. Washington Drive and in your transported to it. out there fishing soon. Let's do the math on making the mirror you see a car tailgating you One tool in the toolbox to protect with the driver texting. When you pumice mine site usable. A belly theseusesforOregonians today and refocus, a couple at mid-block steps dump truck carries approximately forever is the Antiquities Act, which into the roadway ahead, waves and 24 cubic yards of fill dirt; that's 5,667 any president of the U.S. can use to smiles. They are far enough into the truckloads. Those 5,667 truckloads establish national monuments. Unstreet that you slam the brakes. translate to 11,334 trips to the site fortunately, Congressman Walden The texting tailgater looks up and then back. Since OSU-Cas- opposes protecting the Owyhee as and jams her brakes. No crashes. cades has been paying $30,000 per a national monument because he Oct. 24 article "Walden invites Jew-

ell to Owyhee meeting"). Ahead on your left a car ap- ported on the work of the road fundBut in fact, a monument will help proaches Mt. Washington. You are ing committee seeking solutions for local families and businesses capiwithin 30 yards of the car whose "the city's troubled streets, which talize on Oregon's thriving outdoor driver doesn't stop at the sign and are underfundedby about $80 mil- recreation economy. It has hapinstead makes a left just in front of lion. The city's road system scores a pened before in Oregon and around you. Again you slam on the brakes, 68 out of 100, and if roads continue the West. and again tailgating texter looks up to decline, the cost of repairs will According to a 2013 report by in time. skyrocket." Headwaters Economics, for every There you go — RAFO. Texting How will Bend address the wear national monument designated in while driving, tailgating, jaywalk- and tear on the roads leading to the the West, employment, personal ining, running a stop sign and "just campus site'? Road maintenance come and per-capita income all inin time" left-hand turn. I'm going and repair are not the university's creased. In most cases, population to trademark, "Be Edgy, You' re In responsibility. OSU-Cascades will increased as well. for her.

On the same day, The Bulletin re-

RAFO-land."

I invite you to take up the cause. With the declaration, it could be the new buzz and appear on bumpers more frequently than, "Be Nice, You' re in Bend." Tim Conlon Bend

pay SDCs, but those funds are intended for future use, not remedia-

We don't know for certain that

er. So who will shoulder the cost of

it is hard data that national monu-

national monument designation dition of damage caused by a develop- rectly caused these increases. But repairs? Taxpayers.

ment designations do not cause loMarie Bernardy cal economic hardship. Bend My fly fishing business has benefited from Oregon's thriving outdoor recreation economy and access to Protect the beauty

More road problems aheadin Bend

of MalheurCounty

able for OSU-Cascades campus"

Runs Deep and have heard that the

raises additional concerns for local

Owyhee Canyonlands in southeast-

I own a lifestyle boutique and fly The article, "Pumice mine us- fishing business called Soul River

public lands. I hope that business-

es in Malheur County will have the opportunity to grow as well from a protected Owyhee Canyonlands. Chad Brown Portland

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

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

Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters@bendbulletin.corn Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

Why that tlyaway blimp is more than just comical By Tobin Harshaw Bloomberg View

M

any laughs were had last week when an Army blimp broke freeof its tethers and

went on a joyride over Maryland and Pennsylvania — with everyone from Sen. John McCain to national-securi-

ty leaker Edward Snowden getting in on the joke. But that wild goose chase may end

up being very serious, and expensive, for Raytheon, which gets most of the $2.7 billion taxpayers are spending on a threat-detection system that the

Pentagon itself admits has "low system reliability." The Joint Land Attack Cruise Mis-

sile Defense Elevated Netted Sensor System, a mouthful we' ll just call

Jlens, is a radar array kept aloft at 10,000 feet by pairs of 242-foot helium aerostats and intended to identi-

fy threats to the Eastern Seaboard. In theory, Jlens would detect enemy

planes, missiles and drones over a radius of 340 miles and forward the

trouble telling friend from foe. An as- of the House Oversight Committee

sessment the following year conclud- told the Pentagon last week that "this information to U.S. fighter jets or ed that Jlens "did not demonstrate the event raises serious questions about missile systems, which would then go ability to survive in its intended oper- the value and reliability of (Jlens)." in for the kill. ational environment." Rep. Jackie Speier, a Democrat on the That is the theory. The reality has A large contingent of Army brass, House Armed Services Committee, been much different. Initiated in 1998 concerned also that the whole system called it "an egregious example of the with a $292 million contract, the required too much ground support corrupting nature of the revolving project got an understandable boost to give it effective mobility, has spent door for military generals who then after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001; in years trying to end the program. True go onto serve on defense contractor 2005 the military signed on for 27 of to form, a few members of Congress boards." the craft. But since then, the project whose states benefit from the proI wish the representatives good has been a seriesof expensive fol- gram — andwho are lobbied by nota- luck in killing Jlens — and they seem lies. While there were the usual mis- bles like retired General James Cart- to have McCain on their side — but it haps in early development, software wright, a former vice chairman of the has been one of those Pentagon acglitches and the like, a bigger setback Joint Chiefs of Staff — have kept it quisitions that time and time again came in 2010, when a civilian balloon alive. But maybe not much longer. escape death by budget cut. Other crashed into a Jlens blimp and sent it An Army combat readiness team recent"zombie programs" have incrashing to the ground. There went from Fort Rucker in Alabama has cluded an alternative engine design $182 million. already begun an investigation of for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter that According to a stellar piece of in- the runaway blimp — after authori- nobody wanted and ended up costing vestigative reporting by David Will- ties were able to deflate it, that is. The $450 million, and the infamous Exman of the Los Angeles Times, a Pentagon has now put the entire Jlens peditionary Fighting Vehicle, which 2012 Pentagon report noted that the program on suspension. The Repub- the Pentagon tried to remove from its system struggled to stay aloft and had lican and Democratic top members budget three times before it was final-

ly put to death in 2011, with up to $3 billion spent. Unfortunately, the J lens f i asco

wasn't the only recent crash involving an inflatable. On Oct. 11 in Kabul, Afghanistan, a British military heli-

copter hit the tether of a surveillance blimp moored at NATO headquar-

ters and crashed, killing five. The military use of inflatables dates to the Battle of Fleurus in 1794,

when Napoleon's army used one to spy on enemy positions. Sometimes these initiatives have been great suc-

cesses, as with the U.S. Navy airships that protected World War II convoys from German U-boats. But many

others have ended in wasted money and lives. Jlens stands out among that crowd only in terms of total ex-

penditure; let's just be relieved that this time, nobody ended up getting killed. — Tobin Harshaw writes editorials

for Bloomberg.


SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B5

BITUARIES DEATH 1VOTIt ES

DEATHS ELSEWHERE

Scott Wendell Ensey, of Sunriver

Frank Anthony Mazzeo, of Bend

Deathsof note from around

Knicks i n

Oct. 1, 1958 - Nov. 5, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdfh.corn

the world:

whose life took an ignomin-

Nov. 30, 1955 - Nov. 3, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. Please visit our website, www.bairdfh.corn, to share condolences and sign our online guestbook. Services: A private family gathering and Celebration of Life will be held in New York at a later date.

Czeslaw Kiszczak, 90: General who helped crush the Solidarity movement in Poland in 1981 and eight years later presided briefly over the country's transi-

ious turn when he was con-

Services: A private family gathering will take place at a later date. Contributions may be made to:

Upper Deschutes River Coalition, PO Box 3042, Sunriver, OR 97707, 541-390-9798, www. Udl'c.ol'g

Ty Otls Lee Alvarez, of Bend Jan. 20, 1971 - Nov. 3, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. Please visit our website, www.bairdfh.corn, to share condolences and

sign our online

guestbook. Services: A private family gathering and Celebration of Life will be held at a later date.

t h e 1 970s but

victed of robbing a Long Island bank in 1980. Died Oct. 29 in Winston-Salem, North

Carolina. Mike Davies,79: Former tion to democracy as its last British Davis Cup player Communist prime minister. and Wimbledon doubles Died Thursday in Warsaw. finalist. He w a s B r i tain' s Luther Burden, 62: For- No. 1-ranked player in 1950. mer basketball player better Died Monday after a batknown as Ticky, a sharp- tle with illness. His place of shooting guard who played death was not reported. briefly for the New York — From wire reports

Oct. 29, 1970 - Oct. 22, 201 5

FEATURED OBITUARY

By William Grimes New Yorls Times News Service

George Barris, one of the pioneercarcustomizers immor-

=-

the Batmobile, the Munster

ili fSC~rtr

Koach and other specialty cars for television and film,

died Thursday at his home in man for Barris Kustom Industries, confirmed his death.

Ellis FL Bosworth /The Associated Press file photo

George Barris stands with a converted 1931 ModeluAncoupe shops of Sacramento and Los he made into a 500 horsepower hot rod. Barris, the legendary Angeles, was a towering fig- custom car builder, died Thursday. He was 89. ure in the Southern CaliforBarris, a veteran of the body

self-promotion. He and his older brother,

family, Barris married Shirley Ann Nahas, who helped manowner, Bob Hirohata, ex- age his business until she died pressed the Barris aesthet- in 2001. His survivors indude ic in its classic period. The a son, Brett, a daughter, Joji

teardrop.

The car, named after its

Sam, treated standard-issue brothers extended the front and rear fenders, removed as mere starting points for re- the chrome trim, lowered the interpretation. They stripped roof,dropped the chassis to away trim, reshaped body within a few inches of the parts and pirated grilles, head- ground and painted the car lights and taillights from other an arresting sea-foam green car models. George created with dark green panels. Two Mercurys, Buicks and Fords

J ason R o b e r t Hef f n e r was born in Redmond, Ore gon o n Oct o b e r 2 9 t h , 1 970. He grew up i n b o t h R edmond an d B e n d a n d a ttended h i g h s c h oo l a t M ountain V i e w b efo r e graduating from Redmond High School, class of 1989. Jason atte n d e d B l ue M ountai n Comm un i t y

College where he played

b aseball f o r 2 sea s o n s. S oon after, he started hi s career in p aving an d al so spent many years building houses before becoming a superintendent in t he p aving i nd u s t ry . Ja s o n worked extremely hard to support h i s fa m i l y an d friends. Jason was a very j o y f ul , caring person who lived in B end for m ost o f h i s l i f e . J ason was married t o h i s l oving wife, A n gie, for 2 1 years. He ha d t h re e c h i l dren: his son, Jacob Heffn er, and d a u ghters, A l ex Heffner and LaCosta Dice; a nd o ne g r an dc h i l d , Brantley. J ason loved t o b e o u t -

doors, and enjoyed many

things, including h u n t ing,

fishing and camping. He

l oved spo r t s . Pla y i n g , c oaching a n d w atc h i n g sports have always been a btg part of Jason's life. His a ssion fo r b a s eball a n d o ve fo r t h e co m m u n i t y (kids in particular) led him to become the president of t he B e n d N or t h L i tt l e League. During his tenure, he spent c o untless hours b uilding fou r b ase b a l l fields with full dugouts, the most important of which is now named Jason Heffner field. Jason was very proud of all little league, but B end North in p a rticular. Jason also started an d o v ersaw the pr oject f o r M o u n t a in V iew's i n door b a t t ing f a cility, which is called Heffner Fieldhouse. Jason Heff ner h a s t o u c he d m a n y lives in th e Bend community, and will certainly not ever be forgotten. A celebration of l if e service will be held at Broken Top Clubhouse on S a turday, November 7th at 3:00 PM. In lieu of fl owers, the Heffner family h a s a sk ed that donations be made to t he B e n d N or t h L i tt l e League i n J a s on's n a m e. The funds will be used for little l e ague s c h olarships and field improvements at t he J ason H e f f ne r f i e l d . F or m or e in f or m a t i o n about m a k in g d o n a t ions, please visit www.bnll.org.

his own line of outre paints,

Continued from B1 "He probably will return to the area so what we want to do is have enough deterrents so he

won't go back into the pasture where the calves are," Stephen-

1953 Lincoln taillights were

called Kandy Colors, to im- "Frenched," or smoothed into part luster and depth to ve- the contours of the fender, and hicles that became, in effect, a new grille was fashioned rolling works of street art. from three 1951 Ford grilles. In his baroque phase, BarThe Hirohata Merc w as risdesigned a slew of spe- the hit of the 1952 Motorama cial-order cars for television, show in Los Angeles and a most famously transforming superstar after it appeared on a 1955 LincolnFutura concept the coverofMotor Trend. Rod car, in three weeks, into the and Custom documented Hifinned Batmobile for the 1960s rohata's journey as he drove television series "Batman." the car on Route 66 to the IndiIn an entirely different vein, anapolis Custom Show, where he spliced a 1921 Oldsmobile it took first prize. "The Barris brothers didn' t and a flatbed pickup for the sitcom "The Beverly Hillbillies," merely improve the looks of and he incorporateda coffi n the original or 'individualize' in creating the family car on it with bolt-on accessories as "The Munsters," calling it a is done today," DeWitt wrote Drag-u-La. in an essay on the Hirohata "He made a look — the Merc for The American PoetSouthern California custom- ry Review in 2009. "They reized car look — that was very imagined it, redesigned it and

Barris-Paster, and a grandson.

Barris' cars gained cachet

with film actors and other notables. He did his first celeb-

rity job for Lionel Hampton, the jazz musician — a Jaguar — and a slew of commissions

followed. He created a 1954 Cadillac Eldorado for Liberace with sterling-silver grand-piano hood ornaments that played "I' ll Be Seeing You" when opened. His celebrity projects also included Elvis Presley's 1960 Cadillac Fleetwood (with a gold-plated record player, drinks cabinet and shoe buffer inside), a gold Rolls-Royce for Zsa Zsa Gabor and a caricature golf cart, with ski-jump nose, for Bob Hope.

Inevitably, the movies came calling. After the H i rohata

Merc made an appearance in the 1955 film "Running Wild," with Mamie Van Doren, Bar-

ris built two duplicate chopped and channeled 1948 Chevy stunt cars for the drag-racing scene in "High School Confidential" (one doomed to be distinctive," said John DeWitt, rebuilt it so that it embodied a crashed), and the chopped the author of "Cool Cars, High culture, a California car cul- Mercury that James Dean Art: The Rise of Kustom Kul- ture's idea of what it meant to drove in "Rebel Without a ture." "But his great contribu- be completely cool." Cause." Barris did some of his most tion was putting customizing Ala Kart, a c u stomized on the map. He was a phenom- 1929 Ford pickup, won the memorable work for televienal publicist and showman. America's M ost B e autiful sion. In addition to the BatmoL..A was the perfect place for Roadster trophy at the Oak- bile, the Munster Koach and him." land Roadster Show (now the "Beverly Hillbillies" jalopy, George Salapatas was born the Grand National Roadster he designed the fictional 1928 on Nov. 20, 1925, in Chicago. Show) two years running, in Porter driven by Jerry Van His mother died when he was 1958 and 1959. "It gives you a Dyke in "My Mother the Car." 3, and his father sent his two feeling that you' ve done some- Over the decades, the price sons to be raised by relatives thing to make a better world," of gasolineskyrocketed and in Roseville, California, a sub- Barris told Rod and Custom in the cars got smaller, but Barurb of Sacramento. The Bar- 1962. ris managed to keep his hand ris name was fashioned from Detroit took note. In the in, producing custom verSalapatas and another family early 1960s, Ford hired Barris sions of the Toyota Prius (at name, Badacardes. to customize production cars the request of The New York The Barris brothers cre- for two traveling exhibitions, Times Magazine) and the ations reached a national Ford's Custom Car Caravan 2010 Chevy Camaro. In 2013, audience through car shows, and LincolniMercury'sCar- the Batmobile, which he had new magazines like Hot Rod, avan of Stars. Before long, owned through the years, sold Car Craft, and Rod and Cus- the innovations of customiz- for $4.62 million at the annual tom, and model kits sold by ers like Barris began finding Barrett-Jackson auto auction companies like Revell, Aurora their way into the new breed in Scottsdale, Arizona. "Look, I'm just a crazy car and AMT. One car in partic- of muscle cars, a development ular sealed the brothers' rep- that spelled the end of the guy, and I'm proud of it," Barutation: the Hirohata Merc, golden age of customizing. ris told USA Today in 2005. a 1951 Mercury Club Coupe In 1958, a year after Sam "My love for this nutty stuff that Sam and George trans- moved back to Sacramento for keeps me coming in the office formed into a sleek, elongated a quieter life with his young every day, 8 o'clock sharp."

The wolfs attacks on livestock mark the first outside of late 2000s from Idaho, where they were reintroduced the de-

cade before. State-sponsored hunts had led to the elimination of wolves from Oregon in the 1940s. Wolf researchers with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife captured and col-

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand 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. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of theseservices or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Email: obits@bendbulletin.corn Fax: 541-322-7254

Mt. Thtelse/I

e

t:reter

Silvere . &ke • • FREMONT

ChllOq

>e NATIONAL FOREST 'I

Falls

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Mondaythrough Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the seconddayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication,andby9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display adsvary; please call for details.

Soume: Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife

Pete Smith / The Bulletin

Mount Bachelor on his way south through the mountains.

Two other collared male

"We don'thave any kind of

wolves once from the Imnaha Pack — OR-7 and OR-3 — are

evidencethat he has paired up

also roaming near where OR25 has frequented, although they have stayed mainly in the Cascades. Wandering thousands of miles, all the way

that," she said. Back in northeast Oregon,

into California, OR-7 earned fame in late 2011 and 2012. His brother, OR-3, was long

or had pups or anything like the Imnaha Pack has a reputation for livestock attacks,

said Todd Nash, who ranches near Enterprise and serves as chairman of the wolf commit-

tee for the Oregon Cattlemen's thought dead, having disap- Association. peared in 2011 only to be spotHe said he was not surted this summer in a trail cam-

prised to hear that a wolf from

era photo. While both wolves still wear collars, neither of the devices is functioning because the batteries died.

the pack, which has a territory

While OR-7 now has a mate

near Enterprise, attacked livestock. Wolves from Imnaha Pack were involved in the last confirmed wolf attack in Or-

and pups, collectively known egon before OR-25's, late last as the Rogue Pack, it is unclear month near Joseph. whether OR-3 is with other wolves. So far it appears OR-

"They' ve been

l i v estock

killers for a long time," Nash 25 is alone, said Michelle Den- said. "Ever since they' ve been nehy, spokeswoman for the here." Oregon Department of Fish — Reporter: 541-617-7812, and Wildlife in Salem. ddarling®bend bulletin.corn

Flight

time limit, if they need them to

Continued from B1 "Usually whenever you have a change or new airline service, it takes people about a year to change their travel habits," Bass said. "So really what that

revenue guarantee does is subsidize that hypothetical loss until people realize that (new) service and change their habits." Typically an airline will in-

cover losses. Revenue guarantees can be a bit of a gamble for communities that put them

up. Airlines are not required to commit to any specific length of time to provide services and

can essentially take the money and run once the revenue guarantees are depleted. "In th e l ast t w o g r a nts,

though," Bass said, "once Redmond and Central Oregon troduce new flights with heav- proves they use that service, it ily discounted fares in an effort stays there." to lure customers away from — Reporter: 541-617-7829, other flights, Burch added. beasteslbendbulletirLcom "An airline could have a full flight — say it's a 50-passenger plane — in which all 50 seats

are filled, but if they sold those tickets at half price, they' re losing money," Burch explained. "They' re trying to change travel patterns. ... The next

year they' ll slowly increase their prices to a more standard fare, (customers') patterns are changed and they love the availability of the new flight." The airlines only dip into the revenue guarantees, which typically have a two- or three-year

I

C om p l e m e n t s

H o me I n t e ri o r s

541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o r n

j

Juniper Golf Course & Windermere Central OregOn inVite you to •

Phone: 541-617-7825

Areaof OR-25 wolf actlvlty

son said.

left the pack early this year, passing by North Sister and

essay "The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby" and the designer of

design work and his flair for

V Bend

lared OR-25 in May 2014. He

talized in Tom Wolfe's famous

and hot-rodders, known both for the sophistication of his

I

came back into Oregon in the

He designedthe Batmobile

nia subculture of customizers

Wolf

northeast Oregon since wolves

Encino, California. He was 89. Edward Lozzi, a spokes-

Jason Robert Heffner

Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife / Submitted photo

OR-25, then a yearling, shown after being radio-collared in 2014. Now frequenting woods in northern Klamath County, the wolf is believed to have recently attacked calves, killing one.

Our firSt annual Share the Warmth Event.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20 • 4-7PM JUNIPER GOLF COURSE 1 938 SW ELK H O R N

A V E • REDM O N O

541-548-3121 Join us for good food, drinks and fun in celebration of community and in support of Family AccessNetwork. Please bring a new or gently used item of winter clothing (scarf, jacket, mittens, water-proof boots, etc.)FOOD, NO-HOSTBAR&PRIZES!

Windermere R EAL EST A T E


B6

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byACC HWeather, Inc. ©2015

i

'

i

TODAY

I

TONIGHT i

HIGH 56'

ALMANAC EAST: A mixture of clouds and sunshine today. Mostly cloudy tonight with a few showers.

TEMPERATURE

Yesterday Normal Record 52' 30'

55'

32'

72' in 2012 9' in 1971

PRECIPITATION

58/49

Cannon 57/49

2/

57/47

sunny acrossthe southtoday;becoming Lincoln cloudy in the north 56/49 with a couple of Newpo showers late. 55/46 WEST: Rain in the far SUN ANDMOON north anytime today, Tach Today Sun. ss/48 spreading southward 6:49 a.m. 6 : 5 0 a.m. to all but the far south Floren e 4:48 p.m. 4 : 4 7 p.m. by the end of the day. 57/49 2:49 a.m. 3 : 4 7 a.m. 3:07 p.m. 3 : 3 5 p.m. OREGON EXTREMES First Fu l l Last 5 YESTERDAY us I High: 65'

Tonight'a aky:Duenortheast before midnight is Capella, the brightest star of Auriga the Charioteer.

dt6tOn •

56/37

53/45

Granitee 47/32

• Eugene

59/39

'Be d Su iVere 56/35

e 54 Co e Grove Oakridge

• La Pine

oay

• Pa line

'Baker C 50/32 0/31

tario

58/ 3 7

5 34

Srothers 5338

Valee 53/32

Ham ton

Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham

eu

• John

• Prineville

Albuquerque Anchorage

• • 49/33

Joseph Grande • 5 39 union

Nyssa

• Burns Juntura 52/27 Fort Rack Riley 52/28 Greece t • 54/36 51/32 54/35 • Ch r istmas alley Jordan V Hey Beaver Silver 54/36 Frenchglen 51/29 Marsh Lake 54/34 52/35 56/37 • Burns Jun ion • Paisley Chgogulii • 52/30 56/36 •

Ro seburg

56/48

Gra ra

Rome

55/37

,se44 Kla math Ashl nd Falls 60/ Seve

53/28

• Lakeview 54/33

Mcbermi 47/26

Yesterday Today Sunday

Yesterday Today Sunday

Yesterday Today Sunday

H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 62/51/0.45 58/47/r 55/43/t La Grande 52/37/0.06 52/39/pc48/34/r Portland 64/ 4 7/Tr 54/47/r 55/43/t 51/25/Tr 50/32/pc 45/28/c La Pine 56/26/0.00 54/36/pc 43/25/c Prineville 56/ 3 0/0.0059/39/pc43/29/ c 60/44/0.00 57/49/r 54/43/r Me d for d 61/3 3 /0.00 58/44/pc 53/37/sh Redmond 56/ 26/0.0057/35/pc49/24/ c Burns 50/1 8/0.00 52/28/pc 48/22/c N e wport 63/4 5 /0.00 55/46/r 5 3/44/t Rosaburg 64 / 41/0.00 56/48/r 54/40/r Eugene 65/35/0.00 54/45/r 54/40/r No r th Bend 63 / 45/0.00 58/49/r 55/44/r Salem 64/41/0.00 54/46/r 56/42/t Klamath Falls 51/21/0.00 56/36/pc 45/25/c O n t ario 55/30/0.00 56/34/pc 49/38/sh Sisters 56/26/0.00 57/36/r 48/26/c Lakeviaw 54/14/0.00 54/33/pc 44/24/c P e ndleton 59/ 3 8/0.00 62/46/pc 55/37/r The Oases 6 5 /46/0.01 57/44/r 57/39/c WeatheriW):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snowi-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterdaydata asof 5 p.m. yesterday

Wee d s Abs e nt

Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

~ t ea ~ g s

As of 7 a.m.yesterday

~ 08

Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL 274 3 1 50% EXTREMES (for the vvi 52586 26yo YESTERDAY C rescent Lake 4 8 7 62 56vo 46 contiguousstates) Ochoco Reservoir 9978 23% National high: 91 Prinevige 42670 29% at Harlingen, TX River flow St a tion Cu. ft./sec. National low: 1' D eachutes R. below CranePrairie 15 0 at Bodie State Park, CA

Reservoir C rane Prairie Wickiup

22

426 461

~ t es

~ 2 08 ~ 308 ~ 4 0s . vv v v v * „

4

S

d

v

Las V as

1/SS

Aachara s 34/21

n

Juneau

46/sa

7 /sa

c

Boston 44 w York 6/47

usalo

5 /3

nadelpria

Albuque ue 56/34 El Pa

sa

3/30

Omah

O sa/35

Kansas City St

Phoen • 79/67

3

uke

Icaoa

Los An les

FIRE INDEX

/35 v vs s

67/4

26 23

IOh'tO

55/35

• Den 52/2

a

W m 65 4o,i

isvin

9

a1

Litt a Id a homa i • 44 M '

• Dan

(

/

v • itatido

Not available Not available Not available Not available Not available

Honolulu

asns

Chihuahua 71/46

.W 9/38

p,„ M ne

Che n

Salt Lake ity 81/33

anclsco 64/51

~*

ss/2

O

aue c 46/2

ai'smarck 52/25

• Billings 53/34

aols

"

ader aay

• i niPeg T 41 3

54/47

eggs ~100s ~ t tes *

61/29

• 55/38

~ 709 ~ 8 09

Caloa

48/3

Precipitation: 2.2B" at Greenville, MS

50 99 2

us es ~608

v v 55/46

60

Crooked R. near Terrehonne Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes.

he Dan

Oily Astoria Baker City Srookings

POLLEN COUNT

Deschutes R.below Wickiup Deschutes R.below Bend Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls Little Deschutes near LaPine Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake Crooked R.above Prineville Res. Crooked R.below Prineville Res.

•W

7

City Abilene Akron Albany

• ermiston lington sf/44 Mesc am Losti ne 6 /46 se 1/3m2

Camp Sh man fted

57/

The highertheAccuWaatber.corn liv Index" number, the greatertheneedfor eyeandskin protscgoa.0-2 Lcw 34 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10VeryHigh; II+ Extreme.

Bend/Sunriver Redmond/Madras Sisters Prineville La Pine/Gilchrist

m

Chilly with a little snow at times

61/44

• 62/ andy • 57/44 Happner 4/45 Gove nt • up i • esyu ' Condon 9/42 Cam 49/ pmy a • I/40 a • 40 4/46 • Mitch II

ss/ Bro Ings

2 p.m. 4 p.m.

T r ee s ~L o~ w

portland ss/4s

Rufus /44

Gobi ach 6046 Medfo

0'

• g

~L o ~w

54/

Po 0 8/

UV INDEX TODAY

G rasses

Sale

59/50

Source: JimTodd,OMSI

10 a.m. Noon

Mc innvis

Bandon

at The Dalles Low: 14' at Lakeview

N ov 25 D e c 2

RIVer

WED NESDAY

~

N3. Mostly cloudy

Chilly with sun, then clouds

TRAVEL WEATHER

Hood

Seasid

Tinam •

CENTRAL:Partly

24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 1.49"in 1973 Month to date (normal) Tra ce (0.20") Year to date(normal) 7.99 " (7.97") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 28"

Nov11 Nov18

Mostly cloudy andcooler with a shower

Clouds and afewshowers

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lowe. Umatisa

na

TUESDAY

Ooo

OREGON WEATHER

Bend Municipal Airport through 5p.m. yest. High Low

MONDAY

LOW 36'

Clouds and sun, ashower in the afternoon

i i ' I

SUNDAY

ami

M ~ KX

77/65/0.56 70/63/0.01 76/62/Tr 80/63/0.00 46/30/0.00 81/71/0.92 Bismarck 45/34/Tr Boise 52/32/0.00 Boston 73/62/0.00 Bridgeport, CT 71/62/Tr Buffalo 68/61/0.09 Burlington, VT 72/64/0.08 Caribou, ME 58/43/0.01 Charleston, SC 82/65/0.00 Charlotte 71/65/0.13 Chattanooga 81/66/0.21 Cheyenne 37/30/Tr Chicago 51/44/0.16 Cincinnati 69/64/1.80 Cleveland 68/64/0.25 ColoradoSpdings 50/25/0.00 Columbia, MO 62/42/0.05 Columbia, SC 74/67/0.04 Columbus, GA 84n1/0.11 Columbus,OH 70/63/0.41 Concord, NH 74/50/0.00

72/53/r 65/48/r 65/51/r 63/39/r 53/34/s 65/50/r 52/25/s 55/38/s 62/44/pc 64/44/c 52/38/c 54/35/c 49/28/pc 83/60/c 74/49/r 63/48/r 48/31/s 53/30/s 57/33/pc 55/37/pc 51/27/pc 58/34/s 80/57/1 78/54/r

71/56/Tr 67/63/0.45 46/30/0.00 58/38/0.00 66/62/0.15 42/37/Tr 70/41 /0.00 31 /25/0.00 45/33/0.06 45/17/0.00 57/52/0.36 50/44/0.37 70/62/Tr 77/59/0.00 76/58/0.00 42/27/Tr 88n5/0.00 83/67/Tr

67/46/pc 57/31/pc 52/28/s 55/35/s 56/31/pc 39/30/pc 63/46/pc 28/14/sn 48/32/s 43/24/s 51/30/pc 46/27/s 72/45/r

Corpus Christi Dallas Dayton Denver Oes Moines Detroit Duluth El Paso Fairbanks Fargo Flagstaff Grand Rapids Green Bay Greensboro Harrisburg Harfford, CT Helena Honolulu Houston Huntsville Indianapolis Jackson, MS Jacksonville

a

60/42/pc 61/38/pc

47/23/pc 88/75/sh 68/55/r 79no/o.og 60/47/r 64/58/0.26 57/32/pc 82/68/1.25 66/50/r 85n1/0.00 85/67/c

Istanbul

84n5/0.01 61/55/0.00

Jerusalem 66/55/0.52 Johannesburg 78/51 /0.00 Lima 72/64/0.00

Manila

75/62/0.00 63/56/0.06 72/48/0.00

93n9/0.00

62/48/r 68/53/s 68/54/s 75/60/pc 87/79/pc 44/30/c 74/65/pc 62/52/c 65/50/I 55/40/pc 80/60/s 87/62/s 77/61/pc 51/29/c

Yesterday Today Sunday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W

City

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Yegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark, NJ Norfolk, YA OklahomaCity Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Rene Richmond Rochester, NY

60/47/r 58/41/s 63/47/pc 58/35/s 56/34/s 63/52/c 56/24/s 53/39/sh 55/39/s 57/39/s 49/37/s 46/33/s 39/27/pc 62/53/r 61/41/pc

62/46/pc 59/31/s 52/32/s 54/32/s 53/34/s 60/30/s 58/32/s 62/50/r 63/51/r 53/32/s 52/26/s 66/56/c 64/46/s 52/31/s 60/30/s 58/35/s 53/32/s 52/40/s

44/37/0.61 62/35/0.16 57/56/0.22 65/44/0.00 69/63/0.58 58/33/0.02 71/64/0.78 77/51/0.00 72/64/1.03 47/44/0.57 73/66/0.64 86/76/0.18 51/46/0.24 47/41/0.00 74/65/0.42

66n4/0'.05 74/66/0.00 75/64/0.00 81/64/0.00 66/45/0.00 57/38/0.00

gong/Tr

77/50/0.00 57/45/0.18 77/66/0.01 74/49/0.00 69/63/0.19 67/51/0.00 72/60/Tr 76/63/Tr 48/26/0.00 55/27/0.00 78/61/0.00 72/60/0.03 Sacramento 68/38/0.00 St. Louis 63/50/1.19 Salt Lake City 46/38/0.02 San Antonio 77/63/0.01 San Diego 73/54/0.00 San Francisco 67/48/0.00 San Jose 67/43/0.00 Santa Fe 50/26/0.00 Savannah 84/69/0.00 Seattle 60/47/Tr Sioux Falls 48/33/Tr Spokane 39/28/Tr Springfield, MO 63/42/0.02 Tampa 90/73/0.00 Tucson 70/42/0.00 67/42/0.00 Tulsa W ashingt on,OC 80/60/0.00 Wichita 65/36/0.00 Yakima 55/30/0.00 Yama 74/52/0.00

62/45/pc 26/20/c 56/36/s 51/27/s 52/31/s 52/34/s 59/38/pc 57/34/s 55/30/s 49/29/pc 87/75/pc 67/50/c 65/51/s 54/31/s 62/54/c 73/64/t

i

63/55/0.66 70/48/0.00 62/50/0.00 71 /62/0.00 90/81/0.05 sailing 41 /36/0.29 Beirut 73/70/0.12 Berlin 60/45/0.12 Bogota 66/52/0.41 Budapest 55/27/0.00 BuenosAires 81 /48/0.00 Cabo San Lucas 86/67/0.00 Cairo 75/64/0.00 Calgary 46/21/0.01 Cancun 82/77/1.03 Dublin 61 /48/0.05 Edinburgh 59/48/0.00 Geneva 63/41 /0.00 Harara 81 /46/0.00

Lisbon Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systems andprecipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London T-storms Rai n Sh owers Snow F lurries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front

Source: USDA Forest Service

56/32/pc 59/33/pc

81 no/0.06 73/58/c

Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok

Hong Kong

'esYrai+ X XMV '» ™

Yesterday Today Sunday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 71 /43/0.00 66/41/pc 63/46/s 70/64/0.21 54/35/pc 53/34/s 73/61/Tr 56/38/pc 51/31/s 55/31 /0.00 56/34/pc 57/37/pc 38/31/Tr 34/21/pc 33/28/sn

I

Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow

47/28/s 73/64/pc 58/47/pc 65/49/I

98/73/0.01 77/52/Tr 66/50/0.08 39/25/0.00 77/60/0.00

Nassau New Delhi Osaka

88n5/0.04

63/37/pc 81/61/pc

87/63/s 77/61/s 42/28/sf 85ns/t 87/73/pc 54/43/r 58/43/r 52/43/r 56/42/r 61/47/pc 63/46/s 83/55/pc 88/59/pc 84/77/pc 84nsls 59/50/c 60/51/c 62/55/c 65/53/pc 84/56/pc 86/60/pc 71/62/c 72/63/pc 75/60/s 72/59/pc 62/48/r 60/49/c 73/49/s 71/46/s 92/79/t 89ng/s

Nairobi

82/59/0.00 74/57/0.01 46/38/0.39 66/57/0.10 Paris 64/57/0.12 Rio de Janeiro 84/75/0.17 Rome 70/52/0.00 Santiago 77/52/0.00 Sao Paulo 72/66/0.06 Sap poro 48/46/0.00 Seoul 68/44/0.33 Shanghai 78/63/0.10 Singapore 90/80/0.05 Stockholm 50/44/0.00 Sydney 77/66/0.06 Taipei sgn5/0.00 Tal Aviv 72/64/0.51 Tokyo 68/58/0.00 Toronto 64/57/0.05 Vancouver 48/35/0.00 Vienna 54/32/0.00 Warsaw 38/34/0.00 Oslo Ottawa

a () •

Winterizing Workshop ServiceTour with Sean Lakin Join Parts Advisor Larry Fisher Anti Our UyhO1Stery Caytain Wendy Golyer

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87no/pc 84nolt 79/52/s 55/33/s 64/46/c 79/57/s 55/36/pc 60/35/pc 63/41/c 75/48/r 55/29/s 54/31/s 68/43/r 53/39/sh 69/47/s 59/36/s

81/54/s 56/33/s

78/56/s 64/51/s 69/46/s 51/29/pc 84/62/c 55/46/r

75/60/s 61/50/sh 62/46/ah 52/30/pc 63/54/r

58/42/s 81/56/s

52/32/s 51/29/s 56/34/s

60/41/pc 62/31/s 53/30/c 59/36/s 50/34/s

62/46/ah

56/36/s 51/33/s 58/41/pc 68/52/r 65/51/pc

53/42/1 52/33/s 60/40/s 51/40/c 47/33/r

59/32/pc 57/32/s 87//4/pc 84n48 78/53/s 78/49/s 65/35/pc 61/37/s

65/46/r 59/42/s 62/36/s 62/41/s 55/39/r 57/31/c 78/52/s 79/53/s

j

58/53/pc 68/54/s 66/57/pc 73/59/pc

ging/pc

45/36/r 41 /37/c 58/35/s 58/33/s 51/28/pc 51/30/s 67/46/s 69/49/pc 59/35/pc 55/33/s 59/34/s 62/37/s 64/42/pc 61/40/s 81/55/s 77/56/pc 61/39/pc 58/38/s 48/29/s 54/33/s 63/45/c 62/46/s 87//6/pc 86n6/pc 51/32/s 53/36/s 46/35/s 57/41/s 61/41/c 61/42/s 79/60/I 67/61/r 65/47/c 57/44/s 66/45/c 59/40/s 72/51/r 59/49/pc 63/38/pc 61/42/s 57/37/s 60/38/s

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94/67/s

95/67/s

71 /49/s

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56/52/r 76/60/r

59/51/r 67/54/I

74/53/pc 67/54/pc 51/30/pc 43/34/pc 36/27/pc 36/30/c 77/59/pc 79/60/pc 87n6/s 87/76/s 84/62/pc 84/62/pc 71/61/c 70/62/r 59/50/pc 53/46/pc 51/26/pc 44/31/pc 69/54/pc 67/56/pc 80//2/t 85/74/c 78/52/pc 74/50/c 70/63/I 81/66/1 44/28/pc 45/38/r

89/79/pc 88ns/t 53/42/sh 47/37/ah 74/60/pc 70/60/pc 90n4/pc 86/75/pc 74/65/pc 76/64/pc 67/59/pc 66/65/r 52/34/c 49/32/s 52/44/r 50/36/sh 59/48/pc 64/44/pc 52/46/c 58/38/pc


IN THE BACI4 BUSINESS Ee MARUT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 NHL, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Golf, C3 NBA, C3 NFL, C6 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

O www.bendbulletin.corn/sports

PREP VOLLEYBALLPLAYOFFSROUNDUP

torm, utawsan u o sa vanceto inas Bulletin staff report

against No. 5 seed La Salle. The

Falcons from Milwaukie preventa minor upset Friday night, knock- ed an all-Intermountain Confering off No. 2 seed Lebanon in four ence final, downing Bend High in games in the semifinal round of four games in the other semifinal the Class 5A volleyball state cham- Friday night. "Momentum didgo back and pionships at Liberty High School. The No. 3 Storm won 25-22, forth," said Storm coach Jill Waskom. "Weworked on staying ag25-16, 15-25, 25-20 to advance to the championship final tonight gressive and keeping momentum HILLSBORO — Summit scored

Nick Mitchell

Another tough start for OSUQB Nick Mitchell again gets the nod behind center for Oregon State, replacing the injured Seth Collins as the Beavers host No. 22 UCLA today, C5

The Storm, the IMC champions, recovered to win the fourth game,

Isabella Rainaldi added eight kills, Jade Waskom was 20-for-21 serving with two aces and 14 digs,

advancing to the state final for the

and setter Jordan Waskom had 44

fourth time in school history and

assists.

the first time since Summit won the 5A title in 2011.

Summit dispatched 11th-seeded Silverton in the quarterfinal

Haley Smith had 19 kills and

round, sweeping the Foxes 25-17,

on our side."

w as perfect on 15 serves to lead the Storm in the semifinal match.

25-21, 25-17.

SeeVolleyball /C4

inside • Prep volleyball, football playoff scores from around the state. Prep scoreboard, C4

PREP FOOTBALLPLAYOFFS 5A playoffs first round 5A playoffs first round 5A playoffs first round 4A playoffs first round 4A playoffs first round NO.3 REDMOND ... ......41 NO. 6 SUMMIT...........59 NO. 5 ASHLAND ... ......39 NO. 15 NORTH MARION 21 NO. 5 MAZAMA .........44 NO. 14LEBANON ........21 NO. 11 SOUTH ALBANY..14 NO. 12 BEND .............21 NO. 2 SISTERS............14 NO. 12 CROOK COUNTY ..7

• No. 3 Redmond usesits running game — with its quarterback, though — to power past No. 14Lebanon

Vernon Adams Jr.

Ducks QB Adams finds his rhythm After breaking a finger on his throwing handearly in the season,Oregon quarterbackVernon Adams Jr. is finally having fun. Winning helps,CS

By Mark Morical The Bulletin

REDMOND — Derek Brown, one of the top

high school running backs in the state, smiled when asked about his quarterback's rushing performance Friday night. "He's an animal," Brown said of Bunker Parrish. "I can't say enough words. He just

AISO • A look around the Pac-12 and atthe matchups with College Football Playoff implications,C5

runs so hard."

Parrish rushed for 215 yards and four touchdowns, Brown added 214 yards and one touchdown, andRedmond defeated Lebanon

41-21 in a first-round game of the Class 5A football playoffs at Redmond High SchooL The third-seeded Panthers (8-2) advance to

SOCCER

host sixth-seeded Summit, an Intermountain

Timbers' Nagbe on U.S. roster

Conference rival, in a quarterfinal game next Friday. Lebanon (6-4), of the Mid-Willamette Conference and the 14th seed, keyed on Brown early on in the game. That opened the middle of the field for Parrish, who scored on runs of

In a shock decision, Jurgen Klinsmann left veteran forward Glint Dempsey off the U.S. national soccer team roster for the first two 2018 World Cupqualifiers this month.

19, 2, 30, and 25 yards.

"It was different," Parrish said of carrying

the ball 16 times. "I don't think it was the game plan at first, but it worked and we just went with it. They were keying on Derek a

"At this point in time,

I want to give the younger strikers a chanceto prove themselves, and this is a good stageto do it," Klinsmann said. "I communicated with Glint about it and it's all fine." Among those new players is Portland Timbers midfielder Darlington Nagbe, whobecame a U.S. citizen this fall. Nagbe, 25, wasborn in Liberia and settled in the United States whenhe was 11. "In Darlington Nagbe, we have aplayer who we' ve beenfollowing for quite a while andhe finally becameeligible for the United States," Klinsmann said. "It' s good to seethat we have players coming through and give us more of an option." The Americans will begin group play in CONCACAF'ssemifinal round Nov. 13against St. Vincent and the

Grenadines in St. Louis. They play at Trinidad and Tobago onNov. 17. Nabge, the 2011No. 2 overall pick in MLS SuperDraft, has five goals and five assists in 33 matches for the Timbers this year. The Timbers play atVancouver in the second leg of a two-leg MLSWestern Conference semifinal Sunday. Other Timbers players called up to national teams were midfielder Will Johnson (Canada) and defender Alvas Powell (Jamaica). — The Washington Post

little but, so that kind of helped me a lot. We have a lot of other guys, too, who can do so

many things." Parrish had scored two touchdowns in the first half, but the Panthers trailed 14-12 early

in the second quarter after failing on both two-point conversions. Known mostly for running the ball, Redmond then found some success through the air as well. Parrish connected with Alani Troutman on a 63-yard touchdown pass that

gave the Panthers a 20-14 lead, after Brown ran in the two-point conversion, at halftime. The Panthers then opened the floodgates

in the second half when Brown broke a tackle at the line of scrimmage, then busted up the middle for a 72-yard touchdown and a 34-14

lead. Troutman finished with 91 yards receiving. SeePanthers/C4 more photos from Friday night's gamesat O © See Redmond High andSummit on TheBulletin's website:bendbulletin.corn/sports/highschool Jarod opperman i The Bulletin

Redmond High's Riley Powell, right, breaks up apass intended for Lebanon's Tanner Sallee during the first round of the Class 5A football state playoffs Friday night in Redmond. The No. 3 Panthers beat the No. 14 Warriors 41-21.

Follow along with the action every Friday night

O ~ o n Twitter:©BBulletinsports

Storm earn 1st playoff victory By Grant Lucas The Bulletin

Summit's football record book continues to be rewrit-

inside • Bend High, Sisters and Crook County knocked out of playoffs. Prep football roundup,C5

ten this season. First Intermountain Con-

No. 11 South Albany in the

ference championship. First eight-win season. First home playoff game. Add to that list: first playoff victory. After trailing by seven points before sending their offense onto the field in the opening quarter Friday night,

first round of the Class 5A state playoffs.

the No.6-seeded Storm erupt-

ed for 28 points in the second period to grab a 35-point lead and cruise to a 59-14 rout of

"It means the world," said

just means the world to win a playoff game." With the win, Summit, which was 0-4 in the state

playoffs before Friday night, advances to the quarterfinals and will travel to No. 3 Red-

mond High next Friday. The Panthers defeated visiting

Summit running back Daw-

Lebanon 41-21 Friday.

son Ruhl, who rushed for 149 yards and three touchdowns

school. But now, we' ve got this team. We' re so connect-

South Albany (6-4) seemed to be on the path to an upset early at Summit High, as the Rebels' Will Vermilyea returned the opening kickoff 68 yards to give the visitors con-

ed. We just want to win. That's all we want to do. It

trol at the Storm 38-yard line. SeeStorm /C4

on just 13 carries. "We haven't been known as a football

E

-

e

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Summit's Dawson Ruhl breaks a big gain on the way to the end

zone for a touchdownduring a 5A state playoff gameagainst South Albany on Friday in Bend. The Storm won 59-14.


C2

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015

COREBOARD ON DECK Today Bays soccer: 5Aquarterfinals, No. 7Bendat No.2 HoodRiverValley, 5pmc 5Aquarterfinals, No.11 Summiatt No.3Hiffsboro, t p.m.;4Aquarterfinals, No. 7MolaffaatNo.2Sisters, 1 p.m. Girls soccer. 5Aquarterfinals, No.8Hood RiverValley atNo.1Summit, noon;5Aquarterfinals, No.6 SandyatNo.3Bend,2 p.m. Volleyball: Class5Astate tournament at Liberty HS, Hiffsboro;Class4Astate tournament at Forest GroveHS;ClassBAstatetournament at Ridgeview HS; Class1Astatetournament atRidgeviewHS

BASKETBALL Men's college Pac-12 All TimesPST

Friday's Game Washington St.Bt, Pacific(Ore.)74 Today'sGame WesternNewMexico atArizonaSt., f 1a.m. Sunday'sGame Cal StateChico atArizona, 5p.m.

Women's college Pac-12 All TimesPST

Friday's Game

Utah77,FortLewis 69

Today'sGames Academy ofArt at Stanford, 1p.m. S.C.-AikenatColorado,6p.m. Sunday'sGames Lewis-Clark St. atWashington St., t p.m. WestmontatCalifornia, 2 p.m. WarnerPacific atWashington, 2p.m. Cal StateSanMarcosat Southern Cal, 2p.m. Corbanat OregonSt., 3p.m. EasternNewMexicoat Arizona,6p.m.

INJURY REPORT GREEN BAYPACKERS atCAROLINA PANTHERS — PACKE RS: QUE STIONABLE: WRTy

Montgomery (ankle), CBQuinten Roffins (neck), CB Sam Shields(shoulder). PRO BABLE: LB Clay Matthews(ankle, knee),LBNick Perry (shoulder, hand), RB Aaron Ripkowski (iffness). PAN THERS: OUT: DT DwanEdwards(ankle), GAndrewNorweg(hamstring). PROBA BLE:DEMario Addison(shoulder), TEEdDickson(hamstring), CRyanKali (ankle),CBJoshNorman (iffness),LBShaqThompson(knee), CFernando Velasco(shoulder),CBTeddyWilliams (iffness). WASHINGTONREDSKINSatNEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — REDSKINS:QUE STIONABLE: CB BashaudBreeland(hamstring), CB Chris Cugiver (knee),CBDeAngelo Hall (toe), WRDeSean Jackson (hamstring), LBRyanKerrigan(hand),CKoryLichtensteiger (neck), LBKeenan Robinson (rib, abdom en, shoulder).PROBABLE: CBQuinton Dunbar (igness), DE Jason Hatcher (knee), CJoshLeRibeus(shoulder), LB PerryRileyJr. (lowerleg), RBChris Thompson (back).PAT RIOTS: OU T: TMarcus Cannon (toe), G Tre'Jackson(knee), DEJabaal Sheard (ankle). DOUBTFUL:C RyanWendell(knee).QUESTIONABLE:WR KeshawnMartin (hamstring), C ShaqMason (knee). PROB ABLE:WRJulianEdel m an (knee), RBDionLewis (abdome n).

LPGA Tou

IN THE BLEACHERS In the Bleachers Cr 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal uclick 11/7 www.gocomlcs.corn/inthebleachers

TENNESSEE TITANS at NEW ORLEANS

SAINTS — TITANS; OUT; CBBlidi Wreh-Wilson (hamstring), WR Kendag Wright (knee). QUESTIONABLE:CBJason McCourty (groin).PROBABLE:CB

PerrishCox(hamstring), WRHarry Douglas(ribs), QBMarcusMariota(knee), LBDerrickMorgan(ankle). SAINTS: OUT: LB Danneff Efferbe (hip), LBRamon Humber(hamstring), LB Hau'oli Kikaha(ankle), QB LukeMcC own (back), CBDamian Swann (concussion). PRO BABLE: T Terran Armstead (knee), CB DelvinBreaux (notinjury related),LBDavid Hawthorne (hamstring), CB Keenan Lewis (hip), T Andrus Peat (knee), WRWillie Snead(knee). MIAMI DOLPHINS at BUFFALOBILLS-

DOLPHINS: OUT:TJapanJames(toe). DOUBTFUL: S JordanKovacs (knee), WRDeVante Parker(foot). QUEST IONABLE: TEJordan Cameron(hamstring), LB NeviffeHewitt (hamstring), DTJordan Philips (knee), RB DamienWiliams (thumb). PROBABLE: CBBrent Grimes(ribs), S Reshad Jones(shoulder), CBBrice McCain(knee),LBKoa Misi (foot), QBMat Moore (nose),LBSpencerPaysinger(shoulder). BILLS:OUT: WR PercyHarvin (knee), DTKyle Wiliams(knee). QUESTIO NABLE:WRSammyWatkins(ankle).PROBFOOTBALL ABLE:SCoreyGraham(groin), TSeantrel Henderson (concussi on), LB AJTarpley (concussion), QBTyrod College Taylor (knee),RBKarlos Wiliams (concussion), DE All TimesPST MarioWiliams(knee). ST. LOUISRAMSat MINNESOTA VIKINGS — RAMS:OUT: DEChris Long(knee). QUE STIONPAC-12 North ABLE; TRobHavenstein (ankle), DEWiliam Hayes (thigh), RB Tre Mason(ankle), STJ.McDonald(foot), Conf Overall W L W L P F PA DE RobertQuinn (knee), RBChase Reynolds (thigh). Stanford 6 0 7 1 2 9 2 172 VIKINGS: OU T; DTSharrif Floyd(knee,ankle), LB Oregon 3 2 5 3 3 3 6 307 Eric Kendricks(ribs), DEJustin Trattou(foot). QUES:LBAnthonyBarr(back).PROBABLE:CJoe Washington St 3 2 5 3 2 8 3 247 TIONABLE California 2 3 5 3 2 8 6 214 Berger(chest), TTJ. Clemmings(neck), LBAudieCole (finger), WR Stefon Diggs(hamstring), TERhett EffiWashington 2 3 4 4 B t 7 135 Oregon St. 0 5 2 6 1 5 5 245 son (concussion),DEEverson Griffen (neck), DTTom Johnson (knee), SHarrisonSmith (neck). South JACKSONVILLEJAGUARS at NEW YORK Conf Overall JETS —JAGUARS:DOUBTFUL:WRMarqiseLee W L W L P F PA ESTIONABLE: Glane Beadles (foot), Utah 4 1 7 1 2 7 0 17t (hamstring).QU UCLA 3 2 6 2 2 8 4 22t WR AllenHurns(ankle,thigh), S JamesSample SouthernCal 3 2 5 3 2 9 9 f73 (shoulder).PR OBABLE: SJoshEvans (groin), TEJu(abdomen). JETS: OUT: SCalvin Pryor ArizonaSt. 2 3 4 4 2 5 9 252 lius Thomas Arizona 2 4 5 4 3 3 7 308 (ankle).DO UBTFUL; RB Bilal Poweff(ankle). QUESLE:GWillie Colon(knee), WRBrandonMarColorado 1 4 4 5 2 6 9 24t TIONAB shall (toe,ankle), CBBuster Skrine(shoulder, hand). Today'sGames PROB ABLE; CBAntonio Cromartie (hip), TEKeffen Davis(hand),WREric Decker (knee), QBRyan FitzpatStanford at Colorado,10a.m. ArizonaSt.atWashington St., 12:30p.m. rick (left thumb),RBChris Ivory (hamstring), C Nick UCLA atOregonSt., t:30 p.m. Mangold(neck),CBDexter McDougle(hand, ankle), Utah atWashington, 4;30p.m. RB Stevan Ridley (knee), WRDevin Smith (foot), QB Californiaat Oregon, 7:30p.m. GenoSmith(left shoulder). Arizonaat Southern Cal, 7:30 p.m. OAKLANDRAIDERS atPITTSBURGH STEELERS — RAIDERS:OU T: LB Neiron Ball (knee). Friday's Games QUESTIO NABLE: CBTJCarrie (shoulder,hip). PROBTemple60,SMU40 ABLE: SLarryAsante(knee), DEKhalil Mack(hamUTEP 24, Rice21 string), STaylorMays(ankle), S Charles Woodson BYUatSanJoseSt., lategame shoul der,knee).STEELERS:OUT:LBTerenceGarvin knee), TE Matt Spaeth(knee). PROBABLE: SWil Allen (ankle),WRMartavis Bryant (iffness), CBWilliam NFL Gay(notinjury related),LBJamesHarrison(not injury related), TEHeath Miler (not injury related), SMike NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE Mitchell (concussion),DEStephonTuitt (knee), QB All TimesPST MikeVick(hamstring), WRMarkusWheaton (ankle). NEW YORKGIANTS atTAMPA BAY BUCCAAMERICAN CONFERENCE NEERS— GIANTS;OUT;CB PrinceAmukamara East W L T Pc t P F P A (pectoral), LBJonBeason (ankle, knee), WRVictor NewEngland 7 0 0 1. 000 249 133 Cruz(calf),TELarry Donneg(neck), LBJ.T.Thomasffl N.Y. Jets 4 3 0 .57 1 172 f39 (ankle).QUESTIONABLE: CBLeon McFadden(groin), Buffalo 3 4 0 A29 1 7 6173 WRRuebenRandle (hamstring), LBUani Unga(neck). ABLE: SCraig Dahl (neck), RBOrleansDarkwa Miami 3 4 0 .429 t 5 4 173 PROB South back), G GeoffSchwartz (ankle). BUCC ANEERS: UT: WR VincentJackson(knee), DEJacquies Smith W L T Pc t PF PA Indianapolis 3 5 0 .37 5 173 203 (ankle), S Major Wright (hamstring). QUE STIONHouston 3 5 0 .3 7 5 t74 205 ABLE:DEWilliam Gholston (knee), DTTonyMcDaniel Jacksonvile 2 5 0 .2 8 6 t47 207 (groin), TE Austin Seferian-Jenkins(shoulder), SD.J. Tennesse e 1 6 0 .1 4 3 t25 159 Swearinger(toe). PROBABLE: GLoganMankins (not injury related),DTGerald McCoy (shoulder). North W L T Pc t P F P A ATLANTAFALCONS at SAN FRANCISCO Cincinnati 8 0 0 1. 000 229 142 49ERS —FALCONS: OU T: CBRobert Alford (groin), Pittsburgh 4 4 0 .5 0 0 t68 147 LB JustinDurant(caff), WRLeonard Hankerson(hamCle 0 .2 2 2 177 247 string), S WiliamMoore(groin). QUESTIONABLE: LB veland 2 7 Baltimore 2 6 0 .2 5 0 190 214 Vic Beasley Jr. (foot). PROBABLE:DTJonathanBabinWest eaux(notinjury related),DETysonJackson (ribs), G W L T Pc t P F P A Mike Person (ankle), CJamesStone (calf), CBDesDenver 7 0 0 ).0 0 0 168 ft2 mondTrufant(back), WRNickWiliams (hamstring). Oakland 4 3 0 .57 1 178 173 49ERS: OUT:RBMikeDavis(hand),RBCarlosHyde Kansas City 3 5 0 .3 7 5t95 182 (foot), SLJ.McCray(knee). DOUBTFUL: WRAnquan San Diego 2 6 0 .25 0 t g t 227 Boldin (ham string). QUESTIONABLE:CBKennethAckNATIONALCONFERENCE er (chest,concussion),CBTramaine Brock (shin), TE East GarrettCelek(concussion), CBKeith Reaser (not inW L T Pc t PF PA jury related, ankle).PROBABLE; GAlexBoone (knee), N.Y.Giants 4 4 0 .5 0 0215 208 LB NaVorroBowman (shoulder), LB Ahmad Brooks Washington 3 4 0 .4 2 9 t48 168 shoulder), PBradleyPinion(right calf), S EricReid Philadelphia 3 4 0 .4 2 9 160 f37 chest), T JoeStaley (shoulder). Dallas 2 5 0 .28 6 133 171 DENVERBRONCOS atINDIANAPOLIS COLTS — BRONC OS: OUT: WRJordan Norwood (hamSouth W L T Pc t P F P A string), LBShaneRa y (knee). QUESTIONABLE: RB Carolina 7 0 0 1. 000 tgt 136 RonnieHilman(thigh). PROBABLE:RBC.J. Anderson Atlanta 6 2 0 .7 5 0213 173 ankle), LBShaquil Barrett(toe), TEOwen Daniels NewOrleans 4 4 0 .5 0 0213 234 shoulder), TRyan Harris (knee), QBPeyton Manning Tampa Bay 3 4 0 .4 2 9 t63 199 (right shoulder),WREmmanuel Sanders (shoulder), LB DeMarcus Ware(back). COL TS: OUT: WRPhillip North W L T Pc t P F P A Dorsett (ankle), LBNateIrving (knee). QUESTIONGreenBay 6 t 0 .85 7 174 130 ABLE;WRTY. Hilton (foot). PRO BABLE: CB Darius Minnesota 5 2 0 .7 ) 4 t 4 7 122 Butler (foot), S WinstonGuy(shoulder), C Khaled Chicago 2 5 0 .2 8 6 t 40 202 Holmes (neck), QBAndrewLuck(ankle). Detroit 1 7 0 .1 2 5 t49 245 PHILADELPHIAEAGLES at DALUIS COWBOYS — EAGLES: QUESTIONABLE:WR Nelson West W L T Pc t P F P A Agholor (ankle), RBRyanMathews (groin), T JaArizona 6 2 0 .75 0 263 153 son Peters(back), LBDeMeco Ryans (hamstring). St. Louis 4 3 0 .57 1 t 35 125 PROBA BLE:LBKiko Alonso (knee), DEBrandonBair Seattle 4 4 0 .500 1 67 f40 groin), LBBryanBraman (shoulder). COW BOYS: San Francisco 2 6 0 .2 5 0 109 207 UESTIO NABLE; WRBriceButler (hamstring), SBarry Church(ankle). PROBABLE: WRDezBryant (foot), QB Sunday'sGames Matt Cassel(knee),TEJames Hanna(ankle), DEDeTennessee at NewOrleans, tga.m. marcusLawrence(back). St. LouisatMinnesota, tg a.m. CHICAGOBEARS atSAN DIEGO CHARGERS GreenBayat Carolina, t Dam . — BEARS: DNP: RBMatt Forte(knee), CHroniss Washingtonat NewEngland,f 0a.m. Grasu(neck), LBPerneff McPhee (knee), WREddie Miami atBuffalo, f0a.m. Royal(knee).LIMITED:TJermon Bushrod (shoulder), JacksonvilleatN.Y.Jets, 10a.m. CB Bryce Cagahan (concussion), LBShea McCleffin OaklandatPittsburgh, 10 a.m. knee),WRCameron Meredith (ankle),TEZach Miler AtlantaatSanFrancisco,f:05 p.m. shoulder), LB LaRoy Reynolds (knee).CHARGERS: N.Y.GiantsatTampaBay, 1;05p.m. DNP: T KingDunlap(ankle), G OrlandoFranklin Denverat Indianapolis, 1:25p.m. knee), TELadarius Green(ankle), DTCorey Liuget Philadelphia at Dalas, 5:30p.m. foot), LBDe nzel Perryman(biceps), LBManti Te'o Open:Arizona,Baltimore, Detroit, Houston, Kansas (ankle), CChris Watt(shoulder).LIMITED:CBBranCity, Seattle don Flowers (knee), TEAntonioGates(knee), CBJason Monday'sGame Verrett (groinS ),EricWeddle(groin). FULL;CBPatrick Chicag oatSanDiego,5:30p.m. Robinson (concussion), SDarreffStuckey(hamstring).

"This hole is only 20 yards, but it's very challenging."

