Bulletin Daily Paper 09/01/12

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SATURDAY September 1, 2012

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Rethinking honor codes at colleges By Justin Pope and Lindsey Anderson The Associated Press

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Harvard University, whose motto “Veritas” means “truth,” has never had a student honor code in its nearly 400year history — as far as it knows. But allegations against 125 students for improperly collaborating on a take-home final in the spring are leading to renewed consideration of the idea. Though widely associated with college life, formal honor codes are hard to implement and fairly rare on American campuses. But some would argue they’re especially important at places like Harvard that are wellsprings of so many future leaders in government and business. Cheating and plagiarism are serious rule violations at Harvard, just like anywhere else. See Honor code / A6

Most jobs added since recession ended pay poor wages

A brand new breed of fan turned out Friday night to cheer on Redmond’s new high school as it kicked off its football season — and a new era for the city

RIDGEVIEW’S BIG DEBUT By Scott Hammers

By Joel Aschbrenner

REDMOND — Until Friday night, Ridgeview High School was a blank slate. A school with no traditions and no reputation, just a massive, gleaming building on Redmond’s south side with a hall full of empty trophy cases on the north side of the gym. It took junior Reece Rollins scarcely 10 seconds to change all of that. On the first play from scrimmage, Rollins took a handoff and cut left, bringing the purple-clad crowd to its feet as he streaked 69 yards downfield and into the end zone. Friday’s 53-6 victory against a team from Medicine Hat, Alberta, was a coming-out party for Ridgeview, and a milestone for Redmond. Ever since the opening of Redmond Union High School in 1921, Redmond has been a one-high-school town, drawing students from Crooked River Ranch and Tumalo and Powell Butte to a single school. Though the district is not yet enforcing rigid boundaries, the opening of Ridgeview draws a blurry kind

The Bulletin

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Jordan Stacy helps classmate Natalie Ulum put purple makeup under her eyes to show school spirit before the start of the first varsity football game for Rideview High School on Friday.

of line through the community, splitting it into north and south, old and new. A few miles to the north, Redmond High School stands to become Ridgeview’s chief rival — in the classroom, on the football field and elsewhere — with the identity of each school inexorably linked to the other. It’s been less than a year since

nearly every Ravens player suited up as members of the Redmond High School Panthers, and not everything has been left behind. A little over an hour before kickoff, lineman Daniel Majors chatted about the night’s game and absently fondled his mouth guard — a little scrap of rubber in Panthers maroon and gold. See Ridgeview / A6

PRINEVILLE — Legislation that aims to divide the water from the Crooked River among stakeholders is not expected to significantly drop the water level in Prineville Reservoir, Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., said Friday. Merkley spoke to more than 50 Crook County residents, many concerned that the senator’s bill would drain the popular boating and fishing lake. The bill would allocate more water for the city of Prineville, allow for a hydroelectric project below the reservoir and guarantee water supplies for irrigators. It has the support of irrigators, environmental groups, the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs and city and county officials. But one provision has locals worried. The bill says all water not allocated to irrigators or the city will be managed for the benefit of fish species downriver, namely salmon and steelhead. Chuck Lang, a Prineville resident and conservation director of the Oregon Bass Federation Nation, said he is concerned water will be flushed downriver for fish and lake levels will drop. Shallower lake levels could kill bass spawns along the shoreline and result in larger algae blooms and degraded water quality, he said. See Reservoir / A6

WE’RE KICKING IT OFF SLIDESHOW ONLINE: See last season’s fall prep sports action at

New York Times News Service

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• Prineville Reservoir levels would remain high, he says

The Bulletin

By Catherine Rampell

While a majority of jobs lost during the downturn were in the middle range of wages, a majority of those added during the recovery have been low-paying, according to a new report from the National Employment Law Project. The disappearance of midwage, midskill jobs is part of a longer-term trend that some refer to as a hollowing out of the workforce, though it has probably been accelerated by government layoffs. “The overarching message here is we don’t just have a jobs deficit; we have a ‘good jobs’ deficit,” said Annette Bernhardt, the report’s author and a policy codirector at the National Employment Law Project, a liberal research and advocacy group. The report looked at 366 occupations tracked by the Labor Department, and clumped them into three equal groups by wage, with each representing a third of U.S. employment in 2008. See Jobs / A4

Merkley defends water proposal

bendbulletin.com/prepslideshow. Then follow along this season as our photographers capture each week in high school sports. Rob Kerr / The Bulletin

Visitors enjoy the beach on the shore of Prineville Reservoir Thursday afternoon. Some Crook County residents worry that water-use legislation would significantly lower the water level at the reservoir

Wolves to lose protected status in Wyoming By Bob Moen The Associated Press

Photos by Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

Reece Rollins (18) celebrates with his teammates after scoring the first touchdown for Ridgeview High School while playing Medicine Hat High School on Friday.

In Sports • Bend vs. Marist coverage, D1

The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper

Vol. 109, No. 245, 64 pages, 6 sections

INDEX Business Classified Comics

C3-5 E1-4 B4-5

Community B1-X Crosswords B5, E2 Editorials

C6

Local News C1-8 Movies B2 Obituaries C7

TODAY’S WEATHER Sports D1-6 Stocks C4-5 TV B2, ‘TV’ mag

Partly cloudy High 76, Low 40 Page C8

CHEYENNE, Wyo. — The federal government will end its protections for wolves in Wyoming, where the species was introduced two decades ago to revive it from near extinction in the United States. The announcement Friday by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will entrust the state with managing wolf numbers and endorses a plan that allows for them to be shot on sight in most of the state, while keeping them permanently protected in designated areas like Yellowstone National Park. Wyoming will take over management of the wolves at the end of September. See Wolves / A4

TOP NEWS FED: Bernanke proposes action, A3 HAQQANI: A terrorist group? A3


THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

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Advances in LEDs spark bright ideas By Mary Beth Breckenridge Akron Beacon Journal

You thought the lighting at the Olympics’ opening and closing ceremonies was cool? Get ready to be wowed right in your own home. Advances in LED lighting are promising not only to brighten our homes, but also spark our imaginations. LEDs are freeing lighting designers from the constraints of conventional bulbs, and those designers are responding with products that could change how we think about lighting a room. Picture lighted wall panels that respond to our movements, windows that morph into lighting sources and starry arrays suspended from the ceiling. Those sorts of innovations are probably years away from common residential use. But some are already starting to find their way into hospitality and other business settings, and even into some high-end homes. They’re possible because of the unusual properties of LEDs. LEDs are light-emitting diodes, semiconductor devices that light up when electrical current passes through. We’ve become familiar with them in such uses as traffic lights and automotive lighting, and lately they’ve been inching into the home in such forms as under-counter lighting, recessed lighting and even replacement light bulbs. But the Olympics ceremonies showed us that LEDs have a wow factor, too. LEDs lighted the Olympic rings and gave the wings of costumed characters an ethereal glow. Mounted on stadium seats, LEDs made the audience part of a digital light show that pulsed with vibrant color and flashed messages around the arena. An LED is tiny, about onefourth the size of your pinkie fingernail. It takes a number of LEDs to produce the light of a conventional light bulb, but those teeny light sources can be arrayed in interesting ways. “You’re seeing a lot of creativity,” said Jeff Dross, corporate director of education and industry trends at Kichler Lighting, based in Independence, Ohio. “Essentially, a designer is unleashed at this point.” Take, for example, the edgelighted panels that East Cleveland’s GE Lighting Solutions unveiled last year. They’re thin, transparent acrylic panels rimmed with LEDs, which

Courtesy Philips Lighting via McClatchy-Tribune News Service

A woman examines a Philips’ OLED wall featuring new LED technology. Advances in LED lighting are promising not only to brighten our homes but to spark our imaginations.

A chandelier incorporated into a staircase, uses Philips’ new LED technology.

illuminate the acrylic when they’re turned on. The panels can be recessed in a ceiling or wall or suspended from a ceiling like a sleek, contemporary chandelier. WAC Lighting in Port Washington, N.Y., has taken advantage of the small size and slim profile of LEDs to incorporate them into a tape that can be used to light up bookshelves, ceiling coves, cabinet tops and other decorative spaces. It works much like conventional rope lighting, but it stays flat and won’t get hot and turn brown, said Shelley Wald, the company’s president. Kichler is starting to incorporate LEDs into its lighting fixtures, Dross said. It recent-

ly introduced an ultra-thin wall sconce and is planning to come out with an LED chandelier in a few months, although he said details are hush-hush. The sconce is noteworthy in that it’s only about 2 inches deep, so it doesn’t extend far into the room — “almost like a framed picture on a wall,” Dross said. That makes it compliant with the Americans With Disabilities Act, which limits how far a fixture can protrude so it won’t endanger people without sight, he explained.

The promise of OLEDs Perhaps the biggest innovations promise to come from a type of LED called an organic

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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org

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TODAY

CUTTING EDGE

FOCUS: SCIENCE

Crime, punishment and chimpanzees By Monte Morin Los Angeles Times

Here’s a tip for lawbreakers: If you ever find yourself in court, ask for a jury of chimpanzees. They’ll never convict. Despite being one of the closest living relatives to humans, chimps lack the urge to punish thieves who are caught red-handed, unless they themselves are the victims, according to a study published Tuesday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. In a series of experiments involving 13 furry subjects with names like Frodo, Natascha and Ulla, the animals showed no interest in intervening when they observed a fellow chimpanzee purloining grapes and food pellets from a third chimp. It was only when a chimp had their own treats stolen that they got angry and took action — in this case, by opening a trapdoor on the miscreant. The study, according to lead author Katrin Riedl, a developmental psychologist with the Max Planck Institute of Evolutionary Anthropology, in Leipzig, Germany, suggests

that the practice of punishing thievery and crimes committed against others is a uniquely human trait. “Punishment can help maintain cooperation by deterring free-riding and cheating,” wrote study authors. “Of particular importance in large-scale human societies is third-party punishment in which individuals punish a transgressor or norm violator even when they themselves are not affected.” While similar experiments have been done with humans, this was the first time they were performed with chimpanzees, according to study authors. Scientists noted that dominant chimps sometimes break up fights between smaller combatants and exhibit other behaviors that suggest a sensitivity to fairness, so it was possible that they shared the human trait of third-party punishment. In order to see whether this was the case, scientists constructed an elaborate, compartmental test cage. Chimpanzees could see each other through screened dividers, but could not touch each other. In the experiment, a “vic-

tim” chimp had to remove a series of transparent dividers to maneuver a box of food within reaching distance. Once they were poised to grab the food, however, a second “thief” chimp was allowed to pull the box of food away with a rope. A third chimp, called the “actor,” was taught how to open a trapdoor beneath the food, so that it would disappear as the thief tried to eat it. If a chimp pressed the button, it was considered punishment of the thief. The observer chimps rarely trigged the trapdoor, however, even if the victim was a relative of theirs. The trapdoor got a lot more use when the victim chimp was allowed to trigger it. Dominant chimps were most likely to inflict trapdoor punishment, while submissive chimps were far more hesitant to trigger the trapdoor on dominant thieves, the study found. “Overall, chimpanzee punishment appears confined to retaliation against personal harm when the punisher is in a position of dominance,” wrote study authors. “Chimpanzee punishment is of the ‘might makes right’ variety.”

light-emitting diode. Whereas an LED produces a point of light, an OLED is a plane that lights up, explained Joe ReyBarreau, who teaches lighting design at the University of Kentucky and is a spokesman for the American Lighting Association. OLEDs produce a homogenous, diffused light that’s easy to look at directly, said Angela Hohl-AbiChedid, an OLED expert with Philips Lighting. They’re less than one-tenthinch thick and getting thinner, and they’re lightweight and cool to the touch, she said. Philips’ largest OLED is 4 inches square, but they can be customized in a variety of sizes and shapes, such as rectangles, circles and ovals. Lighting designers are capitalizing on the qualities of OLEDs to create innovative lighting products. For example, WAC Lighting’s new Vela chandelier is a contemporary fixture that incorporates 24 OLEDs. Twelve shine upward to create a glow overhead, and the other 12 shine downward to illuminate the surface below. The chandelier produces 2,040 lumens of light, a little less than the light output of one conventional, 150-watt incandescent bulb. But it uses only about 58 watts of electricity to do so, according to the company. Kichler’s Dross said the Department of Energy expects LEDs to reach what’s considered the affordable range in about five years, and OLEDs are expected to follow. Meanwhile, the efficiency of both types continues to improve, with OLEDs lagging behind LEDs but expected to outstrip them eventually, WAC’s Wald said. Rey-Barreau said the public seems to be embracing both forms of LED lighting, thanks to their long life, their potential to save energy and the fact that the lights contain no mercury and produce no ultraviolet or infrared light. He said it’s predicted that by 2016, 40 percent of residential lighting will be LED; by 2020, 85 to 86 percent. “It’s definitely going to change everything we think about lighting,” he said.

It’s Saturday, Sept. 1, the 245th day of 2012. There are 121 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS • Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney and running mate Paul Ryan take their campaign to Ohio.

IN HISTORY Highlights: In 1715, following a reign of 72 years, King Louis XIV of France died four days before his 77th birthday. In 1807, former Vice President Aaron Burr was found not guilty of treason. (Burr was then tried on a misdemeanor charge, but was again acquitted.) In 1939, World War II began as Nazi Germany invaded Poland. In 1987, peace demonstrator S. Brian Willson lost his legs when he was hit by a train at the Concord Naval Weapons Station in California while protesting weapons shipments to Central America. Ten years ago: The California Legislature approved a $99 billion budget, ending a 2month-old standoff. Typhoon Rusa, the worst typhoon to hit South Korea in 40 years, left at least 119 people dead. Five years ago: Idaho Sen. Larry Craig announced his resignation, saying he would leave office on Sept. 30, 2007, in the wake of fallout over his arrest and guilty plea in a Minnesota airport gay sex sting. (However, Craig later reversed his decision, saying he would serve out the rest of his term.) One year ago: In a fiery broadcast from hiding, Libya’s Moammar Gadhafi warned that loyalist tribes in his main strongholds were armed and preparing for battle. Leaders and envoys from 60 countries and the U.N. met in Paris for talks with Libya’s rebel-led National Transitional Council to map the country’s future.

BIRTHDAYS Comedian-actress Lily Tomlin is 73. Talk show host Dr. Phil McGraw is 62. Singer Gloria Estefan is 55. Former White House Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers is 51. Retired NBA All-Star Tim Hardaway is 46. — From wire reports

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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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T S N B Children beheaded in Afghanistan KABUL, Afghanistan — The decapitated bodies of a 7-year-old girl and a 12year-old boy found Friday in the country’s south and east continued a spate of grisly beheadings in Afghanistan this week. The body of the boy was discovered in the rural Panjwai district of Kandahar province in the south, where the Taliban retain command of some areas despite regular clearing operations by U.S. and Afghan forces. Local residents and officials said the Taliban had killed the boy because his brother and uncle were members of the local police. The Taliban denied killing him. There was no immediate explanation for the killing of the girl, whose body was found in a garden in the Tagab district of eastern Kapisa province, said the governor of Kapisa, Mehrabudin Safi.

3 dead in shooting at N.J. grocery OLD BRIDGE, N.J. — An ex-Marine who had suffered from depression and once tweeted about killing “everyone I see” opened fire in camouflage gear at a supermarket early Friday, gunning down two co-workers before he killed himself, authorities said. Terence Tyler, 23, left his night clerk shift at a Pathmark store in Old Bridge Township around 3:30 a.m., drove off and returned 20 minutes later to the closed store with a handgun and an assault rifle similar to an AK-47, Middlesex County prosecutor Bruce Kaplan said. Tyler fired more than 16 rounds from his rifle, shooting at an employee standing outside and firing as he entered the store, blowing out the front windows, authorities said. He shot at five other workers in an aisle, killing Christina LoBrutto, 18, and Bryan Breen, 24, Kaplan said.

S. Africans divided over mass killings JOH A N NESBU RG — South Africa’s justice minister Friday challenged the top prosecutor’s decision to charge 270 miners with the murders and attempted murders of 112 striking coworkers shot by the police, a development that indicates more divisions in the government over the killings that shocked the nation. The National Prosecuting Authority’s decision to charge the arrested miners under an apartheid-era law leaves the government open to accusations that it is acting like the former brutal white rulers. It appeared to be an attempt to shift the blame for the shootings from the police to the miners. The Aug. 16 shootings by police that killed 34 striking miners and wounded 78 near the Lonmin platinum mine were the worst display of state violence since apartheid ended in 1994.

Chinese dissident gets released SHANGHAI — The Chinese dissident who served 10 years after being convicted of state subversion on evidence provided by the U.S. Internet giant Yahoo is under sharp restrictions, his wife said Friday, after he was released and returned home. The dissident, Wang Xiaoning, 62, a former engineer, distributed pro-democracy writings using email and Yahoo forums, often anonymously. He was detained on Sept. 1, 2002, and later convicted of “inciting subversion of state power” using information the Chinese authorities received from Yahoo. — From wire reports

Fed chairman makes case U.S. poised to label for steps to spur growth Haqqani network

as a terrorist group

By Binyamin Appelbaum New York Times News Service

JACKSON HOLE, Wyo. — The Federal Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke, delivered a detailed and forceful argument Friday for new steps to stimulate the economy, reinforcing earlier indications that the Fed is on the verge of action. Calling the persistently high rate of unemployment a “grave concern,” language that several experts described as unusually strong, Bernanke made clear that a recent run of tepid rather than terrible economic data has not altered the Fed’s will to act, because the pace of growth remains too slow to reduce the number of people who lack jobs. The federal government said Wednesday that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 1.7 percent in the second quarter, slightly higher than its initial estimate of 1.5 percent but lackluster in normal times. A measure of consumer confidence hit a three-month high Friday, but that too was impressive only in comparison to the immediate past. The government will release a preliminary estimate of August job growth

By Eric Shmitt New York Times News Service

Ted S. Warren / The Associated Press

With the Teton Mountains behind them, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, left, and Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer walk together outside of the Jackson Hole Economic Symposium Friday at Grand Teton National Park near Jackson Hole, Wyo.

next week; it is expected to show that the unemployment rate remains above 8 percent. Bernanke said the Fed’s efforts over the last several years had helped to hasten economic recovery, that there was a clear need for additional action, and that the likely benefits of new steps to stimulate growth outweighed the potential costs.

“It is important to achieve further progress, particularly in the labor market,” Bernanke said. “Taking due account of the uncertainties and limits of its policy tools, the Federal Reserve will provide additional policy accommodation as needed to promote a stronger economic recovery and sustained improvement in labor market conditions in a context of price stability.”

WASHINGTON — Risking a new breach in relations with Pakistan, the Obama administration is leaning toward designating the Haqqani network, the insurgent group responsible for some of the most spectacular assaults on U.S. bases in Afghanistan in recent years, as a terrorist organization. With a congressional reporting deadline looming, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and top military officials are said to favor placing sanctions on the network, which operates in Afghanistan and Pakistan, according to half a dozen current and former administration officials. A designation as a terrorist organization would help dry up the group’s fundraising activities in countries like Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates, press Pakistan to carry out long-promised military action against the insurgents and sharpen

the administration’s focus on devising policies and operations to weaken the group, advocates say. But no final decision has been made. A spirited internal debate has U.S. officials, including several at the White House, worried about the consequences of such a designation not only for relations with Pakistan but also for peace talks with the Taliban and the fate of Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, the only U.S. soldier known to be held by the militants. Perhaps the most important consideration, administration and congressional officials say, is whether the designation would make any difference in the group’s ability to raise money or stage more assaults as the U.S.-led NATO force draws down in Afghanistan. Several Haqqani leaders have already been designated individually as “global terrorists,” so the issue now is what would be gained by designating the entire organization.

Pentagon threatens legal action against Navy SEALs author By Elisabeth Bumiller and Julie Bosman New York Times News Service

Michael Appleton / New York Times News Service

Jill Frisard carries her friend’s dog, Buddy, from her flooded home in Slidell, La., Friday. On Monday, President Barack Obama will visit the Gulf Coast to tour the damage from Hurricane Isaac and meet with officials about the recovery efforts.

Isaac causes floods en route to Midwest By Jack Healy and Bret Schulte New York Times News Service

ST. LOUIS — As Gulf Coast residents confronted a waterlogged landscape of flooded homes and debris-covered streets Friday, tatters of what had been Hurricane Isaac blew toward the parched Midwest, dumping more than a foot of rain, causing isolated flash floods and leaving thousands of people without power. Heavy rains overwhelmed drainage systems in parts of Arkansas, flooding roads and prompting some emergency rescues. But after a scorching summer, dry soil and lowflowing rivers and streams appeared to be absorbing much of the rain, officials said.

“We’ve been in a pretty bad drought, and a lot of this rain is being soaked up,” said Jayson Gosselin, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service in Weldon Spring, Mo., near St. Louis. “The ground can take a lot of rain, that’s for sure.” As the slow-moving storm curls its way northeast, emergency crews in Arkansas, Missouri and Illinois have been bracing for a weekend of heavy rains and lashing winds, sandbagging homes and businesses, and preparing to close roads. Meanwhile, officials canceled Labor Day fireworks shows and shooed other endof-summer festivals indoors. It was the messy denouement of a soaking storm that

had poured as many as two feet of water across parts of Louisiana and Mississippi. On Friday, officials in Plaquemines Parish, La., announced they had found the bodies of a middle-aged man and woman in the kitchen of their flooded home. As waters receded from some neighborhoods on the northern shore of Lake Pontchartrain, officials were slowly restoring electricity to the thousands left without power after the storm felled transmission lines and damaged power substations. And crews began punching holes in the parish’s brimming back levees, a process that could take a week to complete.

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon on Friday threatened legal action against the former member of the Navy SEALs who has written a first-person account of the raid that killed Osama bin Laden, but the author’s lawyer and the book’s publisher, Penguin, said they were proceeding with publication Tuesday. The Pentagon press secretary, George Little, told reporters in a briefing Friday that the book’s author, Matt Bissonnette, was “in material breach of nondisclosure agreements he signed with the U.S. government” to not reveal classified information and to submit his book to the Pentagon for review. Little said the Pentagon was “reviewing all options” against Bissonnette, but he would not specify what those options might be and repeatedly declined to say whether the Pentagon had determined if there was classified information in the book. Bissonnette did not submit his book to the Pentagon for review. Bissonnette’s lawyer, Robert Luskin, responded in a letter to the Pentagon that the author, who wrote under the pseudonym Mark Owen, had “sought legal advice about his responsibilities before agreeing to

publish his book and scrupulously reviewed the work to ensure that it did not disclose any material that would breach his agreements or put his former comrades at risk.” “He remains confident that he has faithfully fulfilled his duty,” Luskin wrote in the letter, a copy of which was obtained by The New York Times. The letter also said that the book was not subject to the nondisclosure agreement that the Defense Department said was violated. That agreement applied only to “specially identified Special Access Programs” that did not include the subject matter of the book, Luskin wrote. “Mr. Owen is proud of his service and respectful of his obligations,” the letter said. “But he has earned the right to tell his story.”

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Nonaligned nations back Iran on nuclear power, but not on Syria

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* By Thomas Erdbrink New York Times News Service

TEHRAN — The 120nation Nonaligned Movement handed its host Iran a diplomatic victory Friday, unanimously decreeing support for the disputed Iranian nuclear energy program and criticizing the U.S.-led attempt to isolate and punish Iran with unilateral economic sanctions. But the group’s communique, issued by Iranian state media at the end of its annual meeting, omitted any mention of support for Syria, Iran’s vital Middle East ally, which appeared to reflect a

view among many members that the Syrian government’s attempt to crush the uprising there was indefensible. The conspicuous omission of Syria from the document, called the Tehran Declaration, followed a dramatic day of maneuvering by Iran’s delegation to secure some kind of support for Syria’s government, diplomats said, as the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and his aides were criticizing foreign backing of the Syrian insurgency. Nonetheless for Iran, the final result of the Nonaligned Movement’s meeting, the

biggest international gathering in Iran since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, amounted to the strongest expression of support for Iran’s nuclear energy rights in its showdown with the West. The unanimous backing of the final document undercut the U.S. argument that Iran was an isolated outlier nation. The Tehran Declaration document not only emphasizes Iran’s right to peaceful nuclear energy but acknowledges the right to ownership of a full nuclear fuel cycle, which means uranium enrichment — a matter of deep dispute.

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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

Wolves Continued from A1 The announcement quickly sparked promises of legal challenges from environmental groups that argue wolves still need protection to maintain their successful recovery. Dan Ashe, the agency’s director, acknowledged the “emotional reaction to wolf hunting” but said it would not be “detrimental to long-term conservation of wolves.” “Quite the contrary, it will support long-term conservation of wolves as it has other predators like mountain lion and grizzly bear and black bear,” Ashe said. Wyoming has been chafing under federal wolf protections for years, with ranchers and hunters complaining that wolves kill other wildlife and many cattle. North America was once home to as many as 2 million gray wolves, but by the 1930s, fur traders, bounty hunters and government agents had poisoned, trapped and shot them to near extinction in the continental United States. An effort to revive their numbers emerged and centered on starting the recovery in Yellowstone. Overcoming protests from Wyoming farmers and ranchers who feared wolves would prey on their livestock, wildlife managers transplanted 14 wolves from Canada into Yellowstone in the mid-1990s. The effort exceeded all expectations as wolf numbers quickly multiplied, and Friday’s action means Wyoming can now take measures to control their population outside the Greater Yellowstone vicinity. “The wolf population in Wyoming is recovered, and it is appropriate that the responsibility for wolf management be returned to the state,” Gov. Matt Mead said Friday in support of the federal decision. There are about 270 wolves in Wyoming outside Yellowstone. There are about another 1,100 or so in Montana and Idaho, where wolves were delisted several years ago, and still more in Washington and Oregon. Wyoming’s management

Jobs Continued from A1 The middle-third — occupations in fields like construction, manufacturing and information with median hourly wages of $13.84 to $21.13 — accounted for 60 percent of job losses from the beginning of 2008 to early 2010. The job market has turned around since then, but those fields have represented only 22 percent of total job growth. Higher-wage occupations — those with a median wage of $21.14 to $54.55 — represented 19 percent of job losses when employment was falling, and 20 percent of job gains when employment began growing again. Lower-wage occupations, with median hourly wages of $7.69 to $13.83, accounted for 21 percent of job losses during the retraction. Since employment started expanding, they have accounted for 58 percent of all job growth. The occupations with the fastest growth were retail sales (at a median wage of $10.97 an hour) and food preparation workers ($9.04 an hour). Each category has grown by more than 300,000 workers since June 2009.

A demoralizing situation Some of these new, lowerpaying jobs are being taken by people just entering the labor force, like recent high school and college graduates. Many, though, are being filled by older workers who lost more lucrative jobs in the recession and were forced to take something to scrape by. “I think I’ve been very resilient and resistant and optimistic, up until very recently,” said Ellen Pinney, 56, who was dismissed from a $75,000-ayear job in which she managed procurement and supply for an electronics company in March 2008. Since then, she has cobbled together a series of temporary jobs in retail and home health care and worked as a part-time receptionist for a beauty salon. She is now working as an unpaid intern for a construction company, putting together bids and business plans for green energy projects and has

plan, which was agreed to last year by Gov. Matt Mead and U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, calls for the state to maintain at least 10 breeding pairs of wolves and at least 100 individual animals. Additional wolves inside Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks, the John D. Rockefeller Jr. Memorial Parkway — which is located between Yellowstone and Grand Teton — and the Wind River Indian Reservation in central Wyoming will maintain protection from being hunted. The state will classify wolves in the remaining 90 percent of Wyoming as predators, subject to being killed anytime by anyone. The Wyoming Game Commission has approved wolf hunts starting on Oct. 1, the day after the state’s management plan goes into effect. The state is prepared to issue unlimited hunting licenses but will call a halt after hunters kill 52 wolves.

Parishioner leads charge to usher in female deacons

Opponents speak out

By Manya A. Brachear

Wildlife advocates said Wyoming’s management plan allows the state too much freedom to hunt wolves. “From our perspective the Wyoming wolf management plan is just a disaster for the wolf. It drastically reduces the population and basically eliminates wolves from a large part of the state,” said Noah Greenwald with the Center for Biological Diversity. Jamie Rappaport Clark, president of Defenders of Wildlife, said in a statement that the organization would pursue legal action “to ensure that a healthy, sustainable wolf population.” Bryce Reece, executive vice president of the Wyoming Wool Growers Association, said ranchers for too long had their hands tied in trying to stop wolves attacking their livestock. “The reality is my folks aren’t in any big rush to get there to try to kill a wolf. They just want the ability to protect their livestock,” Reece said. “We are hopeful, by putting some pressure on them, they’ll move back into areas where it’s less habited and there’s less livestock.”

moved in with her 86-year-old father in Forked River, N.J. “I really can’t bear it anymore,” she said, noting that her applications to places like PetSmart and Target had gone unanswered. “From every standpoint — my independence, my sense of purposefulness, my self-esteem, my life planning — this is just not what I was planning.” As Pinney’s experience shows, low-wage jobs have not been growing quickly during this recovery; they have accounted for such a big share of job growth mostly because midwage job growth has been so slow.

Skill polarization This “polarization” of skills and wages has been documented meticulously by David Autor, an economics professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. A recent study found that this polarization has accelerated in the last three recessions — particularly the last one — as financial pressures forced companies to reorganize more quickly. “This is not just a nice, smooth process,” said Henry Siu, an economics professor at the University of British Columbia, who helped write the recent study about polarization and the business cycle. “A lot of these jobs were suddenly wiped out during the recession and are not coming back.” On top of the usual private sector revamps, state and local governments have been shedding workers in recent years. Those jobs lost in the public sector have been primarily in mid- and higher-wage positions, according to Bernhardt’s analysis. “Whenever you look at data like these, there is this tendency to get overwhelmed, that there are these inevitable, big macro forces causing this polarization and we can’t do anything about them. In fact, we can,” Bernhardt said. She called for more funds for states to stem losses in the public sector and federal infrastructure projects to employ idled construction workers. Both proposals have faced resistance from Republicans in Congress.