WGC-HSBC Champl olla Friday at Sheshan Intarnatianal Golf Club, Shanghai NFL Yardag a:7,261; P ar: 72 Sunday Secon d Roundleadars STEELE RS 5'/p 4'/p 4B Raiders KevinKisner 64-66—130 JETS TH 42H Jaguars RussellKnox 67-65—132 3 2 39' / z VIKINGS Rams Branden Grace 63-7t —t34 3 3 44r / x BILLS Dolphins PatrickReed 65-70—t35 SAINTS 8 4 8H Titans Haotong Li 66-69—t35 PATRIO TS f4 f 4 52 r/z Redskins BerndWiesberger 70-66—136 Packers 2H 2H 4 gr/x PANTHE RS DustinJohnson 65-71—136 4 7 44 1 / 2 Falcons 49ERS HunterMahan 68-68—t36 Giants 2'/z 2'/z 49'/z BUCCA NEERS ScottHend 68-69—t37 Broncos O H 5H 4 5 COLTS ByeongHunan 69-68—t37 Eagles 2H 2 H 4 4'/z COWB OYS Matthew Fitzpatrick 68-69—t37 Monday LouisOosthuizen 68-69—137 C HARG ERS 4 4 49' / ~ Bears RossFisher 69-69 — 138 ThorbjornOlesen 64-74 — t38 COLLEGE TommyFleetwood 67-7t —t38 Today SergioGarcia 68-70—t38 fflinois PK 4'/~ 52r/~ PURDUE Thomas Pieters 67-71—138 NCAROL INA 8~/2 T/2 5 8H Duk e HarrisEnglish 67-71 — 138 WKENT UCKY 25 24r/z Biz Fla Atlantic DanielBerger 68-7t —t39 WVIRGINIA TA B 79'I~ Texas Tech KiradechAphibarnrat 69-70—t39 GEORG IA tqH tqH 58H Kentucky SorenKjeldsen 68-7t —t39 UL-Lafayette 6'/z 2 63'/zGEORGI A ST PaulCase y 67-72—139 iowa 7 7 60'I~ I NDIANA JamesMorrison 69-70 — 139 ECARO LINA 5 4 54rA S Florida XinjunZhang 67-72 — t39 36r/z Vanderbilt FLORIDA 20 21 Steven Bowditch 64-75—t39 FLA INT'L 1 9'/~ 1 8'/~ 5f'/~ Charlotte DannyWiffett 65-74—t39 52rA Syracuse GaryWoodland LOUISVILLE 12 14 69-71—140 HOUSTO N 8'/z 8'/z 71H Cincinnati Thongchai Jaidee 72-68 — 140 5 2r/x A k r on UMASS 2 MartinKaym er 69-7t —t40 MIAMI-OHIO 61/p 41/p 63r/~ E Michigan RichardTLee 68-72 — t40 MICHIGAN 22 24'/z 49H R u tgersRickieFowler 68-72—t40 Arm y RoryMcffroy AIR FO RCE f 7 f 7 S gr/z 68-72—140 NC State 4H 3PI~BOSTONCOLL EmilianoGriffo 69-71 — 140 N'WESTE RN 2'/z f /2 40H P e nn StChartSchwartzel 68-72 — t40 Mexico St LukeDonald TEXAS ST f 4 f 7 72r/z New Tt-69 — t40 Connecticut 6 4P/x T ULANEJordanSpieth 68-72—t40 TEXAS 29H 28 53H K ansasLeeWestwood 72-69—141 Colorado St 10'/z 55'/z WYOMING S.S.PChawrasia 69-72 — 141 Stanford 16 16 55'I~ COLORADO Zecheng Dou 70-7t —t41 TULSA t5rA 17 64rA C Florida TrevorFisherJnr 67-74 — t41 UtahSt f 4 f 4 STr/z NEWMEXICO MareLeishman 69-72—t41 WASHINGTON 44r/x Uta h Thomas Aiken 70-71—141 USC tzrA 20 66rA A r izonaDavidHowell 73-68 — 141 TENNES SEE f 6 f 7 58H S Carolina JustinThom as 72-69 — t41 OKLAHO MA 24 25r/x Bf'/~ io wa StBubbaWatson 68-73 — t41 Tcu 4Y2 5Y2 76H OKLA HOMAST HenrikStenson 69-72—t41 Ucla f6 tyros STrA OREGON ST DavidLingmerth 70-72—142 CLEMSO N tgrA 55rA Florida St RobertStreb 73-69—142 Nav y DanielSum merhays 68-74 — t42 MEMPHIS 9 9 6 5'/z 48r/x MARYLAND 70-73 — t43 Wisconsin 13 12 ScottPiercy 72-7t —t43 LA TECH 29 30 62rA N Texas lan Poulter ALABAMA 69-74—143 7 B H 46H Lsu AshunWu 70-74—144 TROY 8 9 H 53r/x UL-Monroe AndySullivan 54r/~ H a waii Matt Jones 74-70—f44 UNLV 9 10 71-73—144 OREGO N 6 4 H 75H California HidekiMatsuya ma f2 9 '/z 54'/z Old Dominion CameronSmith 71-73 — 144 UTSA Tt-73 —144 NotreDame 8 B H 53'I~PllTSBURGH DannyLee Kevin Na 72-72 — f 44 MID TENN ST 1 3 56H M arshall 7)-73 — f 44 MISSISSIPP I ft fg 54'/z Arkansas Wenchong Liang 23 23r/x 53r/x Minnesota ChrisWood 68-76—144 OHIO ST 72-73 — 145 TEXASA&M TH 7 60H A u burnDannyChia 74-7t —145 WASH ST PK 2'/z BTr/z Arizona St K.T.Kim 74-7t —45 f MIAMI-FLA BH 53 Vi r ginia Nick Cullen 70-75—f 45 SALABAM A 61/p 91/p 6 5rA Ida ho AnirbanLahiri 73-72—145 MichiganSt 6 STr/z NEBRASK A MiguelAngelJimene 70-76 — 146 Alex Noren 70-76 — 146 TyrreffHatton 73-73 — f46 GregChalmers SOCCER 70-77—f47 HiroshiIwata 70-78 — 148 Yi Cao 75-74—149 MLS playoffs MareWarren 74-75 — 149 ShaneLowry MAJORLEAGUE SOCCER AH TimesPST

America's Li ne

Favorite Open Currant 0/U Underdog

CONFERENCESEMIFINALS

(Two-legaggregatescoring) Sunday'sGames D.C.Unitedat NewYork, noon, NewYorkleadst-g Montrealat Columbus,2 p.m., Montreal leads2-f

Champions Tour CharlesSchwabCup

Friday at DesertMountain Club, Cochise Course, Scattsdale, Ariz. Yardage: 6,929;Par TO SecondRoundleaders Seattle atFCDallas, 4:30p.m.,Seatle leads2-f 65-64—129 Michael Al l e n PortlandatVancouver, 7 p.m.,tied 0-0 63-68—f31 BernhardLanger 66-66—f32 KennyPerry 65-67—132 Billy Andrade 69-64—133 Jeff Sluman GOLF 66-67—133 Olin Brown e 69-65—f 34 TomLehman PGA Tour 7)-64 — f 35 WoodyAustin Sanderso nFarmsChampionship 69-66 — 135 Joe Durant Friday atCountry Clubof Jackson, 68-67—135 KevinSutherland Jackson, Miss. StephenAmes 68-67—135 Yardage: 7,364;Par72 68-67—f 35 Bart Bryant SecondRoundlaaderboard FredCouples 66-69—f 35 68-68 — f 36 (107 golfersdidnotfinishthe round) DuffyWaldorf 68-68 — 136 SCORE THRU PaulGoydos -15 F MarkO'Meara 1. RobertoCastro 68-68—136 -it t6 JerrySmith 74-63 — f 37 2. Jhonattan Vegas -it F Colin Montgom 2. Bryce Molder erie 70-68—f 38 -10 t7 4. PatrickRodgers Kirk Triplett 70-68—f 38 -fo t5 TomPerniceJr. 70-68—138 4. D.J.Trahan -fg 70-68 — 138 4. Michael Thompson F RussCochran -10 F MarcoDa 4. BrianDavis wson 73-66—f 39 -9 F 8. Boo Weekley Jeff Magg ert 72-67—f 39 -9 8. AaronBaddeley f LeeJanzen 72-67—f 39 10. 7 tiedat-8 DavidFrost 72-68—140

TotoJapan Dias src' Friday atKashikojima C auntry Club, Shima,Japan 2 (36-36) Yardage: ,506; 6 Par: 7 First Round 31-34 — 65 RyannOToole 32-33—65 Angela Stanford Ha-NeulKim 35-31—66 33-33—66 f heeLee 34-32—66 JennyShin 33-33 — 66 Mi-JeongJeon Ai Suzuki 33-33—66 StacyLewis 32-35—67 Lexi Thom pson 35-32—67 CarolineMasson 34-33—67 Jiyai Shin 34-33 — 67 Pornanong Phatlum 32-35—67 Ji-HeeLee 34-33—67 Alena Sharp 32-35—67 YaniTseng 32-35—67 YukariNishiyam a 34-34 — 68 MisuzuNarita 35-33—68 34-34—68 Maiko Wakabayashi Sun-JuAhn 33-35—68 32-37—69 HyoJooKim Bo-MeeLee 34-35 — 69 34-35—69 Ha NaJang 33-36 — 69 SandraGal Kim Kaufm an 34-35—69 Mirim Lee 34-35—69 ErinaHara 34-35 — 69 Eun-Hee Ji 33-36—69 Miki Sakai 35-34—69 Min Lee 32-37—69 YokoMaeda 35-34—69 Wei-LingHsu 31-38 — 69 MiHyangLee 34-36—70 Mo Martin 34-36—70 MomokoUeda 34-36—70 33-37—70 MicheffeWie 35-35 — 70 CheffaChoi 34-36—70 AyakaMatsumori 34-36—70 Mika Miyazato 35-35—70 ChristinaKim 35-35 — 70 Teresa Lu 35-35 — 70 HaruNom ura RitsukoRyu 35-35—70 CandieKung 35-35 — 70 RikakoMorita 34-36—70 KaoriOhe 34-36—70 Hee-KyungBae 36-34 — 70 ShihoOyama 34-36—70 DanieffeKang 35-35 — 70 AriyaJutanugarn 36-34—70 I.K. Kim 34-36—70 KarrieWebb 36-35 — 71 Megumi Kido 33-38—Tt 34-37 — 71 Kris Tamulis Jae-Eun Chung 34-37 — Tt 35-36—7t YumikoYoshida 34-37 — 71 Min SeoKwak 35-36—Tt CatrionaMathew 36-36—72 JenniferSong AyakaWatanabe 33-39—72 MayuHatori 36-36—72 SakuraYokomine 35-37 — 72 KumikoKaneda 35-37 — 72 MariaMcBride 35-37 — 72 MoriyaJutanugarn 36-36—72 JunkoOmote 37-35 — 72 Kelly WShun 35-37 — 72

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE

All TimesPST

EasternConference Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA Montreal 1 5 12 2 1 25 55 27 Ottawa t 3 7 4 2 16 40 39 Tampa Bay 15 7 6 2 16 38 37 Detroit 13 7 5 1 15 32 32 Boston t 2 6 5 1 13 43 40 Florida 13 5 5 3 13 36 31 Buffalo 13 5 8 0 10 29 39 Toronto 13 2 8 3 7 27 42 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA N.Y.Rangers 13 9 2 2 20 38 24 Washington 12 9 3 0 18 40 29 Pittsburgh 13 9 4 0 18 29 23 N.Y.Islanders 14 7 4 3 t7 39 35 NewJersey 13 7 5 t 15 33 33 Philadelphia 13 4 6 3 tf 25 39 Carolina 1 3 5 8 0 to 27 38 C olumbus 15 4 1 t 0 8 35 54 WaalarnConterence Central Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA Dallas 14 tt 3 0 22 50 38 St. Louis 13 9 3 1 19 36 31 Nashville 12 8 2 2 18 35 27 Winnipeg 14 8 4 2 18 42 38 Minnesota 12 7 3 2 16 37 35 14 7 6 t 15 35 36 Chicago Colorado 14 4 9 I 9 36 42 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA Los Angeles t3 8 5 0 16 31 28 Vancouver 13 6 3 4 16 38 29 SanJose 1 3 7 6 0 14 38 35 Arizona t2 6 5 1 13 34 34 Anaheim 1 3 4 7 2 10 21 33 Edmonton 14 5 9 0 10 37 43 Calgary 14 4 9 1 9 32 57 Friday's Games Detroit 2,Toronto1, OT NewJersey4, Chicago2 Dallas 4,Carolinat N.Y.Rangers2, ColoradoI Pittsburgh2, Edmonton 1 Anaheim 4, Columbus2 Today'sGames Vancouverat Bufalo, 10a.m. Florida atLosAngeles,1 p.m. BostonatMontreal, 4p.m. TorontoatWashington, 4 p.m. Ottawaat Carolina, 4p.m. PhiladelphiaatWinnipeg, 4p.m. St. Louisat Nashvile, 5 p.m. TampaBayatMinnesota,5p.m. N.Y.Rangersat Arizona, 6p.m. Pittsburghat Calgary, 7p.m. Anahei m atSanJose,7:30p.m. Sunday'sGames Dallas atDetroit, noon Vancouverat NewJersey,2p.m. BostonatN.Y. Islanders,2p.m. Edmonto natChicago,5p.m.

DEALS MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Texas lineup After Fridayqualifying; race Sundayat Texas Motor Speedway,FortWorth, Texas Lap length: 1.5miles (Car numberin parentheses) 1. (2)BradKeselowski, Ford,196.929mph. 2. (4) KevinHarvick, Chevrolet, 195.993. 3. (18)KyleBusch,Toyota, 195.716. 4. (22)JoeyLogano, Ford,195.419. 5. (42)KyleLarson Chevrolet 195.341. 6. (20)ErikJones,Toyota,195.298. 7. (41)KurtBusch,Chevrolet,194.988. 8. (48)JimmieJohnson,Chevrolet,194.89. 9. (11)DennyHamlin,Toyota,194.665. 10. (88)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 194.475. tf. (10) DanicP aatrick, Chevrolet, )93.313. t2. (16)GregBiffle, Ford,190402. t3. (19)CarlEdwards,Toyota,195.341. tq. (15)GlintBowyer, Toyota, t95.327. 15. (55)David Ragan, Toyota,195.178. 16. (5)KaseyKahne, Chevrolet,195.143. IT.(13)CaseyMears, Chevrolet,194.819. t8. (24)Jeff Gordon,Chevrolet, t94.637. tg. (31)RyanNewman, Chevrolet,194.56. 20. (27)PaulMenard, Chevrolet,194.175. 2f.(33) Brian Scott, Chevrolet, 194.)75. 22. (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet, f 94.112. 23. (78)MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet, 194. 24. (43)AricAlmirola,Ford,I 93.666. 25. (21)RyanBlaney,Ford, t95.525. 26. (3)AustinDilon, Chevrolet 195.496. 27. (1)JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet, 195.334. 28.(17) Ricky StenhouseJr., Ford,195.t57. 29.(6) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 195.143. 30.(47) AJ Affmendinger, Chevrolet, 194.735. Sf. (7) AleBo x wman, Chevrolet,194.644. 32. (9)SamHomish Jr., Ford,194.623. 33. (95)MichaelMcDoweff, Ford, t93.472. 34. (26)J.J. Yeley, Toyota, t92.94. 35. (34)BrettMoffitt, Ford,192.651. 36. (40)LandonCassiff, Chevrolet,192.445. 31. (46)MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 38. (83)MattDiBenedetto, Toyota, owner points. 39. (35)ColeWhitt, Ford,owner points. 40. (23)JebBurton, Toyota, ownerpoints. 4f. (38)DavidGiffiland, Ford,owner points. 42. (98)RyanPreece, Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 43. (St)JustinAffgaier, Chevrolet, ownerpoints. Failed toqualify 44. (32)JoeyGase, Ford, 190.6t7. 45.(62)ReedSorenson, Toyota, 187.865.

TENNIS

Transactions BASEBAL L

Major LeagueBaseball OFFICE OFTHECOMMISSIONEROFBASEBALL —Suspended TexasminorleagueBBEvan Van Hoosier (HighDesert-Cal) 50gamesafter testing positive for Amphe tamineand for asecond positive testfor a drug ofabusein violation of theMinor LeagueDrug PreventionandTreatment Program.

AmericanLeague BOSTONREDSOX— AnnouncedRHPsJeanMachi andAlexiOgandorefused outright assignmentsto become freeagents. SentOF-1B Alen Craig outright to Pawtucket (IL). SignedCSandyLeontoaone-year contractandassignedhimoutright to Pawtucket. ReinstatedRHP s Clay Buchholz, Koji Uehara, Anthony Varvaro,BrandonWorkmanand CChristian Vazquez from the 60-dayDL LOSANG ELESANGELS— Declined their 2016 contractoptionsonOFDavid DeJesus. OAKLAND ATHLETICS—PromotedBily Ow ensto assistantgeneral manager/director ofplayerpersonnel and DanFeinstein to assistantgeneralmanager, pro scoutingandplayer personnel. SEATTLE MARINERS— Claimedof DanRobertson offwaiversfromLosAngeles (AL). SentRHPJC Ramirezoutright toTacoma(PCL). TEXASRANGERS— ReinstatedRHPsYuDarvish and NickTepeschandLHPAlexClaudio fromthe60day DL National League ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS— AnnouncedRHP JhoulysChacinrefusedoutright assignment to become afreeagent. ATLANTABRAVES — Named AndrewHauser director ofplayerhealth andperformance,JoeMetz minorleaguemedicalcoordinator,JohnPiersonminor league hitting coordinator, SteveWebber minorleague pitchingconsultant, KennyDominguezassistant rehabilitationinstructor,Garrett Wilsonbaseball operations analystandNoahWoodwardmajor leagueoperations analyst. CHICAGO DUBS— Claimed RHPRyan Cookoff waiversfromthe Boston. LOS ANGELESDODGERS — Announced OF Justin Ruggianorefused his outright assignment andto becomeafreeagent.Announced OFChris Heiseyclearedoutright waiversandbecamea free agent. NEWYORKMETS—AnnouncedCAnthonyReeker, OFEricYoungJr. andINFWilfredo Tovar refused outrightassignmentsandelectedfreeagency. SANFRANCISCOGIANTS— AnnouncedOFJuan Perez clearedwaivers. FOOTBAL L National Football League NFL —FinedSeattle DEMichaelBennett $20,000 for his

ATP Tour BNPParibas Masters Friday atParis Quarlarlinals NovakDjokovic(f), Serbia, beatTomas Berdych (5), Czech Republic, 7-6(3), 7-6(6). AndyMurray(2), Britain,def. RichardG asquet(10), France, 7-6(7), 3-6, 6-3. StanWawrinka (4), Switzerland,def. Rafael Nadal (7), Spain7-6 , (8), 7-6(7). DavidFerrer(8),Spain, def.JohnIsner(13),United States,6-3,6-7(6), 6-2.

WTA Tour WTAElite Trophy Friday atZhuhai China RoundRobin MadisonKeys(7), UnitedStates,def. ZhengSaisai (12), China, 6-3, 6-2. Elina Svitolina(8), Ukraine,def. CarlaSuarezNavarro(2),Spain,6-7(4)r B-f, 6-3. AnnaKarolinaSchmiedlova, Slovakia, def. Roberta Vinci (4),Italy,B-t, 6-0.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL

COLLEGESPORTS

20 players receive qualifying offers — secondbasemanDan-

NCAA tranSfer rule Challenged in COurt —Aformer Weber

jel Murphy andoutfielder Colby Rasmuswereamong a record 20 free agents who received$15.8 million qualifying offers before Major League Baseball's Friday deadline. With teamssensing that starting pitching will be prized, Jeff Samardzjja (ChjcagoWhite Sox), Marco Estrada (To-

the 2012 seasonhas filed a federal lawsuit against the NCAAalleging it

rOntOj, YOVani GallardO (TGXG S), lan Kennedy (SGITDiegO), WGI-Yjn Chen

(Baltjmore), HISGShjIwakuma (Seattle) and Brett AnderSOn(LOSAngeleS Dodgers) also received offers. Players haveuntil Nov. 13 to accept. Teams

State fOOtball Player WhOSayShjS SChOlarShiP WGSnot reneWed fOIIOWing ViOlateS antitruSt laWS byfOrCing playerS to Sjt Out a year after tranSferring SChOOIS. The laWSuit filed ThurSday OITbehalf Of DGVjnPugh jn U.S. DiStriCt

Court jn Indianapolis, wherethe NCAAis based, also contends rules that limit scholarships violate antitrust provisions. TheNCAAsaid jt wasaware

had eaSy deCiSiOnSjn making OfferS to tOP PitCherS SUChaS ZGCk GFGinkG

Of "the SPeCifiCfaCtSOfthe Plaintiff. Pugh aCCePted aSChOlarShiP frOm Weber State, an FCSSChOOIin Utah, after COaChROn MCBrjdGtOld him hiS

(Dodgers), Jordan Zjmmermann(Washjngtonj and John Lackey(St. Lou-

scholarship would berenewedannually as long as heremainedeligible, the

iS), and to hitterS SUCh GSOutfielder JaSOn HGyWard (CardjnalSj and firSt baSeman ChriS DaViS(BaltjmorG). OtherS Who reCeiVed OfferS WereCatCher Matt WjeterS (BaltjmOrej, SeCOndbaSeman Howje KendriCk (DodgerSj,

lawSuit SayS. NewCOaChJOdy SearStOld Pugh fOIIOwing the 2012 SeaSOn hiS SChOlarShiPWOuldnOt bGreneWed, the laWSuit SayS. The laWSuit SeekS

shortstop lan Desmond(Natjonalsj, and outfielders Alex Gordon (Kansas

SChOlarShiPShaSinjured thOuSandS OfathleteS by CauSing them to Pay mjllianS mOre jn tuition When their SChOlarShipSare reduCed Or not reneWed.

City), DeXter FOWIGr (ChiCago CubS) and JUStin UPtOn(San DiegO).

FOOTBALL

TRACK AND FIELD

class-action status, contending theNCAA'sprohibition on multi-year — From wire reports


SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

ON THE AIR

NBA ROUNDUP

NHL ROUNDUP

Rangers win 4th straight

TODAY SOCCER Germany, Bayern Munich vs. Stuttgart Germany, Bayer Leverkusen vs. Koln England, West HamUnited vs. Everton England, TeamsTBA Germany, Darmstadt vs. Hamburg England, StokeCity vs. Chelsea

Time TV/Radio 6 :30 a.m. F S 1 6 :30 a.m.

FS 2

7 a.m. USA 7 a.m. N BCSN 9 :20 a.m. F S 2 9:30 a.m. NBC

MOTOR SPORTS

NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Texas, practice NASCAR,Xfinity, Texas, qualifying NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Texas, final practice NASCAR,Xfinity, Texas

The Associated Press

8 a.m. C N BC 9:30 a.m. NBCSN 11 a.m. NBCSN 12:30 p.m. NBC

DENVER — This is how

well things are going for Oscar Lindberg at the moment: Hescores even from

FOOTBALL

College, Notre Dameat Pittsburgh College, illinois at Purdue College, Vanderbilt at Florida College, Duke atNorth Carolina College, Cent. Florida atTulsa College, PennSt. at Northwestern College, Florida Atlantic at W.Kentucky College, Kentucky at Georgia College, TexasTechat West Virginia College, Stanford at Colorado College, Richmond atNewHampshire College, Florida St. at Clemson College, Arkansas at Mississippi College, TCU at OklahomaSt. College, Rutgers at Michigan College, iowa at Indiana College, Cincinnati at Houston College, Army at Air Force College, S. Utah atMontanaSt. College, Arizona St. atWashington St. College, Connecticut at Tulane College, South Carolina atTennessee College, UCLA at Oregon St.

9a.m.

ABC

9 a.m.

BIG 1 0

9 a.m. E S PN 9 a.m. E SPN2 9 a.m. E SPNN 9 a.m. E SPNU 9 a.m. Roo t 9 a.m. SEC Rich Pedroncelli / The Associated Press 9 a.m. FS1 Houston guard James Harden, center, drives to the basket between Sacramento's James Anderson, left, end Darren Collison during the first quarter of Friday night's game in Sacramento, California. 10 a.m. Pac-12 noon N B CSN 12:30 p.m. ABC 12:30 p.m. CBS 12:30 p.m. Fox 12:30p.m. Big Ten 12:30 p.m. ESPN 12:30p.m. ESPN2 The Associated Press ed Toronto its first loss of the 12:30p.m. ESPNU S ACRAMENTO, Cal i f . Detroit at Portland season. 12:30 p.m. Root — James Harden broke out Pacers 90, Heat 87: INDI12:30 p.m. FS1 of his early-season shooting When: ANAPOLIS — Paul George slump and scored22 of his 6 p.m. Sunday scored 36 points and grabbed 1 p.m. ESPNEWS season-high 43 points in the TV:CSNNW 12 rebounds to lead Indiana to 1 p.m. SEC Radio:KBND 1110-AM; second half to lead the Houston a victory over Miami. 1:30 p.m. Pac-12; Rockets to a 116-110 win over KRCO690-AM, 96.9-FM Celtics 118, Wizards 98: KICE 940-AM; KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM the Sacramento Kings on FriBOSTON — Jared Sullinger College, Old Dominion at UTSA 4 p.m. CSNNW day night. Also Friday: scored 21 points, Isaiah ThomCollege, Michigan St. at Nebraska 4 p.m. E S PN Harden went into the game Cavaliers 108, 76ers 102: as added 16 points and eight College, Navy at Memphis 4 p.m. E SPN2 shooting just 29.4 percent from CLEVELAND - LeBron assists and Boston ended a the floor but made 10 of his James scored a season-high 31 three-game losing streak by College, iowa St. at Oklahoma 4 p.m. E SPNU first 15 shots and finished with points, including his 9,000th beating Washington. College, Utah atWashington 4 :30 p.m. F o x a season-high 13 assists. He career field goal, and CleveBucks 99, Knicks 92: NEW College, Auburn atTexas A8M 4:30 p.m. S EC finished 13-of-23 shooting and land recorded its fifth straight YORK — John Hensen scored College, Minnesota at OhioState 5 p.m. ABC Houston won its third consecu- victory, beating Philadelphia. 22 points and Giannis AntetokCollege, LSU atAlabama 5 p.m. CBS tive game. Lakers 104, Nets 98: NEW ounmpo had 20 to lift MilwauTrevor Ariza had 18 points, YORK — Kobe Bryant scored kee to a win over New York. College, Arizona atSouthern Cal 7:30 p.m. ESPN induding a pair of 3-pointers 18 points, his highest perforPistons 100, Suns 92: College, California at Oregon 7:30 p.m. ESPN2; in the fourth quarter, to help mance since opening night, PHOENIX — Marcus Morris, KBND 1110-AM Houston hold off a late run by and Los Angeles beat winless who said he was looking to GOLF Sacramento. Clint Capela add- Brooklyn for its first victory of "disrespect" his former team PGA Tour,Sanderson Farms 10:30 a.m. Golf ed 13 points and 12 rebounds the season. in Phoenix and was booed Champions Tour,Charles SchwabCup 1:30 p.m. Golf and former King Marcus Hawks 121, Pelicans 115: every time he touched the ball PGA Tour, WGC-HSBC Champions 7 p.m. Golf Thornton scored 16. NEW ORLEANS — Kyle Kor- earlyin the game, scored 20 Omri Casspi had 22 points ver scored 22 points, hitting all points to help Detroit. HOCKEY for Sacramento. four of his 3-point shots, and Warriors 119, Nuggets 104: College, Minnesota at Notre Dame 3:30 p.m. NBCSN The Rockets opened the sea- Atlanta won its sixth straight OAKLAND, Calif. — Stephen NHL, Anaheim atSanJose 7:30p.m. CSNNW son with three straight losses over winless New Orleans. Curry led the way once more BASEBALL but have bounced back nicely Magic 92,Raptors 87: OR- with 34 points and 10 assists, Fall Stars Game 5 p.m. MLB behind Harden's recent surge. LANDO, Fla. — Tobias Harris his supporting cast did plenty BOXING Last year's MVP runner-up has had 20 points, including what to take the pressure off, and averaged 36 points per game turned out to be the decisive Golden State beat Denver to Premier Boxing Champions 6 p.m. NBCSN over his past three contests. free throw, and Orlando hand- stay unbeaten.

OCe

0

0

in S

Next up

SUNDAY SOCCER England, Aston Villa vs. Manchester City Germany, Borussia Dortmund vs. Schalke 04 England, Arsenal vs. TottenhamHotspur Germany, Augsburg vs. Werder Bremen Women's college, ACC Tournament, final Women's college, Big EastTournament, final U-17 World Cup, third-place match Women's college, BigTenTournament, final Women's college, SEC Tournament, final MLS playoffs, D.C.United at NewYork Women's college, Big 12Tournament, final U-17 World Cup, final MLS playoffs, Montreal at Columbus MLS playoffs, Seattle at FCDallas MLS playoffs, Portland at Vancouver

10:55 a.m. FS2 11 a.m. Big Ten 11 a.m. ESPNU n oon ESP N 1 p.m. FS1 1 :55 p.m. F S 2 2 p.m. E S PN 4 :30 p.m. F S 1 7 p.m. FS1

FOOTBALL

1 0 a.m. CB S 10 a.m. Fox 1:25 p.m. CBS 5:20 p.m. NBC

NFL, Oakland at Pittsburgh NFL, GreenBayat Carolina NFL, Denver at Indianapolis NFL, Philadelphia at Dallas GOLF

PGA Tour,Sanderson Farms Champions Tour,Charles SchwabCup

10:30 a.m. Golf 1:30 p.m. Golf

MOTOR SPORTS

NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Texas

1 1 a.m.

NB C

Standings EasternConference W 6 5 5 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 0 0

Atlanta

Cleveland Toronto Detroit Chicago Washington Indiana Milwaukee Miami Boston Charlotte NewYork Orlando Philadelphia Brooklyn

L I 1 I 1 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 5 6

WesternCottlerence W L Golden State 6 0 LA. Clippers 4 I Portland 4 2 Utah 3 2 SanAntonio 3 2 Houston 3 3 Oklahoma City 3 3 Minnesota 2 2 Phoenix 3 3 Memphis 3 3 Dallas 2 3 Denver 2 4 LA. Lakers 1 4 Sacrame nto I 5 NewOrleans 0 5

HOCKEY

Friday's Games

NHL, Vancouver at NewJersey

2 p.m. CSNNW

BASKETBALL

Men's college, Chico St. at Arizona NBA, Detroit at Portland

5 p.m. P a c-12 6 p.m. CSNNW;

KBND 1110-AM; KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM

Listingsarethe most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby TVor radio stations.

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

I(eselowski winspole The Associated Press FORT WORTH, TexasB rad Keselowski won t h e

Orlando92,Toronto87 Cleveland 108,Philadelphia102 LA. Lakers104,Brooklyn98 Bosto n08,Washington98 Milwaukee 99, NewYork92 Atlanta121,NewOrleans115 Indiana90, Miami87 Detroit 100,Phoenix 92 GoldenState09, Denver104 Hottston06, sacramento0 0

Today'sGames MinnesotaatChicago,3 p.m. Orlando at Philadelphia, 4p.m. WashingtonatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. CharlotteatSanAntonio, 5:30p.m. BrooklynatMilwaukee,5;30 p.m. NewOrleansatDallas, 5:30p.m. Memphisatutah,6p.m. GoldenStateatSacramento, 7p.m. HoustonatLA.Clippers,1:30p.m. Sunday'sGames Indiana atCleveland,12:30 p.m. LA. Lakers at NewYork, 12:30p.m. TorontoatMiami, 3p.m. PhoenixatOklahomaCity, 4p.m. Detroit atPortland,6 p.m.

Leaders

Bush was third, and Joey Logano fourth. Erik Jones qualified sixth

pole Friday for the NASCAR playoff race at Texas Motor Speedway. Keselowski ran a fast lap of 196.929 mph. D efending Sprint C up champion Kevin Harvick was second to take the sec-

in the No. 20 car for suspend-

o nd front-row spot, w i t h

World Truck victory of the

ed driver Matt Kenseth.

Also Friday: Jones wins N ASCAR Truck race at Texas: FORT WORTH, Texas — P oints

leader Erik Jones raced to his third NASCAR Camping

Chase contenders sweeping year with a dominating run the first four positions. Kyle at Texas Motor Speedway.

Box scores

All TimesPST

westbIook,QKC Harden,Hou Davis,NOR Beal,WAS James,CLE DeRozan,TOR Mccollttm,poR Thomas,BOS Butler,CHI Leonard,SAN George, IND Anthony,NYK

pn GB

.857

PHILADELPHIA (102) Grant 3-52-4 8, Noel9-18e-e 18,Okafor 8-17

MILWAUKEE (99) Antetokounmpo 7-13 6-6 20, Parker3-6 0-0 6, Monroe3-122-2 8, Ennis 1-4 2-2 4, Middleton 3-9 6-6 13,vasqttez3-e 1-1 8, Henson8-12 e-r

.333 3t/r .333 3'/t

2-9 e-e 5, oeryani 4-43-511,plum2-3 18,Mcconnell3-e0-08, stauskas6-10e-e 14, 22, Bayless 0-3 0-0 0.Totals 35-81 HThompson 36Oe8,Holmes1-21-23,Sampson lee t-t 0-e 2, copeland 26-29 99. Ze 1-2 5, Pressey 1-4 e-0 3, Canaan 5-8 4-4 Ir, NEWYORK(92) Wood 0-00-00. Totals41-7910-15102. Anthony6-164-417, Poizingis6-131-2 14,LoCLEVELAND (108) pez 6-9 0-0 12, Ca lderon0-3 0-00, vulacic1-5 0-0 James12-224-6 31, Love5-16e-0 12, Mozgov e-r 1-2 13,Wiliams8-120-016, Cunningham0-1 2, Grant2-5 4-6 8,Galloway3-9 t-7 13, Wiliams 0-00, TThompson1-11-23,Jefferson7-0 0-0 17, 4-11 7-815, O'Qttinn3-5 0-0 6,Thomas2-51-1 5, 0-00-00.Totals 33-81 22-28 92. Dellavedova 4-0 2-2 u, Jones1-60-e3, Harris 0-0 Seraphin Milwaukee 30 26 19 24 — 99 0-00, Vareiao1-I 0-OZTotals 45-888-12108. 20 33 20 19 — 92 Philadelphia 25 2 5 23 29 — 102 New York Cleveland 28 21 32 27 — 108

QPQ 5'/2

Celtics 118, Wizards98

pn GB

WASHINGTON (98) porter4-81-1 9,Humphries 3-50-e9, Gortat 4-7 2-310, Wal6l I71-1 13,Beal9-15 3-324, Dudley 3-71-28, Sessions1-84-46, Nese1-43-45, Heal 1-4 e-0 2,Templet-e 2-2 5, OtibreJi. 3-9 1-3 7, Blair 0-1 0-0 0.Totals36-Bt 18-2398. BOSTON (118) Crowder 4-124-512,Johnson2-41-25, Sullinger 9-13 ee 2I,Thoma s5-155616, Bradley26 00 6, Olynyk7-112-319, Turner7-120-016, Jerebko1-3 4 4 6, Lee 1-4 00 2, Rozier28 00 5, Hunter0 30 0 0, Zeller3-41-2 7, Mickey1-2 1-13. Totals 44-97

.833

t/r

.833 '/~ .800 1 .66/ I'/t

.600 2

.500 2'/t .500 2t/r .500 2'/t

.400 3 .400 3 .000 5

1.000

.800 I'/t .667 2 .600 2'/t .600 2t/t

.500 3 .500 3 .500 3 .500 3 .500 3

.4OQ 3Y2

.333 4 .200 4'/~ .167 5

18-23 118.

Washington Boston

25 24 25 24 — 98 40 32 28 18 — 118

.QOQ 5Y2

Magic 92, Raptors 87 TORONTO(87) carroll 3-13 2-29, scola3-11e-e7, valanciunas

3-62-38, Lowry6-162-317,DeR ozant-t59-1223, Biyombo1-5O-I 2, Patterson0-60-0 0,Joseph7-9

5-e19,Rosse-3e-00,Bennett0-22-22.Totals 30-86 22-2987.

ORLANDO (92) Fournier3-114-40, Harris8-102-420,Dedmon 3-5 4-610, Payton0-4 0-0 0, Oladipo7-143-4 18, Gordon 2-80-e5,Frye2-40-05,watson4-IO2-2 12, Hezonia2-62-2 6, Napier 2-4 0-e 5, smith 0-1 0-00. Totals 33-7717-22 92. Toronto 15 21 33 18 — 87 Orlando 21 24 19 28 — 92

Hawks 121, Peiicans115 ATLANTA(121) Bazemore 2-5 6-710, Milsap7-0 8-10 22,Horford 7-150-014,Teague5-16 8-1019, Korver8-82-2 22, Splitter1-54-46, Schroder 6-ee-e15, Patterson

0-1e-e0,scott3-52-29,Ju.Holiday2-3e-e4.Totals 41-77 30-35121.

NEWORLEANS(115)

Babbitt5-102-213,Cunningham3-61-1 8, Davis 142314-1643, JrHoliday1-21-24, Gordon8-15 3-3 22,Aiinca2-2e-04, Smith 4-110-08,Anderson

apart in the second peri-

od, helping the New York Rangers beat the Colorado Avalanche 2-1 on Fri-

day night for their fourth straight win. D on't q u estion

L i nd-

berg's logic in shooting a side-angle shot that somehow hit off Reto Berra and

rolled in for the game-winner, just accept it. That' s

what his coach is doing. " Sometimes when a player feels it, sees it, I always like that bad-angle shot," Rangers coach Alain Vigneault said. "I always think it's a good idea." Also Friday: Devils 4, Blackhawks 2: NEWARK, N.J. — Travis

Zajac capped a three-goal first period with a goal and an assist in a

2 6-second

span and New Jersey beat Chicago. Red Wings 2, Maple Leafs 1:

T O RONTO

Jakub Kindl scored 2:17 i nto

o v e rtime, H e n r i k

Zetterberg got his 300th career goal and Detroit won its third straight.

Penguins 2, Oilers 1: EDMONTON, Alberta — Phil Kessel broke a tie midway

through the third period and Pittsburgh won its sixth straight.

Stars 4, Hurricanes 1: RALEIGH, N.C. — Patrick

Sharp scored the go-ahead goal and Radek Faksa added the first of his career to lead Dallas.

Ducks 4, Blue Jackets 2: ANAHEIM, Calif. — Anaheim captain Ryan Getzlaf had three assists in his first

game back from an appendectomy, including one on defenseman Josh Manson's first NHL goal, and the

Bucks 99, Knicks 92

GOLF ROUNDUP

I(isner up 2 strokes

in Shanghai

Lakers104, Nets98 LA. LAKERS (104) Bryant5-167-8 18,Randle 5-9 4-6 I4, Hibbert 1-4 0-e 2,Russell e-92-216, clarkson6-123-416, Williams2-96-610, Black1-25-8 7,World Peace1-3 e-0 3,NanceJr. 2-4 2-46, N.Young3-92-210, Bass 1-1 0-02.Totals33-7831-40104. BROOKLYN (98) Johnson 8-165-522, TYoung7-150-014, Lopez 8-19 7-723,Jack8-221-2 18,Hollis-Jefferson2-3 1-4 5, Bogdanovic2-4 0-0 5, Ellington I-4 0-0 2, Bargnani0-2 e-00, Robinson4-61-2 9, Larkin0-2 e-0 0.Totals 40-9315-20 98. LA. Lakers 18 34 27 25 — 104 Brooklyn 27 20 25 26 — 98

Pistons 100, Sons92 DETROIT (100) Mare.Morris 7-144-6 20, Ilyasova2-6 1-1 6, Drummond 5-92-1312, Caldwell-Pope8-101-1 18, Jackson 8-19ee 23, Johnson25 t-e 5, Tolliver 1-5 1-24, Blake 3-60-08, Baynest-t 2-24. Totals 3775 18-36 100. PHOENIX (92) Tucker2-4e-e 5,Mark.Morris 9-210-218, Chandler 23 0 0 4,Knight8-19 3 422,Bledsoe9 2323

22, Teletovic1-20 03,weems0-20e0, warren2-6 1-25, Price 2-60-06, Len1-22-24, Leuer1-40-03. Totals 37-928-1392. Oetroit

Phoenix

21 21 25 33 — 100 14 26 23 29 — 92

Warriors119, Nuggets104 DENVER (104) Barton7-163-319, Gallinari7-139-9 25, Faried 4-9 e-0 8,Mudiay6-191-213, Harris 6-8 2-216,

Hickso n2-3t-25,Nelson4-8e-eto,Foye0-50-0 0, MillerO-t 0-e 0,Jokic 2-40-2 4,Arthur1-52-24,

papan ikolaoue-e0-e0.Totals39-9118-22104. GOLDEN STATE(119) Barnes 8-133-3 21,Green5-9e-0 12,Ezeli r-7 24 16, Curry 12-222-334, KThompson7-160-018,

Iguodala I-30-02, SpeighIs1-71-23,Livingston1-2 e-0 2, Barbosa 2-61-2 6, McAdoo1-41-4 3, clark 0-2 0-0 0,J.Thompson 1-1 e-e 2, RushO-t c-e 0. Totals 46-9310-18119. Denver 23 21 31 29 — 104 Golden State 40 34 25 20 — 119

4-10 0-010,Dottglas1-3e-e3, Gee 0-2 e-e0. Totals 42-8421-24115. Atlanta 26 32 31 32 — 121 Scoring 28 1 9 32 36 — 115 G FG Fr PTS AVG new Orleatts 6 70 37 213 35.5 Rockets 116, Kings 110 6 61 40 179 29.8 Pacers 90, Heat87 5 56 29 I41 28.2 HOUSTON (116) 6 60 2 1 164 27.3 MIAMI (87) Thornton616e016, Ariza6132218, capela 6 61 30 163 27.2 5-120-0 13,Harden13-2313-16 Deng4-70-09, Bosh7-166-721, Whiteside4-10 6-81-313, Lawson 6 43 63 162 27.0 0-1 8, Dragic5-0 0-0 11,Wade4-151-2 9, Winslow 43, Terry1-30-e2, Hayes1-2 2-2 4, Brewer1-12-2 5 39 43 126 25.2 6-101-1 13,Chalmers1-30-02, McRobe/Is 3-40-0 4, Harrell1-41-23,Dekkeree ee 0,Mcoanielsee 5 47 1 5 125 25.0 8, Johnson 0-00. Totals 40-8221-27116. 2-51-26. Totals 36-819-1387. 6 59 19 142 23.7 INDIANA (90) SACRAMNT E O(110) 134 22.3 6 39 54 George14-27 e-e36, Allen2-4 0-2 4, Mahinmi Anderson 0-42-2 2, Ga y 5-15 4-615, Koufos3-t 6 51 13 133 22.2 ae0-26,GHillae3-512,Ellis2-8e 04,Budinger 0-06, Rondo 6-140-012, Belinelli 2-101-25,Casspi 3-60-06, Turner1-40-02, Rob- 8-10 4-522,Gaoler-stein 3-51-2 7, collison 7-16 5 35 32 11e 22.0 0-23-53, Stuckey 6 42 34 130 21.7 inson III3-51-2 7,J.Hill 5-100-010. Totals 36-80 5-622, McLem ore 3-84-6u, Curry 3-40-08. To5 45 1 4 108 21.6 13-24 90. tals 40-9321-29110. 6 42 34 129 21.5 Miami 26 23 19 19 — 87 Houston 29 32 24 31 — 116 6 41 3 5 126 21.0 Indiana 16 33 22 19 — 90 Sacramento 23 z 7 28 32 — 110

ThroughFriday Curry,GO L Durant,OKC Griffin, LAC Lillartt, POR

Cavaliers 108, 76ers102

improbable angles. Like crazy improbable angles. Derek Stepan and Lindberg scored 21 seconds

Ducks beat Columbus.

NBA SCOREBOARD

5:30 a.m. NBCSN 6 :30 a.m. F S 1 8 a.m. NBCSN 8 :20 a.m. F S 2 9 a.m. E SPNU 1 0:30 a.m. F S 1

C3

The Associated Press SHANGHAI — Two par

saves in the middle of his round and two birdies at the end put Kevin Kisner in

a place he has never been. And that has n othing to do with his first trip to

China. Kisner put together an-

other bogey-free performance Friday in the HSBC Champions for a 6-under 66 and a two-shot lead over Russell Knox going into the weekend of the World Golf

Championship. Kisner was at 14-under 130, the l owest 36-hole

score of his career, and he was the 36-hole leader for the first time in his career.

Also Friday: Late eagle paces Allen: SCOTTSDALE,

A r i z.

— Michael Allen made a 30-foot eagle putt on the par-5 18th hole to take a

two-stroke lead over playing p a rtner B e rnhard Langer in the Champions Tour's season-ending Charles Schwab Cup Championship. Castro tops Sanderson f ield: J A CKSON, M i s s. — Roberto Castro shot a 5-under 67 to take a fourstroke lead in the water-

logged Sanderson Farms Championship. Two share LPGA lead: SHIMA, Japan — Ameri-

cans Angela Stanford and Ryann O' Toole shared the lead at 7-under 65 in the LPGA Tour's Toto Japan

Classic.


C4

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015

Volleyball Continued from C1

Panthers

PREP FOOTBALL ROUNDUP

and piled up 37 assists to

CrookCoun knocked outofplayoffs

go with two service aces. Smith had 14 k i lls, and

Bulletin staff report

m ade onereception for a 35-

KLAMATH FALLS — Making a second straight trip to the

yard touchdown in the second quarter.

state playoffs for the first time since 1988, Crook County saw

Mazama, seeded fifth, took

J ordan W a skom r a n the offense for the Storm

Haydn Quatre had eight kills and seven digs. Bend opened the state tournament with the first-

and biggest — upset of the day, recording nine blocks and 11 aces as a team to down top-seeded Marist in

the quarterfinal round 2624, 25-10, 14-25, 25-19.

"The girls, man, they fought," s ai d Kri s t in C ooper, coach o f t h e ninth-seeded Bears. "They really wanted it; you could tell." Tatiana Ensz led Bend

Continued from C1 "We did some things differently than what we

have during the regular season, and the oppor-

its football season come to a

dose with a 44-7 loss to Mazama in the first round of the Class 4A state playoffs Friday night. Before exiting the game with an injury, quarterback Blake Bartels totaled 41 rushing yards and 68 passing yards to lead the No. 12-seed Cowboys (6-4). Cole Ovens chipped in with 52 rushing yards and 27 receiving yards, while Terran Libolt

a 20-7 lead into the half and shut out Crook County after

the break to advance to next week's quarterfinal round. The

Vikingsamassed 388 rushing yards in the win. Also Friday:

overs, but were unable to cap- ond-seeded Outlaws a tempoitalize on those opportunites, rary lead, but the No. 15 Huskies

tunity presented itself offensively for us to do

according to Bend coach Matt

that," Redmond coach

sealed the win with a 75-yard punt return in the third quarter

Craven. "We had a good first half offensively," Craven said. "We ran the ball really, really well in the second quarter." Cole Rixe rushed for 94 yards and

to knock Sisters out of the Class 4A playoffs in the first round.

Sisters coach Gary Thorson said quarterback Zach Morgan

a touchdown to lead the Lava

left the game with a rolled an-

Nathan Stanley said. "It' s nice to be able to do some different things and add some wrinkles. "They just brought a lot of pressure, and what

Bears (6-4), and Chase Letten- kle and was replaced by Johnmaier threw for155 yards and ny Gurney, while running back

we did kind of countered that nicely at certain

two touchdowns, one each to

Logan Schutte suffered a dislo-

points. At this point, any

High struggled to find offensive footing against No. 5 Ashland, falling in the first round of the Class 5A state playoffs. The

cated shoulder. "There were just Himes. too many things to overcome North Marion 21, Sisters 14: today," Thorson said of his SISTERS — M i t c h G i bney Outlaws, who won the Sky-Em ran for two touchdowns in the League and finished the season

time you have a good playerwho kind ofdom-

Lava Bears forced three turn-

second quarter to give the sec- with a 7-1 record.

ever you do best."

Ashland 39, Bend 21: ASHLAND — Twelfth-seeded Bend

Austin Adye and Cameron

inates the statistics for

your team, people are going to take away what-

with 15 kills, 13 digs and

Stanley noted that

three aces, while Kaci Cox contributed with 11 kills, 10

Brown still manage more

The Lava Bears were unable to repeat in the semifi-

Storm

Summit'sJacob

than 200 yards rushing. The Panthers struck paydirt first when Par-

Thompson

rish rumbled into the end

nals, where they fell 25-19,

Continued from C1 A few plays later, Cheyce Baum powered forward for a 3-yard touchdown to provide

celebrates after

e defensive stop

zone from 19 yards out to give Redmond a 6-0 lead

during e 5A state

just one minute into the

playoff game

game. The pass attempt

against South

on the two-point conver-

Albany on Friday

sion failed. Lebanon evened the

digs and two aces.

24-26, 25-17, 25-20 to La

Salle. Also Friday:

in finals: FOREST GROVE — The Outlaws powered

the Rebels, co-champions of the Mid-Willamette Conference, a 7-0 lead. Yet there was no worry on the Summit s ideline. Rare-

past No.3 Marshfield 25-

ly have the Storm trailed in a

21, 25-17, 25-16 to reach the Class 4A state finals for the

game this season, but Summit

Class 4A Sisters to play No.1 Banks

second straight year. "We really dug the ball

glllb j r

night at Summit High School.

score later in the quarter

on a 38-yard pass from

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Ty Her gis to Oregon State commit John Bates. The Warriors took the

coach Joe Padilla was not concerned. He had no reason to

lead on the extra point,

be. His team boasted the clas-

but Parrish a nswered

very well," Sisters coach Jason Myhre said. "All

sification's top scoring defense, one of the highest-scoring units

soon thereafter with an-

around we did a good job; we had a couple of key players who'd been hurt who were back and in the swing of things." Sisters, the defending 4A state champ, defeated

in 5A, had yet to take the field.

he scored from 2 yards out after runs of 25 and 22 yards on the drive.

N o. 10 Tillamook in t h e

quarterfinal match at Forest Grove High School on Friday morning 25-8, 22-25, 25-22, 25-10.

Crook County dropped its semifinal match against No. 1 B a nks 2 5-16, 2225, 25-16, 25-19 despite 26 kills by Jennifer Roth

and 15 kills by Jennifer McCallister.

The Cowgirls started off the tournament with a 25-16, 20-25, 25-23, 25-23

quarterfinal win against No. 5 Valley Catholic. Roth and Laura Fraser led Crook

County with 16 kills apiece, while McCallister had 11 kills. The Sisters-Banks final will be a rematch of last year's championship

other TD run. This time

Ruhl agreed. "We were disappointed," the running back said. "We haven' t let up many points this year. ... But we kept our heads up. I knew right away, 'We' ve got scoring run. And Ruhl polished this. Our offense can take them off the period with an 11-yard on.' I knew, 'Hey, we' re going touchdown s p rint. S u m m it to get back out there. We' re go- grabbed a commanding 42-7 ing to get some turnovers.' And halftime lead before eventually that's exactly what we did." putting away South Albany for The Storm's Jason Garcia the victory and tallying yet anreturned the ensuing kickoff other first for the Storm. "It's uncharted territory for

tage at the end of the first. T hen Bledsoe hit Kent i n

noon.

Class 2A Culver beets Grant Union to reach state final: REDMOND — T h e B u lldogs

overcame a loss in the first set to d efeat Grant Union 26-28, 25-20, 25-23, 25-19 and advance to the Class 2A state final, where

they will face No. 1 Burns. Lynze Schonneker led Culver with 22 kills, while

Jenny Vega had 12. KayLee Aldrich had four aces and four kills. The Bulldogs lost 3-0 to the Hilanders on Sept. 10. Culver began the tour-

nament a t Rid geview High School with a 17-25, 25-20, 25-6, 25-8 quarter-

final victory over No. 10 Weston-McEwen. Schonneker recored 21 kills for

the Bulldogs, while Margie Beeler served up seven aces.

Class 1A Country Christian ends Trinity Lutheran's season: REDMOND — The Saints

of Bend picked up the program's first quarterfinal victory but fell to defending 1A state champ Country Christian in the semis 25-18, 25-12, 25-16 at Rid-

geview High School. Trinity Lutheran won its

quarterfinal match against No. 5 Powder Valley 23-25, 27-29, 25-17, 25-17, 15-11.

Emily Eidler led the Saints with 23 kills, and Marish

Murphy had 14 kills. Serena Scomparin recorded 16 assists and eight aces, and

Kenzie Smith chipped in with 15 assists.

The Saints will play No. 2 North Douglas in the thirdplace match this afternoon.

yards on the ground. Bledsoe For South Albany, which was 6-of-7 passing for 154 yards made its first playoff appearand two scores — all in the first ance since 2008, quarterback half. Cade Perrizocompleted 20 of "When you' re a defensive 40 passes for 189 yards, but he guy and you' re looking at an- was also picked off four times. other team, you' re looking at The Storm now turn their attheir strength and who, may-

ter. "Wow."

"It's lethal. ... With that many

The Storm racked up 503 weapons at running back, stridefor a 70-yard score to yards of total offense, including there's no telling what we can open the second-quarter scor- 309 yards on the ground. Kent do," Ruhl added. "We have the ing. Ruhl later sprang free for finished with 67 rushing yards power, we have the speed, and a 46-yard touchdown. Soon af- and 97receivingyardsforSum- we have the quickness and the ter,Garcia ripped of a 65-yard mit, while Garcia totaled 65 vision to just destroy defenses."

tention to a quarterfinal match-

up with Redmond High, which

H argis aired i t

out

again for the Warriors, going deep on a 45-yard touchdown pass to Na-

than Pacey to give Lebanon a 14-12 lead mid-

way through the second quarter. But the combination of Parrish and Brown

Summit defeated 49-7 at home last month. But that result, Pa-

proved too much for

dilla said, needs to be erased

the Warriors in the sec-

ond half, as Redmond

from the Storm's memory.

"It's always tough to play

breezed into the n ext

the same team twice in a season. That's been proven many times," he said. "It's a whole

round of the playoffs and

new game for uscome next

seeking to avenge a 49-7 loss at Summit on Oct. 9

week. We' ve got to forget what

another date with Summit. The Panthers will be — the last time Redmond was beaten.

happen the first time against (Redmond) and prepare like they' re a new opponent." — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@ bendbulletin.corn.

— Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin. corn.

PREP SCOREBOARD

"We' re playing Banks again, so feeling good about that," Myhre said. "But it would've been nice

after another two-point pass attempt failed.

be, you' re going to try to slow first offensive play, Summit (9- us, obviously, as we move into down a little bit. When you I) was in the end zone as Sean the playoffs a little farther next look at us, it's hard to say who Kent sprinted54 yards to even week. The kids keep surpris- you' re going to slow down," Pathe score. Later in the quarter, ing us," Padilla said, noting dilla said. "We had a lot of guys quarterback John Bledsoe con- a booming 52-yard field goal make plays today, but that's our nected with Nick Rasmussen (with plenty of room to spare) offense. You' re not going to see for a 35-yard touchdown, giving by Summit kicker Kaden Wad- super stats by anyone because the home team a 14-7advan- sworth late in the fourth quar- everyone does the job." to near midfield, and on the

match, which the Outlaws won 3-0.

to have an all-Central Oregon final." The Cowgirls will face No. 3 Marshfield in the third-place match today at

The Panthers led 12-7

Football Class 6A State playoffs Firsl round Friday's results No. 1Jesuit 52,No.32Jefferson12 No.16Westview56,No.17LakeOswego21 No. 9Beaverton56,No.24Willamette 30 No. 8Tualatin 38,No.25Wilson 34 No. 5CentralCatholic 42,No.28McNary21 No. 12Clackamas35, No. 21South Medford 21 No. 20Sunset 34,No.13Sprague27 No. 4Sheldon63, No.29Barlow21 No. 3WestLinn41,No.30Roosevelt 6 N0.14WestSalem32, No.19 Franklin 0 No. 11OregonCity 53,No.22 Southridge15 No. 6SouthSalem21,No.27 North Medford 20 No. 7Lincoln28, No.26Newberg0 No. 10GrantsPass63,No.23 ForestGrove7 No. 18Tigard34,NO .15 Centennial 22 No. 2Sherwood59,No.31 North Salem20 Secondround Friday's games No. 16Westviewat No.1Jesuit No. 9Beavertonat No.8Tualatin No. 12Clackamasat NO.5Central Catholic No. 20Sunset atNo.4Sheldon N0.14WestSalemat No. 3West Linn No. 11OregonCity atNo.6 SouthSalem No. 10GrantsPassat No.7 Lincoln No. 18TigardatNo.2Sherwood Class 5A State playoffs Firstround Friday's results No.1 Liberty49, N0.16HoodRiverValley 7 No. 9Wilsonville 49,No.8Hermiston14 No. 5Ashland39,No.12 Bend21 No. 4Springfield28,No.13St. Helens13 No. 3Redmond41, No.14 Lebanon21 No. 6Summit 59,NO.11 SouthAlbany14 No. 7Central46,No.10Hilsbor028 No. 2Crater45, NO .15 Silverton 0 Quarlerlinals Friday, Nov.13 No. 9Wilsonville at No.I Liberty No.5AshlandatNo.4Springfield No.6SummitatNo.3Redmond No. 7CentralatNo.2Crater

No.11 Marshfield13,No.6 Molala 7 No. 7NorthBend37, No.10Astoria12

No.15NorthMarion21, No.2Sisters 14 Today'sgame No.13 Baker at No.4Banks,1 p.m.

Crook County

0 7 0 0 — 7 Mazama 14 6 18 6 — 44 M—Curtis Anderson13run(kick failed). M—NoahMcGrew4run(SeanMilard run). u —McGrew25run (kickfailed). CC — Terran Libolt 35passfrom BlakeBartels (Cole Ovens kick). u -Anderson23run(run failed). u -AurelinAgnimel7run(passfailed). M—Agnimel1run(kickfailed). M—McGrew8run(kickfailed).

North Marion 21, Sisters 14 — 21 — 39

A— MasonDow2run(conversionfailed) B— Cam eron Himes 6 passfromChase Lettenmaier (TylerLindseykick) A—Dow5run(conversion failed) A — JamesHutchings 42 passfromKyle Weinberg (coversiofnailed) A—Weinberg19runIWeinbergkick) B—AustinAdye4passfromLettenmaier(Lindseykick) A— MichaelPruitt 38passfromWeinberg IWeinberg kick) A— ShashiPenn 15pass fromWeinberg (Weinberg kick) B—ColeRixe4run(Limdseykick)

Summit 59, SouthAlbany 14 South Albany Summit

Class 4A Stateplayoifs Firstround Friday's results No.1 Philomath 7,No.16Junction City0 No. 9Cascade42,No.8 LaGrande27 No. 5Mazama44, No.12 CrookCounty 7 No. 3Scappoose35, No.14Gladstone14

Mazama44, Crook County 7

Ashland 39, Bend21 0 14 0 7 6 19 7 7

7 7 7 0 — 21 Lebanon Redmond 6 14 21 0 — 41 R— BunkerParrish19 run(passfailed) t — JohnBates38passfrom TyHargis (Brandon Studer kick) 8— Parrish2 run(passfailed) L — Nathan Pacey45passfromHargis(SIUderkick) R— Alani Troutman63 passfrom Parrish (Derek Brown run) R— Parrish30run(Brownrun) R — Brown 72run(runfailed) L— Bates7passfromHargis (Studerkick) 8— Parrish25run(HaydenSmith kick)

Friday's Summaries

Friday's Summaries

Bend Ashland

Redmond41, Lebanon21

7 0 7 0 — 14 14 28 7 10 — 59

SA —CheyceBaum3run(Harry Rochelle kick) S— SeanKent 54run(KadenWadsworthkick) S — NickRasmussen 35 passfrom JohnBledsoe (Wadsworthkick) S— Kent70passfromBledsoe(Wadsworth kick) S— Daw sonRuhl 46run(Wadsworth kick) S— JasonGarcia 65run(Wadsworth kick) s— Ruhlu run(wadsworthkick) SA —Baum1run(Rochelle kick) S— BrianRil 21passfromTroyViola(Wadsworlh kick) S— Ruhl40run(Wadsworth kick) S— FGWadsworth 52

N orlhMarion 7 0 14 0 — 2 1 Sisters 0 14 0 0 — 14 NM — AmmonSuchanski 6 run (TannerScanlan

kick) S— MitchGibney4run(JadonBachtold kick) S— Gibney1run(Bachtold kick) NM —EthanFicek 7run(Scanlankick) NM —BostonSnyder 75punt return (Scanlankick) Class 3A State playoifs Firstround Friday's results No.1 Scio46, No.16Nyssa20 No.9Salem Academy29,No.8Rainier6 No. 5CascadeChristian 77, No.12Colton12 No. 4Vale54,No.13Lakeview7 No. 6Coquile48,No.u Taft25 No. 7Harrisburg37,No.10 Dayton34 No. 2SantiamChristian 46, No.15PleasantHil 0 Today'sgame NO.14ClatskanieatNo.3BlanchetCatholic, 7 p.m. Class 2A Stateplayoifs Firstround Friday's results No. 1Central Linn42, No.16Nestucca14 No. 9Stanfield56,No.8Vernonia26 No. 3Regis49,N0.14 MyrtlePoint6 Today's games No.12ToledoatNo.5Burns,1p.m. No.13 IrrigonatNo.4 Kennedy, 1p.m. No.11 Imbleat r No.6Lost River, 1pm. No.10Weston-McEwenatNo.7Reedsport,2p.m. No.15Monroeat No.2Heppner,3 p.m.

Class 1A Stateplayoffs Firstround Friday's results No.5 HosannaChristian32, No.12 Lowell 22 No.2Yoncalla50,No.15CamasValley26 Today'sgames No.16TriangleLakeatNO.1 Adrian,1 pm. No. 9Shermanat No.8Powers,1 p.m. No.13NorthDouglasat No.4Crane, 1pm. No.14Triadat No.3Wallowa,1 p.m. No.11 PineEagle atNo.6 Perrydale, noon No.10 Days Creekat No. 7Dufur,1 pm.

Volleyball Class 6A State playoifs At Liberly HighSchool, Hillsboro Friday's results Quarterfinals No. 1Jesuit def.No.9 Roseburg 25-14, 25-13,25-13 No.5Cl ackamasdef.No.4Sunset25-12,15-25,2514, 25-17

No. 3 Sheldondet No. 6 Lakeridge26-24, 25-15, 25-13

No. 2 centralcatholic def.No.7 west salem25-13, 25-18,25-14

Semiiinals No.1 JesuitdetNo.5Clackamas25-17,25-15,25-17 No. 2Central Catholic def. No.3 Sheldon25-8, 27-29, 22-25, 25-10,15-11

Today'sgames Consolation semifinals No. 9Roseburgvs. No.4Sunset, 8a.m. No.6Lakeridgevs.No.7WestSalem,8a.m. Fourlh-placematch No. 9Roseburg/No.4Sunset winnervs. No.6Lakeridge/No.7West Salemwinner, noon Third-place match No.5Clackamasloservs.No.3Sheldon,noon Championshipfinal No. 1Jesuit vs.No.2Central Catholic, 8:30p.m. Class 5A Stateplayoffs At Liberlr Highschool, Hillsboro Friday's results Quarterfinals No. 9Benddtt No.1Marist 26-24, 25-10,1425, 25-19 No.5LaSalledef.No.13Churchil25-12,25-1II,25-10 No. 3Summit def.No.11Silverton25-17,25-21, 25-17 No. 2Lebanondef. No.7Ashland25-23, 25-15,25-20 Semiiinals No.5LaSalle det No.9 Bend25-19, 24-26, 25-17, 25-20 No.3Summitdef.No.2Lebanon25-22,25-16,1525, 25-20 Today'sgames Consolation semifinals No.1 Maristvs.No.13Churchil,10am. No. u silvertonvs.No.7Ashland,10 a.m. Fourlh-placematch No. 1 Marist/No.13Churchil winnervs. No.11 Silverton/No.7Ashlandwinner, 2:15 p.m. Third-placematch No. 9Bendvs. No.2Lebanon, 2:15p.m. Championshipfinal No.5Lasal levs.No.3Summit,6p.m. Class 4A Stateplayoffs At ForestGroveHighSchool Friday's results Quartesfinals No. 1 Banksdef. No.9HiddenValley 25-15, 25-15, 25-16

No. 4CrookCounty dtt No.5Valey Catholic 25-16,

20-25, 25-23,25-23 No. 3 Marshfield dt tNo.11Sutherlin 25-17,22-25, 25-23, 25-19 No. 2 Sistersdef. No.10Tilamook 25-8, 22-25,2522, 25-10

Semiiinals No. 1 Banksdet No.4 Crook County25-16, 22-25, 25-16, 25-19 No. 2 Sistersdef. No. 3 Marshfield 25-21,25-17, 25-16

Today'sgames Consolation semifinals No. 9HiddenValley vs. No.5 Valey Catholic, 8a.m. No. u sutherlinvs.No.10Tilamook,Ba.m. Fourth-placematch No. 9 Hidden Valey/No. 5Valley Catholic winnervs. No. 11Sutherlin/No. 10Tilamookwinner, noon Third-placematch No. 4CrookCounty vs. No.3 Marshfield, noon Championship final No. 1Banksvs. No.2 Sisters, 8:30p.m. Class 3A State playofls At Forest GroveHigh School Friday's results Quarlerfinals No. 1 Cresweldef. l No. 9Sheridan25-12, 26-24, 25-21 No. 4Rainierdtt No.5 Coquille 25-19,25-19,25-17 No. 3 Santiam Christian def. No.6 Glide 25-14,2519, 25-22 No. 2Valedef.No.7CascadeChristian 25-19,25-23, 20-25, 25-1 6

Semilinals

No. 1Creswelldef. No.4Rainier 25-22, 25-15,25-15 No. 2 Valedef. No.3 Santiam Christian 25-19,2521, 25-15

Today'sgames Consolation semiiinals No. 9Sheridanvs. No.5Coquille,10 am. No. 6Glidevs. No.7CascadeChristian, 10a.m. Fourth-placematch No. 9Sheridan/No.5 Coquille winnervs. No.6Glide/ No. 7CascadeChristian winner,2:15 p.m. Third-placematch No. 4Rainiervs.No.3SantiamChrisitan, 2;15p.m. Championship final No. 1Creswell vs.No.2Vale, 6 p.m.

Class 2A State playoffs At RidgeviewHigh School, Redmond Friday's results Quarlerfinals No. 1Burnsdef. No.9Imbler25-18, 25-19,27-15 No.5 Kennedydet No.4St Paul25-14,22-25,2725, 25-22

No. 3GrantUniondef. No.6 Bonanza19-25, 25-18, 25-22, 25-17 No. 2Culverdef. No.10Weston-McEwen17-25, 2520, 25-6,25-8 Semifinals No. 1Burnsdef.No.5 Kennedy23-25, 25-19,25-20, 25-13 No.2CulverdetNo.3GrantUnion26-28,25-20, 25-23, 25-19

Today'sgames Consolation semiiinals No. 9Imblervs.No.4St Paul,s a.m. No. 6Bonanzavs. No.10 Weston-ucEwen, 8a.m. Fourlh-placematch No.9Imbler/No.4StPaulwinnervs.No.6Bonanza/ No.10 Weston-McEwenwinner,noon Third-place match No.5Kennedyvs.No. 3Grant Union, noon Championshipfinal No.1 Burns vs. No.2 Culver,8;30 p.m. Class tA Stateplayoffs At RidgeviewHigh School, Redmond Friday's results Quanerfinals No. 1 CountryChristiandef. No.9 Perrydale 25-23, 25-20, 25-13 No. 4Trinity Lutherandef.No.5Powder Valley22-25, 27-29,25-17, 25-17, 15-u No. 3HosannaChristian def. No.6 Crane23-25, 1525, 25-17,25-19,15-13

No. 2 NorthDouglasdef. No.7 lone 17-25,25-13, 25-19, 25-22 Semifinals No. 1 CountryChristiandef. No.4 Trinity Lutheran, 25-18, 25-12,25-16

No.3HosannaChristiandef.No.2Nort hDouglas2517, 23-25,25-23,23-25,17-15

Today'sgames Consolation semifinals No. 9Perrydalevs. No.5 Powder Valley,10 a.m. No.6Cranevs.No.7lone,10a.m. Fourth-placematch No. 9Perrydale/No.5 Powder Valleywinner vs. No.6 Crane/No.7lonewinner,2:15p.m. Third-placematch No. 4TrinityLutheranvs.No.2North Douglas, 215p.m. Championship final No. 1CountryChristian vs.No.3 Hosanna Christian, 6 p.m.

Boys soccer Class 6A State playoffs ituarlerlinals Today'sgames No. 25Roosevelt at NO .1 McMinnvile, 5 p.m. No. 28BarlowatNo.4Lincoln, 3 p.m. No. 14westsalemat No. u Jesuit, 11a.m. No. 23Clackamasat N0.15 Central Catholic, 5p.m. Class 5A State playoffs ituarlerlinals Today'sgames No. 8Springfieldat NO .1 Wilsonvile, 6 p.m. No. 5WoodburnatNo.4Hermiston,2:30p.m. No. u summiat t No.3Hilsboro, 1p.m. No.7Benda tNo.2HoodRiverValley,5p.m. Class 4A State playoffs ituarlerlinals Today'sgames No. 9JunctionCityatNo.1 Stayton, 2p.m. No. 5NorthBendatNo.4Henley,2p.m. No. 6 La Grandeat No.3 North Marion, 3p.m. No. 7Molalaat No.2Sisters, 1p.m. Class 3A/2A/1A State playoffs tiuarlerlinals

Today'sgames No. 8Delphianat No.1 Catlin Gabel, 4p.m. No.5 Riverdaleat No.4 PortlandAdventist, 6 p.m. No. 6Riversideat No.3St Mary's,5 p.m. No. 7Creswell atNo.2OregonEpiscopal 5:30p.m.

Girls soccer Class 6A State playoffs ituarlerlinals Today'sgames No.8LakeridgeatNo.1Jesuit,1:30p.m. No. 21TigardatNo.4Sherwood,4p.m. No.6WestLinnatNo.3Sunset,3p.m. No.10LakeOswegoat No. 2Tualatin,1 p.m. Class 5A State playoffs ituarlerlinals Today'sgames No. 8HoodRiverValley atNo.1 Summit, noon No. 12Hilsboro atNo.4 Marist, 4 p.m. No. 6Sandyat No. 3Bend, 2p.m. No. 7 La Salle at No.2Wilsonvile, 3:30p.m. Class 4A State playoffs Quartertinals Today'sgames No. 9GladstoneatNo.1 Molalla, 6p.m. No. 12Brookings-Harborat No.4 North Bend,2 p.m. No. 14Henley atNo.u valleycatholic, 2p.m. No.7CorbettatNo.2Scappoose,3p.m.

Class 3A/2AflA State playoffs IIuartertinals Today'sgames No. 9PleasantHil at No.1OregonEpiscopal, 2p.m. No. 5 StMarysatNo.4 BlanchetCatholic,2 p.m. No. 6Creswell atNo.3WestsideChristian, 5 p.m. No. 10CascadeChristian at No.2Catlin Gabel, 6p.m.


SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

SOCCER

Anot ertou test orBeavs BMitc e

Former

C5

no different."

U.S. coach looks for a big-time job

ing, to say the least. While Seth

The other freshman QB

By Rob Hards

Collins has been sidelined with a hyperextended knee, Mitch-

UCLA also has a promising young quarterback in

The Associated Press

ell got his first career start last

Josh Rosen, who is considered

weekend against No. 13 Utah. The redshirt freshman will

among the top freshmen in the country at his position. Rosen is averaging 278.8 yards passing a game and he has thrown for 16 touchdowns. In the past five games, Rosen has found success in connecting with Payton and fellow receiver

Bradley is leaving Norway on a high.

last week before the 27-12

Thomas Duarte, who have a

for next season's Europa

loss to the Utes. Mitchell, who

combined939 yards receiving and seven touchdowns.

League. Now, the 5 7-year-old Bradley is preparing for a new challenge, possibly

By Anne M. Peterson

the corner for a lot of teams if

The Associated Press

you' re not careful," Andersen

said. "So you' ve got to be able to prepare every week for a

CORVALLIS — So much for

easing into the job. Nick Mitchell's first tests at

great offense, and this one is

starting quarterback for Oregon State have been challeng-

get his next start today when

the Beavers (2-6 overall, 0-5 Pac-12) host No. 22 UCLA (6-2, 4-2). Collins, a true freshman, hurt his left knee in practice

L

IEI i I' gfgi

fell to third in the tight competition between Collins and

Looking at the standings

Marcus McMaryion in preseason camp, had played his way into a backup role a couple of weeks ago.

h'

Mitchell completed 19 of

35 passes for 204 yards and a touchdown against Utah,

The Associated Press file photo

Oregon State quarterback Nick MItohell's fIrst tests at starting quarterback for Oregon State have been challenging, to say the least. Another one comes today against No. 22 UCLA.

with no interceptions. He also

rushed for 40 yards on 12 carries. "It was a good step," Ore-

Next up No. 22 UCLA

gon state coach Gary Anders- at Oregon State en said. "We'd all like to have some throws back, some calls When: back, some whatever it is on 1:30 p.m. today offense,defense and special TV:Pac-12 Ratlie:KICE 940-AM; teams, but he gave us an op-

KRCO 690-AM; 96.9-FM

wide receiver Jordan Payton. "There is no bad team in the Pac-12. It's always the wild, wild West. Every week w e

have to bring the intensity and bring the focus and gut out a will.

Been along time

portunity to be able to stay in the game and manage it

straight at home against Cal Payton, a senior, is among and Colorado after tumbling t he dwindled list of U C L A striking distance. Now we' ve with consecutive losses to Ar- players who have faced the just got to get him and the rest izona State and Stanford. Beavers — th e t w o t e ams of the offense to be able to take Already bowl eligible, the have not met since 2012. And the next step and score more Bruins are favored against the that game was not especially points." young Beavers, but they are memorable for the Bruins. The Oregon State, rebuilding in wary given their dose 35-31 Beavers were unranked when its first year under Andersen, victory over the Buffaloes at they visited the Rose Bowl and is the last winless team in Pac- the Rose Bowl last weekend. upset then-No. 19 UCLA 27"You can't ever sleep on 20. OregonStatequarterback 12 play. The Bruins have won two these teams," said Bruins Sean Mannion passed for 379 enough to be able to be within

Ducks,Bearsbattle to be bowl eligible By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press

E UGENE —

Hi s i n jury

trouble behind him, Oregon Ducks quarterback Vernon

Adams Jr. is back to having fun.

The heralded senior transfer got off to a disappointing start with th e D u cks after

breaking the index finger on his throwing hand in the opener againsthis former team, Eastern Washington. But Adams returned two and two touchdowns in a 2620 Oregon victory in Seattle.

Last Thursday, he passed for 315 yards and four touchThe Associated Pressfile photo

Oregon quarterback Vernon Adams Jr. Is back to having fun after recovering from a broken index fInger and leading the Ducks to a triple-overtime win over Arizona State.

the Ducks host California. "It was definitely the best

Next up

game I played here funwise," Adams said of the thrilling California victory at Arizona State. "It at Oregon was really fun for myself and When:7:30 tonight the team, I think. We had a great time enjoying that, but TV:ESPN2 now we' re moving on to Cal." RaNe:KBND1110-AM Oregon (5-3 overall, 3-2 Pac-12), with losses to Mich- er in FBS history to reach the igan State, Utah and Wash- mark. He also has a school-reington State this season, sits cord 75 touchdown passes. in second place in the Pac-12 Oregon coach Mark HelNorth standings with Wash- frich said this week that he ington State. The Ducks will met with Goff on a recruiting have to catch No. 9 Stanford visit years back. The teenager (7-1, 6-0) if they hope to de- was wearing a Cal sweatshirt. "Never a good sign," Helfend their Pac-12 title, but time is running short. frich said. Oregon visits the Cardinal

seasons. He ranks eighth na-

tionally with 138.6 yards per game. "He's a great back, a step above what he did last year. They use him really well for what they do," Jalil said. "Big back, hard running, but I think we have a pretty big de-

The last trip to Eugene In 2013, Goff went into the

straight after a promising 5-0 have not defeated the Ducks start. since a 26-16 victory in Berke"We have to come out this ley in 2008. Oregon has outweek with our hair on fire scored C a l ifornia 2 7 3-105 and want this one like we ha- over that span. ven'twanted any other game, rolling and that's how they' ll get it," Royce keeps Cal defensive lineman MustaOregon sophomore runfa Jalil said. "Because I know ning back Royce Freeman has they want this one just as bad. amassed 1,109 yards rushing ... Actually I take that back. this season, becoming the T hey don't w ant t h i s o n e fourth RB in school history to as bad as we do. This game have back-to-back 1,000-yard

most was the rain. "I think they said it was the

worst they'd ever seen," he said. "It was the worst rain that I' ve ever seen. I'm excit-

ed to go back up there and have another chance in Aut-

zen and have a chance to do something special and hopefully get a win." By the way, the forecast c alls for r ai n t onight i n Eugene.

means a lot to us."

and two touchdowns in last

"He'sa great back,a step above what he did last year. Theyuse him really well for what they cio. Big back, hard running, but I think we have a pretty big defense that's a little bit harder hitter than he is." — Gal defensIve lineman Mustafa Jalil on

Oregon running back RoyceFreeman

league season finale. But amid the joy of guiding Stabaek to a top-three finish, there is a clear frustration illustrious European team. The former United States

Savaiinaea sprained an an-

ters. In the previous 10, they allowed 17 touchdowns and

kle and his status for today remains uncertain. Kenny 1,531 total yards. "I think their Young is questionable too belief in what they can do is after an upper-body injury continually getting better. But against Colorado. Deon Holit's week in and week out, be- lins is coming off a knee injucauseaswe see in thisleague, ry, and freshman Josh Woods that Grim Reaper of a whole pulled a hamstring against the bunch of points is right around Buffaloes.

and Egypt coach is careful not to belittle his two years with Stabaek, which draws

fans from an Oslo suburb with a population of about 100,000. But he believes in

his own abilities and his capability to achieve at a

higher level with a bigger budget. While a c complishing noteworthy results during five years with the U.S. and thenmanaging Egypt through the Arab Spring uprising, Bradley was a candidate for a variety of

Pac-12thisweekend GAME OF THEWEEK Utah at Washington:TheUtes (7-1 overall, 4-1 Pac-12) are in control of the South Division, a gameaheadof No. 22 UCLA and Southern California, while Washington has struggled after a strong start to the season. Still, playing the Huskies in Seattle has not beeneasyfor Utah. Washington is 7-0 all-time against the Utes at home,the last game a34-15 win in 2012. TheHuskies bounced back from consecutive losses by blowing out Arizona last week, so they seemto be back onthe right track. Utah rolled over Oregon State last week, but this should be amuch tougher test on the road.

INSIDE THENUMBERS Stanford has outscored Colorado 96-7 the past two meetings and has wonfour straight in the series.... UCLA kicker Ka'imi Fairbairn needs 13points to break former Bruin John Lee's Pac-12 record of 390 points, set from 1982-85.... Arizona State's Jordan Simone leads thePac-12and is tied for second nationally with 74 tackles per game. IMPACT PLAYER UCLArunningback Paul Perkins: TheBruins junior had his 10th career100-yard rushing gameafter running for 118 yards against Colorado last weekandhad four catches to reach 67 for his career. Perkins is fourth in the Pac-12with 109 yards rushing per game and has 11touchdowns rushing and receiving. — The Associated Press

coaching vacancies, particularly in the English Premier League. But a job offer never came. "I think that in many cas-

es decision-makers play it safe," Bradley said during a 40-minute telephone interview. "There's certainly

a network. There are still a lot of good managers. There are also a lot of bad managers. It's not to say that sometimes you don' t

shake your head at how certain guys keep popping up in jobs." S tab aek provided a calmer environment for Bradley to focus on coach-

ing for the last couple of years after the tumult of Egypt. Despite failing to qualify Egypt for the 2014 World Cup, the "American Pharaoh" gained admiration there by sticking with the job even as Egypt was being shaken by deadly fan disorder. The Egypt post came after he was fired by the

U.S. Soccer Federation and replaced by Jurgen Klinsmann. B r adley's t enure

included the 2009 Confederations Cup, where the Americans beat European

champion Spain. The U.S. team reached the second

round at th e f ollowing year's World Cup.

Today'simportantmatchups

"When I say what I am

NO. 16 FLORIDA ST. (7-1) AT NO.1 CLEMSON(8-0)

age of more than 435 yards passing a game, but after completing just 3 of 6 passes for 11 yards in the first quarter, he was replaced by Zach

ter Sunday's Norwegian

month to prepare for the NFL

lowed just 10 touchdowns and draft after tearing the menis821 yards total offense to op- cus in a knee. Junior Isaako ponents over the past 10 quar-

h is next m ove until a f -

over why he has not yet been entrusted with a more

Rankings areCollegeFootball Playoff

The series has not gone Cal's way of late. Oregon has Kline. The Golden Bears lost a six-game winning streak 55-16. over the Golden Bears, who But what Goff remembers

weekend's 27-21 loss to Southern California, which put him in the 10,000-yards-passing club. Goff has 10,018 yards passing and is the 92nd play-

Injuries this season have

In an interview with The

Associated Press, Bradley is wary about discussing

hit UCLA particularly hard. Myles Jack, the Bruins' star

nation's leader with an aver-

Like the Ducks, Cal (5-3, 2-3) needs one more victory to be bowl eligible, but the

Cal junior quarterback Jared Goff passed for 272 yards

Wounded defense

game against Oregon as the

History

So manyyards

er French club owned by American businessman Vincent Volpe.

fense that's a little bit harder hitter than he is."

next week.

Golden Bears have lost three

at Le Havre, a second-ti-

Oregon State's defense is showing signs of improve- linebacker, left school last ment. The Beavers have al-

c o ach

UCLA sits a game back

BEST MATCHUP California at Oregon:TheDucks pulled out a 61-55 victory in triple overtime against Arizona State, but struggled defensively. Oregon allowed theSun Devils to roll up 742total yards and the Ducks essentially outlasted them with somebig plays on offense. This week, the Duckswill be facing one of the nation's top quarterbacks in JaredGoff. The Galjunior has had his share of ups and downs this season, but is still second in the Pac-12with 317 yards passing per game.Neither team hasbeenparticularly good defensively, so don't be surprised if there aremore offensive fireworks like last week atArizona State.

weeks ago against Washington, passing for 272 yards

downs in a 61-55 triple-overtime win at Arizona State. Adams will look to continue his comeback tonight when

Improvingdefense

The A m erican

not only r e -established Stabaek in the top division during his two seasons in charge, but he has also qualified the tiny club

of Utah in the Pac-12 South; those two teams meet Nov. 21 at the Rose Bowl. The Bruins host Washington State next

week before wrapping up the season with the Utes and the annual rivalry game against yards in that one. That said, Southern California at MemoUCLA has won seven out of rial Coliseum. the last 10 in the overall series with the Beavers.

LONDON — At another career crossroads, Bob

Clemson coachDaboSwinney is already onthe defensive in advance of agamedoubters wonder if his team can win. Florida State has won three straight in aseries that typically has major national implications. Clemson blew ahuge opportunity last year when it couldn't beat Florida State whenthe Seminoles were without quarterback JameisWinston, who was suspendedfor shouting obscenities from a lunch-areatable top. "The last thing I'm worried about is anyanti-Clemson faction," Swinney said this week. Alot of people think Clemson is the realdeal this year, but eventhat didn't satisfy Swinney. "We've beena highly ranked team for a long time," he said. "It's not like wejust got in the rankings." Florida State would beUnscathed if not for a last-seconds loss to Georgia Tech. TheSeminoles occupy the same No.16CFPstarting spot Ohio State hadlast seasonwhen it went on to win the national title.

NO. 8 TCU(8-0) AT IIlo. 14 OKLAHOMAST. (8-0) The selection committee clearly is not yet impressed bythe Big 12 Conference's leaders andhadits suspicions reinforced Thursday when undefeated Baylor struggled to a31-24 win at Kansas State. TCU has theunstoppable combination of quarterback Trevone Boykin andreceiverJoshDoctson.TheCowboysdefenseisNo. 41, right behind Michigan State, allowing 357 yards pergame.

NO. 2 LSU(7-0) AT NO.4 ALABAMA(7-1) Remember what Sabansaid about not talking about the ranking until the end of theseason? Hemight change his tune in early December if Alabamawins out but Mississippi captures the Southeastern ConferenceWest. Mississippi controls its destiny in the division. Alabamamight be in the same position it was in 2011, having to lobby for a championship chancedespite not winning its own division of the SEC. — Los Angeles Times

all about and what I bring as a manager, I think if anybody looked back ... maybe somebody could connect a few of those dots and think this didn't just hap-

pen by accident," Bradley said. "You could look back at Chicago Fire (1998 MLS Cup winners). You can look back at the U.S.team. You can look back at how what

happened in a d i f ficult period what happened in Egypt, and I think now in a small club like Stabaek you can see it again." And he isn't giving up hope of getting an opportunity to shine in a top club opening one day. "You go about trying to show people and prove it every day," Bradley said. "You hear sometimes, 'Yes we respect what you have done but you don't have

(English) experience.'

Pre m iership

"In those moments there

is nothing you can do about that. For me, fine. I am just

going to keep working and maybe somebody will figure it out."


C6

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

Kaepernic kvows to supportGabbert Week 9 preview By Barry Wilner

The Panthers weren't ex-

San Francisco quarterback

The Associated Press

sula presented the San

Blaine Gabbert practices

Francisco 49ers' quarter-

Wednesday in

back change this week as a chance for benched Colin

Santa Clara, California. He

to I n dianapolis. Oakland and Pittsburgh renew their long-standing and often nasty rivalry. Intriguing matchups both.

Kaepernick to get a chance

takes overfor

he would a usual week and

Colin Kaepernick, who was benched after leading the 49ers to a 2-6

Bulletin wire reports SANTA CLARA, Calif. — While coach Jim Tom-

to "breathe," Kaepernick insists he is still preparing as will support starter Blaine Gabbert on Sunday against

record to start the season.

Atlanta.

K aepernick was

t old

Monday he would not start against the Falcons, but said

JeffChiu/The Associated Press

he has not had a harder time going to work

actly lights-out Monday night

Peyton Manning

r e turns in their

r a i n-soaked 29-26

victory over Indianapolis that requiredovertime afterCaro-

lina blew a big lead. "We have stressed to young guys that if you play this game Yet the spotlight this week- long enough, regardless of end shines on North Caroli- how good you are or how well na, where unbeaten Carolina you prepare, bad things are hosts 6-1 Green Bay, with the going to happen if you play," winner getting the inside track said Greg Olsen, the Panthers' for the top rung in the NFC. outstanding tight end. "Things The Packers are coming are not going to always go off, by far, its worst perfor- your way. But the guys who mance of the season, a 29-10 have the ability to continue drubbing at Denver in which to fight, or not let it take them even Aaron Rodgers looked over mentally, are the ones pedestrian. who make it here."

"No,to me that's selfish, to

put that on myself and take

DENVER (7-0) AT INDIANAPOLIS(3-5)

away from my teammates

and away from Blaine," Kaepernick said. "I' ll sup-

Next up

port my teammates, I' ll sup- Atlanta at

port Blaine, in everything San Francisco they do because they supWhen:1:05 p.m. port me." After two straight games Sunday without a touchdown and TV:Fox three in five not finding the Series record:49ers lead 46-30-1 end zone for San Francisco Last meeting:49ers won 34-24, (2-6), Kaepernick refuses to Dec. 23, 2013 get into the notion he might Last week:Falconslostto Buccabe a "scapegoat" for a sink- neers 23-20; 49ers lost to Rams ing team only three years 27-6

NOTEBOOK No fine for hit on Seahawks' Lockette Dallas safety Jeff Heath will not be fined by the NFL for his hit on Seahawks wide

he's going to be on Sunday, it was good to see him move around like he did.

The No. 2 overall draft pick out of Oregon will wear a brace to protect his knee.

after he led the Niners to a

receiver Ricardo Lockette, Souces:Cowboysdid who needed surgery to stabi- not see Hardy photos lize ligaments in his neck. Photos that surfaced FriLockette was injured last day depicting injuries sufSunday in Seattle's 13-12 win fered by Greg Hardy's former over Dallas during a punt girlfriend were not made return when he was hit by available to the Dallas CowSTATS Heath and knocked out. He boys before he signed with Falcons:Offense, overall (4), rush laid motionless for several the club, sources said. (8), pass (5); defense, overall (11), minutes and was eventually Deadspin published a derush (3), pass (24). strapped to a backboard and tailed account of the case Friday along with a gallery of 48 49ers:Offense, overall (32), rush taken off the field. Heath was penalized for an photos that show the various (18), pass (31); defense, overall illegal blindside block on the bruises and abrasions Nicole (28), rush (23), pass (27t). play, but the league ruled Fri- Holder suffered to her back, day that it didn't warrant an legs, foot, arms, neck and that same stretch. additional fine. chin that evening in CharThat is why there is and has Seattle defensive end Mi- lotte, North Carolina, a yearbeen nopanic along theway to c hael B ennett w a s fi n e d and-a-half ago.

Super Bowl. "I don't pass judgment on that," he said after Friday's

practice. "I do everything I can to try to help this team win, try to supportmy teammates and try to go out and help us get a W on Sunday." When asked about Tom-

sula's comment about letting him breathe, Kaepernick said, "I'm not out of breath so I don't understand Seattle's 4-4 start. "We' ve got a long ways to go. that reference." "I don't believe in pres- We have so much talent. We sure. The pressure's not be- have so much ability. But we ing prepared for what you still have a long ways to go," Sewant to do," he said. "To attle wide receiver Doug Baldme, I played full seasons, win said. "Once we put it all toI' ve played full seasons and gether, really put it all together, been successful. It's some- it's going to be really hard for thing that mentally, I' ve teams to stop us." been through before. I'm not

The satisfaction for Seattle

$20,000 for his late hit on Dal-

The NFL ha d a c cess to

las quarterback Matt Cassel these and other photos bein that same game. fore issuing its suspension

Mariota to start Sunday against New Orleans

of the defensive end in April.

But Cowboys officials, sourcview the photos, several of which were under a protec-

return to the starting lineup

tive order. W hile the club w a s

ans Saints. Mariota, who is officially

incapable of going through comes from rebounding from things." those opening two defeats and listed as probable, has missed knowing that its four losses the Titans' last two games Seahawkson came against teams with a with a sprained medial collatupswingduring bye combined 24-4 record. eral ligament in his left knee. "We have improvement that Mariota's injury occurred on Since 2012, no team in the NFC has a better record we can see that we' re really a hit from Miami's Olivier over the final eight games of going to build on, and we' re Vernon, who was penalized the season than the Seattle hopeful and very healthy going for roughing the passer. "He's going to play," Titans Seahawks. in with a few exceptions," CarThe Seahawks are 20-4 roll said. "As we come out of interim coach Mike Mularkey combined in games Nos. this break, we should come out said. "I think each day he has 9-16 since 2012, tied with strong and be ready to go. It's a gotten better. To be on the Denver for the best mark of big month of November, obvi- turf (for Friday's practice) any team in the NFL during ously, coming up." here, which is the same turf

WASHINGTON(3-4)AT NEW ENGLAND (7-0) No place is tougher for a visitor than Foxborough, Massachusetts, and the Redskins are1-10 on the roadunder coachJay Gruden. They head into this gamebanged-up on defense. TomBrady leadsthe NFLin passer rating at115.8; he hasthrown 20 TDsand just one interception.

PHILADELPHIA (3-4) AT DALLAS(2-5) A rare intriguing night affair betweenteams with losing records. Why? Well, the Cowboysbelieve if they could only find away to win agameor two before quarterback TonyRorno returns, they could steal the NFCEast. Of course, that assumesDallas is spotless once Rorno is back inthe lineup — a hugeif. The Eagles needan outbreak offensively from DeMarco Murray, andwhere better to do it than at his former stomping grounds?

OAKLAND (4-3) AT PITTSBURGH(4-4) Once the nastiest of NFLrivalries, Raiders-Steelers gets some of that spice back this week. Forthe first time since 2002, the Raiders are relevant, above.500 and with a big-play offense sparked by rookie receiver Amari Cooper. For Pittsburgh, look for BenRoethlisberger, in his second game at quarterback following a kneeinjury, to do more passing with star running back Le'VeonBell gone for the season.

es said, were not allowed to

Tennessee Titans quarterb ack Marcus M ariota w i l l Sunday to face the New Orle-

Denver clearly is on apath toward another postseason berth, using a powerful defense morethan Manning's arm. If the Broncos win, Manning will break Brett Favre's record for regular-season wins by a quarterback (186). Manning also needs284 yards passing to pass Favre (71,838) and become the NFL'scareer leader. Manning dislikes remembrance tours. Folks in Indianapolis are focused onthat losing record, even though the Colts are tied for the AFC South leadwith Houston. Offensive coordinator Pep Hamilton was fired this weekandAndrew Luck hasthrown a leaguehigh12 interceptions despite missing two games.

not

granted access to the visu-

ST. LOUIS(4-3) AT MINNESOTA(5-2) The winner herewill be in good position for a wild card halfway through the schedule. ForSt. Louis to prosper, it will need to keepfiring up that league-leading pass rush, but also slow downTodd Gurley, who is the first rookie in NFLhistory with four straight games of125-plus yards rushing.

al evidence, sources stress

the Cowboys were aware of the photos and had an understanding of what they showed. Owner Jerry Jones, executive vice president Stephen Jones and head coach

Jason Garretthave said repeatedly that the organization did its due diligence before signing Hardy. The club's stance: the Cowboys understand the serious nature of

domestic violence but also believe in second chances.

TENNESSEE (1-6) AT NEWORLEANS(4-4) Titans interim coach MikeMularkeysteps into a difficult situation in the Big Easy.TheSaints haveturned it around as DrewBrees tears apart defenses with somenewplaymakers (Brandin Cooks, Willie Snead). Meanwhile, the Titans are indisarray with six straight defeats, and No. 2overall draft pick Marcus Mariota returns after missing the past two games.

MIAMI (3-4) ATBUFFALO(3-4) The other team that haschangedcoaches sofar, the Dolphins found instant success with two wins after DanCampbell replaced JoePhilbin. Then they went up to NewEngland and got smoked. Buffalo comes off a bye after a damaging loss in London to theJaguars, and should have starting quarterback TyrodTaylor back.

ATLANTA (6-2) AT SANFRANCISCO(2-6)

PatienCenOta Virtue fOrmanyOt leagLle'SOWnerS By Barry Wilner

only way is to be on the same page. You will have disagree-

The Associated Press

With 21 teams not own-

ments, but the guys have to w ork i n c o ncert w ith o n e

ing winning records through eight weeks, it is no wonder

another."

coaches from coastto coast

Obviously, that doesn't hap-

are on the firing line. It is also ludicrous in many cases.

pen much with perennial losers, but it also can fall apart with winning organizations. Look at the San Francisco 49ers under Jim Harbaugh,

P atience is not a

v i r tue

for far too many NFL owners when it comes to coaches. They don't seem to learn

and what happened to John Fox in Denver. There is no question that Philbin and Whisenhunt will

from the wise approach of the New York Giants, Cincinnati,

New England and, most glaringly, Pittsburgh, which has had three head coaches since

Paul Sancya/The Associated Press

1969.

Detroit Lions owner Martha Firestone Ford reads a prepared

More often, what we get is wholesale change at the end of the regular season. Or, as in 2015, dismissals before the schedule is halfway

statement Thursday after the Lions fired president Tom Lewand and general manager Martin Mayhew. While the Lions kept head coach Jim Caldwell, the franchise got rid of three assistant coaches — showinga trend in the NFL to make wholesale changes when things start to go bad.

concluded: Joe Philbin in Miami and Ken Whisenhunt in Tennessee.

If you are not a really strong Perhaps both o f t h ose leader or owner, it is tough to coaches deserved their walk- hold up against that." ing papers: Philbin had lost Some owners, spurred on control of the locker room and by social media, no less, are his players were not going at in such a present-day mindset full speed; Whisenhunt went that they forget (or complete3-20. ly ignore) what their coaches But also consider that the achieved not too long ago. Dolphinsseverel y revamped Prime cases are Indianapotheir roster in recent years, lis, where Chuck Pagano has and Whisenhunt generally never fallen short of making had been working with rookie the postseason and has taken quarterbacks in Music City. his team one step further in "It's great to have high ex- the playoffs each year; Houspectations," says Tony Dungy, ton, where Bill O' Brien turned who helped build a champion- a 2-14 Texans franchise into a ship-caliber team in Tampa 9-7 club last year; and Kansas thatJon Gruden coached to a City, where Andy Reid's past title, then won his own after two Chiefs teams have been moving to Indianapolis. ravaged byinjuries after he "But you also have to some- made that club a winner. times be able to say as an orGo back a little further to ganization, 'We are doing OK. Lovie Smith, who was 84-66 People may want a little more in Chicago and got canned. now, but we' re on our way.' How has that w orked out "The negative is always since for Da Bears' ? "I agree 100 percent the more vocal than the positive.

not be the only coaches handed pink slips for the 2015 season, with some possibly comingbeforetheregular-season

The 49ers have no touchdowns in their past two games andthree in five. After a 5-0 start, the Falconshavestruggled. Atlanta has six turnovers and 17 penalties over thepast two games,and could bethin in the secondary.

JACKSONVILLE(2-5)AT NEW YORK JETS (4-3) Jacksonville could do somemoredamageto AFCEast wild-card contenders with a win at the Meadowlands. Both RyanFitzpatrick (left thumb) andGenoSmith (shoulder) were dinged in the Jets' worst showing of the season, a34-20 loss at Oakland.

NEW YORKGIANTS (4-4)AT TAMPA BAY (3-4) The prospect of the return of Jason Pierre-Paul, the Giants' stud defensive end who blewoff his finger in a Fourth of July fireworks accident, makes this gamestand out a bit. The Buccaneers aremorethan capable of making the Giants payfor poor defending asJameis Winston improves on his readsand decisions.

CHICAGO (2-5) AT SANDIEGO(2-6), MONDAY NIGHT Not exactly a prime-time must-see, especially with Bears star running back Matt Forte (knee)andChargers standout wideout KeenanAllen (spleen) injured. Philip Rivers hasset a franchise record with five straight 300-yard games.

schedule concludes on Jan.

3. Pagano and Jim Caldwell in Detroit already have made major staff changes, and the Lions fired their president and

general manager. past should count, honestly, Wolf and Dungy point to for a lot," says Hall of Famer the stable franchises who not Ron Wolf, who built a champi- only have that blueprint, but onship team in Green Bay and stick to it. When Bill Cowher stuck with such coaches as retiredafterthe 2006 season, John Madden, Tom Flores and the Steelers knew exactly Mike Holmgren in his various what they wanted and found NFL stops. "But what's in the the guy in Mike Tomlin. They mind of an owner, I can't help have made two trips to the Suyou there." per Bowl and won one in his Wolf notes that a sports

tenure, and there is no hot seat

I '' i

organization needs to be run in the Steel City. like a finely tuned machine, They also cite the Giants, with every part coordinated where Tom Coughlin often with the others. has been the target of the "There has to be continuity, New York tabloids. Co-owner with everyone on the same John Mara probably chuckled page, from the owner to the more than once over those GM and the head football "Can Coughlin" headlines, escoach," he says. "Hopefully pecially after he won two Suthat's what makes it w ork

— until you get to the point

per Bowls with the team. "It's the old-school model

where somebody wants to

with the Steelers and Giants

have more power and then things fall apart.

and they are able to weath-

"The object of this whole

er the storms," Dungy says. "They say, 'We have a formula

business is to stay employed we know works and we will and make it work, and the

stick to it.'"

BEND:541.382.2321

NAPAI

62057 NE 27THSTREET

REIIMOIIID:541.823.6272 2250 s HWY 97

HIGH DESERTAUTOSUPPLY Mltpftitfi. 541 475 7214 ww w . h i g h d e s e r t n a p a . c o r n 646 sw 6TH sTREET


C7 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015 S&P 500 2,099 . 20 -.73

17,910.33 4 DOW , +46.90 M .

O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.corn/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

NASDAO +19.38 4 , 5,147.12

Tod8p 2 psp.

Cheaper oil and less demand for machinery and other industrial equipmenthave weighed on U.S. wholesalers in recent months. Sales bywholesale businesse. notched monthly declines in July and August. But the figure may have returned to growth in September. The Commerce Department reports its latest monthly tally of wholesale business sales on Tuesday.

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Stock indexes were mixed Friday following a strong October jobs report. Employers added 271,000 jobs in a variety of industries. That was the most in 10 months and far more than analysts expected. The unemployment rate also dipped to 5 percent. The large jobs gain could encourage the Federal Reserve to start raising interest rates in December, marking an end to almost seven years of near-zero rates. Investors positioned themselves for higher interest rates: Bank stocks rose on the prospect that they' ll be able to charge more for lending, while dividend-paying stocks like utilities sank. Bond prices also fell, pushing yields higher.

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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 1791 2.04 17768.60 1791 0.33 +46.90 DOW Trans. 8242.10 8144.34 8241.43 +61.28 DOW Util. 574.35 551.81 556.46 -22.23 NYSE Comp. 10531.11 10441.84 10513.36 -35.00 NASDAQ 5147.12 5092.87 5147.12 +1 9.38 S&P 500 2101.91 2083.74 2099.20 -0.73 -1.61 S&P 400 1464.38 1452.31 1463.32 Wilshire 5000 21879.65 21694.27 21865.12 -1.34 Russell 2000 1199.95 1181.77 1199.74 +9.06

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Alaska Air Group A LK 53.11 ~ 2015 Aviate Corp A VA 29.77 ~ Source: Fact.' Bank of America B AC 14. 60 ~ Barrett Business BBS I 2 0 .05 — o Boeing Co BA 115.14 ~ Spotlight on Macy's CascadeBancorp CA CB 4 .14— o Macy's reports its latest quarterly Columbia Bnkg C O L B 24.60 — o results on Wednesday. ColumbiaSportswear COLM 38.55 ~ Wall Street predicts that the CostcoWholesale CO ST 117.03— o department store chain's Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 6.92 o — third-quarter earnings declined FLIR Systems F LIR 25.12 ~ from a year earlier. Macy's has HP Inc H PQ 11.03 ~ been looking for new ways to Intel Corp INTO 24.87 ~ boost its sales as middle-class K EY 12.04 ~ Keycorp customers increasingly look for Kroger Co K R 2 7 .32 ~ deals and shop online more. In Lattice Semi LSCC 3.25 ~ response,the company isopenin LA Pacific L PX 1292 ~ lower-priced Macy's Backstage MDU Resources MDU 1 6 .15 a — stores starting this year. Mentor Graphics MEN T 20.58 — o Microsoft Corp MSFT 3 9.72 ~ Nike Inc 8 NKE 90.69 — o NordstromInc J WN 63.50 ~ Nwst Nat Gas NWN 42.00 ~ Paccar Inc P CAR 49.46 ~ Planar Syslms PLNR 3.50 ~ Plum Creek P CL 36.95 ~ Prec Castparts POP 186.17 ~ SchnitzerSteel S CHN 1 2.64 ~ Sherwin Wms SHW 218.27 ~ StancorpFncl SFG 61.56 ~ StarbucksCp SBUX 37.74 ~ Umpqua Holdings UMP Q 14.70 ~ US Bancorp U SB 38.81 ~ WashingtonFedl WAF D 19.72 — o WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 7.75 ~ 5 Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 6.73 ~

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Close $22 89%5 96 or 35 2y The weight loss program operator reported better-than-expected third-quarter profit and revenue and boosted its revenue outlook. $30 20 10

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+30.7 +4 6 .0 65 8 1 3 - 6.7 + 0 . 1 2 2 8 1 8 +0.3 +1.0 1 48856 13 +90.0 + 1 23.0 1 1 0 1 8 +13.8 +2 2 .0 2 260 19 +10.8

+14 . 1

0. 8 0 1 . 32 0 .20 0. 8 8 3 .64

DWA

Close:$23.18 %2.97 or 14.7% The animation studio reported third-quarter results and revenue that beat Wall Street's expectations. $25

JOLTS job openings in millions 6.0

::;";;".Kraft " Heinz shares squeezed Kraft Heinz shares slid this week after the food maker reported a quarterly loss and 7 announcedplansto slashjobs and close plants. The company said on Wednesday that it plans to close seven plants in the U.S. and Canada as part of a downsizing that will eliminate 2,600 jobs, or roughly 14 percent of its North American factory workforce. The closures, which will take place over the next two years, are part of a plan to

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save $1.5 billion in operating costs by the end of 2017. Shares took a steep slide Friday, after the company said that it lost ALKI $123 million in the third quarter. TONA'it0 KETCHUP Revenue fell 2 percent from a year ago for the combined company, after accounting for currency fluctuations, the company's merger and other factors. The company earned 44 cents per share after ignoring several special items, but that fell short of analysts' expectations.

®

5.7

Kraft HeinZ (KHC) F r i day's close: $72.01 5.5

5.1

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est

5.4 5.3

1-wk price chage: -7.6%

54

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AP

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PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 MarhetSummary American Funds AMCAPA m 28.11 +.99 +3.7 +4.1 +17.4+13.8 D 8 8 Most Active AmBalA m 25.97 -.93 +2.9 +4.3 +11.2+10.4 A A A CaplncBuA m 57.43 -.54 -1.1 -1.1 +7.0 +6.7 C A A NAME VOL (ggs) LAST CHG CpWldGrlA m 45.82 -.20 +1.0 -0.1 +10.5 +7.4 D C C BkofAm 1488556 17.95 +.64 EurPacGrA m 48.35 -.22 +2.6 +1.2 + 7.9 +4.2 C 8 C Geo Elec 1205136 29.92 +.28 FnlnvA m 53.86 +.93 +5.6 +6.9 +15.4+12.3 A C C Vale SA 625620 4.14 -.25 MFS Total Return Bond (MRBFX) GrthAmA m 45.81 +.99 +7.3 +8.2 +17.0+13.0 C C C Alibaba 382963 83.61 -1.77 IncAmerA m 21.93 -.10 -0.2 0 . 0 + 8.9 +8.7D C 8 FrptMcM 350473 10.75 -.73 LIMITED MODERATE EXTENSiVE InvCoAmA m 36.97 -.99 +1.6 +1.4 +14.9+11.8 D C D Facebook 342530 107.10 -1.67 NewPerspA m39.92 -.15 +7.6 +8.5 +13.5 +9.8 A A A Microsoft 321982 54.92 +.54 Apple Inc 321029 121.06 +.14 WAMutlnvA m41.99 -.93 +1.7 +2.9 +14.3+13.0 8 8 A Pfizer 307745 33.93 -.22 Dodge &Cox Income 13.4 8 - . 9 4 -0.1 +0 .3 + 2.1 +3.6 D A A Petrobras 305776 5.06 -.11 IntlStk 3 9.76 - . 2 3 -5.6 - 7.3 +8.2 +3.9 E A 8 Stock 177.9 5 +1.28+0.2 + 2 .2 +16.5+13.4 8 A A Gainers Fidelity Contra 105. 6 6 +.95+8.9 +10.3 +17.4+13.5 8 6 8 NAME L AST C H G %C H G UJ ContraK 105 . 66 +.95+9.0 +10.4 +17.5+13.7 8 B 8 LowPriStk d 49.75 +.95 +2.8 + 5 .0 +15.1+12.8 A B 8 ChannAdv 1 3.18 + 4 . 0 9 +4 5 .0 Fidelity Spartan 5 0 0 ldxAdvtg 74.13 -.91 +3.7 + 5.5 +16.1 +13.7 8 B A ZS Pharm 89.04 $ -25.73 + 4 0 .6 Stamps.cm 104.93 » 28.95 + 3 8 .1 FrankTemp-Frank li n IncomeA m 2.20 -.92-3.9 -5.4 +5.1 +6.2 E 6 A TrueCar 8 .43 +2 . 3 0 +3 7 . 5 FrankTemp-TempletonGIBondAdv 11 .87 +.95 -1.8 - 3.5 +1.6 +3.1 8 A A ZionB wt18 3 .15 +.84 +36 . 3 Oakmark 23.44 -.16 +0.4 + 1 .7 +10.6 +6.8 8 A A WtWatch 2 2.89 + 5 . 9 6 +3 5 .2 RisDivA m 20 . 10 +.93+1.2 +3.7 +12.9+11.1 C D D MagHR pfD 4 .70 +1 . 2 1 +3 4 . 7 MorningstarOwnershipZone™ Oppenheimer RisDivB m 17 . 74 +.92+0.5 +2.9 +11.9+10.2 C E E Constellm 8 .19 +1 . 6 4 +2 5 . 0 Vertical axis represents averagecredit BldrFstSrc 1 5.25 + 2 . 9 4 +2 3 .9 quality; horizontal axis represents RisDivC m 17 . 61 +.91+0.5 +2.9 +12.0+10.3 C E E LexiPhm rs 1 3.04 + 2 . 5 0 +2 3 .7 interest-rate sensitivity SmMidValA m47.22 +.10 -2.8 + 0.6 +14.7 +9.5 C C E -0.2 +13.8 +8.6 O D E SmMidValB m39.60 +.98 -3.4 Losers GrowStk 58.5 5 - . 10+12.7 +13.6 +20.2+15.4 A A A CATEGORY:INTERMEDIATE-TERM BOND T Rowe Price NAME L AST C H G %CHG HealthSci 75.9 5 - . 34+10.4 +15.0 +31.3+27.8 A A A Newlncome 9. 4 0 - .94+0.2 + 0 .9 + 1.3 +2.7 C C C -9.24 -57.2 BIORNINGSTAR IconixBr 6.90 LSB Inds 9.08 -7.14 -44.0 RATING~ ***tv' Vanguard 500Adml 194.93 -.95 +3.7 +5.5 +16.1+13.7 8 8 A -17.40 -43.4 MensW 22.70 500lnv 194.91 -.95 +3.6 +5.4 +16.0+13.6 8 8 A ASSETS $1,583 million Pixelwrks 2.50 -.99 -28.4 CapOp 54.73 +.29 +3.8 +6.5 +22.0+15.3 D A A EXPRATIO .77% -2.08 -26.9 MarinusPh 5.65 DivGr 23.45 -.96 +4.1 +5.9 +15.2+13.7 A C A BIIII.INIT.INVES T. $1,000 Eqlnc 31.31 -.10 +2.4 +3.6 +13.9+13.9 A 8 A PERCEN T L O A D 4.25 Foreign Markets IntlStkldxAdm 25.23 -.17 -1.1 -3.1 +4.7 NA D D HISTORICALRETURNS StratgcEq 33.12 -.92 +2.9 +5.3 +19.3+15.8 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG TgtRe2020 28.72 -.99 +0.9 +1.8 +8.3 +7.5 A A A Return/Rank Paris 4,984.15 +4.11 + . 08 TgtRe2025 16.70 -.95 +1.0 +1.9 +9.1 +8.0 A 8 8 London 6,353.83 -11.07 -.17 YEAR-TO-DATE -0.2 TotBdAdml 10.67 -.95 +0.2 +1.2 +1.3 +2.7 8 C D Frankfurt 10,988.03 +1 00.29 +.92 1-YEAR +0.4/D Totlntl 15.98 -.11 -1.2 -3.2 +4.6 +1.8 D D E Hong Kong22,867.33 -1 83.71 -.80 3-YEAR +1.6/8 TotStlAdm 52.47 +.91 +3.1 +5.0 +16.0+13.6 8 8 A Mexico 45,243.86 +48.20 + . 11 5-YEAR +3.3/8 Milan 22,529.94 +306.24 +1.38 TotStldx 52.45 +.91 +3.0 +4.9 +15.9+13.4 8 8 8 Tokyo 19,265.60 +1 49.1 9 +.78 3and5-rearretctes areennualized. USGro 32.54 -.98 +8.8 +11.0 +19.3+15.1 A A A Stockholm 1,526.49 + 3.24 + . 2 1 Rank:Fund'sletter grade comparedwith others in Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption Sydney 5,269.72 + 21.84 + A 2 the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing fee»edeither a sales or Zurich 8,970.27 -19.89 -.22 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent. redemption fee.Source: Momingstae 5.0

FAMILY

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TripAdvisor

TRIP Close:$77.42 T-5.69 or -6.8% The travel website operator reported worse-than-expected third-quarter profit and revenue along with higher costs and expenses. $90

12 4 21

dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m - Current annualrate, which wre decreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p - Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months.

A new Labor Department survey i job openings should provide insig into the health of the U.S. labor market. The September Job Openings and Labor Turnover survey, or JOLTS, is due out on Thursday. The survey provides figures for overall hiring, as well as the number of quits and layoffs.

BHP

80 70

20

A S 0 N +28 . 0 + 2 6. 1 2 9 7 2 2 0 .72a 52-week range +2 5.4 +40.5 395 28 0.68f $17.$2~ $2 $.7$ +11. 1 +1 9 .3 1 730 29 1 . 6 0 Vol.:3.2m (4.1x avg.) P E: .. -47.5 - 50.8 158 7 8 Mkt. Cap:$1.81 b Yield:.. -14.6 -18.4 1084 16 0 . 44 Kraft Heinz KHC -23.1 -10.4 21 544 -6.8 +3 . 6 23392 14 0 . 96 Close:$72.01 T-3.41 or -4.5% The maker of Oscar Mayer meats, -3.7 -0.4 23685 13 0.30 Jell-0 pudding and Velveeta +17. 0 +3 0 .2 9 563 19 0 .42f Cheese reported worse-than-expected third-quarter earnings. -27.7 -30.3 2526 dd $90 +5 7 +29 7 180 6 d d -21.4 - 24.0 996 d d 0 . 73 80 +27. 3 +2 7 .7 46 0 2 1 0. 2 2 70 +18. 2 +1 6 .2 32198 37 1.44f 60 J A S 0 +37.1 +4 0 .5 2 403 33 1 . 1 2 52-week range -17.1 + 1. 0 1910 18 1.48a $$1.42~ $$1.20 -7.9 +5 . 7 14 9 2 4 1 . 87f Vol.:8.8m (2.3x avg.) P E: 36.9 -20.7 - 16.0 2517 1 2 0 . 96 Mkt. Cap:$87.34b Yie l d: 3.1% - 25.1 +68.9 3 2 8 2 1 News NWSA -5.8 +3 . 3 1 1 19 30 1 . 7 6 Close: $14.88%-0.47 or -3.1% - 4.2 + 3 . 5 6 4 3 2 0 0 . 1 2 The publi shing company and owner -24.2 -26.2 300 d d 0 . 75 of The Wall Street Journal reported +1.6 +17 . 5 67 3 2 6 2. 6 8 worse-than-expected fiscal +62. 6 +6 7 .2 1 3 3 2 0 1 . 40f first-quarter profit and revenue. $16 +51.1 +64 .2 6 3 58 3 4 0 . 80f +4.9 +2.1 19 7 3 1 8 0 . 64f 14 -2.7 + 0 .3 11912 14 1 . 02 + 16. 5 +1 9 .0 65 2 1 5 0. 5 2 A S 0 N +1. 9 +5 .2 16399 13 1.50 52-week range -15.3 -6.1 4228 29 1 . 24 $12.1$~ $17.$$ DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paid in last 1 2months. f - Current Vol.:4.5m (1.1x avg.) P E: .. . annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i - Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I - Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent Mkt. Cap:$5.67 b Yie l d : 0. 7%

job market monitor

BHP Billiton

Close:$30.75 T-1.69 or -5.2% The mining operator shares slid as more details emerged about a deadly disaster at a mine co-owned by the company in Brazil. $40

Vol.:21.7m (5.0x avg.) P E : 28.6 Vol.:8.2m (2.5x avg.) P E: 9 . 6 Mkt. Cap:$1.31 b Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$81.81 b Yie l d: 8.1%

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SILVER $14.7 0-.29

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M

Close: 17,91 0.33 Change: 46.90 (0.3%) 17,520" "' 10 DAYS "

StocksRecap

Wholesale sales

0.2

GOLD $1,087.60 -16.80

................ Close: 2,099.20 Change: -0.73 (flat)

Sales slump

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Sstp 500

Saturday, November 7, 2015

2%

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Vol.:8.4m (3.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$10.16 b

PE:5 3 . 6 Yield: ...

Nvidia NVDA Close:$31.55 L3.84 or 13.9% The maker of graphic chips and processors for phones and tablets reported better-than-expected third-quarter profit and revenue. $35 30

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52-week range $1$$4 ~

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Vol.:29.3m (3.2x avg.) P E : 33.6 Mkt. Cap:$17.01 b Yie l d: 1.2%

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ZSPH Close:$89.04 %25.73 or 40.6% AstraZeneca is buying the biotechnology company in a deal worth $2.7 billion, giving it a potential hyperkalemia treatment. $100 80 60 A

S 0 N 52-week range $34.35 $89.40 Vol.:15.5m (16.1x avg.) PE: . .. Mkt. Cap:$2.24 b Yield: ...

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

gy"g

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES TEST PVS CHG WK MO GTR AGO 3-month T-bill . 0 8 .0 4 + 0 .04 L L 6-month T-bill .30 .27 +0.03 L L 52-wk T-bill .43 .39 +0 . 0 4 L L

L L L

The yield on the 10-year Treasury jumped to 2.33 percent. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

2-year T-note . 8 7 .81 + 0 .06 L 5-year T-note 1.73 1.65 +0.08 L 10-year T-note 2.33 2.23 +0.10 L 30-year T-bond 3.09 3.00 +0.09 L

L .55 L 1.68 L 2.39 L 3.10

Commodities

FUELS

The price of crude oil dropped for the third straight day, capping a 5 percent loss for the week. Prices of both gold and silver skidded lower, and copper also fell.

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

BONDS

L L L L

NET 1YR TEST PVS CHG WK MOOTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.89 2.82 +0.07 L L L Bond Buyer Mani Idx 4.38 4.35 +0.03 L L Barclays USAggregate 2.47 2.46 +0.01 L L L PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 7.41 7.33 +0.08 T T L RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.05 4.05 ... L L T TEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.66 1.58 +0.08 L L T 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.49 3.48 +0.01 L L L 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

Foreign Exchange A stronger-than -expected U.S. jobs report sent the dollar surging against other currencies, including the euro and yen. U.S. employers added the most jobs in 10

'h)Q

METALS

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

.01 .06 .09

2.92 4.39 2.28 5 85 . 3.90 1.96 3.07

CLOSE PVS. 44.29 45.20 1.52 1.52 1.49 1.49 2.37 2.36 1.37 1.36

%CH. %YTD -2.01 -16.9 -6.4 +0.20 +0.16 -19.3 +0.30 -1 7.9 +0.62 -4.6

CLOSE PVS. 1087.60 1104.40 14.70 14.99 940.00 953.10 2.24 2.25 612.75 606.10

%CH. %YTD -1.52 -8.1 -1.95 -5.6 -1.37 -22.2 -0.53 -21.0 +1.10 -23.3

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.35 1.34 +0.39 -1 8.6 Coffee (Ib) 1.18 1.21 -2.61 -29.3 -6.1 Corn (hu) 3.73 3.75 -0.40 Cotton (Ih) 0.62 0.62 - 0.47 + 2 . 3 Lumber (1,000 hd ft) 247.90 250.00 -0.84 -25.1 -1.2 Orange Juice (Ih) 1.38 1.35 +2.67 Soybeans (hu) 8.71 8.68 +0.40 -1 4.5 Wheat(hu) 5.23 5.26 -0.57 -11.3 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5039 -.0173 -1.15% 1.5837 Canadian Dollar 1.3 298 +.0134 +1.01% 1.1425 USD per Euro 1.0745 -.0142 -1.32% 1.2386 JapaneseYen 123.21 +1.54 +1.25% 114.93 Mexican Peso 16. 8 284 +.2194 +1.30% 13.6423 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9284 +.0435 +1.11% 3.8067 Norwegian Krone 8 . 6553 +.1042 +1.20% 6.8689 South African Rand 14.1560 +.2466 +1.74% 11.2461 Swedish Krona 8.7 2 17 + .0974 +1.12% 7.4310 Swiss Franc 1.0062 +.0111 +1.10% . 9721 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1 4205 + 0205 +1.44% 1.1862 Chinese Yuan 6 3523 +.0052 +.08% 6,1120 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7508 -.0002 -.00% 7.7529 Indian Rupee 66.060 +.144 +.22% 61.515 Singapore Dollar 1.4210 +.0141 +.99% 1.2952 South KoreanWon 1153.64 +14.19 +1.23% 1091.00 Taiwan Dollar 32.71 + . 2 7 + .83% 3 0 . 60


© www.bendbulletin.corn/business

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015

BRIEFING Businessesopen in downtown Seven newbusinesses opened or leased new space in downtown Bend during the summer andearly fall months, boosting the occupancy rate downtown to 97 percent, a 1 percent rise from the second quarter. Rob Porsche, executive director of the Downtown Bend Business Association, said five businesses also closed during that penod. The occupancy rate is based on thenumber of leased street-level retail and restaurant spaces, according to a news release from the business association. The new businessesand their addresses areas follows: • White Water Taphouse, a taproom located at 1043 NWBondSt. that opened in late June. • EverBank Home Lending, a branch of a national banking chain that opened in September at 5 NWMinnesota Ave., Suite 106. • Bendy Dog, a boutique shop for dog owners that opened in July at 112 NWMinnesota Ave. • Lark Mountain Modern, a boutique furniture store that opened at831 NW Wall St.

• Clementine Urban Mercantile, a merger between existing downtown stores Clutch Handbag Boutique and the women's clothing shop Activeairl. The store officially opened Friday. • Crow's FeetCommons Bikes, a bike shop at 869 NWWall St. opened in July by those who operate the taproom and outdoors store at 875 NWBrooks St.

• Duda's Billiard Hall, at1020 NW Wall St.,

was leased over the summer and is slated to open in early 2016. — Bulletin staff report

I

arne rices

I ~+

Own In Bn,

u in e m on Bulletin staff report The median price for a single-family home in Bend fell about 2 percent last month over September, according to

a report released Friday, while the median price in Redmond increasedby about the same

percentage. Bend's median price dipped

MONDAY • Bend Planning Commission: The Marijuana Technical Advisory Committee will presenta newsection to theBend Development Code about definitions and regulations for marijuana businesses; 5:30 p.m .;City Hall — Council Chambers, 710 NWWall St., Bend, 541-388-5580. • Introduction toFinding Funders: A workshop to help nonprofits find funding; free; 10:30 a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW DeschutesAve., Redmond, 541-617-7089. TUESDAY • SCOREBusiness Counseling:Business counselors conduct free one-on-one conferences forlocal entrepreneurs. 5:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend, 541-706-1639. WEDNESDAY • I-CAR Courseon Blueprinting Process and DamageRecovery: An HOAR course; $164; 6 p.m.; Precision Body & Paint, 61530 S.U.S. Highway 97,Bend, 541-382-3995, www. precisionfirst.coml. THURSDAY • Perfect Work-Pant Party:Tougher,astartup that designs women's work apparel, is inviting women to bring in their work clothing and discuss what they want in work clothing; 6 p.m.; Les Newman's Work & Outdoor Clothing, 126 NE Franklin Ave., Bend, 541-908-4889. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.corn/bizcal

While median prices for singlefamily homes in Bendand Redmond mayseesawfrom one month to the next, they havebeen generally trending upward over the last 12 months.

Bend: $341,000

to $341,000 in October, about

$350,000-----------------------

Construction workers on the roof of the Calatravs train station at the World Trade Center in New York. The job market numbers for September were pretty terrible across the board. Now the results

$7,000below themedian price in September, according to

$300,000

are in for October and they' repretty terrific across the board.

The Beacon Report. However,

$250,000-

Bryan Thomas /The New York Times

n cto er o sreport, stron case or rate rise By Nelson D. Schwartz New York Times News Service

Hiring at U.S. companies shifted into higher gear in October, helping to lift wages and clearing the path for the FederalReserve to raise interest rates next month.

Along with altering the landscape for policymakers in Washington, D.C., and traders on Wall Street, the strength in the labor market, if it persists, is expected to shift the political debate as the 2016 presidential

campaign heats up.

The 271,000 jump in pay-

-

-

last month's median is more than 14 percent above the me- $200,000dian price for a single-family $150,000--home in Bend in October 2014, $100,000--accordingtothereportfrom the Beacon Appraisal Group. $50,000The medianpriceequals -

the midpoint, with half the prices above it and half below.

Bend recorded 194 home sales last month, 30 fewer than in September and 13 few-

Redmond: $233,000

-

O ND J F M A M J J A S O

aa~

Source: The Beacon Appraisal Group Pete Smith /The Bulletin

er than in October 2014. In Redmond,the median

October 2014, according to the

single-family-home price reached$233,000 lastmonth, about $5,000 higher than in September. October'sm edian price is about 24 percent high-

report. Redmond recorded 81 home

er than the median price in

cording to The Beacon Report.

sales last month, 11 fewer

than in September, but 17 more than in October 2014, ac-

rolls reported by the Labor

Department on Friday was much more robust than expected and suggested that economic growth had enough momentum to allow

favoredan increase in short- blunt Republican attacks on President Barack Obama's time, it should reassure Jan- economicrecord,a m ainet Yellen, the chairwoman stay of the Republican canof the Federal Reserve, and didates' message. a majority of her colleagues After therelease ofthe term rates. At the same

the central bank to begin

its move away from the ultralow, crisis-level inter-

at the central bank that the

a lock at the Fed's mid-De-

Legal battle overgiant bottles of ranchdressing

cember meeting. "The report was so strong

By Kim Janssen

employment data,econo-

economy can handle modmists lined up to predict that estly higher borrowing costs a rate increase is now nearly

est-rate policy it has been

following for seven years. Along with altering the landscape for policymakers in Washington, D.C., and

without stress. "It was pretty much ev-

erything you could ask for in a jobs report," said Michelle Meyer, deputy head of U.S. economics at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

traders on Wall Street, the strength in the labor mar-

ket, if it persists, is expected

"Not only was the headline

to shift the political debate as the 2016 presidential

number strong, but there were upward revisions for

campaign heats up. While there is still a

prior months, the unem-

possibility the Fed could hold back, the underlying

ployment rate fell and wage

solidity evident in the latest

A healthy, improving economy tends to favor

growth accelerated."

jobs report will strengthen the hand of monetary policy hawks who have long

the incumbent party in the White House, and it could

and broad-based that it will be difficult to deter them

from raising rates," said Michael Gapen, chief U.S. economist at Barclays. Until Friday, Barclays had been predicting the Fed would wait until March 2016 to act, but moved that up to next month after Friday's announcement. "I think the odds are about 80 to 85 percent that they will move,"

Gapen said.

BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR

Medianhomeprices

Whole Foodstrying to ditch rut By Sarah Halzack

clearest evidence arrived to show how much Whole Foods

executive John Mackey said

has been hurt by this new

down on its lucrative exclusive

first began opening its gro-

reality. In its quarterly earn-

cery stores in cities and sub-

ings report Wednesday, the companysaid thatsaleswere

brands and prepared foods business. These categories

The Washington Post

When Whole Foods Market

urbs across the country, every store launch was something of a test case for whether organic

eating was a niche fad or part of a sweeping change in the

down 0.2 percent at stores

open more than a year, the first time in at least four years

Whole Foods will be doubling

Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO — It's every American's birthright: the

twin packs of 40-ounce ranch

al-sized bottle of ranch dress-

dressing bottles to Woodman's and instead forcing it to buy

ing across a parking lot to their SUV. But should they have to go to

a big-box store like Costco or Sam's Club to do it? A federal judge said maybe

nation that places Woodman's

at an unfair competitive disad-

mission is siding with a manufacturer that argues it should

decision to the Seventh Circuit

be free to refuse to sell its giant

in a court filing supporting that appeal this week, the FTC

packages to smaller grocery stores.

of the U.S. Appeals Court. And writes that "for decades, courts

W oodman's Food Market, a chain with stores in Illinois and

have recognized that manufacturers may decide with whom

Wisconsin, last year sued Clo-

they will deal and that such

rox in federal court, complain-

choice benefits consumers." The law does not "require

ing that Clorox will no longer sell Hidden Valley Ranch dressing and other products in the same cheap, large sizes it sells to Costco and Sam's Club.

manufacturers to sell the same

nienceofthelargerpackages, which the big-box retailers

innovation and differentiation

can sell at a lower unit cost, it

in 2014. When Woodman's

said. Sam's Club, for example, offers a gallon jug of Daily Chef ranch dressing for a penny-pinching $7.17.

sued, Clorox halted the sale

Customers prefer the conve-

By David Welch Bloomberg News

Automakers still put CD

years after the iPod ushered in the intangible music revolution. Now, finally, the in-

dash device's days might be

n

numbered. S tra me P h illips T u gaw IHS Consulting Services, to include clients in Central Oregon.Phillips holds amaster's degree in public health withaspecialty in industrial hygiene and safety from theUniversity of Washington. • Denise Tugawhasbeenpromoted to assistant vice president atWells Fargo in Bend.Tugawjoined Wells Fargoas ateller in 2003, waspromoted to lead teller two years later andbecamea personal banker in2008.

of all of its products to Woodman's in an attempt to render the lawsuit moot.

CD players aredisappearing from newcardashboards which seems strange 14

PEOPLE ONTHE MOVE

in residential home construction supervision andpersonal real estate investment management. • Debbie Hersheywasthe top listing agent for October atJohn L. Scott Real Estate in Redmond. • Bobble Stromewasthe top selling agent for October atJohn L. Scott Real Estate in Redmond. • Jose Phillips,acertified industrial hygienist andsafety professional, has expandedhis consulting practice,

bottles, Clorox may have engaged in illegal price discrimi-

not. vantage, he ruled. Now the Federal Trade ComBut Clorox has appealed that

players into the dashboards of the majority of their cars,

Romain Hershey

single 16-ounce or 32-ounce

of Whole Foods' total sales, but the grocer thinks greater

already account for one-third

it had seen a dedine on this

Tweedle

the case. By declining to sell

chance to lug an industri-

package sizes to all buyers who demand them," it adds. Clorox stopped selling giant packs of food storage bags, cat litter, lighter fluid, bleach and salad dressing to Woodman's

in this area would help it ring way many want to eat. metric. Totalrevenue was up 6 up even more sales. For a while, Whole Foods percent, its smallest quarterly Meanwhile, thecompany consistently delivered impres- increase since at least 2011. is seeking to walk a tightrope sive growth — so impressive, Whole Foods' splashiest when it comes to price posiin fact, that other massive bid to turn things around is its tioning. Executives pledged to retailers such as Wal-Mart, previously announced plan increase promotional activity Kroger and Target became to launch anew chain, 365 by and reduce prices. They also eager to get in on what the Whole Foods Market, which said they were working to do industry now believes is a is slated to open next year and abetterjob ofm arketingand durable shift toward healthier, will cater to amore value-con- building customer awareness less-processedfood. scious consumer. of those deals. And yet, the The category it practically But the retailer stressed this brand seems determined to created suddenly was crowdweek that it has other tactics not let the pendulum swing ed with alternatives that often up its sleeve to hang on to and too far toward low prices, behad lower price tags. grow the customer base at cause that might have to come This week, some of the the existing chain. Co-chief at the expense of quality.