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To submit service information or announcements for religious organizations, email bulletin@bendbulletin.com or call 541-383-0358.

Lynne Mapes-Riordan, left, of Evanston, Ill., wants the opportunity to enter the Catholic Church’s deacon formation program. Chuck Berman Chicago Tribune

Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO — Lynne Mapes-Riordan of Evanston, Ill., hopes women will one day serve as Roman Catholic deacons. After 800 years, she could be one of the first. Growing up, she never gave ordination a second thought. But then she learned that, unlike the church’s verdict barring female priests, the question of female deacons has never been resolved. That open question has led MapesRiordan, 49, and her fellow parishioners at St. Nicholas Catholic Church in Evanston to seek an answer. If the church finds in favor of female deacons, she could become one of the first women ordained since the 12th century. After meeting last winter with members of the parish, including Mapes-Riordan, Chicago’s Cardinal Francis George reportedly promised to raise the question in Rome during his visit earlier this year. Scholars say female deacons wouldn’t be a novel or new idea, but the restoration of a tradition abandoned centuries ago. The idea of female deacons “is being talked about very slowly,” George said earlier this year during a forum at the Union League Club in response to a question about the future likelihood of female priests. “The diaconate is a more open question. At this place, at this time, it is not a possibility.” Mapes-Riordan, a lawyer, wife, mother of two and longtime parishioner at St. Nicholas, does not take a position on whether women should become priests. The church has made it clear that’s not permitted. Ordaining women as deacons is not the same, she said. “In a strange way, I don’t see this being about women,” Mapes-Riordan said during a recent interview inside St. Nicholas. “I see it as being about church and mission. We have this part of a puzzle, this piece, that I’m not going to say is missing, but we could have a fuller picture if this (letting women become deacons) was added. I don’t see it as a women’s issue. I see it as a matter for our church.”

An unresolved issue At a time when critics have accused Catholic church leaders of declaring a war on women by restricting insurance coverage for contraceptives, rebuking American nuns and maintaining an all-male priesthood, a renewed discussion about ordaining women as deacons indicates high-profile church leaders such as George want to give women more opportunities for church leadership. “It’s a message of hope. It’s a way to stay within the boundaries of Catholic teachings and have women with real preaching authority within the system,” said Phyllis Zagano, one of the American church’s leading researchers on the subject of women deacons. “I think the bishops need to address this issue directly.” In the Catholic Church, there are three levels of ordained clergy: bishops, priests and deacons. Deacons can’t say mass, hear confessions or anoint the sick, but they can baptize,

officiate at weddings or funerals and preach. A handful of scholars, including Zagano, argue that the diaconate of the early church included both men and women. In fact, they say the Apostle Paul tapped a female deacon, Phoebe, to deliver his most important epistle to the Romans, explaining the concept of salvation through Jesus Christ. Historians say in an attempt to accommodate societal norms, the church ceased giving women public leadership roles. The permanent diaconate vanished until the Second Vatican Council asked Pope Paul VI to reinstate it in the 1960s. Even then, the pope asked what role women should play, but the question reportedly never got a public answer. In 2002, the International Theological Commission of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith issued a report that didn’t rule out the possibility of female deacons. Seven years later, Pope Benedict XVI issued an apostolic letter that distinguished between the role of bishops and priests and the purpose of deacons. While bishops and priests act as icons of Christ, deacons act as Christ’s servants, he wrote. Sister Sara Butler, a professor of systematic theology at University of St. Mary of the Lake Mundelein Seminary, does not believe there is sufficient historical or theological evidence to support adding women to the permanent diaconate. One of the first two women named to the International Theological Commission in 2004, Butler said the church is still trying to sort out just what it means to be ordained a deacon. “I don’t think it’s because they don’t want women,” she said. “The theology of the diaconate needs to be thoroughly refined. A woman should not be prepared for this or encouraged to prepare themselves. This has been explicitly discouraged repeatedly.”

An open question As Mapes-Riordan waits for permission to discern what she perceives as a call to the diaconate, she is working on a master’s in liturgy at Catholic Theological Union. George declined to answer specific questions from the Tribune, reiterating through his spokeswoman that the matter of women deacons was still an “open theological question” for the church. During his meeting with parishioners, George expressed reservations, suggesting some theological questions had to be resolved first. But he also promised to include it in his report to the pope and to raise it with key leaders during his February meeting in Rome with the church’s leadership. “He did say it’s a question of our time,” Mapes-Riordan said. “It’s a question to get answered. There’s a sense of some urgency around it.” Tkachuk believes Cardinal George recognizes Mapes-Riordan’s authenticity. “I think he was truly valuing that,” Tkachuk said. “This is church at its best. We’re having a conversation. And we can all trust each other in this conversation.”

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ANTIOCH CHURCH: Don Jacobson; “A Theology of Hope” ; Sunday at 9:30 a.m.; Redux Q-and-A after the service; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St., Bend. BEND CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: Pastor Charlie Endicott ; “Looking to the Future”; Sunday at 10 a.m.; 4twelve youth group: Wednesday at 7 p.m.; 19831 Rocking Horse Road, Bend. BEND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE: Pastor Virgil Askren; a message from the series “Oops!”; Sunday at 10:15 a.m.; 1270 N.E. 27th St., Bend. DISCOVERY CHRISTIAN CHURCH: Pastor Dave Drullinger; “Unique Messenger” based on the Book of Galatians; Sunday at 10 a.m.; 334 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend. EASTMONT CHURCH: Pastor John Lodwick; “God’s Judgment on America and the Rapture,” as part of the series “Your Questions. God’s Answers.”; Sunday at 9 and 10:45 a.m.; 62425 Eagle Road, Bend. FAITH CHRISTIAN CENTER: Pastor Mike Johnson; “Life in the Way”; Sunday at 10:30 a.m.; 1049 N.E. 11th St., Bend. “Restored” youth services: Wednesday at 7 p.m. FATHER’S HOUSE CHURCH OF GOD: Pastor Randy Wills; “Are We Ready for God”; Sunday at 10 a.m.; 61690 Pettigrew Road, Bend. The youth group meets Wednesday at 7 p.m. THE FELLOWSHIP AT BEND: Pastor Brett Anderson; “Communion,” based on Mark 14:22-25; Sunday at 10 a.m.; Morning Star Christian School, 19741 Baker Road, Bend; and Sunday at 6 p.m.; 601 Larch St., Sisters. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH: End of summer outdoor service and BBQ; Sunday at 10:30 a.m.; 60 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: The Rev. Dr. Steven Koski; “Holy Talk and Sacred Casseroles”; Sunday at 10 a.m.; BBQ after worship; 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend. FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH: The Rev. Thom Larson; “Healing Intentions,” based on James 1:17-27 and Mark 7:1-8, 14-15, 21-23; Sunday at 9 and 11 a.m.; 680 N.W. Bond St., Bend. GRACE BIBLE CHURCH OF BEND: Pastor Phil Kooistra; “Pray for Everyone,” based on 1 Timothy 2:1-7; Sunday at 10 a.m.; Boys & Girls Club, 500 N.W. Wall St., Bend. GRACE FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH: Pastor Joel LiaBraaten; “Chop Wood and Carry Water” and “What Matters Most?”; Sunday at 9:30 a.m.; 2265 N.W. Shevlin Park Road, Bend. GRACE REFORMED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: Pastor Dan Dillard; “The Spirit Who Leads Us,” based on John 16:12-15; Sunday at 10:30 a.m.; 62162 Hamby Road, Bend. JOURNEY CHURCH: Pastor Keith Kirkpatrick; “Great Things”; Sunday at 10 a.m.; BBQ after church; 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend. NATIVITY LUTHERAN CHURCH: Pastor Craig Jorgensen; “Baseball, Hot Dogs, Apple Pie and ...,” based on Mark 7:1-8; Sunday at 10 a.m.; 11 a.m. potluck; 60850 Brosterhous Road, Bend. REAL LIFE CHRISTIAN CHURCH: Chris Babcock will share the message from Luke 15; Sunday at 8, 9:30 and 11 a.m.; 2880 N.E. 27th St., BEND SPIRITUAL AWARENESS COMMUNITY OF THE CASCADES: Kelsey Collins; “The Healing Force Within”; Sunday at 9 a.m.; held at The Old Stone Church, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend. TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH: Youth and Neighborhood Programs Fair; free; Sunday 9 a.m.-noon; 469 N.W. Wall St., Bend. TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH: The Rev. David Carnahan; “Godliness is Cleanliness,” based on Mark 7:1-8, 14-15; Sunday at 9 a.m.; no “ReFuel” on Wednesday; 2550 N.E. Butler Market Road, Bend. WESTSIDE CHURCH: Pastor Ken Johnson and Pastor Steve Mickel; “That the World May Know”; today at 6:30 p.m. and Sunday at 8, 9 and 10:45 a.m.; 2051 N.W. Shevlin Park Road, Bend. WESTSIDE SOUTH CAMPUS: Pastor Ken Johnson and Pastor Steve Mickel; “That the World May Know”; Sunday at 10:30 a.m.; 1245 S.E. Third St., Bend. COMMUNITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: Pastor Rob Anderson; “Do You Use a Night Light?” based on James 1:17-27; Sunday at 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m.; 529 N.W. 19th St., Redmond. EMMAUS LUTHERAN CHURCH: Pastor Robert Luinstra; “Who is my Neighbor?” based on Luke 10:23-37; Sunday at 10:30 a.m.; 2175 S.W. Salmon Ave., Redmond. ST. PAUL’S ANGLICAN CHURCH: Father John Pennington will present a sermon by Kraig Pullam; “The Man in the Middle,” based on Galatians 3:13-22; communion service; Sunday at 10 a.m.; Southwest 12th Avenue and Forest Avenue, Redmond. ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH: Pastor Eric Burtness ; “Finishing the Work God Gave You To Do”; Sunday at 10 a.m.; 1113 Black Butte Blvd., Redmond. AGAPE HARVEST FELLOWSHIP: Youth group Wednesday at 7 p.m.; 52460 Skidgel Road, La Pine. COMMUNITY BIBLE CHURCH AT SUNRIVER: Pastor Glen Schaumloeffel; “Heirs of God’s Riches,” as part of the series “Portraits of God’s Grace”; Sunday at 9:30 a.m.; 1 Theater Drive, Sunriver. CONCORDIA LUTHERAN MISSION: The Rev. Willis Jenson; “God’s Justice on Earth is the Justice of the Cross of Christ,” based on 2 Chronicles 28:9; Sunday at 11 a.m.; held at Terrebonne Grange Hall, 8286 11th St., Terrebonne.

Lord’s Prayer requests daily bread — not entire loaf By Lorraine Murray The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A friend was describing a lavish house she had just purchased. She listed multiple bathrooms, Jacuzzis and marble countertops, and then came the zinger, “It’s all because of God!” She is a firm believer in the prosperity gospel, so she expects God to reward her prayers with houses and cars, and whatever else her heart desires. From this perspective, health and wealth mean you are right with God, while hard times indicate some-

COMMENTARY thing is amiss. Problem is, the prosperity gospel is spiritually bankrupt. Nowhere did Christ promise his followers opulent houses and glittering jewelry and all the trappings of wealth. Instead, he recommended picking up the cross daily and following him. You’ll notice he didn’t say go get your bankroll. He also said rich folks would have a tough time get-

ting into heaven. When a wealthy young man sought his advice on becoming perfect, Christ told him to sell his possessions, give the money to the poor — and “come follow me.” Following him means at times enduring suffering, but prosperity-gospel folks sidestep that conclusion. They believe that if you’re down and out, that’s a sign of dwindling faith. They apparently forget the many Old Testament figures, like Job, who lost health and wealth while remaining faithful to God. They seem to over-

look the crucifixion itself. In truth, many well-off people fund missionary work, helping to feed the hungry and shelter the homeless. And it was a rich man who provided the tomb for Jesus. Still, it is spiritually dangerous to proclaim that people with money are God’s chosen few. There is a deeply moving refrain in the Psalms, “The Lord hears the cry of the poor.” The poor obviously include those with little money, as well as people with failing health.


SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 • THE BULLETIN “Celtic Cross” Christianity

“The Wheel of Dharma” Buddhism

“Star of David” Judaism

You Are The Most Important Part of Our Services “Omkar” (Aum) Hinduism

“Yin/Yang” Taoist/ Confucianism

“Star & Crescent” Islam

Do we have your Fall Schedule?

Assembly of God

Bible Church

FAITH CHRISTIAN CENTER 1049 NE 11th St. • 541-382-8274 SUNDAYS: 9:30 am Sunday Educational Classes 10:30 am Morning Worship

COMMUNITY BIBLE CHURCH AND CHRISTIAN PRESCHOOL 541-593-8341 Beaver at Theater Drive, PO Box 4278, Sunriver, OR 97707

This Sunday at Faith Christian Center, Pastor Mike Johnson will be sharing the Sunday service message titled, “Life in the Way” beginning at 10:30am Childcare is provided in our Sunday morning service. On Wednesdays “Restored Youth” service begins at 7:00 pm A number of Faith Journey Groups meet throughout the week in small groups, please contact the church for details and times. The church is located on the corner of Greenwood Avenue and NE 11th Street. www.bendfcc.com REDMOND ASSEMBLY OF GOD 1865 W Antler • Redmond 541-548-4555 SUNDAYS Morning Worship 8:30 am & 10:30 am Life groups 9 am Kidz LIVE ages 3-11 10:30 am Evening Worship 6 pm

“Transforming Lives Through the Truth of the Word” All are Welcome! SUNDAY WORSHIP AND THE WORD - 9:30 Am. Coffee Fellowship - 10:45 am Bible Education Hour - 11:15 am Nursery Care available • Women’s Bible Study - Tuesdays, 10 am • Awana Kids Club (4 yrs - 6th gr.) Sept. - May • Youth Ministry (gr. 7-12) Wednesdays 6:15 pm • Men’s Bible Study - Thursdays 9 am • Home Bible Studies are also available Preschool for 3 & 4 year olds Call for information Senior Pastor: Glen Schaumloeffel Associate Pastor: Jake Schwarze visit our Web site www.cbchurchsr.org Listen to KNLR 97.5 FM at 9:00 am. each Sunday to hear “Transforming Truth” with Pastor Glen.

Calvary Chapel CALVARY CHAPEL BEND 20225 Cooley Rd. Bend Phone: (541) 383-5097 Web site: ccbend.org Sundays: 8:30 & 10:30 am Wednesday Night Study: 7 pm Youth Group: Wednesday 7 pm Child Care provided Women’s Ministry, Youth Ministry are available, call for days and times. “Teaching the Word of God, Book by Book”

WEDNESDAYS FAMILY NIGHT 7PM Adult Classes Celebrate Recovery Wednesday NITE Live Kids Youth Group Pastor Duane Pippitt www.redmondag.com

Baptist

Catholic

EASTMONT CHURCH NE Neff Rd., 1/2 mi. E. of St. Charles Medical Center

HOLY REDEEMER CATHOLIC PARISH Fr. Theodore Nnabugo, Pastor www.holyredeemerparish.net Parish Office: 541-536-3571

Sundays 9:00 a.m. & 10:45 a.m. Worhip Services

HOLY REDEEMER, LA PINE 16137 Burgess Rd Tuesday, Wednesday & Friday Mass 9:00 am Sunday Mass — 10:00 am Confessions: Saturdays — 3:00–4:00 pm

Sundays 6:00 p.m. Hispanic Worship Service Weekly Bible Studies and Ministries for all ages Contact: 541-382-5822 Pastor John Lodwick www.eastmontchurch.com

HOLY TRINITY, SUNRIVER 18143 Cottonwood Rd. Thurs. Mass 9:30 am; Sat. Vigil Mass 5:30 pm Sunday mass 8:00 am Confessions: Thurs. 9:00 - 9:15 am

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH CBA “A Heart for Bend in the Heart of Bend” 60 NW Oregon, 541-382-3862 Pastor Syd Brestel SUNDAY 9:00 AM Sunday School for everyone 10:15 AM Worship Service

OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS, Gilchrist 120 Mississippi Dr Sunday Mass — 12:30 Pm Confessions: Sundays 12:00 –12:15 Pm

At First Baptist this Sunday, we will be having our end-of-summer outdoor service. Join us at 10:30am for worship and stick around for our BBQ afterwards! For Kidztown, Middle School and High School activities Call 541-382-3862 www.bendchurch.org HIGHLAND BAPTIST CHURCH, SBC 3100 SW Highland Ave., Redmond • 541-548-4161 Sunday Worship Services: 8:00 am, 9:30 am, 11:00 am Sunday Bible Fellowship Groups 9:30 am & 11:00 am Dr. Barry Campbell, lead pastor For complete calender: www.hbcredmond.org

Bible Church BEREAN BIBLE CHURCH In Partnership with American Missionary Fellowship Near Highland and 23rd Ave. 2378 SW Glacier Pl. Redmond, OR 97756 We preach the good news of Jesus Christ, sing great hymns of faith, and search the Scriptures together. Sunday Worship Service - 10:30 am Bible Study - Thursday, 10:30 am Pastor Ed Nelson 541-777-0784 www.redmondbbc.org

HOLY FAMILY, near Christmas Valley 57255 Fort Rock Rd Sunday Mass — 3:30 pm Confessions: Sundays 3:00–3:15 pm ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI CATHOLIC CHURCH Pastor Rev. James A. Radloff Parochial Vicar Rev. Juan Carlos Chiarinoti 541-382-3631 NEW CHURCH 2450 NE 27th Street Masses Saturday – Vigil 5:00 PM Sunday 7:30, 10:00 AM & 7:00 PM 12:30 PM Misa en Español Capilla Santa Clara – Misa en Español Miercoles 7:00 PM Reconciliation/Reconciliación Saturday ~ 3:00 – 4:45 PM – English Wednesday 6:00 – 7:00 PM – English o Español HISTORIC DOWN TOWN CHURCH Corner of NW Franklin & Lava Masses Sunday 4:30 PM Monday – Friday 7:00 AM Monday – Friday 12:15 PM Saturday 8:00 AM Exposition & Benediction Monday–Friday, after 7:00 AM Mass to 12:00 PM Reconciliation Tuesday after 7:00 AM Mass – 8:00 AM Saturday after 8:00 AM Mass – 9:30 AM ST. THOMAS CATHOLIC CHURCH 1720 NW 19th Street Redmond, Oregon 97756 541-923-3390 Father Todd Unger, Pastor Mass Schedule: Weekdays 8:00 am (except Wednesday) Wednesday 6:00 pm Saturday Vigil 5:30 pm First Saturday 8:00 am (English) Sunday 8:00 am, 10:00 am (English) 12:00 noon (Spanish) Confessions on Wednesdays from 5:00 to 5:45 pm and on Saturdays from 4:30 to 5:15 pm

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Christian

Jewish Synagogues

Lutheran

Presbyterian

CHRISTIAN CHURCH OF REDMOND 536 SW 10th, Redmond 541-548-2974 www.redmondchristian.org Sunday Worship 9:00 am & 10:30 am Friday Evening Worship 6:30 pm Sunday School for all ages Kidmo • Junior Church Greg Strubhar, Pastor Darin Hollingsworth, Youth Pastor

CONGREGATION SHALOM BAYIT (JEWISH COMMUNITY OF CENTRAL OREGON) www.jccobend.com Serving Central Oregon for 20 Years, We Are a Non-Denominational Egalitarian Jewish Community Our Synagogue is located at 21555 Modoc Lane, Bend, Oregon 541-385-6421 Resident Rabbi Jay Shupack Rebbetzin Judy Shupack

ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH ELCA Worship in the Heart of Redmond

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 230 NE Ninth, Bend (Across Ninth St. from Bend High) All Are Welcome, Always!

POWELL BUTTE CHRISTIAN CHURCH Cowboy Fellowship Saturdays Potluck 6 pm Music and the Word 7 pm Sunday Worship Services 8:30 am - 10:15 am - 11 am Nursery & Children’s Church Pastors: Chris Blair, Glenn Bartnik & Ozzy Osbourne 13720 SW Hwy 126, Powell Butte 541-548-3066 www.powellbuttechurch.com REAL LIFE CHRISTIAN CHURCH Like Hymns? We've Got 'em! at the RLCC Church, 2880 NE 27th Sunday Services 8 am Traditional Service (No child care for 8 am service) 9:30 am Contemporary Service with full child care 11 am Service (Full child care) For information, please call ... Minister - Mike Yunker - 541-312-8844 Richard Belding, Associate Pastor “Loving people one at a time.” www.real-lifecc.org

Christian Schools EASTMONT COMMUNITY SCHOOL “Educating and Developing the Whole Child for the Glory of God” Pre K - 5th Grade 62425 Eagle Road, Bend • 541-382-2049 Principal Lonna Carnahan www.eastmontcommunityschool.com

Christian Science FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1551 NW First St. • 541-382-6100 (South of Portland Ave.) Church Service & Sunday School: 10 am Wed. Testimony Meeting: 7:30 pm Childcare provided. Reading Room: 115 NW Minnesota Ave. Mon. through Fri.: 11 am - 4 pm Sat. 12 noon - 2 pm

Eckankar ECKANKAR Religion of the Light and Sound of God You Are Warmly Invited To A Worship Service Join people from all walks of life at this ECK Worship Service to experience the Light and Sound of God. This event is free and open to all on September 23, at 2:00PM at the Deschutes County Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters, OR.

Shabbat and High Holiday Services Religious Education Program Bar/Bat Mitzvah Training Weekly Torah Study Every Sat @ 10 am Active Sisterhood Erev Rosh Hashana Service, Sunday, September 16 Doors open at 6:30 pm, Services at 7 pm Rosh Hashana Day Service Monday, September 17 Doors open at 9:30 am, Services at 10 am followed by Potluck Lunch 11 am Children’s Services Tashlich will be at 3:00 pm at the bridge in Drake Park 1st Day of Religious Education ~ Sunday, September 23rd Kol Nidreei/Erev Yom Kippur Service, Tuesday September 25th ~ Doors Open at 5:45 pm, Services at 6:30 pm SHARP Yom Kippur Day Service, Wednesday, September 26 ~ Doors Open at 9:30 am, Services at 10 am Ni’ilah 6:40–7:44 pm and Community Potluck Break the Fast ~ 8 pm

For more information and inspiration please visit www.eckankar.org or www.miraclesinyourlife.org or call 541-728-6476 (message phone)

Episcopal TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH 469 NW Wall St. • 541-382-5542 www.trinitybend.org Sunday Schedule 8 am Holy Eucharist 9:15 am Education for All Ages 10:15 am Holy Eucharist (w/nursery care & Godly Play) 5 pm Holy Eucharist (in St. Helens Hall) The Rev. Roy D. Green, Interim Rector

Evangelical THE SALVATION ARMY 755 NE 2nd Street, Bend 541-389-8888 SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP 541 NE Dekalb Sunday School 9:45 am Children & Adult Classes Worship Service – 11:00 am Major’s Robert & Miriam Keene NEW HOPE EVANGELICAL 20080 Pinebrook Blvd.• 541-389-3436 Celebrate New Life at New Hope Church! Saturday 6:00 pm Sunday 9:00, 10:45 am, Pastor Randy Myers www.newhopebend.com

Foursquare CITY CENTER A Foursquare Fellowship Senior Pastors Steve & Ginny McPherson 549 SW 8th St., P.O. Box 475, Redmond, OR 97756 • 541-548-7128 Sunday Worship Services: Daybreak Café Service 7:30 am Celebration Services 9:00 am and 10:45 am Wednesday Service UTurn - Middle School 7:00 pm Thursdays High School (Connection) 6:30 pm Home Bible Studies throughout the week City Care Clinic also available. Kidz Center School, Preschool www.citycenterchurch.org “Livin’ the Incredible Mission”

Children’s Room available during services Come Experience a warm, friendly family of worshipers. Everyone Welcome - Always. A vibrant, inclusive community. A rich and diverse music program for all ages Coffee, snacks and fellowship after each service M-W-F Women’s Exercise 9:30 am Wed. Bible Study at noon 3rd Th. Women’s Circle/Bible Study 1:00 pm 3rd Tues. Men’s Club 6:00 pm, dinner Youth and Family Programs Active Social Outreach 1113 SW Black Butte Blvd. Redmond, OR 97756 ~ 541-923-7466 Pastor Eric Burtness www.zionrdm.com

Rabbi Glenn Ettman High Holy Days Services High Holy Days Services to be held in the sanctuary of the First United Methodist Church Rabbi Glenn Ettman with Cantor Margaret Bruner Erev Rosh Hashanah Service ~ Monday, September 16 @ 7:00 pm Rosh Hashanah Day Service ~ Tuesday, September 17 @ 10:00 am Rosh Hashanah Children’s Service ~ Tuesday, September 17 @ 2:00 pm Erev Yom Kippur Service, Kol Nidre ~ Tuesday, September 25 @ 7:00 pm Yom Kippur Day Service Wednesday, September 26 @ 10:00 am

Lutheran CONCORDIA LUTHERAN MISSION (LCMS) The mission of the Church is to forgive sins through the Gospel and thereby grant eternal life. (St. John 20:22-23, Augsburg Confession XXVIII.8, 10) 10 am Sunday School 11 am Divine Service The Rev. Willis C . Jenson, Pastor. 8286 11th St (Grange Hall), Terrebonne, OR www.lutheransonline.com/ condordialutheranmission Facebook: Concordia Lutheran Mission Phone: 541-325-6773 GRACE FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH 2265 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend 541-382-6862 Sunday Worship 9:30 am (Child Care Available) Pastor Joel LiaBraaten Evangelical Lutheran Church in America www.gracefirstlutheran.org NATIVITY LUTHERAN CHURCH 60850 Brosterhous Road at Knott, 541-388-0765 Come worship with us. There will be one service this Sunday, September 2 at 10am The sermon title is, “Baseball, Hot Dogs, Apple Pie and…” given by Pastor Craig Jorgensen based on Mark 7:1–8 (Child care provided on Sundays.) www.nativityinbend.com Evangelical Lutheran Church in America TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH & SCHOOL LCMS 2550 NE Butler Market Road Bend, OR 97701 541-382-1832

Wednesday Noon Silence & Supper Worship 12:30 pm Contemplative Prayer 7:00 pm Learning to Pray Youth Events See Youth Blog: http://bendfp.org/youth/ Choirs, music groups, Bible study, Fellowship and ministries every week 230 NE Ninth Street, Bend www.bendfp.org 541 382 4401

Messianic

Unitarian Universalist UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISTS OF CENTRAL OREGON “Diverse Beliefs, One Fellowship” We are a Welcoming Congregation

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 • Home groups • Teaching from the Torah and the Brit TEMPLE BETH TIKVAH Hadashah (New Testament) Temple Beth Tikvah is a member of the • Biblical Feasts Union for Reform Judaism. Our members represent a wide range • Lifecycle Events • End-times prophecy of Jewish backgrounds. We welcome interfaith families and Jews by choice. Our monthly activities include social functions, services, religious education, Hebrew school, Torah study, and adult education

Rev. Dr. Steven H. Koski Lead Pastor One Tent, One Service, One Community! “Holy Talk And Sacred Casseroles” 10:00 am Single Service Under the Big Tent! Sunday School: 3 yrs to 6th grade. Nursery care provided. 11:00 am Free Summer-end BBQ (Bouncy House for Kids!)

HOUSE OF COVENANT 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:

Daycare and children’s activities provided for all HHD services.

This service begins with a short We are currently enrolling students reading from the works of Eckankar. in grades K–7 for Sunday School and This is followed by a brief HU Song, Hebrew School. Hebrew Classes begin a sacred name for God, which includes Monday, September 10; Sunday School a time for quiet contemplation. begins, September 23rd. “Spiritual Tools For A More Joyful Life” For more information about our is the Worship Service topic. education programs, please call Is laughter important in your life? Kathy Schindel at 541-388-8826. Even though Life often seems to throw obstacles in our way—what if you knew All services are held at the how to create a space where you could First United Methodist Church feel harmony, balance, peace and 680 NW Bond Street love? Come and discover ways you can 541-388-8826 do this in your life. www.bethtikvahbend.org There will be an opportunity to share your insights, stories and inspirations on this topic in small group discussions with others who attend.