• Tim Bangerthasbeenhired as insurance salesproducer for SELCO Community Credit Union —EastBend branch. • Tom Tapia,abroker at Fratzke Commercial RealEstateAdvisors, of Bend, achievedaCertified Commercial Investment Memberdesignation by the CCIM Institute. • Doug Tweedlehasjoined Harcourts The GarnerGroupReal Estateas a real estate broker.Tweediehasalmost 40yearsof experience in realestate, construction, managementandsales and marketing. Hewill work alongside his wife, Angela,asthe Tweedie Team. • Carie Romain,hasjoined Harcourts The GarnerGroupReal Estateasareal estate broker. Romainhasexperience

U.S. District Judge Stephen Crockerearlierthisyeardenied Clorox's attempt to toss

Compact-disc players have been slowly following cassette decks into the automotive-in-

teriordustbinforafew years, and their disappearance is suddenly accelerating. A couple dozen 2016 models are rolling out without homes for discs, particularly cars targeting younger buyers, including the re-engineered Honda Civic and every model in Toyota Motor Corp.'s Scion line.

It's not just about saving the $30 it costs to incorporate a

player into a dashboard. That little slot is prime real estate that can be used to make

touchscreens bigger; the larger thescreen,thebettertheresolution for navigation programs and streaming-music and other apps. Why aren't the devices fall-

ing out of favor even faster'? Same reason that it wasn' t until five years ago that the in-

dashcassette-tapeplayerw as buried. Toyota's high-end Lexus line had the machines until

the 2010 SC 430, said company spokeswoman Nancy Hubbell — and kept them nearly that

long in the GS sedan because the chief engineer was clinging to his old tapes and made sure

his cars could play them.


IN THE BACI4 ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT W Religious services, D2-3 Volunteer search, D4 Support groups, D5 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.corn/community

SPOTLIGHT

Free light bulbs for local residents Bend Energy Challenge will install up to16 free LEDlight bulbs in the homes ofanyCentral Oregon resident living within 97701, 97702 and

97703 zip codes. Team membersfrom the LED Light Bulb In-

stallation program will install bulbs in the high traffic areas of aperson' s home aspart of a plan to cut the city's overall electricity usageand utility costs, according to a Bend EnergyChallenge spokesperson. LED bulbs can besix or seven timesmore efficient than conventional incandescent light bulbs and can last up to25 times longer thanthe traditional bulbs, according to a press releaseabout the challenge. People cansign up for the free light bulb installations by visiting the program's website at http: //www.bendenergychallenge.org/freebulbs. Someone from the challenge will call each person who signs upto schedule aninstallation appointment. Appointments should takean hour to complete.

Photos by Joe Kline i The Bulletin

Garners play head-to-head rounds of "Super SmashBros." during a tournament at Wabi Sabi in Bend. Gaming group Central Oregon Smashputs on tournaments once a month. They hope to host regional tournaments.

Free lunch for Veterans Day Prestige Senior Living High Desert is celebrating VeteransDayby offering a freelunch. All Central Oregon veterans areinvited to the afternoon mealfrom Nov. 9 to15. Lunchwill be served from noonto 1 p.m. at thelong-term care facility, 2660 NE Mary RosePlacein Bend, everyday of this weeklong event. Reservations are requested inadvance but are not required. Contact: 541-3122003.

Hoedownfor Hunger today For 10 years, Bend's Community Center's Feed theHungry program hasworked to put meals on thecenter's table every Sunday for local hungry and homeless populations. The program is nowthe largest food kitchen in Central Oregonserving more than 3,000meals per month, according to the center's website. All that food is expensive, so that's wherethe Hoedown for Hunger comes in. The10th annual festival will feature all-you-can-eat chili and live music from local acts starting at 3 p.m. today. Local restaurants and volunteer groups, including Hola!, Bad Boys BBQ,Jake's Diner, Kayo's, RonanFood Truck, Rockin' Davesand Ten Below, will provide the chili and fixings. No hoedownwould be complete without some country music. Cinder Blue, RunwayRanch, Bend 'NStrings, Coyote Willow, Burnin' Moonlight, Rusty RaylesandCJ Neary andPeachfuzzwil bring the tunesall day. Kids can get in onthe action during theday with face painting and other activities. After 6 p.m., the barndance begins. Hoedown for Hunger is 3 to10 p.m. today; $20, $10 for kids ages5 to17 and seniors, free for kids younger than 5;Bend'sCommunity Center, 1036 NE fifth St., Bend. Contact: 541-312-

2069 or www.bendcommunitycenter.org. — Bulletin staff reports

• A competitive video game group isexperiencing fast expansion in Bend By Will Rubin • The Bulletin

Bend — a town known for its plethora of outdoor activities and adrenaline-laden sports offeringsrecently added another option to the mix. Video gaming, or eSport, has taken hold in the form of a fast-growing"Super Smash Bros."tournament scene. At least twice a month, dozens of competitors do battle in tournament rounds lasting fewer than 10 minutes hosted by gaming group Central Oregon Smash. The tournaments were first held last year. Locals Kiff Moffat, Julian Paolo Sanchez and

Keegan Palmer first met more than two years ago on a Web forum dedicated to the game. Sanchez said they ahvays

Gaminggroup Find Central OregonSmash on Facebook here: http://bit.ly/bbsmashbre Garners man their controllers while playing rounds of "Super SmashBros." during a tournament. A

knew there were other players

in the area, they just needed to find a central location. Enter

The premise of "Super

special one-year anniversary tournament will be held at Wabi Sabi on Nov. 15.

Smash Bros." is simple. It's a

Wabi Sabi, a Japanese hobby shop downtown that has allowed the trio to host their tour-

fighting game featuring many of the most popular video game neuvers that either succeed or charactersofthe past30 years. fail spectacularly. It's a bona fide red carpet of naments there free of charge. Terms such as "labbing" A special one-year anniversary the biggest stars, featuring (practicing alone) or "edge-hogtournament will be held Nov. 15. the "Super Mario Bros." clan, ging" (staying near the edge "Having a space like Wabi "Pokemon" favorites Pikachu of the screen) may confuse the Sabi made this possible," San- and Mewtwo, and more. average person, but they' re no chez said. "It only took a couple Each of the characters has its more exotic than those comof months for us to be getting own bevy of attacking moves mon in more traditional sports. "It's like throwing rocks at least 20 people to every tour- and various size and stn.ngth nament. People feel safer going attributes that make for a and seeing who can throw it there as opposed to going to the unique playing experience. farther," Moffat said. "People house of someone they don' t Countless hours of training will find the weirdest things know."

come down to split-second ma-

and think, 'how can I use this

to compete with someone else?'

petitive circle of 'Smash Bros.'

'Smash' is just really well suited and are motivated to get even for that." better." Most tournaments feature at least one newcomer to

the group, one who Palmer said is usually in for a rude awakening. "There are a lot of people who play the game with friends and they think they' re

good because they' re the best player there," he said. "Then they discover us and the com-

It takes much more than

the occasional game to hold one's own on the competitive circuit. Moffat estimates the

best players in Central Oregon — including himself — play for at least two hours each

night, more in the run-up to a regional or national tournament.

SeeSmash/D5

Parentssecuringdigital spacefor their babies,beforethey're born By Alison Bowen Chicago Tribune

for their child on social media sites like Facebook or Twitter. Media and parenting experts say that securing digital space is becoming more com-

Becoming a parent includes a long list of to-dos: stockpiling diapers, building a crib, picking a name. mon as millennials become Now some parents are add- parents. "I see it all the time," said ing a variety of online-only tasks to sweep up digital real Dr. Yalda Uhls, a child psyestate under their baby's name chologist and author of "Media — before they even hold the Moms and Digital Dads: A birth certificate.

Fact-Not-Fear Approach to

In the digital age, parents are weighing whether to snap

Parenting in the Digital Age." Uhls said many parents com-

up a domain name for their

bine their familiarity with

baby, post photos that family members can click through or

technology and excitement around a new baby.

stow forlater orcreate a slot

A 2010 report from online

security company AVG Technologies shows that 92 percent

of U.S. children under age 2 have some type of digital footprint. A third have informa-

tion and photos online within weeks of being born, the study found. A similar report from

AVG in 2014 showed 6 percent of parents had created a social network profile for a child under 2, and 8 percent made an email address for a baby or toddler, a slight increase from 2010.

snaps, parents might not think through the long-term implications. "We always caution that

whenever you' re posting images, (look) at the settings to make sure you' re sharing it with the right people you intended to," said Julia Wang,

can't help but think ahead to a time when his children's online presence will be a factor in their lives.

"I think it's very, very com-

mon these days that parents do it, but I do recognize that

we need to be responsible with it," said Herndon-Brown,

founder of Strategic Admissions Advice, a website Securing a digital birthright offering college admissions asWhen his twins were born sistance. "We will make sure three years ago, Shereem there's nothing up there that site director at The Bump.

Herndon-Brown had plenty to

wouldn't be something that

could help them, not hinder

natural extension of posting

plan. But one thing he made time for was reserving the

pre-baby food or vacation

twins' domain names. He

Although a seemingly

them."

SeeSocial media/D4


D2 THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015

Why do themajor religionsworship different days? A big moveforward The Kansas City Star of the covenant between God to pray in congregation. DiVoices of Faith: Why do a ndthe Jewishpeople. (Exodus rectly before the prayer they •the major religions wor- 31:17) listen to a lecture designed to ship on different days? We commemorate the Sab- empower them with valuable Rabbi Mark H. Levin, founder, bath with more than worship. knowledge aboutGod and the Congregation Beth Torah:Tra- Besides prayers we tradition- religion of Islam. ditionally Jews worship at least ally serve special family meals It is a time when Muslims three times daily, seven days a and dedicate time for both come together to worship one week. However, study and rest. God and find strength and 'COMMENTARY the Sabbath, the W hereas h u - comfort by standing shoulder seventh day of mans must spend to shoulder and reaffirtning the week, contains some spe- six days a week earning a liv- their faith and devotion to him. cial prayers specifically denot- ing and emphasizing our physi- It is a blessed day that has been ing the day. cal existence, we devote at least designated as such by God, Jews follow the Torah, which one day per week to developing almighty; no other day of the stipulates the seventh day of o urspirituallives. week shares its virtues. creation as holy in Genesis 2:3, Moh amml Kohia, professor, The Prophet Muhammad "And God blessed the seventh Ro c khurst University: Muslims said, "The best day on which day and dedared it holy, be- worship God in many ways, the sun rises is Friday. It is the cause on it God ceased from including f i ve-times daily day Adam was created. It is all the work of creation that He p r ayers. Those prayers can be the day when Adam entered had done." offered individually or in con- the Heavenly Gardens,the day Leviticus 23:3 lists the bib- gregationand,if missed,canbe when he was expelled from it lical holy times, the Sabbaths o ff ered later. and also the day he died. Friday and festivals, saying in part, "... O n F r iday, the noon prayer is the day on which the Day of on the seventh day there shall must be done in congregation Resurrection will take place. "The believer who has a be a sabbathof complete rest, and, if missed, cannot be ofa sacredoccasion.You shalldo feredlater.Therefore,as soon bath, clean himself fully, use no work..." as the call for it is given, believ- perfume, then go to the mosque Because Genesis 1:5 de e r s ar e commanded to leave early and take his place quietly scribes days as beginning at theirbusinessandhastentothe without pushing or disturbing sundown, we have evening mosque. the people; then listened to the (ma'ariv) and morning (shaha"0 you who beli eve! When sermon peacefully, he will have rit) worship, followedbyan ad- the call is prodaimed for Ju- all his sins committed since the ditional service for the Sabbath mu'ah (Friday prayer), come previous Friday forgiven." (musaf), afternoon prayers fast to the remembrance of Rev. Justin Hoye, St. Patrick' s (minhah), and then a service Allah. Whentheprayerisend- Catholic Church, Kansas City, of separation from the Sabbath ed, you may disperse through North:Christians look to Jesus after evening prayers Saturday the land, and seek the Bounty Christ as the lens by which dinight (havdalah). of Allah (by working), and re- vine decrees are perfectly fulThe Bible recounts several m e mber Allah much: that you filled. In the fifth chapter of the covenants between God and may be successful." Qur'an, Gospel of Matthew, Jesus sighumanity. Each covenant has 62:9-10 nals his fulfillment as a teacha sign as a reminder. ObservF r i day is a very importanter,foreshadowed in the life of ing the Sabbath is the reminder day for Muslims. They gather Moses.

Q•

By Jesus' teachings, those dedarations essential for our health — induding the Ten Commandments — are understood in a richer way. This includesthe day ofrest. Jesus reminds us that it is

God who directs us in understanding the importance of the Sabbath. Later in Matthew' s

Gospel,Jesus is accused of breaking the Sabbath, and he responds with examples of acceptable behavior (e.g. the work of the priests in the temple) and asserts, "For the Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath." (Matthew

12:8) As God, Jesus has the authority to define the appropriate understanding of the day. The early Christians saw in theresurrection ofJesus something so definitive that the day

itself (the first or eighth day) became the reference point of a week.On a day in which the faithful are asked to rest from

their labors and trust implicitly in the ability of God to provide for us,the day of resurrection

became the dearest and most radical confirmation of this trust, and a day on which to

worship. The day of rest is still important for a healthy life. The

revelation of Jesus Christ has re-presentedthat day of rest, with its dependence on God' s

ability to save. It is now most explicitly appreciated Sunday, the day of resurrection. — To reach the Voices of Faith columnists, send email to

fait hhcstancorn

for transgenderrights By Michael Muskai

about 300 households, she said. About 60 percent idenThe largest branch of Ju- tify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, daism in the United States transgender or questioning. "That this passed without passed a far-reaching resolution supporting transgender a 'no' vote shows our overrights Thursday, the latest whelming enthusiasm that step in a year that has seen we in Reform Judaism have," the issue move from the shad- she said by telephone from ows into the limelight. Florida. "It is about indusion, At its biennial meeting in which is one of the most imOrlando, Florida, members of portant Jewish values." the Union for Reform Judaism Other religious bodies, approved the resolution that such as the Episcopal Church, calls for their congregations the United Church of Christ Los Angeles Times

and children's camps to have

gender-neutral bathrooms and encourages gender-neutral language. The resolution, which passed on a voice vote, also calls for religious school

and the Unitarian Universalist Association have ap-

proved resolutions affirming equality for transgender and nongender-conforming people. But none go as far as the staffers to receive training one by the Reform Jews, said on gender issues and urges Michael Toumayan, manager members to lobby govern- of the Religion and Faith Proments on behalf of the trans- gram at Human Rights Camgender community. paign, a civil rights group for Bathrooms were not seen gays, lesbians, bisexuals and as controversial in the nine- transgender people. point resolution adopted by Reform Judaism represents the Reform Jews. roughly one-third of the ap"This is a very historic res- proximately 6 million Jews in olution," said Rabbi Denise the United States, according Eger of Congregation Kol to a 2013 survey by the Pew Ami in West Hollywood, Cal- Research Center. Orthodox ifornia. Eger is also president Jews, the most strictly reliof the Central Conference of gious, account for about 10 American Rabbis, with 2,300 percent, while Conservatives, members the largest and old- theologically located between est rabbinical organization Orthodox and Reform, reprein North America. She is the sent about 18 percent. third woman and first lesbian Reform is seen as the most toheadthegroup. liberal of the various religious Her congregation has traditions practiced by Jews.

RELIGIQUs SERvIcEs To submit service information or announcements for religious organizations, email bulletin© bendbulletin.corn or call 541-633-2117.

on1 Timothy 3:14-16; 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. Sunday; 11 a.m. Sunday high school youth group; 6 p.m. W ednesday middle schoolyouth group; 529 NW19th St., Redmond; 541-548-3367 or www.redmondcpc.

SERVICES

Olg.

CONCORDIALUTHERAN MISSION: org. The Rev. Willis C. Jenson; "God GRACEEVANGELICALLUTHERAN CHURCH: Pastor James Ruppel; "Take Saves and Gives Life Eternal Through the Gospel by Faith," based the Reformation Path"; 10:30 a.m. Sunday; 9:30 a.m .Biblestudyand on Ezekiel 7:14; 11 a.m. Sunday; "Luther's Call," 10 a.m. Sunday children's Sundayschool; 9:30 a.m. to noon Saturday family Bible study, the school; Terrebonne Grange Hall, 828611th St., Terrebonne; 541-325- Final Harvest Children andFisher's of Men lunch follows; 7525Falcon Crest 6773 or www.lutheransonline.corn/ Drive, Redmond; 509-899-5018 or concordialutheranmission. www.gracelcateag!ecrest.org. DISCOVERYCHRISTIAN CHURCH: GRACEFIRST LUTHERANCHURCH: Minister Dave Dru!linger; "Godly Pastor Joel LiaBraaten; "HeWatched Contentment," based on1 Timothy the Crowds" and "Pennies From 6:5-1 0; 10a.m. Sunday with veteran Heaven"; 9:30 a.m. Sunday; 2265 recognition during the worship NW Shev! InPark Road, Bend; 541service; noonThursdaysack lunch 382-6862 or www.gracefirstlutheran. Bible study; 334 NW Newport Ave., Olg. Bend; 541-382-2272 or www. discoverychristianchurch.corn. HOLY COMMUNIONEVANGELICAL CATHOLICCHURCHOFBEND: EASTMONTCHURCH:Pastor John Father Jim Radloff; "The Invisible Magic; "Enjoying Life's Journey," Woman"; 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Sunday; based on Philippians; 8:30 a.m. Bend Senior Center1600 SEReed (traditional hymn service) and 10 Market Road, Bend; 541-408-9021

ANTIOCH CHURCH:Jer Swigart, pioneer and directional leader of The Open Door Community and co-founding director of The Global Immersion Project; "MalachiMinor Prophets"; 10 a.m. Sunday; 7 p.m.Monday highschoolyouth group; 7 p.m. Wednesday junior high youth group; Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St., Bend; 541-318-1454 or www.antiochchurch.org. BELIEVERSBIBLE FELLOWSHIP CHURCH:Pastor Gary Breegle; "God's Plan for the EndTimes (The Rapture)"; 10:30 a.m. Sunday; 9:30a.m. Bible study; Super 8 Hotel,3629 SW 21st Place, Redmond; 541-974-8694 or www. believersbib! efel!owship.org. BEND CHRISTIANFELLOWSHIP: Pastor DaveMiller; "That's Me, Part 1"; 10 a.m. Sunday; 7p.m. Wednesday 4Twelve Youth Group; 19831 Rocking Horse Road, Bend;541-382-6006 or www.bendchristianfel! owship.corn. BEND CHURCHOFTHE NAZARENE: Pastor Virgil Askren; "A FewGood Men ... and Women," based on Judges 2-16; 10:15 a.m. Sunday; 9 a.m. (Hispanic service) Sunday; 1270 NE 27th St., Bend; 541-3825496 or www.bendnaz.org. BEREANBIBLECHURCH: 10:30 a.m. Sunday; 10:30 a.m. Thursday Bible study; 2378 SWGlacier Place; Redmond; 541-504-2618 or bereanbiblechurchredmondoregon. wordpress.corn COMMUNITY BIBLE CHURCH AT SUNRIVER:Pastor Glen Schaum!oeffel; "The Exaltation of Humiliation," part of the series "To Live Is Christ," based on Philippians 2:9-11; 9:30 a.m. Sunday; 1 Theater Drive, Sunriver; 541-593-8341 or www.cbchurchsr.org. COMMUNITY OF CHRIST: Elder Gary Sahlberg; "Im!tate God' s Generosity," based onMark12:38-44; 11 a.m. worship and babyblessing;

a.m. (contemporaryservice) Sunday;

62425 Eagle Road, Bend; 541-3825822 or www.eastmontchurch.corn. EMMAUS LUTHERANCHURCH, LCMS:Pastor David Poovey; 9:15 a.m. Bible study, 10:30 a.m. worship; 2175 SW SalmonAve., Redmond; 541-548-1473. FATHER'SHOUSECHURCH: Guest Pastor Randy Travis of Life Point Church, Homestead, Florida; 10 a.m. Sunday; 7 p.m. Wednesday youth group; 61690 Pettigrew Road, Bend; 541-382-1632 or www.fathershouse. church. THE FELLOWSHIP ATBEND: Loren Anderson; "Back to Bethel" based on Genesis 35;10a.m. Sunday; 6 p.m. Sunday youth group; 21530Butler Market Road, Bend;541-385-3110 or www.ffab.corn. FIRST PRESBYTERIANBEND: Steven Koski; "What DoYouWant Me to Do forYou?"based on Mark 10:46-52; 9 a.m., 10:45 a.m. and 6 p.m. Sunday; noon Wednesday communion service; 230 NENinth St., Bend; 541-382-4401 or www. bendfp.org. FOUNDRYCHURCHOFBEND: Trevor Waybright; "Listen and Be Encouraged," based on Judges 7; 10:15 a.m. Sunday; 60 NWOregon Ave., Bend; 541-382-3862 or www. foundrybend.org.

10a.m.classesfora!Iages;10:45 a.m. praise singings or meditation music Sunday; 20380 Cooley Road, Bend; 541-388-1011 or www. bendcommunityofchrist.org. COMMUNITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH:Rev.Dr. Mike Jacobs; "Beli eve,Belong,Become" based

olliifH

0

camps, programs,andactivities for children otal! ages.

++II +4~~ ®@2 ~ ®~ ~ To reserve your ad space in e Summer Youth Guide

or info©holycommunionbend.org. JOURNEYCHURCH: Pastor Keith Kirkpatrick; "The Secret to Success," based on Philippians; 9 a.m., 11 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. Sunday; 70 NW Newport Ave., Bend; 541-647-2944 or www.Iourneyinbend.corn. MISSIONCHURCH BEND CAMPUS: Pastor Brent Hofen; "Crush the Box, Part3";5:30 p.m.today;9a.m .and 10:45 a.m. Sunday; kids' church at all service times; online at www. experiencethehighlife.tv 9 a.m. and 10:45 a.m. Sunday; 2221 NEThird St., Bend; 541-306-6209 or www. experiencethehighiife.corn. MOST SACREDHEART,ROMAN CATHOLICCHAPEL:Father Bernard; Traditional Catholic Latin Mass; 9

a.m. Sunday; 6:30 p.m. Wednesday iLoveyouthgroup;240SW Seventh St., Redmond; 541-548-6246 or www.newc! c.corn. NEWPORTAVENUECHURCHOF CHRIST:DeanCatiett; "When Do You Stop Losing andStart Winning," based on Judges4:1-4; 10:45 a.m. Sunday worship; 6 p.m. Sunday devotional serv!ce; 6 p.m.Wednesday adult Bible study; 554 NWNewport Ave., Bend.; 541-382-5242 or www. churchofchristbendoregon.corn. REAL LIFECHRISTIAN CHURCH: Pastor Mike Yunker; "Less Is More," based on John 3:22-36; 8 a.m. traditional hymn service, 10 a.m.

contemporaryserv!ce;youth group

meets Wednesday, call for time; 2880 NE 27th St., Bend; 541-312-8844 or www.rea!! Ifebend.org. SAINT JACOBOFALASKA ORTHODOX CHRISTIANCHURCH: Reader serv!ces 10 a.m. Sunday; 1900 NE Division St., Bend; 541-9289240 or www.saintjacob.org. SAINT PAUL'SANGLICANCHURCH: FatherJohnPennington;"W hose Image,"basedon Matthew 22;10:30 a.m. Sunday; 1108 WAntler Ave., Redmond; 541-604-1029. UNITARIANUNIVERSALISTS OF CENTRAL OREGON:Rev.Anton!a Won; "Fierce Conversations and AmazingGrace";10:30a.m .Sunday; talk on Palestinian culture 1 p.m. Sunday; 61980 Skyline Ranch Road, Bend; 541-385-3908 or www.uufco.

org

WESTSIDECHURCH:NewYork Times best-selling author BobGoff; 6:30p.m.today;8 a.m.,9a.m .and 10:45a.m. Sunday;W estside Church West Campus, 2051 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend; watch live10:45a.m. Sundays at Stone LodgeRetirement, 1460 NE27th St., Bend; 541-3827504 or www.westsidechurch.org. WESTSIDESOUTH CAMPUS: New York T!mes best-selling author Bob a.m. Sunday,confessions heard Goff; 10:30 a.m. Sunday; Westside before Mass; 1051 SWHelmholtz Church South Campus, 1245 SEThird Way, Redmond; 541-548-6416. St., Bend. NATIVITY LUTHERANCHURCH WESTSIDESISTERS CAMPUS: New ELCA:Pastor Chris Kramer; York T!mes best-selling author Bob "Sundays After Pentecost," based on Goff;9a.m. and10:45a.m.Sunday; 1 Kings17:8-16, Psalm146, Hebrews Westside Church Sisters Campus, 9:24-28 and Mark 12:38-44; 9 a.m. 442 Trinity Way, Sisters. informal worship, 11 a.m. formal WESTSIDEONLINE CAMPUS: worship Sunday; 9 a.m.Wednesday New York Times best-selling author prayer group; 10 a.m.Wednesday Bob Goff ;6:30 p.m.today;9a.m . Bible study; 60850 Brosterhous Road, Bend; 541-388-0765 or www. and 10:45 a.m. Sunday; www. nativityinbend.corn. wes tsidelivaerg. NEW CREATIONSLIFECENTER ZION LUTHERANCHURCH:Pastor CHURCH:Pastor Arthur Wilder; 10 Er!c Burtness; "What Do I Believe?

"

Fri a, April1 16

Central OregOn. PleaSefill Oljt thiS fOrm tOVerify infOrmatiOn in Order tO b8 CQllSidered fOr PubliCatiOn in the Summer YOuth ACtiVity Guide. EmailinfOrmation to:SummerCamPS©bendbulletin.Com

CamP HOSt:

- >i@'t

*

~

Mi ~ c a tion: Website:

ACCESSINGYOURCHAKRAS AND INTERNALRESOURCES WORKSHOP:Learn how to allow the energy of an experience in to unlock the third eye, heart and solar

plexus; 1 p.m.;$40; NamaspaYoga 8 Massage, 1135 NWGalveston Ave, Bend; 541-639-6246.

Sunday ANNUALJUDAICAAND CHANNUKAH GIFT SHOP:Featuring gifts imported from Israel, complete Judaica inventory for Jew!sh holidays and Sabbath;candles,

menorahs,liiiy art glassware, jewelry, tal!asim, mezzuzahs and more; 9:30 a.m.; Shalom Bayit Synagogue, 21555Modoc Lane, Bend; 541-815-2590. RECONNECT SUNDAY CENTERING CLASSES:Learn to utilize meditation, energy exercises, relaxation techniques, sharing circles and clear intention to help you relax and reconnect with yourself; 1 p.m.;

$12 persession; NamaspaYoga8 Massage, 1135 NWGalveston Ave., Bend;54I-639-6246.

Tttt.'slit COMMUNITY BIBLE STUDY: Bible study titled "Mary: A Biblical Walk With the Blessed Mother"; meets each Tuesday from 10 a.m. to11:45 a.m.and 6:30 p.m .to 8 p.m.through Nov. 24; St. Francis of Assis! Catholic Church L School, 2450 NE27th St., Bend; www.catholicscripturestudy. info or 541-382-3631.

Nondenominationalcommunity Bible study open to all; study of1 and 2 Corinthians; $35; 9:15 a.m.; Foundry Church, 60 NW Oregon St., Bend; www.bend.cbsclass.org; 541-390-4093.

Thursday TWIN HOLYDAYS FESTIVAL:An observation of the Birth of the Bab, with a Persian meal; 6 p.m.; free; registration required; Stonebriar Apartments Clubhouse, Apt. 2; 21255 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-213-8357.

Friday TWIN HOLYDAYS FESTIVAL:A Day of Service: A Baha'I Day of Service. Volunteer or donate tolocal charities; 10 a.m.; Stonebriar Apartments Clubhouse, 21255 E Highway 20, Bend; 541-213-8357.

Nov. 14 MADRAS AGLOW NOVEMBER: Stephanie Carmichael, inspirational speaker, writer and breast cancer survivor will talk about anxiety and anger that comes with illness and finding peace andIoy despite it; childcare is available; 9:30 a.m.; Living Hope Christian Center, 25 NE "A" St., Madras; 541-771-8844. I <

I

I I '

Deadline to submit: April 1,2016

The Bulletin~

I

View ourpresentationat Tompklnswealthpresents.corn Charlesrsmpklls, CFPI541-797-7009 securities s AdvisoryservicesofferedthrouphKMs FinancialSenices,Inc.MemberFINRWIPC

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EVENTS, MEETINGS

CENTRAL OREGONBIBLE STUDY: Nondenominational community Bible study; begins w!th the book of Ruth and Esther, followed by the Gospel of Mark; meets Tuesdays through Apri!19; 3:30 p.m.; Mountain View Fellowship, 1475 SW35th, Redmond; 541-923-6996 or541-923-8791.

The Bulletin is in the process of compiling a list of SummerCampsin

Mail fOrm to:

QAdv e~rti !@no~ dlin:-

I Believe GodCalls All Christians to Show Compassionto People in Need"; 8:30 a.m. and 11a.m. Sunday; 1113 SWBlack Butte Blvd., Redmond; 541-923-7466 or www. zionrdm.corn.

ATTENTIONCENTRAL OREGON SUMMER CAMPS

1 h8 BUIIBtjn, Attn: stacie oberson, po. Box 6020, Bend, QR 97702

~publishesFrida, April 15, 15

r:..

GRACEBIBLECHURCHOF BEND:Pastor Phil Kooistra; "The Resurrection," based on Luke 20:27-44; 10 a.m. Sunday; 5:30 p.m. Sunday youth group; 63945 Old Bend Redmond Highway, Bend; 541728-3897 or www.gracebib!eofbend.

Canby: 5o3.266.51oo ~ Redmond: 54x.548.3o49 www.thelmasplace.org


SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN •

0

CHRISTIAN CHURCH OF REDMOND

0 0

536 SW 10th, Redmond

0

0

541-548-2974

o

0

www.redmondchristian.org Sunday Worship 9:00 am F 10:45am

You AreThe Most important Part of Our Services

Sunday School for all ages Kidmo• Junior Church Greg Strubhar, Pastor Darin Hollingsworth, Youth Pastor

CHRISTIAN CHURCH

8:30 Worship Center 10:30 Contemporary Service

"Yin/Yang" Taoist/ Confucianism

"Star 8 Crescent" Islam

Pastors: Chris Blair and Trey Hinkle 13720 SW Hwy 126, Powell Butte 541-548-3066

• •

REDMOND ASSEMBLY OF GOD 1865 W Antler • Redmond • 541-548-4555 SUNDAYS Morning Worship 8:30 am 8 10:30 am Life groups 9 am KIdz LIVE ages 3-11 1030 am Evening Worship 6 pm WEDNESDAYS FAMILY NIGHT 7PM

Adult Classes Celebrate Recovery Wednesday NITE Live Kids Youth Group Pastor Duane Pippitt

www.redmondag.corn •

HOLY COMMUNION CHURCH "Catholicism the way you always wished it could be"

www.powellbuttechurch.corn

Father Jim Radloff Father Mark Hebert

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,SCIENTIST 1551 NW First St.• 541-382-6100

SUNDAY MASS SCHEDULE 9:00 am Traditional Catholic Music 5:00 pm Contemporary Christian Music Bend Senior Center 1600 SE Reed Market Road

Church Service 8 Sunday School: 10 am

Weekday Mass Chapel at the Church Office Monday at 7:00 am with Fr Mark Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday at noon with Fr Jim

1563 NW First St.

Childcare provided. Reading Room:

Sat. 12 noon - 2 pm

EASTMONT CHURCH

We invite you to join us this weekend! Come as you are, and bring the whole family. Experience loving, life-changing community. Learn more about who Jesus is, and the life that he offers to each of us.

Open briefly after Sunday Service

RAGAMUFFIN MASS WITH FRMARK

Mass followed with Sermon Study 8 Fellowship Thursday at 7:00 pm Call Office for details

21720 E. Hwy. 20, Bend 541.389.8241

Visit www.westsidechurch.org for service times and locations, or call 541-382-7504.

Women's Bible Study "Men of the Bible" Tuesday 9: 30 a.m.

November 8, 2015 at Westside Church - SOUTH CAMPUS NYT Best Selling Author, Bob Goff at 10:30am on Sunday at the Westside Church South Campus, 1245 SE 3rd St., Bend. November 8, 2015 at Westside Church - SISTERS CAMPUS NYT Best Selling Author, Bob Goff at 9 and 10:45am on Sunday at the Westside Church Sisters Campus, 442 Trinity Way, Sisters. November 7-8, 2015 at Westside Church - ONLINE CAMPUS NYT Best Selling Author, Bob Goff at 6:30pm Saturday and 9 and 10:45am on Sunday at www.westsidelive.org

at 8:00am Sundaymorning

382-6862

Sunday Worship 9:30 a.m. (Child Care Available) Sunday School 10:20 a.m. Education Hour 10:45 a.m.

Men's Bible Study "Reformation Roots" Wednesday 8:00 a.m. Pastor Joel LiaBraaten Evangelical Lutheran Church in America www.gracefirstlutheran.org ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH ELCA

Worship in the Heart of Redmond Sunday Worship Services at 8:30 8 11:00 am Sunday School for all ages at 10:00 am Children's Room available during services Come Experience a warm,

friendly family of worshipers. Everyone Welcome - Always. A vibrant, inclusive community. A rich and diverse music program for all ages Coffee, snacks and fellowship after each service M-W-F Women's Exermse 9:30 am W ednesday Bible Studyatnoon 3rd Thursday Women' s Circle/Bible Study I:00 pm

3rd Tuesday Men's Club 6:00 pm, dinner Youth and Family Programs Active Social Outreach

on KBND - AM 1110

Experience the

BIBLE STUDY

Lightand Sound ofGod

With Father Jim Wednesdays

1113 SW Black Butte Blvd. Redmond, OR 97756 541-923-7466 Pastor Eric Burtness wwwsnonrdm.corn Mennonite

We havetwo venues thatm eeton Sunday

Morning Study: 10-11:30am

You are invited to the following events A Spiritual Discussion

mornings, offering distinct music styles.

Evening Study: 7-8:30 pm at the Church Office

"Soul Travel: A Journey into Heaven"

Traditional Hymn Service - 8:30am Senior Adult Classes - 10:00 am Upper Campus

BOOK GROUP

Thurs. Nov. 19, 6:30-7:30 pm 175 NW Meadow Lakes Drive

A Warm, Joyful, and Welcoming Community Serving Central Oregon for 25 years.

HOUSE OF COVENANT

Prineville, Oregon

We Welcome Newcomers, Interfaith Families and Jews by Choice Participation Encouraged For information, call 541-385-6421 Please Visit: www.jccobend.corn

Messianic Synagogue Est. 1994 We provide a congregational setting for Jews and Christians alike. If you' re interested in learning the Bible from a Hebrew perspective, come join us at:

Contemporary Service - 10:00am Children's Ministry from Nursery-5th Grade Lower Campus Look forward to seeing you this Sunday!

2nd Tuesday of each month Next Session — November 10 Falling Upward by Richard Rohr

"Whenever Soul reaches the far orbits of

the inner planes through Soul Travel,

Contact prayerCaho)ycommunionbend.org for more information

the human heart opens to God' s all-consuming love. It is our very prupose to discover that love." "Past Lives, Dreams and Soul Travel"

62425 Eagle Road 541-382-5822 www.eastmontchurch.corn

CHURCH OFFICE 587 NE Greenwood —Bend

(across from Croutons)

By Harold Klemp

LovinglyIeiping people everywhere becomefully

Contact us (541) 408-9021 InfoCehoJycommunlonbend.org www.holycommunionbend.org

Coming in 2016: an Oregon Regional Seminar "How to Survive Spiritually in Our Times"

devotedfollowersof Jesus FIRST MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH

Thomas L. Counts, Pastor

Bus available for Sundays WORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES

(Nursery available) SUNDAY

Sunday School - 9:45am (Bible Classes for all ages) Prayer Time - 10:40am Worship - 10:50am Evening Bible study - 6:00pm EveningWorship -7:00pm WEDNESDAY Ladies Bible Study - 10:00am Bible Study and Prayer - 7:00pm

www.fmbcbend.org FOUNDRYCHURCH (FORMERLY FIRST BAPTIST) "A Heart for Bend in the Heart of Bend" 60 NW Oregon Ave, 541-382-3862

Pastor Trevor Waybright SundaySchoolclassesare at9:00 am and our Worship Service at 10:15 am This week at Foundry Church, Trevor Waybright will be continuing in the series "The Gospel According to Judges". For Kidztown, Middle School and High School activities, Call 541-382-3862 www.bendchurch.org HIGHLAND BAPTIST CHURCH

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

Rodney Jones, Eckankar Clergy, April 15-17, 2016 University Place Hotel

Fr. Theodore Nnabugo, Pastor www.holyredeemerparish.net Parish Omce: 541-536-3571

Near the Portland State University Campus

Portland, Oregon

HOLY REDEEMER ROMAN CATHOLIC, LA PINK 16137 Burgess Rd

For more information

Tuesday Mass 6 pm, Wednesday and Friday Mass 9;00 am Sunday Mass - 10:00 am Confessions: Saturdays-3:00 -4:00 pm HOLY TRINITY ROMAN CATHOLIC, SUNRIVKR 18143 Cottonwood Rd. Thurs. Mass 9:30 am; Sat. Vigil Mass 5:30 pm

www.miraclesinyourlife.org www.eckankar.org 541-728-6476 •

Sunday December 13thCommunity Sunday School 10-12:30

TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH

We are4 community ofCflrlstians w/rowel come diversity inIfieologyanrJworld view.

Sunday Mass 8:00 am

The Rev. Jed Holdorph fl, Rector

OUR LADY OF THK SNOWS ROMAN CATHOLIC, GILCHRIST 120 Mississippi Drive

TEMPLE BETH TIEVAH

Sunday Services: Barn and 10:15am

Sunday Mass - 12:30 pm

Sunday Adult Forum: 9:15am HOLY FAMILY ROMAN CATHOLIC, NEAR CHRISTMAS VALLEY

57255 Fort Rock Road Sunday Mass - 3:30 pm "We are a church family, centered on the Eucharist, living and sharing our faith and God-given talents and gifts."

Childcare available both services Wednesday Noon Eucharist (in the Trinity chapel — please use St. Helens St. entrance) Youth Events:

ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH

www.facebook.corn/BendYouthCollective

Rev. Julian Cassar Pastor Rev. Joseph K. Thalisery 541-382-3631

Potluck Suppers, Centering Prayer,

and Eco-Justice Activities, Women's Group and more...

mlnlstryC Ntrin(tybend.org 541-382-5542

HISTORIC DOWNTOWN CHURCH Corner of Franklin and Lava MASSES Saturday 8:00 am Sunday 4:30 pm Monday - Friday 7:00 am 8 12:15 pm

469 NW Wall Street, Bend, OR 97701

CHURCH & SYNAGOGUE DIRECTORY LISTING

Reconciliation Tuesday 7:30 AM - 8:00 AM Saturday 8:30 - 9:30 AM

The Bulletin: EVery Saturday On the church page. $25 Copy Changes: by 5 PIVITuesday

ST. THOMAS ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH 1720 NW 19th Street

Call Pat Lynch 54(-383-0396 PlynCh@bendbulletjn.Com

THK SALVATION ARMY

541 NE DeKalb Ave.

Exposition 8 Benediction Monday-Friday after 7:00 AM Mass to 6:00 PM Tuesday (Family Holy Hour) 5:00 PM - 6:00 PM

Effective May I, 2015 4 SaturdayS and TMC: $125 5 Saturdays and TMC: $150

CO Marketplace: The FirSt TueSday Of each month. $25 Copy Changes: by Monday I Week PriOr to PubliCatiOn

www.trinitybend.org www.facebook.corn/I'rinityBend

Sung Latin Mass Sunday, November I at I:45 PM No confessions before Mass

Friday, November 20 at 6:00 pm — Shabbat Shalom in the Home At a Private Home - Call for information Saturday, November 21 at 9:00 am — Shabbat Torah Study Saturday, November 21 at 10:45 am — Shabbat Torah Service Friday, November 27 at 7:00 pm — Erev Shabbat Service Saturday, November 28 at 10:00 am — B'nai Mitzvah of Kyle & Kahlan Snyder Every Monday 12:-00-1:00 pm - Weekly Torah Study Call for information 8 location

Sunday School starts November I and 8; Hebrew School Meets every Tuesday

Sunday Worship; Sunday School at 10:00 AM

For the complete schedule of Services and Events go to: www.bethtikvahbend.org

Worship Service at 11:00 AM For Both Children andAdults

Weekly Programs: Tuesday Youth Night at 5:00 PM Wednesday Women's Group at 9:30 AM

Unless otherwise noted, all services are held at the First United Methodist Church 680 NW Bond Street 541-388-8826

MISSION (LCMS) The missionof theChurch is Io forgivesinsthrough the Gospeland tfrere6y grant eternal (ife.

www.facebook.corn/

~MILS~h t t ))..

Lts Jeremy and Violet Aird

St. John 20:22-23, Augsburg Confession XXVIII.8, 10

Pastors

10 am Sunday School

LIVING TORAH FELLOWSHIP

At La Roca Church 1155 SW Division, ¹D8, Bend Saturday 12:00 - 3:00 pm Worship/Dance - Study - Food/Fellowship Hebrew Roots Fellowship worshiping in Spirit and Truth 541-410-5337 Children Welcome www.livingtorahfellowship.corn •

BEND CHURCH UNITED METHODIST

(In the Heart of Down Town Bend) 680 NW BondStreet Bend, OR 541. 382. 1672

Everyone is Welcome! Rev Ted Virts

Abuse Awareness Sunday Sermon:Knowing Good and Evil Scripture: Genesis 2:15-17; 3:1-6/ Isaiah 54:10 Sermon Idea: The Genesis story of the "fall" leads to some questions. What happens within us when the sayings and warnings don't work? What is it in us that has us leave the way we should be? How do we deal with the evil within us? The path from darkness to light is telling the truth, even when we'd rather keep hidden (they discovered they were naked). How do we acknowledge the shadow of our lives and accept that we are accepted by God nonetheless (Isaiah 51:10)? Faith is more than a "to do list" of good behavior. Incarnation means recognizing the Divinity in the mess 9:00am - Contemporary Service Sunday School during the 9am service 11:00am - Traditional Service Childcare provided 'During the Week: Women's Groups, Men's Groups, Youth Groups, Quilting, Crafting, Music 8 Fellowship Open Hearts. Open Minds. Open Doors. Rev. Dave Beckett flrstchurch@bendumc.org

BEND CHURCH OF THK NAZARENE 1270 NE 27 Street • 541-382-5496

9:00 am Sunday School for all ages 9:00 am Hispanic Worship Service 10:15 am Worship Service Nursery Care 8 Children's Church ages 4 years - 4th grade during all Worship Services "Courageous Living" on KNLR 97.5 FM 8:30 am Sunday

11 am Divine Service WEDNESDAY

NKW HOPE EVANGELICAL

20080 Pinebrook Blvd.• 541-389-3436

The Rev. Willis C. Jenson, Pastor 8286 11th Street (Grange Hall) Terrebonne, OR

6:30 pm Ladies Bible Study

www.lutheransonline.corn/ concordialutheranmission Facebook: Concordia Lutheran Mission Phone: 541-325-6773

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

Sunday 9:00, 10:45 am,

Pastor Randy Myers •

-

THURSDAY

10 00 am 50+ Bible Study WEEKLY

Celebrate New Life at New Hope Church!

Visit us on the web at www.houseofcovenant.org or contact us at 541-385-5439

Senior Pastor Virgil Askren CONCORDIA LUTHERAN

For more Information:

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

• Home groups • Teaching from the Torah and the Brit Hadashah (New Testament) • Biblical Feasts • Lifecycle Events • End-times prophecy

SUNDAY

Thursday Men's Group at 2:00 PM

Redmond, Oregon 97756 541-923-3390 Father Todd Unger, Pastor

Rabbi Johanna Hershenson

541-389-8888 Ext. 200

The SalvationArmyCentraIOregon

is a member of the Union for Reform Judaism. Our members represent a wide range of Jewish backgrounds. We welcome interfaith families and Jews by choice. Our monthly activities include: Services, religious education for children and adults, Hebrew school, Torah study, social action projects and social activities

SERVICES

Outreach, Music, Book Discussions, "Spirit"ed Conversations, Justice

NEIF CHURCH 2450 NE 27th Street MASSES Saturday - Vigil 5:00 PM

Bear Creek Center 21300 Bear Creek Rd., Bend, OR 97701 Our Shabbat Services are on Saturday mornings at 10:00 a.m. Our ministries include: • Davidic dance and worship • Children's ministry and nursery • Hebrew classes

Reconciliation Saturday 3:00 PM - 4:30 PM

Celebrate Recovery Tuesdays, 6;30 PM.

All Services held at our Dedicated Synagogue Building 21555 Modoc Lane (Comer of Ward and Modoc in Bend) unless otherwise noted.

Sunday small groups, all ages

Family Night Wednesdays Sept. 16- Nov. 18, 2015 5-5:45 PM. Dinner 6-7:30 PM.Small group studies for all ages Babies through adult

December: Friday December 4thFriday Evening Service 6PM

Thursday December 10th- Chanukah Celebration at Shalom Bayit 5:30PM. Pot luck Dinner, Bring your Menorah.

www.eckankar-oregon.org

Services Sunday November8th— Community Sunday School 10-12:30

Sunday December 6thCommunity Sunday School, First Night of Chanukah at Old Mill with Chabad. Activities, Games and Treats.

Sunday - 7;30 am 8 10:00 AM Domingo 12:30 - Misa en Espanol

9:30 8 11 A.M.

Rabbi Jay ShupackBend's First Resident Rabbi Rebbitzin - Judy Shupack

Saturday November 21st — Come celebrate laden Root's Bar Mitzvah! 10AM

Jazz guitarist from New York City

HOLY REDEEMER ROMAN CATHOLIC PARISH

Lead Pastor Dr. Barry Campbell Worship Saturday 7 P.M. Worship Sunday 8, 9:30 8 11 A.M.

Children's Worship, preschool thru 5th grade 11 A.M.

(Jewish Community of Central Oregon)

10 AM, unless otherwise noted

21129 Reed Market Rd. Bend, OR 97702 541-382-6081

CONGREGATION SHALOM BAVIT

Torah Study Every Saturday M orningta

With guest speaker

CHRISTIAN LIFE CENTER

November 8, 2015 Westside Church - ON THE RADIO Pastor Mike Alexander will share the message titled "Love Does!! Sometimes I Don' t" on the Heirbome radio show

Tues. through Fri.: 11 am - 4 pm

2265 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend

(South of Portland Ave.) Wed. Testimony Meeting: 7:30 pm

GRACE FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH

Worship Center 10:30 Traditional Service Historic Chapel Nursery F Children's Church

I •

BIESTSIDE CHURCH Westside Church invites you to join us at any of our weekend services. No matter what your expectations are, we hope your time spent with us brings you a little closer to understanding, knowing and growing in a relationship with Jesus Christ. In our opinion, that's what really matters.

November 7-8, 2015 at Westside Church - WEST CAMPUS NYT Best Selling Author, Bob Goff at 6;30pm on Saturday and at 8, 9 and 10:45am Sunday at Westside Church, 2051 NW Shevlin Park Rd, Bend.

POWKLL BUTTE

"Omkar" (Aum) Hinduism

• •

D3 •

Sunday Morning Worship 8;45 AM and 10:45 AM WednesdayMid-Week Service Children F Youth Programs 7:00 PM

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

COMMUNITY PRKSBTTKRIAN CHURCH 529 NW 19th Street

(3/4 mile north of High School) Redmond, OR 97756 (541) 548-3367 Rev. Rob Anderson, Pastor 9:00 am Contemporary Worship 9:00 am Nursery Care 9:15 am Children 8 Youth Sunday School 9:30 am Adult Education 11:00 am Traditional Worship Fellowship following both services.

Youth Group: 10:30am Sunday for Middle and High School Youth Mondays 6:30 pm Centering Prayer Wednesdays 5:30 pm Prayer Service

Small Groups Meet Regularly (Handicapped Accessible) Please visit our website for a complete listing of activities for all ages. www.redmondcpc.org FIRST PRESBYTERIAN BEND 230 NE Ninth, Bend

(Across Ninth St. from Bend High) Embodying Spacious Christianity Finding Life's Answers in God's Questions What Do You Want Me To Do For You? Preaching is Steven Koski 9;00am contemporary service, Sanctuary 10;45am traditional sennce, Sanctuary 600 700pm TAP Heritage Hall

Nursery care provided for all services Project Hope, Healing S Purpose Sundays November 8 and 15 9:00am and 10:45am services A celebration of how generosity to First Presbyterian Bend are reaching lives and providing hope, healing S purpose to so many here in Central Oregon and around the world. Women's Caregiver Support Monday's, November 23, December 7 & 21 2:00 - 3:30 pm, First Presbyterian Prayer Room. Are you caring for someone who is physically or mentally challenged? Consider joining the Women' s Caregivers' Support Group Contact First Presbyterian at reception® bendfp.org with any questions. Traces Of The Trade Movie Screening Tuesday, December I, 6:30pm, First Presbyterian, FREE A film by Katrina Brown retraces her and nine fellow DeWolf descendant's links to their ancestors connections to the largest slave-trading family in history. Tom DeWolf, a Bendite and author will answer questions and introduce Coming to the Table, an organization dedicated to healing racial wounds of the past. TAP

Join us for this new worship experience and place of belonging for those who might otherwise never set foot in a traditional church service. Local beers & kombucha on tap to enjoy before, during and after the service. Contact Morgan Schmidt at mschmldt@bendfp.org with questions. Find more N bendtap.corn and facebook.corn/bendtap 230 NE Ninth Street, Bend, 541.382.4401 www.bendfp.org www.facebook.corn/bendfp YouthEvents:www.facebook.corn/ bendyouthcollective

UNITARIAN UNIVKRSALISTS OF CENTRAL OREGON

"Diverse Beliefs, One Fellowship" We are a Welcoming Congregation Sunday, November 8 at 10:30am "Fierce Conversations and Amazing Grace" - Rev. Antonia Won, Minister

"Grace" as a word doesn't have much of a place in the secular world and yet this widely known hymn endures, often used at funerals. For many, the song can call up our most humanizing memories of forgiveness, healing and humility. Such things usually require hard work and difficult conversations. How human can we get? Religious Exploration K-2 will explore friendships and how important it is to reach out to others.

Grades 3-5 will talk about the power of growth by e l arninagbout community gardens, and also where their food comes from and food choices. This all connects to the 7th Principle of Unitarian Universalism, "Respect for the interdependent web of nature of which we are all a part." Grades 6-8 will continue to learn about Judaism and talk about Moses and the Ten Commandments and their connection to Unitarian Universalism.

Meeting place: 61980 Skyline Ranch Road, Bend 97703 Mail:POBox 428,Bend OR 97709 www.uufco.org (541) 385-3908


D4

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015

u en swiness n iana's By Amy Lavaiiey

ChicagoTribune GARY, Ind. — The case

cou ina ion case stays. provides three choices for the "That has happened a cou- governor. "The law said politics should ple of times," she said. The judges fielded questions not be considered," he said. about how they separate their David also fielded a question own beliefs and views from about what lawyers need to do following the law in the cases before they appear before the

The case focused on Leon-

ard Suggs, who was found guilty in Allen Superior Court

before the Indiana Supreme in Allen County of domestic Court focused on arguments battery against his girlfriend about what constitutes a fam- and felony battery against ily member. Vera Warren, a woman Suggs But the oral arguments be- had known all his life as "Aunthey hear and to what extent fore the state's high court on a tie," who is the sibling of a man they evaluate and update the recent Friday weren't in Indi- who was married to Suggs' laws they uphold. "That's not our job," Justice anapolis. They took place in a aunt. high school auditorium. That convoluted relationMark Massa said. "It's the job "This is rather a rare occur- ship is the basis for the apof the General Assembly to rence. We typically hold oral peal that landed before the write and update laws, and it' s arguments in an ornate court- Supreme Court, as attorneys up to us to hear oral arguments house in the state Capitol," for the defendant and the state about what a law means, but said Justice Robert Rucker, a argued whether Warren was Kyle Telectran / Gary (Ind.) Post-Tribune via Tribune News Service it's not up to us to change that." Gary native, adding that a few truly a relative, which would Indiana Supreme Court justice Justice Mark S. Massa, center, He added that there have times a year, the justices bring support the felony battery speaks during a Q&A session in front of students in Indiana been times when the Generthe oral arguments to the pub- charge. recently. al Assembly has amended a lic. "We do this because we The justices listened to the law after one of the court's want you to see the process arguments intently, asking decisions. firsthand." questions and s ometimes the Lake County and Porter decision. During a q u es- One student wanted to know About 875 students from using humor. When Rucker County bar associations in the tion-and-answer session with about whether politics comes 10 schools heard the Indiana said he has heard he is a dis- audience. the students after the oral ar- into play in judicial appointSupreme Court dissect what tant relative of singer Darius Chief Justice Loretta Rush guments, Rush said if one of ments, because the governor constitutes a family member Rucker, Justice Steven Da- told the students that in the the justices is recused from a makes those decisions. Justice during oral arguments in the vid said, "He's very proud of next step in the case, the jus- case and the remaining four Brent Dickson, a Hobart, InPortage High School auditori- that," drawing laughter from tices would meet for discus- justices have a tie vote, the ap- diana, native, said a commisum, in Portage, Indiana. the students and members of sion and then vote on their pellate court's decision in the sion reviews applicants and

Social media Continued from 01 Experts say many parents choose to reserve a domain name, perhaps adding photos or a blog. Others might nab the name but do nothing with it, holding it, for example, for a possible future portfolio.

Most platforms regulate that a child needs to be at least 13 to be on social media, said

Augusta Nissly, program coordinator for the Washington, D.C.-based Family Online Safety Institute.

How this affects a child later varies and is a bit unpre-

dictable, experts agree. After all, no one knows what the digital world will look like in 18 years. Another thing many parents consider'? Email. Parents

often set up an account to avoid the inconvenience, for

Supreme Court. Lawyers need

to know the facts of their case and to be prepared, he said. "Have a backup plan. Have a backup plan for your backup plan," he said, adding that lawyers expect the justices to be

prepared as well by knowing thecase and having questions ready. Massa had a few closing words forthe students. " Think a bout w h a t y o u

saw today and what it means for you as future adults, and

the freedoms you have," Massa said, noting that the case the students heard before the state's highest court meant

the difference of six months in Suggs' sentence. "We have the rule of law, and you' re all protected by it."

their child, of having to add a Most millennial moms and etiquette, Wang noted. If a Facebook privacy settings your 13-year-old asks why jumble of numbers at the end dads have Facebook and In- parent feels she is posting and removing your location you posted that bathtub photo of the email address. stagram accounts, and they too often on her own page, from Twitter. when he was a baby. "They' re kind of thinking "They' re probably not gomight use them more after she cancreatea page justfor Common Sense Media, a ahead and trying to lock that baby. According to BabyCen- baby and her fans. Then, "all nonprofit media advocacy ing to think that's very funin," Wang said. ter,since becoming pregnant those 102 pictures of the baby group for families, warns of ny to have on social media," It's a m i l lennial t h i n g : or a mother, 24 percent re- are really dedicated for the children's photos falling into Nissly said. Young parents, especially ported using Facebook more family and close friends that the wrong hands, whethUhls, who also works with millennials (ages 18 to 34 in than before, and 33 percent are really interested about all er through identity theft or Common SenseMedia on the 2015), are jumping on this had bumped uplogging onto of your baby's development," showing up o n u n intend- digital intersection of parents trend. Instagram. she said. ed websites. In May, a Utah and children, added that it' s " Millennial p a r ents a r e "Instagram is really made mother found that photos of hard to later tell teens to be on social media, and they' re for the millennial parent, be- Pause before posting her daughterand 9-month-old careful online if you didn' t on their digital devices and cause it's just all about photo Wang said Bump message son had been used on social model the same caution. smartphones all t h e t i me," sharing," Wang said. "You see boards often discuss privacy media with hashtags connectAnd, she pointed out, it' s Wang said. "This is very many moms who are the pow- and whether to post infant ed to porn sites. nearly impossible to know much a part of their lifestyle." er Instagram users, who love photos. Indeed, discussing The organization notes that what your brand-new baby A 2014 BabyCenter report posting photos of their child digital expectations and de- having a password-protect- would think. " They don't e ven k n o w on millennial moms showed and styling them." cisions is a great first step for ed account on photo-sharing that 79 percent use social meFor sites like Facebook or new parents, who are espe- sites like Flickr or Photobuck- who their child is.... Are they dia at least daily. And in this Ttrtritter, some simply store cially vulnerable to the temp- et is an option. They also sug- going to be shy? What are year's BabyCenter "State of a name. Others might use a tation of posting. gest apps that are designed to they going to be?" Uhls said. Modern Motherhood" report, handle to t w eet h umorous First, parents need to be- be privately shared, like Nota- "And by making this choice 63 percent o f r e spondents things from baby's voice — "I come fluent in privacy set- bli, 23snaps and eFamily. for them early on, are they reported using their smart- tried carrots today!" tings. FOSI provides videos cramming them into a box phone more since pregnancy Having a Facebook site on navigating the some- When baby grows up that they may not want to be or birth. for a baby can be excellent t imes-confusing world o f Also, think ahead to when in?"

VoLUNTEER SEARGH The organizations listed areseeking volunteers for a variety of tasks. Changes, additions or deletions should be emailed to Volultteer©bendbulletin. corn or call 541-383-0350.

SENIORS ALZHEIMER'S ASSOCIATION: 800-272-3900. ASPEN RIDGEALZHEIMER' S ASSISTEDLIVING AND RETIREMENT COMMUNITY: 54 l-385-8500. BEND SENIORCENTER: Kim, 541-706-6 I27. CASCADEVIEW NURSING AND ALZHEIMER'SCARECENTER: 541-382-7161. CENTRALOREGON COUNCIL ON AGING(COCOA)AND MEALS ON WHEELS: www.councilonaging.org or 541-678-5483. LA PINESENIOR ACTIVITY CENTER: Karen Ward, 541-536-6237. LA PINE SENIOR CENTER: Denise, 541-848-9075. LONG-TERMCARE OMBUDSMAN PROGRAM:NancyAllen, 541-312-2488. PILOTBUTTE REHABILITATION CENTER:541-382-5531. PRINEVILLESOROPTIMIST SENIOR CENTER:Melody, 541-447-6844. REDMOND SENIORCENTER: Sharon, 541-548-6325. TOUCHMARK ATMT. BACHELOR VILLAGE: 541-383-1414. VOLUNTEERS IN ACTION: 541-548-7018.

CHILDREN, YOUTH AND EDUCATION SERVICES ACTIONTHROUGH ADVOCACY: 541-385-4741. ADULTBASICSKILLSDEPARTMENT (COCC):Margie Gregory, mgregory© cocc.edu or 541-318-3788. AFS-USA:www.afsusa.org or Caitlin Krutsinger, 503-419-9514. ALYCE HATCHCENTER:Andy Kizans, 541-383- I980. ASSE INTERNATIONAL STUDENT EXCHANGE PROGRAM:www.asse. corn or WendyLarson, 541-480-0959. BENDPARK& RECREATION DISTRICT:Kim, 541-706-6127. BIGBROTHERS BIG SISTERS OF CENTRAL OREGON:541-312-6047 (Bend), 541-447-3851,ext. 333 (Prinevillej or 541-325-5603 (Madras). BOY SCOUTSOF AMERICA: Paul Abbott, paulabbott©scouting.crg Or 541-382-4647. BOYS &GIRLS CLUBS OF BEND: www.bgcbend.org, 541-617-2877 ext.10. CAMP FIRE USA CENTRAL OREGON: campfire©bendcable.corn or 541-382-4682. CASA(COURTAPPOINTED SPECIAL ADVOCATES): www. casaofcentraloregon.org or 541-389-1618. CENTRAL OREGONSHRINERS RijN FOR ACHILD:shrinersrunforachild@ g mail.corn or 541-205-4484.

CHILDREN'SVISION FOUNDATION: Julie Bibler, 541-330-3907. CIRCLEOFFRIENDS: Beth, beth© acircleoffriendsoregon.corn or 54 I-588-6445. DESCHUTESCOUNTYSHERIFF'S OFFICE— CENTRAL OREGON PARTNERSHIPSFORYOUTH: www.deschutes.org/copy, COPY© deschutes.org or 541-388-6651. FOSTERGRANDPARENTS PROGRAM:JOhn Breltne,541-2764474 or 1-800-541-5116. GIRL SCOUTS: 541-389-8146. GIRLSON THE RUN OF DESCHUTES COUNTY:www.deschutescountygotr. org or eusselman©bgcbend.org. GRANDMA'SHOUSE:541-383-3515. HEALTHYBEGINNINGS:ww w.myhb. org or 541-383-6357. HIGH DESERTTEENSVOLUNTEER PROGRAM: www.highdesertmuseum. org or 541-382-4757. IEP PARTNERS:Carmelle Campbell at the OregonParent Training and Information Center, 888-505-2673. JBAR JLEARNINGCENTER: Lachlan Leaver, lleaver@ibarj.org or 541-389-1409. JUNIORACHIEVEMENT:www. jaorswwa.org or Liz Lotochinski, 541678-2256, Ilotochinski©ja-pdx.org. JUNIPERSWIM 8rFITNESS CENTER: Kim, 541-706-6127. KIDS CENTER: Charissa Miller, cmiller@kidscenter.org Or 541-383-5958. LA PINEHIGHSCHOOL:Jeff Bockert, 541-355-8501. MEADOWLARK INDEPENDENT LIVING PROGRAM: Teal Buehler, 54 I-617-9576. M OUNTAINSTARFAMILY RELIEF NURSERY:541-322-6820. NEIGHBORIMPACT: 541-548-2380, ext. 115. OREGON STATEUNIVERSITY EXTENSIONSERVICE:541-548-6088, 541-447-6228 or 541-475-3808. OREGON STATEUNIVERSITY MASTERGARDENERVOLUNTEER PROGRAM:http: //extension. oregonstate.edu/deschutes or 54 I-548-6088. READ TOGETHER: 541-388-7746. REDMOND HIGHSCHOOL: 541-923-4807. REDMOND LEARNINGCENTER:Zach Sartin, 541-923-4854. REDMOND YOUNGLIFE: 54 I-923-8530. SCHOOL-TO-CAREERPARTNERSHIP: Kent Child, 541-355-4158. SMART (STARTMAKING A READER TODAY):www.getsmartoregon.org or 541-355-5600. TRILLIUM FAMILYSERVICES: 503-205-0194. VIMA LUPWA HOMES: www. lupwahomes.org or 541-420-9634. YOUTH CHOIROF CENTRAL OREGON:541-385-0470.

ANIMALS AND ENVIRONMENT BENDSPAY& NEUTER PROJECT: 541-617-1010.

BRIGHTSIDEANIMAL CENTER: 541-923-0882 or volunteer© b rig htsidcanimals.org. CAT RESCUE, ADOPTION & FOSTER TEAM (CRAFT):www.craftcats.org, 541-389-8420 Or541-598-5488. CENTRALOREGON NORDIC CLUB TRAIL ANDSHELTERMAINTENANCE: conordicclub©gmail.corn or www. conordicclub.org. CHIMPS, INC.:www.chimps-inc.org or 541-410-4122. DESCHUTES LANDTRUST: www.deschuteslandtrust.org or 541-330-0017. DESCHUTES NATIONALFOREST: Jean Nelson-Dean,541-383-5576. EASTCASCADESAijoijBON SOCIETY:www.ecaudubon.org or 541-241-2190. THE ENVIRONMENTALCENTER: www.envirocenter.org or 541-385-6908. EQUINEOUTREACH HORSE RESCUE OF BEND: www.equineoutreach. corn, joan@equIneoutreach.corn or 541-419-4842. FENCES FORFIDO: LaDonna, 503314-7105 or fencesforfido.org. FRIENDS OFTHECENTRALCASCADES WILDERNESS: centralcascades. org, info©centralcascades.orgor 541-390-2400. HIGHDESERT MUSEUM: Shannon Campbell, scampbell© highdesertmttseum.org or 541-3824754 ext. 391. HUMANE SOCIETYOF CENTRAL OREGON: Jen, jennifer©hsco.org or 54 I-382-3537. HUMANE SOCIETYOFTHE OCHOCOS: 541-447-7178. JUNIPERGROUP SIERRA CLUB: 541-389-9115. MUSTANGS TOTHERESCUE: www.mustangstotherescue.org or 541-330-8943. PRINEVILLE BLM:www.blm.gov/orl districts/prineville/recreation/host.php or 541-416-6700. STEWARDSHIPFOR SUSTAINABLE BAGGING: LexaMcAllister, Imcallister@cocc.edu or 541-914-6676. SUNRIVERNATURECENTER & OBSERVATORY: 541-593-4442. VOLUNTEERCAMPGROUND HOST POSITIONS: TomMottl, 541-416-6859.

HEALTH AMERICAN CANCERSOCIETY: Charlie Johnson, 541-434-3114. AMERICANCANCER SOCIETY'S RELAYFORLIFE: Lauren Olander, lauren.olander@cancer.org or 541-728-4378. AMERICANREDCROSS: MaryTyler, 541-749-4111. THE BLOOMPROJECT:LizTaylor, I.taylor@thebloomproiect.org or 541-480-6312. HEART 'N HOME HOSPICE & PALLIATIVE CARE:www.gohospice. corn or 541-508-4036. HOSPICEOF REDMONDSISTERS: www.redmondhospice. org or Volunteer Coordinator at

541-548-7483. MOUNTAINVIEW HOSPITAL:JODee Tittle, 541-475-3882, ext. 5097. MOUNTAINVIEW HOSPITAL HOSPICE:541-460-4030 or Tori Schultz, tschultz©mvhd.org or 541475-3882, ext. 5327. NATIONALALLIANCE ON MENTAL ILLNESS— CENTRAL OREGON: Eileen White, namicentraloregon© g mail.corn. PARTNERSINCARE:www. partnersbend.org or JasonMedina, iasonm©partnersbend.org or 5rI1-382-5882. RONALD MCDONALDHOUSE:Teresa Braun, 541-318-4950. ST. CHARLESIN BENDAND ST. CHARLESIN REDMOND: 541-706-6354. VOLUNTEERS IN MEDICINE: Kristi, 541-585-9008.

ARTS, MUSIC, CULTURE AND HERITAGE 88.9KPOV,BEND'S COMMUNITY RADIOSTATION:info©kpov.org Or 541-322-0863. ART COMMITTEEOF THE REDMOND FRIENDSOF THE LIBRARY:Linda Barker, 541-312-1064. ARTS CENTRAL STATION: 541-617-1317. CASCADES THEATRICAL COMPANY: 541-389-0803. CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY ASSOCIATION: Julie, 541-383-7779. DES CHUTESHISTORICAL MUSEUM: 541-389-1813, 10a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. DESCHUTESPUBLICLIBRARY SYSTEM:541-312-1039. FRIENDSOF THE BEND LIBRARIES: www.fobl.org or Meredith Shadrachat 5rII-61 7-7047. HIGHDESERT CHAMBER MUSIC: www.highdesertchambermusic. corn or Isabelle Senger at info© highdesertchambermusic.corn or 541-306-3988. HIGHDESERT MUSEUM: 541-382-4754. LA PINEPUBLICLIBRARY: Cindylu, 541-317-1097. LATINOCOMMUNITY ASSOCIATION: Brad, 541-382-4366. REDMOND FRIENDSOF THE LIBRARY:54I-312-1060. REDMONDINTERCULTURAL EXCHANGE (R.I.C.E.): Barb, bonitodia@msn.corn or 541-447-0732. TOWER THEATREFOUNDATION: 541-3 I7-0700.

HUMAN SERVICES ABILITREE:volunteer@abilitree.org or 541-388-8103, ext. 217. AMNESTYINTERNATIONAL:Philip Randall, 541-388-1793. ASSISTANCE LEAGUEOFBEND: 541-389-2075. BEND'SCOMMUNITY CENTER: volunteer©bendscommunitycenter. OI'g.

BENDFOODPROJECT: www. bendfoodproject.corn or Sueand Larry Marceaux, 541-383-3112. BETHLEHEM INN: www.bethleheminn. org or 541-322-8768. BRIDGING GAPS:bendbridginggaps© gmail.corn or 541-314-4277. CASCADES EASTRIDECENTER: Erik Maiorano, emaiorano@coic.org. CENTERFOR COMPASSIONATE LIVING(PREVIOUSLY PEACE CENTER OF CENTRALOREGON):www. compassionateceltter.org or Beth Hansen, 541-923-6677. CENTRALOREGONVETERANS OUTREACH: covo.org©gmail.corn or 54 I-383-2793. DEPARTMENT OFHUMAN SERVICES/ VOLUNTEER SERVICES:Therese Helton, Therese.M.Helton©state,or.us or 541-693-8988. DEPARTMENT OFHUMAN SERVICES/ VOLUNTEERSERVICESCROOK COUNTY: Valerie Dean, 541-447-3851, ext. 427. DISABLEDAMERICANVETERANS (DAY):DonLang, 541-6471002. FAMILYKITCHEN:Cindy Tidball, cindyt@bendcable.corn or 541-610-6511. FAMILYRESOURCECENTER: 541-389-5468. HEALINGREINSTHERAPEUTIC RIDINGCENTER:www.healingreins. org or CassidyThompson, 54 I-382-941 0. HUMANDIGNITY COALITION: 54 I-385-3320. HUNGER PREVENTIONCOALITION: Robin, 541-408-1978. LA PINE COMMUNITY KITCHEN: 541-536-1312. NEIGHBORIMPACT: chrisqo neighborimpact.org or 541-548-2380, ext.106. PEACEBRIDGES,INC., BEND: www.abridgetopeace.org or JohnC. Schwechten at541-383-2646. PFLAGCENTRAL OREGON: www.pflagcentraloregon.org or 541-317-2334. SAVINGGRACE:541-382-9227 or 541-50rI-2550. SOROPTIMISTINTERNATIONAL OF BEND:www.sibend.org, president© sibend.org or 503-519-5051. ST. VINCENTDEPAULSOCIAL SERVICES: 541-389-6643.

HABITAT FOR HUMANITY AND THRIFT STORES BENDAREAHABITATFOR HUMANITY:rcooperobendhabitat.org. BRIGHTSIDEANIMAL CENTER THRIFT STORE: 541-923-0882 or volunteer©b rig htsideanimals.org. BENDHABITATRESTORE: Brenda Jackson, 541-312-6709. HUMANE SOCIETYOF CENTRAL OREGON THRIFT STORE:Jen, jennifer©hsco.org or 541-382-3537. NEATREPEATTHRIFT SHOP:Peg, 541-4rI7-6429. NEWBERRYHABITATFOR HUMANITY:541-593-5005. OPPORTUNITYFOUNDATION THRIFT

STORE OF BEND: 541-389-0129. OPPORTUNITYFOUNDATION THRIFT STORE OFREDMOND: 541-548-5288. REDMOND HABITATFOR HUMANITY: Scott or Warren, 541-548-1406. REDMOND HABITAT RESTORE:Roy, 541-548-1406. SISTERSHABITAT FOR HUMANITY: 541-549-1193. ST. VINCENTDEPAUL— LAPINE: 541-536-1956. ST. VINCENTDEPAULPRINEVILLE:541-280-7109. ST. VINCENTDEPAUL— REDMOND: 541-923-5264.

GOVERNMENT, CITY AND COMMUNITY THE CITIZENREVIEWBOARD(CRB): crb.volunteer.resources©oid.state. or. UsOr1-800-551-8510 ext. 64535. CITY OFBEND:Volunteer Now© ci.bend.or.Usor 541-388-5579. DESCHUTES COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION:Nick Lelack, 541-3851708 or www.deschutes.org/cd/page/ planning-commission. DESCHUTESCOUNTY VICTIMS' ASSISTANCEPROGRAM: Diane Stecher, 541-317-3186or 541-388-6525. DESCHUTESRIVER WOODS NEIGHBORHOODASSOCIATION: www.drwna.org or Barbara atinfo© drwna.org or 541-382-0561. JEFFERSONCOUNTY CRIME VICTIMS' ASSISTANCE PROGRAM: Tina Farrester, 541-475-4452, ext. 4 I08. JEFFERSON COUNTYVOLUNTEER SERVICES: Therese Helton, 541-4756131, ext. 208. LA PINERURAL FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT:Volunteer Coordinator, 541-536-2935. ORCHARDDISTRICT NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION:

www.ore harddistrictneighborhood

.

corn. SCORE: Bruce Michalski, www. scorecentraloregon.org or 541-316-0662. SUNRIVERAREACHAMBER OF COMMERCE: 541-593-8149. VISIT BEND: www.visitbend.corn or 541-382-8048. VOLUNTEER CONNECT:www. volunteerconnectnow.org or 541-385-8977.

MISCELLANY GENTRALOREGONLOCAVORE: Niki, 541-633-0674 or info© centraloregonlocavore.org. HIGHDESERT SPECIAL OLYMPICS: 541-749-6517. THE KILNSBOOKSTORE & BOUTIQUE: www.thekilns.corn or Jen Lewis at 541-771-8794. OREGON ADAPTIVESPORTS: www.oregonadaptivesports.org, info©oregonadaptivesports.org or 54 I-306-4774. SACREDART OF LIVING CENTER: 541-383-4179.


SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D5

Pus-size a ein is out o as ion r-

By Sara Bauknecht

For instance, most pieces in its debut in-house label of dress-

'

)-

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

There's a makeover of sorts sweeping the fashion indus-

es and separates, called You x ModCloth, come in sizes XS

try — but it's not about what

through 4X.

dothes look like. Instead, it' s about how retailers are talking

But ModCloth isn't the only retailer trying to better cater

about them.

to curvy fashionistas. Depart-

ModCloth, the e-commerce site specializing in vintage-in-

• ' • e•

spired fashions and accesso-

ries, recently announced that it's removing the "plus" section of dothing from its home page, and is in the process of eliminating plus-sized language

• pr ' • -e •

ment store chain J.C. Penney is

f

:*:

launching more options for sizIQ

'ys

nq .4~,sl

• r.

from its website. Shoppers will

be able to find sizes for a range of body types all in one place

sr '

es 14Wto24Wand 1Xto3Xin stores and online. It also plans

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

to replace the plus-sized apparel section on its webske with something called "The Boutique," which will be stocked with looks for fuller figures for daytime, social occasions and

Jeremy Wahl, right, celebrates a win over Julian Paolo Sanchez, center, while playing in the finals of the winners' bracket of the "Super Smash Bros." tournament at Wabi Sabi in Bend. Paolo Sanchez went on to win the best-of-five match.

Smash

while tying his wrists into carpal tunnel knots. A prime example is "South Park" derelict Eric Cartman — his most

fitness. Also making headlines this

Continued from 01

ModCloth recently announced that it's removing the "plus" sec-

way for them to search for piec- tion of clothing from its website. Other companies are also trying

fall has been Lane Bryant's

memorable line in an episode born, Michigan, to toggle it out about "World of Warcraft" is for the title of champion. a demand of, "Mom, more Hot

on the site, or there will be a

Photo courtesy Modcloth / Tribune News Service

new ¹PluslsEqual campaign, a series of black-and-white images by fashion photographer Koger and the site's "Mod- Cass Bird that features plusStylists" witnessed these find- sized models proudly showings firsthand at its recent pop- ing off their curves. It's been up shops in Los Angeles and splashed across TV ads, social San Francis co.Inthesetempo- media and major fashion magrary bric k-and-mortar stores, azines like Vogue. According to styles in many sizes were dis- Lane Bryant, which specializes played side by side, rather than in women's sizes 14 thmugh 28, in their respective sections, 67 percent of U.S. women wear and the response from shop- a size 14 to 34, but those wompers was positive. ModCloth en often aren't seen in fashion

es that come in sizes above XL to be more inclusive rather than isolating for larger women. via a filter to be called "extend-

ed sizes," which someday could also include petite, tall and oth- sized fashion. It involved about er size variahons. 1,500 women ages 18 to 35 in

"ModCloth's mission is to

the United States who identify as wearing a size 16 or larger. About 60 percent of them rewe believe this is another way ported feel ing embarrassed help women feel like the best version of t h emselves, and we can promote inclusivity,"

about going to a separate store or department to find their

co-founder and chief creative officer Susan Koger said in a size, the survey found, while statement. about 65 percent said they' d The online retailer conduct- prefer to find their size in the

ed a survey about the experi- same section as all the other ence andperceptions ofplus- sizes.

also strives to carry styles that

editorials, on television or else-

are available in many sizes. where in the media.

SUPPoRT GRoUPs The following list contains support grou pinformation submitted to The Bulletin. Submissions must beUpdated monthly for inclusion. Tosubmit, email relevant details to communltylife@ bendbulletin.corn. ABILITREEPEER GROUP FOR PERSONS AFFECTEDBYA DISABILITY: 541-388-81 03. ABILITREE YOUNG PEER GROUP: 541388-81 03ext. 219. ABILITREEBRAIN INJURY SUPPORT GROUP: 541-388-81 03. ADHDADULTSUPPORTGROUP: 541-420-3023. ADOPTIVEPARENTSUPPORT GROUP: 541-389-5446. ADULTCHILDREN OF ALCOHOLICS: 541-633-8189. AGE WIDEOPEN (ADULT CHILDREN SUPPORT GROUP): 541-410-4162 or www.agewldeopen.corn. AIDSEDUCATION FOR PREVENTION, TREATMENT,COMMUNITY RESOURCES ANDSUPPORT (DESCHUTES COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT):541-322-7402. AIDSHOT LINE:800-342-AIDS. AL-ANON: 541-728-3707 or www. centraloregonal-anon.org. ALCOHOLICSANONYMOUS (AA):541548-0440or www.coigaa.org. ALS SUPPORT GROUP:541-977-7502. ALZHEIMER'S ASSOCIATION: 541-548-7074. ALZHEIMER'S ASSOCIATION CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 541-330-6400. ALZHEIMER'S ASSOCIATION CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUPASPEN RIDGE:800-272-3900. ALZHEIMER' S/DEMENTIA CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 541-948-7214. BENDATTACHMENTPARENTING: 541-385-1787. BEND S-ANONFAMILYGROUP: 888-285-3742. BEND ZENMEDITATION GROUP: 541382-6122 or541-382-6651. BEREAVEMENTSUPPORTGROUPS: 541-382-5882. BEREAVEMENTSUPPORTGROUPS: St. Charles Hospice;541-706-6700. BEREAVEMENTSUPPORT GROUP/ADULTSAND CHILDREN: 541-383-391O. BEYOND AFFAIRSNETWORK: A peergroup for victims of infidelity, baninbend©yahoo.corn. BRAININJURY SUPPORT GROUP: 541-382-9451. CANCERFAMILYSUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-5864. CANCERINFORMATION LINE: 541-706-7743. CAREGIVERSUPPORT GROUP: 541-536-7399. CELEBRATE RECOVERYBEND: Faith Christian Center,541-383-5801; Westslde Church,541-382-7504; centraloregoncr.org CELEBRATE RECOVERYLAPINE: Grace Fellowship,541-536-2878; High Lakes Christian Church,541-536-3333; Living Waters Church, 541-536-1215; centraloregoncr.org CELEBRATERECOVERY MADRAS: Living HopeChristian Center,541-4752405orcentraloregoncr.org. CELEBRATE RECOVERYREDMOND: RedmondAssembly of GodChurch, 541-548-4555 orcentraloregoncr.org. CENTRALOREGON ALZHEIMER'S/ DEMENTIACAREGIVERS SUPPORT GROUP: 541-504-0571. CENTRALOREGON AUTISM ASPERGER'SSUPPORTTEAM: 541-633-8293. CENTRALOREGON AUTISM SPECTRUM RESOURCEAND FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP:541-279-9040. CENTRALOREGON COALITIONFOR ACCESS(WORKING TO CREATE ACCESSIBLE COMMUNITIES): 541-385-3320. CENTRALOREGON COUNCILON AGINGCAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP: 541-678-5483 or cmcguire© councilonaging.org. CENTRALOREGON DISABILITY SUPPORTNETWORK:541-548-8559 orwww.codsn.org. CENTRALOREGON FAMILIESWITH MULTIPLES: 541-330-5832 or

541-388-2220. 541-706-2904. CENTRALOREGON LEAGUE OF INFERTILITY SUPPORT GROUP AMPUTEESSUPPORT GROUP (RESOLVE): 54! -604-0861. (COLA):541-480-7420 orwww. LA LECHE LEAGUEOF BEND: ourcola.org. 541-317-591 2. CENTRALOREGON RIGHT TO LIFE: LIVING WELL tCHRONIC 541-383-1593. CONDITIONS): 541-322-7430. CHILDCAR SEAT CLINIC (PROPER LIVING WITHCHRONICILLNESSES INSTALLATIONINFORMATION FOR SUPPORT GROUP: 541-536-7399. SEATANDCHILD): 541-504-5016. LUPUS &FIBROMYALGIA SUPPORT CHILDREN'SVISION FOUNDATION: GROUP:541-526-1375. 541-330-3907. MADRAS NICOTINE ANONYMOUS CHRISTIANWOMEN OF HOPE GROUP:541-993-0609. (WOMEN'SCANCER SUPPORT MATERNAL/CHILDHEALTH GROUP):541-382-1 832. PROGRAM(DESCHUTES CLAREBRIDGEOFBEND COUNTYHEALTHDEPARTMENT): (ALZHEIMER'S SUPPORT GROUP): 541-322-7400. 541-385-4717or rnorton1@ MEMORY CARESUPPORT GROUP: brookdalellving.corn. 541-848-4144oracs©touchmark. CO-DEPENDENTSANONYMOUS corn. BEND:541-610-7445. MENDED HEARTSSUPPORT GROUP: CO-DEPENDENTSANONYMOUS 541-706-4789. REDMOND: 541-610-8175. MISCARRIAGESUPPORT GROUP: COFFEEAND CONNECTION CANCER 541-514-9907. SUPPORTGROUP:541-706-2969. MOMMY ANDMEBREASTCOMPASSIONATEFRIENDS (FOR FEEDINGSUPPORT GROUP: Laura, THOSEGRIEVING THE LOSS 541-322-7450. OF ACHILD):541-480-0667 or MULTIPLESCLEROSIS SUPPORT 541-536-1709. GROUP:54! -706-6802. CREATIVITY & WELLNESS — MOOD NARCONON: 800-468-6933. GROUP:541-647-0865. NARCOTICSANONYMOUS (NA): CROOKED RIVER RANCHADULT 541-416-2146. GRIEFSUPPORT:541-548-7483. NATIONALALLIANCE ON MENTAL DEFEATCANCER: 541-706-2969. ILLNESSOF CENTRAL OREGON DEFEATCANCER YOUNGADULT (HAMI):Email: ttamicentraloregon© SURVIVORNETWORK: 541-706-2969. gmail.cornorwww.namicentraloregon. org. DESCHUTES COUNTYMENTAL HEALTH24-HOUR CRISIS LINE: NAMI BEND — EXTREME 541-322-7500. STATES: 541-647-2343 or www. namlcentraloregon.org DEPRESSIONAND BIPOLAR SUPPORTALLIANCE:54! -549-9622 NAMI BENDCONNECTIONS: 541480-8269, 541-693-4613or www. or541-771-1620. namlcentraloregon.org DEPRESSIONAND BIPOLAR NAMI BENDFAMILY SUPPORT SUPPORT: 541-480-8269 or suemiller92@gmail.corn. GROUP:whitefam©bendcable.corn or www.namicentraloregon.org DEPRESSIONSUPPORT GROUP: 541-617-0543. NAMI-CODUAL DIAGNOSIS ANONYMOUS GROUP: 54!-408-7568 DIABETESEATFOR LIFE!:541-3066801, www.centraloregonnutritlon.corn ortinasmith700©gmail.corn orIbrizee©centraloregonnutrition.corn. NAMI LAPINE CONNECTIONS: 54I536-1151or karless2003©yahoo.corn. DIABETICSUPPORT GROUP: 541-598-4483. NAMI MADRASCONNECTIONS:For peers,541-475-1873or namimadras@ DISABILITY SUPPORT GROUP: gmall.corn. 541-388-8103. NAMI MADRASFAMILY SUPPORT DIVORCECARE:541-410-4201. GROUP:lindamccoy79©gmail.corn. DOUBLETROUBLERECO VERY: NAMI MADRASFAMILY-FAMILY Addiction andmental illness group; SUPPORT GROUP: 541-475-3299 or 541-317-0050. www.namicentraloregon.org DYSTONIASUPPORT GROUP: NAMI PRINEVILLE FAMILY SUPPORT 541-388-2577. GROUP:dawnmountz©gmail.corn ENCOPRESIS (SOILING): 541-548NAMI REDMOND FAMILY 2814orencopresls@gmail.corn. SUPPORT GROUP: 541-548-8637 or EVENINGBEREAVEMENT SUPPORT namicentraloregon©gmail.corn. GROUP:541-460-4030 NAMI REDMOND CONNECTIONS: 54 IFAITHBASED RECOVERY GROUP: 693-4613or www.namicentraloregon. Drug andalcohol addictlons; org. pastordavld©thedoor3r.org. NEWBERRY HOSPICE OF LA PINE: FAMILYRESOURCECENTER: 541-536-7399. 541-389-5468. OREGON COMMISSIONFOR THE GAMBLERSANONYMOUS: Redmond BLIND:54! -447-4915. 541-280-7249, Bend541-390-4365. OREGON CURE:541-475-2164. GAMBLINGHOT LINE:800-233-8479. OREGONLYME DISEASE NETWORK: GERIATRICCARE MANAGEMENT: 541-312-3081 orwww.oregonlyme. info@paulbattle.cornor orQ. I-877-867- !437. OVEREATERSANONYMOUS: 541GLUCOSECONTROL LOW GARB DIET 306-6844orwww.oa.org. SUPPORTGROUP:kjdnrcd©yahoo. PARENTS/CAREGIVERSOF cornor 541-504-0726. CHILDREN AFFECTEDBYAUTISM GLUTENINTOLERANCEGROUP SUPPORT GROUP:541-771-1075 or (CELIAC):541-390-2399. www.coregondevdlsgroupaso.ning. GRANDMA'SHOUSE:Support for corn. pregnant teensandteen moms; PARENTS OF MURDERED CHILDREN 541-383-3515. (POMC)SUPPORT GROUP: 541-410-7395. GRANDPARENTSSUPPORT GROUP: 541-385-4741. PARISHNURSESANDHEALTH MINISTRIES:541-383-6861. GRIEFSUPPORT GROUP: 541-3066633, 541-318-0384or mullinskl@ PARKINSON'SCAREGIVERS bendbroadband.corn. SUPPORT GROUP: 541-317-1188. GRIEFAND LOSS SUPPORT GROUP: PARKINSON'SDISEASE SUPPORT 541-508-4036orwww.gohospice.corn, GROUP:541-419-9964. GRIEFSHARE(FAITH-BASED) PARTNERS INCARE:Homehealth and RECOVERYCLASS:541-350-6435. hospice services;541-382-5882. HEALINGENCOURAGEMENT FOR PAUL'SCLUB:Dads and malecaregiver ABORTION-RELATEDTRAUMA supportgroup;541-548-8559. (H.E.A.R.T.):541-318-1949. PFLAGCENTRAL OREGON: For HEALTHYFAMILIESOFTHE HIGH parents, families andfriends of lesbians DESERT: Homevisits for families with and gays;541-728-3843 orwww. newborns; 541-749-2133 pflagcentraloregon.org. HEARINGLOSS ASSOCIATION: 541PLAN LOVINGADOPTIONS NOW 390-2174or ctepper©bendcable.corn. (PLAN):541-389-9239. HEARTSOFHOPE:Abortion healing; PLANNEDPARENTHOOD: 541-728-4673. 888-875-7820. IMPROVEYOUR STRESS LIFE: PMS ACCESS LINE: 800-222-4767.

PREGNANCYRESOURCE CENTERS: Bend, 541-385-5334; Madras,541-475-5338; Prineville, 541-447-2420; Redmond, 541-504-8919. PULMONARY HYPERTENSION SUPPORTGROUP:208-61 0-5522. RHEUMATOIDARTHRITIS SUPPORTGROUPCENTRAL OREGON(RASGCO): 541-504-8059 oralyce1002©gmail.corn. SAVINGGRACE SUPPORT GROUPS:Bend,541-382-4420; Redmond, 541-504-2550, ext. 1; Madras, 541-475-1880. SCLERODERMA SUPPORT GROUP: 541-480-1958. SEXAHOLICSANONYMOUS: 541-595-8780. SISTERSWOMEN'S CANCER SUPPORT GROUP: 54!-549-2015 or541-815-8131. SOS (SECULARORGANIZATION FOR SOBRIETY):541-410-4271 or thlnkrecovery.co@gmail.corn. SOUPANDSUPPORT:For mourners; 541-548-7483. STEPMOM SUPPORTGROUP: 541-325-3339 orwww. insightcounselingbend.corn. SUPPORT FORFAMILIES AND FRIENDSOFSEXADDICTS: sano n4you©gmail.corn. SUPPORT GROUPFOR FAMILIES WITH DIABETICCHILDREN: 541-526-6690. TOBACCO FREEALLIANCE: 541-322-7481. TOPS ORWEIGHT LOSS SUPPORT GROUP:Bend,541-633-7399; Culver, 541-546-4012; Redmond, 541-548-0480. TRANSITIONINGBACK TO HEALTH:ForCancersurvivors and careglvers; Bend,541-706-3754. TYPE 2DIABETESSUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-4986. VETERANS HOTLINE: 541-4085594or818-634-0735. VISION NW:Peersupport group; 541-330-0715. VOLUNTEERSIN ME DICINE: 541-330-9001. WOMEN FACINGCANCER TOGETHER: Bend, 541-706-2969. WOMEN'SRESOURCE CENTER OF CENTRAL OREGON:541-385-0747 YOUNG PEOPLEWITH DISABILITIESPEERGROUP: 831-402-5024. ZEN MEDITATIONGROUP: 541-388-3!79.

Yes, national: The last one drew 2,010 garnersto DeerThat doesn't count the time

I

that weird loner stigma with a

gamer." Sanchez and Palmer are homes for hours of casual hoping that Central Oregon gaming and strategy building. Smash will continue to grow "Playing alone won't make to the point that they can host you better," Moffat said. "Peo- their own r e gional tournaple are obsessive about every- ments either at Wabi Sabi or thing from character match- a larger venue. Palmer estiups to the looseness of their mates that at their current rate controller joysticks. You won' t of expansion, they' ll need to learn much playing against find a bigger venue sometime the computer." next year. During one Sunday afterThe group also wants to noon in earlyOctober,asmany expand its reach within Bend as 10 members shuffled in and and the surrounding area. out of the darkened apartment Wabi Sabi requires them to shared by a few of the garners. allow kids at their events as a Many were coasting on caf- condition of making the store feine and adrenaline after re- available. The hope is that turning in the early-morning more people of all ages will hours from a 90-person tour- join the fun but that garners nament held on the University and eSport will be seen as of Oregon campus. more than just a basement Sanchez and Jeremy Wahl game. — a newer addition to t h e "You might be new and you group — sharedstories from might get your ass kicked a lot, their top-25 finishes in Eugene but we' re going to show you while others how to become better," Moffat their chosen characters and said. "You don't have to be a made plans for dinner. social favorite to be accepted There's a ste r e otypical here. Besides,wh o doesn'tlike gamer representedin popular having more people to play culture. He lives in his moth- 'Smash' with?"

workshopped

er's basement and spends his

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D6 THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015

ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT TV TOQAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 12:30 p.m. on FOOD,"Valerie's Home Cooking" — Former "Hot in Cleveland" star Valerie Bertinelli

TV SPOTLIGHT

self off. witnessing her takeoff. "I just told my mom, 'Mom, During the incident, Curbeam said he put aside nega- I'm home. That'senough. You

"Secret Space Escapes"

don't have to know,'" said Yi, tive thoughts to get to work. "It wasn't l i k e, 'I'm go- who lives now in the Pacific ing to die,'" he said. "It's just Northwest. "For her, I'm just a

7 p.m. 7hesday, Science Channel

By David Bauder

that I have a job to do. It's all business."

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Lunch with

vival skills give the astronaut a certain cache, as Yi found

tured on the Science Channel's upcoming series "Secret Space Escapes" — and the club would

Richard Shotwell /The Associated Press file photo

seem evenmore exclusive.But Former NASA astronauts Scott Parazynski, left, and Robert Curnot as much as you'd think, beam, sit alongside Science Channel's Vice President of Producsince the danger of space trav- tion Bernadette McDaid onstage during a "Secret Space Escapes" el probably isn't fully appreci- panel. The show detailing tales of dangerous situations encounated by the general public. tered in space premieres Tuesday. r e asons, inci-

dents are often minimized at the time. Space agencies don't want the bad publicity,

of the series that premieres

back home and astronauts are

board had to put out a fire on

trained to fix problems and move on. "Whenever you' re operating on the edge of human ability, you' re going to have close calls," Linenger said. "We' ve had quite a few. But because we usually come out of them successfully people say that

the Russian space station Mir in 1997. Russian press reports

Tuesday at 7 p.m., came when no one wants to scare families he and the other five men on-

hairy." Linenger's close call, part

"I' ve always told my mother

that I'm one of the few persons

out. As a young scientist, she

misses that have them fea-

it's fine when it's actually quite

Curbeam's family watched

his space walks back home and, naturally, were nervous.

To a certain extent, the sur-

former astronauts Robert Curbeam, Jerry Linenger and Yi So-yeon feels a little like eavesdropping on the meeting of a special club. Bring up the reason they' re together — to discuss the near

For many

little girl."

at the time dismissed it as

akin to a cigarette burning; in reality it was like a sparking blowtorch so hot it melted met-

became the first South Korean on Earth where there are literin space when she flew on the ally thousands of people lookspace station in 2008. She was ing out for my safety every a national hero back home, time I go to work," he said. but the Russians she flew and The former astronauts all trained with didn't warm to a still support the space proyoung Korean woman joining gram, and bristle when contheir club. She was just 29 at fronted with p eople who the time.

wonder whether it's worth the

Her problems came during re-entry, when a

expense. They saw the chance

m a l f unc- to tell their stories as a way of

tion briefly subjected her and crewmates to eight times the force of gravity. The simple act of pushing her chest up and down to breathe became

helping the program. Set aside the dangerous inci-

dents, and their stories of space travel will bring out the excited importance of the m issions kid inanyone. They rememmakes the risk worth it. difficult. ber staring out the windows of Curbeam was on a spaceBack on Earth, a conserva- their vehicles in wonder at all walk in 2001 when a valve tive Russian military officer, that passed by, the unexpectleaked, spilling toxic ammonia his uniform bedecked with ed colors and vast amounts of flakes all over his spacesuit. medals, knocked on her door nontwinkling stars. Photos of He had to fix the leak, then and wanted to hear her story. Earth from space are always "He accepted me as one of stay outside the International lovely; imagine seeing it in real Space Station for two extra his colleagues after the ac- time, with cloud formations orbits around the Earth, wait- cident," she said. "I thought, swirling above the surface. "Everybody tells you it's so ing for the sun to melt away 'that's good, as long as I the ammonia crystals. He was survived.'" captivating, that it's 100 times She'snever told hermother better than anything you' ve protected by his space suit, but exposure to the ammonia much about the incident, how- ever seen," Curbeam said. would have put his colleagues ever, particularly after hearing "They' re wrong. It's much bet-

al. There aren't many places to escapea serious fire on a spaceship. Most astronauts are at peace with the danger they face, they say, believing the at risk if he couldn't clean him- that mom fainted in fear while

ew ir isn'ts aroun 0 s

ter than that."

MOVIE TIMESTOQAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0 and IMAX movies. • Movie times are subject to change atter press time. I

Dear Abby: I'm a 17-year-old girl in high school. Recently, I became friends with a new girl at school. She's 15. She has a boyfriend at her old school, but she talks to guys at

will find someone else to ease his a self-centered mooch, and it's unbroken heart. fair to you. Dear Abby: I met someone I reDear Abby: I started a new job ally like eight months ago. The that requires me to deal with the problem is, I can't get him to do public. I am now encountering an

this school she thinks are cute. She

anything except sit at home and watch TV.

unexpected issue I didn't know

I'd have with myself. It's receiving want to hook up with I have suggest- compliments. her and she seems ed doing things he On more than one occasion, DE/,R appy about it. S e is interested in. But men have told me I'm "beautieven talked about when a friend called, ful." Instead of handling it gracegoing to a s chool he went out to a ball- fully, it makes me defensive and dance with them. game without hes- I seem rude without meaning I'm worried she might be cheat- itation. I had been asking him for to be that way. Comments of ing on her boyfriend, but I don' t months to go. He also went to a this nature make me extremely know what to do. I don't know music festival with friends. But if uncomfortable. I' ve never had strangers tell him, so I don't think I can tell him I suggest anything, he can't do it. what'shappening. When she men- He says he will "sometime in the me things like this before. My tioned the guys at school and I future," but how should I take this? co-workers think I'm crazy for not asked her, "What about your boy- W e have never been out to eat or eating it up, but I'm left feeling unfriend'?" she just kinda changed seen a movie. easy for the rest of the day. There the subject. Am I being childish or asking has to be a better way of handling told me some of them

Ag gy

— Teen in Pennsylvania

too much too soon?

this than the way I have been. Any — Underwhelmed in Michigan advice? Dear Underwhelmed: Too soon? — Defensive in Arkansas

Dear Teen: High school romances aren't like marriages. While some of them may last for- Eight months'? You' re not childever, most don' t. That's why I'm ish; you are thinking rationally. advising you to take a step back, Sitting around and watching telestay out of this girl's love life, and vision requires no effort on his stop worrying about her old boy- part — and I' ll bet you' re providfriend. If she really cared about his ing the snacks, too. Forgive me for feelings, she wouldn't be flirting seeming judgmental, but the man with the boys at school. In time, he you' re involved with is acting like

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSATURDAY, NOV.7,2015:Thisyearyouhave many friends. One person in particular is unusually lucky for you; keep this person

ARIES (March 21-April 19)

to be gracious and accept it. Say thank you and refrain from using it as an excuse to parade your insecurities. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabbycom or P.o. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • INSIDE OUT (PG)11:30 a.m., 2:30 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) 9 • MAZE RUNNER:THE SCORCH TRIALS (PG-13)5:30 • Younger than 2t may attend aii screenings if accompanied by alegal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • A BALLERINA'S TALE (No MPAArating) 6 • GRANDMA (R) 4 • THE KEEPINGROOM (R)8

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)

YOUR HOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

around. You havemany high aspirations. You also are acutely aware of what is not working. If you can't make asituation workable, consider nixing it in the near future. If you are single, use care before committing to Stars show the ging anY relationship. of day yes'll have Someone signif ** * * * D ynamic icant could enter ** * * p ositive yo u r life. If you are ** * Average atta ched, you' ll ** So-so want more and more time alone * Difficult together. Consider going away more for a night or two. These periods will strengthen your bond. LIBRA knows what makes you tick.

Dear Defensive: Yes. The best way to handle a compliment is

I

Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • BRIDGE OF SPIES (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 3, 6:15, 9:35 • BURNT (R) l2:40, 3:45, 6:30, 9:10 • CRIMSON PEAK (R) 3:15, 9 • EVEREST (PG-13) 1:30, 4:25, 7:25, 10:35 • GOOSEBUMPS (PG) 1:10, 4:20, 7:40 • GOOSEBUMPS 3-D(PG)10:25 • HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA(PG) 2 1:20, 405, 7 45, 10:10 • THE INTERN (PG-13) 1, 4:10, 7:20, 10:15 • THE LAST WITCHHUNTER(PG-13) 7:15, 9:55 • THE MARTIAN (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:55, 6:25, 9:45 • OUR BRAND IS CRISIS(R) l2:15,6:05 • PAN (PG) 12:50, 3:50, 6:50 • THE PEANUTSMOVIE (G)11:30 a.m.,2,4:30,7,9:30 • THE PEANUTSMOVIE3-D(G)noon,2:30,5,7:30,10 • SPECTRE (PG-13) 11:35 a.m., noon, 12:25, 3:05, 3:35, 3:55, 6:25, 6:40, 7:10, 9:40, 10:05, 10:30 • SPECTRE IMAX (PG-13) 1, 4:15, 7:35, 10:45 • TRUTH (R) 9:50 • WOODLAWN (PG) 12:55, 4:15 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.

lukewarm about any one topic. Let out the child within you and enjoy those around you, rather than get uptight. Consider a picnic lunch. Tonight: Add some spice.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

** * * I nvestigate possibilities more carefully than you have in the past. Be respectful with a sincere offer, even if you decide to nix it. A child or a new friend could be fun to brainstorm with. You will love this person's imagination. Tonight: Maintain a low profile.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.21)

** * * Give up being so serious. You ** * * Choose to respond to an invicould be raining on others' parades more tation to talk in the morning. You' ll have than you realize. If you feel excluded, perthe opportunity to reveal your feelings haps you need to put yourself in a different and have a long-overdue conversation. A situation. You don't need to make adecihappy quality evolves around your home. sion right now. Weigh various ideas. ToYou might decide that staying at home is a night: Find a friend who makes you laugh. worthwhile idea. Tonight: Order in. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ** * * You might consider sponta** * * Run out for a favorite breakfast neously taking off with a loved one this treat, and bring it home for others. Do this, morning. A change of scenery revitalizes and you' ll start the day on the right note. youandanyonefortunateenough to be The day only gets better, though there with you. You will feel empowered by what might be a discussion about your attitude is happening around you. Tonight: Others as of late. Don't make it a big deal. Tonight: naturally gravitate toward you.

** * * Whatever you do, you will do it with all your heart. You most likely will be participating in a special event with a loved Someonesnagsyour heart. one. Others also seek you out. A close VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) friend might not beonthe samepageas ** * * Use the morning well, as your you about a potential trip. Tonight: Take energy levels remain high and you become others' feelings into consideration. unusually expressive of your feelings. You might go overboard in an areawhere TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * Spend some quality time with a you frequently tend to overindulge and loved one over breakfast or immediately not care about what others have to say. afterward. Your imagination will delight Tonight: Out on the town. this person. You might have someerrands LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) or a special happening to attend to later. ** * * You might need to handle a perYou naturally delight others in your own sonal matter in the morning, after which way. Tonight: Be nurturing. you will be much more upbeat. You could GEMINI (May 21-June20) discover that there is a difficult moment ** * * Fun surrounds you. Feelings in a discussion with a key person in your could be quite passionate, no matter what life. Decide whether you should pull away. the topic. It seems as though no onefeels Tonight: Hang out with your pals.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * One person pulls in close. Can you handle this type of behavior? In any case, you will want to reflect on this later in the day. Make it OK to head to a ball game, an art exhibit or some other fun activity by yourself. Tonight: Weigh the pros and cons of recent events.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * Others seem to gather around you this morning. A loved one could become irritated, as he or shewants your company. Be smart, and make time for the special people in your life; don't take them for granted. The payoff will be worth it. Tonight: With someone you adore. © King Features Syndicate

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • THE MARTIAN (PG-13) 5:45, 8:45 • THE PEANUTS MOVIE(G) 11a.m., 11:30 a.m., 1:15, 1:45, 3:30, 4, 8:15, 8:30 • SPECTRE (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 12:30, 2:45, 3:30, 5:45, 6:30, 8:45, 9:30

continuessharingherpassionfor cooking delicious meals for her friends and family as sheopens her second season with "Poker Night." When actor Michael Burger, "cake king" Duff Goldman and Twitter comic Jenny Johnson come over for anevening of card-playing, Valerie lays out an assortment of finger foods, including Southwest eggrolls with homemadesalsa dipping sauce, retro Rumaki Teriyaki and bite-size ham, apple andcheddar slide rs. 8 p.m. on FOOD,"Unwrapped 2.0" — In the newepisode, "Savor the Flavor," host Alfonso Ribeiro samples such tasty treats as Eli's Bavarian Apple Tart and Necco's classic bite-size Mary Jane. Themystery of the orange-colored, banana-flavored Circus Peanuts is solved. 8 p.m. on HALL, Movie: "Ice Sculpture Christmas" — After aspiring chef Gallic (Rachel Boston, "Witches of East End"), reconnects with her childhood friend David (David Alpay), a member at the country club where she just started working, he signs her up for the club's ice-sculpting competitionwhich will put her in direct competition with her prickly boss, Gloria (Brenda Strong, "Desperate Housewives" ). Although working with ice is chilly business, warm

sparks fly betweenDavidand Gallic as they prepare for the competition together. 9 p.m. on STARZ, "Ash vs Evil Dead" — In the newepisode "Bait," Special Agent Amanda Fisher (Jill Marie Jones), a disgraced Michigan state trooper, is on the trail of Ash (BruceCampbell), determined to prove heis responsible for the grisly murder of her partner. Elsewhere, Pablo (Ray Santiago) gets his first taste of blood during a particularly manic battle. 11:29 p.m. on 8, 5, "Saturday Night Live" — Too bad hehasn't

made much newslately... maybe

Donald Trump's guest-host stint here will help. We' rekidding, of course, and you just know the show will have afield day with the business tycoon turned Republican presidential candidate — but he' ll be in aposition to giveasgoodashegets,making one wonder how much he' ll stick to the script. The musical guest is Sia. © Zap2it

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Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • THE PEANUTS MOVIE(G) noon, 2:15, 5, 7:20 • SPECTRE (Upstairs — PG-13) 1, 4:15, 7:30 • The upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.

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THE BULLETIN

SATURDAY, NOV 7, 2015

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Your Dream Home Awaits!

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High Desert Design Council

2015 Desi n ompetion Awards On October13th,the HDDCheld the fourth annualDesignCompetition at LegumDesignin downtown Bend. Theevent wasinconjunction with the inauguralBendDesignconferenceheld that sameweek. Of the 12 categories there were 22 submissions. Theseare the award winners.

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Commercial Architecture Summer Oman, Steel Associates Architects Silver Rail Elementary School Designed to be used as the Bend La Pine Schools' new prototype, in support of the district's goals, core values and mission statement.

Functional Art

Repurpose/Upcycle

Barton Stubblefield

Stacey Stemach

Mountain Air, at Bend Furniture 6 Design This commissioned public art installation was created to welcome customers into a retail location as well as enhance the sheetscape.

Light Fixture — Habitat for Humanity Hand-built using all reclaimed and donated materials specifically for the entry vestibule at the new Bend Area ReStore.

-.l'Qfl '

Commercial Remodel

Furniture Design

Residential Architecture

Ascent Architecture and Int eriors EM Thompson Retail Building The renovation of this building, built in 1915, evokes a sense of the building's history without trying to recreate it.

Terra Steel Furniture Butcher Block Mobile Culinary Cart This piece, due to its mobility and features, can be used in a variety of scenarios in any type of home or restaurant.

Ascent Architecture and Interiors Mendell Residence A perfect example of residential urban infill, this new home takes advantage of the site's narrow, steeply sloped property.

Commercial Interior Design Lynn Baker, Ascent Architecture and Interiors Bonta Artisian Gelato Scoop Shop The modern-industrial retail space was designed with a focus on managing and expediting patron traffic patterns.

Residential Remodel

Landscape Design

Charmaine Manley, Charmaine Manley Design Art Collector's Home Designed to open up the existing, crowded main floor to showcase the homeowner's treasured art collection.

Randy Smith, Rhodes Smithey Studio River of Rememberance, Partners in Care Memorial stones are arranged in the landscape, allowing family and friends to reflect and connect with loed ones they' ve lost.

Windertnere... Re-defining the Standard of Excellence in the Real Estate Industry.

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TOP LISTINGAGENT BEND 541-390-0934

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E2 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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Many busi- High Desert Realty 726 - Timeshares for Sale ness possibilities for 541-312-9449 this building, retail, 730 - New Listings BendOregon beautysalon, offices, www. 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale RealEstate.corn gym, etc. $79,900. 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 13985 SW Business Beautiful single level 740 -Condominiums & Townhomes forSale Circle. CRR. home on 8 acres with 744 - Open Houses Juniper Realty gorgeous Cascade Mtn 541-504-5393 745 - Homes for Sale views. AD¹1272 TEAM Birtola Garmyn 746- Northwest Bend Homes 51487 HWY 97 High Desert Realty 747- Southwest Bend Homes $494,900. 1.64 acre 541-312-9449 748 - Northeast Bend Homes commercial lot in La www. BendOregon Pine . High Lakes Re749 - Southeast Bend Homes RealEstate.corn alty 8 Property Man750 - Redmond Homes agement B eautifully cared f o r 753 - Sisters Homes 541-536-0117 home in private and 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes quiet n eighborhood Commercial Buildings in Ad ¹2172 756- Jefferson County Homes Terrebonne. 2 buildTEAM Birtola Garmyn 757 - Crook County Homes ings; 2160 sq. ft. and High Desert Realty 762 - Homes with Acreage 1728 sq. ft. on over 541-312-9449 763- Recreational Homes and Property 1.5 acres. Currently www. BendOregon 764 - Farms and Ranches being used as wareRealEstate.corn houses. Paved drive771 - Lots 16505 Shanks Lane. way and p a rking. 773 - Acreages RVer's Paradise. There is a half bath 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 2400 sq.ft. RV cove and office in the large 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land /shop and home. Ad building. Current use ¹1602 is approved. Change 648 TEAM Birtola Garmyn of use should be veriHigh Desert Realty Houses for fied and approved by 541-312-9449 Jefferson Co u nty. Rent General www. BendOregon $199,500. MLS ¹201409760 RealEstate.corn PUBLISHER' S Bobbie Strome, NOTICE Cozy single level Principal Broker All real estate advercottage in NE tising in this newspa- John L Scott Real Redmond. Ad¹1802 per is subject to the Estate 541-385-5500 TEAM Birtola Garmyn F air H o using A c t Redmond Commercial High Desert Realty 604 which makes it illegal 541-312-9449 Lot I $220,400 to a d vertise "any Storage Rentals www. BendOregon Steve Gorman preference, limitation RealEstate.corn Broker or disc r imination 27'x13.5', 14' overhead 541.408.2265 based on race, color, Gorgeous single level door, thermostat religion, sex, handiliving w/ forest out heated, rec. 8 rest back, large shop and room. GarajMahal on cap, familial status, space in and out. Crusher Ave. in Bend. marital status or national origin, or an inAd ¹1472 Annual rent neg. MORRIS tention to make any TEAM Birtola Garmyn Tenant pays utilities. REAL ESTATE such pre f erence, High Desert Realty 541-389-4111 541-312-9449 limitation or discrimination." Familial stawww. BendOregon Find It in tus includes children 738 RealEstate.corn The Bulletin Classifleds! under the age of 18 Multiplexes for Sale Impeccable cared for living with parents or 541-385-5809 single level home. legal cus t odians,Comfortable duplex, full Ad ¹2142 pregnant women, and of character, near the TEAM Birtola Garmyn 627 people securing cus- heart of P r ineville. High Desert Realty tody of children under AD¹1682 Vacation Rentals 541-312-9449 18. This newspaper TEAM Birtola Garmyn & Exchanges www. BendOregon will not knowingly ac- High Desert Realty RealEstate.corn cept any advertising 541-312-9449 Eagle Crest 2 b drm. for real estate which is www. BendOregon 3000 sq.ft. woodside condo for Thanksgiv- in violation of the law. RealEstate.corn ranch home and shop ing week, Nov. 22-29. O ur r e aders a r e on 2.3 acres. Ad $500. 541-923-5631 hereby informed that ¹2162 all dwellings adver- Condo/Townho mes TEAM Birtola Garmyn 630 tised in this newspaHigh Desert Realty for Sale Rooms for Rent per are available on • 541-312-9449 an equal opportunity www. BendOregon Furnished room, no basis. To complain of ¹4 Mt. V iew Condo, RealEstate.corn smoking/drugs. $550/mo d iscrimination ca l l Sunriver. 3 bdrm, 2 + dep. 541-408-0846 HUD t o l l-free at bath, 1014 sq. ft., golf Beautiful small acreage 1-800-877-0246. The course view. in Tumalo w/ CasRoom rental/Bend. Nice toll f ree t e lephone $240,000 Kyle Hoak, cade Mt n vi e w s. master bdrm, private number for the hear- Broker 541-639-7760 AD¹1152 full bath, $500 mo. + H a t hawayTEAM Birtola Garmyn ing im p aired is Berkshire sec. dep/references. 1-800-927-9275. Home Serv i ces High Desert Realty 541-350-1281 Northwest Real Estate 541-312-9449 FIND IT! www. BendOregon ¹63 Meadow House 632 BUY IT! RealEstate.corn condo, Sun r iver. SELL IT! Apt./llllultiplex General $250,000. 2 bdrm, 2 Own a piece of Oregon The Bulletin Classifieds b ath, 1494 s q . f t . history, the old CHECKYOUR AD great location, golf Hodecker home. 650 course and meadow Ad ¹1722 Houses for Rent v iews. C a l l Ky l e TEAM Birtola Garmyn NE Bend 541-639-7760, BerkHigh Desert Realty shire Hathaway Home 541-312-9449 Clean 3/2 1700 sq. ft., Services N o rthwest www. BendOregon on the first day it runs c orner l ot , n e w e r Real Estate RealEstate.corn to make sure it is cor- home, double garage, refer 8 W/D included, rect. eSpellcheckn and human errors do oc- no smoking, pets concur. If this happens to sidered, $1395 mo. your ad, please con- 1st, last & dep. 63323 Carly Lane. Jim Floyd tact us ASAP so that P rincipal Brok e r, corrections and any 541-390-9986 adjustments can be *... made to your ad. Quiet 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 541-385-5809 private & fen c ed, OI' TheBulletin Classified I views. No smoking/ I pets. $1425. 1st, last, Have an item to dep. 541-389-1922 sell quick? 656 If it's under Houses for Rent '500 you can place it in SW Bend The Bulletin 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, Classifieds for: w asher & dry e r , fenced yard, $1650/ month. 541-389-4351 '13 -3 lines, 7 days k20- 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only) BM 5aRmRs •

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IL L IA M S. hu y. Homes for salelookveryfestive

54 I -408-9029 pre-qualified or even with full l oan approval subject to finding the right property. New listings are needed today!

Do you need to buy or sell? Our team is availa ble seven days a week. C a l l to schedule your personal consultation, andj o i n o u r i n s t an t m essaging service that m a t ches neu properties to your criteria. Let us do the looking for you, so

you can enjoy the holidays! Have a super week, Shelly

Cascade West will market your home until it sells

We will continue Io Market

Until yourhomeisSOLD

Or Farm, Ranch & Acreage i

"Bend sfavorite veal estate team, judged by me, an independent tab.n — Stetson

Team Sell Bend Shelly Hummel, Broker, CRS, GRl 541-480-S523 cell

Statistics:Bend Residential Sales Statistics for the Week of

I 0/26 — I I/I New 30 Pending 48 Sold 46

Low Price $275,000 Low Price $200,000 Low Price $I82,500

Hed i an Price $4 l4,900 Hed i an Price $334,995 Hed i an Price $352,450

High Price $I l,950,000 High Price $825,000 High Price $879,000

Total Bend residential properties on the market: 665 Total number of residential properties sold year to date: 2339 with a median salesprice of $342,500 6 I348Triple Knot Road

$775,000 • Luxury townhome in Golf Homes at Tetherow • 3 bedrooms, 3.5 bathrooms, 2753 sq. ft. • Spectacular waterfall, open living, office • Cascade Mountain & golf course views

2500 NW Peoples Court

$625,000 • SpectacularAwbrey Butte home on 42 acre lot

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$385,000 • One-year new home on Bend's Westside • 3 bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms, I 807 sq. ft. • Great room floor plan with gas fireplace • Move-in ready, close to COCC and all Bend offers!

I 8395 Tumalo Reservoir Road

$699,000 • Country home near Tumalo Reservoir • 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, 2733 sq. ft. • 9.54 acres,4 acres irrigated, barn,corral,shops • Cascade mountain views, riding trails, and much more!

6 I 333 Wild Rapids Drive

$745,000 • Sweeping Deschutes River and canyon views • 2 bedrooms,2.5 bathrooms,. I4 lot • Master on the main, great room, loft, bamboo flooring • Natural surroundings for maintenancefree landscaping

60'930 jennings Road

$495,000 • Classic country single-level home • 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, I 702 sq. ft. • 4.75 acres, huge shop,2 RV pads, dog kennel • Greenhouse, fe nced garden, minutes from town!

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Senior ApartmentIndependent Living ALL-INCLUSIVE with 3 meals daily 1 & 2 Bedrooms Avail NOW at StoneLodge Call 541-460-5323 634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Buyer/SellerStrategies [)pop©gpss , 'certified Residential specialist', I I 732

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Commercial/Investment Properties for Sale

Only a feMrleft! Longtime established Two & Three Bdrms restaurant with Washer/Dryer bar/lounge/pizza and Patio or Deck. parlor in Culver. (One Bdrms also avail.) AD¹1652 Mountain Glen Apts TEAM Birtola Garmyn 541.383.931 3 High Desert Realty Professionally 541-312-9449 managed by www. BendOregon Norris & Stevens, Inc. RealEstate.corn

541-389-1847

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Call me today for your personal consultation to list or view property!

Angella Bean,Broker Buyer Partner

54 I-508-9930 595 NW Yor k D r ive, Suite l00, Bend OR 97703 54 I -585-3760 Main Office View our listingsat WVVWSELLBEND.COM Pleasecheck out our references on Zillow.corn All Realt ors are licensed in the State of Oregon

bouts 4


THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY NOVEMBER 7 2015 E3

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 745

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Great Tumalo location Beautiful and quality 3 one lot off the river on bdrm, 2 bath home in 0.4+ acres. Ad ¹1592 a gorgeous and quiet TEAM Birtola Garmyn SW Bend High Desert Realty neighborhood. 541-312-9449 Ad ¹2062 www. BendOregon TEAM Birtola Garmyn RealEstate.corn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 Turn key single level, 4 www. BendOregon bdrm beauty, on large RealEstate.corn lot, great location. Ad ¹1102 4 Bdrm Bend homeTEAM Birtola Garmyn Huge lot cul-de-sac High Desert Realty privacy. Ad ¹1142 541-312-9449 TEAM Birtola Garmyn www. BendOregon High Desert Realty RealEstate.corn 541-312-9449 www. BendOregon 16 Acre horse property RealEstate.corn + guest house w/ Cascade views. Craftsman styling in AD¹1022 wonderful OaktreeTEAM Birtola Garmyn Bend. Ad ¹1232 High Desert Realty TEAM Birtola Garmyn 541-312-9449 High Desert Realty www. BendOregon 541-312-9449 RealEstate.corn www. BendOregon Custom 2000+ sq.ft. RealEstate.corn home and guest Custom built, house on 10+ acres spectacular views, and Cascade Mtn complete privacy. views. AD¹1512 AD¹1702 TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 541-312-9449 www. BendOregon www. BendOregon RealEstate.corn RealEstate.corn Custom NW 2700 sq.ft. home and 2700 sq.ft. Custom frame home on shop on 1.9 acres. Ad 5+ acres plus bunk house & shop. ¹1322 AD¹1522 TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 541-312-9449 www. BendOregon www. BendOregon RealEstate.corn RealEstate.corn Newly updated 1160 sq.ft. S.E. Bend Bright and beautiful Condo. AD¹1202 home on the 7th fairTEAM Birtola Garmyn way of Big Meadow High Desert Realty Golf Course. 541-312-9449 Ad ¹7002 www. BendOregon TEAM Birtola Garmyn RealEstate.corn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 SE Bend Starter/ www. BendOregon Investor special with RealEstate.corn room for 2nd home. Ad ¹1312 Custom log home, 1 TEAM Birtola Garmyn acre backs forest land High Desert Realty in SR's backyard. Ad 541-312-9449

¹1072

www. BendOregon RealEstate.corn Big Providence

TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www. BendOregon RealEstate.corn Tumalo Craftsman and guest home on 10 acres. Ad¹1452 TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www. BendOregon RealEstate.corn

Charmer! Ad ¹1282 TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www. BendOregon RealEstate.corn Comfortable home on over 4 acres w/shop, 1 barn, irrigation and amazing location. Ad¹1402 TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty

Top of the Hill and end of the road privacy on 20 acres. AD¹1692 TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www. BendOregon RealEstate.corn

541-312-9449

www. BendOregon RealEstate.corn Privacy, Peace and Quiet, 4000 sq.ft. home on 160 acres.

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Many luxuriousfeatures > Oversized chef's kitchen Master on mainlevel Den, loft 8 media room~= $7$$,$50 ~ 'ht

20.44 Acres. If you want privacy and your own getaway retreat, this property is it. Breathtaking views of the Cascade Mountains. Electricity is on t he property. $ 135,000. MLS: 201 3 0 9974 CALL KAR O L YN DUBOIS AT 541-390-7863. Duke Warner Realty

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Sto n ehill Drive. $1,200,000. 4700+ sq. ft., 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath w/ designer touches throughout, main-level master & s p acious in-home off ice,3 spacious bedrooms upstairs, g a me/bonus room with full bath, .94 acre lot in downt own B e nd . C i t y , mountain & Mi r ror Pond views, your getaway in stunning Hillside Park. Cindy King, ABR, CRS, GRI, Principal Broker, P Re/Max Key Properties, 541-419-9068 Co-listed with Cole Billings, Broker, Hasson Company Realtors, 541-241-4868.