Sunday Worship Service 10:00 am, May 27 - Sept. 2

Visit us on the web at www.houseofcovenant.org or contact us at 541-385-5439 LIVING TORAH FELLOWSHIP @ Celebration Church 63830 Clausen Rd Ste 102, Bend Saturday 10:30 am - 2 pm Worship/Dance - Study Food/Fellowship Hebrew Roots Fellowship worshipping in Spirit and Truth 541-410-5337 Children’s Program www.livingtorahfellowship.com

Nazarene BEND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 1270 NE 27 St. • 541-382-5496 Senior Pastor Virgil Askren SUNDAY 9:00 am Sunday School for all ages 9:00 am Hispanic Worship Service 10:15 am Worship Service Nursery Care & Children’s Church ages 4 yrs–4th grade during all Worship Services “Courageous Living” on KNLR 97.5 FM 8:30 am Sunday WEDNESDAY 6:30 pm Ladies Bible Study THURSDAY 10:00 am 50+ Bible Study WEEKLY Life Groups Please visit our website for a complete listing of activities for all ages. www.bendnaz.org

Sunday, September 2, 2012 - 11:00am: “Freedom: Our Choices Shape Our Lives” Guest speaker Homer Wilkins: Few (if any) take full advantage (in the good sense of the word) of the tremendous freedoms we have. This service will include stories of people who, inspite of almost impossible odds, have been able to make use of their freedom to live productive, even inspiring, lives. Even in the worst of circumstances, we still have choices. Homer Wilkins has taught physics at several colleges and universities and worked as a top administrator in community mental health. Childcare and religious education are provided! Everyone is Welcome! See our website for more information www.uufco.org Meeting place: THE OLD STONE 157 NW FRANKLIN AVE., BEND Mail: PO Box 428, Bend OR 97709 www.uufco.org (541) 385-3908

United Church of Christ ALL PEOPLES UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST Come as you are; depart with renewal and progressive refocusing of your spiritual life. Worship with us Sunday, September 2, at 11 a.m. in the Community Room of Redmond’s Ray’s Market, 900 SW 23rd Street, just off of Hwy 126. Or, come early at 10 a.m. for adult study and discussion. All Peoples meets on the first and third Sundays of each month. On September 16th, Special Music Sunday will host a live music group with a very short worship service, again in the Community Room of Redmond’s Ray’s Market. For details, directions and possible help with car-pooling, email: prisbill@earthlink.net, or call: 541-390-6864

Unity Community UNITY COMMUNITY OF CENTRAL OREGON Join the Unity Community Sunday 10:00 am with Rev. Jane Meyers Youth Program Provided The Unity Community meets at 62855 Powell Butte Hwy (near Bend Airport) Learn more about the Unity Community of Central Oregon at www.unitycentraloregon.com or by calling 541-388-1569

Non-Denominational SOVEREIGN GRACE CHURCH Meeting at the Golden Age Club 40 SE 5th St., Bend Just 2 blocks SW of Bend High School Sunday Worship 10:00 am Sovereign Grace Church is dedicated to worshipping God and teaching the Bible truths recovered through the Reformation. Call for information about other meetings 541-420-1667 http://www.sovereigngracebend.com/

Open Bible Standard CHRISTIAN LIFE CENTER 21720 E. Hwy. 20 • 541.389.8241 “Run to Win!” This Summer at CLC Summer Schedule Sunday--9:30 AM in the Amphitheater Wednesday Mid-week Services--7 PM Nursery Care and Children’s programs provided for all services. Pastor Daniel N. LeLaCheur 21720 E. Hwy. 20 541.389.8241 www.clcbend.com

Presbyterian COMMUNITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 529 NW 19th Street (3/4 mile north of High School) Redmond, OR 97756 (541) 548-3367 Rev. Rob Anderson, Pastor Rev. Heidi Bolt, Associate Pastor 9:00 am Contemporary Worship 9:00 am Nursery Care 9:15 am Children & Youth Sunday School 9:30 am Adult Education 11:00 am Traditional Worship Youth Groups High School ~ Sunday 11:00am–12:30pm Middle School ~ Wednesday 6:00–7:30pm

SUNDAY WORSHIP 9:00 AM Staffed Nursery provided

Mondays 6:30 pm Centering Prayer

Next week we switch to our Fall/Winter Schedule

Wednesdays 5:30 pm Prayer Service

Church Website: www.trinitylutheranbend.org School Website: www.saints.org Pastors: Rev. David Carnahan Rev. Patrick Rooney Principal: Mrs. Hanne Krause

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

United Methodist FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH (In the Heart of Down Town Bend) 680 NW Bond St. / 541-382-1672 Everyone is Welcome! Rev. Thom Larson Sermon Title: “Healing Intentions” Scripture: James 1:17–27 Mark 7:1–8, 14–15, 21–23 9:00am - Contemporary Service Jubilee Sunday School 11:00am - Traditional Service Childcare provided on Sunday *During the Week: Women’s Groups, Men’s Groups, Youth Groups, Quilting, Crafting, Music & Fellowship, Open Hearts. Open Minds. Open Doors. Rev. Thom Larson firstchurch@bendumc.org

CHURCH & SYNAGOGUE DIRECTORY LISTING Effective May 1, 2012 4 Saturdays and TMC: $110 5 Saturdays and TMC: $132 The Bulletin: Every Saturday on the church page. $22 Copy Changes: by 5 PM Tuesday CO Marketplace: The First Tuesday of each month. $22 Copy Changes: by Monday 1 week prior to publication

Call Pat Lynch 541-383-0396 plynch@bendbulletin.com

Directory of Central Oregon Churches and Synagogues


A6

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

Reservoir

CAMPAIGN 2012

Continued from A1 “It’s going to turn into a stinky, useless lake, at least for recreation,” he said. Under Merkley’s bill, the Bureau of Reclamation, the tribes and the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife will decide when and how much water is sent downriver from the reservoir to benefit fish. Merkley said it’s in the best interests of those water managers to keep the lake full. If they draw down the reservoir one year to benefit fish there could be insufficient water for the fish the following year if it’s a dry one, he said. Still, it’s unknown exactly what will happen to water levels in the Prineville Reservoir if Congress passes Merkley’s bill, called the Crooked River Collaborative Water Security Act. The Ochoco Irrigation District, which supports the bill, developed models of the river system from 70 years of water data. It’s likely that lake levels won’t drop significantly during the summer recreation season, as snowmelt keeps the lake brimming and downriver flows are high then anyway, said district manager Mike Kasberger. “While it will lower the lake levels, the lake will still be very useable,” he said of the bill. The reservoir, about 15 miles southeast of Prineville on the Crooked River, is a popular spot for anglers and water skiers. There are an estimated 575,000 visits to the Prineville Reservoir and the nearby Ochoco Reservoir each year, providing about $6.7 million in economic benefits, according to the Bureau

Romney diverts from trail to visit flooded Louisiana

Obama marks end of Iraq war, focuses on veteran care

By Maeve Reston

By Roger Runningen

Los Angeles Times

Bloomberg News

JEAN LAFITTE, La. — Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney toured a flood-ravaged area of the Louisiana bayou on Friday in the aftermath of the hurricane that disrupted his party’s national convention in Florida. Accompanied by his wife, Ann Romney, the candidate rode in an SUV past submerged gas stations and flooded homes in this Mississippi Delta community near New Orleans. In some places, the water was several feet deep. Romney got out of the vehicle and had an informal roadside conversation with Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal and U.S. Sen. David Vitter, both Republicans. “I’m here to learn and obviously to draw some attention to what’s going on here, so that people around the country know that people down here need help,” he told the governor. Jindal told the former Massachusetts governor about relief efforts by the Red Cross, Salvation Army and other organizations. Romney inquired about how many people were out of their homes or in shelters. “Did the water come from the sky, or the rivers, or the ocean?” he asked. The answer could not be heard. Romney’s visit triggered a harsh reaction from Democrats in Congress, who charged that his running mate Paul Ryan, a Wisconsin congressman, has proposed a federal budget that would gut money needed to respond to disasters, such as Hurricane Isaac. Harry Reid, the Senate majority leader, said in a statement: “It is the height of hypocrisy for Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan to make a pretense of showing sympathy for the victims of Hurricane Isaac when their policies would leave those affected by this disaster stranded and on their own.”

FORT BLISS, Texas — President Barack Obama used a stop at Fort Bliss, Texas, Friday to remind voters that he kept his vow to end the war in Iraq and wind down the conflict in Afghanistan, while promising veterans they won’t be forgotten. Even though the trip was listed as official business rather than a campaign event, Obama’s remarks directly addressed some of the criticisms by Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, from national security to the economy. “If you hear anyone trying to say that America is in decline or that our influence has waned, don’t you believe it,” Obama said. “Around the world, there is a new attitude toward America, new confidence in our leadership. When people are asked, which country do you admire most, one nation always comes out on top: the United States of America.” Obama made the same trip on Aug. 31, 2010, followed by an address to the nation from the White House that evening in which he declared an end to the U.S. combat role in Iraq. The president declared an end to the war 16 months later in a speech to troops at Fort Bragg, N.C. “Because of your determination to succeed you turned back an insurgency,” he told the soldiers at Fort Bliss. “You helped pull Iraq back from the abyss.” Romney, who accepted the Republican Party’s nomination for president yesterday in Tampa, Fla., tied Obama’s handling of the economy to the concerns of veterans, in remarks earlier this week. “They’ve served their country. They want to get back to work,” Romney told the American Legion in a speech Aug. 29 in Indianapolis. “This president’s greatest failure is that he’s not delivered those jobs.”

Ridgeview Continued from A1 His teammates chuckle when Majors’ mouth guard is discovered and he protests, cheerfully, insisting it’s a quality piece crafted by his orthodontist. When the Ravens play the Panthers, Majors promises to smile fiercely across the line, showing off his mouth guard for his old teammates and new crosstown rivals. When, exactly, that will happen is not yet known. Though Ridgeview and Redmond will face off in other sports this year, the football teams may not go head-to-head for another year or two. Across town earlier in the day, Redmond High School principal Nicole MacTavish sat in her office in a double-wide trailer. The nearly 40-year-old school is undergoing a face-lift of its own in the interest of giving Redmond and Ridgeview students a mostly equal expe-

Honor codes Continued from A1 But Donald McCabe of Rutgers University, an expert on academic cheating, puts the number of schools that go beyond such rules with some sort of formal honor code at no more than about 100. Details vary, but the commonalities are a pledge signed — and largely enforced — by students not to cheat. Some require students also to report any cheating they witness. At a few places, such as the military academies, the University of Virginia and some tradition-bound liberal arts colleges, honor codes extend far beyond academic misconduct and cover any lying and cheating. Many such schools are clustered in the South. William & Mary, in Virginia, claims to have had the first student honor code, dating to 1779 at the behest of Thomas Jefferson, an alumnus and the state governor at the time.

Cheating culture “You have surveys showing between two-thirds and threequarters of college students cheat, and higher ed leaders don’t care, or at least not enough to do anything about it,” said David Callahan, senior fellow at Demos, a think tank, and author of the book “The Cheating Culture: Why More Americans Are Doing Wrong to Get Ahead.” If cheating cost schools points in the U.S. News & World Report college rankings, he said, “then you’d see more action.” Research dating back 40

Rob Kerr / The Bulletin

Prineville Reservoir Resort owners Rick and Julie Mayers are concerned that a bill by Sen. Jeff Merkley would draw down the water level in the reservoir and hurt their business.

of Reclamation. Rick Mayers, who owns the Prineville Reservoir Resort, is concerned lower lake levels will impact fishing, make boat ramps unusable and hurt his business. “It’s going to affect the

economy of the county because when people know the lake is low they’re not going to come,” he said. Mayers wants an amendment to the bill that guarantees the lake level can’t drop below a certain point. The crowd Friday was at times hostile and grilled Merkley and local officials about why the bill allows outside groups, like the tribes and the Bureau of Reclamation, to control water in the reservoir. City Manager Steve Forrester said the bill is a compromise. The bill guarantees water for the city and irrigators and protects that water from environmental litigation in exchange for water downstream for fish, he said. “This legislation protects Prineville,” Forrester said.

“What we have now is no protection.” The bill allows the city to pump 5,100 acre-feet of water a year for homes and businesses and guarantees irrigators 80,000 acre-feet of water annually. Another provision removes the “wild and scenic” designation from a quarter-mile of river just below the reservoir, allowing Portland General Electric to potentially build a hydroelectric plant there. The bill, co-sponsored by Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., was assigned to the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources. A similar bill sponsored by Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., passed the House in June.

rience, and will be partially under construction through the upcoming school year. Though this will be MacTavish’s first year in the district, she said opening Ridgeview will inevitably change Redmond High School. One school may have the better test scores one year, or win the football game between the two, she said, forcing each to push that much harder to distinguish themselves in the eyes of the community. “(Ridgeview Principal Lee) Loving and I have a friendly rivalry, though we haven’t bet any haircuts or anything like that,” she said. “There is going to be a comparison, but the demographics are about the same no matter how you slice the town.” FreshmancheerleadersHalie Bride and Shania Chesney said Ridgeview’s impressive building may already be shaping impressions of the school. Shania said some classmates who

elected to go to Redmond this year have concluded those who chose Ridgeview are “snobby,” a sentiment Halie said she’s heard as well. Halie said by the time she and Shania graduate, Ridgeview will have formed its own identity, and she’s excited at the idea they can help set the tone for their new school. “I want us to be known not for being just a nice school, but for doing well, and being nice people,” she said. Randy Lunsford, 53, settled in to the stands early Friday. A 1977 graduate of Redmond High School, his son, Ryan, is a sophomore on the Ravens junior varsity team. When Lunsford played football, the Panthers chief rivals were Bend High School, a relationship that began to fade two years after he graduated when Bend opened its second high school. The Lava Bears measured themselves against Mountain View High School,

and Redmond, Lunsford said, was effectively “orphaned.” The Ridgeview-Redmond rivalry probably won’t come into full flower for another two years, Lunsford said, at least as far as football is concerned. No seniors — football players or otherwise — are enrolled at Ridgeview this year, and Lunsford said a large number of talented juniors elected to leave Redmond High School to get out from under the shadow of their older teammates. If they play next year, those players who are juniors this year will almost certainly make Ridgeview the stronger team. But come the fall of 2014, Lunsford said both schools will finally get the chance to go head-tohead as equals. “It’ll be the start of something great when that game gets played,” he said. “It’ll give this town a whole lot to buzz about.”

years shows lower rates of cheating on campuses with honor codes — in McCabe’s data, the rate is about a quarter lower. Still, such numbers show codes aren’t a panacea, and he says they won’t work everywhere. For schools that have them, honor codes are a point of pride, with visible effects on campus. At tiny all-male Hampden-Sydney in Virginia, students leave their backpacks in hallways and other public places without fear of theft. At schools like Wellesley and Davidson, the whole feel of final exam season is different. Students typically schedule exams themselves, or take them home, signing a pledge to follow the rules and not to share the questions with other students. At Davidson, outside Charlotte, N.C., the student-run honor council, which can impose punishments up to indefinite suspension, hears about 12 to 15 cases per year. Taylor White, a senior who leads the honor council, said that’s a remarkably small number for a school of 1,950 students. But the code does more than instill a socially beneficial fear of getting caught, she said. It also imbues the whole campus with an atmosphere of trust, and gives students values they carry after graduation. “It’s liberating,” White said, for students not to worry others are cheating. “We all sort of feel that there’s an instant respect when you meet any student in any class, and also a trust.” The code, she said, “works for students here every single day. It works against

students 12 to 15 times a year.” But that culture can take decades, even centuries, to develop. McCabe’s research found that while honor code schools have less cheating overall, there are exceptions. His research shows that what appears to prevent cheating is a culture of taking academic integrity seriously. Often that correlates with a code, but not always. Also required are buy-in from students and faculty, and constant renewal for incoming students. That usually only works on a manageably sized residential campus with a strong identity.

tion like that and it’s a shame that not everybody can handle the motto of the school. But if people want to cheat, they’re going to cheat. A code isn’t going to change that.” Joseph Lanzillo, a freshman from Glen Ellyn, Ill., said he thought a code was a good idea, though it can’t be something “you just make people sign,” he said. “It has to be really engrained in the place, and I kind of expected it would be, until I heard about this.” A few schools have implemented honor codes in recent years, such as Georgetown in 1996, but others have dropped them or continued without. Another hesitation for colleges is that putting potentially career-altering punishments in the hands of students is getting riskier, with students more likely to sue. Discussions about a possible honor code at Harvard have been under way since at least 2010, the Crimson has reported, but the university said this episode would lead to a campuswide conversation about academic honesty, which could include starting an honor code. Callahan, the author of the book on cheating, said that as a place grooming so many future global leaders, Harvard should demand more of itself. “I find it shocking that a place like Harvard doesn’t have an honor code,” he said. “This is a major failure of leadership in higher education. If a school like Harvard doesn’t have an honor code, without all of its leadership responsibilities, somebody’s not paying attention.”

To Madras 26

Prineville

26

126 To Bend, Redmond

Lower Crooked Wild and Scenic River 27

Bowman Dam

Prineville Reservoir

Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin

At Harvard Harvard officials said Thursday they discovered roughly half the students in a class of about 250 people may have shared answers or plagiarized on a final. The Harvard Crimson student newspaper and Wall Street Journal reported the cheating allegations concerned a government course called “Introduction to Congress.” “These allegations, if proven, represent totally unacceptable behavior that betrays the trust upon which intellectual inquiry at Harvard depends,” President Drew Faust said. In Harvard Yard on Friday, several students said that even without a formal code, Harvard does send the message academic honesty is important. They doubted a code would help. “ ‘Veritas,’ it’s honesty,” said Anna Maguire, a freshman from Westfield, N.J. “I think you come to an institu-

— Reporter: 541-633-2184, jaschbrenner@bendbulletin.com

— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com

Eastwood’s speech unsettles top aides By Michael Barbaro and Jeremy W. Peters New York Times News Service

TAMPA, Fla. — Clint Eastwood’s off-color endorsement of Mitt Romney on Thursday seemed to startle and unsettle the candidate’s own top aides, several of whom made a point of distancing themselves from the decision to put him onstage without a polished script. “Not me,” said an exasperated-looking senior adviser, when asked who was responsible for Eastwood’s speech. In late-night interviews, aides variously called the speech “strange” and “weird.” One described it as “theater of the absurd.” Finger-pointing quickly ensued, suggesting real displeasure and even confusion over the handling of Eastwood’s performance, which was kept secret until the last minute. A senior Republican involved in convention planning said Eastwood’s appearance was cleared by at least two of Romney’s top advisers, Russ Schriefer and Stuart Stevens. This person said that there had been no rehearsal, to the surprise of the rest of the campaign team. But another adviser said that several top aides had reviewed talking points given to Eastwood, which the campaign had discussed with the actor as recently as a few hours before his appearance. Stevens, in an interview, said he would not discuss internal decision-making but described Eastwood’s re-

marks as improvised. “He spoke from the heart with a classic improv sketch which everyone at the convention loved,” Stevens said. Eastwood delivered a speech in which he pretended to have a sarcasm-filled conversation with President Barack Obama sitting by his side in an empty chair. “Mr. President, how do you handle promises that you made when you were running for election?” Eastwood said. Eastwood, 82, also asked the invisible Obama why he had not closed the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. “What do you mean, shut up?” he said, continuing to talk to his imaginary companion. A moment later, he stopped again, saying, “What do you want me to tell Mr. Romney?” “I can’t tell him that. He can’t do that to himself,” Eastwood said. “You’re getting as bad as Biden.” Eastwood was scheduled to speak for about five minutes but stayed onstage much longer, throwing off the schedule for Romney. Leonard Hirshan, Eastwood’s manager, said the actor was traveling and would not be available for interviews until he started promotional work for his next film, “Trouble With the Curve,” set for release by Warner Brothers on Sept. 21. The campaign insisted Romney enjoyed the speech. “I was backstage with him, and he was laughing,” Stevens said.


SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

A7

Threats to the Amazon jungle sprout outside Brazil By Juan Forero The Washington Post

ASCENCION, Bolivia — On a scorching afternoon in the Amazon, all Agustin Villa and his partner needed was a chain saw and gasoline to take down an 82-foot hardwood in less than two minutes. Battling thick brush and mosquitoes, the pair downed 25 trees in all that day, from silk-cotton softwoods to figs, clearing the limbs and sawing them into sections for tractors to drag to a nearby dirt road. Across this corner of eastern Bolivia, peasants torch the forest for subsistence crops, while soy producers clear trees to plant one of the world’s great cash crops. Their relentless push, much of it legal, has given Bolivia the highest rate of Amazonian deforestation and underscored a little-known trend that environmentalists say should be a wake-up call for the world’s greatest forest. While environmental campaigns have, for decades, focused on Brazil’s Amazon, today in South America, it is the enormous expanse of Amazonian forest outside of Brazil, in a moon-shaped arc from Bolivia to Colombia and east to French Guiana, that is facing its most serious threat. In Brazil, the enforcement of land-use laws reduced deforestation by 76 percent in eight years, from 10,424 square miles in 2004 — when a swath bigger than Maryland was cleared of jungle — until last year, when the country’s National Institute for Space Research reported

that 2,471 square miles had been destroyed. But more than 40 percent of the Amazon is beyond Brazil’s borders, spread across eight countries in a carpet of green six times the size of California. These countries are poorer and less stable than Brazil, with less capacity to control clear-cutting of trees. Government agencies that regulate land use are spread thin, and some of those countries, including Bolivia, actively promote development in the jungle. Satellite data and field work by environmental and forestry ministries in the region show that deforestation in the non-Brazilian Amazon rose from an annual average of 1,930 square miles in the 1990s to 2,779 square miles last year. “There’s more deforestation going on in the Andean Amazon than in the Brazilian Amazon,” said Timothy Killeen, a Bolivia-based ecologist and geographer who works with environmental groups and has been studying deforestation in the Amazon for 25 years. “Before, Brazilian deforestation was four times as great as in the Andean Amazon. Now the Andes has more. We’re winning the battle in Brazil but losing the battle in the Amazon.” Deforestation is not increasing in every country with Amazonian forest. Indeed, recent preliminary data from Colombia and Ecuador show a reduction in clear-cutting. And in all the countries that contain a piece of the Ama-

“There’s a Bolivian perception that the future is in Amazonia. And that perception and the dynamics that go with it are leading big businessmen to embrace a vision that’s leading to this deforestation.” — Eduardo Forno, director of Conservation International in Bolivia

zon, including Brazil, more than 80 percent of the forest remains largely intact. But in Bolivia, where the Amazon is vast but just a seventh the size of Brazil’s, the amount of territory deforested annually is more than half as much as was lost in Brazil. Peru, which has a stretch of rain forest bigger than Texas, is seeing hundreds of square miles fall annually to chain saws, fires and machinery. Some of the smaller countries, such as French Guiana, have seen a dramatic spike in deforestation. The driver of deforestation has been a commodity boom centered on exports to China and other Asian economies. In Peru, mining and infrastructure development projects are to blame, environmentalists say, while in Ecuador, oil companies have expanded into the jungle. Small-scale farmers and moneyed producers of oil palm trees are cutting into the bush in Colombia. In the eastern shoulder of South America — Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana — artisanal gold mining is seen as a main threat. These countries have less influence with other govern-

ments at climate-change conferences than Brazil, which has one of the world’s leading economies and whose Amazonian forest is the size of Western Europe. “Brazil is 60 percent of the area and gets maybe 90 percent of the attention,” said Virgilio Viana, chief executive of the Foundation for a Sustainable Amazon, an environmental organization in Brazil’s Amazon. “So the rest of the area gets less of the media attention and less of the political attention.” Environmentalists say the destruction of the Andean Amazon is particularly worrisome because it affects the lifeblood for the entire Amazon, the rivers flowing down from the Andes. The forests that reach the foothills of the Andes — in Bolivia, Peru, Colombia and Ecuador, where a change of a few hundred feet in altitude can mean entirely new plant and animal species — are the most biodiverse in the world. “This is the richest part of the entire Amazon basin because of the climate diversity and the altitudinal diversity,” said Bruce Babbitt, an environmentalist and former

U.S. interior secretary who does research in the Peruvian Amazon with the Blue Moon Fund, a foundation supporting conservation. “The challenge, I think, is to see if we can sort of hold back these waves of development.” In many ways, what is happening in Bolivia is what happened in Brazil a generation ago, as farmers, ranchers and timber companies flooded in, taking advantage of cheap land, government subsidies and virgin forests. In this slice of Bolivia north of the regional capital of Santa Cruz, a hectare of land — about 2.5 acres — can cost $1,200, while in Brazil’s soybean belt it cost $8,000 and in Argentina up to $15,000. Diesel fuel for farm machinery is subsidized by the government, and state policies are designed to encourage development, said Eduardo Forno, director of Conservation International in Bolivia. Without access to the Pacific Coast, landlocked Bolivia also sees its fortunes in exploiting its lowlands, which cover more than half the country. “There’s a Bolivian perception that the future is in Amazonia,” Forno said. “And that perception and the dynamics that go with it are leading big businessmen to embrace a vision that’s leading to this deforestation.” Diego Pacheco, a negotiator for Bolivia’s climate-talks team and an adviser on environmental matters to the foreign ministry, said the government is trying to design a policy that balances the

environment with people’s needs. The idea, he said, is to promote sustainable projects that keep much of the forest intact. But Pacheco said a forestry law and a land-use law from the 1990s are at odds, with one consolidating use for land owners and the other designed to protect the wilderness. “Without a clear policy, there is an opening for the irregular use of land,” said Pacheco, explaining that much of the deforestation is illegal or takes place legally but without much thought as to the consequences. In the jungle outside of Ascencion, a town bustling with logging trucks and stores selling farming equipment, the final arbiter on land use is the Forests and Land Agency, which provides permits to those who want to clear land and sanctions those who do so illegally. But the agency has only 11 enforcement agents to hunt down illegal logging and clear-cutting and only a handful of others to process legal bids to deforest. “The problem I see is ignorance of the laws. So there’s clear-cutting, burning of land that takes place,” said Lillian Bellot, the lawyer for the office. “People don’t know they had to come here for permission.” And permission is often granted. Much of the deforestation in this region is legal for cattle ranchers, soy farms and loggers, environmentalists say.

Russian tycoon loses case over oil fortune By John F. Burns and Ravi Somaiya New York Times News Service

LONDON — In a legal battle between two Russian oligarchs, a High Court judge rejected a $5.1 billion claim Friday brought by Boris Berezovsky, a Londonbased emigre, against Roman Abramovich, a Kremlin favorite who owns London’s Chelsea football club. Berezovsky had accused Abramovich of acting in concert with the current Russian president, Vladimir Putin, to bully and blackmail him into selling his shares in the Russian oil company Sibneft and other assets in 2001 for a fraction of their value, under threat that the Kremlin might expropriate his holdings. The case had been billed as the world’s largest private lawsuit since it began more than four years ago. Berezovsky, 65, was characterized by the judge, Elizabeth Gloster, as an “inherently unreliable witness” during the four months of testimony that ended in January. Berezovsky was in court for the ruling. Abramovich, 45, was in Monaco to watch a game involving Chelsea. The judgment Friday deferred until the fall a ruling on an estimated $200 million to $250 million in legal and other costs, much of which could be assessed against Berezovsky. Berezovsky said he was “absolutely amazed by what’s happened today,” and accused Gloster of rewriting Russian history and glossing over the intimidation he had faced from Putin. He said he had made no decision on whether to appeal the judgment, which he said “could have been written by Putin.” Abramovich remains at least formally a Russian resident and retains ties to Putin. Berezovsky has been cast as an embezzler and turncoat in recent years by the Kremlin. He was forced to flee Russia in 2001 after the Kremlin connections he built under former President Boris Yeltsin turned to ashes under Putin.

¹Monthly payment based on 1.9% apr financing at 60 month term. Financing requires 10% down payment is subject to approval by John Deere Finance. John Deere 1026R tractor $11767.86, H120 loader $2908.98, BB2048L $522.16, John Deere 1023E $10674.65, 54D on ramp mower deck $1877.27 after 250.00 implement bonus, D120 loader 2347.08 John Deere 3032E 16,900.00 with 305 loader, RC2060 rotary cutter 1420.36 after 250.00 Implement Bonus. ²Offer valid until 8/31/12. Offer not available at all locations; see your local John Deere dealer for details. All attachments and/or implements included in offer are John Deere–and/or Frontier-branded. John Deere’s green and yellow color scheme, the leaping deer symbol and JOHN DEERE are trademarks of Deere & Company.


A8

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012


COMMUNITYLIFE THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

www.bendbulletin.com/community

“You can try every approach to fix a situation but if it comes from the residents it’s bound to work.”

COMMENTARY

A little college knowledge can help parents

— Nancy Allen, long-term care ombudsman

SPOTLIGHT You can adopt a horse today Meet or even adopt a mustang at the High Desert Museum’s 1904 ranch and corral today . The U.S. Bureau of Land Management is offering the adoption as part of its management of the mustang population, which ensures that healthy herds thrive on healthy rangelands. The event takes place from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97. For more information on wild horse adoption, visit www.blm.gov/or/ resources/whb/. Contact: www .highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754.

By Naomi Schaefer Riley Bloomberg News

BendFilm seeks host housing One way to meet the artists visiting for the BendFilm Festival? Invite them to your house. The festival is seeking host housing for filmmakers Oct. 11-14. Housing must be in the Bend area, preferably not too far from downtown. You should indicate how many rooms and bathrooms you have and if you have pets. Also, indicate if you can assist with transportation, which isn’t necessary but can be helpful. Contact: pamela@ cascadebusinessnews. com or 451-388-5665.

Abilitree moves to new offices The Abilitree Independent Living office has moved to a new location at 2680 N.E. Twin Knolls Drive, Suite 150, Bend. Although its office has moved, the organization has the same mailing address, phone numbers, extensions, fax numbers, and e-mail addresses. Abilitree is a nonprofit organization that helps people with disabilities. Contact: www .abilitree.org.

Church plans fundraiser Compass Church will host a spaghetti benefit dinner and dessert auction Sept. 8 from 6 to 8:30 p.m. The cost is $5 per person or $15 per family. The event will include dinner, dessert and a silent auction with live music. The event will benefit a mission team going to Thailand with plans to teach English to 1,000 children. The event will take place at Compass Church, 21610 Butler Market Road, Bend. The registration deadline is Wednesday. Contact: www .compassbend.com, kalisha@bendcable.com or 541-280-0284.

Contact us with your ideas Have a story idea or event submission? Contact us! • Community events: Email event information to events@ bendbulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event” at www .bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Contact: 541-383-0351. • Story ideas: Email communitylife@ bendbulletin.com. — From staff reports

B

TV & Movies, B2 Comics, B4-5 Puzzles, B5 Calendar, B3 Horoscope, B3

Photos by Andy Tullis / The Bulletin

Long-Term Care Ombudsman Nancy Allen, right, helps Maree Fawver through the front door at The Summit Assisted Living Facility in southeast Bend.