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AD¹1792 Custom and comfortTEAM Birtola Garmyn a ble home o n 1 0 2364 SW 33rd St., SW High Desert Realty acres w/ barn, shop Redmond. Open floor 541-312-9449 and quite a view. Ad plan, vaulted ceilings, www. BendOregon ¹2122 brand ne w c a rpet RealEstate.corn TEAM Birtola Garmyn throughout, large .21 High Desert Realty Single level, 3 bdrm, 2 acre lot, great front 541-312-9449 patio w/pavers, easy bath on half acre in www. BendOregon access: schools/ quiet and SW Bend RealEstate.corn shopping/freeway. neighborhood. Sagiv, Broker, Ad ¹1252 3 10 Wil l i s Lan e , Clair 541-390-2328 WindTEAM Birtola Garmyn incredible NW style High Desert Realty Central Orestate on almost 90 ermere egon Real Estate 541-312-9449 acres. Ad ¹1362 www. BendOregon TEAM Birtola Garmyn $ 249,950 S W R edRealEstate.corn High Desert Realty mond. Vaulted open 541-312-9449 Impressive craftsman l iving, 4 b d r m., 3 www. BendOregon on over 4 acres w/ baths, great backyard, RealEstate.corn shop and living space. RV parking, hilltop Ad ¹1292 views. Jean e tte Forest Ridge TownTEAM Birtola Garmyn B runot, Brok e r , home in Eagle Crest High Desert Realty 541-771-1383 WindResort. AD¹1632 541-312-9449 ermere Central OrTEAM Birtola Garmyn www. BendOregon egon Real Estate High Desert Realty RealEstate.corn 541-312-9449 $264,000 Cro o ked Better than new and www. BendOregon River. 2176 sq. ft., 3 beautifully customRealEstate.corn bedroom & 2 b a th, ized on a half acre Perfect SE Bend starter open floor plan, masand the big Deschutes River canal. or investment special. ter separation, shop/ garage, 24x36, 1.56 AD¹1772 Ad¹1812 acres. Jean e tte TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn B runot, Brok e r , High Desert Realty High Desert Realty 541-771-1383 Wind541-312-9449 541-312-9449 ermere Central Orwww. BendOregon www. BendOregon egon Real Estate RealEstate.corn RealEstate.corn •

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Beautiful l andscaping around this 4 bdrm, 3 bath home. Reverse livinghome shows off the incredible views. Downstairs could be an in-law suite. This home shows pride of ownership. $249,900 MLS 201505951. Call Donna Carter, Broker,

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E4 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7 2015 • THE BULLETIN 745

745

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

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

• H o mes for Sale •

745

745

745

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

745

• H o mes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

$264,947. 63229 Boyd $399,000 3465 Field- $425,000 4.75 Acres- $629,500 Horse Prop- $ 800,000 258 9 N W A Rare O pportunity.Bend, Oregon. 66577 Bring the Horses & Christmas Valley Lot Acres, Bend. Upstone Ct. Beautiful 4 SW Bend. OffBrook- erty. Beautiful home 8 Champion Circle. 4 Mountain, river and P onderosa Lo o p . Dogs! Big 2.5 acre with services availdated 4 bdrm., 2.5 bdrm. home, perfect swood, very private landscaping, 2941 sq. bdrm., 3 bath in pres- golf course v iews. $435,000. CASCADE corner lot. 4 bedroom able. Power at road bath Home, 2198 sq. for entertaining, quiet setting, Cascade Mtn. ft. on 2.5 acres, 1.5 ir- tigious Awbrey Glen, Unique Kitty Hawk MOUNTAIN VIEWS, with oak and slate and city water availft., Huge bonus room cul-de-sac, large bo- views from 2nd story, rigated, 4 bdrm., 3 d ream kitchen w / unit features 2 master ROOM TO ROAM & floors. R e m odeled able. Adjacent parcel & master on main. nus room with private e xisting w el l 4 7 0 ' bath, detached heated stainless appliances, suites with a great lo- FOR TOYS! NICE kitchen, great room 1800 also for sale. Re/Max Key Proper- entry, many upgrades deep at 20 GPM, mfg. 65x30 garage/shop, granite cou n t ers, cation. $47 4 ,500. S HOP TOO ! T h e and water feature. $11,000 each. MLS: ties. Gary Everett, & extra storage, large home, lots of poten- RV hookups, 2 stall b eautifully land - MLS: 201 5 07411. h ome is part of a $359,000. MLS: 201503506; CCIM, Principal Bro- covered porch. Tona tial for private estate barn. Mich elle Mar- scaped .6 3 a c r es CALL JAYNEE BECK small community be- 2 01503106. CAL L 2 01503508. CAL L ker, 541-480-6130. R estine, Brok e r, settings. Tony Levi- tinez, Broker, w/sprinkler s ystem, AT 541-480-0988 OR tween Sisters a nd J AYNEE BECK A T FRED JOHNSON AT 541-388-0404 Wind- son, OR 541-788-3733. Duke Joan Steelhammer, Broker, 508-451-8806 Wind- upscale finishes/fea- PETE VAN DEUSEN Tumalo s urrounded 541-480-0988 Broker, ermere Central Or- 541-977-1852 Wind- erm ere Central Or- tures, over 1500 sq. ft. AT 541 - 480-3538. by public land. Each PETE VAN DEUSEN Warner Realty 541-4'I 9-37'I 7. 3-car garage w/bonus. Duke Warner Realty egon Real Estate ermere Central Or- egon Real Estate home is on about one AT 541 - 480-3538. Connie Settle, Broker, egon Real Estate Jillian Smith, Broker, acre, giving everyone Duke Warner Realty Classic NW C ottage. 3+ Acre Mtn. View Par63282 Stonewood Dr. 503-913-5076 Wind- Are You Looking to Built by Jim St. John 541-550-0002. space but not a cel. Four unique lots $495,000 61110 Fergu- Spacious single level- ermere Central Or- Downsize? Sophisti- some lot of property to take Broken Top I $950,000 with timeless finishes with Mt . B a c helor Debbie Benson home, great r oom egon Real Estate and a great room floor Find exactly what cated and low-main- care of. The home views, abut f ederal son Ct. Imagine lookplan, features 3 541 A80.6448 plan. Chef's kitchen tenance 2751 sq. ft. has an open floor you are looking for in the land. Lots are flat at ing out at a gorgeous floor PC, Broker, GRI, bdrm, 2 bath, vaulted and fabulous patio are 80 Acre Estate I & China Hat & home with exquisite plan, which extends CLASSIFIEDS t op, s l op e do w n yard Preview Specialist ceilings and master ideal for entertaining. Paulina mtns., gor$3,950,000 finishes t h roughout. r ight on out t o t h e steeply, have n ice geous open floor plan, separation, big $595,500. MLS: Craig Long Convenient to Old Mill deck and patio per26695 Horsell Road- trees. Close to Sunri- brazilian cherry floors kitchen with breakfast 2 01503918. CA L L 541.480.7647 and shopping. Earth fect for entertaining. Recently remodeled 3 ver Resort, La Pine & cabinets, 41' cov- bar a n d pan t ry, TERRY S KJERSAA Broker The 3-car garage also Advantage-certified. b edroom, 2 bat h , State Park and all rec- ered R V la n d AT 541 - 383-1426. s t o rage, f enced a n d has a work $499,000. M LS: 2 070y sq. ft . f a rm reation. Septic not al- many upgrades, pri- scaped, $ 2 5 9,000. Duke Warner Realty 2 01509008. CAL L space/shop for home MORRIS lowed on these lots. e house on 67.9y acres vacy on all four sides, www.johnlscott.corn/5 SHEA REINER AT projects. There are REAL ESTATE Contemporary 3675 with 39.7y acres of $29,500. MLS: 808-349-5559. Duke two additional buildsq. ft. gorgeous 3576 Cyndi Robertl~ y~ ~ Oy d sq.ft. home in Awbrey CALL 2178 COI irrigation. 1344y 201508418 son, Broker home-a must s ee. Warner Realty ings - one could be MORRIS Highlands with pansq. ft. building for of- BECKY OZRELIC AT Susan Pitarro, Broker, 541-390-5345. John Build your dream home. an additional garage. REAL ESTATE oramic Cascade 541-480-9191. Duke 541-410-8084 Wind- L. Scott Realty, Bend fice/recreation/studio, Awbrey Butte. 3 bed- The yard is fenced to .20 acres, corner lot, I&~ dy ~ ~ ~ d Mountain views 4502y sq. ft. building Warner Realty ermere Central Or- 64055 Tanglewood Rd., room, 3 bath, 3974 +/- keep the pet at home. established neighbor$885,000. with 12' door & man 3bdrm, 2 bath, 1512 sq. egon Real Estate sq. ft. home on 0.61 A must-see! Features: hood, southern views, $844,900 19178 Green Bend. 3 Bdrm, + ofJohn Snippen, door fo r s h op/RV/ ft. with o f fice, car+/- acres. Built closely 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, conveniently located Lakes Loop, Bend. fice/den, 2.5 bath, priPrincipal Broker, toy/boat storage 8 in- port and wraparound $499,000 20903 Bilyeu on Bend's West Side. among some of the 1 971 sq. f t . , 1 . 02 tunning home o n 541-948-9090 door gardening. New decks on 1.27 acres. Way. Custom built, vate, close in to town, S $ 174,950. Kell i e largest P o n derosa acres, built in 1998, 12th fairway, 3553 sq. 750y sq. ft. deep well Stunning C a s cade 3-car garage, backs to 4 .63 a cres. 2 7 0 6 ft., 5 bdrm., 4 bath, Pines o n Broker Aw b rey shop, hot tub, fenced Cook, being drilled to pro- views. $169,900 MLS the c a nal, p r ivate sq.ft., heat pump, 2 Cascade 541-408-0463 John L m a s ter, Butte, to accentuate yard, fireplaces, main level main-level vide a ye a r-round 2 01506578. Scott Realty, Bend Lin d a d rive, q uality u p - master, views of Mt triple garage, Brazil- the feeling of living Mountain Views, Sissource of d omestic Mel o dee Bachelor, water fea- ian cherrywood. Eric within nature in an ur- ters High School Dis- Call The Bulletin At Day Wright, Bro- grades. water. New gas log Lou MORRIS Radcliffe, Bro k er, ture, 3 car garage, Andrews, P r i ncipal ban setting. Interior t rict. R e/Max K e y ker, 541-771-2585 fireplace in s talled.Crooked 541-385-5809 REAL ESTATE 541-788-0612 Wind- privacy constructed on 5 lev- P roperties. Kat h y River Realty Broker, 541-771-1168 plus. $625,000. Hansbrough, Broker, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail IA~ dy~ ~ ~ ermere Central Or- $ 599,000. Kath y Winderm ere Central els, designed to cre- 541-408-2998 MLS¹201 401400 40 Acre Irrigated Farm. egon Real Estate ate a very active livAt: www.bendbulletin.corn Oregon Real Estate Caba, Principal BroBobbie Strome, Contemporary Crafts40 acres of irrigated ing space in a home ABR Principal Broker Cascade Mountain man. Locatedin NW ground for raising hay, $524,500 Quail Ridge. ker, surrounded by large Bend's Westside. 1699 .88 of an acre commer541-771-1761. John John L Scott Real NW Hartford, Bend, Views I $1,750,000 Crossing across from cattle, or horses. 3 2692 sq. ft. one level, L. Scott Realty, Bend cially zoned property trees, abundant i n Estate 541-385-5500 OR: 4 bed, 2 bath with bedroom, 2 bath 1.96 treed acres, 4 Jane Strell Sunset View Park. 3 with tw o s t i ck-built both natural light & hardwood floors and b edroom, 2.5 b a t h 541.948.7998 29.97 NE Bend Acres I home with deck and bdrm., 3 bath, 4-car $724,900. 15778 Ma- homes rented at $575 overall brightness. No cedar siding on large Broker, ABR, GRI, with main level masgarage. Hay storage garage 8 shop, large jestic View, Powell and $850. You also expense was spared $365,000 pine treed lot. Close E-Pro, ter suite and private a nd h o rs e ba r n . b onus room. B o b Butte. Custom Home get an additional tax (65 windows in the Craig Smith, Broker to Drake Park, conveEath Advantage courtyard. $689,900. $649,000. MLS: Ahern, 541.322.2417 Broker, on 38 acres. Horse lot in the deal! This lo- house) to develop a nient to shops, restauMLS: 20' I 506075. 2 01400298. CAL L 5 41-420-3891. D e e setup, easy c a re, cation is off the Ma- sense of warmth, light rants, and s chools; DUKE WARNER RE- Baker, CALL TERRY Broker, views, BLM Land & 15 dras Hwy in Prineville, 8 movement. Com- access to skiing and SKJERSAA AT ALTY DAYVILLE AT 541-977-7756 Wind- min. to Bend. and there have been munal rooms within trails. MLS: 541-383-1426. Duke 541-987-2363. ermere Central Or- www. BendOregons ome n e w bu s i - the home are very 201509279. Warner Realty op e n . egon Real Estate HorseProperty. Info nesses in the area. s pacious & MORRIS MORRIS Need help fixing stuff? Scot t Re/Max Key Properties. Asking $199,900 Bedrooms designed $425,000. REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE C ontemporary N W X Call A Service Professional Pr i ncipal Gary Everett, CCIM, agent-owned p rop- to create a feeling of McLean, ~ y~ e ddy ~ y~ ~ ~ d Craftsman. This TURN THE PAGE find the help you need. Principal Broker, $ 6 5 0,000. Broker/Owner, erty. Heather Hockett, privacy. r aises the bar f o r 541-408-6908. Realty Cascade www.bendbulletin.corn MLS¹ 201507941 For More Ads 541-480-6130. Joan P rincipal Brok e r Mou n tain $ 334,900 New C o nDesigner Executives Steelhammer, Broker, 5 41-420-9151 G o l d Bobbie Strome Views. This lot is lo- perfection! struction! Single level, 40 Acres i n P o well The Bulletin finishes & energy-effiPrincipal Broker 541-419-3717. Country Realty cated in the heart of 2 112 sq. ft. on . 4 9 Butte. 16065 SW Alfeatures. Open John L. Scott USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Tumalo. 4.22 acre lot cient acres! Open f l o or falfa Road, Powell $ 549,900. 63488 NE Connie Settle, Broker, plan 8 multiple Real Estate 541-550-0002. is ideal for your future floor $929,000 Cascade Mtn. plan, 4 b d rm., 2 .5 Butte: 3 bed, 2 bath, Abbey Road, Bend. outdoor living areas. Door-to-door selling with 541-385-5500 home. $29 9 ,000. $539,000. bath, granite, hard- 1560 sq. ft. manufac- Contemporary Home $798,900 19562 Cen- Views. 2610 sq. ft. MLS: MLS: 201 5 05048. home, 36x38 shop, fast results! It's the easiest woods, tile, c entral tured home with addi- on almost 20 acres tury Drive. Magnifi201507179 CAL L Awbrey Glen. Live and CALL TERRY Little Desc h utes heating, RV area & TERRY S KJERSAA shop/barn, 40 with irrigation. Perfect cent log home, 3718 R iver, 1 9.74 t o t al play in amazing Aw- way in the world to sell. SKJERSAA AT AT h ook-ups! J ill i a n tion, 541 - 383-1426. a cre farm with 1 7 for family & critters. sq. ft., 4 b d rm., 3 a cres, g arden & brey Glen in spacious The Bulletin Classified 541-383-1426. Duke Smith, Broker, acres irrigated, new Duke Warner Realty bath, master s u ite g reenhouse. Warner Realty Be a 3 bdrm, 3 bath home! 503-913-5076 Wind- large pond, some new Close in Bend. 541-385-5809 Key Properties. w/wood burning fire- Leach, Broker, 3225 NW Melville Dr., ountry Cottage i n ermere Central Or- fencing, starter home Re/Max Charming Craftsman. CTown. place, vaulted open 541-788-2274 Wind- B end, O r Gary Everett, CCIM, 977 0 1 . bedroom, 1 egon Real Estate Big Awbrey Butte or downsize. MLS: C lose to t h e D e s- bath, in2 1020 Principal Broker, living floor plan, mul- ermere Central Or- $582,500. Chri s +/- sq. Craftsman home. chutes River Trail in 541-480-6130. Joan tiple decks, master egon Real Estate $349,900 Par k -Like 201503280. $425,000 McPheeters, Princion .44 +/- acres, Ad¹1112 NW Bend and just a ft. Setting. Single level, 3 Scott McLean, Princi- Steelhammer, Broker, hot tub, waterfall wapal Broker. TEAM Birtola Garmyn s hort d i stance t o rustic cabin close to Br o ker/Owner, 541-419-3717. ter feature & more. Acreage and V iews! bdrm., 2 bath, large pal Assist 2 Sell amenities of Bend. High Desert Realty downtown. Tall ceil- the Bea Leach, Broker, 22440 McArdle, Bend, 54'I -388-21 'I 1 private lot, new paver 541-408-6908. Realty Connie Settle, Broker, 541-312-9449 ings and open floor Double carport and a 541-550-0002. 541-788-2274 Wind- OR: 3 bed, 3 bath, patio & Trex decking, Executives double garage that is www. BendOregon erm ere Central Or- 2463 sq. ft.; 10 acres Update Ranchette, 4.88 plan. $385,000. MLS: c urrently m any interior u p - $410,000 57963 Cya sh o p . RealEstate.corn 2 01505222. CAL L grades, A MUST SEE. press Ln., Sunriver. 4 $550,000 Eagle Crest egon Real Estate with 5.4 acres of irri- acres with run off irriPlenty of parking for TERRY S KJERSAA Michelle M a r tinez, bdrm., 2 bath w/open w/Privacy. O r i ginal gation, large l iving gation, 3178 s q .ft. Brand New For You. 3 AT Village Wiestoria I 541 - 383-1426. all types of toys and broker, 508-451-8806 custom home, room with gas fire- home w/4 bdrm, 3.5 b edroom, 2 ba t h , Duke Warner Realty vehicles, with on one plan, NUMER- owner, $395,000 Win dermere Central floor 3255 sq. ft., 1 story in place on both levels, bath, great covered 1878 sq. ft. home with to complain (no HOA). OUS upgrades since the trees, backs to re- Dawn Ulrickson Oregon Real Estate french door open to backyard, entertain2013! Recently fina wel l -thought-outCharming Single Level. Heat pump and forced Broker, CRS, GRI, sort course ¹4, formal ing area w/water fead eck; 1000 sq . f t . floor plan. Great fea1150 sq. ft., 3 bdrm., air backup furnace, $354,950 One Happy ished exterior paint living & dining rooms, ABR guest house w/single t ure, h o rs e ar e a tures including oak- 2 bath on .25 acre lot, plus a w o odstove Home. 2014 remodel, and new d r iveway, a t en d o f ga t e d 541.610.9427 car garage, plus shop. fenced w/small barn wood flooring, vaulted new windows, paint, City of Bend services. open living floor plan, central heating 8 A/C, cul-de-sac. Dee MLS: 201 5 07374. and covered loafing ceilings, knotty alder siding, roof, ample A must-view property. formal dining, back hot tub, 2 decks for Broker, Now p r i ce d at area, 2 shops - 15x36 d oors a n d mu c h parking & large yard. $295,000. MLS deck w/spa, RV park- entertaining, sold fur- Baker, 5 41-977-7756. B o b $510,000. Scott and 30x36. Candice more. $449,900. MLS: www.Jackson-Ander- ¹201507501 ing galore. Jeanette nished per inventory Ahern, Broker, Anderson, B r o ker, Mc Lean, P r i ncipal 2 01508545. CAL L son.corn. C a n dice Bobbie Strome, B runot, Brok e r , list. Jillian Smith, Bro- 541-420-3891 WindMORRIS Broker/Owner, CRS 5 41-788-8878. CAROLYN EMICK AT Anderson, Br o k er Principal Broker 541-771-1383 Wind- ker, 503 - 913-5076 REAL ESTATE ermere Central Or541-408-6908. Realty John L. Scott Realty, 541-419-0717. Duke John L Scott Real 541-788-8878 John L. ermere Central Or- Winderm ere Central egon Real Estate Executives Bend Warner Realty Scott Realty, Bend Estate 541-385-5500 egon Real Estate Oregon Real Estate •

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THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7 2015 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 745

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

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745

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Homes for Sale

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745

745

Homes for Sale

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Development Land I $595,000 Corey Charon PE, Broker

Family Compound in French Style river view Great Family Home. 2006 built - over 1900 Amazing property with Custom, steel-beam Spectacular 20+ acre Alfalfa. 62677 County Home w / r iverbank Darling 3 b edroom, sq.ft., big half+ acre gorgeous river, can- home on west edge of West Powell Butte Line R d. MLS: setting! Exquisite ac- 2.5 bath with bonus lot. Ad ¹1482 yon and mtn views. Lake Billy Chinook. Estates Home. 201503391. 3 bed, 2 coutrements: Granite, room, loft area, and TEAM Birtola Garmyn Ad ¹1422 Ad ¹1622 Ad ¹1262 541.280.5512 bath, 3282 sq. ft., 11 hardwood, m a rble, u nfinished atti c . High Desert Realty TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn TEAM Birtola Garmyn acres, 6.5 irrigated, tile, Venetian plaster, Downstairs m a ster 541-312-9449 High Desert Realty High Desert Realty High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 541-312-9449 541-312-9449 horse barn, heated stone 8 sta i nless. has private entrance www. Ben dOregon tack, full roping arena, Wood-burning f i r e- to deck and backyard. RealEstate.corn www. BendOregon www. BendOregon www. BendOregon $650,000. place, top line appli- $279,900. MLS: RealEstate.corn RealEstate.corn RealEstate.corn 62655 County Line Rd. ances, metal c l ad 2 01506638. CAL L MORRIS MLS: 201410201. 4 windows and so much BECKY OZRELIC AT REAL ESTATE bed, 3 bath, 2390 sq. more! Listen to the 541-480-9191. Duke IA ~ m lyo ft., 64.24 acres, 50 ir- tranquil ripple of the Warner Realty Take care of rigated, shop, barn, river below. while enE xecutive Home o n pivot, bunk h o use joying this Exquisite your investments Location in NW Canyon Creek. 7 tim- w/full bath, trails and home. $59 9 ,900.Great with the help from Crossing. Frank Lloyd bered ares south of f ishing near b y , MLS201404694. home John Day. 3 bedroom, $675,000. The Bulletin's Nancy Popp, Principal Wright-inspired by Greg Welch Con2.5 bath, 2801 sq. ft. Properties may be pur- Broker 541-815-8000 "Call A Service s truction. Mas t e r bonus room, attached chased together or Crooked River Realty bedroom on the main Professional" Directory a rage, landscaped. s eparately. Sco t t l evel, t w o gue s t FSBO 399,999. MLS: McLean, Pr i ncipal Appliances & More. rooms, off ice/den, and 01304288. CAL L Broker/Owner, Crooked River Ranch I 2 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1400 sf. bonus room. DUKE WARNER RE- 541-408-6908. Realty $195,000 $195,000 Not Firm $669,500. MLS: ALTY DAYVILLE AT Rachel Lemas, Executives 541-279-8783 2 01501545. CAL L 541-987-2363. Broker F antastic T ur n K e y Gorgeous Single-Level TERRY SKJERSAA 541.896.1263 54 ' I -383-1426. Home. i m maculate in Broken Top. Situ- AT People Lookfor Information home on a quiet dead ated on Goose Creek Duke Warner Realty About Products and street in a great Pond with beautiful Services EveryDaythrough end SE ne i g hborhood. The Bvlletie Claseifferte This 2 bedroom, 2 water views. Triple car Great Mtn views. Spagarage, 2327 sq. ft. cious 3 bdrm, 2 bath, MORRIS bath home is nestled and 2 master suites. m fd h o me . 4. 9 9 REAL ESTATE on a larger, treed lot. F abulous Cust o m $549,900. MLS: acres., 2.5 acres irri~ y~ ~ ~ Home. SW Redmond $235,000. MLS: 2 01504989. CAL L gated, 2 car + w ith v i ews, 1 9 9 9 201509731. CALL ROB EGGERS AT garage/shop, pond, Custom 6613 sq.ft. home, 2781 sq. ft., 4 TERRY S KJERSAA 541-815-9780. Duke greenhouse & 2 box home on 160 acres 541 - 383-1426. Warner Realty bedrooms, 2.5 baths, AT stalls, ou t standing capturing the master on the main, Duke Warner Realty horse prop e rty. Cascade Peaks .42 acres, RV parking, Need help fixing stuff? www.johnlscott.corn/r $2,495,000. must see! $409,900. Find exactly what Call A Service Professional ods Rod Stuve, BroBrandon Fairbanks, www.johnlscott.corn/8 you are looking for in the find the help you need. ker 54 1 - 844-9251. Broker, 2211. Kellie C ook, www.bendbulletin.corn John L. Scott Realty, CLASSIFIEDS 541-728-8647 Broker, 541-408-0463 Bend John L. Scott Realty, Great Country Setting P rivate Setting w i t h with Amazing Views. Bend Great Natural Light. Bordered thousands Views of the Deschutes floor plan, of acres of public land R iver. Lot 9 i n t h e Fairway Crest Village I Traditional 3 bedroom, 3 b ath with endless trails. 4 MORRIS prestigious River Park $699,000 with play room and bedroom, 2 bath, light Estates cap t ures REAL ESTATE Jack Johns office. Large lot with stunning views of the and bright with over 541.480.9300 Helping people secure home financing is the only thing room for RV parking. 2880 sq. ft. of living D eschutes Riv e r , Broker, GRI Natural landscaping s pace. Located i n Custom Contemporary easterly desert views, We do and We PrOmiSe to go the eXtra diStanCe fOr you. We with a 3-car garage. sought after Sisters Pilot Butte and the Beauty. This 3 bdrm., $650,000. MLS: School District cur- C ascade Ran g e. 3 bath, 3380 sq. ft. PrOVide a Streamlined PreaPPrOVal" PrOCeSS, a range Of highly 2 01406052. CAL L r ently r a nked ¹ 4 . $299,000. home features amazMLS: J AYNEE BECK A T $599,000. ing v i ews, i n - law 201307188 CAL L M LS: affordable loan programs and personalized one-on-one MORRIS 541-480-0988 OR 2 01507731. quarters, h i g h-end CAL L TERRY SKJERSAA REAL ESTATE PETE VAN DEUSEN JASEN CHAVEZ AT AT 541 - 383-'I 426 finishes & is a short SerViCe. Whether thiS iS yOur firSt time Or third time buying a AT 541 - 480-3538. 541-891-5446. Duke Duke Warner Realty IA y Mmly~ M ~ distance to the DesDuke Warner Realty chutes River. Warner Realty hOme, We'd like to make you a Valued CuStOmer fOr life. $433,500. MLS: 2 01508406. CAL L Crestridge Estates! 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 2000 sq. ft., on 5 acre corner lot, RV parking, new paint, new roof! 3-car garage. MLS¹ 201508298 $459,000 Pam Lester, Princ. Broker, Century 21 Gold Country Realty, Inc. 541-504-1338

We' re solely focused on local home loans.

KR

K IM W ARNER A T 541-410-2475. Duke

Warner Realty Deschutes River frontage in Bend. 2234 sq.ft., townhome, 4 bdrm, 3.5 bath, includes separate apartment, p r i vate deck and patio, gated neighborhood on the D eschutes Riv e r . www.jackson-anderson.corn Bar b ara Jackson, Broker, CRS 541-306-8186. J o hn L. Scott Realty, Bend

ondansher-Berlanga

ChristieMahoney

Mark Long

WendyPangle

NNILy89521

NMLy210118

NMLS 90091t

NMl5 208965

I MLS208295

TWO lOCatiOnS SerVing all Of Central Oregon

Bend ~ 541-318-5500 685 SE 3rd Street ( Bend, OR NMLS 89511

Deschutes River Woods I $284,900 Greg Miller PC, Broker, CRS, GRI 541.408.1511

Prineville ~ 541-416-7480

Buy 8 Sell Safely In The Bulletin Classifieds Unlike unregulated Internet advertising, we make every

MORRIS REAL ESTATE hd~& yly ~

KevinPangle

220 Nw Meadow Lakes Drive( Prineville, OR NMLS9038

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Desirable Lava Ridges Neighborhood. Open great room with patio access and spacious kitchen. 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath plus bonus room. Near the 1790 acre Bend Pine Nursery Park. $374,900.

NMLS 3182

Call 541-385-5808 toplaceyour Id today. © 2015EvergreenHomeLoansisaregistered trade nameof EvergreenMoneysource Mortgage Company NMLS ID3182.Trade/service marksarethe property ofEvergreen HomeLoans. All rightsreserved. Licensed under OregonMortgage LendingLicenseML-3213. 1/15.

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MLS: 201 5 06430. CALL TERRY SKJERSAA AT 541-383-1426. Duke Warner Realty

"Preapproval isnotacommitment to lendandis subject tosatisfactory loanconditions including acompleted application and property appraisal.Customersmostapply with EvergreenHomeLoansto determine loanqualification.

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SATURDAY 1:00-3:30 PM

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Gorgeous Westside 3834 sq. fc of luxury living — all the amenities anyone could ask for in a home! Large second finished space over large garage

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with its own bathroom. Two 2936 Wild Meadow Dr. masters in main house, one Directionsr From Shevlrn Park private 825 sq. ft. with sitting area 8ygas fireplace for cozy Road,/urn lefr on ReserveCamp

evenings. This one has it all.

HOSted byr DEBBIE MooNEY Broker

LiSted byr BEGKY BREEzE Principal Broker

Rdy le ft on 5ummerH!I/, and left on Wild Meadorry.

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Beautiful Sunriver home! This

3 bd,3.5 bth (t/-) 1828 sq.ft home isclose to Aspen Lake

a bike path. putty furnished a move-in ready! Many windows offers lots of light throughout. Cozy gas fireplace in living room a each bedroom has its 4Tumalo Lane, Sunriver own bathroom with 1/2 bath Rd downstairs. Large deck with Dirvctiaru: Huy/97 ro corlonuyood Le/i on E. cascade Rd, left on Bache/or/rd., secluded hot tub.

left on 7hm alo /n., bouse onleft.

Hosted 6 Listed by:

$434,900

CHRIS MCPHEETERS Principal Broker

541-388-2 1 1 1

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in your landscaped yard, w/ sprinklers. This Earth Advan- 2398 NW Lemhi Pass Dr. tage Home includes all the Directions: Hwy97 to Ntr Layfayene comforts you'd want; wired Ave, left oyy /vrr wail, rigbr onto Neyyypyt e surround sound system in a roundabout stayon/reyyfyort, at youyydabour out, dual zone heating a cool- take I/rr cnusiyytDR,at roundaboutlakeIw ing, granite counter tops, Bam-Ieyyhy'pass Dr, a2 miles,bouseson rberight. boo flooring a much more!

Principal Broker

541-388-21 1 1

SAT R SUN 12-3 PM

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15 acres of open space first exit ar roundabour onro 15th.

and 2 miles of trails. South on 15th to Golden GatePlace, Tour a variety of single- turn left. Follow GoMen GatePlace level and 2-story plans. to Ambassador, turn right.

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541-480-2620

A beautiful 4 bedroom, 4.5 bath home on Bend's popular westside, priced to sell at only I210.24 per sq. ft. Very highend finishes at the end of quiet 3323 Morningwood cul-de-sac. Main level master Cotset suite. All other bedrooms have their own bathrooms. Plus den Dfrectionsr From Shevlin Park and huge family room. Triple Road, turn ms( on Sheulin Meadow

car garage.

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$325,000

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Located ca a private, quiet, cul-de-sac, this 2762 sq. fr., allergen free, energy-efficient, green built home has top of the line finishes throughout. Large private deck. 3 bed, 2.5 1084 NE Hobbs Comt bath, office could be fourth Directions: Nodh on 8th Street, bedroom. Close to parks, Right on Janes Road, left on 11th shopping, trails, aad all the Street, lrfr on HobbsCourt. best of Bend!

HOSted 6 LiSted byr

RYAN HOOVER CENTRAL OREGON REAL1Y GROUP, INC.

PrinciPal Broker

541-771-6625

SATURDAY 1PM - 4PM

Village Westoria is a unique neighborhood with community planning, a common halland open spaces. This two bedroom, 2.5 bath t o w n h ouse 1844 NE Maker Wayy Bend features new k itchen Direcrfarrs:Village Westoria is tile and full back splash, located on theNortheas( corner o f remodeled bathrooms and 8th Street andRevere. hardwood floors.

Broker

$258,900

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Hosted 6 Listed by:

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This brand new construction single-level home is located in SW Redmond. n offers 3 spacious bedrooms, 2 baths and 1814 sq. ft. Of living space. The kitchen features stainless steel appliances, tiled 985 SW 23rd Place, countertops with backsplash, Redmond large eating bar a d u al INrvcffons:Weston Highland, Ir fr pantries. Vaulted ceilings throughout and wood laminate on Rimroct/23rd, right on Kalama flooring. Full front a rear Ave.Homeon corner of 23rd Place. yard landscaping w/ sprinkler system.

Hosted 6 Listed by: GLYNIS LEACH

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Listed by:

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Just completed full a renovation. f I Wood floors, customcabinetry, quartz countertops, new Samsumg stainless steel gas range &microwave.3bedroom, 3056 SW Cascade 2.5 bath w/ master onthemain floor & a largebonusroom, 3- Vista Drive, Redmond car garage, RVparking & I/2 Dirvctions:South on 27th St., right acre behind the house, giving on SW WickiuP, lefi onSWCascade you fantastic CascadeMountain Vista Drive. House is on the right. views.

Hosted 6 Listed by: GARY DIEFENDERFER

SAT. R SUN. 12-5 PM

PrinciPal Broker y

H omes c o m m u n i t y featuring multimillion dollar amenities; pools, c lubhouse, f i t n e ss 61104Ambassador Drive, Bend center, sports complex, Directions: East on Reed Market,

EDIE DELAY

the front the other on the side

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SATURDAY 1:00 — 3:30 PM

This beautiful 4bd, 2.5ba Craftsman/Prairie style home in desired Northwest Crossing is on a large fenced corner Iot. 2 covered porches, one in

Hosted 6 Listed by: CHRIS MCPHEETERS

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LARONDA ACUFF-SACK

Windermere R EAL E S T A T E SIERRA

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Principal Broker

541-788-2287

$454,900 ECKY REEZE fk MPANY Real Estate

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E6 SATURDAY NOVEMBER 7 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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

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$499,900 65044HIGHLAND ROAD, TUMALO

$879,000 $2,500,000 WORLDCLASSCLIMBING•WORLDCLASSHOME DOWNTOWN WESTSIDELUXURY HOME W/ADU

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892 NE LOCKSLEY, BEND I YY

• 2.5 fenced acres • Barn, loafing shed, tack room, round pen &corral • 2000 SF single-level home • Sweeping southern views • 3 bedrooms, 3 baths • Includes private guest suite • Close to river trails • Fully fenced

541-771-1168 ERIC ANDREWS BROKER • Beautifully landscaped, fenced, sprinklers, dog run • Great Providence location near hospital, Costco

• 1675 SF, 3 bdrm, 3 bath • PRE-INSPECTIONDONE! • NEW FURNACE, interior/ exterior paint, downstairs carpet, bathroom flooring

$74,900TO $79,900 IREDMOND BUILDING LOTS

$249,950ISW REDMOND

• New listings • Vaffeyview HOA • Common areas • Elevated views • Established subdivision • 6500-7800 sq. ft. lots

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503-913-5076 JILLIAN SMITH BROKER

• Enjoy magnificent views of • Fully Furnished Smith Rock • Situated on 10 acreswith • 3 bedroom, 4 bath, 371 2 35'x35' finished shop & SF home built by Norman gated entry offerng privacy Building & Design • Walking distance of state park w/hiking/climbing trails • See property at https:// ,g) 541-480-7183 BARBARAMEYERS youtu.b/eGBnjSNywssM MLS''201509323 BROKER

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19562 SW CENTURY DRIVE, BEND

• Magnificent log home • Multiple decks, master hot tub • 3718 SF, 4 bdrm, 3 bath • Waterfall water feature & • Master suite w/wood more burning fireplace • Vaulted open living floor plan

• Dream kitchen w/stainless

appliances,granitecounters • Beautifully landscaped.63 acres w/ sprinkler system

503-913-5076 JILLIAN SMITH BROKER

$595,000IBEAUTIFUL CUSTOM HOME -1 ACRE • 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths • Formal dining , iai I . • 18' high ceilings in great LIIRI TI I-, I I room • Brazihan cherry hardwood floors " • Knotty alder cabinets • Granite tile counters 541-480-9883

541-771-1383 JEANETTEBRUNOT BROKER

$500,000I6186 MADRAS HWY, PRINEVILLE

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541-306-0479 CHRISTINHUNTER BROKER

ERIC ANDREWS BROKER • Open floor plan, vaulted • Great front patio w/pavers ceilings • Easy access: schools/ • Brand new carpet throughout shopping/freeway • Large.21 acre lot

III 541-390-2328 CLAIR SAGIV BROKER

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• Charming 2941 SF country home '4bd"m 3bath 24 acres/1.5 irrigated • Light and bright throughout • Detached heated 2000 SF

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MICHELLEMARTINEZ BROKER

$469,000 1765 MOUNTAINQUAIL DR.,EAGLE CREST

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• Cascade mtn. views • Home shows like new • Open kitchen with 3 pantries • Located on cul-de-sac • Beautiful clubhouse & pool • French doors lead to surround deck • New 3-year-old roof

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541-41 0-8084 SUSAN PITARRO BROKER

BROKER

$695,000IARTIST'SHOME INCRR • 3500+ sq. ft. on one level • Open spacious floor plan • View of 13 holes of CRR golf • Where eaglefly! s

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541-977-1852 TONY LEVISON BROKER

invitingdecks/patio

UN% K455+ COMMUNITY

• Beautiful single-level home, 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath • Large private lot, parklike setting • New paver patio & Trex decking surrounded by trees 508-451-8806 • Many interior upgrades MICHELLE MARTINEZ • A MUST SFE

• Operating as Baba's Chinese restaurant and a catering kitchen • Downtown Redmond

garage w/loft & shop • 2 stall barn, garden area,

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$479,500 ICUSTOM HOME, SHOP,4.84 ACRES

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541 480 9883 AUDREYCOOK BROKER

• 3-car garage • POnd, fenced

$349,900I 20057 PARKSIDEPLACE, BEND

• 80acres- M1 zoned industrial use • Located in Crook Country and state enterprise zone • Water/sewer stubbed to property • Robust and reliable power & fiber infrastructure • Proven data center hub

FOR SALE OR LEASE

$599,000I23265 GIDDY COURT, BEND

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AUDREYCOOK BROKER

$3,600,000 IPRIME INDUSTRIALACREAGE IN PRINEVILLE

• 10.6 acres • 6.6 acres irrigation • 3471 SF home • 4 bdrms, 3 baths • Fenced • Views • Supreme privacy

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541-410-8084 SUSAN PITARRO BROKER

• Many upgrades • 2-car attachedgarage • 1/2+ acre corner lot Walking distance toboat ramp • New heatpump • Used assecondhome

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$212,000 2364 SW 33RDSTREET, REDMOND -

$215,000 IYOUR PIECE OFHEAVEN IN CENTRALOREGON

• 2014 remodel • Open living floor plan • Formal dining • Back deck with spa • RV parking galore

prestigious AwbreyGlen

503-939-6155 MIKE TUCKER BROKER

• SWI S S

• This is an assetsale only • Contact listing broker for list of assets • Fuff operating restaurant assets - ready to do business • Broker with assist in negotiating leasewith new tenant

$354,950IONE HAPPY HOME

• PRICED TD SRLU • 4 bdrm, 3 bath in

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541-977-1852 TONY LEVISON BROKER

541-480-6790 541-480-2245 JAKEMOORHEAD LORElTAMOORHE AO BROKER BROKER

$759,900I2589 NW CHAMPION CIRCLE,BEND

2.5 bath • Huge bonus room • Refrigerator, washer & dryer included • Indoor/outdoor dog enclosure

541-639-6307 SECILYLUBE BROKER

$110,000IDOWNTOWN RESTAURANT BEND

$175,000I WESTSIDECONDOI

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$314,900I 21194 KEYTEROAD • 2357 sq. ft., 3 bdrm,

541-771-1383 JEANElTE BRUNOT BROKER •I unit left & canbepurchasedas an investm ent! •Southernexposure &groundlevel •3blocksto Newport Market, coffee shops&restaurants •Completelyrenovated2 bdrm, I bath &680SFunit •Bamboo flooring&Bichlite cosntertcps

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541-977-1852 TONY LEVISON ' BROKER

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541-480-7777 ] DIANA BARKER . BROKER

$780,000

• Vaulted open living • 4 bdrm, 3 baths • Great backyard • RV parking • Hilltop views

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• 4bdrms, 3.5 baths,2398SF,0.12size lot •Tudor-style home w/ Craftsmancharm, open floor plan • 2transferable city of BendType 1land use permits • Beautifully landscaped oncorner lot, close to DrakePark/Illirror Pond & theDeschutes Rwer

• Outstanding mountain view • 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths •Openconceptfloorplan • Quartz counters in kitchen • Fireplace in great room • Attached 3-car garage • Detached 3-car shop/ garage • Fenced & gated

541-480-7777 DI ANA BARKER B ROKER

• Original Cascadesmural • Easy maintenance 1.38 acres

$269,900I2225 SW KAULMA AVE.,REDMOND • Close to schools/ shopping • Access to Dry Canyon •Communityclubhouse • 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath • Large corner lot

~ , 541-604-1649 GAILROGERS BROKER

$334,900 I 17181 CRANE DRIVE, BEND • Spacious openfloor plan • 2551 SF, 4 bdrm, 4 bath • Light & bright, vaulted

ceilings

• Gated section for privacy • Large decks overlooking the golf course • Enjoy accessto pools, tennis, trails

541-771-1383 JEANETTEBRUNOT BROKER

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-J,-' 541-410-1200 BILL KAMMERER BROKER

• Wonderful single-level home • 1704 SF, 3 bdrm, 2 bath • 30x40 shop w/ 9' doors • Landscaped & nicely treed • 2 separate tax lots • Close to lakes & mountains

• Granite, hardwoods, tile • Central heating

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$239,000I52816 WAYSIDE LOOP, UL PINE

• Single-level, 2112 SFon .49 acres! • Open floor plan with 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths

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$454,900I 2001 CONDORCT., EAGLECREST

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2978NW WILDMEADOW DRIVEI3BEDROOM,3BATHI3960SFISSSO,OOO • Immaculate customhomewith RVparking located on a quietstreetwith inviting front porch and spaci ousbackyardontheW estSide! • Home featuresgranite counters,stainless appliances & walk-in pantry in kitchen • Slate & exotic hardwood floors

• RV area & hook-ups!

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• Built-in cabinets in themain floor guest room/office • Large bonusroomw/wet bar& vaulted beamceiling Rinehurt, Dempserf a Phelps • Spaciousmaster suite featuresgasfireplace, soaking tub,tile showerandlarge closet Patty Dempsey 541-480-5432 • Large utility andoversizedgarageinclude lots of Andrea Phelps 541-408-4770 storage bendgrouprewindermere!corn •

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(541 ) 977-4702 DEANVOGT BROKER

• Resort Course 14th fairway • Vaulted kitchen & great room • 2 master suites, 3.5 baths • Large paver patio • Double garage with shop area • Aff on.36 acre, cul-de-sac


THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015 E7

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

For homes online WW W b e n d h o m e S . C o m

THEBULLETIN i SATURDAY,NOVEMBER7,2015 i ADVERTISING SECTION E — II 745

745

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

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Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

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Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Great property! Nicely La Pine Strip Mall. 1980 Location, Location, Lo- Minutes to river and Old New construction! 4 New Listing, 5 bdrm, 3 One acre with 1782 sf, P anoramic Views o f NOTICE laid out. Newer heat +/- sq. ft. commercial cation! This 3 b e d- Mill District. 1152 sq. bdrm + off ice and op- bath, 2388 sq.ft., 0.89 All real estate adver- 3 bdrm, 2 bath home. River. This home has pump to keep you use building on 0.68 room, 2 bath, 1544 ft. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, with tion for 5th bdrm, 3.5 acres, attached tised here in is sub- covered decks front it all with direct acc ool, and a w o o d +/- acre parcel. Des- sq. ft. home includes new carpet and paint. b ath, 2369 sq . f t . apartment, full y ject to th e F ederal and back. Ready for c ess to t h e D e sstove to keep you ignated on Compre- a shop on a 1/4 acre $295,000 MLS ¹ home with many up- fenced, ins u lated Fair Housing A c t, wood pellet or gas chutes River Trail and warm in w inter. A hensive Plan to be lot. Close proximity to 201508438 Pam grades. Triple garage shop, Bedr o om j ust a $420 , 000. which makes it illegal s tove. mi l e f r o m short distance to pub- Commercial M ixed- restaurants, parks and Lester, Princ. Broker, and R V pa r king. 1 9276 Kiowa R d . , to advertise any pref- separation, fo r mal downtown. Have your lic lands. Double car Use. Additional stor- downtown. U n ique C entury 2 1 Gol d $339,000. dining and breakfast own slice of paradise MLS Bend. erence, limitation or garage large storage age underneath the opportunity. $557,000. Country Realty, Inc. 201410227 Pam Chris McPheeters Over s ize in this 2 master beddiscrimination based room. building with power. units. Plenty of Park- MLS: 201 5 05642. 541-504-1338 Lester, Princ. Broker, Principal Broker on race, color, reli- double garage, circu- room, with 2 l a rge Raised f l o wer/veg- ing. $225,000. CALL KIM WARNER C entury 2 1 Gol d Assist 2 Sell drive. $159,900. b alconies. Stud y gion, sex, handicap, lar etable beds, apple & Bobbie Strome AT 541 - 4 10-2475.Mixed Zoned Property. Country Realty, Inc. 541-388-2111 familial status or na- MLS201507341 Call serves as a potential 541-504-1338 pear trees, Property is Principal Broker Duke Warner Realty Backs up to commerNancy Popp, Princ. 3rd bedroom. No more power bills! 8 tional origin, or inten- Broker, 541-815-8000 $949,000. completely f e nced. John L. Scott Real Escial property. 2 bedMLS: to make any such construction! 4 p rivate acres s u r- tion $188,000. tate 541-385-5500 L og home o n 3 . 2 7 room, 2 bath, 1776 New Crooked River Realty 2 01509583. CAL L BL M . preferences, l i mitaMLS201508477 Call acres. Single level, sq. ft. well-kept prop- bdrm 2.5 bath, 2384 r ounded b y TERRY S KJERSAA or discrimination. h and s c ribed l o g erty with 1000 gallon s q. ft . h o m e w i t h 4000 sq.ft., 5 bdrm, 3 tions Linda Lou Day-Wright, AT 541 - 383-1426. Orion Greens I on main floor. full baths, solar and We will not knowingly Say "goodbuy" Broker, 541-771-2585 home, 1488 sq.ft., 3 Duke Warner Realty septic, plus hooked up master accept any advertis$559,000 Granite countertops, wind gene r ated, Crooked River Realty bdrm, 2 bath, open t o ci ty sewe r . dbl car garage, RV ing for r eal e state Kirk Sandburg to that unused features, a Park Like Setting. 3+ great room floor plan. $159,900. MLS: parking with gate and luxury which is in violation of Broker, SRS must see home. Inez bdrm, 2.5 bath, 2190 item by placing it in Shop/barn setup for 2 01508447. CAL L landscaped front yard. Hard to find 5 acre, flat this law. All persons 541.556.1804 Martin, Principal Brosq.ft, 4 6 a c r e l o t, buildable corner lot The Bulletin Classifieds horses. Back to forest CAROLYN EMICK AT $279,900. are hereby informed MLS ker, 8 0 8 -561-4162. large windows, large land for privacy, new 541-419-0717. Duke located in Lake Park that all dwellings ad201505304 Pam John L. Scott Realty, deck with hot tub, RV septic heat p u mp, Warner Realty Estates with mature vertised are available Lester, Princ. Broker, Bend Parking. $ 4 3 9,999. wood stove, k i d' s 541-385-5809 l andscape. MLS ¹ on an equal opportuC entury 2 1 Gol d Barb Hartnett, Broker playhouse and more. Mt. Bachelor Village I 201406959. $135,500 NORTH RIM ON AWnity basis. The BulleCountry Realty, Inc. MORRIS 541-420-0915. John www.johnlscott.corn/8 $189,500 Pam Lester, Princ. BREY BUTTE. Extin Classified 541-504-1338 REAL ESTATE L. Scott Realty, Bend 2595 Shelley Arnold, Broker, Century 21 LAZY RIVER SOUTH Minda McKitrick ceptional o n e -acre ~ y~ ~ ap d Broker, GRI Gold Country Realty, Remodeled 3535y sq. Broker 541-771-9329 Look at: homesite in the beau- NW Bend I $649,900 Advertise your car! ft. home with 4 bdrm + John L. Scott Realty, Brent Landels, Broker Inc. 541-504-1338 541.280.6148 tiful North Rim ComBendhomes.corn Add A Picture! officeand 3 baths. Bend 541.550.0976 Check out the m unity, i n clos e Reach thousands of readers! for Complete Listings of Master bath with large Call 541-385-5809 to t e nnis classifieds online Incredible Ca s c ade jetted tub & new tile Lower Bridge lot I Area Real Estate for Sale proximity The Bulletin Classiffeds court a n d park www.bendbufletin.corn Mountain Views. Pri- shower. Media room, $399,000 New Construction in NE grounds and the Desv ate setting o n 5 family room, h uge Diane Lozito, Broker Updated daily Park-Like Setting. 3 MORRIS acres, 1916 sq. ft., 3 kitchen with h a ndBend. Great r o om chutes River T r ail. 541.548.3598 b edroom, 2 bat h , REAL ESTATE bedroom, 3 bath up- crafted cabinets and concept w/3 bdrms., Other amenities inMORRIS 541.306.9646 Pahlisch A w ard-Win- 1531 sq. ft. home on l~ ~ dOp mB d ated h o me. D e - granite 2.5 baths in 2221 sq. c lude g a te d en REAL ESTATE cou n ters, 3.71 acres. Move-in ning Quality - Move-In ft. Room for RV park- trances, paver walktached garage plus a walk-in pantry, sund~ A October. Call us to- ready with newer aphobby barn. E njoy room with hot t ub. ing, mtn. views from ing p a ths, n a t ive NE Bend I $213,500 carpet, day to learn about a pliances, landscape m a i ntel ong trail rides o n master bedroom 8 NW Bend craftsman. H ome ha s ce d a r Grant Ludwick, m o r e/ nance and the beau- 1742 s q . ft. , w/3 buyer bonus! Restric- paint, an d nearby public lands. eaves with copper accorner fire p lace. Broker detached shop tiful North Rim Lodge. bdrms, 2 bath, sepa- tions apply. Spacious 24x48 MORRIS $339,00. MLS: $639,000. MLS: cents. Exterior siding concrete floor 541.633.0255 2 0'I506001. CAL L Beautiful C a s cade rate laundry r oom, open first floor layout with 2 01508058. CAL L on home, garages & REAL ESTATE nd l o f t are a s . Mountain views add to close t o K IM WARNER AT J AYNEE BECK A T sc h ools, is perfect for enter- a storage bldg have just MLS: Large great $299,990. 541-480-0988 OR the ambiance of this 541-480-5365. Duke parks, river t r ails, taining. been painted. Watch 2 01505645. CAL L Warner Realty PETE VAN DEUSEN very special building downtown, s h o ps. room with gas fire- CAROLYN EMICK the wildlife from the Magnificent golf course AT & tons of winAT 54 ' I -480-3538. site. $550,000. MLS¹ O pen f l oo r pl a n , place estate home with wrap-around deck or MORRIS dows for lots of kght. 541-419-0717. Duke 201505062 Duke Warner Realty abundant light, gas Cascade In-Home Childcare op- go to your private ackitchen fea- Warner Realty REAL ESTATE Bobbie Strome, Mountain views fireplace, wood floors, Gourmet portunity, $309,000. cess to 300y sq. ft. of Newer cus t om-built Principal Broker tures beautiful quartz custom built-ins. Spa$2,250,000. 1840 sq.ft., s i ngle Little Deschutes River home on over 1/2 L a r ge Ponderous Pines I John L Scott Real cious kitchen w/gran- countertops. Angie Mombert, level, 4 bdrm, 2 bath frontage for fishing, $399,000 m aster s uite w ith acres, 2334 sq. ft. 4 Estate 541-385-5500 ite countertops, wood Jerry Stone plus bonus r o om, swimming or floating. Broker, 541-408-3543 NE Bend I $342,000 bdrm, 2 bath with 2 double sinks & huge cabinetry, s t ainless w alk-in closet. B ig separate e n trance, $455,000. Broker Neal Kramer, Broker car detached garage, Northwest Crossing I steel appl. $475,000. 541.390.9598 large, fully f e nced MLS¹201309267 541.728.6725 features oak flooring, $544,000 guest rooms 8 bonus cathym©johnlscott.co backyard, close in NE Bobbie Strome, archways, formal din- JJ Jones, Broker m Cathy Malk, Broker room. The Bridges is Bend location, childPrincipal Broker ing room and much 541.788.3678 a m aster p l anned 541-408-3441. John care/preschool busi- John L Scott Real more. $265,000. MLS community with many MORRIS L. Scott Realty, Bend ness opp o rtunity. Estate 541-385-5500 201507240. Pam a menities: poo l s , REAL ESTATE www.johnlscott.corn/7 MORRIS f i t ness Lester, Princ. Broker, OK Garage. Mini mart, clubhouse, MORRIS 0445 Angie Cox, Bro- Live on Tumalo Creek. REAL ESTATE C entury 2 1 Gol d fuel & mechanic shop, center, indoor regulaREAL ESTATE ker 541-213-9950 Country Realty, Inc. Relish this opportu- M aster on M a in. 4 upgrades throughout, tion basketball court, l&~ m l y~ ~ ~ MORRIS nity to live in the Sky- bdrm, 2 bath, 1760 541-504-1338 liquor, tires. Owner trails & more! MLS: REAL ESTATE 2 01506674. 3 b e d Powel Butte I $387,000 Inn of the 7th. This 3 liners n eighborhood sq.ft., built in 1998, will carry. $225,000. bedroom, 3 bath j ust m inutes f r om large home w/master NE Bend I $379,900 New Listing, 3 bdrm, 2 rooms, 2. 5 b a t hs, Erica Patchen, MLS: 201 4 09917. Debbie Johnson, bath, 1286 sq.ft., 2.3 ground level condo is downtown. Property on main, mtn views Broker CALL DUKE 2065 sq. ft, 10 acre. Broker 541.480.1293 Just too many acres, deta c hed located near the pool sits on 1.83 acres and from back deck, large 541.480.4825 WARNER R E A LTY 61120 A mbassador apartment, pond, 2 collectibles? $369 , 950. and all resort activi- has 127 feet of creek fenced in yard, RV DAYVILLE AT Drive. wells, (1 s hared) ties. Don't miss your frontage. $ 449,500. parking. $ 2 69,000. Team Delay. Edie: 541-987-2363. $ 475,000. 6174 S 541-420-2950. Sam: opportunity! $169,000. MLS: 20' I 503113. 2730 NE Faith Dr. Sell them in Hwy 97, Redmond. 541-678-3290. Moe: MLS: 201 4 08943. CALL TERRY Theresa The Bulletin Ra m say, MORRIS The Bulletin Classifieds Chris McPheeters 541-303-3735. H aCALL KIM WARNER SKJERSAA AT Broker 541-815-4442 To Subscribe call MORRIS REAL ESTATE Principal Broker AT 541 - 4 10-2475. 541-383-1426. Duke sso Company RealJohn L. Scott Realty, 541-385-5800 or go to REAL ESTATE Assist 2 Sell tors Duke Warner Realty Warner Realty 541-385-5809 Bend 541-388-2111 www.bendbulletin.corn

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The Ladd Group is a highly experienced team that helped clients make $35 million of real estate

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541.633A569 I 650 SW Bond St, Suite 100, Bend

INTERNATIONAL REALTY

investments jn 2014. Their advanced search engine at bendpropertysource.corn allows you to easily track homes by pricing, area, neighborhood or custom criteria.

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61582 HOSMER LAICEDR. - TETHEROW • $1,100,000 NewGregWelch Construction • 3 bedroom, Z5 bath, 3113 sq. ft. • For more info, text LADD21 to 88000

TETHEROW CABINS - BONNEY LANE • $559,000-$599,000 - 2 floor plans available • 2 bedroom, Z5 bath, 1396-1 766sq. ft. • For more info, text LADD5 to 88000

TETHEROW HOMESITES • Lots starting at $217,350 • For more info, text LADD15 to 88000

20123 COX LANE — NW BEND • $770,000 • 4 bedroom, 3 bath, 5.42 acres, 2556 sq. ft. • For more info, text LADD8 to 88000

19860 ROCKING HORSE RD — SW BEND • $699,999 log home with barn • 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 5.26 acres, 2304 sq. ft. • For more info, text LADD10 to 88000

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61617 WOODRIVERDRIVE - SW BEND • $689,000 & $699,000 • 3 bedroom, Z5 bath, 2509 sq. ft. • For more info, text LADD4 to 88000!

CROSSWATERESTATE - SUNRIVER • $3,895,000 • 4 bedroom, 5.5 bath • For more info, text LADD13 to 88000

1972 NWKEENANCOURT- AWBREYBUTTE • $1,095,000 • 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 3546 sq. ft. • For more info, text LADD23 to 88000

20451 TIMBERLINE — SW BEND • $424,900 • 3 bedroom, Z5 bath, 2703 sq, ft. • For more info, text LADD24 to 88000

6 SHADOW LANE - SUNRIVER • $677,500 • 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 2822 sq. ft. • For more info, text LADD19 to 88000

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ES SATURDAY NOVEMBER 7 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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• Northwest Bend • Close to COCC, shopping, downtown • 10 condos available • 1 bedroom, 1 bath & 2 bedroom, 1 bath • Condos range from 754 to 816 SF • Don't miss this opportunity!

' 1008 SF • 3 bedroom, 1 bath • Natural light, vaulted ceiling • Single Level, open floor plan • New roof, interior paint & wainscoting • Large laundry/craft room

• 1882 SF, .12 acre • 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths • 2-car garage with shop area & fenced yard • Large master suite with walk-in closet • Large kitchen with tile counters • Views of Pilot Butte from master suite MLS¹201509964

61320 Yakwahtin Ct., • 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath • 2603 SF single-level • Beautiful landscaping, deck & courtyard • Formal living and dining area • Large bonus/family room, new pellet stove • 4th bedroom/den/office MLS¹201 510270

The Norma DuBoisand Julie Moe Team, Brokers

Sheila Balyeat, Brokerj 541-280-5964

Silvia Knight, Broker } 541-788-4861

Greg Barnwell, Broker } 541-848-7222

541-312-4042 j www.TeannNormaAndJulie.corn

sheilabalyeategmail.corn

wwwisilviaknight.corn

gbarnSOOyahoo.corn

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Modern aesthetic Mountain views! Large corner lot Fabulous great room for entertaining • Custom design MLS¹201505345

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Michele Anderson, Broker } 541-633-9760 Jacquie Sebulsky, Broker } 541-280-4449 jacquiesebulsky@gmail.corn j michelevanderson©hotmail.corn • '

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1495 SF, .18 acre 3 bedrooms, 2 baths Stacked stone fireplace Wood-wrapped windows, vaulted ceiling Close to Pine Ridge Elementary & park Quiet cul-de-sac location with easy access to the Old Mill MLS¹201509941 H

Silvia Knight, Broker } 541-788-4861

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• Cascasde Mountain views • 24.1 acres • 22.9 acres TID water ."'"" rights • Planted in orchard grass • 924 SF home with septic - replaceable MLS¹201508236 H

PamMayo-Phillips j 541-480-1513or Brook Havensj H

541-604-0788,Principal Brokersj www.desertvalleygroup.corn

blockrem©gmail.corn

wwwiailviaknight.corn

• 3 bedrooms, .Bi 2 baths, 1540 SF • 2 buildable lots ,~'x • 4 irrigated acres • Fenced pasture • Mountain views • Borders canal, minutes from town MLS¹201407613 H R M Bobby Lockrem, Broker } 541-480-235~

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• NorthWest Crossing • 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1439 SF • Newer SS appliances, wraparound porch • Vaulted great room w/gas fireplace, hardwoods • Sat. host Jennifer Stewart, 541-639-2089 Sun. host Kathleen McDonald, 541-480-6581

• Broken Top - Tyrion Sky • 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 2310 SF • 2 main level masters, office & bonus room • Open house hosted by Donna Burklo, Broker, 541-760-5677, donna©cjlisa.corn MLS¹201510072

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• Tryion Sky townhome • 2703 SF, .21 acre • Great room floor plan, many upgrades • Master suite, junior suite & den on main • Beautiful corner lot overlooking common • Fantastic location! MLS¹201508733

19675 Sunshine Way • Single-level • Spacious corner .44 acre lot • Privacy with native landscape • Near downtown, river, and trails MLS¹201506831

Deb Tebbs, CEO/Owner/Broker } 541419-4553

Deb Tebbs, CEO/Owner/Broker } 541-419-455

Shelly Swanson, Brokerj 541-408-0086

Sandy Kohlmoos, Broker, CRS} 541-408-4309

debtebbsgroupebendlu xuryhomes.corn www.debtebbsgroup.corn

debtebbsgroupebendlux uryhomes.corn www.debtebbsgroup.corn

Shellyebendnet.corn

www.bestbendhomes.cornl skohlmoosebendbroadband.corn

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• 3 & 4 bedroom plans • Minutes to Old Mill, downtown & river • Earth Advantagecertified homes • Premium finish & appliance packages • Each unit includes studio apartment • www.basecamp-bend.corn

• 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 3-car garage • Move-in ready! • New flooring & paint throughout • Master on main, vaulted great room • Close to park & river trail access

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Betsey Little, IProker } 541-301-8140 Ken Renner, Principal Broker } 541-280-5352

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• 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 3458 SF • Spectacular views! • Master on main, open great room & bonus room • Gourmet kitchen, nook & formal dining • Views from spacious decking & abundant windows • Fenced yard, minutes to downtown MLS¹201 510592 Myra Girod, Principal Brokerj 541-815-2400 or Pam Bronson, Broker } 541-788-6767

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Prices starting at $1,112,750 39 luxury homes 2700 — 4500 SF 1/2 — 3/4 acre home sites in Phase I Private, gated neighborhood with amenities • Tetherow golf membership included • www.tartandruim.corn H

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m ra. amteamecascadesir.corn www.live la orkcentralore on.corn

Stephante Ruiz, Broker } 541-948-5196 Jordan Grandlund, Broker } 541-420-1559

Awbrey Butte Homesite } $205,000

760 NE Majesty Lane - Midtown } $495,000

• Cascade Range views • .71of an acre • Just minutes to downtown • Imagine your dream home • Beautifully treed lot MLS¹201505762

• 4 bedroom, 3 bath, 201 7SF • Triple car garage • Gorgeous parklike setting with large pond • Great Midtown location I in cul-de-sac • New updated designer finishes throughout • Master I additional bedroom on main

The Norma DuBoisand Julie Moe Team, Brokers

Nicolette Rice, Broker} 541-241-0432

541-312-4042 } www.TeamNormaAndJulie.corn

nicolette. rice©sothebysrealty.corn

• 105 acre horse/cattle ranch perfectly designed and constructed • Stunning 4773 SF, 3 bedroom, 4 bath home onthe canyonedge • Striking river, Cascademountain & Smith Rockviews •100x250coveredarena,4stallbarn,RV barn/shop,hayand equipment sheds &cattle handling facilities •3bedroom, 2bathranch manager'shom e MLS¹201406034

Awbrey Butte Homesite } $260,000

2423 NW Hemmingway } $499,999

+ Deb Tebbs, CEO/Owner/Broker } 541-419-4553+

Ron Davis, Principal Broker } 541-480-3096

The Norma DuBoisand Julie Moe Team, Brokers

MLS¹201506441 Nicolette Rice, Broker} 541-2414432

debtebbsgroupebendluxur yhomes.corn www.debtebbsgroup.corn

www.OregonRanchandHorse.corn

541-312-4042 j www.TeamNormaAndJulie.corn

nicol ette.dce©sothebysrealty.corn

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• Live in Pronghorn! • 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 3306 SF • Custom single-level, amazinglandscaping • Views of Jack Nicklaus's 10th fairway • Sunken wet bar, two en suite guest rooms MLS¹201400401

• .49 of an acre • Fabulous views! • Close to amenities • All utilities at street • Build your dream home! MLS¹201504466

• 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2656 SF • Solar & energy efficient • Main level living plan • 700 SF bonus room - • Immaculate condition • Desirable Westside Bend


THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY NOVEMBER 7 2015 Eg

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

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Ronda Kanitz has called Bend homefor 36years. A broker since2005, she experienced issues surrounding new home construction, closing transact ions,and day-to-day problem-solving while workingfor a busy real estate development office. Ronda's work ethic incorporates diligence, integrity & commitment to her clients.

Ronda Kanitz, Broker 541-480-4886 kanitzronda©gmail.corn

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Corner lot 3 bedrooms, 2 baths 1465 SF Vaulted ceilings, gas fireplace • .25 acre lot, fenced yard • Room for small RV or boat in side yard MLS¹201509861

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Close in to Bend UGB Cascade Mtn. views High desert views Avion water, power at property • Increase your farming operation • Build your dream home MLS¹201500366

17833 Grimm Road • 4 bedroom, 2 bath, Adair Home • Detached 2-car garage • 2.06 private acres, fenced & corner lot • Close to Sunriver, lakes& Mt. Bachelor

CJ Neumann, Brokeri 541410-3710 or Llsa Lamberto, Brokeri 541-610-9697i www.CJLisa.corn

Kelly Winch, Broker i 541-390-0398

Joanne McKee, Broker i 541-480-5159

kwinch©sunriverdream.corn

www.joanneejoannemckee.corn ~

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62665 Big Sage Way, Lot 48 • Inspired by mountain contemporary design & modern architecture • Build your vision and dream home in this highly sought-after westside neighborhood • Dedicated custom building envelope • .31acre backing to a com mon greenbelt space

• Desirable established westside neighborhood • 20 minutes to Mt. Bachelor • 3 bedroom,2.5bath, 2789SF • Beautiful hardwood floors, custom fixtures, lighting & handcrafted ait tiles • Living/dining areas and master bedroom open to a secluded deck &garden • Bonus room offers multipurpose space MLS¹201504319

• Majestic plan features 5 bdrms w/ 2 master suites • Spacio usden/of fice plus bonus room • Oversized triple-car garage • Fully landscaped & fenced backyard • Overlooks community pool and park • Close proximity to schools & Old Mill District MLS¹201505160

Paul Holstege, Broker i 541-480-8606

Shelly Swanson, Broker i 541-408-0086

Shelly Swanson, Broker i 541-408-0086

• Dual mastersuites • Private covereddeck,patio • 2636 SF, 3 bedroom, 3.5bath, office/den, largeutility room • Media/rec room with wet bar • Gourmet kitchen,large island, SSappliances • Granite/quartz, hardwood/tile/carpet, rock fireplace • Enjoy Pine MeadowVilage, walk to downtown MLS¹201508205

Shelly Swanson, Broker i 541-408-0086

paul.holstegeegmail.corn

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19682 Aspen Ridge Drive • Stop by ourrecently staged furnished model home for additional details. • These properties are selling quickly.

Shelly Swanson, Brokeri 541-408-0086

• Rare resale offering • 4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths • Situated on private lot on the greenbelt • Honed granite, hardwoods, rock fireplace • Paved patio overlooking water feature • Turnkey living at its best!