STANDING up for SENIORS • Long-term care ombudsmen address seniors’ complex physical, emotional needs By Mac McLean • The Bulletin

M

aree Fawver and the 14 other wheelchair-bound seniors who live at The Summit Assisted Living Facility in southeast Bend face a daunting obstacle: a heavy wooden door with a glass and metal window bars the way whenever they want to go in or out of their building’s front entrance. • “I’ve

never opened the door myself,” Fawver, 78, said as she sat by the door and waited for someone to open it. “I can’t do it.” • But things are about to change for The Summit’s residents because as they see it , they managed to come together with help from their long-term care ombudsman, Nancy Allen, and persuade their facility’s owner, Regency Pacific Management, to fix the door. • “There is power in numbers,” said Allen, who has worked as the long-term care ombudsman at The Summit and five other Central Oregon long-term care facilities for the past six years. The agency If the 43,000 people who currently live in Oregon’s 2,300 licensed long-term care facilities — places that provide care to seniors who cannot live independently because of their age or physical or mental condition — formed their own city, it would be the state’s 14thlargest and have a population greater than 18 of the state’s 36 counties, according to the 2010 U.S. Census Bureau. Representing these people’s interests is the job of Mary Jaeger, director of the state’s Office of the LongTerm Care Ombudsman — an independent government agency with 10 employees — and about 200 volunteers like Allen who are scattered across the state (see “Want to join?”). “We serve as their independent, confidential advocates,” Jaeger said, adding that every state in the country has an ombudsman program, even though it may not be structured in the same way as Oregon’s. “It’s Oregonians out in Oregon helping Oregonians.” Residents of long-term care facilities often need someone to act on their behalf because many have a physical ailment — such as being confined to a

wheelchair or needing a walker to get around — or a mental problem, such as Alzheimer’s disease or another form of dementia that makes them vulnerable and dependent on someone else for care. They also have to deal with situations that could complicate anyone’s life — such as depression, loneliness, family struggles and complicated health care situations, and the related coverage with Medicare, Medicaid or private health insurance. In 2010 and 2011, the office and its volunteers were able to solve at least half of the nearly 7,000 complaints that came their way, according to a report presented to the state Legislature in July. The office referred an additional 371 complaints to agencies better equipped to deal with the situation. “Our volunteers are not investigators,” Jaeger said. If an ombudsman volunteer so much as suspects neglect or abuse in a complaint, Jaeger said, they immediately report it to the state’s Adult Protective Services Division, which has investigators specifically trained to handle abuse cases. See Ombudsman / B6

Nancy Allen has worked six years as a long-term care ombudsman at The Summit Assisted Living and five other care facilities in Central Oregon.

Want to join? The Office of the Long-Term Care Ombudsman is looking for volunteers to help seniors who live in Central Oregon’s longterm care facilities. Those interested in the position can get an application from the agency’s website, www.oregon.gov/ LTCO, or by calling 1-800-522-2602. A series of five training sessions for the program that takes place over three weeks is scheduled to start in Deschutes County on Sept. 11.

During my freshman year at Middlebury College, I remember a classmate complaining to me as we walked across campus on a particularly bitter January morning: “I knew it was going to be cold. I just didn’t know it was going to be this cold.” She was from Southern California, and the one visit she made to the wilds of Vermont before starting college was in mid-July after her junior year of high school. For parents who have just returned from schlepping Junior all over the country in an effort to narrow down the list of colleges, I have to ask, “What were you thinking?” Summer isn’t the time to visit schools, and not just because you won’t get a good sense of New England winters. Colleges over the summer are just a bunch of buildings, some lovely landscaping and a few peppy student ambassadors — walking backward, of course. Why not go visit colleges when classes are actually in session? Admittedly, students spend fewer and fewer hours in class or engaged in academic pursuits (about 25 hours a week, according to the now famous study, “Academically Adrift”). But wouldn’t it be good to know something about the way classes are taught anyway? Good teaching is rarely recognized and almost never rewarded in a way that counts. According to a 2005 study in the Journal of Higher Education, “teaching an additional hour remained a negative factor in pay and publishing an extra article a positive factor in pay.” That was true for large state schools, research universities and small liberal-arts colleges. If professors do enough research and publish enough books and articles, they will move up the academic ladder, even if they are complete duds in front of a classroom. An administrator at a large Midwestern university told me that professors used to offer a loose-leaf of publications for consideration by a tenure committee 20 years ago. Today, they offer a box full of them. Students, meanwhile, complain about professors who use the same notes for 20 years, professors who never look up from those notes, and whose grading of papers consists of “great job!” or “needs work.” Teaching is rarely supervised by grownups. A Harvard professor told me that in her two decades teaching there, not a single colleague or administrator had ever set foot in her class. How do you find out where your son or daughter can be taught well? First, don’t rely on the U.S. News and World Report “Best Colleges” rankings. The formula rewards factors that have nothing to do with teaching. They include the number of faculty members who have won important awards, such as the Nobel Prize or the Fields Medal, and the school’s overall reputation in the eyes of its peers. See College / B6


B2

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

TV & M MSNBC aims to be the anti-Fox network

L M T FOR SATURDAY, SEPT. 1

BEND

are badly needed but don’t stay long or join the fray — You can agree with ev- like piano players in a brotherything that Rachel Mad- el, they don’t go upstairs. dow and Ed Schultz say on Fox News doesn’t have this MSNBC and still oppose problem. Because it doesn’t their right to say it. have a network news division, Especially when they and its star anchors can be as detheir hyped-up panelists shout fiantly partisan as they like. that Republican TheyfavorRepubclaims are “lies,� but even TV SPOTLIGHT licans, or Chris Matmore they like to thews says that goad Republican Republicans view candidates into welfare recipients as “looters.� criticizing the liberal media MSNBC has pumped up and President Barack Obama. its ratings by recasting itself MSNBC has a growing as a left-leaning riposte to cast of anchor-bloviators Fox News, and that’s fine. — hosts like Martin Bashir, Fox long ago proved that a Tamron Hall and, of course, lot of viewers like to hear Al Sharpton, who rant and cable anchors echo what then invite like-minded guest they already think; MSNBC commentators to assure them is just playing catch-up. Fox that they are right. is still well ahead, especially Matthews, who hosts a during a Republican conven- Sunday talk show syndicated tion, but Tuesday, there were by NBC and a daily MSNBC times when MSNBC drew show, seemed determined almost twice as many con- during this convention to vention viewers as CNN. outflank his most outspoken That’s because MSNBC rivals, including Sharpton. offers counterprogramming, His rampage started with not coverage. All that arch a bruising harangue against sarcasm and partisan brio Reince Priebus, the Repubmay rev up the cable chan- lican National Committee nel’s fans, but it constrains chairman, that made even — and stains — NBC News, his hosts on “Morning Joe� its corporate sibling, which wince. Matthews looked alis still the country’s No. 1 most thuggish Wednesday source in the evening. night when the Arizona govNBC and the other broad- ernor, Jan Brewer, 67, speakcast networks cut their live ing from the din of the conconvention coverage to an vention floor, complained she hour during prime time this couldn’t hear his question. year, which leaves barely “You can’t hear me?� time to show the main he said. “Well, that’s speeches, let alone analyze convenient.� them. Yet NBC’s chief anMSNBC talk shows are chor, Brian Williams, has to network newscasts what conspicuously avoided the blogs are to newspaper colmost fractious MSNBC umns, shaggier and often less discussion panels. Those considered . And increasinganchors who do make duti- ly, viewers, like readers, have ful appearances, like David a hard time distinguishing Gregory and Tom Brokaw, one from the other.

Regal Pilot Butte 6

By Alessandra Stanley

2717 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend, 541-382-6347

New York Times News Service

BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD (PG-13) 12:45, 3:45, 6:30, 8:40 THE BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 8:55 THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) Noon, 2:50, 5:45, 8:35 CELESTE AND JESSE FOREVER (R) 1, 3:30, 6, 9 FAREWELL, MY QUEEN (R) 4, 9:05 MOONRISE KINGDOM (PG-13) 1:15, 7 ROBOT AND FRANK (PG-13) 12:30, 3, 6:45, 8:50

Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 541-382-6347

2016: OBAMA’S AMERICA (PG) 12:05, 3, 6, 9 THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) 12:15, 3:25, 6:30, 9:30 BRAVE (PG) 1:45, 4:45, 7:25 THE CAMPAIGN (R) 2, 5, 8, 10:20 THE DARK KNIGHT RISES IMAX (PG-13) 12:30, 4:15, 7:55 THE DARK KNIGHT RISES (PG-13) 12:20, 4:05, 7:45 THE EXPENDABLES 2 (R) 1:30, 4:25, 7:15, 9:50 HIT AND RUN (R) 1:35, 4:35, 7:35, 10:15 HOPE SPRINGS (PG-13) 1:10, 3:45, 6:35, 9:05 LAWLESS (R) 12:10, 3:30, 6:25, 9:15 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (PG-13) 12:35, 4, 7:50

THE ODD LIFE OF TIMOTHY GREEN (PG) 12:45, 3:40, 6:15, 9:10 THE OOGIELOVES IN THE BIG BALLOON ADVENTURE (G) 12:25, 3:05, 6:05 PARANORMAN 3-D (PG) 1:20, 7:05 PARANORMAN (PG) 3:50, 9:25 THE POSSESSION (PG-13) 1:55, 4:55, 7:40, 10:10 PREMIUM RUSH (PG-13) 12:55, 3:15, 6:50, 9:45 TED (R) 10 TOTAL RECALL (PG-13) 9:35

McMenamins Old St. Francis School 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562

THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN (PG13) 6 MADAGASCAR 3: EUROPE’S MOST WANTED (PG) Noon, 3 MAGIC MIKE (R) 9:10 After 7 p.m., shows are 21 and older only. Younger than 21 may attend screenings before 7 p.m. if accompanied by a legal guardian.

EDITOR’S NOTES: • Open-captioned showtimes are bold. • There may be an additional fee for 3-D movies. • IMAX films are $15.50 for adults and $13 for children (ages 3 to 11) and seniors (ages 60 and older). • Movie times are subject to change after press time.

REDMOND

MADRAS

Redmond Cinemas

Madras Cinema 5

1535 S.W. Odem Medo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777

1101 S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505

THE CAMPAIGN (R) 11:15 a.m., 1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15 THE EXPENDABLES 2 (R) Noon, 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9 LAWLESS (R) 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 THE ODD LIFE OF TIMOTHY GREEN (PG) 11:15 a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15

SISTERS Sisters Movie House 720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800

Tin Pan Theater 869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend, 541-241-2271

FIRST POSITION (no MPAA rating) 6 THE WELL DIGGER’S DAUGHTER (no MPAA rating) 3:30 YOUR SISTER’S SISTER (R) 8

THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) 12:50, 3:40, 6:30, 9:25 BRAVE (PG) 12:20, 2:25 THE CAMPAIGN (R) 7, 9:10 THE EXPENDABLES 2 (R) 12:15, 2:30, 4:55, 7:20, 9:35 HIT AND RUN (R) 4:40, 6:50, 9 THE OOGIELOVES IN THE BIG BALLOON ADVENTURE (G) 1:05, 3:05, 5:05 PARANORMAN 3-D (PG) 12:30, 2:45, 5, 7:10, 9:20

PRINEVILLE

BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD (PG-13) 3, 5 THE BOURNE LEGACY (PG-13) 7 LAWLESS (R) 2:30, 5, 7:30 MOONRISE KINGDOM (PG-13) 3 PARANORMAN (PG) 5, 7:15 PREMIUM RUSH (PG-13) 3:15, 5:30, 7:30

Pine Theater 214 N. Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014

THE CAMPAIGN (UPSTAIRS — R) 3, 6 LAWLESS (R) 4, 7, 9:30 Pine Theater’s upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.

Providing unparalled service across a variety of industries since 1983.

541-389-1505

7:30 AM - 5:30 PM MON-FRI 8 AM - 3 PM SAT.

400 SW Bluff Dr Ste 200 Bend , OR 97702

Saturdays, June 30 - Sept. 22 | 10am-2pm NorthWest Crossing Neighborhood Center

541-382-4171 541-548-7707 856 NW Bond • Downtown Bend • 541-330-5999 www.havenhomestyle.com

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L TV L SATURDAY PRIME TIME 9/1/12

*In HD, these channels run three hours ahead. / Sports programming may vary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine

ALSO IN HD; ADD 600 TO CHANNEL No.

BROADCAST/CABLE CHANNELS

BD PM SR L ^ KATU KTVZ % % % % KBNZ & KOHD ) ) ) ) KFXO * ` ` ` KOAB _ # _ # ( KGW KTVZDT2 , _ # / OPBPL 175 173

5:00

5:30

6:00

6:30

College Football Alabama vs. Michigan From Arlington, Texas. (N) (Live) Ă… Grey’s Anatomy ’ ‘14’ Ă… News Nightly News Paid Program Evening News The Unit Freefall ’ ‘PG’ Ă… College Football Alabama vs. Michigan From Arlington, Texas. (N) (Live) Ă… (4:30) College Football Hawaii at USC (N) ’ (Live) Ă… This Old House The Lawrence Welk Show ‘G’ Last of Wine NewsChannel 8 NewsChannel 8 Nightly News Straight Talk (4:00) ›› “Troop Beverly Hillsâ€? ’Til Death ‘PG’ ’Til Death ‘PG’ Julia Child Cooking Class Casebook of Sherlock Holmes

7:00 Jeopardy! ‘G’ Old Christine

7:30 Wheel Fortune Old Christine

Travels to Edge Steves’ Europe Inside Edition Grant Getaway Seinfeld ‘PG’ Seinfeld ‘PG’ Backstage Pass Bowery ’ ‘G’

8:00

8:30

Johnny Cash America’s Got Talent ‘PG’ Ă… CSI: NY Brooklyn ’Til I Die ’ ‘14’ College Football Big Bang Big Bang Globe Trekker ‘G’ Ă… (DVS) America’s Got Talent ‘PG’ Ă… House Babies & Bathwater ‘14’ Front Row Center O.A.R. ’ ‘G’

9:00

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10:00

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Jeopardy! ‘G’ Wheel Fortune KATU News Comedy.TV ‘PG’ Law & Order: SVU News Sat. Night Live 48 Hours Mystery ’ ‘14’ Ă… News Paid Program Primetime: What Would You Do? News (N) Ă… College Football News Two/Half Men Touch Kite Strings ’ ‘14’ Ă… New Tricks Lost in Translation ’ Masterpiece Mystery! ’ ‘PG’ Law & Order: SVU NewsChannel 8 Sat. Night Live That ’70s Show That ’70s Show Cheaters ’ ‘14’ Ă… ›››› “Of Mice and Menâ€? (1939, Drama) Burgess Meredith.

BASIC CABLE CHANNELS

Hatfields & McCoys (Part 1 of 3) ‘14’ Ă… Hatfields & McCoys (Part 2 of 3) ‘14’ Ă… Hatfields & McCoys (Part 3 of 3) ‘14’ Ă… *A&E 130 28 18 32 (3:00) “Independence Dayâ€? Ă… (2:45) ››› “Thun- ››› “Top Gunâ€? (1986, Adventure) Tom Cruise, Kelly McGillis, Anthony Edwards. A hot-shot Navy ›› “Four Brothersâ€? (2005, Crime Drama) Mark Wahlberg, Tyrese Gibson, AndrĂŠ Benjamin. Pre- ›› “Four Brothersâ€? (2005, Crime Drama) Mark Wahlberg, *AMC 102 40 39 derheartâ€? jet pilot downs MiGs and loves an astrophysicist. Ă… miere. Siblings seek revenge for their adoptive mother’s murder. Ă… Tyrese Gibson, AndrĂŠ Benjamin. Ă… Tanked: Unfiltered ’ ‘PG’ Ă… My Cat From Hell ’ ‘PG’ Ă… My Cat From Hell (N) ’ ‘PG’ Tanked (N) ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Tanked ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Tanked ’ ‘PG’ Ă… *ANPL 68 50 26 38 Tanked: Unfiltered ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Million Dollar Listing Ă… Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC ››› “Meet the Parentsâ€? (2000) Robert De Niro, Ben Stiller. (11:07) “Meet the Parentsâ€? (2000) BRAVO 137 44 ›› “Police Academyâ€? (1984) Steve Guttenberg, Kim Cattrall. Premiere. ’ Ă… My Big Redneck Vacation ‘PG’ ››› “Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventureâ€? (1989) Keanu Reeves. ’ CMT 190 32 42 53 (4:30) ››› “Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventureâ€? Princess Leanna Princess Mario How I, Millions How I, Millions The Suze Orman Show Princess Leanna Princess Mario Carol Burnett Ninja Kitchen CNBC 54 36 40 52 How I, Millions How I, Millions The Suze Orman Show (N) CNN Newsroom (N) 41 President George H.W. Bush discusses politics and family. ’ ‘G’ CNN Newsroom (N) 41 ’ ‘G’ Ă… CNN 55 38 35 48 41 President George H.W. Bush discusses politics and family. ’ ‘G’ (6:07) ›› “Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bayâ€? (2008) Kal Penn. Ă… › “Half Bakedâ€? (1998) Dave Chappelle, Guillermo Diaz. Ă… (10:38) ›› “Dumb & Dumberâ€? (1994) Jim Carrey. COM 135 53 135 47 (3:29) ›› “Sex Driveâ€? (2008) (4:30) City Club of Central Oregon Talk of the Town Local issues. Desert Cooking: Central Oregon Style Journal Get Outdoors Visions of NW The Yoga Show The Yoga Show Talk of the Town Local issues. COTV 11 Washington This Week CSPAN 61 20 12 11 (4:00) Washington This Week Austin & Ally ’ Austin & Ally ’ Austin & Ally ’ Austin & Ally ’ Shake It Up! Rocky and CeCe travel to Tokyo. ’ Shake It Up! ‘G’ My Babysitter My Babysitter A.N.T. Farm ‘G’ A.N.T. Farm ‘G’ *DIS 87 43 14 39 “Hannah Montana: The Movieâ€? MythBusters ’ ‘PG’ Ă… When We Left Earth: Moon One Giant Leap: Neil Armstrong Gold Rush The Jungle ‘PG’ Ă… Bering Sea Gold: Under the Ice Gold Rush The Jungle ‘PG’ Ă… *DISC 156 21 16 37 MythBusters ’ ‘PG’ Ă… ››› “Julie & Juliaâ€? (2009, Comedy-Drama) Meryl Streep, Amy Adams, Stanley Tucci. Jonas Jonas Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians The Soup ‘14’ Chelsea Lately *E! 136 25 College Football College Football Arkansas State at Oregon (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… Football Final ESPN 21 23 22 23 (4:00) College Football Auburn vs. Clemson (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… College Football Final (N) Ă… Baseball Ton. ESPN2 22 24 21 24 (4:00) NASCAR Racing Nationwide Series: NRA American Warrior 300 ››› “Harvard Beats Yale 29-29â€? (2008, Documentary) Ă… ››› “Harvard Beats Yale 29-29â€? (2008, Documentary) Ă… SEC Storied Ă… ESPNC 23 25 123 25 ››› “Harvard Beats Yale 29-29â€? (2008, Documentary) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. Highlight Express (N) (Live) ESPNN 24 63 124 203 SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… ›› “Sweet Home Alabamaâ€? (2002) Reese Witherspoon, Josh Lucas. ›››› “Toy Storyâ€? (1995) Voices of Tom Hanks, Tim Allen. ›› “The Gooniesâ€? (1985, Adventure) Sean Astin, Josh Brolin. FAM 67 29 19 41 ›› Bring It On Justice With Judge Jeanine (N) Fox News Reporting Journal Editorial FOX News Justice With Judge Jeanine Huckabee Fox News Reporting FNC 57 61 36 50 Huckabee (N) Restaurant: Impossible Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Iron Chef America *FOOD 177 62 98 44 Iron Chef America › “Armageddonâ€? (1998) Bruce Willis, Billy Bob Thornton. A hero tries to save Earth from an asteroid. ››› “Zombielandâ€? (2009) Woody Harrelson, Jesse Eisenberg. Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Wilfred ‘MA’ Totally Biased FX 131 House Hunters Hunters Int’l Home by Novo Dina’s Party ‘G’ Love It or List It Ramos ‘G’ Ă… Love It or List It Jim & Connie ‘G’ House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l HGTV 176 49 33 43 Dear Genevieve Donna Dec Swamp People ‘PG’ Ă… Swamp People Endgame ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ *HIST 155 42 41 36 Swamp People Man Down ‘PG’ ›› “Tyler Perry’s the Family That Preysâ€? (2008, Drama) Kathy Bates. Premiere. Ă… Prank My Mom Prank My Mom Prank My Mom LIFE 138 39 20 31 Taken From Me ›› “The Secret Life of Beesâ€? (2008, Drama) Queen Latifah, Dakota Fanning. Ă… Lockup: Raw Killers Among Us Lockup: Raw Ganging Up Lockup: Raw Time to Kill Lockup: Pendleton Lockup: Pendleton Angry teens. Lockup: Pendleton MSNBC 59 59 128 51 Lockup: New Mexico Body bag. (7:49) The Hills (8:24) The Hills The Hills ‘PG’ The Hills ‘PG’ The Hills ‘PG’ The Hills ‘PG’ The Hills ‘PG’ The Hills ‘PG’ MTV 192 22 38 57 (4:54) The Hills (5:29) The Hills (6:04) The Hills (6:39) The Hills (7:14) The Hills ’ ‘PG’ Ă… SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob ›› “The Last Day of Summerâ€? (2007) Jansen Panettiere. ’ ‘Y7’ Yes, Dear ‘PG’ Yes, Dear ‘PG’ Friends ’ ‘PG’ (11:33) Friends NICK 82 46 24 40 SpongeBob Disappeared ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Lovetown, USA ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Lovetown, USA Love & War ‘14’ Sweetie Pie’s: An Extra Slice Sweetie Pie’s: An Extra Slice Lovetown, USA Love & War ‘14’ OWN 161 103 31 103 Disappeared ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Big Sky College Football Oklahoma at Texas-El Paso (N) (Live) College Football ROOT 20 45 28* 26 (4:00) College Football Marshall at West Virginia (N) ››› “Star Wars VI: Return of the Jediâ€? (1983) Mark Hamill. Luke and his allies have a confrontation with Darth Vader. Star Wars SPIKE 132 31 34 46 (4:32) ›››› “Star Wars V: The Empire Strikes Backâ€? (1980) Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford. ’ ›› “Outlanderâ€? (2008, Action) James Caviezel, Ron Perlman, Sophia Myles. Ă… ›› “Predator 2â€? (1990, Science Fiction) Danny Glover, Gary Busey. Ă… ››› Serenity SYFY 133 35 133 45 “In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Taleâ€? In Touch W/Charles Stanley Hour of Power ’ ‘G’ Ă… Billy Graham Classic Crusades Love Begins “Love’s Resounding Courageâ€? (2010, Drama) ‘PG’ Live-Oak Tree Virtual Memory TBN 205 60 130 Seinfeld ‘PG’ Big Bang Big Bang › “Rush Hour 3â€? (2007, Action) Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker. Ă… › “Blue Streakâ€? (1999, Comedy) *TBS 16 27 11 28 Friends ’ ‘PG’ Friends ’ ‘PG’ Friends ’ ‘PG’ Friends ’ ‘PG’ Seinfeld ‘PG’ ››› “The Band Wagonâ€? (1953, Musical) Fred Astaire, Cyd Charisse. A Hol- ››› “The Barkleys of Broadwayâ€? (1949, Musical) Fred Astaire. A pair of ››› “Humoresqueâ€? (1946, Drama) Joan Crawford, John Garfield. A violinist’s (11:15) ›››› “An American in Parisâ€? TCM 101 44 101 29 lywood has-been tries his luck in a Broadway musical. Ă… Broadway performers quarrels and breaks up. Ă… benefactor is viciously used and cast aside. Ă… (1951, Musical) Gene Kelly. Dateline: Real Life Mysteries ‘14’ Dateline: Real Life Mysteries ‘14’ Dateline: Real Life Mysteries ‘14’ Dateline: Real Life Mysteries ‘14’ *TLC 178 34 32 34 Cellblock 6: Female Lock Up ‘PG’ Cellblock 6: Female Lock Up ‘PG’ Dateline: Real Life Mysteries ‘14’ ››› “Ocean’s Elevenâ€? (2001) George Clooney, Matt Damon. Ă… (DVS) ›› “Sherlock Holmesâ€? (2009) Robert Downey Jr. *TNT 17 26 15 27 ››› “Mission: Impossible IIIâ€? (2006, Action) Tom Cruise, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Ving Rhames. Ă… (4:30) ›› “Planet 51â€? (2009), Jessica Biel ›› “Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thiefâ€? (2010) Logan Lerman. Home Movies King of the Hill King of the Hill Family Guy ‘14’ Black Dynamite The Boondocks *TOON 84 Xtreme Waterparks: World’s Best Insane Coaster Wars: Top Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Ă… Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Ă… Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Ă… Ghost Adventures ‘14’ Ă… *TRAV 179 51 45 42 Hotel Impossible ‘PG’ Ă… The Soul Man The Soul Man The Soul Man ›› “Beauty Shopâ€? (2005) Queen Latifah, Alicia Silverstone. Ă… Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens TVLND 65 47 29 35 The Soul Man ›› “Next Fridayâ€? (2000, Comedy) Ice Cube, Mike Epps. Ă… ›› “Bad Boys IIâ€? (2003, Action) Martin Lawrence. Two detectives battle a drug kingpin in Miami. Ă… Covert Affairs ‘PG’ Ă… (DVS) USA 15 30 23 30 (4:00) ››› “Fridayâ€? (1995) T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny T.I. and Tiny Single Ladies Finally ’ ‘14’ Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta ‘14’ › “Honey 2â€? (2011, Drama) Katerina Graham, Randy Wayne. ’ VH1 191 48 37 54 T.I. and Tiny PREMIUM CABLE CHANNELS

(6:10) ››› “National Lampoon’s Animal Houseâ€? 1978 ‘R’ Ă… ›› “National Lampoon’s Vacationâ€? 1983 ‘R’ Ă… (9:40) ›› “Bringing Down the Houseâ€? 2003 Steve Martin. ‘PG-13’ › Bait 2000 ‘R’ ENCR 106 401 306 401 (4:15) › “Jackâ€? 1996 ’ ‘PG-13’ FXM Presents “Austin Powers: International Man of Mysteryâ€? FXM Presents ›› “Most Wantedâ€? 1997, Action Keenen Ivory Wayans. ‘R’ Ă… ›› “Most Wantedâ€? 1997 Keenen Ivory Wayans. FMC 104 204 104 120 “Austin Powers: Man of Mysteryâ€? (4:00) UFC Reloaded UFC Reloaded Rampage 2010 Fight Night ‘G’ FUEL 34 Golf Central (N) 19th Hole (N) PGA Tour Golf GOLF 28 301 27 301 PGA Tour Golf PGA Tour Golf Deutsche Bank Championship, Second Round From the TPC Boston in Norton, Mass. ›› “Mr. Magorium’s Wonder Emporiumâ€? (2007) Natalie Portman. Frasier ’ ‘G’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘G’ Frasier ’ ‘G’ HALL 66 33 175 33 ››› “The Parent Trapâ€? (1998, Comedy) Lindsay Lohan, Dennis Quaid, Natasha Richardson. Ă… (3:45) “Despicable ››› “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stoneâ€? 2001, Fantasy Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint. An ›› “Hopâ€? 2011, Comedy Voices of James Marsden, Rus- (9:45) Boxing Gennady Golovkin vs. Grzegorz Proska, Middleweights (N) ’ 24/7 Chavez, Jr./ HBO 425 501 425 501 Meâ€? 2010 orphan attends a school of witchcraft and wizardry. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… sell Brand. Premiere. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Martinez (N) Ă… ››› “Full Metal Jacketâ€? 1987, War Matthew Modine, Adam Baldwin. ‘R’ ››› “Full Metal Jacketâ€? 1987, War Matthew Modine, Adam Baldwin. ‘R’ ››› “Black Bookâ€? 2006, Historical Drama Carice van Houten. ‘R’ IFC 105 105 (5:10) ›› “The Bone Collectorâ€? 1999 Denzel Washington. Premiere. A para- (7:10) ›› “Knight and Dayâ€? 2010, Action Tom Cruise. A woman becomes the Strike Back A wounded Othmani ››› “Troyâ€? 2004, Adventure Brad Pitt, Eric Bana, Orlando Bloom. Achilles MAX 400 508 508 lyzed detective guides the hunt for a serial killer. ’ ‘R’ Ă… reluctant partner of a fugitive spy. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… holes up in Algeria. ’ ‘MA’ Ă… leads Greek forces in the Trojan War. ’ ‘R’ Ă… Dark Secrets of the Lusitania Abandoned ‘PG’ Abandoned ‘PG’ Abandoned ‘PG’ Abandoned ‘PG’ Dark Secrets of the Lusitania ‘PG’ Abandoned ‘PG’ Abandoned ‘PG’ Amish: Out of Order ‘PG’ NGC 157 157 Wild Grinders Wild Grinders Wild Grinders Wild Grinders Wild Grinders Odd Parents Odd Parents SpongeBob SpongeBob Fanboy-Chum Fanboy-Chum Invader ZIM ’ Invader ZIM ’ NTOON 89 115 189 115 Wild Grinders Jimmy Big Time Raglin Outdoors Ultimate Hunt’g Trophy Quest Most Wanted Commander Outfitter Boot Ted Nugent Craig Morgan Sasquatch Commander High Places Best Defense OUTD 37 307 43 307 Trophy Hunt (4:15) › “In the Mixâ€? 2005 Usher. ’ ›› “Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Lifeâ€? 2003 Angelina Jolie. The (11:35) Episodes ››› “Our Idiot Brotherâ€? 2011, Comedy Paul Rudd, Eliza- ›› “The Mechanicâ€? 2011 Jason Statham. An elite hit-man (11:05) Weeds SHO 500 500 ‘PG-13’ Ă… globe-trotter battles a scientist for Pandora’s box. Ă… beth Banks. Premiere. ’ ‘R’ Ă… teaches his deadly trade to an apprentice. Saplings ‘MA’ ’ ‘MA’ Monster Jam NASCAR Perfor. NASCAR Racing NASCAR Racing Formula 1 Debrief Formula One Racing SPEED 35 303 125 303 Monster Jam (6:20) Boss Ablution ‘MA’ Ă… (7:20) › “Resident Evil: Afterlifeâ€? 2010 ‘R’ Ă… › “The Son of No Oneâ€? 2011 Channing Tatum. ‘R’ (10:35) ›› “Just Go With Itâ€? 2011 Adam Sandler. STARZ 300 408 300 408 (4:20) ›› “Daylightâ€? 1996 Sylvester Stallone. Ă… (4:25) ›› “The Fighting Temptationsâ€? 2003, Comedy (10:35) › “The Breedâ€? 2006 Michelle Rodriguez. A pack ››› “The Helpâ€? 2011, Drama Viola Davis, Emma Stone, Bryce Dallas Howard. An aspiring writer › “Blood Creekâ€? 2009 Dominic Purcell. Two brothers TMC 525 525 Cuba Gooding Jr. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… captures the experiences of black women. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… encounter the occult at a nearby farmhouse. ‘R’ of mutated dogs hunts a group of vacationers. Game On! Bull Riding PBR Winstar World Casino Invitational From Thackerville, Okla. Caught Looking ‘G’ Game On! NBCSN 27 58 30 209 Bull Riding PBR Winstar World Casino Invitational From Thackerville, Okla. (N) (Live) My Fair Wedding My Fair Wedding My Fair Wedding My Fair Wedding › “Head Over Heelsâ€? 2001 Monica Potter, Shalom Harlow. ‘PG-13’ *WE 143 41 174 118 My Fair Wedding


SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

A & A

Make sure dog’s toys don’t become deadly Dear Abby: I am writing hoping to avert another tragedy like we experienced last week. Our German shepherd, Leah, was playing with a hard rubber ball the size of a tennis ball. Somehow, the ball slid down her throat. I tried to dislodge it by grabbing and pulling it out, then I tried the Heimlich maneuver. Neither worked. By the time we got Leah to the veterinarian, she was dead. They tried for 25 minutes to revive her. Leah was a friendly, funny, loving dog, not yet 2 years old. We miss her terribly. Abby, please tell your readers to never, ever let their dog play with any object that fits into its mouth. If it fits, it can lodge in the throat. I don’t want anyone else to experience the pain of losing their dog like we lost ours. — Karen in Center Valley, Pa.