• 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths + bonus room • 3074 SF, large yard • Barnwood & stone accents, great kitchen • Vaulted wood ceiling, bunk rooms • Fenced yard with putting green! • Also available for lease Laura Blossey, Brokeri 949-887-4377

• $659,750 • Summit floor plan • 2938 SF • 4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths+ den • Main-level living, master + den on main • Vaulted great room, golf course views • Move-in ready! MLS¹201408581

www.robinyeakel.corn $

Stephanie Ruiz, Broker i 541-948-5196 Jordan Grandlund, Broker i 541-420-1559

Robin L. Yeakel, Broker i 541-408-0406

www.expedcocebcodliving.corn

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19700 Aspen Ridge Drive, Homesite 23

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• 2720 SF • 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath • .64 acre lot • Easy river access MLS¹201510128

• 201 5 COBA Tour Home • 4 bedroom, 3 bath,den/office, plus bonusroom • 3-car garage • Enjoy Renaissance Ridge lifestyle with community park & pool • Close proximity to schoolsBrookswood , Plaza,shopping, dining MLS¹201507394 H

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Listed Shelly Swanson, Broker i 541-408-0086 Hosted by Justin Lavik, Broker i 541-460-3064 •

Jacquie Sebulsky, Bro er i 541-280-4449 Michele Anderson, Broker i 541-633-9760 'acquiesebulsk 4¹gmail.corn michelevanderson@hotmail.corn $

ww> !It'f'g • 4 bedroom, 4.5 bath, 4334 SF ,lI $ ' "* • Situated on 1 acre lot I./r • Tuscan home sold turnkey furnished • Main level master, media & bonus room • Private courtyard; private guest casita MLS¹201506977

• Riverfront townhome • 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath • 3115 SF, 2 large decks, 2-car garage • Off 1st Street Rapids Trail to downtown • One of the few riverfront properties! MLS¹201503398

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Carmen A. Coo, Bro er 541-480-6491

De Te s, CEO Owner Bro er 541-419-4553

carmenanncook©gmail.corn

debtebbsgroupebendluxui yhomes.corn www.debtebbsgroup.corn

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Huge mountain views 19 ac, 4550 SF home 11 acres of irrigation In-ground swimming pool, waterfalls • Detached garage, RV bay, guest quarters • Horsesetup, fenced, loafing shed MLS¹201501565 www.60470ArnoldMarketRoad.corn Robin L. Yeakel, Broker i 541-408-0406 www.robinyeakel.corn

• 4BD/4.5BA, 3730 SF i I • 19327 Golden Lake Ct. , I '-.» • Master on main, 2 home offices • Custom Norman Building & Design • 4-car garage, rear patio built-in BBQ • Located on cul-de-sac on .51 acre Laura Blossey, Broker i 949-887-4377 Natalie Vandeborn, Broker i 541-508-9581 www.ex eriencebendllvln .corn

• Deschutes River view • Expansive great room • Gourmet kitchen & generous master suite • Family room, executive office & bar • 4 bedroom, 5.5 bath, 8247 SF, .48 acre lot MLS¹201409875

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Ken Renner, Principal Broker i 541-280-5352 ken.renner©sothebysrealty.corn

• Cascade Mtn viewswith unmatched seclusion • 280 acres w/95 acresirrigation • Custom main home4416 SF 4 bed, 5.5 bath •Guesthome:1850SF,3 bed,2bath • Barn with office, gated paved driveway, LOPtags • Varied topography, 2 canyons, 2stocked ponds • Recreational lifestyle property minutes from Bend www.boxsranch-johnsonrdbend.corn MLS ¹201306094

Pam Mayo-Phillips, 541-480-1513 or BrookHavens, 541-604-0788, PrincipalBrokersi www.deseItvalleygroup.corn


E10 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7 2015 • THE BULLETIN 745

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Homes for Sale

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

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• Homes forSale Northeast Bend Homes R e d m ond Homes

Pride of Ownership. 3 Profitable Kennel Busi- Saddleback. Two sto- Single-Level Home on Spring River Home with SW Bend I $329,900 Want to move in and Cute single story home Charming home in the b edroom, 2 ba t h , ness. First class ken- ries with 5 bedrooms, the Little Deschutes Space for People 8 Darryl Doser enjoy kfe? This is your in NE Bend. 1056 sq. heart of R edmond, 1468 sq. ft. home with n el/boarding bu s i - 2.5 baths in 2928 +/- River. Views of New- Toys. Cool, green and Broker, CRS home, and it is loaded ft. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, dbl 2250 sq. ft., 4 bdrm., newer windows, heat ness for dogs and sq. ft. o n 1 .51 +/- berry Monument and spacious half a c re with upgrades and attached garage on 2 bath., on .37 acre w/ 541.383.4334 pump, new garage cats. 53 dog rooms acres. S p ectacular Paulina Peaks from y ard that i s fu l l y ready to live in. This almost 1/4 acre with a greenhouse/solarium door and pull-down and 13 cat rooms, view lot, very private the backyard of this 3 fenced. 3 large bedwell-maintained home park-like set t i ng. 8 3 car garage. MLS¹ steps for extra stor- most wit h o u t side with treetop views of b edroom, 2 bat h , rooms, 3. 5 b a t hs, boasts a large tiled $235,000. MLS 201502749 $274,000 age. 12x16 shop with runs. Multiple outside M t. Jefferson, M t . 2026 sq. ft. home lo- 2961 sq. ft. with great entry way, heat pump, 201507242. Pam Pam Lester, Princ. power, room for RV. play areas for super- Washington, Mt. Hood cated across f rom room with exposed MORRIS ceiling fans, recessed Lester, Princ. Broker, Broker, Century 21 ch a let-style REAL ESTATE l ighting, large l o f t C entury 2 1 Gol d Gold Country Realty, $319,900. MLS: vised play and exer- and Smith Rock. Steel Q uail R u n Gol f wood, 2 01505946. CAL L cise. Longtime expe- framed construction, Course. $ 2 96,000. v aulted ceili n g. area, a master bed- Country Realty, Inc. Inc. 541-504-1338 I 4~ m l y o CAROLYN EMICK AT r iences staff a n d s table, easy to r e - MLS: 201 5 06757. $385,000. room w it h a m p le 541-504-1338 MLS: Hard-to-find single story 541-419-0717. Duke grooming f a c ilities. model home. Base- CALL CAL L walk-in closet, winJASEN 2 0'I506656. The Bungalows at NW h ome in N W R e d Warner Realty Property has a 2500 ment storage 8 small CHAVEZ AT B ILL PANTON A T dow coverings 750 mond 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 541-891-5446. Duke 541-240-6545. Duke Crossing is a 24 unit throughout. The gasq. ft. home including office 8 garage below. Pride of O w nership. a 1 bedroom apart- Home is light & bright Warner Realty condo development rage is finished with Redmond Homes 1724 sq. ft, 14 acres, Warner Realty Park-like private lot comprised of 4 indi- ceiling storage rack R V p a rking w i t h $964,000. MLS: with many windows. Stunning Single-Level. near midtown and Pi- ment. phases. Con- and you have great 1960 sq. ft. one story 4 double gate. 01502782. CAL L $469,000. MLS¹ Special Property and This brand new 3 bed- vidual lot Butte. Large bright 2 d os r a ng e fr o m bdrm, 2 bath, jetted $258,500. MLS IM WARNER A T 201507612 views from the back kitchen, many custom K location. 2 bdrm, 2 room home is located 1100-1285 s q . ft. t ubs, v a ulted, t i l e 201509361 Pam 541-480-5365. Duke Bobbie Strome deck. MLS¹ bath, original owner, in a n es t ablished Priced built-ins, and vaulted Warner Realty from 201304344. V A -as- floors/counters, huge Lester, Princ. Broker, Principal Broker like new. A mazing neighborhood on Aw- $415,000-$459,000. ceilings. 3 bedroom, Gol d John L. Scott Real Es- views, sumable if e l igible. rear deck on .20 acre C entury 2 1 grandfathered brey Butte. Open floor CALL 2.5 bath, 2172 sq. ft. R eady to TERRY $124,900. lot, fenced w/RV gate, Country Realty, Inc. Buil d ? tate 541-385-5500 H e a ther vacation rental plus. plan w it h c u stom $399,950. MLS: Multi-Family Lot. 1051 SKJERSAA AT Hockett, Pri n cipal gas heat, dbl. garage, 541-504-1338 Sharon Abrams, Bro- c abinetry an d d e - 541-383-1426. Duke 2 01506837. CAL L NE Kayak Lp., Bend, $25 9 ,000. Broker 541-420-9151 lighted. ker, CRS signer fini s hes. Warner Realty TERRY SKJERSAA OR: Possible invest- SE Bend I $639,000 MLS 2015 0 8559Just Listed! One owner Gold Country Realty 541-280-9309. John Home, on very large AT 541 - 383-4126. ment property with $650,000. CALL Pam Lester, Princ. Jim Moran private lot. 3 bdrm, 2 L. Scott Realty, Bend TERRY SKJERSAA TLC Needed. Classic Duke Warner Realty views in NE Bend has Broker, Century 21 Broker AT 54 ' I -383-1426. 1960's contemporary Welcome Home. Like l i v ing Gold Country Realty, bath, l a rge room for a d uplex. 541.948.0997 room, mt n v i e ws, Need to get an Convenient to Parksingle-level 3 bdrm., new 3 bedroom, 2 Inc. 5 4 1-504-1338 Spectacular Cascade Duke Warner Realty b ath, 1728 s q . f t . vaulted ceiling in dinad in ASAP? way, Bend River Mall, M ountain View s . Sun Meadow. 3 bed- 1603 sq. ft. home in home on a corner lot. Single story 4 b d rm, ing room, c o untry and nearby area for Redmond on a corner 4i 18.78 +/acre parcel room, 2.5 bath, 2456 You can place it with i s land walking. MLS: b acks up t o B L M +/- sq. ft. house on a lot. Brand new in-the- This was a m o d el 2 bath, 1920 sq. f t . kitchen online at: home with all the up- home on large lot, RV and lots of extras 201505729. $60,000. box appliances waitwhich features the 5,663 +/sq. ft. Iot. MORRIS $ 2 8 9,900. parking, large cov- great for entertaining, Kathy: www.bendbulletin.corn Call D eschutes Riv e r , Enjoy this spacious ing to b e i n stalled. grades. REAL ESTATE o ffice/den with m t n MLS: 201 5 07775. 541-390-5236. Realty horse trails and river family floor plan in- $159,900. MLS: CALL patio and dbl. car views, master bdrm CAR O L YN ered Executives water activities. CUP cluding the expansive 2 01509564. CAL L garage. $ 2 1 7,000. 541-385-5B09 AT MLS 201507942 Call with mirrored closet EMICK AT EMICK Single level adorable in place, bring build- bonus room, ideal for CAROLYN 541-419-0717. Duke ceiling fan. Ready to Build? Ready 541-419-0717. Duke ing plans. N atural kids' and adult activiPam Lester, Princ. doors, Private Setting in the Large attached dbl Custom Home. home. granite coun- low-maintenance Warner Realty Warner Realty Broker, Century 21 Pines! Fully scribed 3 for ties. Enjoy all t his with opener, S w eetgrass tertops, knotty pine landscape 8 w ildlife home has to offer, Gold Country Realty, garage bed, 1.75 bath cus- 22065 Irge shop room loBend, OR: 4.03 interior doors. 1550 add to the ambience Tumalo horse ranch I West Hills I $574,900 tom log home is sur- Dr., plus the community Inc., 541-504-1338 sq.ft. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, - Sundance cated behind dbl gaCathy Del Nero $1,195,973 rounded by a beauti- acre lan dscaping. of quiet country life. pool and parks for the rage. Nice s torage rectangu- lush 12 miles to Redmond, Greg Floyd Broker, CSP fully landscaped yard. Meadows, entire family. T his MLS ¹201504132 Pat Cute Cottage Style 2 lar lot n ear Horse garden bldg., new ce541.410.5280 541.390.5349 There is a 1500 sq. ft. Butte, backs up to Baxter, Broker St. Charles Hospital 8 home has been lightly bdrm, 1 bath, 792 sq. dar deck, b eautiful Redmond Ai r port. lived in and awaits shop w/220 power for National Forest, wa- 808-551-5729. J o hn PC, Broker ft. home with many landscaping with un$275,000. MLS ¹ new owners. Quality all y ou r t o y s or ter and power to road. L. Scott Realty, Bend updates. Located on derground sprinklers, 201507866 f inishes t ha t y o u projects. Twin w e ll MLS: .17 acres close to 201 5 07802. many lovely mature bought a new boat? Bobbie Strome w ould expect in a provides crystal clear $220,000. Call Kris- Just downtown Redmond. trees, fully f e nced Sell your old one in the Principal Broker Pahlisch home . water. $46 9 ,000. tina: 5 4 1-610-6208.classifieds! MORRIS $139,900 MLS backyard, parking for Ask about our John L. Scott Real Es- $360,000 MLS MLS: 201 5 01833. 201508905. Call very l arge m o torREAL ESTATE Super Seller rates! MORRIS tate 541-385-5500 CALL BILL PANTON Realty Executives ¹201506272 Pam Lester, Principal 541-385-5809 home or other veREAL ESTATE Bobbie Strome, AT 541 - 420-6545.Red Sky Farm. You and Broker, Century 21 hicles. $369,950. Principal Broker Duke Warner Realty your critters will love Single Level Energy Ef- Spectacular mtn. view Gold Country Realty, Call Johnnie Murray, 748 John L Scott Real Gre e n-built b eautifully Inc. 541-504-1338 land 541-923-0936 Private Small Acreage this property. Attrac- ficient U nique Property! 3 Estate 541-385-5500 on 20 acres. scaped ba c kyard, Highland Realty. W ithin M inutes o f tive 3 bedroom, 2.5 home bdrm., 2 bath, 1608 Northeast Bend Homes sq. ft., 4 bed- tranquil setting with Sunriver I $375,000 D owntown. Qu i e t , b ath, 2900 s q . f t . 2739 sq. ft. completely up- 63040 Woodbridge Pl Bank owned on almost Located in Terrebonne! room, 3 bath, solar with barn and Koi water f e ature. Gary Rose b d r m, peaceful r e laxation home dated home on .26 $286,000. 3 bed, 2.5 1 /4 acre. 3 10 acres irriga- Enjoy character and sq. ft., 3 bdrm., Broker, IIIIBA awaits in this arena on 5 acres with panel, acre lot. Pride of own- bath No HOA and de- 2bath, 1120 sq. ft., in 21215 bath home on .34 tion, set up for horses 2 a c res i r r igation. comfort in this unique w ell-loved home i n 541.588.0687 SW Redmond. Dbl car ership. A must see. steel barn. Too 3 bdrm, 2 bath log irable area. C a l l garage and fenced acre flat lot with madesirable Sunset View Close to BLM land. and $279,900. MLS: sMary t ure t r ees. M L S ¹ or Dan backyard. $161,900.. MLS: many upgrades and home. A m u st-see! Estates! A rare com- $599,000. 201509676. CALL to list. $278,500. CAL L extras or MLS ¹201506262 Call 201503396. MLS bination of single-level 2 01502661. J AYNEE BECK A T 541-848-8140 MLS: 201503008. Berk- Pam Lester, Principal $118,350. Pam OZRELIC AT $549,900. Call home, 3-car garage, BECKY 541-480-0988 OR 541-639-6595. CAL L Donna Carter Broker Lester, Princ. Broker, Hathaway Home Broker, Century 21 and small acreage is 541-480-9191. Duke 2R01503739. PETE VAN DEUSEN shire OB EGGERS AT C entury 2 1 Gol MORRIS Services N o rthwest 541-903-0601 not to be missed. The Warner Realty Gold Country Realty, Country Realty, Inc.d AT 541 - 480-3538. Real Estates 541-815-9780. Duke Crooked River Realty REAL ESTATE Inc. 541-504-1338 great room design River's Edge Village I Duke Warner Realty 541-504-1338 Warner Realty IA~ & m ly ~ & 0~ 4 with large kitchen is $449,900 perfect for entertainBonnie Savickas ing, the master suite Broker, E-Pro, SRESE is as perfect retreat. 541.408.7537 O ~ • Huge patio area with hot tub invites you to enjoy your n atural s urroundings. B o r dered by 7 acres of MORRIS open space. Quality c raftsmanship a n d REAL ESTATE materials, lo v i ngly maintained, now r eady for you a nd Successful Established your next c hapter! B usiness. The S k y Hotel in Mitchell, OR, MLS: 20'I 508759. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, in an area known for 2 606 sq. f t . , 1 . 23 its scenic beauty with acres. 20326 Rain- a ttractions such a s b ow L a k e Tr a i l. the Painted Hills and $580,000. Team De- John Day Fossil Beds. lay. Edie: Owner terms avail541-420-2950. Sam: able. $250,000. MLS: CAL L 541-678-3290. Moe: 2 01507787. 541-303-3735. H a- K IM WARNER A T 541-480-5365. Duke sso Company RealWarner Realty tors

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SUNDAY

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Fred Johnson, Broker 54 I -788-3733

Find out where all the Garage Sales are each week. Not to mention, a wealth of items daily in The Bulletin Classifieds.

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WHAT IS THE VALUE OF YOUR HOME IN TODAY'S MARKET? STOP IN &VISIT ONE OF OUR REAL ESTATE EXPERTS TO FIND OUT! ORIGINAL WESTSIDE COTTAGE IN HISTORICAL DISTRICT

~ C R AFTSMAN STYLE HOME IN DESIRABLE OAKYIEW Great roomfloor plan, 1881sq.ft.,3 bedrooms,2.5 bathrooms,hugebonusroom (or 4th bedroom), comerlot,coveredfrontporch& fencedbackyard in agreat location & neighborhood.$299,900 CALL ROB EGGERSAT 541-815-9780 OR KATRINA BUCHANAN AT 541-420-3348. MLS: 201510577

Move-in ready. Great opportunity! 2 bedroom, cuteand cozy cottage on a nice, large level lot. $335,000 CALL

FRED JOHNSON AT 541-788-3733. MLS: 201510705

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— ER —. LIVE ONTUMALO CREEK Relish this opportunity to live in the Skyliners neighborhood just minutes from downtown. Property sits on 1.83acresand has127feetofcreekfrontage,$389,000 CALLTERRY SKjERSAAAT 54l-383-1426 MLS: 201503113

CLOSETOTHE OLD MILL DISTRICT & RIYERTRAIL Features 3bdrms,2.5 baths, 1811sq.R. wlgreat room,den,hugekitchen, u ptsairslaundry8 easycare landsca ping.$345,000 CALLAUBRECHESHIRE541598-4583OR BROOK CRIAZZO 541-550-8%8. MLS: 201507780

EXECUTIVE HONE ON NET CONSTRUCTION fN C USTOff CONTEMPORARY BEAUTY 7 TIMBERED ACRES NE BEND This 3 bedroom,3 bath,3380sq.ft home SouthofJohnDay,3bedroom, 2.5 bath Greatroomconcept wl3bdrms,&2.5bathsin 222 sq. features amazing views, in-law quarters, 2801 rq ft.bonusroom,attached garage fi. Room for RVparking,mtnviewsfrommaster bdrm high-end finishes and is a short distance landscaped. $399,999 CALL DUKE 8<cornerfireplac,$e339,000CALLjAYNEEBECK541- to the Deschutes River. $428,500 WARNER DAYVILLEAT 54 I-987-2363 480-0988ORPETEVANDEUSEN 501-480-3538. CALL Klf1WARNERAT5'll 410-2475. MLS: 201304288 MLS:201506001 MSL:201508406 ' •

PERFECT PROPERTY FORTRAIL RIDING Both you & the critters wi love this propert/I Locatedcloseto BLM,well-maintained homehas almost2900sq fi on5acreswl 2+acresofirrigaton. $599,000.CALLBECKYOZRELIC541-480-9090. MLS: 201502661

GORGEOUS SINGLELEVEL IN BROKEN TOP Situated onGooseCreek pondw/beautiful water views. Triple car garage,2327 sq ft. 2 master suites &new appliances.$549,900

PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP

PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP

PRIVATE COUNTRY

MLS: 201506837

MLS: 201505946

MLS: 201510287

Park-like private lot near Mid town & Pilot 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1468 sq ft. homewith LIV I N G I N NE BEND Butte.Large bright kitchen,many custom newerwindows,heatpump,new garagedoor Single-levelhomeonoverahalfacre,3bdrm,2 built-ins, andvaulted ceilings. 3 bedroom, and pull downstepsfor extra storage. 12XI 6 bath, 1486sqft. Great privatebackpatio with 2.5 bath,2172 sq. ft. $385,000 CALL shop with power. Room for RV. $319,900 lots ofroom for RVs,trailers,etc $299,900 CALL ROB EGGERS AT 541-815-9780 TERRY SKjERSAA AT 541-383-1426. CALL CAROLYNEMICKAT 541-419-0717. CALL ROB EGGERS AT 541-815-9780

MLS: 201504989

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INN OF THE 7TH

PROFITABLEKENNEL BUSINESS

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Classifieds

Nl-385-5809

This 3 bedroom, 3 bath ground cats.53dogrooms level condo is located nearthe pool 8 13 catrooms,most w/outside runs.Outside play and all resort activities. Don't miss areasfor payft exercise. E xp eriencedstall'8rgrooming youropportunity! $169,000 CALL 'facilities.2500sq. fi. home,including a I bedroom

YOU WILL BE CHARMED( FANTASTIC NEIGHBORHOOD! Qualit y 3 bedroom,2.5 bath home in NE BESTVALUE! Bend, Endlessupgradesfor eifiiciency and Sophisticated & I'owmaintenance2751sq. II. comfort.Gorgeous landscaping for the homew/exquisitefinishesthroughout. Convenient sweetretreat of your dreams.$359,900 to Old Mil &shopping.Earth AdvantageCertified.

20.44 ACRES Ifyou want privacy and your own get-away retreat this property is it. Breathtaking views of the Cascade Mountains. Electricity is on the property. $135,000 CALL

KIM WARNER AT 541-410-2475. apt $964,000CALLKRISWARNER511-480-5365. CALL BECKY OZRELIC AT541-480-9191. $498,500CALLSHEA REINER808-319-5559. KAROLYN DUBOIS AT 541-390-7863. MLS: 201408943 MLS: 201502782 MLS: 201510247 MLS: 201509008 MLS: 201309974

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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7 2015 E11

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 750

Redmond Homes

S u nriver/La Pine Homes Jefferson County Homes

762

763

771

Homes with Acreage

Recreational Homes 8 Property

Lots

Lots

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773

Acreages

Acreages

Newly built golf course 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath Mfd BANK-OWNED IN MA- Breathtaking views of 16945 Cagle, La Pine. Lot 4 S W B lue J ay Canyon City, OR Bid Novi/! frontage! 3 bedroom 2 Home on 2.1 Acres in DRAS! New s ingle the Cascades and the Crescent Lake 141937 $69,000. .98 Acres, 3 www.sulletinBidnBuy.corn Road, CRR. S mith Eastern Oregon 3 lots bath + den. Custom Sunforest E s t ates. story home, 1611 sq. Deschutes River! 4 R ock v iews, 5 . 1 7 a vailable wit h c i t y Spruce Dr. One of the RV hookups, septic, cabinets, gra n ite, Corner Lot with drive ft. 3 bdrm, 2 b ath, bdrm, 3 bath round most gorgeous creek well, large deck. acres borders public water and sewer at hardwoods, v aulted thru driveway, corn vaulted ceiling, gas home on 2.27 acres. front properties on Dan H oak, B r o ker land. $65,000. MLS street. 1.86 acre resic eilings, pant r y, pletely fenced, with FP, recent upgrades, Greenhouse, hot tub 201407131 d ential l o t , lev e l Creek. 1836 541-639-6595 walk-ins. Elegance in the ability to still build 2-car garage on .14 a nd plenty o f R V Crescent Juniper Realty building site, $30,900. sq. ft. home located Mary H oak, B r oker a s e rene s e tting. on other lot. Storage acres. $169,900. MLS parking. $ 3 79,000. on 1.71 acres. Spec 541-848-8140 541-504-5393 6.12 acre view lot, $349,900 Call Nancy B uilding. Plenty o f 201507147 . Pam MLS 20'I 506613 Berkshire H a th away zoned re s i dential, t acular views, w i n Buy New...Buy Local Good classified ads tell Popp, Princ. Broker room to add a shop. Lester, Princ. Broker, Pam Lester, Princ. Bro- dows showcase the Home Serv i ces $30,900. 3.49 acre You Can Bid On: 541-815-8000. MLS the essential facts in an MLS 2015 0 9322 C entury 2 1 Gol d ker, Century 21 Gold mtn view lot, within creek from all rooms, Northwest Real Estate Lot 11 at Yarrow 201505433 Call $89,900. Country Realty, Inc. Country Realty, Inc. interesting Manner. Write city limits, $35,900. wood stove and elec 176 Silver Spur Road, Community, Madras 541-504-1338 541-504-1338 Nancy Popp, Princ. Cascade Realty, from the readers view - not Sellers are Oregon litric, g ravelled drive, $60,000. One acre, Retail Value $25,000 Broker, 541-815-8000 Dennis Haniford, Princ. censed Real Estate the seller' s.Convert the Enjoy amazing views of covered decks, min community pool, club757 Sun Forest Crooked River Realty Broker Brokers. Juniper Refacts into benefits. Show cascade moun- utes from Crescent house High L a kes Construction 1-541-536-1731 Crook County Homes the the reader how the item will alty 541-504-5393 tains and Deschutes Lake, Odell Lake, Wil Realty & Pr o perty (Bidding closes New Redmond listing. help them insomeway. Tues., Nov. 10, H ome in a gre a t 51434 Telegraph Road. Possibilities a b ound! c anyon f ro m t h i s lamette Ski Pass. Fish Management FIND IT! snowmobile from 541-536-0117 This at 8:00 p.m.) neighborhood on quiet $75,900. 1 bdrm, 1 Home with acreage, beautiful home! Nice or BUT IT! advertising tip large deck, perfect for your backyard. MLS cul-de-sac..34 acre of bath, dbl. carport with irrigation, shop and SELL IT! 201503668 $299,000 5.3 acres near the enentertaining! Property brought to you by shop. High Lakes privacy, fruit trees, Cascade Mt Views from barn with d evelopCall Linda The Bulletin Classifieds trance of The Ranch has a 36 x 40 pole sprinkler system and Realty & Property this 1. 2 5 acre ment potential. Don' t barn w/5 stalls with Bulletin West Powell Butte EsCascade Realty, and golf course. Nice cul-de-sac l o c ation The Management elevated for easterly wr i w cenealorego since t9w miss out on this stick rubber mats. Plenty of 541-815-0606 mountain views. nice ready to go! Septic in541-536-0117 views. 3 bdrm, 2 bath built home that was with gated enhorse property. stalled with 1000 gal- Grandfathered RV lot, tates, offers large l i ving updated 2 years ago room for storage with Crescent Lake 18303 flat try, 20+ acres with 52250 Parkway Drive, Perfect place to build 2 large doors and corone acre. Nicely treed lon tank. Connection room, vaulted ceiling, $214,000. 3 bdrm, 2 and features a large Sugar Cone Ct. This private well, large windows, new walk in pantry, mas- ral to the side. Come magical mountain re your home. $75,000. to C r ooked R i v er and fenced, adjoining old-growth trees and tile a n d car p et. bath, Hickory, A/C. ter separation, up- enjoy Crooked River treat located at the M LS 2710905 C a ll Ranch water, 30x40 a greenbelt for pri- fenced on 3 s i des, Linda Lou Day-Wright, g arage/shop K itchen ha s ne w 1 .12 a cres. H i g h stairs dorm b onus Ranch amenities in- very top corner of wit h vacy. Water line into build your Realty & Prop- room 8 more. Shop is cluding; golf, swim- Diamond Peaks has Broker, 541-771-2585 concrete floors, win- s talled to R V s i t e. perfect granite counters, tile Lakes dream home. erty Man a gement Crooked River Realty ming, tennis, hiking, Older septic for RV backsplash, new GE 541-536-0117 2519 sqft with 2 Mas dow and 16x10 over$159,000. MLS 750 sq ft. Fenced for fishing and h o rseuse. Power nearby. appliances in s l ate head door and man ter Suites, loft, 2 guest 50556 horses. Country living back riding. 201507113 Pam De e r St., ML color. Master bdrm 52367 Ammo n Road, close to t own a nd c abins, gran i t e $118,000. 3.33 acre, door. $85,900 MLS Continue RV use or Lester, Princ. Broker, S201507632 build your home on separation, real wood La Pine $242,000 3 Call counters, s t a inless lots, well and power. 201302066 SR1 zoning. C entury 2 1 Gol d Call Katie appliances, gourmet 3High li v el y sit e . Country Realty, Inc. baseboard trim, heat bdrm, 2 bath chalet $249,900. MLS $339,500. Lakes Realty & Nancy Popp, Princ. t his Dailey Broker MLS Broker, 541-815-8000 $47,500. pump/AC. 450 sq. ft. with large shop and 201509403 Heather kitchen, soaking tub in Property M a n age541-504-1338 add'I to utilize as you w orkshop on 2 . 2 6 Hockett, 2 01205397 N a ncy o ne m a ster a n d ment 541-536-0117 Crooked River Realty Pri n cipal 541-419-4220. wish. Double garage, acres. Call Terri Bus- Broker 541-420-9151 Crooked River Realty Popp, Princ. Broker, 776 double steam shower Enjoy Mt . J e fferson 541-815-8000 lots of parking, stor- ton, 50 3 -899-8415 Gold Country Realty Nicely remodeled Cha- in the other, heated 52285 Ponderosa Way. views from this 5-acre Crooked Manufactured/ River Realty age building. Prop- Berkshire Hathaway floors in baths, on $56,000. 1.3 acres, Mobile Homes built s ingle let w i t h la m inate demand hot w a ter commercial w a t er, lot, close to Crooked erty fenced. Agent Home Serv i cesRecently f looring, vinyl w i nRiver Ranch entrance 2 0+ acres in W est level custom home on owned. $239,900 heater, prop a ne electric at street High with the availability of Powell Butte Northwest Real dows, forced air furEstates, Beautiful home on the a large lot with RV Heather Hockett, Estate metal r o o f. stove, hidden media Lakes Realty & Prop- all the CRR amenities: gated co m munity, river with views of parking. This home nace, Principal Broker room, paved entertain erty Man a gement golf, swimming, ten- mtn. views, Double car garage + private Paulina. Per f ectly 541-420-9151 Gold 52679 Golden Astor features vaulted ceil- carport. nearly 800 sq. ing decks and walk 541-536-0117 nis, disk golf, river well, paved roads w/ maintained custom 3 ar c h itectural ft. accessory building ways, l a n dscaped, Country Realty $145,000 N ic e 3 ings, fishing, p i c kle-ball, access to BLM. MLS¹ bedroom, 2 bath 5 2549 A n tler L a n e, bdrm, 2 bath, fenced detail, recessed light5 acres. $239,900. master crafts man horseback riding and 201305077 $159,900. h ome on over a n Single story home on acre. High Lakes Re- ing, spacious kitchen, on $75,000. 1.13 acres, ship with 2x8 framing watching. Pam Lester, Princ. acre. Views are awealmost 1/3 acre lot B a t hrooms MLS 201507174 Call and log support, cus well, septic, outbuild- bird alty & Property Man- pantry. Popp, Princ. MLS Broker, Century 21 some, watch the sunwith huge rear patio, agement have granite counter Nancy tom milled redwood ings. High Lakes Re- $57,900 Broker, 541-815-8000 01504749 Kati e Gold Country Realty, rise over the r iver, dbl attached garage 541-536-0117 tops, tile floors, masthroughout MLS alty & Property Man- 2Dailey, Crooked River Realty Broker Inc. 541-504-1338 paved drive, n i ce and detached 768 sq. ter bedroom has tiled agement 20'I 508107. 541-419-4220 shop excellent neighft. shop. Fenced with 52920 Meadow Lane. shower & jetted tub. Outstanding Cascade $515,000. Call Linda 541-536-0117 7965 SW River Rd. SeCrooked River Realty borhood. Grab this RV gates and exten- $280,000. 1663 sq. ft., Lots of solid wood v iews. 2300 sq . f t . Cascade Realty, cluded & private 2.79 5 2563 A n tler L a n e. one quick. $379,900. sive concrete work. 2.14 acres, 3 -bay moldings and e ven custom 3 bdrm, 2 t/e 541-815-0606 Lot 2 C h apman Rd. $35,000. 1.12 acre $71,000. 2.86 acres, acres, near the Des- MLS 201 5 08783. $319,900. MLS shop. High Lakes Re- oak detail on f ront bath, triple garage, River, canyon C ascade Real t y 201508292 Call Pam alty & Property Man- porch. Large fenced RV parking, all on 4 Great vacation home in level building lot. High water, electric, camp- chutes wall views, borders 541-536-1731 Lester, Princ. Broker, agement back yard with an irri- acres. $489,000. mls the heart of Christ- Lakes Realty 8 Prop- sites. H i g h L akes public land. $39,500. Man a gement Realty & mas Valley. This one erty C entury 2 1 Gol d 541-536-0117 gation well. $194,900. 201507566 Pr o perty Juniper Realty Country Realty, Inc., MLS 2015 0 9460 Pam Lester, Princ. Bro- has 1 bdrm with an- 541-536-0117 Management Get your 541-504-5393 53255 Deep Woods541-504-1338 Heather Hoc k ett, ker, Century 21 Gold other that can be set 5 2764 a n d 527 7 8 541-536-0117 business $155,000. 1782 sq. ft., P rincipal up as a 2nd bedroom Brok e r Country Realty, Inc. $36 9 ,500.Nice flat 5 a c r e l o t! 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 5 41-420-9151 G o l d it has no closet so can Bridge. 541-504-1338 Looking for your next Tick, Tock 24X36 shop. H i gh Country Realty not be called a bed- Gorgeous 6.49 River- C ome b uild y o u r emp/oyee? Lakes Realty & Propa ROW I N G room. The kitchen has f ront a c re s Hig h dream home and en- Tick, Tock... Place a Bulletin help Find It in erty Man a gement a ceramic cook top, Lakes Realty & Prop- joy all of the ameniwanted ad today and 541-536-0117 erty Man a gement ties t ha t C r o oked ...don't let time get Homes with Acreage The Bulletin Classifieds! small toaster oven, 541-536-0117 with an ad in reach over 60,000 lots o f cup b oard River Ranch has to 541-385-5809 away. Hire a The Bulletin's readers each week. 54620 Caribou Drive, B etween Bend a n d offer! Including golf, space, & t ile floor. Your classified ad $254,900. 1704 sq. ft., Redmond. 3 bdrm, 2 Ready for your new Nice size living room, 5 5535 Gross D r . "Call A Service swimming, te n nis, professional out $39,000. .52 acres, will also appear on community river ac- bath 1603 sq. ft. home home in Prineville? 5+ w ith patio door t o F risbee g o lf , a n d Professional" of The Bulletin's bendbulletin.corn cess. H i g h L akes p aved road, n e a r 2.38 acres adja acres in an upscale deck. Metal garage river. High Lakes Re- fishing. Close to pubDirectory which currently reRealty & Pr o perty on "Call A Service lic land for horseback with a shop area. Locent to public lands. neighborhood close to alty & Property Man- riding, hiking, and exceives over Management cated close to golf Professional" F enced an d o v e r town with paved roads 541-536-011 7 agement 1.5 million page List Your Home ploring! A 10-minute sized garage. and on a cul-de-sac. course, municipal air- 541-536-0117 Directory today! views every month JandMHomes.corn drive to shopping and port, tennis courts 8 $239,900. M LS The property c ur8 P u ma , S u n river. at no extra cost. We Have Buyers acc e ss.Lot 37 SW Quail Rd. C h r istmas9040 SW S a ndridge highway Pam rently has a 768 sq. ft. all t ha t $399,000. 1861 sq. ft., 201509304. Bulletin Classifieds Get Top Dollar Valley has to offer. Rd., CRR 1.12 acre $54,900. MLS 5.13 acres, unique Financing Lester, Princ. Broker, stick built shop and 3 bdrm, 3.5 bath, 3 Available. Get Results! Reduced to $65,000. Power and water at 201507119. Call Katie rock Gol d the property has a master suites. Call C entury 2 1 o u t croppings, Call 385-5809 or 541-548-5511 MLS 201502928 D ailey, Brok e r , the street $34,900. Dan Hoak, B roker Country Realty, Inc. shared well that almtn,. views, septic place your ad on-line 541-419-4220 541-504-1338 ready has a water line Cascade Realty, 541-639-6595 Mary MLS ¹201403978. feasibility approved. NEW MODELS ARE at Dennis Haniford, Princ. Crooked River Realty running to a spigot by Juniper Realty, Hoak, Broker HERE, two homes $65,000. MLS bendbulletin.corn SW Dove Rd., the shop. The CEC Broker 541-536-1731 541-504-5393 541-848-8140 Berk- 16751 available for fast Wild River Lot I $55,000 201509636 J u niper RR, c ustom l o g power pole is in and delivery come see shire Hathaway Home C Price lowered: Cabin/ Jan Laughlin Realty 541-504-5393 home on 5 acres. with 755 Services N o rthwest many upgrades: floor needs the temporary 638 acres in forest on 8 Acre in Bend city Broker, ABR, CRS, jandmhomes.corn ervice reset. T h e trout stream, P R I- limits in NE area of Price lowered: Cabin/ 541-548-5511 Sunriver/La Pine Homes Real Estate GRI, CSP to ceiling windows sproperty s ni c e ly VATE hunt/fish/invest, newer homes. All un638 acres in forest on w ith m t n . vie w s , treed and ihas 541.350.6049 3 bdrm, 2 Bath Mfd. derground utilities at PRICE REDUCED a gentle 80 mi. from Bend, trout stream, P R I3 Bedroom 2 B a t h Hickory hardwood & By $8000! VATE hunt/fish/invest, Manufactured Home Home on 3.88 Acres. tile floors, gourmet slope to it and is a $749K. Fo r D r o ne s treet, v i e w fro m Laminate Flooring and 80 mi. from Bend, Brand New model home Link, building site. Downon 1.45 Acre Lot in kitchen, cherry cabi- nice site for a custom Video $749K. Fo r D r o ne Sunhaven Community, 541-480-7215 J ack, town, outdoor recrePonderosa Pi n e s. Carpet through out nets, granite counters, home. $125,000. Video Link, 3 bdrm, 2 bath Heather Hockett, I NVESTwest Re a l ation, all necessities in This Home was built the Home. Very Pri stacked rock woodMORRIS minutes. $135 , 000 541-480-7215 J ack, NOW ONLY $71,900 Com p letely burning Principal Broker Estate. in 1991 and is 1428 vate, fir e place. REAL ESTATE Owner terms availfenced and c r o ss 541-420-9151 Gold I NVESTwest R e a l JandMHomes.corn Sq Ft. Double De $421,900 771 able 541-385-4790 Estate. 541-548-551 1 Country Realty tached Garage. Bank fenced, Horse Prop ¹201502837 erty with Barn. New Lots of America associ Juniper Realty, Smith R oc k v i e ws! ates, hous e hold Deck, Patio, and Fire 541-504-5393 Custom home with 3 Lot 1 SW Shad Rd. members or business Pit. 30 Year Roof In bdrms., 2 bath, 1968 3 .09 a c re s wi t h 2 years ago. partners p r ohibited stalled sq. ft., large custom a mazing v iew s . from pur c hasing Newer exterior paint. covered deck, 35x60 $78,500. MLS MLS¹ REO/auctioned prop $160,000 s hop, all o n 5 . 1 8 201402733 J u niper erties dir e ctly/indi 201508720 MLS¹ acres. Cascade Realty, Realty 541-504-5393 rectly. $125,000. MLS 201504620. $389,000 1-541-536-1731 201508994 Cascade Pam Lester, Princ. 1 5438 Deer A v e 360' View/Top of Butte Broker, Century 21 Realty 541-536-1731 $30,000. Wooded half The Bulletin's in Terrebonne. Home, acre building lot. High Gold Country Realty, 145451 Birchwood "Call A Service shop, mansion building Lakes Realty & PropInc. 541-504-1338 $1 74,900. 1794 sq. ft. Professional" Directory site. 2% to broker. See: Ma n agement bend.craigslist.org/reo/ Two bdrm, 2 bath, 1.57 erty decks, 3-car garage, 2 is all about meeting 541-536-011 7 5273683344.html acre. High Lakes Reacres fenced/gated. your needs. alty & Property ManAntelope, Three 3 bdrm., 2 bath, 2456 tile floors, bedroom 16424 agement $12,500. .45 Call on one of the sq. ft. home with on sliders onto p a tio, Rivers. 541-536-0117 14.66 acres, 13.20 pellet stove, vaulted acre, recreational lot, professionals today! br e akfast deeded river access. acres irrigation. Bo- ceilings, 147914 Mabel, La Pine. Kyle Hoak, Broker bar, skylights, stor$160,000. 5 A c res,Great investment prop- nus room w/seperate age building and cor541-639-7760 entry, stainless steel RV garage w/shop erty! No w r e nted. ral o n cu l -de-sac. Berkshire Hathaway appliances, solar dearea, gated entrance. Needs some T L C. Home Services cond i tion. Kyle H oak, Would make g reat sign generates 20% Good $159,900. MLS Northwest Real Estate MLS¹ 541-639-7760 Broker starter home. T h is electricity. Call 16465 SW Dove Rd., Berkshire Hathaway property backs up to 201504013 $427,500 201507087. Popp, CRR. 5 acre legal lot. Pam Lester, Princ. Nancy Home Serv i ces gov"t lands. One lot 541-815-8000 Septic feasibility apNorthwest Real Estate off paved maintai ned Broker, Century 21 Gold Country Realty, Crooked River Realty proved. mtn v iews. road $69,000. MLS 15019 Chipmunk Lane. 201506730 Cascade Inc. 541-504-1338 $69,900. MLS $259,900. 1920 sq. ft. Realty, Dennis Hani- 8120 SW SHAD RD, BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS 20150'I897 Search the area's most 4 bdrm, 2 bath, shop, ford, Princ. Broker CRR. Frame built 3 Juniper Realty comprehensive listing of 1 acre. High Lakes 541-536-1731 541-504-5393 bdrm, 2 bath, 1,336 classified advertising... Realty & Pr o perty sq. ft., landscaped 1 16755 Casper, Three real estate to automotive, Management acres on paved street, merchandise to sporting Rivers. .70 Acre, vaLa Pine 1 acre / 541-536-0117 older si n gle-wide large concrete patio, goods. Bulletin Classifieds cant lot - close to boat mobile home, de- fenced backyard, in- appear every day in the ramp. $30,000. Owner 15464 Liberty Road. cludes riding l awn will c a rly . D a r rell print or on line. $215,000. 1660 sq. ft. tached garage, unmower, push mower Hamel, Broker derground well 3 bdrm, 2 bath, on .96 Call 541-385-5809 a nd w ee d ea t e r www.bendbulletin.corn 541-480-7563 Berkacre. High Lakes Re- house. 1 mile from $209,000. MLS¹ shire Hathaway Home alty & property Man- state park. $89,900 541-420-3611 201503271. Juniper Services N orthwest agement The Bulletin Sernng Central Oregon unw 19t8 Realty 541-504-5393 Real Estate 541-536-0117 -

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1 5760 Burgess R d . $129,900 1440 sq. ft. home with attached shop. High Lakes Realty & Property Management 541-536-0117

15980 Green Forest $182,500. 1500 sq. ft., 2-car garage, fenced yard. High Lakes Realty & Property Management

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16266 Pine Drop Lane $ 174,900. 3 bdr m chalet, 2 car garage, 1 acre. High Lakes Realty & Property Management 541-536-0117

30 yr fixed= 4.125% APR- 4.299% P &I pmt= $1357.02

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16784 Brenda Drive. $ 333,950 3 bd r m , 1743 sq. ft. with cus-

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shire Hathaway Home Services N o rthwest Real Estate 18 Red Cedar, Sunriv er. $ 5 25,000. 4 Bdrm, 4 bath, 2650 sq. ft., golf course view. Darrell Hamel, Broker 541-480-7563 Berkshire H a t haway Home Serv i ces Northwest Real Estate

gsdrssms: 3 Bath: 21/2 Square Feet: 1,716 Mountain Views OpenGreatRoom Layout

Purchaseprice $350,000,20% down, loan amount $280,000,30yearlixed. Jumbo purchaseprice /value $800,000 — 20% down /equity,$640,000 loan amount. Offer valid as of 11/6/2015, restrictions may apply.Rates/fees subject to change. OnApproved Credit. I

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541-536-0117

16876 Pony Express Way, River Meadows. near Sunriver 3 bdrm, 2 bath, bonus room, 2672 sq. ft. near Sunr iver. Call Mary o r Dan, 541-848-8140,

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MonteVista Homes is proud to introduce this Custom Craftsman home atop The Cliffs at Southcrest. This dream home allows you to take in views of the mountains and buttes. Relax in your spacious first floor great room concept living space, complete with a fireplace, designer granite kitchen counters fitted atop our beautiful wood cabinets and hardwood style flooring. Plenty of counter space with a stainless steel range to make this an entertainer's kitchen. Southcrest community is close to the Cascade Shopping Center, Lava Ridge and Skyview schools.

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A CA D E M Y

M ORT G A G E C O R P O R A T I O N Casey NMLS 189449 Caseyjones@academymortgage.corn 541-419-9766 CORP OR LIC.¹ ML-2421

Jennifer NMLS 288550 j enni f er.edwards@academymortgage.corn CORP NMLS ¹3113

54$ 323 2$9$

371 SWUpper Terrace Dr., Suite 1, Bend, OR 97702

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ON PAGES 3R4 COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.corn To place an ad call 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015 205

208

Items for Free

Pets 8 Supplies

Notice to our valued readers!

www.sherman-ranch.us Quality. 541-281-6829

For newspaper delivery questions, please call the Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800

German Shorthair (2) black 9-wk-old males, shots. Bred for hunting. $500-$1000. Call

To place an ad, call 541-385-5809 or email classified©bendbulletin.corn

Jack Russell/Fox Terrier mix pups, $200ea.

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00 202

Want to Buy or Rent

Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage fake & fine jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver. I buy in bulk. Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006

German Shepherds

541-777-9317 for info

541-903-0346

Lab Pups AKC,black & yellow, Master Hunter sired, performance pedigree, OFA cert hips & elbows, 541-771-2330

The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregnn sincetete

203

Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows

210

Bid Now!

www.6ulletin6idnBuy.corn

Buy New...Buy Local

You Can Bid On: $1000 Carpet and Pad Certificate Retail Value $1000 Carpetco Flooring (Bidding closes Tues., Nov. 10, at 8:00 p.m.)

www.kinnamanretrievers.corn

208

Labrador pups AKC,

Pets & Supplies

yellOW, $300-$400. 541-954-1727.

210

Fur niture & Appliances Furniture 8 Appliances

Bid Now!

www.sunetinBidneuy.corn

215

246

257

260

Coins & Stamps

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Musical Instruments

Misc. Items

GE drop in range, good Private collector buying BASS GUITAR Tow Bar, for Chevy cond. Must sell! $75 postagestamp albums & GUN SAFETY CLASSSOUNDGEAR by C olorado, $100 . collections world-wide obo. 541- 388-5696. Ibanez 4-string, black 541-788-6442 Armed Self-Defense, and U.S. 573-286-4343 exc. cond., with pre- Sell your s t ructured taught by police fireG ENERATE S O M E (local, cell phone). mium padded case, arms trainer and lawsettlement or annuity EXCITEMENT in your strap and amplifier. yer. 11/17, 6:30 pm. 241 for CASH neighborhood! Plan a $250. Fender electric payments $65. CHL T r aining NOW. You don't have garage sale and don' t Bicycles & guitar, Squire Strat 8 Cert extra. wait for your future forget to advertise in case, SOLD. Vintage to Accessories Register/directions: payments any longer! classified! banjo, 5-string, new 503-585-5000. 1-800-914-0942 541-385-5809. keys & strings, SOLD. Call 2013 Santa Cruz Solo (PNDC) H & H FIREARMS 541-385-4790. mtn. racing bike, med. NEED TO CANCEL Buy, Sell, Trade, SOCIAL S E C URITY full-suspension, good YOUR AD? 260 D ISABILITY BEN cond, must sell, $2600. Consign. Across From The Bulletin Pilot Butte Drive-In Misc. Items E FITS. Unable to 541-480-2652 Classifieds has an 541-382-9352 work? Denied ben"After Hours"Line G iant Talon 1 2 9 e r Misc. outdoor Christefits? We Can Help! Call 541-383-2371 hardtail, small, excel- Want to impress the mas decorations, like WIN or Pay Nothing! 24 hrs. to cancel lent condition, $475. new. 541-408-0846 Contact Bill Gordon 8 relatives? Remodel your ad! 541-408-1 676 at Cable snow chains, un- Associates your home with the to used, orig. $18, ask- 1-800-879-3312 242 help of a professional start your application ing $9, 541-504-0707 Exercise Equipment from The Bulletin's today! (PNDC) GPS - Portable expedi"Call A Service The Bulletin Offers tion with charger. $45. Professional" Directory Precor Multi-staFree Private Party Ads 541-317-2890 tion strength and • 3 lines - 3 days Buyrng Diamonds • Private Party Only Pakistani Bohkhara fitness unit,high Ithaca single barrel /Gold for Cash sx10 rug. Ivory and • Total of items adverquality always intrap shotgun, very Saxon's Fine Jewelers tised must equal $200 Brown. $500. side, exc. cond., 541-389-6655 541-633-5309 nice, $650. or Less paid over $1500, sell Waffen Bennewitz for $600. Must see! FOR DETAILS or to BUYING classic mauser You move PLACE AN AD, Lionel/American Flyer mountain rifle, as 541-330-0733. trains, accessories. Call 541-385-5809 new, SOLD 541-408-2191. Fax 541-385-5802

Chi-Poo puppies, first s hots, teacup, d e - POODLE or POMAPOO wormed, way cute! pupstoyor tiny. Adult $300. 541-977-0035 also 541-475-3889 I Holiday Shows I at the Bend Factory Free to good home, fe- Queensland Heelers Buy New...suy Local ~ Stores on S. Hwy97 ~ male black and white 8 Mini, $150 You Can Bid On: every Saturday in cat. I ndoor/outdoor, Standard & up. 541-280-1537 Oreck Axis Upright November from v ery f r iendly. C a ll www.rig htwayranch.wor Steering Vacuum 10am to 4:00pm. 541-420-0097. dpress.corn Retail Value $399.99 Over 50 amazing Oreck Vacuums local artists. p u p pies, (Bidding closes The Bulletin recom- Schnoodle / 'V/here the Maker is 541-548-3408 ready Nov. 4, $600 F, mends extra caution Tues., Nov. 10, 243 BUYING & SE LLING the Seller" 263 $500 M, C all Kari: at 8:00 p.m.) when purc h asAll gold jewelry, silver Ski Equipment Tools L ( 541)420-9015 ing products or ser- 541-390-6471 and gold coins, bars, KAHR pistols; P9 Sofa & Love Seatvices from out of the rounds, wedding sets, 9mm, $ 495 o b o . EXC. CONDITION 4.5n area. Sending cash, Registered AKC Yellow class rings, sterling sil- C hicago pneumatic Bid Now! P45 .45ACP, $475 Bid Now! Sofa is 90" Lx26" D angle ai r gr i nder, Labs, born 9/15/15, Need to get an ad checks, or credit inwww.BulletinBidnBuy.corn ver, coin collect, vinwww.BunetinBidnsuy.corn x 36" H. Loveseat is obo, with case, exready 11/1. 4 females, 12,00 0 f ormation may b e tage watches, dental C P9110 in ASAP? 6 7" Lx 26" D x 3 6 " cellent c o n dition. 3 m a l es , mi c rogold. Bill Fl e ming, RPM, used very little. subjected to fraud. 541-389-9836 H. Asking $319 for $245. 503-936-1778 541-382-9419. For more informa- chipped & vaccinated, set. Also, s e lling tion about an adver- parents on site, dog Fax it te 541-322-7253 Generac 4000W-XL 7.8 Queen Mattress and trial & hunting back247 tiser, you may call HP generator, $275. Boxspring. A s king grounds. $500. The Bulletin Classifieds the O r egon State Sporting Goods 541-316-1045 $179. Both i t ems 541-523-3782 Attorney General' s Buy New...Buy Local Buy New...suy Local - Misc. lightly used in 2nd 264 Office C o nsumer You Can Bid On: You Can Bid On: home. For info, call 210 Newcomers Club of Protection hotline at Ski or Snowboard Snow Removal Equipment Hunter Douglas Treadmill, foldable, Meredith © Bend - "Artisan 1-877-877-9392. Furniture & Appliances Tune-Up. Vignette Modern 360-607-9908. power speed/incline. Copper Fire Plt Showcase Holiday Retail Value $40 Snowblower, A r i ens, Roman Shades $99. 541-788-4229 Bazaar"Unique The Bulletin Chest of drawers, wal- Retail Cover 24", electric start, like Mountain Water Value $1,000 Serving Centrei Oregon sincetete hand-crafted quality n ut, $ 55 cash . Redmond Window Snow new. $450. 248 gift creations! Come 541-549-1 778 Restored & Patinaed 541-788-6442 (Bidding closes Treats Health & shop Sat. Nov. 7, Adopt a great cat or Tues., Nov. 10, 66" dia. 20" high (Bidding closes 265 Beauty Items 9:00am — 3:30pm at two! Altered, vacciat 8:00 p.m.) Tues., Nov. 10, New Smaller Cover Bid Now! Bend Elks Lodge, nated, ID chip, tested, Building Materials at 8:00 p.m.) www.BulletinBidnBuy.corn For Owner - $3000 Knee Pain? Back 63120 Boyd Acres Rd more! CRAFT, 65480 Pro-tec Scandal helmet Got Pain? Shoulder Pain? (at Empire Ave). $1800 All Kohler components: 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, ski/snowboard, m e d. Get a pain-relieving u Free admission. 1-5p.m. 541-389-8420 Jetted tub, 2 s inks, gl i $35. 541-306-6539 541 480-7823 brace -little or NO cost (541) 678-5779 or www.craftcats.org faucets & commode; Richard to you. Medicare Pa245 (801) 391-9340. c ondition A+. P i cs tients Call Health HotDeposit c a ns/bottles available, $ 4 8 5/all. Golf Equipment Stanley dining set. DID YOU KNOW that 205 line Now! 1541-788-1226 needed for local all Buy New...Buy Local Hutch, pecan top 800-285-4609 not only does newsvolunteer, non-profit Items for Free You Can Bid On: table — 6 chairs. CHECKYOUR AD (PNDC) paper media reach a REDMOND Habitat cat rescue. Donate: $2,000 Gift Bamboo design. RESTORE Dinette, seats 6, good HUGE Audience, they Free Rooster, black, Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 Certificate $1200 OBO. 249 cond., $400; Coffee a lso reach an E N - Building Supply Resale Polish with white top Bend; Petco, Red- Retail Value $2,000 541-382-0782 Quality at table, nic e w ood, GAGED AUDIENCE. Art, Jewelry k not, g e ntle an d mond; Smith Sign, M. JacobsFine LOW PRICES Discover the Power of $400; Queen b ed, 1515 NE 2nd, Bend; beautiful, makes a & Furs Furniture 1242 S. Hwy 97 Serta mattress, headNewspaper Advertisgreat alarm clock but CRAFT in T u malo. (Bidding closes 541-548-1406 ing in five states - AK, board, v ery clean, The Bulletin on the first day it runs neighbors are slack- Can pick u p Ig. Beautiful 1.50 c a r at Tues., Nov. 10, Open to the public. $1200. 805-720-3515 to make sure it is cor- r ing, r ecently a p - ID,MT, OR & WA. For recommends extra ers! W e del i ver. amounts. 389-8420. at 8:00 p.m.) a free rate brochure KIMore Pix at Bendbulletin.a len ten n e ns r rect. nSpellcheckn and www.craftcats.org 541-325-2397 praised at $15,400. 266 chasing products or • human errors do oc- Asking $10,400 obo. call 916-288-6019 or Heating & Stoves email services from out of I cur. If this happens to 541-617-0846 elizabeth Ocnpa.corn 8 the area. Sending 8 your ad, please conNOTICE TO • cash, checks, or • tact us ASAP so that Desperately Seeking (PNDC) ADVERTISER corrections and any Iillissing 1940s d iaf credit i n f o rmation Since September 29, may be subjected to adjustments can be m ond ring sold a t 1991, advertising for Bend Pawn approx. f FRAUD. For more made to your ad. used woodstoves has Sept.13-17, 2014 has 541-385-5809 information about an 8 been limited to modadvertiser, you may I The Bulletin Classified central diamond and 2 els which have been little side stones, one $ call th e Or e gon $ 246 is missing. Sz. 7.5. certified by the O r' State Atto r ney ' 541-213-1221 Please Golden West pool egon Department of 280 280 288 292 f General's O f f i ce Guns, Hunting keep trying! Will pay table ex c . c o n d, Environmental QualConsumer Protec• Estate Sales Estate Sales Sales Southeast Bend S a les Other Areas tion & Fishing dark cherry finish, ity (DEQ) and the fedany reasonable price. h o t line at I black felt, has racks, eral E n v ironmental Estate Sale. 232 NW Keeney Moving Antiques and old stuff. It Moving Sale, Nov. 6 & i 1-877-877-9392. 253 and balls and cues. Protection A g e ncy Bid Now! Florida. Saturday 8 Estate Sale given by all goes! Sat. 11/7; 7, 9AM-SPM. $1000 professional (EPA) as having met TV, Stereo & Video TheCentralBulletin > www.BulletinBidnBuy.corn Sunday, 9-3, Sun. 1/2 Farmhouse Estate 7:30am-3pm. 21080 17065 Sacramento Rd., > Serving Oregon since iggs move or $700 you smoke emission stanhalf off! Lots of misc.! Sa/es M ajestic View C t . , Sun River. DIRECTV Starting at move. 541-588-0508 dards. A cer t ified Friday - Saturday, 9-4 Bend. CASH ONLY. Take Spring River Rd., w oodstove may b e $19.99/mo. FREE In212 ESTATE SALE turn left on Solar, left 61542 SE Baptist Way, identified by its certifis tallation. FREE 3 290 SE Bend just off Reed Market. on Upland, right on Antiques & Bernina 820 in excation label, which is months o f HBO Quality items! Modern Contents of home and Sales Redmond Area Sacramento. cellent condition. Collectibles S HOWTIME CIN permanently attached L azy Boy s of a 8 garage. Leather furTools, saws, d esks, Price includes lot of to the stove. The BulNew...Buy Local EMAX, STARZ. FREE loveseat, leather chair niture, f la t s c r eenGarage/Moving Sale, boat, clothes, work WANTED: Old Fishing Buy letin will not knowYou Can Bid On: HD/DVR U p grade! bobbins, carrying & re c liner, Ki n g TVs, washer 8 dryer, multi-family. 312-320 benches, sto r age Lures and/or Tackle ingly accept advertis$600 Certificate 2015 NF L S u nday case, all sewing feet, memory foam bed 8 dining set, plus so SW Canyon Dr. No- shelves, and more! Barbie case and all Boxes. Call local Ticket Included (Seing for the sale of toward Non-Guided dressers, grandfather much more! See pix vember 7, 9AM-SPM. instruction books. uncertified number 209-623-7174 Upland Bird Hunting lect Packages) New clock, oak dining set, and descriptions at Sat. 11/7, 10-4 11190 $4700 cash. woodstoves. Sage Canyon C ustomers Onl y . oak dinette & hutch, farmhouseestate292 SW Red Cloud Rd, 541-205-8525. 1930s Empire Style Ouffitfers CALL 1-800-410-2572 Thomasville 7 pc. wall sales.corn Powell Butte, rain or 267 scallo ed table top, Sales Other Areas (Bidding closes (PNDC) unit, trundle bed, full snow! Antiques, oak Fuel & Wood Tues., Nov. 10, How to avoid scam kitchen, flat screen TV desk, much more! D ish Network - G e t and fraud attempts TURN THE PAGE MOVING SALE! at 8:00 p.m.) & 2 s tands, Oreck, M ORE fo r LE S S ! 12445 NW Rainbow Dr For More Ads patio set, I nvacare Starting $19.99/month v'Be aware of internaWHEN BUYING NOTICE .Follow signs on motorized wheelchair, CASH!! The Bulletin (for 12 months.) PLUS tional fraud. Deal loCrooked River Ranch. Remember to remove FIREWOOD... ladies clothing, tools, For Guns, Ammo 8 cally whenever posBundle 8 SAVE (Fast Fri/Sat, 9-4, Sun, your Garage Sale signs ANTIQUES in c l ude Reloading Supplies. To avoid fraud, sible. 35t/en diameter, has Internet f o r $15 9-noon, Furn., 282 (nails, staples, etc.) 1800's primitive cor541-408-6900. The Bulletin sailing ship design on more/month.) CALL v' Watch for buyers Household, tools, after your Sale event ner cabinet, bench & Sales Northwest Bend recommends payNow 1-800-308-1563 who offer more than construction, collectthetop. Base isa is over! THANKS! Central Oregon's desk, Shaker settee 8 your asking price and ment for Firewood capstan, could sell ables. see craigslist From The Bulletin Largest Gun & Knife (PNDC) chairs, wood trunks, MovingSale -2640 NW only upon delivery who ask to have ad 541.923.1781 separately. $299 and your local utility Show! decoys, s i deboard, College Way ¹t, 11/7255 and inspection. money wired or obo Also Vintage companies. Nov. 7, 9-5 Nov. 8, 9-3 primitive items, Fen- 11/8, 9-3. Household, Call The Bulletin At • A cord is 128 cu. ft. handed back to them. wash bowl & pitcher Deschutes County Fair Computers t on, g l assware & furniture & sport goods. 4' x 4' x 8' Fake cashier checks 54t -385-5809 The Bulletin set, white & light blue china, pewter, Singer & Expo Center SewingCentra/Oregon since tgie • Receipts should and money orders with gold trim. $65. T HE B ULLETIN r e f eatherweight, f l a t Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Admission $6 Ool 286 include name, quires computer ad- are common. See more pix at ware sets, mirrors, Sales Northeast Bend At: www.bendbulletin.corn www.bendbulletin.corn 503-363-9564 phone, price and bendbulletin.corn lots o f int e resting wesknodelgunshows.corn vertisers with multiple YNever give out perkind of wood ad schedules or those sonal financial inforsmall col l ectibles, 541-419-6408 Marilyn Rohaley purchased. selling multiple sys- mation. jewelry 8 more! Colt .44-40 Frontier ** FREE ** • Firewood ads ESTATE SALE Antiques Wanted: tems/ software, to dis- YTrust your instincts FRI. & SAT. 9-4, numSix Shooter 1892, MUST include 21004 KING HEZEKIAH DR., BEND Garage Sale Kit Marbles, old tools, close the name of the and be wary of bers Fri., 8 a.m. $3,400 4s/4n barrel. species & cost per Place an ad in The Take 15th St. south from Reed Market Rd. fishing gear, collector business or the term someone using an SE 15th to Desert cord to better serve B ulletin fo r yo u r Follow to King Hezekiah go east about 1 mile to character glasses, John 541-233-3156. "dealer" in their ads. escrow service or Woods to 20998 our customers. sale and receive a sale site. Deere toys, Breyer Private party advertis- agent to pick up your Greenmont Dr. G arage Sale K i t Friday, Nov. 6 • Saturday, Nov. 7 horses, old signs. ers are defined as merchandise. www.atticestatesanION'IRIIS HHS FREE! 541-389-1578 The Bulletin 9:00 am to 5:00 pm those who sell one dappraisals.corn ServingCentral Oregnn sincetete The Bulletin CROWD CONTROL NUMBERSat BrAN FRIDAY computer. 541-350-6822 ServingCentral Oregon since tggs KIT INCLUDES: Seven Foot b y s i x f o o t a n tique fireplace DO YOU HAVE • 6 Garage Sale surround-oak'? wood; Pool Table; Ping Pong ,,tt'ItrdBGBB rr HUGE MOVING SALE SOMETHING TO Signs Table; Lawn Mower; Beige Leather reclining Furniture, treadmill, art, • $2.00 SELL FOR $500 Off Coupon 'IIBIB PALE r.LB sofa; Two large china cabinets; Mahogany Dinmen's clothes,BBQ, OR LESS? Use Toward ing table and six chairs; Maple dining table and etc. Craigslist: "Huge To Next Ad six chairs; Large Buffet cabinet; Two half moon Moving Sale" for more •Your Non-commercial 10 Tips For shaped smaller china cabinets; Loveseat; two Large English (Scotinfo. 305 NW Hunter advertisers may "Garage Sale matching wing back chairs; King bed with white t ish) P u b Mir r o r Pl. Sat. 9-4, Sun. 10-2 place an ad Success!" 8 brass metal frame; Matching nightstands and (1960s). High quality with our quilt rack; Victrola -works; Two recliners; Hun- acid etched glassn with n "QUICK CASH 36 x30 What are you PICK UP YOUR dreds of books; hundreds of CD's; VCR's; gold leaf. SPECIAL" $250. GARAGE SALE KIT DVD's; Records; 45's; Dressers; nightstands; framed. looking for? 1 week 3 lines 13 at 1777 SW ChanDuncan Phyfe dining table and three chairs; 541-389-0099 ol' You' ll find it in dler Ave., Bend, OR Quilts; comforters; sheets; towels; blankets; lots The Bulletin reserves ~tweeke 2N 97702 of table cloths; Lots of Large ladies clothing right to publish all The Bulletin Classifieds Ad must 541-385-5809 -size 2-3X; Lots of tools and tool boxes; Out- the 4DD 4t ads from The Bulletin include price of door furniture; Wicker items; About 50 collector The Bulletin dolls from Heritage; Boxed Games; Embroidery newspaper onto The ~nn le item ni Ssnn BOlDlygg gl ServingCentrel Oregnn sincetgei 541-385-5809 Internet webor less, or multiple projects need to be finished; Fat Quarters and Bulletin 0 kggPI!jig Og items whose total see t)s some supplies; Brother Sewing machine; site. does not exceed (;0 ' 2.$yt7+ Purses like Dooney & Burke; Lots of size 8 1/2 Bulletin I Pub l ic Auction 8 Garage Sale I $500. to 9 ladies shoes; Antique small drop front desk; The Serving Central Oregnn sincefete Abandoned Rental Home Antique small bar cabinet; Silverplate items; Call Classified at Contents for Sale!! Lots Gold plate items; Sets of dishes and stain215 541-385-5809 THIS ISNOT HAUL AWAY JUNK. I Monitors, less flatware; lots of Xmas decor; Loveseat and Coins & Stamps bendbulletin.corn Xboxes, brand new golf clubs, matching wing back chairs; Coffee, endtable, i furniture, antiques and everything else! half round tables; Large office unit that unfolds; I Also office printers/copiers. Pictures and Prints; Lots of Costume jewelry; FORCE ON F O RCE One Day ONLY!!! Antique dressers; oak dressers; Electrical appliLEGAL/TACTICAL Saturday, November 7th, 2015, ances and huge amount of Kitchenware; Lots of TRAINING - C l ass11:00 am- 3IOOPm. stem ware and glasses; Large refrigerator; room instruction, then HELP YOUR AD I Every i t em must be sold! Washer and Dryer; Vacuums; Lots of Glassrealistic deadly force stand out from the Location: ware and Cookware; We hope to be ready by decision-making scerest! Have the top line Partners Property Management Friday, so much stuff to handle!! See you narios with live role in bold print for only soon, Deedy, Norm, Ken, players. All e q uipI 2326 S MGlacier I Pi., $2.00 extra. Handled by ment prov i ded. Redmond, OR • 541-389-4149 541-385-5809 Deedy's Estate Sales Co. $65/hour. REGISTER: (NM/corner of Highland and 19th) Info Call- 541-419-4742 Firearmslnstructor1 © See craigslist ad for more information The Bulletin gmail.corn estatesales.net for pictures and info ServingCentral Oregon sincefete

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F2 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7 2015 • THE BULLETIN 267

325

Fuel & Wood

Hay, Grain & Feed

All Year Dependable Quality o rchard/grass Firewood: dry mix $225-$245 ton, Lodgepole, split, del, small bales, between 1 /$195; 2/$3 6 5 . Bend Redmond, del.