Dear Karen: Please accept my sympathy for the loss of your beloved pet. However, because you wrote to other dog owners, take comfort in the knowledge that you have very likely saved another fourfooted family member’s life. Dear Abby: My well-meaning mother continues to give me “classics� from her wardrobe that she no longer wears. I’m a size 6 to 8 in my 50s. Mom is in her 80s and wears 12 to 14. Our sense of style is also not the same. My problem is, after insisting I take these items, she’ll often ask for them back several years later. It becomes awkward when I must explain I gave her clothes away. How can I politely stop her from gifting me these items?

DEAR ABBY shop for you.� It’s honest, it’s practical, and someone can enjoy them. Dear Abby: My husband and I have been married three years, and we are both lucky to have families that are kind and supportive. However, there is one recurring issue with his family that I find annoying. Nobody in my husband’s family has a driver’s license or owns a car. This includes his two aunts and mother, who all live in the same town we do. As the only driver in the family, I am regularly asked to shuttle relatives to the doctor, the pet groomer, the grocery store, etc. Abby, none of them have any physical or mental disability that prevents them from driving. We live in a city with a number of cab companies that serve the area. I work hard so I can pay my car insurance bills, my car payments and buy gas to get to where I need to. I’m starting to resent being asked to drive three ablebodied adults who are perfectly capable of driving themselves or taking a taxi. Am I being inconsiderate? Is there a way to politely convey that I do not wish to play chauffeur? — Driven Crazy in Massachusetts

— No Longer Has Them

Dear Driven Crazy: Yes, there is — and because these are his relatives, your husband should be the one to tell them that you have been generous enough and it’s time for them to arrange other transportation.

Dear No Longer Has Them: Say, “Mom, these things won’t fit me. But I’ll be glad to drop them off at a charity thrift

— Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Horoscope: Happy Birthday for Saturday, Sept. 1, 2012 This year you are capable of making a big difference in many friends’ and loved ones’ lives. You will demonstrate a high level of sensitivity to their emotional aches and pains. If you are single, this quality will draw someone very special to you who you might consider sharing a life bond with. You will meet very different people who are bonded by a mutual respect for difference. If you are attached, the two of you enjoy socializing as a couple far more than in the past. PISCES is quite drawn to you. You are nearly opposites, but you have the same core issues. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH Follow your instincts with a child, loved one or personal money matter. Confusion surrounds communication, as well as key relationships. You also feel more vulnerable than usual. Choose to revisit these feelings another day. Tonight: Play it low-key. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Be where your friends are, and stay around crowds, if possible. You could feel as if circumstances have rushed you into an uncomfortable situation. Confusion surrounds a friendship. You probably are not speaking the same language as the other party. Tonight: Where your friends are. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH You might feel as if the camera is on you. You’ll tend to go overboard with showing affection and giving praise. You could try to communicate your thoughts instead. The other party is not on the same wavelength as you. Tonight: A force to be dealt with. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Look at the big picture before taking a leap of faith. You might want to gather more opinions, especially if finances are involved in some way. If you need to find an expert, do not hesitate to do so. Forthcoming news could be confusing. Tonight: Follow the music. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Make plans with a favorite friend or loved one. Make this important person in your life feel valued. One-on-one conversations, though sometimes confusing, have great value. A brainstorming session helps you come up with special plans. Tonight: Individual time with someone.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHHH Listen to others, but know that you do not need to agree with them. In any case, these discussions create unusual and spontaneous plans that you really want to be a part of. Make sure that everyone knows exactly where to meet and when. Tonight: Say “yes.â€? LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You do not need to go far to find a way to occupy your time. Either someone you care about wants to join you, or you could meet someone who is quite enticing. Meeting up with people could be a problem if confusion is present. Confirm “what, where and when.â€? Tonight: Just don’t push. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You could be pushing way beyond your normal limits, but your enthusiasm helps carry you to the finish line. Do not forget a child or loved one. Spending time together could be more satisfying than you think. Tonight: Make the most of the moment. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH Invite others to come over to your home, rather than go out. This doesn’t require much preparation. You can always order a pizza or do barbecue. Make sure you and others agree on a time, because confusion could wreak havoc. Tonight: The later, the better. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Defer to others and let them decide where to meet and what to do. A break from organizing and bringing others together would be more refreshing. You’ll gravitate toward a good restaurant or a fun spot where you can relax. Tonight: Know when to call it a night. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH Use good sense when making a decision about where you want to be and with whom. Do not take any risks, as you easily could see money disappear. Be careful when counting your change. You could feel overwhelmed, as confusion marks some interactions. Be patient. Tonight: Your treat. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You beam from ear to ear, smiling “just because.â€? Others note your mood and hope that it’s contagious. You presently manage to add an element of mystery that could translate to confusion if people are not used to your ethereal side. Tonight: Wish upon a star — it just might work. Š 2012 by King Features Syndicate

B3

C C Please email event information to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event� at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

TODAY PRINEVILLE FARMERS MARKET: Free; 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E. Third St.; 503-739-0643 or prinevillefarmersmarket@gmail. com. VFW BREAKFAST: A breakfast of chicken-fried steak, biscuits with gravy and hashbrowns with eggs; $8, $7 senors and children ages 6 and younger; 8:30-10:30 a.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. “THE BISON — AMERICAN ICON� EXHIBIT OPENS: New exhibit explores the meaning and significance of the bison; exhibit runs through Jan. 6; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. MADRAS SATURDAY MARKET: Free admission; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, B and Seventh streets; 541-489-3239 or madrassatmkt@gmail.com. CENTRAL OREGON SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts from local artisans; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Bend Public Library, 600 N.W. Wall St.; 541-420-9015 or www. ntraloregonsaturdaymarket. com. NORTHWEST CROSSING FARMERS MARKET: Free; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives, Bend; 541-382-1662, valerie@ brooksresources.com or www. nwxfarmersmarket.com. GRAPE STOMP: Stomp grapes for wine; with live music and food; bring your own glass; a portion of proceeds from wine produced will benefit Terrebonne Community School; $8 in advance, $10 at the door, free for children; 11 a.m.-6 p.m.; Maragas Winery, 15523 S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Culver; 541-546-5464 or www. maragaswinery.com. LABOR AND LUMBER: Featuring turn-of-the-century woodworking, cross-cut sawing and cabin building; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. DIXIELAND PARTY BAND AND FRIENDS: Musicians from the Northwest and California perform; refreshments available; donations accepted; noon-10 p.m.; La Pine Moose Lodge, 52510 Drafter Road; 541-5480679. LIBRARY BOOK SALE: Friends of the Sunriver Area Public Library hosts a bag sale of books; free admission, $3 per bag; noon-5 p.m., 3-5 p.m. bag sale; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1080. LITTLE WOODY BARREL AGED BREW FESTIVAL: Craft beer and rye whiskey tastings from Oregon breweries, with live music; ages 21 and older only; a portion of proceeds benefits the Deschutes County Historical Society; $6, $15 beer tasting package; noon-10 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 N.W. Idaho Ave., Bend; www. thelittlewoody.com. SUNRIVER SUNFEST WINE FESTIVAL: Featuring wines from more than 50 wineries, art vendors, live music, food and more; free admission, signature glass required for tastings; noon-7 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-385-7988 or www.sunriversunfest.com. BRANDI CARLILE: The rootsy singer-songwriter performs, with Blitzen Trapper and Ivan & Alyosha; $34 plus fees; 6 p.m., gates open 5 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-3185457 or www.bendconcerts. com. CASINO NIGHT: Featuring blackjack, craps, Texas hold ‘em, an auction and more; proceeds benefit the Crooked River Ranch Lions Club Sight and Hearing Foundation, scouting organizations and children with diabetes; $15; 7-11 p.m.; Sandbagger Dinner House, 5165 Clubhouse Drive, Crooked River Ranch; 541-570-5565 or jay. nordin@hotmail.com. DJ WICKED: The Portlandbased DJ performs; free; 9 p.m.; The Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-318-0588.

SUNDAY CENTRAL OREGON SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts from local artisans; free

Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin file photo

Central Oregon’s farmers markets are in full swing with separate markets in Bend, Redmond, Madras, Prineville and Sisters. Check individual listings in the calendar for times and locations. admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Bend Public Library, 600 N.W. Wall St.; 541-420-9015 or www.centraloregonsaturdaymarket. com. HANDY ANDY MAGIC MAN: The magician performs magic for children and creates balloon animals; included in the price of admission donations, $2 for balloons; 10 a.m., 11:30 a.m. and 1 p.m.; Petersen Rock Gardens, 7930 S.W. 77th St., Redmond; 541-3825574. DIXIELAND PARTY BAND AND FRIENDS: Musicians from the Northwest and California perform; refreshments available; donations accepted; 11 a.m.-8 p.m.; La Pine Moose Lodge, 52510 Drafter Road; 541-548-0679. LABOR AND LUMBER: Featuring turn-of-the-century woodworking, cross-cut sawing and cabin building; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. SUNRIVER SUNFEST WINE FESTIVAL: Featuring wines from more than 50 wineries, art vendors, live music, food and more; free admission, signature glass required for tastings; 11 a.m.-6 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-385-7988 or www. sunriversunfest.com. NOTABLES SWING BAND: The big band plays swing, blues, Latin, rock ‘n’ roll and waltzes; $5; 2-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-639-7734 or www.notablesswingband.com. DOG SWIM: Play fetch with your dog, then give him/her a bath; $10; 4-6 p.m.; Cascade Swim Center, 465 S.W. Rimrock Way, Redmond; 541548-7275 or www.raprd.org. LIVE AT THE RANCH: Featuring a performance by Americana band nelo; $15, $10 ages 6-12; 4 p.m.; Lakeside Lawn at Black Butte Ranch, 12934 Hawks Beard, Sisters; 888-234-5956 or www. blackbutteranch.com/concerts.

MONDAY LABOR AND LUMBER: Featuring turn-of-the-century woodworking, cross-cut sawing and cabin building; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org.

TUESDAY REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 2-6:30 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue; 541-550-0066 or redmondfarmersmarket1@hotmail. com. BROOKSWOOD PLAZA FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m.; Brookswood Meadow Plaza, 19530 Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541-323-3370 or farmersmarket@ brookswoodmeadowplaza.com. “THE LAST MOUNTAIN�: A screening of the documentary about environmental impacts of coal mining in West Virginia; free; 6:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Tom Martin talks about his book “Big Water Little Boats�; free; 7 p.m.; Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 S.W. Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; 541-317-9407.

WEDNESDAY BEND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m.; Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@gmail.com or http://bendfarmersmarket.com. MUSIC ON THE GREEN: Featuring traditional Hawaiian dancing by the

Hokulea Dancers; vendors available; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; Sam Johnson Park, Southwest 15th Street, Redmond; 541-923-5191 or http:// visitredmondoregon.com.

THURSDAY TONY SMILEY: The Portlandbased looping rocker performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com.

FRIDAY GARDEN WORK PARTY: Help complete the reclaimed fence around the Kansas Ave. Learning Garden; free; 9 a.m.-noon; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-385-6908. RUN TO THE CASCADES MOTORCYCLE RALLY: The rally includes live music, jousting, charity poker, classic cars, a tattoo expo and more; a portion of proceeds benefit local charities; $15 day pass, $25 for weekend; 11 a.m.-11 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711 or www. runtothecascades.com. BEND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 2-6 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@ gmail.com or http:// bendfarmersmarket.com. SISTERS FARMERS MARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade Avenue and Ash Street; www. sistersfarmersmarket.com. FIRST FRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and food in downtown Bend and the Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. SISTERS FOLK FESTIVAL: Threeday folk music festival including performances by James McMurtry, Mary Gauthier, Gregory Alan Isakov and more; SOLD OUT; 5:30 p.m.-1 a.m.; downtown Sisters; 541-5494979, info@sistersfolkfestival.org or www.sistersfolkfestival.org. YOGIS UNITE!: With yoga classes, social activities and dance performances; $25 for two days; 5:30-8:30 p.m.; Juniper Swim & Fitness Center, 800 N.E. Sixth St., Bend; information@yogisunitebend. com or www.yogisunitebend.com. MUNCH & MOVIES: An outdoor screening of “Hugo�; with food vendors and live music; free; 6 p.m., movie begins at dusk; Compass Park, 2500 N.W. Crossing Drive, Bend; 541-389-0995 or www. northwestcrossing.com. SYNRGY: The Ashland-based reggae band performs; free; 6-9 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House, 1044 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-9242. “GREGORIAN, GOSPEL AND GERSHWIN�: Mark Oglesby presents an organ concert; donations accepted; 7 p.m.; St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church & School, 2450 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-382-3631. RED ROCK SQUARE DANCE: Spectators and dancers welcome; $5, free for spectators; 7-10 p.m.; Redmond Grange, 707 S.W. Kalama Ave.; 541-923-8804. “RICHARD III�: Thoroughly Modern Productions and Stage Right Productions present Shakespeare’s play about the controversial English king; with a champagne reception; $18, $15 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, 2ndstreettheater@gmail.com or www.2ndstreettheater.com. SCREEN ON THE GREEN: Juggling performance followed by a screening of the PG-rated film “How to Train Your Dragon�; free; 7:30 p.m., 8 p.m. movie; Sahalee Park, B and Seventh streets, Madras; 541475-3351 or www.jcld.org. BLACK BEAST REVIVAL: The rock band performs, with Strive Roots; $5; 8:30 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend.

SATURDAY Sept. 8 HIGH DESERT SWAP MEET & CAR SHOW: A sale of antiques and a car show; proceeds benefit local and regional charities; free admission; 7 a.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-4467 or bramsey@bendbroadband.com. RUN TO THE CASCADES MOTORCYCLE RALLY: The rally includes live music, jousting, charity poker, classic cars, a tattoo expo and more; a portion of proceeds benefit local charities; $15 day pass, $25 for weekend; 8 a.m.-7 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711 or www. runtothecascades.com. PRINEVILLE FARMERS MARKET: Free; 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E. Third St.; 503-739-0643 or prinevillefarmersmarket@gmail. com. GARDEN WORK PARTY: Help complete the reclaimed fence around the Kansas Ave. Learning Garden; free; 9 a.m.-noon; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-385-6908. SPORTSMAN JAMBOREE COLLECTIBLE SHOW: A show of guns, knives, coins and collectibles; food available; $5, $4 with a trade gun, free ages 12 and younger with an adult; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; La Pine Event Center, 16405 First St.; 541536-6237. YOGIS UNITE!: An outdoor yoga event with classes, exhibitors, a raffle and more; registration requested; $25 for two days; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; information@ yogisunitebend.com or www. yogisunitebend.com. NORTHWEST CROSSING FARMERS MARKET: Free; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives, Bend; 541-3821662, valerie@brooksresources. com or www.nwxfarmersmarket. com. A DAY TO REMEMBER: Featuring a fire truck parade, booths, axthrowing contests, demonstrations, races and more; proceeds benefit a scholarship fund for the children of fallen firefighters; free admission; 11 a.m.-6 p.m.; Big Al’s Firehouse Grill, state Highway 126 and Williams Road, Powell Butte; 541-548-1488. SISTERS FOLK FESTIVAL: Threeday folk music festival including performances by James McMurtry, Mary Gauthier, Gregory Alan Isakov and more; SOLD OUT; 11-12:30 a.m.; downtown Sisters; 541-5494979, info@sistersfolkfestival.org or www.sistersfolkfestival.org. VFW DINNER: A 9/11 barbecue, with a poker run; free; 1-7 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. LA GUITARRA IN MEXICO: A lecture tracing the history of the guitar and its different transformations in Mexico; free; 3 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-3121032, lizg@deschuteslibrary.org or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. “RICHARD III�: Thoroughly Modern Productions and Stage Right Productions present Shakespeare’s play about the controversial English king; $18, $15 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-3129626, 2ndstreettheater@gmail.com or www.2ndstreettheater.com. JASON & THE PUNKNECKS: The Nashville, Tenn.-based country punk band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.reverbnation.com/venue/ thehornedhand. THE HOONS: The indie rock band performs, with Dead Remedy; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.com.


B4

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

TUNDRA

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE

HEART OF THE CITY

SALLY FORTH

FRAZZ

ROSE IS ROSE

STONE SOUP

LUANN

MOTHER GOOSE AND GRIMM

DILBERT

DOONESBURY

PICKLES

ADAM

WIZARD OF ID

B.C.

SHOE

GARFIELD

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

PEANUTS

MARY WORTH


SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

BIZARRO

B5

DENNIS THE MENACE

SUDOKU Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.

SOLUTION TO YESTERDAY’S SUDOKU

DAILY BRIDGE CLUB

GET FUZZY

NON SEQUITUR

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five games weekly at www.bendbridge.org.

CANDORVILLE

SAFE HAVENS

LOS ANGELES TIMES DAILY CROSSWORD

SIX CHIX

ZITS

HERMAN


B6

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

‘The Possession’ set to scare off competition over slow Labor Day the film — 67 percent of whom were over the age of 25 — asLOS ANGELES — The hor- signed it an average grade of ror film “The Possession” is set B-plus, according to market to claim the No. 1 spot over the research firm CinemaScore. Labor Day weekend, though Based on Max Bondurant’s the most frightening thing at popular novel “The Wettest the box office may be poor County in the World,” the viooverall ticket sales. lent Depression-era picture The Sam Raicenters around m i - pr o duc e d AT THE BOX OFFICE three brothscary movie is ers trafficking expected to take moonshine. Of in a decent $15 million over the the new releases debuting this four-day holiday, according weekend, critics have been to individuals who have seen most kind to “Lawless,” which prerelease audience surveys. premiered to mixed response “Lawless,” a crime drama in May at Cannes. starring Shia LaBeouf and “Oogieloves” is shaping Tom Hardy, will have to vie for up to be an embarrassment the runner-up position against for Viselman, a veteran of “2016: Obama’s America,” as the children’s licensing busieach is likely to gross around ness known for his work with $12 million during the long Teletubbies and Thomas the weekend. The low-cost politi- Tank Engine. The film, which cal documentary, which has features unknown colorful already sold nearly $11 mil- talking puppets, only manlion worth of tickets, will add aged $102,564 when it debuted roughly 700 theaters as it ex- Wednesday. pands to 1,800 locations this The movie will need a miraweekend. cle to become a financial sucThe biggest flop at the box cess. It had a budget of around office this weekend will most $20 million and marketing certainly be “The Oogieloves costs of $40 million, all paid in the Big Balloon Adventure.” for by Viselman and a small The children’s film, which is group of high-net-worth pribeing independently distrib- vate investors. uted by toy mogul Kenn ViselMeanwhile, Walt Disney man, opened Wednesday and Studios will expand both is expected to take in a dismal “The Avengers” and “Brave” $6 million by Monday. to roughly 1,700 theaters in an “The Possession” is based effort to promote the movies on a story that first appeared before they hit home video. in the Los Angeles Times in The Marvel Entertainment 2004 about a college student superhero film, which is still who purchased a supposedly playing in more than 100 lohaunted cabinet box at a yard cations and has grossed a sale. The movie, which stars whopping $1.5 billion worldJeffrey Dean Morgan and wide since May, will go on Kyra Sedgwick, only scored a sale on Blu-ray and DVD on 31 percent fresh rating Thurs- Sept. 25. Pixar Animation’s day on Rotten Tomatoes. “Brave,” still in 600 theaters, Lionsgate co-financed the won’t be available to own until film with Raimi’s production Nov. 13. The June release company Ghost House Pic- about the Scottish princess tures for around $14 million. has collected more than $440 U.S. distribution rights for million in global ticket sales. “Lawless,” meanwhile, were Last year, Pixar’s “Cars 2” — acquired by the Weinstein Co. which first hit theaters in June at the 2011 Cannes Film Fes- 2011 — expanded from around tival. The movie hit theaters 200 theaters to more than 2,000 Wednesday, when it grossed during the Labor Day holiday $1.1 million. Those who saw and grossed $1.8 million. By Amy Kaufman

Los Angeles Times

College Continued from B1 U.S. News sends administrators a survey asking about schools in the same general category as their own. Some have given poor grades to other institutions to boost their own rankings. A couple of years ago, the provost at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, for instance, determined that 260 of its 262 peer institutions were of merely “adequate” quality. Most base their conclusions on the level of prestige an institution has achieved. In this regard, provosts and presidents at other schools may have some sense of the level of publication of faculty members at other institutions. But they would have no way of knowing about the quality of the teaching. There is also evidence that schools have fudged data about the percentage of adjuncts teaching at particular institutions. There is nothing inherently wrong with an adjunct and many are good teachers. But at some schools the adjuncts don’t have the time or inclination to engage with students. They can earn less than the minimum wage for their hours worked, because they are paid by the course. They don’t have offices, and few offer office hours. They have every incentive to inflate grades since the performance of many of these untenured instructors is evaluated only by students. Assuming students can visit a school when it’s in session, what should they look for? First, they might read the course catalog and then sit in on some classes that they might actually take during freshman year. The admissions office may try to impress visitors with an advanced seminar in constitutional law, taught by a senior professor and capped at 13 students. There is some small chance you will be able to take this class four years from now. But you may first have to sit through an introduction- to-

political-science class with 600 students. Why not visit that one instead? Then, look at who is at the front of the class. Professors often dislike teaching introductory courses. So they may be assigned to someone with little experience teaching, let alone in holding the attention of hundreds of young people in a large lecture hall. Schools that value teaching will make senior professors teach freshman. But even if they do, the teachers’ assistants handle more of the hands-on grading. In an age when you can watch lectures by great professors online, the interactive part of teaching — grading and answering questions — becomes more valuable. Maybe your teenager is someone who can learn well in a large class. If your child is barely staying awake for his or her 50-minute visit, however, it doesn’t bode well for freshman year. Whatever the average class size and the quality of the professors, it is also useful to find out how hard it is to get into the courses a student wants. U.S. News rewards schools for having a higher number of smaller classes. But if schools get more credit for keeping the size at 19 and you are the 20th student who wants to get in, you are out of luck. Increasingly students are complaining that they can’t even get into the classes they need to graduate on time. Are you prepared to pay another semester or year of tuition if that happens to you? Families who tour schools over the summer can often only ask their guides about these issues. If you go when school is in session, you can ask anyone lounging on the quad. It won’t be a scientific survey, yet it might be a more honest one. College tuition is probably the biggest investment a family will make outside of a mortgage. Doing some real homework will pay off. — Naomi Schaefer Riley is the author of “The Faculty Lounges and Other Reasons Why You Won’t Get the College Education You Paid For.”

Andy Tullis / The Bulletin

Pat Hansen, left, and Abel Lagassie, right, live at The Summit Assisted Living Facility in Southeast Bend and talk with LongTerm Care Ombudsman Nancy Allen at a table on the facility’s top floor.

Ombudsman Continued from B1 But, she said, the volunteer ombudsmen do handle just about everything else, including complaints about the food served at nursing homes, maintenance issues, billing questions, and, in The Summit’s case, concerns nursing home residents might have about their facility’s heavy front door. “Nancy’s the greatest,” Jaeger said. “She had been observing that this was a concern (among The Summit’s residents) and helped facilitate a resolution.”

The council Pat Hansen, 83, and Abel Lagassie, 72, said Allen has helped them solve issues at The Summit. For Hansen, it was a billing issue with her insurance company, while Lagassie needed help convincing the facility’s maintenance staff to replace the felt on a pool table. They also play a fairly active role working with The Summit’s Resident Council, a group of facility residents who meet each month to discuss problems with their care and ways to fix them. Allen helped this group get organized when she came to The Summit about five years ago. Hansen said many resi-

dents had voiced concerns about the facility’s heavy front door, the problems they personally had going through it with a walker or a wheelchair, and how they were worried someone might fall down and get hurt. But, she said, they also understood replacing a front door — especially when you replace a manual door with an automatic one — can be a very expensive proposition. That’s when Allen came up with an idea. Over a series of meetings, she helped resident council members draft a politely worded letter explaining their concerns about the door. Council members took this letter around the facility and got signatures from 55 of its 60 or so residents. “We just had to get everybody on the same page,” Lagassie said, adding he feels keeping the lines of communication open, both between facility residents and facility administrators and among the residents themselves, is one of the council’s most important jobs. Lagassie said one of Regency Pacific’s top executives visited The Summit about three weeks after the council mailed its letter to the company’s headquarters in Bellevue, Wash. Because the resident council knew about this meeting ahead of time, he said, it was able to get the facility’s residents together for an impromptu meeting and explain

to the Regency Pacific executive why they thought fixing the door was important. The executive told them he had received their letter, understood their concerns and would replace the door sometime in September as part of a major remodeling project it had planned for The Summit and a few other of its 52 retirement communities in California, Hawaii and the Pacific Northwest. “It’s finally happening,” Allen said. “You can try every approach to fix a situation but if it comes from the residents it’s bound to work.”

The company Scott Nay, Regency Pacific’s vice president of operations, has a slightly different version of the events that surrounded his company’s decision to replace the door. In an email, he said it had “recognized the need to replace the doors … prior to the letter and the meeting with the residents.” Nay said in his email that financing the project — which he estimated could cost between $9,000 and $11,000 — took longer than anyone at the company’s headquarters had expected and that was the reason the repair hadn’t been started before he received the letter. He also said that while Allen and the resident council may not have swayed the company’s decision to fix the front door they still played a critical

role in the project. “What I was able to do at the resident meeting and with the letter they wrote, is to communicate directly with the residents on the project and give them some time frames on when they could expect to see the project start,” he wrote. “I think the ombudsman’s involvement in assisting the residents both with the letter and communication with the company on this issue was of great help to the residents, as is the nature of the ombudsman program.” Nay continued to say that he’s seen a lot of things get accomplished because residents from a single long-term care facility or a group of longterm care facilities were able to come together with help from the ombudsman programs and work together on a project that affected their lives. But he said the program is just as effective when it works with residents to address their individual concerns and those that come from the community as a whole. “Often a resident or family member will feel more comfortable speaking with the ombudsman than with say the manager or other staff of a facility,” he wrote. “So often our staff will never know of a resident concern until the ombudsman brings it to them.” — Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com

Roberts leaves ‘GMA’ to undergo medical treatment New York Times News Service Starting Friday, ABC’s “Good Morning America” — which has surged ahead of the “Today” show in recent weeks to become the No. 1 morning television show in America — was without its biggest star, Robin Roberts. Roberts, who received a diagnosis of a rare bone marrow disorder in April, is about to undergo a bonemarrow transplant that will leave her hospitalized and homebound for four months or more. The break presents clear challenges, not just for Roberts, who must regain her health, but also for ABC, which earns huge profits from the morning show. It will have to find a way to maintain its nascent winning streak without her. Roberts signed off from

the show on Thursday, a day earlier than expected, because she needed to visit her 88-year-old mother, who is ill, in Pass Christian, Miss. “I love you and I’ll see you soon,” she told viewers, many of whom have gravitated to “Good Morning America” because of her. There are few if any precedents in the television industry for an extended leave of absence by a host, even on an ensemble show like “Good Morning America.” ABC thus finds itself in an extraordinarily difficult position: It has to keep viewers informed about Roberts’ condition and encourage them to keep watching the program while she is away, but not appear to be exploitative or insensitive. News coverage and public sympathy for Roberts

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could help “Good Morning America,” or her absence could lead viewers to try other morning shows. Roberts has been on the program for a decade, longer than any of her co-hosts In February, back when “Good Morning America” was No. 2, Roberts felt abnormally tired while covering the Academy Awards in Los Angeles.

Local Service. Local Knowledge. 541-848-4444 1000 SW Disk Dr. • Bend www.highdesertbank.com

EQUAL HOUSING LENDER

She followed up with doctors and, after some blood tests, underwent her first bone marrow test before a vacation at the end of March.


LOCALNEWS

News of Record, C2 Business, C3-5

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

LOCAL BRIEFING Construction to cause delays Nighttime construction work will begin on a stretch of Reed Market Road in Bend starting Wednesday. Construction will take place from the Bend Parkway to the Southwest Century Drive roundabout on Reed Market, and will also occur from that same roundabout to Southwest Chandler Avenue. The work will take place from 7 p.m. to 6 a.m. through Friday. Two-way traffic will be maintained through the construction zone, and drivers should expect delays.

www.bendbulletin.com/local

Cruise line disputes account Jobs • Findings rebut Bend woman’s claim that ship failed to aid vessel

PRINEVILLE

By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

Months after taking international criticism for cruising past a small boat in possible distress, Princess Cruises has issued a rebuttal to what a Bend woman and her friends say they saw from the deck of one of its ships. The company released video Thursday that it says proves a

boat spotted by three passengers aboard the Star Princess off Central America in the Pacific Ocean wasn’t the Fifty Cent, an ill-fated Panamanian fishing vessel on which two of the three men aboard died during weeks at sea after the engine failed. It also says an analysis of ocean current, wave and wind data shows the boats didn’t pass each other.

among those passengers. Meredith, who couldn’t be reached by phone Friday night, and two friends were out bird-watching on the Star Princess on March 10 when they say they saw a stranded boat through their spotting scopes. Jeff Gilligan of Portland used a Canon camera with a 300mm lens and a 1.4 times magnifier to capture photos of the distant boat. See Cruise / C2

“While this remains a tragic story, we are gratified to have scientific confirmation that Star Princess was never in the vicinity of the adrift boat and that the boat photographed by our passengers was not the adrift Fifty Cent,” Alan Buckelew, president and CEO of Princess Cruises, said in a press release. Judy Meredith of Bend was

at issue in council election By Joel Aschbrenner The Bulletin

The field is set in the race for the Prineville City Council. Five candidates are vying for three open seats and Mayor Betty Roppe is running unopposed. The city’s five council members are elected at-large rather than by districts or precincts. Each serves four-year terms while the mayor serves for two years. City councilor and mayor are nonpartisan, unpaid positions. The mayor presides over council meetings, votes on all council business and has the power to appoint all members of city boards.

— From staff reports

FIRE UPDATE Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon. For the latest information, visit www.nwccweb .us/information/ firemap.aspx.

Council candidates:

Bend

1

C

Obituaries, C7 Weather, C8

Jason Beebe

2

Baker 3 City Burns

Madras Bend MILES

4 0

50

Lakeview 1. Waterfalls 2 Fire • Acres: 12,265 • Containment: 70% • Cause: Lightning 2. Hay Creek Fire • Acres: 1,016 • Containment: 95% • Cause: Human 3. Parish Cabin Fire • Acres: 5,503 • Containment: 10% • Cause: Under investigation 4. Danner Loop 2 Fire • Acres: 20,461 • Containment: 60% • Cause: Under investigation

CLOSURES All city, county, state and federal offices will be closed for Labor Day. Libraries in Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties will be closed. Banks will be closed. Schools, including school district offices and Central Oregon Community College, will be closed. Post offices will be closed, and mail will not be delivered or picked up. Juniper Swim & Fitness Center in Bend will be open from noon to 5 p.m. Most liquor stores will be open.

Rob Kerr / The Bulletin

Plant manager Sean Williams talks about a waste-burning plant at its location in Prineville that is currently waiting for an air permit from the state.

Cleaning up carbon • Company needs air quality permit By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

A Bend company is waiting for state approval for a recycling plant in Prineville. Located on a former saw mill property, the company says it would be the first in Oregon to recycle carbon used to filter water and air. International Tech Corp. would recycle activated carbon — the sort of black filters used in water purifying pitchers — only it would come from industrial operations such as wastewater treatment plants, said company President Mike Ballantine. He said the facility would be the first in the state. See Carbon / C7

How the Thermal Recovery Unit works The Thermal Recovery Unit, designed by International Tech Corp. of Bend, takes spent carbon, which has been used to filter water or air, and reactivates it so it may be used again. The company has built the unit in Prineville and is waiting for state air permits before starting to reactivate carbon. 1

3

11 Virus survives winter in

body of adult Culex mosquito

Virus causes infection Human, animal immune systems usually destroy virus in bloodstream

Brain

bird, infects it

• Coos Bay: Volunteers prepare to collect tsunami debris brought by winter storms. • Eastern Oregon: Newly discovered wolf pack could lead to species delisting as endangered. Stories on C7

mosquitoes pass virus to birds, humans or horses, which may develop disease

Spinal cord If virus survives in body, it can infect membranes around spinal cord and brain (encephalitis)

Severe cases, deaths Risk highest for elderly, children and people with impaired immune systems

Symptoms usually mild • Fever • Headache • Body aches • Skin rash • Swollen lymph nodes

Source: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, MCT Photo Service

Reactivated carbon is collected

Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin

33 Other mosquitoes bite

• Coos Bay

Jason Beebe

Jason Carr

Rick Johnson

Gail Merritt

William Peterson

Source: International Tech Corp

Transmitted only by insect bite

44 Infected

Betty Roppe

Natural gas burners heat the carbon to 1,200 to 1,500 degrees

2

2 West Nile cases in Oregon spotlight danger of virus By Anne Aurand The Bulletin

Joseph •

Exhaust is heated to burn off pollutants and then sent into the air by a fan

4

Widespread in Africa and the Mideast, West Nile virus arrived in the U.S. in 1999 and began to spread.

bird, become infected

For our complete coverage, visit www.bendbulletin.com/ elections.

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Mosquitoes and West Nile virus

22 Infected mosquito bites

Incumbent Jason Beebe said one of his priorities would be to develop a sports complex with several soccer, baseball and softball fields for youth and adult leagues. “I have kids who play sports, and I would like to see a sports park with a little better facilities,” he said. “We’re just running out of room (for sports) in Prineville.” See Council / C2

Virus not known to be transmitted by contact with infected birds

© 2012 McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Two Oregonians, one in Coos County and one in Malheur County, tested positive for the West Nile virus this week, according to state health officials. The man and the woman, both 50 or older, are recovering. Statewide, West Nile virus cases in mosquitoes are considerably higher than in recent years, although no cases have been found in Central Oregon. West Nile virus is a potentially serious illness spread by mosquitoes and birds. Most infections in humans are mild, with fever and flu-like symptoms. Severe infections may cause encephalitis — an inflammation of the brain. On rare occasion, it can cause death. Oregon’s state and county public health departments,

Take precautions • Make sure screen doors and windows are in good repair and fit tightly. • Eliminate sources of standing water, including watering troughs, bird baths, clogged gutters and old tires, which are a breeding ground for mosquitoes. • When outdoors at dusk or dawn, when mosquitoes are most active, protect yourself by using mosquito repellents containing DEET, oil of lemon, eucalyptus or Picaridin. • Wear long-sleeved shirts and long pants in mosquito-infested areas. Source: Emilio DeBess, Oregon Health Authority veterinarian.

along with local vector control districts, have been testing mosquitoes and tracking West Nile virus cases since 1999, when the virus appeared in the United States. It was first diagnosed in Oregon in 2004, in humans, birds and horses. Crows, ravens, jays and other members of the corvid family that are infected carry

high loads of West Nile virus, said Donna Mulrooney, supervisor of the molecular diagnostics section of Oregon State University’s Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, which conducts West Nile testing. If a mosquito bites an infected bird, the mosquito invariably becomes infected with the virus, she said. See West Nile / C2


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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

West Nile Continued from C1 “Horses, on the other hand, are known as ‘deadend’ hosts,� Mulrooney said. “They don’t carry enough of a viral load to infect mosquitoes if bitten. However, the danger to horses is real. Anywhere from 30 to 50 percent of horses infected with West Nile virus will die.�

An uptick in West Nile This year has seen the highest levels of West Nile virus activity in mosquitoes since 2009, and it’s hitting Malheur County the hardest, according to the OSU diagnostic laboratory. “Things had died down for a couple of years, but this year (West Nile) came back to being around,� said Chad Stubblefield, director of the Four Rivers Vector Control, which does West Nile surveillance and monitoring and mosquito control between Sunriver and La Pine, where there are lots of rivers and a “horrendous� amount of mosquitoes. Until the two recent cases in humans, the virus had only been found in animals this year: a horse in Klamath County; a mosquito pool in Jackson County; two mosquito pools in Morrow County; and 55 mosquito pools and a bird in Malheur County. A mosquito pool is a sample of up to 50 female mosquitoes of the same species collected at one site. In contrast, only three pools of West Nile virus were confirmed last year in Oregon, and four in 2010. The virus peaked in Oregon in 2006, when it was found in some 1,100 pools of mosquitoes. That year, a record number of 73 humans in Oregon were known to be infected with West Nile, according to the Oregon Health Authority. Seventy of them contracted it in-state. Three contracted it elsewhere. Three-quarters were Malheur County residents. Thirteen, or 18 percent, of those were diagnosed with encephalitis or meningitis from the virus. One died. Another Oregonian died in 2007 of West Nile.

Central Oregon’s scene Central Oregon’s tri-county region has largely been

Council Continued from C1 Beebe said he aims to find corporate sponsors to fund the park rather than raising taxes. Following an unsuccessful run for mayor in 2010, Beebe was appointed city councilor, replacing a council member who moved out of the city limits. Beebe was born and raised in Prineville. He works for Les Schwab Tire Centers and serves as a cavalry scout for an Army National Guard unit based in Pendleton. He is married with three children.

Jason Carr Jason Carr, the former Crook County manager of Economic Development for Central Oregon, said if elected he would focus on recruiting blue-collar, family-wage jobs. “What I really hope to do is make sure the momentum that Crook County and Prineville have continues, not only with the growth of data centers, but other types of jobs to bring the unemployment down,� he said. The Prineville Airport and a local railroad depot make the town an ideal fit for manufacturing and distribution jobs, he said. Carr is the executive director of the Partnership to End Poverty, a Redmond-based nonprofit. A Bend native, Carr has lived in Prineville with his wife and two children since

West Nile cases in Oregon Two human cases of West Nile virus have been found in Oregon this year. Other cases were in animals or mosquito pools − samples of up to 50 mosquitoes gathered from a single location.

The Dalles

Portland

Pendleton La Grande

Salem Newport Eugene

Ontario

Bend Burns

Coos County One human Jackson County One mosquito pool

Morrow County Two mosquito pools

Medford

Klamath Falls

Klamath County One horse

Source: Oregon Health Department; Oregon State University’s Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory

Malheur County One human; one bird; 55 mosquito pools

Scott Steussy / The Bulletin

For more about West Nile in Oregon, including symptoms in humans: http://public.health.oregon. gov/DiseasesConditions/ DiseasesAZ/WestNile Virus/Pages/survey.aspx

spared from the West Nile virus, with no confirmed cases in animals or humans since 2006, when West Nile was confirmed in one Deschutes County resident, one Deschutes County bird and one Jefferson County horse. Cliff Kiser, the Crook County Vector Control district manager, said there’s no evidence to explain why Central Oregon has been lucky, but there are some pretty good theories. The most logical is that this is high country, and it’s a little cooler here than in the state’s eastern and southern counties, where the disease is more prevalent. Those regions have a longer warm season. The species of mosquitoes that best transmits the virus, called Culex, need time to build their numbers large enough to create a widespread problem. The eggs of the Culex mosquitoes are not sturdy enough to survive all winter, Kiser said. Some adults hide in houses and survive the winter, come out when spring warms up, and start laying eggs. “That means we start with almost a zero population of Culex,� Kiser said. Some other species of mosquitoes can hatch right out of the ice, but those types are less likely to transmit the vi-

2007. He previously served on the city budget committee and serves on the boards of the Prineville Hospital Foundation and the Crook County Education Council.

Rick Johnson Retired police officer Rick Johnson said the Apple and Facebook Prineville data centers have not provided enough local jobs and if elected he would focus on recruiting industrial and manufacturing jobs. “We need living wage jobs. We need some plants here,� he said. “I’m not too pleased with Apple and Facebook coming here because data centers don’t create many jobs. It’s a falsity to think many people are going to get jobs from them.� Johnson also said he is concerned about the city water supply, specifically that the data centers could draw down the aquifer on which the city relies. After retiring from the Air Force in 1965, Johnson served as a police officer in California and Nevada for 20 years. He ran a commercial real estate company in Roseburg for about 25 years before retiring to Prineville three years ago.

Gail Merritt Incumbent Gail Merritt said she just got her feet wet during her first term on the City Council and wants a second term to learn more. Merritt was appointed in 2010 to fill the council seat vacated when Roppe moved from councilor to mayor.

rus than the Culex. So, it’s a numbers game. The odds of getting bitten by a virus-carrying Culex in Central Oregon are lower than in other regions of the state. That is, right up until about Labor Day, when the Culex have rebuilt their populations, he said. A couple of hard frosts could knock their populations down any time, though, he said. “Temperatures are what really drives most of these mosquitoes that we have,� Kiser said. Stubblefield said the Culex thrives in floodwater areas, such as a flood-irrigated pasture. They prefer warm water and develop quickly in it. They can be found in east Bend, Alfalfa, and northeast and northwest Redmond, he said. They can also be found, in small numbers, in south Deschutes County.

Prevention State health officials are warning people who plan to camp or play outside this late-summer weekend to take preventive action against getting bitten by mosquitoes. “Having tracked West Nile cases for many years now, we know that the number of cases typically peaks by Labor Day weekend,� said Emilio DeBess, a Oregon Health Authority veterinarian. “There are simple things people can do to protect themselves.� Namely, avoid getting bitten. Cover your skin during the dawn and dusk hours when mosquitoes are most active, and wear repellent.

Cruise

Gilligan said he planned to review his photos and see if he could sharpen them. If the boat isn’t the Fifty Cent, he was sure it was a strange coincidence that there seemed to be another boat in trouble. The bird-watchers told the ship’s crew about the boat, but the Star Princess didn’t stop. Once the cruise was over, Meredith learned about the Fifty Cent and thought they must have seen it. The Fifty Cent left Rio Hato, Panama, on a fishing trip on Feb. 24 with Oropeces Betancourt, 24, Fenando Osario, 16, and Adrian Vasquez, 18, aboard. Only Vasquez would come back alive. Returning from fishing and with land in sight, the boat’s motor lost power. For days the boat drifted into the ocean with the men grilling and eating fish they’d caught and drinking fresh water from a large jug. The three men were still alive on March 10 and Vasquez later told Don Winner, a journalist with the Eng-

Continued from C1 “It definitely looked like a boat that was adrift without power and signaling us for help,� he said. Gilligan said Friday he’d reviewed the video released by Princess Cruises but he wasn’t convinced that he hadn’t seen the Fifty Cent. “I really can’t tell from their video one way or another,� he said. The video shows the Fifty Cent had a flat bow with its name in red paint on it, as well as a double strip of paint along its side, according to Princess Cruises. In contrast, the company contends that Gilligan’s photos show a boat with a raised bow, a different paint scheme and no name on the front. Michael Snyder, a retired photo analyst who worked at NASA’s Johnson Space Center, reviewed the video and photo and determined they showed different boats, according to Princess Cruises.

lish news source PanamaGuide.com, that he saw the cruise ship but it didn’t stop. Bentancourt and Osario died before Vasquez was rescued by a commercial fisherman on March 24. The video released by Princess Cruises shows Vasquez on the Fifty Cent after his rescue as well as close-up shots of the small boat. Princess Cruises said it has been sued six times by Vasquez and relatives of his shipmates and demands the cases be dismissed. Vasquez’s attorney, Edna Ramos, told the Associated Press that the boat seen by the bird-watchers was the Fifty Cent because it had the same blue tarp as the boat sighted off the Star Princess. Ramos said the lawsuit will continue. “The cruise company is just trying to extend this, to wear us out until we give up,� she told the Associated Press said. “We are ready to fight for years.� — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com

P O For The Bulletin’s full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.com/officials. Fax: 503-378-5156 Email: superintendent.castillo @state.or.us Web: www.ode.state.or.us

STATE OF OREGON Gov. John Kitzhaber, Democrat 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov Secretary of State Kate Brown, Democrat 136 State Capitol Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us

Treasurer Ted Wheeler, Democrat 159 Oregon State Capitol 900 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer @state.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us

800 N.E. Oregon St., Suite 1045 Portland, OR 97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax: 971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail@state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet 1000’s Of Ads Every Day

Superintendent of Public Instruction Susan Castillo 255 Capitol Street N.E. Salem, Oregon 97310 Phone: 503-947-5600

Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum, Democrat 1162 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian

Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com

— Reporter: 541-383-0304, aaurand@bendbulletin.com

Merritt said she doesn’t have a specific agenda but wants to see the city continue to work with Crook County officials to grow the local economy. She cited a joint effort earlier this month to redraw the city’s urban growth boundary to promote industrial development. “I think it’s an exciting time, when the city and county are working closer than they ever had in the past,� she said. Merritt has lived in Prineville since 1969 and also chairs the Crook County Fair board and the Crook County Foundation.

William Peterson Retired truck driver William Peterson said he is running for City Council because he wants to make the city government more open and transparent. “We the people are being run over,� he said. “The mayor and the council should talk to the people, not at the people.� The city should post the meeting agendas further in advance and do more to alert the public of what is going on around town, Peterson said. Peterson is a member of the Crook County Patriots, a local tea party group, and described himself as a constitutional purist. Peterson moved to Prineville in 1991. He said he doesn’t know much about serving as a city councilor but said he plans to learn a lot before the election. — Reporter: 541-633-2184, jaschbrenner@bendbulletin.com

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

information, call 541-383-0358. Prineville Police Department

DUII — Chase Dunten, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants and theft at 11:34 p.m. Aug. 30, in the area of Northwest Claypool Street.

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DUII — Halie Elaine Wilkins, 29, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:14 p.m. Aug. 30, in the area of Northwest Ninth Street and Northwest Locust Avenue in Prineville.

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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

BUSINESS s

CLO SE 3,066.96 CH AN G E +18.25 +.60%

NASDAQ

IN BRIEF Airlines start merger talks US Airways Group Inc. is a step closer to a possible merger with American Airlines. The two carriers announced Friday they have signed a nondisclosure agreement, and will exchange confidential financial information so that they can evaluate a potential combination. The companies said they will not speak publicly about the status of discussions, until they have a deal or terminate talks. The airlines said they would work “in good faith” and “close collaboration” with American’s unsecured creditors committee. They noted there is “no assurance that a transaction will result.” American also signed a similar agreement with International Consolidated Airlines Group SA, owner of British Airways, according to a Bloomberg News report. US Airways has aggressively pursued a possible merger with American since soon after AMR Corp. filed for bankruptcy in November. In a letter to US Airways employees Friday, CEO Doug Parker said he was “pleased to be working directly with American to study a potential merger.” “It does not mean we are merging — it simply means we have agreed to work together to discuss and analyze a potential merger,” Parker wrote.

Bankers warned on political cash WASHINGTON — The Securities and Exchange Commission said Friday that bankers may be donating to state and local politicians who hire them to underwrite bond deals, possibly violating a ban aimed at influence-peddling. The SEC’s Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations said banks may be breaking the law by underwriting bond deals within two years of the donations. The SEC said financial institutions may also have made inadequate disclosures to regulators. The SEC is urging banks to take greater steps to comply with limits on political donations enacted in 1994 to curb the practice of awarding bond deals to campaign contributors. The SEC didn’t identify banks or say whether any cases triggered enforcement action. —From wire reports

Out of work The number of U.S. workers seeking jobless benefits held steady last week, suggesting slow improvement. Continuing to claim unemployment insurance Initial claim Week ending Aug. 18 3.3 million

6 5 4 3 2

Week ending Aug. 25 374,000

1 ’08

’09

’10

’11 ’12

Note: Report on continuing claims lags initial claims by one week Source: U.S. Department of Labor © 2012 McClatchy-Tribune News Service

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DOW JONES

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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

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10 Barrel expansion hits snag Europe By Jordan Novet The Bulletin

No one said it would be easy for a Central Oregon brewery to open a facility in another state. 10 Barrel Brewing Co., which started in Bend as Wildfire Brewing Co. in 2007, announced in January its intent to open a brewpub in Boise, Idaho, this summer. The idea was to brew on site in Boise and also bring in

beer brewed at the company’s northeast Bend facility. But Idaho law bars out-ofstate brewers and wholesalers from holding financial interests in retail businesses in the state, which blocks 10 Barrel from receiving a license from Idaho’s Alcohol Beverage Control Bureau to brew for consumption on premises. Brewing in Idaho without importing from Oregon would

be permitted, though. “We were definitely caught off guard,” said Garrett Wales, the 10 Barrel partner who has led the company’s efforts to open in Boise. 10 Barrel has been in talks with the bureau concerning the licensing issues. The company is waiting to see how the discussions turn out before putting in place a time line for opening, Wales said. Lt. Bob Clements, chief of

the Alcohol Beverage Control Bureau, said his agency has consulted the Idaho Office of the Attorney General. A 10 Barrel brewpub in Idaho would make the brewery the first based in Central Oregon to open a facility in another state. It’d be one way for 10 Barrel to stand out among the 15 operational breweries in Central Oregon. See 10 Barrel / C5

proposes central bank oversight By James Kanter New York Times News Service

Ty William Wright / New York Times News Service

Doug Wallace, a legally blind Eastern Kentucky University graduate who racked up $89,000 in student loans, gets close to the TV to read a movie title recently at his father’s house in Plain City, Ohio. To discharge student loans in bankruptcy, the borrower has to convince a judge that repaying the loan will cause “undue hardship” and, often, that there is a “certainty of hopelessness” in their financial lives.

Price of student loan cancellation: hopelessness By Ron Lieber New York Times News Service

PLAIN CITY, Ohio — It isn’t easy to stand up in an open courtroom and bear witness to the abject wretchedness of your financial situation, but by the time Doug Wallace Jr. was 31 years old, he didn’t have much left to lose by trying. Diabetes had rendered him legally blind and unemployed just a few years after graduating from Eastern Kentucky University. He filed for bankruptcy protection and quickly got rid of thousands of dollars of medical and other debt. But his $89,000 in student loans were another story. Federal bankruptcy law forces those who wish to erase that debt to prove that repaying it will cause an “undue hardship.” And one component of that test is often convincing a federal judge that there is a “certainty of hopelessness” to their

financial lives for much of the repayment period. “It’s like you’re not worth much in society,” Wallace said. Nevertheless, Wallace made his case. And on Wednesday, nearly six years after he first filed for bankruptcy, he may finally get a signal as to whether his situation is sufficiently bleak to merit the cancellation of his loans. The gauntlet he has run so far is so forbidding that a large majority of bankrupt people do not attempt it. Yet for a small number of debtors like Wallace who persist, some academic research shows there may be a reasonable shot at shedding at least part of their debt. So they try. Before the mid-1970s, debtors were able to get rid of student loans in bankruptcy court just as they could credit card debt or auto loans. But after scattered reports of new doctors and lawyers filing for

bankruptcy and wiping away their student debt (on the way to the BMW dealership, presumably), resentful members of Congress changed the law in 1976. In an effort to protect the taxpayer money that is on the line every time a student or parent signs for a new federal loan, Congress toughened it again in 1990 and again in 1998. In 2005, for-profit companies that lend money to students persuaded Congress to extend the same rules to their private loans. But with each change, lawmakers never defined what debtors had to do to prove that their financial hardship was “undue.” Instead, federal bankruptcy judges have spent years struggling to do it themselves. Most have settled on something called the Brunner test, named after a case that laid out a three-pronged standard for judges to use when determining whether

they should discharge someone’s student loan debt. It calls on judges to examine whether debtors have made a good-faith effort to repay their debt by trying to find a job, earning as much as they can and minimizing expenses. Then comes an examination of a debtor’s budget, with an allowance for a “minimal” standard of living that generally does not allow for much beyond basics like food, shelter and health insurance plus some inexpensive recreation. The third prong, which looks at a debtor’s future prospects during the loan repayment period, has proved to be especially squirm-inducing for bankruptcy judges because it puts them in the prediction business. This has only been complicated by the fact that many federal judicial circuits have established the “certainty of hopelessness” test that Wallace must See Debt / C5

BRUSSELS — The European Commission insisted Friday that the 6,000 banks in the euro area be centrally supervised to prevent future financial crises, even though leading German politicians expressed skepticism about the breadth of the plan. The proposal, which the commission said it would formally present Sept. 12, is expected to hand the European Central Bank the right to withdraw banking licenses and the power to order other adjustments, representing a sharp turn away from national controls. The proposal stops short of allowing the ECB to wind up problem banks, leaving that function to national regulators. A main objective of the policy is to curb the ability of individual countries to prop up failing banks or conceal problems, ideally improving the stability of the broader eurozone. The changes are an “opportunity for eurozone leaders to show the world that they are drawing lessons from the crisis and can streamline their supervisory structures,” Karel Lannoo, chief executive of the Center for European Policy Studies, wrote in a commentary published by his organization Friday. But some Germans are highly sensitive about giving up authority over their large public banking system, which is partly controlled by states, districts and cities, and that has cast some doubts over the goal of turning the proposal into law by the end of the year. Klaus-Peter Flosbach, finance policy spokesman for the parliamentary group of the ruling party in Germany, the Christian Democrats, told the daily Suddeutsche Zeitung that it was “completely wrong” for the ECB to regulate the Sparkassen, the hundreds of German savings banks. Germany’s Landesbanken, the regional banks, were severely hit by the financial crisis in 2008 and 2009. Writing in The Financial Times, the German finance minister, Wolfgang Schauble, said supervision should focus only on those banks that could pose a threat to the entire European financial system, while some key policy makers at Germany’s central bank, the Bundesbank, have expressed wariness about expanding the European bank’s powers. See Europe / C5

Catfish producers get help from federal government By John H. Cushman Jr. New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — In the federal government’s efforts to help farmers and ranchers survive this year’s devastating drought, perhaps the most surprising step has been a dose of support for struggling producers of catfish. It’s not that their ponds, shimmering across some of the poorest counties from Alabama to Arkansas, were literally drying up, although the catfish industry has been

shriveling for 10 years. Rather, catfish assistance came as part of a $170 million federal purchase of pork, chicken, lamb and fish announced in early August, all intended to prop up farmers hit by skyrocketing prices of feed like corn and soybeans. The Agriculture Department, in addition to its routine purchases for school lunches and food banks, would buy an extra $10 million of catfish, the administration announced. That would be more catfish

than the government bought all last year, and enough to put a significant dent in a glut of catfish that has left fish farmers this year squeezed between rising feed costs and falling prices for the fish. Whether it is enough to head off the continuing collapse of the industry is another question, according to catfish specialists. “I think we are seeing a change before our very eyes, quicker than we ever dreamed,” said Roger Barlow,

executive vice president of the Catfish Farmers of America. “We have never had as high a feed cost and at the same time seen our pond-bank price go down,” Barlow said. A $10 million purchase, at recent prices paid by the government, would be more than 3 million pounds of frozen catfish. “That’s not a lot, but it can’t help but help,” said Craig Tucker, a catfish expert and former director of the Thad Cochran National Warmwater Aquacul-

ture Center of Mississippi State University, in Stoneville. The glut that has depressed fish prices built up suddenly this year, to the industry’s surprise, after a shortage last year after increasing numbers of farmers bailed out. Inventories of frozen catfish doubled to about 10 million pounds from about 5 million in the last year, according to the government. In effect, the government will soak up most of that increase. See Catfish / C5


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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