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

Employment Opportunities

476

476

528

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Loans & Mortgages BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200.

DESIGNER, FULL TIME FLOORING SALES

CAUTION: Looking for your next Ads published in employee? (BEND) "Employment O p - We are a local flooring Place a Bulletin help Illlulti-cord discounts! avai. 541-280-7781 cash, check, Visa, MC Wheat Straw for Sale. portuntttes" include retailer, looking for a wanted ad today and 541-420-3484, Bend employee and inde- full t ime D e signer/ reach over 60,000 Also, weaner pigs. pendent positions. 541-546-6171 sales associate. This readers each week. Ads fo r p o sitions job r equires g ood Your classified ad Pine & Juniper Split MONEY: Webuy that require a fee or computer skills, de- will also appear on LOCAL Looking for your secured trust deeds & upfront investment bendbulletin.corn sign and sales experiPROMPT DELIVERY next employee? note, some hard money must be stated. With which currently 541D89-9663 ence. Knowledge of loans. Call Pat Kellev Place a Bulletin any independent job receives over 1.5 c arpet, v i nyl, t i l e , 541-382-3099 ext.13. help wanted ad opportunity, please million page views hardwood and natural Ponderosa pine today and i nvestigate tho r - stone products. Mateevery month at 573 firewood split, reach over oughly. Use extra no extra cost. rial selections, estiBusiness Opportunities $160 or trade. 60,000 readers c aution when a pBulletin Classifieds mates, sales agreeGet Results! 541-41 9-1 871 each week. plying for jobs onm ents, prod u ct 25+ Years established line and never proCall 385-5809 Your classified ad ordering. Wages will 269 vide personal inforor place pet board/grooming will also be based on experifacility. AD¹t 71 2 mation to any source your ad on-line at Gardening Supplies appear on ence. Please respond TEAM Birtola Garmyn ben dbulletin.corn you may not have & Equipment bendbulletin.corn with a resume and High Desert Realty researched and cover letter by e-mail which currently 541-312-9449 deemed to be repuonly to receives over www. BendOregon table. Use extreme BarkTurfSoil.corn floorsales1@ live.corn 1.5 million page RealEstate.corn c aution when r e Rmmfam views every Look at: s ponding to A N Y ® UI I KIIXKO PROMPT DELIVERY month at no online employment Bendhomes.corn Where can you find a 542-389-9663 extra cost. ad from out-of-state. for Complete Listings of helping hand? Bulletin We suggest you call Area Real Estate for Sale From contractors to Classifieds the State of Oregon Bid Now! KNO W Get Results! Consumer Hotline DID YO U yard care it's all here www.BulletinBidnBuyscom Newspaper-generCall 541-385-5809 at 1-503-378-4320 in The Bulletin's a ted content is s o For Equal Opportuor place your ad "Call A Service valuable it's taken and nity Laws c ontact on-line at 528 repeated, condensed, Oregon Bureau of Professional" Directory bendbulletin.corn Labor 8 I n d ustry, broadcast, t weeted, Loans & Mortgages discussed, p o sted, Civil Rights Division, 383 WARNING copied, edited, and 971-673- 0764. Bey Netttt...Bey Local Produce & Food emailed c o u ntless The Bulletin recom:e. mends you use cauYou Can Bid On: The Bulletin times throughout the tion when Servlntr Central Orearrnsince fate you proSpring Lawn and Vaquero Valley Ranch day by others? Dis541-385-5809 vide personal Yard Clean up. cover the Power of & Cattle Co. Retail Value $500 Newspaper Advertis- information to compaGrass finished Beef. nies offering loans or YernSamples People Look for Information ing in FIVE STATES Open year round. All credit, especially Landscaping orders welcome from About Products and with just one phone those asking for ad(Bidding closes whole beefs to 1 lb. pkg Services Every 0ay through call. For free Pacific vance loan fees or Tues., Nov. 10, of ground beef. Northwest NewspaThe Bulletin Classineds from out of at 8:00 p.m.) 850 Contact Ron Miller per Association Net- companies state. If you have 541-382-0043 or text Add your web address work brochures call Snowmobiles concerns or questo your ad and read916-288-6019 or 541-350-2520, email For newspaper tions, we suggest you email vvrccbee f © gmail.corn ers onThe Bulletin's delivery, call the consult your attorney web site, www.bend- elizabeth Ocnpa.corn or call CONSUMER Circulation Dept. at bulletin.corn, will be (PNDC) 54'I -385-5800 HOTLINE, able to click through Early Childhood 1-877-877-9392. To place an ad, call automatically to your Development Center 541-385-5809 website. I:='ut Supervisor The Bulletin or email 4-place enclosed Interclassified ebendbulletin.corn $40,945 - $58,623 To Subscribe call Call a Pro state snowmobile trailer Full Benefits 541-385-5800 or go to w/ RockyMountain pkg, The Bulle6n Whether you need a Prof-Mgt., Regular, Serure Cenoal Oregonsince Sta www.bendbulletin.corn $7500. 541-379-3530 Full-Time fence fixed, hedges 270 trimmed or a house This position is located Administrative 421 Lost & Found built, you' ll find in Chiloquin. Schools & Training professional help in FOUND swimming suit For more information The Bulletin's "Call a HTR Truck School top, little girl size, pink contact: REDMOND CAMPUS with ruffles, near TuService Professional" The Klamath Trtbes malo School 1 1 /1. Our Grads GetJobs! PO Box 436 Directory 1-888-438-2235 541-419-6408 Chiloquin, OR 97624 541-385-5809 WWW.IITR.EDU www.klamathtribes.org We are looking for an Executive Assistant to jobs@klamathtribes.corn provide administrative support to our execu541-783-2219 x 113 Trades/Maintenance Coordinator tive management team. Will serve as the point REMEMBER: If you (Facilities Maintenance Coordinator) Fisheries Biologist of contact for internal and external constituhave lost an animal, ents and perform other support duties such as don't forget to check OSU-Cascades in Bend is recruiting for one $49,541-$77,184 calendar management; travel planning; and The Humane Society full-time Trades/Maintenance Coordinator poFull Benefits preparing correspondence, reports, docuBend sition (Facilities Maintenance Coordinator). Prof.-Mgt., Regular, ments and visual presentations. 541-382-3537 The person in this position is responsible for Full time Redmond coordinating the maintenance and repairs for Position requires 5+ years of experience 541-923-0882 OSU-Cascades. This position is located supporting C-Level Executives, proficiency in Madras in Chiloquin. Microsoft Office (experience in Google apps 541-475-6889 Minimum Qualifications include three years of preferred), excellent writing and proofreading Prineville experience in the operation, maintenance, or For more information skills, strong organizational and prioritization 541-447-7178 repair of facilities in one or more physical plant contact: ability and ability to communicate effectively or Craft Cats or building services and one additional year of The Klamath Tribes and deliver world class customer service to in541-389-8420 experience with responsibility for coordination dividuals at all levels. PO Box 436 of maintenance work or projects. Preferred Chiloquin, OR 97624 qualifications include a demonstrable com- jobs © klamathtribes.corn Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent cusmitment to promoting and enhancing diversity. www.klamathtribes.org tomer service, with over 450 stores and 7,000 T he full-time monthly s alary r ange i s 541-783-2219 x 113 employees in the western United States. $3,588-$4,544 (typically, the starting salary is Medical Please go to www.lesschwab.corn for more at the lower end of the salary range). information and to apply. RN's up to $45/hr. LPN's up to $37.50/hr. To see the complete position description Les Schwab Is proud to be an CNA's up to $22.50/hr. and to apply online, visit equal opportunity employer. Free gas/weekly pay http: //oregonstate.edu/jobs/ $2000 Bonus Posting number 0016362; 325 AACO Nursing Agency the closing date is 11-15-2015. 1-800-656-4414 Ext. 14 General Hay, Grain & Feed OSU is an AA/EOE/Vets/Disabled. (PNDC) First Quality green grass Serv/ce Technicians hay, no rain, barn stored Join the Coast Truck $225/ton. C enters Family I n / * Great Supplemental Income!! * IIR IVERSITY Call 541-549-3831 Klamath Falls, OR! Patterson Ranch, Sisters Hiring Service Techni- I The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I cians for Western Star • day night shift and other shifts as needed. WeI Premium orchard grass, Dealership. Our com- • currently have openings all nights of the week.• barn stored no rain, pany offers medical, / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts $250/ton, straw 3 tied The Bulletin is seeking a resourceful and paid holidays, vaca- start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and bale $5/per bale. De- self-motivated full-time employee to assist a tion, sick days, 401k / end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a. l ivery a v ail. C a l l large staff and write daily clerical reports. This m. Allpoand a great family en- • sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• 541-420-9158 person should like working in a fast-paced en- vironment to work in. I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI vironment and be able to meet tight deadlines Experience required I minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsg I on a daily basis. Prior writing or editorial expeand must have own • are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of• rience preferred. tools. Join a f amily / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackteam of i n dividuals ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and EVERY BUSINESS has Organization, flexibility, and a high level of who are dedicated to / other tasks. a story to tell! Get computer proficiency are essential. A solid provide great cusyour message out knowledge of keyboard short-cuts and a typtomer service through IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl with California's PR- ing speed of at least 50 WPM is required. integrity and excel- I including life insurance, short-term & long-term Media Release - the lence. Send resume disability, 401 (k), paid vacation and sick time. only Press Release Ability to work for long periods doing detail-oriService operated by ented work is necessary. This person must the press to get press! understand the importance of accuracy and ~ Please submit a completed application For more info contact thoroughness in all duties. attention Kevin Eldred. Elizabeth © Applications are available at The Bulletin 916-288-6019 or Excellent customer service and interpersonal caution when purfront desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or http: //prmediarelease. skills are required. Must enjoy working with the f chasing products orf an electronic application may be obtained corn/california (PNDC) public. College degree or previous office ex- • services from out of • upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred©bendbulletin.corn). perience preferred. The Bulletin is a drug-free i the area. Sending c ash, checks, o r I workplace and equal opportunity employer. i credit i n formation No phone calls please. Pre-employment drug screening is required i may be subjected to Meet singles right now! prior to hiring. FRAUD. * No resumes will be accepted * No paid o perators, To apply, please send a resume and any writ- For more informa- f tion about an adver- • just real people like ing samples to: nolson@bendbulletin.corn. Drug test is required prior to employment. i tiser, you may call you. Browse greetEOE. No phone inquiries please. ings, exchange mesthe Oregon State sages and connect i Attorney General's live. Try it free. Call Office C o n sumer I The Bulletin Sererng Centrar Oregon since $03 Protection hotline at I now: 8 77-955-5505. Serving Central oregon since t903 I 1-877-877-9392. (PNDC)

SPOKESMAN The Bulletttt

Redmond Spokesman

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NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who con t racts for construction work to NOTICE: Oregon LandServing Central be licensed with the scape Contractors Law Oregon Since 2003 Construction Contrac- (ORS 671) requires all tors Board (CCB). An businesses that ad- Residental/Commercial Sprinkler active license vertise t o pe r form means the contractor Landscape ConstrucBlow-Outs is bonded & insured. tion which includes: Verify the contractor's l anting, deck s , Fall Clean up CCB l i c ense at ences, arbors, www.hirealicensedwater-features, and in~Landeee tn contractor.corn stallation, repair of ir- •Landscape or call 503-378-4621. rigation systems to be Construction The Bulletin recom- l icensed w it h th e eWater Feature mends checking with Landscape Contrac- Installation/Maint. the CCB prior to con- tors Board. This 4-digit •Pavers tracting with anyone. number is to be in- •Renovations Some other t rades cluded in all adver- •Irrigation Installation also req u ire addi- tisements which inditional licenses and cate the business has Bonded & Insured cert ifications. 541-815-4458 a bond, insurance and LCB¹8759 workers compensation for their employees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 Personal Services or use our website: Handyman www.lcb.state. or.us to At Your Service check license status I DO THAT! Errands & Notary before contracting with Home/Rental repairs the business. Persons I stand in line so you don't need to. Small jobs to remodels doing lan d scape Honest, guaranteed errandsandnotary maintenance do not work. CCB¹151573 r equire an LC B l i I gmail.corn Dennis 541-317-9768 cense. 541-815-4731

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Reporter

Western Communications seeks a reporter to cover community news and local sports for the Redmond Spokesman, its 4,000 circulation weekly newspaper in Redmond, Oregon.

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The successful candidate can expect to write a weekly front-page centerpiece for the paper, as well as report on local prep and community sports and recreation.

As a lead reporting position, it also entails a modest amount of editing of the paper's copy, and is responsible for coordinating coverage. Photography experience and skills a plus. This is a full time position.

To apply,please email resume and any relevant writing samples to: spokesmaneditor@bendbulletin.corn

Human Resources Specialist Western Communications is seeking a skilled HR Specialist to join our team. The Human Resource Specialist handles and provides support for various HR functions within Western Communications. Essential ob functions: • Review new employee enrollment forms for accuracy and coordinates benefits enrollment with third-party administrator. • Ensure compliance with COBRA/FMLA and other federal and state programs by preparing letters and other paperwork as directed. • Coordinate health, life and disability insurance enrollments and communicates with service providers concerning routine administration of programs. • Maintain personnel files in compliance with applicable legal requirements. • Keep employee records up-to-date by processing employee status changes in timely fashion. • Process personnel action forms and ensures proper approvals; disseminates approved forms. • Prepare paperwork required to place employees on payroll and establishes personnel file. • Assist in hiring process by coordinating job postings, reviewing resumes, and performing telephone interviews and reference checks. • Maintain the employee handbook with updated resolutions and other pertinent information, as needed. Core Com etencies: Skilled at uman Resources function. Communication Proficiency.Personal Effectiveness/Credibility. Project Management. Customer/Client Focus. Minimum ualificat tons: • Two years of applicable HR specialist experience. • Use of personal computers, Microsoft Office and HR database system experience. • Knowledge of California and Oregon employment laws a plus. • Excellent communication and customer service skills.

We offer benefits including paid vacation and sick time, 401 (k), life insurance and limited medical, dental, vision benefits. EOE/Drug Free Workplace If interested please submit your resume and cover letter to: Heidi Wright, CFO/HR Officer, Western Communications 1777 SW Chandler Ave, Bend, OR 97702 or e-mail hwright©wescomnewspapers.corn. No phone calls please.

The Bulletin ADVERTISING SALES EXECUTIVE

The Bulletin, Central Oregon's leading media company, is seeking a resourceful and performance driven person to sell print and online advertising to local businesses on behalf of The Bulletin daily newspaper, bendbulletin.corn website, and our suite of successful niche magazines.

Candidates should have a proven track record of presenting solution sales strategies to local business prospects, as well as the ability to build and maintain strong relationships with clients.

This full-time position requires a background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting sales. Generous sales incentives can be earned by those who are able to move the revenue needle.

Qualified applicants will have print/online advertising experience. College degree preferred.

To apply, respond with a resume and letter of interest to the attention of Jay Brandt, Advertising Director at jbrandt©bendbulletin.corn, or mail to: Advertising Director, The Bulletin, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708-6020.

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All hiring contingent upon passing a drug test. EOE

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L a ndscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care

The Bulletin

Call 5I I 385 580f io promoteyourservice• Advertise for 28ddyt starting at'lf0 phasptddpactart itnetawilabieenearnttatei

Building/Contracting

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Do you LOVE your job'P Most people don' t. OUR INDEPENDENT SALES REPS DO! s

~To eats:

• Proven interpersonal skills • Professional-level writing ability and sports background a must • Working knowledge of traditional high school sports • Proven computer and proofreading skills • Comfortable in a fast-paced, deadlineoriented environment • Must be able to successfully pass a pre-employment drug screen

So get excited, give Your Neighborhood Publications, LLC. a call and start a prosperous career in sales today by promoting THE BULLETIN (the most trusted media source in the region).

AYERAGE PAY Is $3004500 A wEEK

KIOSKS LOCATED IN HIGH TRAFFIC LOCATIONS AROUND TOWN.

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WE OFFER YOU: ZERO TELEMARKETING COMPLETE AND THOROUGH TRAINING I WEEKLY BONUSES OPPORTUNITY OF ADVANCEMENT

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WHAT'S THE BEST PART?

YOU SET YOUR OWN SCHED U LE!

Please send your cover letter, resume, and a work sample attention: sportsassistant@bendbulletin.corn

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No agencies or telephonecalls please

In this position you will play a vital role on our Sports Staff!

If you are a sports-minded journalist and have a positive "Can Do" attitude WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU!

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PART-TIME PREP SPORTS ASSISTANT The successful candidate will work weeknight and Saturday shifts.

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F4

TH E BULLETIN• SATURDAY, NOV 7, 2015

DAILY B R I D G E

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

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD willi'shortz

C L U B s aturday, November7,2015

He who won't wait By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Unlucky Louie's wife says she can't understand him. He can sit and wait three hours for a fish to bite but won't wait 15 minutes for her to get dressed. Assuredly, Louie won't take two minutes to plan his play at a tough slam. At today's six clubs, Louie won the first spade with the king and drew trumps, leaving him with only one trump. He led a spade to dummy and returned the queen of hearts. West took his king and led another spade, forcing out Louie's last trump. When Louie then took the ace of hearts, West discarded, East got a heart trick, and Louie went down three and griped about his bad luck.

spade, he bids two clubs and you return to two hearts. Partner then bids two spades. What do you say? ANSWER: De spite your w e ak preferencebid of two hearts,partner bid a t h i r d t i m e a n d r e m a ins interested in game. Since you have a maximum for your bidding, you must cooperate. Jump to 3NT. If he has as little as K 5 3, A K J 6 5, Q, K 10 6 2, you' ll arrive at a reasonable contract. South dealer Both sides vulnerable

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Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Findfive gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

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11/07/I 5


THE BULLETIN• SATURDAY NOVEMBER 7 2015 F5

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

9 3

SutIoku High Fives

4 8 1 6

How to play:

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bers in any shared set of 3-by-3 boxes apply to each of the individual Sudokus.

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since f903

4

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Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories Sport 1 5 0 Ta o T ao S cooter, 2014 Al m ost N ew , $ 9 9 5 .I 541-548-0345

I ~. = I' I I ,18' 2 003 S u n I I Cruiser - pontoonI boat, fully equipped. .

I Has only been used I handful of times & I BARON 2003 cus- I ahas been in covered tom built on '03 Vul- I storage. Ask ingI can chassis, 1600 V-twin, 4600 miles, custom paint, fenders, wheels, etc., comes with helmet, windshield and more! Discounted for off-season. $8,495. 541-280-9404

FUN & FISH!

2006 Smokercraft

Sunchaser 820 model pontoon boat, 75HP Mercury and H arley Road K i ng electric trolling moClassic 2003, 100th tor, full canvas and Anniversary Edition, many extras. 16,360 mi., reduced Stored inside $9,999. 541-647-7078 $19,900 541-350-5425

Moto Guzzi Breva 1 100 2007, o n l y 11,600 miles. $5,500. 206-679-4745

Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809

880

880

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

875

Watercraft

Mirada CLASS A 2014 Silver Edition, 2 slides, 6K MILES,

ds published in "Wa exc. cond. tercraft" include: Kay Just Reduced! aks, rafts and motor The Bulletin Classified Now $77,777! Ized personal 503-438-6060 541-385-5809 waterc rafts. Fo "boats" please se SUZUKI 2006 SV650S Class 870. tinted win d s hield, 541-385-5809 H ELI-Bars, fra m e guards, almost new tires, red color, 10k Serving Central Oregonsince 19|a miles, extras, exc. Monaco Monarch 31' 880 cond., only $3,100. 2006, Ford V 10, 541-548-3443 Motorhomes miles, 28,900 Itasca 2003 31 ' Class C auto-level, 2 slides, b ed & MH. Great cond., 31K queen miles, slider, $32,000. hide-a-bed sofa, 4k

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8 5 6 7 9 4 3 2 1

1 8 5 9 3 2 6 4 7 2 9 1 3 8 5 9 2 7 1 6 4

7 6 3 9 24 17 48 6 5 9 1 5 3 8 2 4 8 3 5 6 7 1 6 2 9 7 4 4 5 63 8 1 9 2 58 3 7

929

5 2 4 6 1 3 9 7 8

7 6 1 9 4 8 5 3 2

8 9 3 5 7 2 4 6 1

11-1-15

9 2 4 5 8 3 2 1 7 8 69 3 4 1 7 5 6 7 3 2 8 9 5 8 2 4 1 6 9 3 6 25 7 8 17 53 9 4

6 1 7 3 4 5 2 8 9 1

3 1 98 6 2 7 5 1 9 8 4 5 6 4 3 2 7

4 7 5 6 2 3 8 9 1

5 2 9 4 3 7 1 6 8

8 7 3 6 1 4 9 8 6 5 2 1 7 9 5 2 4 3

1 4 3 6 8 7 5 1 49 6 2 2 5 9 8 7 3

9 2 5 8 7 3 6 4 1

3 6 5 7 9 8 41 2 2 7 9 6 8 3 5 4 1 9 3 4 1 2 7 8 5 6

4 6 7 5 3 4 1 9 8 6 2

933

935

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

W ANTED! I b u y o l d Porsches 911, 356. 1948-1973 only. Any

c ondition. Top $ $ paid. Finders Fee. Call 707-965-9546 or

00

(4) Studded tires, (no rims) 215/60R16. Off Chevy Cruise 2013. $150. 541-728-6421

908

Aircraft, Parts & Service

(4) Winter cap studded snow tires, 215/60/R16, u n iversal rims, slightly used one season on Toyota Camry, Must s e l l! $200. 541-382-0483

Columbia 400,

Financing available.

$125,000

(located O Bend) 541-288-3333

932

2008, VIN ¹146871

$38,990 (exp. 11/30/1 5) DLR ¹366

Ford Expedition Eddie Bauer 2005, 4x4, V IN ¹B06769 $9,988 (exp. 11/30/1 5) DLR ¹366

SMOLICH

V OL V O 541-749-2156

smolichvolvo.corn

1947 Stinson 108-2,

engine has been gone through, the m a gs h ave been g o n e through, new c a rb, brakes rebuilt, new ins trument panel & gauges, new ELT, & much more. F resh annual. Signed offby Bend Ace mechanics, Bend airport. $24,000.

541-548-1448

Ford F250 Crew Cab Super Duty 2012, (exp. 11/30/1 5) Vin ¹C52424 Stock ¹83414

smolichusedcar center.corn

$32,977 or $449/mo.,

$1000 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License a nd title

541-410-6945

CHECK YOUR AD

try Tires -265/65R17 mounted on six bolt 2004 Lexus GX-470 rims. Less than 8,000 miles on tires. $895. 541-604-6099 Antique & Classic Autos

1/5 share in very nice 150 HP Cessna 150; 1973 Cessna 150 with Lycoming 0-320 150 hp engine conversion, 4000 hours. TT airframe. Approx. 400 hours o n 0- t imed 0-320. Hangared in nice (electric door) city-owned hangar at the Bend Airport. One of very few C-150's that has never been a t rainer. $4500 w i l l consider trades for 30' Alpenlite 1990 5th whatever. C all J im wheel i n e x cellent Frazee, 541-410-6007 cond., $4,800 obo.

Cameo 32' LXI, '01, 3 slides, rear lounge, island kitchen, new tires, wheel pack, new batteries, Onan generator, rear cargo carry hitch, $16,500 541-923-2595.

DodgeRam 3500

Four Wild Coun1/3 interestin

i n cluded i n

payment plus dealer in stalled options.

©

s u a aau

FordEscape AM/D 2012, (exp. 11/30/2015)

Vin ¹B18831 Stock ¹45590A

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $15,999 or $199/mo., 877-266-3821 $2500 down, 72 mo., Jeep CJ5 4x41967, Dlr ¹0354 4 .49% APR o n a p first year of the orig. proved credit License Dauntless V-6, last Ford Flatbed1952. and title i ncluded in year of the "All metal" No engine. Located in payment, plus dealer inbody! Engine overstalled options. La Pine. Contact Jeff hauled: new brakes, © 530-613-0624. © s u a aau fuel pump, steering gear box, battery, al- Ford Pickup, 1995, new 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. paint, 4x4, $800 obo. ternator, emergency 877-266-3821 or brake pads, gauges, 541-350-0079 Dlr ¹0354 541-220-6330 warn hubs, dual exhaust, 5 wide traction GMC 2500 1990 tires, 5 new spoke, 4x4,long bed, chrome wheels. NO overloads, overrust, garage stored. sized wheels/ tires, $7,495 OBO! $1990 or best offer. (775) 51 3-0822

541-548-71 37

I l"e

Illlercedes 450 SL 1979 Roadster, soft & hard tops, always garaged, 122k mi., new tires, shocks and brakes, $7900. 541-548-5648

Explorer XLT GMC Pickup 1983 w/ Ford 1991 r eliable w e l l topper, 4 wheel drive, cared for, clean, nonI'Uils go od, good smoking, incl. 4 studwinter truck. $1,500 ded winter tires, new obo. 907-310-1877 H D b a ttery, 1 9 0 k GMC Sierra 1500 2011 miles, 20k towed behind moto r home ex cab SLE 62.5kmi. $1500 obo Message ¹288703 $24,988 541-241-4896. AAA Ore. Auto Source corner of West Empire & Hwy 97, Bend. Dlr 0225 541-598-3750

www.aaaoregonautosource.corn.

541-385-5662

HANGAR FOR SALE. Desert Fox 21SW on the first day it runs 30x40 end unit T 2014 toy hauler in to make sure it is corhanger in Prineville. excellent condition, rect. "Spellcheck" and Dry walled, insulated, has al l fe a tures PRICE REDUCTION! human errors do oc- and painted. $23,500. V-Max 2009 shown on N o rthcur. If this happens to Tom, 541.788.5546 $59,000. Yamaha wood website, 4 541-815-6319 your ad, please conLots of factory season trailer, fuel tact us ASAP so that extras: windshield, s tation fo r AT V , corrections and any saddlebags, back Allegro 32' 2007, like RV non-smoker owned, adjustments can be rest, rear cargo new, only 12,600 miles. CONSIGNMENTS n ever ha d AT V made to your ad. rack, bike cover, Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 WANTED inside, u p g raded 541-385-5809 motorcycle hoist, transmission, dual ex- We Do The Work ... memory foam mat- The Bulletin Classified alarm system, also haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- You Keep The Cash! Superhawk N7745G tress, wheel bearOwners' Group LLC set of new tires. eling system, 5kw gen, On-site credit ings re- packed. Cessna 172/180 hp, power mirrors w/defrost, $10,500. approval team, $31,000 Laredo 31' 2006, full IFR, new avionics, 2 slide-outs with aw541-508-1554 web site presence. 406-396-1043 5th wheel, fully S/C GTN 750, touchnings, rear c a mera, We Take Trade-Ins! one slide-out. screen center stack, trailer hitch, driyer door Check out the Awning. Like new, exceptionally clean. 870 w/power window, cruise, BIG COUNTRY RV classifieds online Healthy engine hardly used. Boats & Accessories exhaust brake, central Bend: 541-330-2495 reserve fund. vac, satellite sys. Rewww.tsendbuiietin.corn Must sell $20,000 Redmond: Hangared at KBDN. price: $64,950. or refinance. Call 541-548-5254 Updated daily Minn Kota motor, 5 spd, duced One share 541-410-5649 28 lb. thrust, 3' shaft, 503-781-8812 available. Forest River ( Rock$65. 541-923-0183 Call 541-815-2144 wood) 2015 A122S, Take care of Loaded; fridge, micro., 14' 2006 Tracker fishyour investments Just bought a new boat? stove, shower, grill, ing boat, 15hp motor, RV Sell your old one in the sleeps 4, lots of stor- CONSIGNMENTS nice trailer. Like new. with the help from classifieds! Ask about our age. $11,600 obo. $4500. 541-71 8-0050 WANTED Super Seller rates! The Bulletin's jgeist©stoneacq.corn We Do the Work, Beaver Contessa 40'541-385-5809 "Call A Service You Keep the Cash! 2008, four slide dieOn-site credit 925 sel pusher. Loaded, Professional" Directory approval team, Utility Trailers great condition. Warweb site presence. ranty. Pictures/info at We Take Trade-Ins! 2013 6x10 Big T ex, www.fourstarbend.corn used 3 times, $1350 541-647-1236 16' Seaswirl Tahoe BIG COUNTRY Rv R-Pod 176 2016, obo. 541-604-0940 with trailer, 50 HP Bend: 541-330-2495 B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , Awesome Trailer! Evinrude, bimini top, Redmond: Progressive 2006 cargo one slide, low mileLike new, only used 541-548-5254 excellent condition. hauler, 28' w/gas tank age, very clean, lots two weekends. 33 ft. 1969 $3,500 8 water tank, 110 812 of storage, $28,500. Southwind Fully loaded. on Chevy c hassis, 541-647-1918 volt, stainless steel 541-639-9411 Upgraded batteries. 64k mi., 454 motor, 885 cupboards, drop door Perma plate exterior Columbus by Thor 30' new front brake pads, 8 side door, excellent Canopies & Campers weather coating. m otorhome, 1 9 9 4 , 6.5k Onan generator. cond., 5,000 lb. axles, Winterization and Chevy 454, B a nks $9000. 541-389-7669 $8,500. 541-207-71 37 de-winterization p ower w / new e r or 541-903-0522 package incl. A/C, transmission, w a l kheat, media center, 929 around queen bed, fridge, micro, stove, 16' Smoker Craft 41K miles, full gas Automotive Wanted shower, toilet. Lots tank! $9,500 obo. fishing boat, 50 HP of storage.$19,800 DONATE YOUR CAR, Yamaha ou t board 541-598-6978 206-228-3467 Northlander 1993 TRUCK OR BOAT TO motor w/electric tilt & 17' camper, Polar Sunseeker 2500 T S HERITAGE FOR THE electric trolling motor 990, good shape, 2015 by Forest River BLIND. Free 3 Day w/remote control RV new fridge, A/C, triple slide Class C. V acation, Tax D e mounted on bow, walk CONSIGNMENTS queen bed, bathPurchased June ductible, Free Towing, through w indshield, WANTED room, indoor/out2015, used twice (wife We Do All Paperwork Taken exc. cond. $8,500. The Work ... door shower, lots of became ill) F ULLY You Keep 541-233-6223 Care O f. CALL The Cash! storage, customized Loaded with Platinum Fleetwood Discov1-800-401-4106 On-site credit to fit newer pickups, Full Body paint, auto ery 40' 2003, diesel, (PNDC) approval team, $4,500.00 obo. level system, Arctic w/all options - 3 slide web site presence. 541-419-9859. Pkg, rear c amera, Got an older car, boat o uts, s atellite, 2 We Take Trade-Ins! or Rv? Do the huT V's, W /D , e t c . , B luetooth. Also i n cludes NEW Adco all- BIG COUNTRY RV mane thing. Donate it 34,000 miles. WinAdvertise your car! to the Humane Socit ered i n hea t ed weather coach cover. Bend: 541-330-2495 Add A Picture! 17' Suncraft, ety. Call 1$74,900. Call Jim cell Reach thousands of readers! shop. $78,995 obo. Redmond: 2 motors. $1,000. 209.401.7449 (can 800-205-0599 Call 541-385-5809 541-447-8664 541-548-5254 541-593-7257 email addt'I photos) The Bulletin Classifieds (PNDC) 541-508-9700

2 1 3 8 5 4 7 9 6

utomotive Wanted

F

34' Winnebago One 2013 30RE. $23,000. Two slides. Fully loaded. Full photos and info sent upon request. Family illness requires sale.

4 5 8 6 1 9 2 7 3

email porschedclas- Dodge Big Horn Chrysler Aspen Lmtd sics@yahoo.corn 2008, 4x4, Ram 2500, 2005, 6 (PNDC) VIN ¹101118 speed manual. Ex$15,988 tra tires and rims, 931 (exp. 11/30/1 5) canopy goes with. DLR ¹366 Automotive Parts, Excellent condition, mai n tained, Service & Accessories well runs great. 160K @20132013 UFS, Dist. b Univ. Uclickfor UFS 4.2L 6 Cyl. eilglne fi'Om miles. $2 8 ,500 2001 Chevy T r ail- 541-620-1212 881 blazer, complete with Travel Trailers o computer, starter 8 541-548-1448 alternator. A p p rox. smolichusedcar 0 0 15K mi., stored inside center.corn for many years, $800 obo. 541-617-0211

, • eBI ~

Servin Central Ore on since 1903

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

2 6

Tow Dolly Roadmaster, m odel 3 4 77 , li k e new-never used, electric breaks, magnetic lights w/wiring harness, professionally w ired. $ 1 450. Unique R-Pod 2013 Fleetwood South541-419-5151 wind, F o rd, 3 2 ' , trailer-tent combo, 1994, 82,000 miles, fully loaded, exqueen bed 8 sleeper tended service consofa, TV, cooktop, tract and bike rack. oven, m i crowave, 'I• $14,500. t<vv ~ e refrigerator & 541-595-3972 or freezer, trailer hitch 503-780-4487 equipped, new tires, Winnebago 22' just serviced. 2002 - $26,900 $9,800. Chevy 360, Looking for your 503-459-1580. heavy duty chassis, next employee? cab 8 roof A/C, Place a Bulletin help tow hitch w/brake, wanted ad today and 22k mi., more! reach over 60,000 541-280-3251 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.corn Winnebago Lexington 2006 which currently reJourney 283TS class B+mo- 2001 36' 2nd owner, ceives over 1.5 miltor coach, full GTS lion page views ev300 Cummins Turbo pkg, 19,352 miles. 3 ery month at no diesel, Allison 5 spd, burner range, half extra cost. Bulletin 80k miles. D r iver time oven, 3 slides Classifieds Get Res ide s l ide, g a s w/awnings, Onan sults! Call 385-5809 stove, oven, 2 flat gen., King Dome sat- screen TVs, refer, or place your ad ellite system, Ford on-line at generator, inverter, V10 Triton, auto-levbendbulletin.corn King Dome, tow bar. eling system, new Non-smoker, no tires, Falcon tow bar. pets, no c hildren. Non-smoker, main882 C lean, an d w e l l tained in dry storage. Fifth Wheels maintained, $43,000 Can email additional 541-390-1472. pictures.$55,000. 541-520-3407 881 4 v Travel Trailers

The Bulletin USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

9

9 2 1 4 7 3 8 6 5

9

9 7 3 6 8 7 5 2 6 4 3 8 2 4 5 2 9 5 4 5 6 3 2 8 3 4 7 7 1 4 9 5 2 8 5 2 1 7 6 1 2 1 1 4 1 6 3 3 4 8 6 4 8 5 9 4 8 11-1-15

860

3 6 7 5 2 8 4 1 9

19 4 7 6 3 9 6 1 9 3 5 2 5 1 4 7 8

2 3 5 1 2 4 6 5 9 8 7 4

L AST WE E K 'S S O L U T IO N

5 3

7 5 9 9

Sudoku High Fives consists of five regular Sudoku grids sharing one set of 3-by-3 boxes. Each row, column and set of 3-by-3 boxes must contain the numbers 1 through 9 without repetition. The num-

15

gen, convection microwave, 2 TVs, tow package.

Ford Freestyle

Limited AWD 2005, 7 seats, leather, heated front seats,

.P'.:s,

Mercedes — Benz 300 SE 1989, Outstand- Toyota Tacoma 2006, radio/CD in-dash ing cond., engine re- reg. cab, 4x4, 5 spd player, moonroof, roof built less than 3K mi., standard 4 cyl engine, rack, Has been gaPlus $6,000 of other 2+ mpg, one s e - raged, no smoke or work on car. $9750 2 dogs, Good cond. nior owner, OBO. 541-948-1466 n on-smoker, wel l $3,300. 541-390-1602 maintained, n e a rly new tires, o r iginal spare near new, runs excellent. $ 1 4 ,750. 541-633-9895

Sunbeam Tiger 1966 Niercedes-Benz GL Very clean car. Al450 4MATIC 2012, ways garaged since VIN ¹765775 repaint 30 y e a rs $37,990 ago. Original 260 (exp. 11/30/1 5) V-8 engine totally DLR ¹366 T OYOTA T A C O M A rebuilt 9,400 miles 4x4 1999 4 cyl., non SMOLICH ago. Factory hard smoker, snow tires, top, good condition V OL V O canopy, extra cab, soft top, many LAT Tons of e x tras,2 541-749-2156 dealer sold options safes, 332,000 miles. smolichvolvo.corn so car is considered $6900. 541-389-9115. "stock" at car shows. 935 Find It in I have owned the car f or 18 year s . Sport Utility Vehicles The Bulletin Classifledsl $ 70,000. Tel 5 4 1 541-385-5809 548 3458

Nissan R o u e I 2011 VERY cean I 30+ mpg hwy (25+

T hunderbird

19 6 4 , 390 engine, g reat paint job, runs good, $8,500. 541-410-3218

Toyota FJ40 Landcruiser 1977 with winch, $18,000 541-389-7113, Michelle

933

Pickups

I in town). Runs great! I I AWD, white w/black I interior, air, cruise,

I tilt, single CD, rear I defrost, factory win-

I dowtint, powerlocks I & windows.

I siped). New AGM I b attery.

Alw a y s

I maintained. Great I I commuter - winter I

CA LLEW@ TODAY 5

Chevy Pickup 1878, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3889 or 541-420-6215.

New

AT tires (less I I Toyo than 6k miles and

driver

Ford Explorer 4x4

$13 500

I OBO Call or text I

2012, VIN ¹A21323

$19,988. (exp. 11/30/1 5) DLR ¹366

541-548-1448

smolichusedcar center.corn

Tahoe 1996 165K. miles, Leather. Clean. Runs & looks good $4250 OBO 541 420-3301


F6 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7 2015 • THE BULLETIN 935

Sport Utility Vehicles

975

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

975

Auto m obiles

975

Automobiles

975

Automobiles

Toyota 4Runner 2013 DID YOU KNOW 7 IN SR5, grey, 32k mi., 10 Americans or 158 Vin¹140349 $35,995 million U.S. A d ults AAA Ore. Auto Source read content f r om corner of West Emn ewspaper m e d ia pire 8 Hwy 97, Bend. each week? Discover Mercedes Benz E 541-598-3750 the Power of the PaClass 2005, www.aaaoregonauto- cific Northwest News(exp. 11/30/1 5) source.corn Dlr 0225 paper Advertising. For Vin ¹688743 free brochure call Toyota Highlander 2012 a Stock ¹82316 916-288-6019 or LTD, 53,726 miles email $10,979 or $155/mn., Vin¹126218 $30,895 $1500 down, 72 mo., Ocnpa.corn AAA Ore. Auto Source elizabeth 4 .49% APR o n a p (PNDC) corner of West Emproved credit. License and title i ncluded in pire 8 Hwy 97, Bend. payment, plus dealer in541-598-3750 stalled options. www.aaaoregonautosource.corn Dlr 0225

REDUCED!

Automobiles Lexus RX350

2 0 1 1, 23K miles. Loaded, silver, i m m aculate, 541-954 0902 OCC

Find exactly what Toyota Camry Hybrid 1000 1000 1000 1000 2007, 1 51 k m i l es, you are looking for in the one owner, garaged, CLASSIFIEDS Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices cruise, non-smoker, fully l o a ded, all (ORS C hapter475); curred by B enefiLEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE A c cord LX records, Now $7900. Honda and/or (2) Was used ciary in foreclosure Wagon '91, r uns, IN T H E C I R CUIT Notice of Preliminary 541-350-9806 or intended for use in including the cost of THE Determination for fixer-upper o r for COURT O F committing or facili- a t r ustee's s a le p arts. $1,00 0 . STATE OF OREGON Water Right Transfer tating the violation of, guarantee and any Just too many FOR THE COUNTY T-11994 541-606-5950 solicitation to violate, other environmental OF DES C HUTES collectibles? PROBATE DEPART- T-11994 filed by Avion attempt to violate, or or appraisal report. Chevy Impala 1970, Com p any conspiracy to violate By reason of said E400, $2,500. '76 MENT. In the Matter Water Sell them in Nova, $1,800. '03 of the Estate of ROB- 6 0813 P a rrell R d the criminal laws of default, Beneficiary The Bulletin Classifieds H onda 700cc M C , ERT H. M a cDOU- Bend, O R 97 7 0 2, the State of Oregon and the Successor Hwy 20, Bend. have GALL, De c e ased, proposes additional regarding the manu- Trustee $2000. 541-410-5349 Ford FusionSEL2012, 2060 NE 877-266-3821 Case No. 15PB04668. points of appropria- facture, distribution or elected to foreclose (exp. 11/30/1 5) Dlr ¹0354 541-385-5809 possession of conthe trust deed by D odge Charger R T NOTICE TO INTER- tion and a place of Vin ¹117015 su b stances advertisement and 2013, silver w/ black ESTED PERSONS. use change under trolled FIND IT! Stock ¹44382A s ale pursuant t o leather, loaded! 6k mi. NOTICE IS HEREBY C ertificate 857 4 3 . (ORS Chapter 475). or $199/mo., BQT !TI Toyota Highlander Ltd $14,979 ORS 86.705 to ORS $26,500. Call for de- GIVEN that the un- The right allows the $2400 down, 72 mo., SELL IT! 2003, V-6, all wheel, 4 .49% APR o n a p IN THE MATTER OF: 86.815 and to sell tails 541-536-3889, or dersigned have been use of 1.0 cfs from a The Bulletin Classifieds garaged, A/C, leather, proved credit. License the real p roperty 541-420-6215. appointed p ersonal well in Sec. 21, T18S, DVD, hitch, sunroof, and title included in (1) $3,395.00 in US identified above to representative. All R12E, WM for extra set w h eeled payment, plus dealer inCurrency, Case No. satisfy the obligapersons having claims quasi-municipal use in B lizzak tires, n e w stalled options. Toyota Corolla2008, Tick, Tock against the estate are S ects. 34, 3 5 , 3 6 , 15-00270828, seized tion that is secured timing belt, 187,700 VIN ¹013663 required to p resent T 17S, R12E, W M ; September 24, 2015 by the Trust Deed. m i., 2 2 -2 3 mp g , Tick, Tock... $8988 NOTICE IS them, with vouchers Sec. 31, T17S, R13E, from Johnny Walker. $7,500. 541-549-6896 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. HEREBY G I V EN (exp. 11/30/1 5) attached, to the un- WM; Sects. 1, 2, 3, 4, ...don't let time get LEGAL NOTICE DLR ¹366 that t h e un d e r877-266-3821 dersigned p e rsonal 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 16, Mercedes-Benz away. Hire a signed Successor representative at 747 21, 22, 2 7 , T 1 8S, T RUSTEE'S N O Dlr ¹0354 SLK230 2003, T ICE O F SA L E . Trustee or SuccesSW Mill View Way, R12E, WM; Sec. 6. professional out exc. cond., auto, Reference is made sor Trustee's agent Bend, O R 9 7 7 02, T 18S, R13E, W M . Garage Sales convertible retractof The Bulletin's to that certain short will, on March 2, within four m o nths The applicant pro- form trust deed line able hard top. 2016, at one o' clock "Call A Service after the date of first poses additional Garage Sales 54,250 miles, carfax credit (the "Trust (1:00) p.m., based publication of this no- points of appropria- of Volvo XC60 2014, available. $13,000. 541-548-1448 Professional" Deed" ) dated Deon the standard of tice, or the claims may tion to Sec. 30, T16S, VIN ¹556164 Garage Sales 541-389-7571 smolichusedcar cember 5, 2007, exDirectory today! time established by be barred. All per- R12E, WM; Sec. 6, $33,997 center.corn ecuted by Steven ORS 187.110, just sons whose r ights T 17S, R1 2 E , W M , Find them (exp. 11/30/1 5) Tollefson (the o utside the m a i n may be affected by and to change the DLR ¹366 "Grantor" ) to U.S. in Vehicle? e ntrance of 1 1 64 the proceedings may place of use to Sec. SMOLICH Call The Bulletin Bank Trust ComN.W. Bond, Bend, The Bulletin obtain additional in30, T16S, R12E, WM; and place an ad O regon, sell f o r V OL V O f ormation from t h e Sec. 1, T17S, R11E, pany, National AsClassifieds today! (the cash at public aucrecords of the Court, WM; Sects. 6, 34, 35, sociation 541-749-2156 Ask about our tion to the highest the personal repre- 36, T17S, R12E, WM; "Trustee" ), whose smolichvolvo.corn 541-385-5809 "Wheel Deal"! mailing address is VW Bug 2002, 117k sentative, or the law- Sec. 31, T17S, R13E, bidder the interest in Toyota Corot/a 2013, for private party 111 S.W. Fifth Av940 mi., 5 speed, sun roof, yers for the personal WM; Sects. 1, 2, 3, 4, said real property, (exp. 11/30/1 5) advertisers enue, Suite 3500, heated leather seats, which Grantor has Vin ¹053527 representative. Dated 9, 10, 12, 14-16, 21, Vane Portland, O r egon includes studded tires. or had power to and first published on 22, 27, T18S, R12E, Stock ¹83072 97204, to s e c ure $3,600 OBO. convey at the time O ctober 31 , 2 0 1 5. WM; Sec. 6, T18S, Toyota Sienna XLE Van $15,979 or $1 99 mo., 541-410-1685 of the execution by D OUGLAS T. A N - R13E, WM . The payment and per2006, F W D , v6, $2000 down, 84 mo., of certain Grantor of the Trust 4 .49% APR o n a p DRESEN, Personal Water Resources De- formance l eather, A C , tilt , obligations of Deed, together with credit. License Representative. cruise, JBL s tereo, partment proposes to G rantor t o PRIUS C3 2014 proved Ford LTD 1985 U.S . title i ncluded in any interest t h at 6-CD, a l l po w e r, PERSONAL REPRE- approve the transfer, Bank National Asw/1 2,000 miles, as- and Country Squire payment, plus dealer inGrantor or the sucSENTATIVE: DO U- b ased on t h e r e heated front seats, Wagon Exc. shape. sume lease with 20 sociation, succescessors in interest GLAS T. ANDRESEN, quirements of O RS climate control, lugmonths remaining at stalled options. 106,300 miles. sor by merger to to Grantor acquired 8160 PIUTE ROAD Chapter 540 and OAR gage rack, set snow Small V-8 Engine. $240 mo., 50+ mpg. S UBA R lcoM l U.S. Bank National eusaauovrmm 690-380-5000. after the execution ¹20, COL O RADO tires. 1 o w ner, a ll $2700 541-548-1821 $3000. Call L a r ry Association ND (the of the Trust Deed, to SPRINGS, CO 80926. maint. records. 175K 541.728.1775 e mail 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Chevy E! Camino " Beneficiary" ), i n satisfy the foregomi. Excellent condi877-266-3821 LAWYER FOR PER- Any person may file, Imbatstar©aol.corn 1987, Classic! cluding repayment ing obli g ations Dlr ¹0354 SONAL REPRESEN- jointly or severally, a t ion! $10,0 0 0 . Small Block 327 of a promissory note thereby secured and 541-595-1180 T ATIVE: RYA N P . protest or s t anding Modified engine. dated December 5, the costs and exCORREA, OSB statement within 30 BULLETINCLA$$IFIEDS Large duration roller in the princi975 penses of sale. NO¹071109, Hurley Re, days after the l ast 2007, Search the area's most Cam. Edlebrock pal a m ount o f TICE IS FURTHER P .C., 747 S W M i l l date of n ewspaper Automobiles comprehensive listing of Alum Heads and $170,690.00 (the G IVEN that a n y View Way, Bend, OR publication of this noclassified advertising... Ford Taurus 2007 80k "Note" ). The Trust more.$8,000 person named in 97702. tice, 11/07/2015. Call (541) miles, 4 studded tires Scion TCcoupe 2007, real estate to automotive, Runs Great! Deed was recorded 317-5505 ORS 86.778 has the (Phone); ( 503) 986-0807 t o merchandise to sporting i ncluded w/ri m s. (exp. 11/30/1 5) 541-977-2830 on December 26, right at any time (541) 317-5507 (F&x), obtain additional in- 2007, as Instrument goods. Bulletin Classifieds $4800. 541-4'I6-9566 Vin ¹198120 prior to five days rpcorrea © hurley-re.corn formation or a protest No. 2007-65688 in appear every day in the Stock ¹44193B before the date last form. If no protests print or on line. LEGAL NOTICE $10,379 or $149/mo., he o ff icial r e a l Looking for your set for the sale, to are filed, the Depart- tproperty IN T H E C I R CUIT $2800 down, 60 mo., Call 541-385-5809 records of Audi A4 Quaftro 2010, have this foreclonext employee? ment will issue a final 4 .49% APR o n a p - www.bendbulletin.corn COURT O F THE Deschutes County, VIN ¹017492 sure pr o ceeding Place a Bulletin help order consistent with Oregon. The legal proved credit. License STATE OF OREGON dismissed and the $1 8,997 wanted ad today and the preliminary deterand title i ncluded in The Bulletin FOR THE COUNTY d escription of t h e (exp. 11/30/1 5) Trust Deed r e inSaving Central Oregon since19N reach over 60,000 payment, plus dealer inOF DES C HUTES mination. real property covHyundaiSanta Fe GLS stalled options. stated by payment DLR ¹366 readers each week. PROBATE DEPARTered by the Trust 2012, to Beneficiary of the Your classified ad SMOLICH MENT. In the Matter Deed is as follows: © s u a a au (exp. 11/30/2015) entire amount then will also appear on Need help fixing stuff? o f th e E s t ate o f Lot 2 in Block 11 of V O LV O Vin ¹151185 due (other t h an bendbulletin.corn Call A Service Professional FIRST A D DITION 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. RANDY ALLEN SUS54'I -749-2156 Stock ¹45197A such portion of the which currently re877-266-3821 find the help you need. SMANE-STUBS, DeTO W H ISPERING smolichvolvo.corn $15,979 or $199/mo., principal as would ceives over 1.5 milDlr ¹0354 www.bendbulletin.corn ceased, Case No. PINES ESTATES, $1900 down, 84 mo., not then be due had lion page views 15PB04677. NOTICE 4 .49% APR o n a p Deschutes County, no default every month at Bid Now/ Toyota Corolla S TO IN T E RESTED proved credit. License Oregon. No action occurred), and by www.sulletinsidnsuy.corn 2007, 93 k m i l es, no extra cost. BulleLEGAL NOTICE and title i ncluded in PERSONS. NOTICE has been instituted curing any o t her tin Classifieds automatic, s i l ver. payment, plus dealer inIS HEREBY GIVEN NOTICE OF SEIZURE to recover the oblidefault complained Get Results! Call New brakes and stalled options. FOR CIVIL that the undersigned gation, or any part 385-5809 or place of herein that is caSuper clean, have been appointed FORFEITURE TO ALL t hereof, now r e © s u m n L L Subaru Impreza 201 3, battery. pable of being cured your ad on-line at no smoking. Cruise POTENTIAL personal representamaining secured by by ten de ring the bendbulletin.corn control, CD player, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. tive. All persons havCLAIMANTS AND TO (exp. 11/30/1 5) the Trust Deed or, if p erformance r e c loth seats, A C . 877-266-3821 ALL UNKNOWN ing claims against the Vin ¹027174 s uch action h a s quired under the obBuy New...Buy Local Price: $6500. Call Dlr ¹0354 estate are required to PERSONS READ THIS been Stock ¹83205 ins t ituted, l igation o r T r u st You Can Bid On: 541-480-2700 to I The Bulletin recoml CAREFULLY present them, with s uch action h a s $19,965 or $249/mo., view. NO T E XTS mends extra caution ~ Deed and, in addi$100 Toward any vouchers attached, to $1300 down, 84 mo., been dismissed extion to paying said Auto Detailing when p u rchasing ~the undersigned per- If you have any inter- cept as permitted by 4 .49% APR o n a p - PLEASE! sums or tendenng Retail Value $100 f products or services sonal representative est i n t h e s e ized ORS 86.752(7). The proved credit. License pattym51@q.corn the pe r formance Heavenly Touched and title i ncluded in from out of the area. at 747 SW Mill View property d e scribed default for which the necessary to cure Auto Detailing payment, plus dealer f S ending c ash , Way, B e nd , OR below, you must claim foreclosure is made the default, by pay(Bidding closes installed options. checks, or credit in- g 9 7702, within f o ur that interest or you will is Grantor's failure ing all costs and exTues., Nov. 10, Infinity G35 coupe formation may be I months after the date automatically lose that to pay when due the penses actually inat 8:00 p.m.) 2006. Mint! 44K mi. © s uSIHIARUOSMXD.OtM EIARu J subject to FRAUD. of first publication of interest. If you do not f ollowing sum s : curred in enforcing Must see! $15,500. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. For more informal- t his notice, o r t h e file a claim for the monthly payments the obligation and 541-389-9836. f tion about an adverclaims may be barred. property, the property 877-266-3821 in full owed under Say "goodbuy" T rust D e ed , t o VW Jetta 1999, 187K tiser, you may call All persons whose may be forfeited even the Note beginning Dlr ¹0354 gether with Trustee to that unused mi., 1 7 " whe e l s,I the Oregon State rights may be af- if you are not con- M arch 2014 a n d and attorney fees Attorney General's g fected by t h e p r o- victed of any crime. each month thereR aceland Ult i m o not exceeding the item by placing it in I ceedings may obtain To claim an interest, after; plus any late coilovers, Kenwood Office C o nsumer amounts p rovided The Bulletin Classifieds stereo. New radiator / Protection hotline at additional information you must file a written charges accruing by ORS 86.778. In hoses, motor mount & 1-877-877-9392. from the records of claim with the forfei- thereafter; and exconstruing this nonew CV axle. $2100 the Court, the per- ture counsel named penses, costs, tice, the singular in541-385-5809 below, The w r itten trustee fees and atKia Optima SE 2013, obo. 541-420-2016 or sonal representative, Serving Centra/ Oregon since 7%8 cludes the p lural, Subaru Legacy silver, leather, pan541-279-8013 or the lawyers for the claim must be signed torney fees. By reaand t h e wor d LL Bean2006, orama roof, keyless, personal representa- by you, sworn to un- son of said default, "grantor" i ncludes (exp. 11/30/1 5) back-up camera, only tive. Dated and first der penalty of perjury Good classified adstell Beneficiary has deHave an item to any successor in Vin ¹203053 before a notary public, 9200 mi, Exc. $19,700 published on October the essential facts in an clared all sums owinterest of grantor, Stock ¹82770 sell quick? 541-788-4229 31, 2 0 15 . D O NG- and state: (a) Your ing on the obligainteresting Manner. Write as well as any other $16,977 or $199/mo., true name; (b) The QING XIE, Personal tion secured by the If it's under from the readers view -not person owing an $2600 down, 84 mo. at Representative. address at which you Trust Deed immedithe seller' s. Convert the obligation, the per4 .49% APR o n ap - '500 you can place it in BMI/I/Z4 3.1 will a c cept f u t ure PERSONAL REPREately due and payproved credit. License facts into benefits. Show formance of which is Convertible 2003, SENTATIVE: DONGm ailings from t h e able which sums are The Bulletin and title included in secured by the Trust the reader howthe item will VIN ¹U06112 court and f orfeiture as follows: (a) the Q ING X I E , 448 1 payment, plus dealer Deed, a n d the help them insomeway. Classifieds for: $9,977 SOUTH TRAC E counsel; and (3) A principal amount of installed options. words "trustee" and This (exp. 11/30/1 5) s tatement that y o u BLVD., OLD $165,123.51 as of "beneficiary" inLexus ES350 2010, advertising tip DLR ¹366 HICKORY, TN 37138. have an interest in the September ® s u a m L L '13 -3 lines, 7 days 22, Excellent Condition clude their respecbrought to you by seized property. Your SMOLICH LAWYER FOR PER2015, (b) accrued 32,000 miles, $20,000 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. s20 -3 lines, 14 days tive successors in SONAL REPRESEN- deadline for filing the interest of $1,269.55 214-549-3627 interest, if any. In (in The Bulletin V OL V O 877-266-3821 (Private Party ads only) ServingCentral Oregonsince f909 claim document with T ATIVE: RYAN P . as of September 22, Bend) accordance with the Dlr¹0354 541-749-2156 CORREA, OSB forfeiture co u nsel 2015, and interest Fair Debt Collection smolichvolvo.corn 'C ¹071109, Hurley Re, n amed below is 2 1 accruing thereafter Practices Act, this is P.C., 747 S W Mi l l days from the last day on t h e p r i ncipal an attempt to colIL View Way, Bend, OR of publication of this amount at the rate lect a debt, and any 97702. (541) notice. Where to file a set forth in the Note information ob317-5505 (Phone); claim and for more until fully paid, (c) tained will be used (541) 317-5507 (Fax), i nformation: D a i na escrow advances of for that p urpose. rpcorrea © hurley-re.corn Vitolins, Crook County $3,887.90 a s of This c o m municaDistrict Attorney OfSeptember 22 Buick Lucerne 2008 tion is from a debt LEGAL NOTICE 300 N E T h ird 2015, plus any late Very clean 6 cylinder, IN T H E CI R CUIT fice, collector. For f urStreet, Prineville, OR auto., leather interior, charges a c cruing ther in f ormation, COURT O F THE 97754. 87k mi. $6950 Will thereafter and any STATE OF OREGON please contact Tony Notice of reasons for other expenses or consider part trade. Kullen at his mailFOR THE COUNTY Forfeiture: The propCall or text Ron at OF DES C HUTES erty described below fees owed underthe ing address of Miller 541-419-5060 Note or Trust Deed, Nash Graham 8 Probate Department. was seized for forfei(d) amounts that In the Matter of the ture because it: (1) Dunn LLP, 111 S.W. Beneficiary has paid Fifth Avenue, Suite Estate of ELIZABETH i the pro- on or may hereinANN VEATCH, De- Constitutes 3400, Portland, Orceeds of the violation e gon 9 7 204o r ceased. Case No. of, solicitation to vio- after pay to protect the lien, including by 15PB04789. NOTICE t elephone him a t late, attempt to vioway of illustration, TO IN T E RESTED late, or conspiracy to (503) 224 - 5858. Sell no longer but not l i mitation, PERSONS. NOTICE violates, D ATED this 3 0 th Cadillac CTS 2010, the criminal taxes, assessments, day o f O c t ober, IS HEREBY GIVEN laws of the State of needed items V 6 I n jection, 6 i nterest o n p r i o r 2 015. / s / Ton y that the undersigned Oregon Speed A u tomatic. regarding the liens, and i n surwith one of these Kullen, Successor has been appointed manufacture, distribuLuxury series. Exteance premiums, and Personal RepresentaTrustee. File No. rior: Black Raven, or possession of (e) expenses, costs Special Rate 080090-0955. tive. All persons hav- tion, Interior: Light Titacontrolled substances and attorney and ing claims against the nium/Ebony. 22,555 Classifieds! t rustee fees i n trust estate are remiles. 4 door. Exquired t o pr e sent cellent condition all them, with vouchers a round. Has A r i 3 lines, 3 days — items under $200 ......................................... attached, to the un~ E P U R LI C zona plates. This is dersigned Personal car is a great mix of Representative at 747 3 lines, 7 days — items under $500.......................................... IIICÃFICES luxury, com f ort, SW MILL VIEW WAY, style, and workmanB END, ORE G O N I M P CSKT~ ~ ship. $24,000 4 lines, zj days — Garage Sale ad ........................................... 9 7702, within f o ur Call 541-408-3051 months after the date Go Big with our "Run until Sold" An important premise upon which the principle of of first publication of t his notice, o r t h e *i p t 8 starting at k )pl i t j p j democracy is based is thatinformation about claims may be barred. All persons whose government activities must be accessible in order Item priced at: Your Totol Ad Cost on: rights may be affor the electorate fo make well-informed decisions. fected by t h e p r o• Under $500........................................................................................................ Public notices provide this sort of accessibility fo ceedings may obtain Chevy Impala 2007, • $500 fo $999.................................................................................................... ...............$4O additional information citizens who want fo know more about government VIN ¹334268 from the records of • $100010$2499.............................................................................................. $6,988. activities. the court, the Per(exp. 11/30/1 5) • $2500 and over............................................................................................... sonal Representative, DLR ¹366 or the lawyers for the Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin Includes: 2" in length, withborder, full colorphoto, boldheadlineandprice. Personal Representaclassifieds or go fowvvw.bendbullef/n.corn and "Ad runs until SOLD tive, DANIEL C. RE. Call The Bulletin for Details! or up to 8 weeks Dated And first pubclick on"Classi%edAds". (whichever comes first! ) lished on October 31,

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The Bulletin

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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2015 F7

TO PLACE ANAD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809

Time to declutter? Needsomeextra cash?

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List one Item" in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.corn

The Bulletin

To receive yourFREE CLASSIFIED AD,call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (On Bend's west side) 'Offer allows for 3 lines oftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must bean individual item under$200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincluded in the ad. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limit 1 ad peritem per30days to besold.


FS SATURDAY NOVEMBER 7 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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

There's soccer practice. And then there's late for soccer practice.

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NEW 2016 FORD ESCAPE SE 4X4 SYNC, SE Convenience Package, Navigation, PowerLift Gate

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The 201e Subaru Forester' 2.OXT.Symmetrical All-Wheel Drive, a 250-hp Direct-Injected Turbocharged SUBARU BOXERe engine, and it's a 201 5 IIHS Top Safety Pick+ with optional Subaru EyeSight® Because while power is important, safety always comes first.

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New 2015Subaru WRX STI Limited 6MT

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NEW 2015 FORD FOCUS 4-DR AT VIN: 281692

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New 2016Subaru Legacy 3.6R Limit ed CVT

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NEW 2016 FORD FUSION SE ECOBOOST Leather Seats, Moonroof, My Ford Touch Package, Adaptive Cruise Control

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Power Moonroof, Auto-Dimming Rear View Compass Mirror w/Homelink, Navigation Infotainment System, VoiceActivated Control Navi, Audio L HVAC, SiriusXM Travel Link, Weather, Sports 36 Months Free, Sirius XM Trafftc 36 Months Free, Subaru Map Update Program 3 Year Free Llpdates, Eyesight Driver-Assist System, Pre-Collision Braking System, Pre-Collision Throttle Management System and Much More!

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New 2016Subaru Forester 2.5i Premium CVT

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NEW 2015 FORD F150 SUPERCREW XLT 4X4

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NEW 2016 FORD F250 CREW CAB 4X4 DIESEL Camper Package, Heated & Cooled Leather Seats, Spray-in Bedliner VINA15229 MSRP ....................... $62,080 Friends &NeighborDisc. -$4,444" Ford CustomerRebate ... -$2,250fn Ford Credit Bonus Cash* . . -$750fn

New 2015Subaru Impreza 2.0i Limited CVT Option Package 21, Standard Model, Popular Pkg. ¹1, Auto Dim Compass/Mirror/Homelink, Bumper Applique S Door, Cargo Tray, All Weather Floor Mats, Seat Back Protector

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MSRP $24,260.VIN:¹FH327687. Flo-21 SubaruofBendDiscount$1261.

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