The weekly market review New York Stock Exchange Name

Last Chg Wkly Name

A-B-C ABB Ltd 17.32 +.19 -.22 ACE Ltd 73.73 +.21 -.52 AES Corp 11.39 ... -.12 AFLAC 46.18 +.16 ... AG MtgeIT 23.60 ... +.09 AGCO 42.09 -.08 -.43 AK Steel 5.22 +.22 -.40 AOL 33.67 -.04 +.75 AT&T Inc 36.64 -.05 -.31 AU Optron 3.03 -.01 -.02 AbtLab 65.54 +.14 -.30 AberFitc 35.99 +.10 -.20 AcadiaRlt u24.90 +.17 +.59 Accenture 61.60 +.45 +.07 AccoBrds 6.59 ... -.21 AccretivH 11.89 -.03 +1.34 ActiveNet d11.26 +.46 +.27 AdvAuto 71.12 +.10 -.85 AMD d3.72 +.02 -.22 AdvSemi 3.70 +.03 +.07 AecomTch 19.39 +.15 +.22 Aeropostl 13.93 -.19 +.53 Aetna 38.41 -.39 -.31 AffilMgrs 117.62 +.44 -.94 Agilent 37.16 +.12 -.69 Agnico g 48.32 +2.31 +1.13 Agrium g 98.38 +2.16 +.55 AirProd 82.58 +.82 -.75 AlaskAir s 33.55 ... -.52 Albemarle 54.73 +.33 -1.67 AlcatelLuc 1.13 +.01 -.04 Alcoa 8.56 +.12 -.07 Alere 18.78 +.19 -.17 AllegTch 29.64 +.31 -1.13 Allergan 86.13 +.43 +.88 AlliData u137.65 +.48 -.84 AlliBInco u8.58 ... +.08 AlliBern 14.32 -.34 +.73 Allstate 37.28 +.10 -.26 AlonUSA u13.68 -.04 +.05 AlphaNRs 5.94 ... -.46 AlpTotDiv 4.38 +.05 +.01 AlpAlerMLP 16.34 +.06 +.14 Altria 33.96 -.48 -.12 AmBev 37.61 +.83 +.11 Amdocs 32.24 +.30 -.14 Ameren 32.72 -.28 -.48 Amerigrp u90.92 +.14 +.10 AMovilL 25.59 +.39 +.10 AmAxle 11.17 +.10 +.28 AEagleOut u22.24 -.06 +.28 AEP 42.99 +.19 +.19 AmExp 58.30 +1.13 +.81 AmIntlGrp 34.33 +.54 -.14 AmTower 70.40 +.28 +.96 AmWtrWks 36.87 -.12 -.52 Ameriprise 54.91 +.36 -.27 AmeriBrgn 38.52 +.42 +.42 Ametek s 34.31 +.12 -.15 Amphenol 60.87 +.55 -.79 Anadarko 69.27 +1.01 -.30 AnglogldA d31.90 +.74 -1.56 ABInBev u84.18 +.83 +1.94 Ann Inc u35.58 -.14 +.59 Annaly 17.31 +.13 +.15 Anworth 6.86 -.02 +.13 Aon plc 51.96 +.25 -.41 Apache 85.75 +.66 -1.75 AptInv 26.48 -.08 -.38 AquaAm 25.00 ... -.05 ArcelorMit 14.70 +.21 -.56 ArchCoal 6.11 -.07 -.44 ArchDan 26.75 +.22 +.37 ArcosDor 13.21 +.01 -.15 ArmourRsd 7.46 +.02 +.14 Ashland 73.63 +.93 +.14 Assurant 35.25 +.66 +1.07 AssuredG 13.20 +.01 -.42 AstoriaF 10.07 +.04 +.33 AstraZen 46.79 -.21 -.49 AuRico g 6.93 +.51 -.21 AutoNatn 40.20 -.09 -.32 Autoliv 59.29 +.46 -1.32 AvalonBay 141.52 -.26 -2.66 AveryD 31.23 +.50 ... Avnet 32.21 +.39 -.24 Avon 15.45 +.01 -.11 AXIS Cap 34.07 +.44 +.33 BB&T Cp 31.54 -.06 +.43 BCE g 44.49 -.32 -.53 BHP BillLt 65.80 +.82 -3.00 BHPBil plc 58.77 +.66 -2.35 BP PLC 42.06 +.15 -.13 BP Pru d88.33 -1.18 -20.54 BPZ Res 2.29 +.07 +.02 BRFBrasil 16.11 +.28 -.40 BakrHu 45.60 +.60 -1.91 BallCorp 42.17 +.36 +.14 BallyTech 44.29 +.01 -.09 BcBilVArg 7.53 +.36 +.38 BcoBrad pf 16.42 -.04 -.41 BcoSantSA 7.04 +.32 +.13 BcoSBrasil 7.58 +.16 -.32 BkofAm 7.99 +.08 -.17 BkMont g 58.50 +.55 +.32 BkNYMel 22.54 +.24 +.11 BkNova g 53.03 +.34 +.05 Barclay 11.63 +.08 -.23 Bar iPVix 11.51 -.41 +.18 BarnesNob 11.97 -.01 +.28 BarrickG 38.52 +1.43 +.94 BasicEnSv 11.10 -.06 -.54 Baxter 58.68 +.23 -.07 Beam Inc 58.36 +.26 +.16 BeazerHm 2.94 +.06 -.09 BectDck 75.98 +.17 +.05 Belo 7.30 +.06 -.12 Bemis 30.26 +.06 -.14 BerkH B 84.34 +.33 -1.05 BerryPet 36.84 +.45 -1.21 BestBuy 17.74 -.06 +.43 BigLots 30.44 +.07 +.16 BBarrett 21.93 +.36 -.67 BioMedR 18.53 +.01 +.14 BlkHillsCp 34.20 +.09 +.78 BlackRock 176.37 +.36 -.40 BlkDebtStr u4.37 +.02 +.13 BlkEEqDv 7.40 +.03 -.03 Blackstone 13.49 -.25 -.04 BlockHR 16.56 +.01 +.21 Boeing 71.40 +.58 +.31 Boise Inc 7.53 +.16 +.29 BorgWarn 68.78 +1.15 +.35 BostProp 112.13 +.73 +.29 BostonSci 5.40 -.03 -.10 BoydGm 6.01 +.18 -.22 Brandyw 12.20 -.08 ... Braskem 12.57 +.08 -1.17 Brinker 34.46 -.36 -.05 BrMySq 33.01 +.14 +.44 BroadrdgF 23.68 +.25 +.08 Brookdale 21.73 ... +.02 BrkfldAs g 34.53 -.17 -.88 BrkfldOfPr 16.74 -.02 -.31 BrwnBrn 26.24 +.12 +.42 BrownShoeu15.01 +.18 +.11

Last Chg Wkly Name

Brunswick 23.69 +.13 Buckeye 49.42 +.86 Buckle 45.54 -.74 Buenavent 34.66 +.84 BungeLt 63.65 +.21 BurgerK n d13.03 -.03 C&J Engy 20.13 +.79 CBL Asc u21.37 +.08 CBRE Grp 17.31 +.11 CBS B u36.34 +.34 CF Inds 207.01 +3.45 CIT Grp 37.76 -.11 CMS Eng 23.07 +.13 CNO Fincl 8.90 -.02 CPFL Eng d20.98 +.14 CSX 22.46 +.05 CVS Care 45.55 +.35 CYS Invest 14.38 +.19 CblvsnNY 14.95 +.24 CabotOG s 41.41 +.87 CalDive d1.49 -.12 Calix 5.31 -.03 CallGolf 5.75 +.01 Calpine 17.55 -.21 CamdenPT 69.43 -.24 Cameco g 21.86 -.04 Cameron 54.71 +1.48 CampSp u35.14 +.05 CampusCC 10.80 +.22 CdnNRs gs 30.40 +.30 Canon 33.29 -.21 CapOne 56.53 +.51 CapOne pfPu25.00 +.03 CapitlSrce 6.93 +.10 CapsteadMu14.34 +.08 CardnlHlth 39.55 -.02 CareFusion 26.27 -.13 CarMax 30.59 +.30 Carnival 34.68 -.35 CastleAM 13.03 +1.11 Caterpillar 85.33 +.86 CedarRlty u5.49 -.05 Celanese 38.26 +.25 Cemex 7.47 -.15 Cemig pf s 17.00 -.84 CenovusE 32.70 +.49 Centene 40.61 -.04 CenterPnt 20.39 -.13 CenElBras 6.50 -.45 CntryLink 42.26 +.18 ChesEng 19.35 +.31 Chevron 112.16 +1.23 ChicB&I 36.82 +.21 Chicos u18.94 +.16 Chimera 2.54 +.01 ChinaMble 53.69 +.28 ChinaUni 15.86 -.52 Chubb 73.89 +.39 ChurchDwt 54.74 +.45 Cigna 45.77 +.09 Cimarex 57.21 +.53 CinciBell u4.69 +.19 Cinemark 23.42 +.13 Citigroup 29.71 +.06 CliffsNRs d35.84 +.09 Clorox 72.75 +.45 CloudPeak 17.59 -.11 Coach 58.13 +.78 CobaltIEn 22.71 +.49 CocaCola s 37.40 +.26 CocaCE 29.53 +.13 Coeur 22.99 +1.04 ColgPal 106.31 +.50 Comerica 30.71 -.29 CmclMtls 12.74 +.01 CmwREIT 14.97 -.04 CmtyHlt 27.04 -.01 CBD-Pao 42.88 +.37 CompSci 32.21 +.21 ComstkRs 16.49 +.27 Con-Way 30.31 +.98 ConAgra 25.11 +.12 ConchoRes 89.74 +1.59 ConocPhil s 56.79 +.68 ConsolEngy 30.20 -.51 ConEd 60.62 -.14 ConstellA u32.94 +.12 ContlRes 74.06 +1.65 Cnvrgys 15.51 +.04 Cooper Ind 73.15 +.24 CooperTire 19.99 ... Copel 17.79 -.71 CoreLogic 24.60 +.17 Corning 11.99 +.37 CorrectnCpu33.31 +.08 Cosan Ltd 13.93 +.01 CousPrp 7.99 +.06 CovantaH 17.10 +.11 CoventryH 41.63 -.05 Covidien 56.05 +.21 CS VS3xSlv32.47 +4.02 CSVS2xVxS 2.61 -.15 CSVelIVSt 13.89 +.41 CredSuiss 19.26 +.69 CrwnCstle u63.46 +.31 CrownHold 36.25 +.09 CubeSmartu12.90 +.05 Cummins 97.11 +1.37 CurEuro 124.98 +.67 Cytec u68.47 +1.22

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DrxEnBear 8.54 DirEMBear 13.96 DirxSCBull 56.20 DirxSPBull 83.80 DirxEnBull 48.99 Discover u38.73 Disney 49.47 DolbyLab 33.18 DoleFood 12.88 DollarGen 51.07 DollarTh u87.16 DomRescs 52.48 Donldson s 35.29 DEmmett 23.99 Dover 57.81 DowChm 29.31 DrPepSnap 44.81 DuPont 49.75 DukeEn rs 64.78 DukeRlty 14.50 Dycom 14.52 E-CDang 5.08 EMC Cp 26.29 EOG Res 108.30 EPAM Sy n 17.50 EQT Corp 53.96 EastChm s 55.26 Eaton 44.72 EatnVan 27.09 EV TxDiver 9.34 EVTxMGlo 8.65 Ecolab 64.03 EdisonInt 43.79 EducRlty 11.56 EdwLfSci 102.11 Elan 11.36 EldorGld g 13.28

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Last Chg Wkly

FordM 9.34 ForestCA 15.08 ForestLab 34.69 ForestOil s 7.41 Fortress 3.93 FBHmSc n u25.50 ForumEn nu23.67 FranceTel 13.90 FrankRes 117.40 FMCG 36.11 Freescale 10.01 Frontline 3.13 Fusion-io 28.02

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G-H-I GMAC CpT 24.82 GMX Rs .79 GNC 38.85 Gafisa SA 4.11 GameStop 19.08 Gannett 15.26 Gap u35.82 GaylrdEnt 40.54 GenCorp u9.13 GenDynam 65.51 GenElec 20.71 GenGrPrp 20.58 GenMills 39.33 GenMotors 21.35 Gensco 70.65 GenOn En 2.53 Genpact 18.25 GenuPrt 63.16 Genworth 5.29 GaGulf u39.64 Gerdau 8.93 GiantInter s 4.83

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Name

How to Read the Market in Review Here are the 1,133 most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange, the 830 most active on the Nasdaq National Market and 255 most active on American Stock Exchange. Stocks in bold changed 10 percent or more in price. Name: Stocks are listed alphabetically by the company’s full name (not its abbreviation). Company names made up of initials appear at the beginning of each letter’s list. Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. Chg: Loss or gain for last day of week. No change indicated by “…” mark. Wkly: Loss or gain for the week. No change indicated by … Name: Name of mutual fund and family. Sell: Net asset value, or price at which fund could be sold, for last day of the week. Wkly: Weekly net change in the NAV. Stock Footnotes: cc – PE greater than 99. cld - Issue has been called for redemption by company. d - New 52-week low. dd – Loss in last 12 mos. ec - Company formerly listed on the American Exchange's Emerging Company Marketplace. g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h - temporary exmpt from Nasdaq capital and surplus listing qualification. n - Stock was a new issue in the last year. The 52-week high and low figures date only from the beginning of trading. pf - Preferred stock issue. pr - Preferences. pp - Holder owes installments of purchase price. q – Closed-end mutual fund; no PE calculated. rt - Right to buy security at a specified price. s - Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. wi - Trades will be settled when the stock is issued. wd - When distributed. wt - Warrant, allowing a purchase of a stock. u - New 52-week high. un - Unit,, including more than one security. vj - Company in bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of the name. Dividend Footnotes: a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement. i - Sum of dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. j - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred. k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date. Mutual Fund Footnotes: e – Ex-capital gains distribution. f – Previous day’s quote. n - No-load fund. p – Fund assets used to pay distribution costs. r – Redemption fee or contingent deferred sales load may apply. s – Stock dividend or split. t – Both p and r. x – Ex-cash dividend.

Source: The Associated Press and Lipper, Inc. Sales figures are unofficial.

“109 Ways to Discover Central Oregon” will not just tell readers about what this region has to offer; it will show them how to fully experience Central Oregon, ensuring their visit to the area is as unique as it is unforgettable.

Last Chg Wkly Name

Molycorp d11.51 Monsanto 87.11 MonstrWw 6.97 Moodys 39.60 MorgStan 15.00 Mosaic 57.91 MotrlaSolu 47.66 Movado u35.16 MuellerWat 3.83 MurphO 51.33 NCR Corp 22.39 NRG Egy 21.34 NV Energy 17.54 NYSE Eur 25.05 Nabors 14.77 NamTai u10.29 NOilVarco 78.80 NatRetPrp u31.06 Nationstr n 27.12 Navistar 21.98 NewOriEd 13.90 NY CmtyB 13.26 NY Times 9.19 Newcastle 7.60 NewellRub 17.93 NewfldExp 32.63 NewmtM 50.68 NewpkRes 6.88 Nexen g 25.21 NextEraEn 67.31 NiSource 24.34 NielsenH 28.04 NikeB 97.36 NobleCorp 38.14 NobleEn 87.90 NokiaCp 2.82 Nordstrm u57.83

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Last Chg Wkly Name

Petrobras 21.14 PtroqstE 6.37 Pfizer 23.86 PhilipMor 89.30 PhilipsEl 22.87 Phillips66 n 42.00 PiedmOfc 16.97 Pier 1 18.48 PilgrimsP 5.32 PinnclEnt 11.07 PinWst 51.37 PioNtrl 97.36 PitnyBw 13.36 PlainsEx 39.32 PlumCrk 40.93 Polaris s 75.19 Polypore d32.42 PortGE 26.84 PortglTel 4.92 Potash 41.07 PwshDB 28.79 PS Agri 30.42 PS USDBull 22.30 PS SrLoan u24.77 PS SP LwV 27.76 PSHYCpBdu19.07 PwShPfd 14.80 PShEMSov 30.19 PSIndia 16.88 Praxair 105.50 PrecCastpt161.08 PrecDrill 7.44 PrinFncl 27.44 ProLogis 34.17 ProShtS&P 35.06 PrUShS&P 14.41 PrUltQQQ s 59.87

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EllieMae 25.77 Embraer 26.95 EmersonEl 50.72 Emulex 6.85 EnbrdgEPt 29.46 Enbridge 39.42 EnCana g 22.20 EndvSilv g 8.89 Energizer 68.90 EngyTEq 43.95 EngyTsfr 42.72 EnergySol 2.45 Enerpls g 15.77 ENSCO 57.37 Entergy 68.08 EntPrPt 53.40 Equifax 45.78 EqtyOne 21.20 EqtyRsd 60.40 EsteeLdr s 59.95 Esterline 59.80 ExcoRes 6.85 Exelis n 10.10 Exelon 36.47 Express 15.61 ExterranH 18.39 ExtraSpce 34.11 ExxonMbl 87.30 FMC Cp s 54.32 FMC Tech 46.84 FairchldS 14.52 FamilyDlr 63.64 FedExCp 87.63 FedInvst 21.22 Ferro 3.28 FibriaCelu 7.73 FidlNFin 18.84 FidNatInfo 31.50 Fifth&Pac 13.25 FstHorizon 8.96 FstInRT 12.90 FMajSilv g 19.73 FirstEngy 43.70 FiveStar u4.73 FlagstBcp .94 Flagstone 8.54 Flx3yrTips 25.39 FlowrsFds 20.65 Flowserve 127.66 Fluor 51.50 FEMSA 84.50 FootLockr 34.57

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CalaGDyIn 8.30 CalaStrTR 10.02 CalAmp 7.60 Callidus 4.47 CalumetSpu28.51 CdnSolar 2.79 CapFedFn 11.87 CpstnTrb h .00 Cardiom gh d.33 Cardtronic 28.25 CareerEd 3.15 CaribouC 12.79 Carmike 11.50 Carrizo 25.24 Caseys 56.55 Catamaran 87.15 CathayGen 16.37 Cavium 32.30 Celgene 72.04 CelldexTh 5.64 CentEuro lf 2.73 CenGrdA lf u11.80 CentAl 6.23 Cepheid 37.74 Cerner 73.14 CerusCp 3.19 Changyou 23.24 ChartInds 69.80 CharterCm 77.80 ChkPoint 46.09 Cheesecake 33.21 ChildPlace u56.94 ChinGerui d1.76 ChinaInf rs 1.00 CienaCorp 13.67 CinnFin 38.66 Cintas 40.42 Cirrus u41.67 Cisco 19.08 CitrixSys 77.69 CleanEngy 13.14 Clearwire 1.60 CogentC u19.60 CognizTech 64.28 Coinstar 51.12 ColdwCrk h .57 ColBnkg 17.84 ColumLb h 1.07 Comcast 33.53 Comc spcl 32.87 CmcBMO 40.23 CommVlt 50.42 CmplGnom 3.04 CompCred 6.07 Compuwre 9.99 Comverse 6.00 ConcurTch u72.40 Conns u23.16 ConsolCom 16.28 ConstantC 19.55 CopanoEn 30.69 Copart s 26.71 CorinthC 2.02 CorOnDem 26.81 Costco u97.87 CowenGp 2.61 Cray Inc 11.41 Cree Inc 28.20 Crocs 17.49 CrosstexE 12.40 CrosstxLP 14.88

D-E-F DCT Indl 6.32 DDR Corp u15.22 DNP Sel rt d.04 DR Horton 18.99 DTE 58.40 DanaHldg 13.66 Danaher 53.57 Darden 51.95 Darling 16.62 DaVita 97.27 DeVry 19.31 DeanFds 16.42 Deere 75.11 Delek u26.26 DelphiAu n 30.29 DeltaAir 8.65 DenburyR 15.49 DeutschBk 35.44 DevonE 57.83 Dex One 1.74 Diageo u109.22 DiaOffs 67.02 DiamRk 9.62 DiceHldg 7.98 DicksSptg 49.76 Diebold 32.58 DigDMda n d2.07 DigitalRlt 74.51 Dillards u75.08 DxEMBll rs 76.88 DxFnBull rs 96.65 DirSCBear 16.55 DirFnBear 20.18 DirSPBear 18.67 DirDGldBr 34.87 DirDGldBll 12.90

Last Chg Wkly Name

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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

Debt

P M Marika Smiley has joined Go Solar! Central Oregon as the project coordinator. The solar project is designed to make using solar power easier and more affordable for homeowners. Smiley is also the project manager for Accelerate Bend. Andie Lind- Smiley gren has joined Moementum Inc. in Bend as the social media manager. Lindgren has more than 15 years of experience in Bostwick marketing and communication. She previously worked in Chicago advertising agencies on national campaigns and Hoover spent six years as marketing manager for Bend Park & Recreation District. Lindgren also owns a consulting business called Leapstrong. Carolyn Bostwick, Nancy Hoover and Linda Williams

have joined Duke Warner Realty and formed Team 11 Northwest. Bostwick was previously the managing broker of Sunriver Realty’s Bend office and has served as president for both the Oregon’s Women’s Council of Realtors and Jett Central Oregon Association of Realtors. Hoover was previously with Pacific Union Realty’s Berkeley office in California, Williams then worked as director of development at the High Desert Museum and the Deschutes Land Trust in Bend. Williams is co-owner of RiverRim home builder Tamarack Homes and her brokerage, Tamarack Real Estate Services handled the sales and marketing of the company’s homes for eight years. Gail Jett, of Bend Obstetrics and Gynecology and Healing Response Acupuncture, has joined Bend Spay and Neuter Project as board president.

Catfish

would not be enough fish to supply processors in 2012 and 2013. But instead, the supply has exceeded demand. As the price of domestic catfish increased last year, customers substituted other fish like inexpensive tilapia, or imported catfish and similar species from countries like Vietnam and China. And these buyers, unlike the federal government, have not come back even though prices have fallen. “What makes the situation so dire is that the processors are not getting these sales back,” said Hanson. “And now, everyone is uncertain — if they grow fish, will there be anyone to sell them to?” The prospect of continuing high feed prices is deeply worrying to farmers, who can easily spend roughly 75 cents on feed to produce each pound of fish in the two years it takes to raise a fingerling to fillet size. Today, they are getting about 85 cents a pound for grown fish, not enough to generate a profit. They sell on the spot market, not under production contracts. The price of catfish feed had drifted between about $200 and $300 a ton for 20 years before suddenly increasing to above $400 a ton in the past two years, and to nearly $600 this summer. “It’s impossible to make even a napkin calculation showing that this is profitable,” Tucker said.

Continued from C3 But nobody expects the federal purchases, equivalent to about one week’s national sales of processed catfish, to bring the price at the pond up to the break-even point, or to affect the price of feed in any way, or to offset import competition, which was up 30 percent in June from a year earlier. “It does not get at any of the underlying problems facing the farmers,” said Terrill Hanson, an aquaculture economist at Auburn University. Domestic production of farm-raised catfish has been declining for years, and the trend has accelerated as feed prices and imports have climbed. By various measures, the industry has shrunk by half since its peak a decade or so ago. From January 2010 to January 2011, more than 20 percent of catfish farming operations closed. That caused a shortage last year of fully grown catfish for the companies that cut them up, process them for cooking and freeze them, eventually selling them through brokers to restaurants and supermarkets. The price of catfish, both at the farm and after processing, went up as a result, and the business was reasonably profitable last year. As recently as the start of this year, Hanson predicted in an annual report that there

10 Barrel Continued from C3 At least seven others are under construction or awaiting approval in the region. Establishing a second brewpub has been a goal for 10 Barrel for a few years, Wales said. Among other reasons, the brewery’s four partners chose Boise because the city’s culture resembles Bend’s. “And,” Wales said, “I think there’s a lot of opportunity in that market. It’s a very up-andcoming craft beer market, as opposed to a very established craft beer market, like Bend or Portland....” To prepare for the opening of a Boise brewpub, Wales said, 10 Barrel has already secured

a brewer and found a location on West Bannock Street in downtown Boise, around the corner from the Capitol. Six other breweries operate in Boise, a city with more than 205,000 residents. Sheila Francis, marketing director at Boise-based Payette Brewing Co., said she looks forward to the opening of a 10 Barrel brewpub in Boise because it could raise the city’s profile as a hot spot for craft brewing. “As long as they make good beer, why not?” said Francis, who is also board president of the trade group Idaho Brewers United. “It brings everybody up, in our opinion.” — Reporter: 541-633-2117, jnovet@bendbulletin.com

Continued from C3 pass in Ohio. Lawyers sometimes joke about the impossibility of getting over this high bar, even as they stand in front of judges. “What I say to the judge is that as long as we’ve got a lottery, there is no certainty of hopelessness,” said William Brewer Jr., a bankruptcy attorney in Raleigh, N.C. “They smile, and then they rule against you.”

Bringing a case Debtors themselves struggle with testifying in their undue hardship cases. Carol Kenner, who spent 18 years working as a federal bankruptcy judge in Massachusetts before becoming a lawyer for the National Consumer Law Center, said that one particular case stuck in her mind. The debtor had a history of hospitalization for mental illness but testified that she did not suffer from depression at all. “She was so mortified about the desperation of her situation that she was committing perjury on the stand,” Kenner said. “It just blew me away. That’s the craziness that this system brings us to.” Debtors also stretch the truth in other directions. In 2008, a federal bankruptcy judge in the Northern District of Georgia expressed barely disguised disgust in deciding a case involving a 32-year-old, Mercedes-driving federal public defender with degrees from Yale and Georgetown. With nearly $114,000 in total household income, the woman’s financial situation was far from hopeless, despite her $172,000 in student loan debt. No one keeps track of how many people bring undue hardship cases each year, but it appears to be under 1,000, far less than the number of people failing to make their student loan payments. In its most recent snapshot of student loan defaults, the Department of Education reported that among the more than 3.6 million borrowers who entered repayment from Oct. 1, 2008, to Sept. 30, 2009, more than 320,000 had fallen behind in their payments by 360 days or more by the end of September 2010. About 10.3 million students and their parents borrowed under the federal student loan program during the 2010-11 school year. One reason so few people try to discharge their debt may be that such cases require an entirely separate legal process from the normal bankruptcy

Europe Continued from C3 Even so, the commission held firm Friday. “We have seen over the past period so-called nonsystemic banks popping up and posing systemic risks, so for the situation that we face it is important that we have a large coverage and an ambitious proposal,” said Stefaan De Rynck, a spokesman for Michel Barnier, the European Union commissioner for the internal market. De Rynck said rules on the winding up of banks, including the sale of assets, would remain — for now, at least — the responsibility of national banking supervisors, as would other tasks like consumer protection. The commission plans to put most big euro area banks under ECB supervision by the middle of next year and to bring in the remaining lenders by early 2014, said EU officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity be-

proceeding. In addition, those who may qualify generally lack the money to hire a lawyer or the pluck to file a suit without one. Nor is the process quick, since the lender or the federal government often appeals when it loses. And even if clients can pay for legal assistance, some lawyers want nothing to do with undue hardship cases. That’s the approach Steven Stanton, a bankruptcy lawyer in Granite City, Ill., settled on after trying to help David Whitener, a visually impaired man who was receiving Social Security disability checks. The judge wasn’t ready to declare him hopeless and gave him a twoyear “window of opportunity” to recover from his financial situation, saying he believed that Whitener had the potential to obtain “meaningful” employment. Stanton did not see it that way. “It’s the last one I’ve ever done, because I was just so horrified,” he said. “I didn’t even have the client pay me. In all of the cases in 30 years of bankruptcy work, I came away with about the worst taste in my mouth that I’ve ever had.” Those who do go to court face the daunting task of arguing against opponents who specialize in beating back the bankrupt. If they’re trying to discharge a federal loan, they’ll often square off against Educational Credit Management Corp., a so-called guaranty agency sanctioned by the government to handle a variety of loanrelated legal tasks, from certifying students who are eligible for loans to fighting them when they try to discharge the loans in bankruptcy court. On its website, the agency paints a picture of how much of a long shot an undue hardship claim is, noting that people “rarely” succeed in discharging student loan debt. Some academic researchers have come to a different conclusion, however. Rafael Pardo, a professor at the Emory University School of Law, and Michelle Lacey, a math professor at Tulane University, examined 115 legal filings from the western half of Washington state. They found that 57 percent of bankrupt debtors who initiated an undue hardship adversary proceeding were able to get some or all of their loans discharged. Jason Iuliano, a Harvard Law School graduate who is now in a Ph.D. program in politics at Princeton, examined 207 proceedings that un-

cause the proposal still was being finalized. The proposal also would modify the way an existing pan-European agency, the European Banking Authority, operates to enable countries like Britain that do not use the single currency to shape decisions, though the specifics of how that would be achieved have not yet been decided, the officials said. The proposals had been expected Sept. 11 but were pushed back by a day to allow Jose Manuel Barroso, the president of the commission, to present the plans in his annual State of the Union speech to the European Parliament. By beefing up supervision under the auspices of the ECB, one of the few European institutions to emerge from the crisis with its reputation intact, the commission is seeking to end the so-called doom loop, where member states rack up enormous debts by bailing out their banks.

folded across the country. He found that 39 percent received full or partial discharges. His assessment of ECMC’s view of the rarity of success? “I think that’s wrong,” he said. While his sample size was small and he agrees that it’s not easy to prove undue hardship and personal hopelessness, his assessment of bankruptcy data suggests that as many as 69,000 more people each year ought to try to make a case. And they don’t necessarily need to pay lawyers to argue for them, as he found no statistical difference between the outcomes of people who hired lawyers and those who represented themselves. Dan Fisher, ECMC’s general counsel, said it had no opinion on whether more borrowers should try to make undue hardship claims. As for the “rarely” language on its website, he said the company stood by its assertion that it was uncommon for an undue hardship lawsuit to end in a judgment discharging the loans in its portfolio.

Getting a ruling Sometimes, getting any judgment is a challenge, as judges may delay a decision if the case seems too close to call or there is a possibility that the facts may change reasonably soon. Radoje Vujovic, a North Carolina consumer bankruptcy lawyer, for instance, had more than $280,000 in student loan debt and just $23,000 in annual income. When Judge A. Thomas Small, a federal bankruptcy judge in the eastern district of North Carolina, examined the case in 2008, he decided to wait two years before rendering final judgment, given that Vujovic thought his law practice might grow. “Must the cost of hope be permanent denial of discharge of debt?” Small asked in his written opinion. “The answer to that question cannot be an unequivocal ‘yes.’ Hope is not enough to end the inquiry and, ironically, permanently tip the scales against a struggling debtor.” The Department of Education, unhappy with the twoyear delay, appealed before the period was up and persuaded a higher court to overturn the ruling. “I would stand by my decision,” Small, who is now retired, said in an interview. “If you’re forced to make that decision, all you have is speculation, and speculation is really not good enough to overcome the burden of proof.” Getting judges out of the

C5

speculation business, however, would require a new law or an entirely new standard, possibly from the U.S. Supreme Court. Neither appears likely anytime soon. In the meantime, Doug Wallace, the blind man in Ohio, is nearing the end of his long wait for a ruling. In December 2010, C. Kathryn Preston, a federal bankruptcy judge in the southern district of Ohio, tried to assess Wallace’s hopelessness by pointing to expert testimony that blindness does not necessarily lead to an inability to ever work again. But she also noted that because he lived in a rural area, he faced significant transportation obstacles. So she set a new court date for Sept. 5, to give him “additional time to adjust to his situation.” The question for Wallace then became what sort of adjustments he was supposed to make aside from a courtordered $20 monthly loan payment. His routine hasn’t changed much. Aside from hernia surgery a few months ago, his days consist of sitting close to the television (he can just make it out through one eye that still has a bit of vision) and regular trips to the gym with his father. His college diploma hangs on the living room wall, and at night he sleeps underneath it on the couch of the rental house he shares with his father and sister. Wallace’s sister, a community college student, is sometimes around during the day while his dad works at a Honda factory. There are few visitors. “I’ve got friends around here, I’m sure, but they’ve got lives for themselves,” he said. “So I don’t really bother them.” The judge did not explicitly order him to move closer to a training center, and his lawyer, Matt Thompson, said that doing so would set him up for certain failure. “I don’t think there is any place he could go in central Ohio and live on $840 a month,” he said. Logistics aside, Wallace said that it was hard to imagine his overall situation ever improving and wonders who would hire a blind man in this economic environment. “Do I think I’m hopeless?” he said. “Well, yeah, I mean by looking at it you would think I am hopeless. Like it won’t get

Rebecca Nonweiler, MD, Board Certified

(541) 318-7311

www.northwestmedispa.com

Welcome to the Team Natalie Vandenborn Natalie and her family have enjoyed living in Bend for 5 years and she would love to show you why! All the outdoor activities make Bend the perfect place to love to live and play. “The Realtor that friends feel good about referring friends to”. Natalie Vandenborn, Broker 541-508-9581 cell 541-323-4828 direct NVandenborn@gmail.com

650 SW Bond Street, Suite 100, Bend, OR

The weekly market review American Stock Exchange Name

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Inuvo d.41 InvVKAdv2 13.49 InvVKSelS 13.10 IsoRay .81 KeeganR g 3.69 KimberR g .72 LadThalFn 1.39 LkShrGld g 1.02 Libbey 14.69 LongweiPI 1.47 LucasEngy 1.67 MAG Slv g 10.27 MadCatz g .69 Medgenics 12.25 MeetMe 2.45 Metalico 2.30 MdwGold g 1.37 MincoG g .48 MinesMgt 1.37 NTN Buzz .17 NTS Inc .71 NHltcre 44.69 NavideaBio 3.64 NeoStem .62 NeuB HYld 14.87 NBIntMu 16.43 NBNYInt 15.36 NBRESec 4.81 Neuralstem d.64 NevGCas 1.00 Nevsun g 4.03 NewEnSys .55

-.01 -.05 ... +.18 +.02 +.12 +.01 -.02 +.21 +.05 +.02 +.01 +.03 +.01 +.04 -.01 +.16 +.32 +.07 +.09 -.01 -.12 +.52 +.06 +.01 +.03 -.07 -.70 +.08 -.04 +.02 +.08 +.12 +.03 +.00 -.04 +.05 +.00 -.01 -.02 +.01 ... -.10 +.21 -.04 -.17 -.01 +.00 +.12 +.33 +.09 +.65 +.01 +.48 +.05 +.09 +.09 +.19 +.01 +.06 +.20 +.05 +.03 +.05

NwGold g 11.06 NA Pall g 1.81 NDynMn g 2.83 NthnO&G 16.34 NovaBayP 1.18 NovaCpp n 2.47 NovaGld g 4.65 NCaAMTFr 15.20 NuvCADv2 15.80 NCADv3 14.02 NvDCmdty 21.69 NuvDiv2 15.90 NuvDiv3 15.30 NvDivAdv 15.56 NuvAmtFr 15.10 NMuHiOp 13.89 NuvREst 11.88 OrientPap 2.05 OrionEngy d1.48 Pacholder 9.47 PalatinTch .61 ParaG&S 2.48 ParkNatl 67.35 PhrmAth 1.24 PionDvrsHiu21.29 PlatGpMet .79 PolyMet g 1.15 ProlorBio 4.89 Protalix 5.43 Quaterra g d.36 QuestRM g 1.29 RMR RE 17.74

Biggest mutual funds +.53 +.11 +.15 -.13 +.03 +.44 +.01 -.29 ... -.06 -.13 -.16 +.29 ... -.06 +.07 -.05 +.08 +.04 +.11 +.18 -.15 +.11 +.48 +.06 +.29 +.02 +.25 ... -.05 +.11 +.44 -.01 +.36 +.01 -.06 -.05 -.51 -.10 +.09 ... +.01 +.10 +.05 -.41 -.39 -.02 -.04 -.04 +.24 +.02 -.04 -.01 +.01 +.04 +.02 -.02 +.11 +.03 +.01 +.06 +.09 -.02 +.12

RareEle g 3.93 ReavesUtl 24.78 Rentech 2.20 RevettMin 3.10 RexahnPh .47 Richmnt g 4.16 Rubicon g 3.50 SamsO&G 1.03 Sandst g rs 9.75 SaratogaRs 5.23 SearchMed 1.57 Senesco .23 SilverBull .51 SilvrCrst g 2.80 SinoHub d.15 Solitario 1.26 SondeR grs 1.01 SCEd pfD u25.00 SparkNet 5.65 SprottRL g 1.43 SuprmInd 3.95 SynergyRs 2.80 SynthBiol 2.01 TanzRy g 4.43 Taseko 3.00 TasmanM g 1.58 Tengsco .71 TianyinPh .49 TimberlnR .34 Timmins g 2.52 Tompkins 38.84 TrnsatlPet 1.04

+.03 -.17 -.02 +.33 -.02 ... +.08 -.05 -.01 +.01 +.31 -.10 +.12 +.01 -.02 -.04 +.23 -.02 -.04 -.55 +.18 +.10 +.01 -.02 +.02 +.01 +.28 +.05 +.00 -.01 +.02 -.04 +.08 +.04 -.33 -.08 +.04 -.34 +.01 +.01 -.05 +.03 +.06 -.02 -.01 +.06 +.22 -.16 +.09 +.13 +.01 +.08 -.02 +.03 -.01 +.01 ... +.02 +.26 +.24 +.48 +.49 ... -.04

TravelCtrs 5.25 TriangPet 6.87 Tucows g 1.19 TwoHrb wt .65 UQM Tech 1.01 US Geoth .34 USAntimny 2.60 Univ Insur 3.50 Ur-Energy 1.01 Uranerz 1.45 UraniumEn 2.55 VangMega 48.62 VangTotW 47.14 VantageDrl 1.52 VirnetX 26.01 VistaGold 3.08 VoyagerOG 1.24 Vringo 3.15 Vringo wt 1.50 WalterInv 27.99 WFAdvInco 10.64 WFAdMSecu16.19 WFAdUtlHi 11.92 WstnAsInt 10.48 WstC&G gs .94 WidePoint d.48 WT DrfChn 25.20 WT Drf Bz 18.75 WizrdSft rs 4.91 YM Bio g 1.89 ZBB Engy .35

+.06 +.16 +.05 -.01 -.04 +.01 ... +.05 +.01 +.05 +.06 +.29 +.33 +.02 -.33 +.13 -.01 -.02 +.10 +.21 -.01 +.09 -.06 -.05 -.03 -.00 +.02 +.09 -.05 +.03 +.01

+.06 +.05 -.11 +.14 +.19 +.02 +.23 +.03 -.06 -.02 -.02 -.01 -.23 +.01 +2.13 -.12 -.05 -.42 -.01 -.01 +.04 +.20 +.04 +.02 -.04 -.04 +.02 -.01 +.26 -.07 +.04

Name PIMCO Instl PIMS: TotRet n Vanguard Idx Fds: TotStk n Vanguard Instl Fds: InstIdx n Fidelity Invest: Contra n American Funds A: CapInBldA p Vanguard Admiral: 500Adml n American Funds A: IncoFdA p Vanguard Admiral: TotStkAdm n American Funds A: GwthFdA p Vanguard Instl Fds: InsPl n American Funds A: CapWGrA p American Funds A: InvCoAA p American Funds A: WshMutA p Frank/Temp Frnk A: IncoSerA p Dodge&Cox: Stock Dodge&Cox: Intl Stk Vanguard Instl Fds: TSInst n Vanguard Admiral: WelltnAdm n Vanguard Admiral: TtlBdAdml n Vanguard Idx Fds: TotlIntl n

Obj IB XC SP LG BL SP BL XC LG SP GL LC LC BL LV IL XC BL IB IL

Total Assets Ttl Rtrn/Rnk ($Mins) 4-wk 163,565 71,581 65,440 58,441 57,830 56,946 56,152 55,757 54,360 45,853 45,246 44,594 40,156 39,553 38,821 36,185 35,337 35,325 34,157 33,672

+0.6 +1.7 +1.4 +1.7 0.0 +1.4 +0.5 +1.7 +1.9 +1.4 +0.8 +1.0 +0.5 +0.5 +1.3 +1.0 +1.7 +0.7 +0.4 +1.2

12-mo +8.6/A +17.0/A +18.0/A +14.8/C +10.4/B +18.0/A +12.3/A +17.2/A +13.1/C +18.0/A +8.2/B +15.8/C +16.4/B +12.0/A +16.3/B -0.7/C +17.1/A +13.6/A +5.8/E -2.3/D

Min 5-year

Init Invt

+55.1/A 1,000,000 +8.6/B 3,000 +6.7/A 5,000,000 +18.2/B 2,500 +6.1/D 250 +6.7/A 10,000 +12.8/C 250 +9.2/A 10,000 +1.8/E 250 +6.8/A 200,000,000 -3.7/B 250 +0.3/C 250 +3.7/C 250 +20.6/B 1,000 -9.2/D 2,500 -16.9/B 2,500 +9.2/A 5,000,000 +22.9/A 50,000 +38.0/C 10,000 -18.5/C 3,000

Percent Load NL NL NL NL 5.75 NL 5.75 NL 5.75 NL 5.75 5.75 5.75 4.25 NL NL NL NL NL NL

NAV 11.50 35.10 129.31 77.28 52.65 130.15 17.83 35.12 32.80 129.32 35.20 30.24 30.95 2.20 115.85 31.37 35.12 58.38 11.21 13.96

G – Growth. GI – Growth & Income. SS – Single-state Muni. MP – Mixed Portfolio. GG – General US Govt. EI – Equity Income. SC – Small Co Growth. A – Cap Appreciation. IL – International. Total Return: Change in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%, E in bottom 20%. Percent Load: Sales charge. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. NA – Not avail. NE – Data in question. NS – Fund not in existence.


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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

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The Bulletin

AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER

B M C G B J C R C

Chairwoman Publisher Editor-in-Chief Editor of Editorials

A reasonable tree harvest is good for all

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hat’s left of the Eastern Oregon timber industry took another blow recently with the announcement that the Malheur Lumber Co. sawmill in

John Day will close. When it does, many of the 90 people working there will either be forced to move to find work or will be unemployed. The problem for the Malheur mill, as with so many others, is simple. It cannot purchase enough trees to operate, largely because harvests on public land across Oregon have plummeted in the last 25 years, from 4,892 million board feet in 1986 to 387 million board feet in 2010. Federal timber sales accounted for more than half of all timber sold in 1985 but only about 10 percent in 2010. The story is similar west of the Cascades. But west of the Cascades isn’t John Day, population 1,855, and the loss of the mill and its jobs in that small community will be devastating. There’s no Eugene, no Salem nor Portland within driving distance for potential jobs, just Prairie City, population 1,110, which has problems of its own. It shouldn’t have to be that way. Oregon’s forests are filled with timber, too much of it, in fact. As the harvest has declined, so, too, have such things as forest restoration. At this week’s end, more than 5,000 acres were ablaze in

timberland roughly 20 miles south of John Day near Seneca; if recent history predicts the future, the trees will burn and mostly be left to rot, harbor pests and become fuel for even more fires. No one seriously suggests that Oregon’s timber industry be restored to what it was in the 1970s, when clear-cutting was common even in species like ponderosa pine, which gains no benefit from the practice. That was not sustainable forestry, and it was as damaging as the current situation is. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore., and others have worked tirelessly to try to bring science and reason to the table where forest health is concerned, with some, but not enough, progress. That’s unfortunate here; it’s a catastrophe in John Day. But unless things change and forest restoration, including cutting of trees, becomes acceptable, jobs in the little towns of Eastern Oregon, John Day, Hines, Burns and others, are doomed to slow deaths.

From the Archives Editor’s note: The following editorial from July 25, 1963, does not necessarily reflect the views of The Bulletin’s editorial board today.

Sen. Musa overstepped bounds in making this sneak appointment Sen. Ben Musa, serving as Oregon governor pro-tem by virtue of his position as President of the State Senate, this week appointed a man to an important job. He was able to do so because Governor Mark Hatfield was out of the state on necessary business. Before we go any further, let’s make two things clear. In the first place, Musa had the legal right to make the appointment, because of a provision in the outdated Oregon Constitution. In the second place, we must assume his appointee is a good man, who might or might not have been appointed by Gov. Hatfield. We question on the propriety of Musa’s making the appointment under all the circumstances. The state’s Constitution provides for an interim governor when the elected governor is out of the state. The provision was written many years ago, when an out-

of-state governor was many days, or many weeks, away from his job, before travel and communications made it possible for him to keep in touch with the state. The provision was made so someone could make decisions, when quick decisions were necessary. Those days are gone forever. In the first place, there was no emergency, requiring a quick decision. In the second place, Hatfield was, at the most, about 10 minutes away from his office by telephone. He was attending a national conference, at which governors of all 50 states were present, and communications were excellent. ‌ The intent of the framers of the constitution was clear. They wanted to be sure someone could carry on the duties of Governor. They did not foresee the able staff furnished present-day governors. Nor did they foresee jet aircraft which could put Hatfield back in Oregon from any place in the world in 12 hours. They knew nothing of practically instantaneous telephone and radio communication. As a practical matter, Hatfield would be more out of touch on a pack trip in the Wallowas than he would at the conference he was attending ‌ .

My Nickel’s Worth Romney, Ryan provide ‘Hope and Change’ All you Libs and Democrats (we can also include the independents) have your quote from President Barack Obama coming true. His mantra of “Hope and Change� took three and a half years to come to fruition, but finally it was given to the world and Republican Party by the names of Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan. Thanks and kudos in keeping your promise, Mr. Obama. Allure Nicholls Powell Butte

We’re tearing down the human spirit The ecologists tell us we are destroying the planet. The courts and the politicians stand in the way of energy independence and job creation, all in the name of protecting the environment. Dirty air and water, man-made global warming, the spotted owl. Save the planet for our children. Yet, because of this obsession for nature, we continue to pile debt on our kids, we tear down the human spirit with dependency on the government, we rob people of their self-worth through unemployment and worst of all we continue to destroy the family unit. What good is a pristine environment if the human race is reduced to a lobotomized state, feeding at the government trough like animals in the zoo. Unleash the human spirit, allow us to work at meaningful tasks, allow us to achieve the human potential through our own means, give us back the challenges that made this country great. The planet is being destroyed not by oil rigs on the water, pipelines across the tundra,

or coal going to China, but rather by bureaucrats and their “you can’t� ideology. Jim McCaffery Bend

Public sector retirement plans are Ponzi schemes The op-ed article titled, “Entitlements must be reformed to avoid a crisis of debt,� by Bryan Lawrence in The Bulletin on Aug. 18, accurately describes the approaching collapse of Medicare and Social Security. Lawrence describes them as, “the greatest Ponzi scheme ever contrived.� I agree, but these federal programs are not the only Ponzi schemes currently in place. The many state, county and city public employee retirement schemes are based on the same principle. The early retirees receive their full benefits, being paid partly by younger workers and willing taxpayers, but when the retiree benefits and existing employee payroll exceeds the state or community income, then drastic measures must be taken. Dubious accounting maneuvers can camouflage the problem for a while, but cities such as Harrisburg, Pa., Montgomery, Ala., San Bernadino and Stockton, Calif., to name a few, have been forced into bankruptcy. What impact does this have on the public employees, active and retired, and the citizens in these communities? These problems have been growing for many years and the fault lies with greedy public employee unions, as well as easily influenced, and possibly corrupt public officials. The past cannot be undone, but today, and the future, is in the hands of current union and political leaders. If they lack the courage to face the impending debt crisis, they

should acknowledge their weakness and step aside. Jack Cook Bend

Workers are the heroes We Americans seem to be enthralled with wealth and the wealthy, placing those at the top echelon of private as well as public organizations on pedestals. The reality is that most of us are not, and will never be, among that top echelon of wealth. However, those who do the work necessary for this economy to function are the real heroes. They are the ones who actually “work� for a living rather than spend so-called business hours on the golf course. They are the real backbone of the American economy. The real heroes, those we should admire the most, are the waitresses, the secretaries, the mechanics, the electricians, those who really create the wealth in America. My hat is off to these folks. More importantly, their contribution to the development of wealth should result in their receiving a fair share of that wealth. We have far too many American workers who are existing on poverty incomes while there are a large number of billionaires, that is twelve zeros, who begrudge paying taxes or decent wages and benefits to their employees, those who do the work to create those billions. And while the millionaires and billionaires continue to live well in this down economy, the working folks are suffering while the unemployed, the most severely affected by the economic downturn, are told they could find a job if they were not so lazy. What rubbish. Dick Phay Prineville

Letters policy

In My View policy

How to submit

We welcome your letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250 words and include the writer’s signature, phone number and address for verification. We edit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhere and those appropriate for other sections of The Bulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed piece every 30 days.

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

Please address your submission to either My Nickel’s Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Write: My Nickel’s Worth / In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804 Email: bulletin@bendbulletin.com

Too many sacrifices asked to save endangered species By Carroll Asbell elcome to the predatorfriendly, new-world order of livestock production emphasizing the multiple advantages gained when you voluntarily provide your livestock as sustenance for the endangered species, the Canadian gray wolf. You will be educated in the proven advantages of flags, shock collars and wolf-friendly management techniques as well as generous compensation programs that will enrich your bottom line. You will be introduced to a multitude of time-tested methods that will ensure our wolf population will thrive and prosper with little or no cost to the more progressive and enlightened members of our society. Hopefully you Cattle Barons will finally recognize that your grudging acceptance to provide free wolf feed is only a modest repayment for your past destruction of the

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environment and destruction of our ecosystem. Payment is long overdue for your destruction of an endangered species. I would like to define endangered species as a population of organisms, which is facing a high risk of becoming extinct because it is either few in numbers or threatened by changing environmental or predation parameters. I would like you to consider some additional criteria, those being, political ineptitude, sociocultural ignorance and a lack of collective will and leadership. Let’s look at a familiar example of an endangered species headed for extinction caused by political ineptitude and sociocultural ignorance, that two-legged organism being, the Northwest logger. Logging was felled by the spotted owl ruse and the industries’ failure to organize and mobilize against changing environmen-

IN MY VIEW tal theories, while being hoodwinked by our pliable politicians in Washington and state capitals. Environmental tacticians used the bird to close the forests and destroy generations of alleged ecosystem-destroying outlaws. Likewise the Canadian wolf will be used to deny stockmen access to the public grasslands and hamstring the livestock producer. By the way, are you familiar with the latest government report emphasizing the amazing recovery of the spotted owl? No? Maybe the reason this good news has not reached you is the spotted owl is not recovering because the barred owl has finally won the decades-old battle for the habitat, the logger dupe tagged with the crime. The spotted owl has served well, rest in peace. However,

our environmental heroes and our toady politicians should not absolve the logger at any price. Should we open the woods and restore a prolific industry and the jobs, jobs, jobs? Absolutely not. For the record, let me state I have penned the above under a false flag. I reject the proposition that there are any proven, cost-effective “non lethal� wolf control methods, and any party that espouses this fiction needs to be rejected, absent documented long-term proof. The fiction of fair, timely compensation for predation losses is belied by the imposition of controls and costly protection efforts required to qualify for funding. You are delusional if you trust the entrenched politicos and the dedicated, well-funded liberal crowd to provide any fair relief. Considering the sociocultural climate, I am not a proponent of triple

“S� (shoot, shovel and shut-up) as the first rancher caught shooting a wolf will be prosecuted harshly by the feds and wind up under the federal hoosegow. The hysterical progressives will assure our politicians and press will be in full cry for the pelt of the offender as an example to other heretics. Getting crucified for shooting a wolf only advances the “Neanderthal Cowboy� aspect to the benefit of the opposition. There exists a legal, proven, three-century-old wolf predation aid that might be considered. Make no mistake, livestock producers are under attack by a smart, dedicated, well-funded, politically astute adversary that will not relent or falter until the rancher has joined the almost-extinct logger in the unemployment line. Welcome to the world of the unfruitful forest, the fallow grasslands and the veggie burger. — Carroll Asbell lives in Prineville.


SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

O D N Don Archer, of Bend Feb.11, 1925. July 31, 2012 Services: A memorial is planned for the fall. please contact, Dawnya Sasse, 785-541-1010 for arrangement details.

Linda L. Winter, of Redmond Aug. 6, 1956 - Aug. 27, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, OR 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaires.com Services: A private urn committal will take place at La Pine Community Cemetery Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701. 541-382-5882 www.partnersbend.org

Tommy Howard Eagles, of Bend June 15, 1954 - Aug. 29, 2012 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel, 541-548-3219 www.redmondmemorial.com

Services: Graveside service will be held Wed., Sept. 5, 2012, at 11:00 a.m., at German Cemetery, in Culver, OR.

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines: Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and noon Saturday. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by 1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail: Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

Jeffrey William Marcy May 27, 1960 – August 29, 2012 Jeff Marcy, 52, of Bend, was born in Garden Grove, California, and died in Bend, surrounded by his loved ones. He was preceded in death by his father, Eugene (Gene) Marcy, and his sister, Teresa Marcy. He is surJeff Marcy vived by his mother, Wanda (Frank) Novy; his children, Sara, Josh, Isaiah (Jennine), and Tiffany; and grand-children, Raven, McKayla, Cryslen, Jeremiah, Jadyn, and Haily; as well as sister, Jennifer Scheidies (Mark), Sue Marken (John), Lin Marcy (Rod Wiles), and Steve Marcy (Katy); as well as numerous nieces and nephews, family and friends. Jeff will be remembered for his quick wit and wry sense of humor and his love for the Oregon Ducks, as well as the Kansas City Chiefs and Royals. He greatly enjoyed his poker tournaments at Sidelines. Above all, he treasured his family and friends. A Celebration of his Life will be held Saturday, Sept. 1, at 11:00 a.m., in Juniper Park in Bend. A memorial contribution may be made to Bank of America, Wall St., Bend.

Actor Steve Franken was known for comedic characters By Dennis McLellan Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Steve Franken, a veteran character actor whose long career included playing the spoiled young millionaire Chatsworth Osborne Jr. on the popular situation comedy “The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis� in the early 1960s, has died. He was 80. Franken died of cancer Aug. 24 at a nursing and rehabilitation center in Canoga Park, said his wife, Jean. In a more than 50-year career that began in New York, Franken appeared in scores of TV shows and several movies, including “The Party,� “The Americanization of Emily,� “The Missouri Breaks� and the Jerry Lewis comedies “Which Way to the Front?� and “Hardly Working.� But for many TV fans, Franken may be best remembered as Chatsworth Osborne Jr. on “The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis.� The series, which aired on CBS from 1959 to 1963, starred Dwayne Hickman in the title role of the g i r l - c r a z y FEATUR E D grocer’s son, OBITUARY whose beatnik friend, Maynard Krebs, was played by Bob Denver. Franken joined the series in 1960, replacing the young actor who had played Milton Armitage, the show’s original rich kid: Warren Beatty. “Warren Beatty did about four or five shows and wanted to go do movies,� Hickman said. “Once he had done that, he wasn’t going to come back and do ‘Dobie Gillis.’ But because he was gone, we got Steve, and he was wonderful.� As the snobbish Chatsworth, “he wore clothes that were expensive, polo outfits and a polo stick and all that,� said Hickman. “He was a great character. He was the only person to call me ‘Dobie-do.’ Chatsworth Osborne Jr. — what a great name. And, of course, everything was grand and he was so rich. Steve played it very well.� When Hickman appeared at an autograph show with Franken a few years ago, he said, “Steve told me people were still coming up to him on the street asking for his autograph and calling him Chatsworth.� But, Hickman said, Franken did many things in his career and was “a very serious actor.� Jean Franken said her husband was especially proud of his performance in director Blake Edwards’ film “The Party,� the 1968 comedy starring Peter Sellers, in which Franken played a drunken waiter who never speaks a word. “He and Peter Sellers worked out most of the improvisations themselves for that,� she said. “Blake let them go.� Franken was a versatile actor who studied at the Actors Studio in New York and later did a lot of theater work in Los Angeles, much of it dramatic. Born in Queens, N.Y., on May 27, 1932, Franken graduated from Cornell University and launched his acting career against his parents’ wishes.

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Deaths of note from around the world: Carlo Maria Martini, 85: Italian cardinal in the Roman Catholic Church who was considered a papal contender despite his liberal views. Died Friday in Italy. Lawrence Mead, 94: Led the design team for the A-6 Intruder, the Navy’s primary attack bomber for over three decades, including the Vietnam War. Died Aug. 23 in New Haven, Conn. — From wire reports

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OREGON NEWS

More tsunami debris coming, and volunteers are ready By Jessie Higgins The World, Coos Bay

COQUILLE — In early June, a big dock splashed ashore in Oregon, confirming everyone’s suspicion: Tsunami debris had arrived. Now, officials say, the worst is yet to come. Winter storms always drive piles of ocean trash onto Oregon’s beaches. This year, they will carry debris from the 2010 Japanese tsunami. Scientists predict most of the debris will be small items, easy for volunteer beachcombers or hired workers to remove by hand. Still, at a community presentation Wednesday in Coquille, members of the Oregon Tsunami Debris Task Force told a group of Coos County residents the state is gearing up to battle the wave of trash that’s on its way. “There are two more docks out there� similar to the Japanese dock that washed ashore on Agate Beach, said Gen. Mike Caldwell, director of Oregon’s Office of Emergency Management. “We got lucky with the first. Agate Beach is probably the most inexpensive place it could land.� Agate Beach, off Newport, is easily accessible by foot or with machinery. It also is near Oregon State University’s Hatfield Marine Science Center, which houses marine scientists who could help the state study the dock. Removing the first dock cost the state $85,000. “Now, think of some of the other places it could have landed that are more difficult to get to,� Caldwell said. The Oregon Parks Department has taken the lead on tsunami debris issues. So far, it has spent about $300,000. Its annual budget is about $120,000. The task force has applied for an array of federal grants, hoping to recoup that mon-

Jessie Higgins / The World

Mary Johnson, the general manager at Washed Ashore, shows a piece of foam-like material recently that may be insulation and tsunami debris in Bandon. Winter storms that drive piles of ocean trash onto Oregon’s beaches will this year carry debris from the 2010 Japanese tsunami.

ey and fund the remaining cleanup. But even with more money, the state will rely on volunteers for beach-cleaning manpower. “As native Oregonians, we pride ourselves in having the cleanest beaches in the country,� said Gus Gates, Oregon policy manager at Surfrider Foundation, a nonprofit organization that seeks to protect the world’s oceans and beaches. “If you walk on the beach, it is easy enough to take a bag with you and take away anything that doesn’t belong.� The parks department has established several tsunami debris disposal bins in highuse areas, including Sunset Bay State Park. It also established a hotline to call with debris-related questions: 211. Multiple volunteer organizations already are working to keep Oregon beaches

clean. SOLVE, a nonprofit, has organized Oregon beach cleanups since the mid-1990s. Their next cleanup will be Sept. 22. Washed Ashore, a Bandonbased nonprofit group, takes all forms of ocean debris, then makes artworks from the trash. Volunteers can build sculptures or donate marine debris at its studio, about seven miles south of Bandon on U.S. Highway 101. Washed Ashore founder and artist Angela Haseltine Pozzi plans to use tsunami debris to build a sculpture titled “Tragic Wave.� The piece will feature misshapen homes flowing out of a large wave, said Mary Johnson, the organization’s general operations manager. So far, Washed Ashore has received a few pieces of Styrofoam it believes came from the tsunami. More is bound

to arrive this winter, Johnson said. Gates believes volunteers can remove most of the debris, especially considering the volume of volunteers who have come forward since the debris started arriving. But volunteers should exercise caution, warned Mike Zollitsch of the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality. Some debris could pose hazards. At the community presentation Wednesday, Zollitsch showed pictures of Japanese gas cans, fire extinguishers and other household items that should be handled with care. Although the writing is in Japanese, most hazardous items have warning markings — such as the skull and crossbones — that are similar to the markings used in this country, Zollitsch said. If in doubt, call 211.

New wolf pack could lead to species delisting By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press

GRANTS PASS — State biologists have identified a new wolf pack in northeastern Oregon’s Eagle Cap Wilderness. Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife wolf coordinator Russ Morgan said Friday that the discovery brings to five the number of packs with pups. If four of those packs still have two pups each by December, that would mark a milestone toward taking wolves off the state endangered species list. The state wolf plan calls for delisting the gray wolf after four packs successfully produce pups for three years in a row. While achieving

Carbon Continued from C1 “We are one of very, very few companies that (will recycle) activated carbon,� Ballantine said. Although he declined to say specifically where the activated carbon would be coming from, he said possible sources include carbon suppliers, companies that service the filtering systems, and companies, cities and counties that use the filtering systems. “It will be coming from everywhere in Oregon because we will be the only regeneration facility in the state,� he said. He said such facilities already operate in Arizona, California and Washington. While the exact costs would be negotiated in contracts, he said they would be about 40 percent of the cost of buying new activated carbon. The state Department of Environmental Quality is taking comment on the company’s air permit until Sept. 24, and Ballantine said he is hopeful the company can start recycling activated car-

that goal would lift the listing statewide, protections would still be exercised for wolves in the western third of the state until wolves establish breeding packs there. While federal Endangered Species Act protection has been lifted for wolves in Eastern Oregon, the state act still covers them. Morgan said he was backpacking on the west side of the Eagle Cap Wilderness outside Joseph last weekend when he heard howls, and found two adult wolves with five pups on the west side of the upper Minam River drainage. They will be known as the Minam River Pack. The pack appears to be a new one, because there were no other adults besides the

alpha male and alpha female, he said. He saw no signs of any kills. Morgan said he and a friend saw the pups wading in a shallow glacial pond, and got within 20 yards of the adults when they we lying down in some grass. They got no photos. “They saw me and they barked and howled,� he said. The wilderness is a good place for the wolves, because they are far from cattle, Morgan said. However, the Imnaha Pack, which has been blamed for several attacks on livestock, also spends time there, on the east side. And there is no telling where the new pack may go from here. A trail camera captured a photo of a lactating female

Planned carbon reactivator location

To comment The state Department of Environmental Quality is taking comment on the plans of International Tech Corp. to build a carbon reactivation plant in Prineville until Sept. 24. Comments should be emailed to Nancy Swofford, DEQ permit coordinator, at swofford.nancy@deq.state.or.us or sent to 475 NE Bellevue Dr., Suite 110, Bend, OR 97701. For more information call Swofford at 541-633-2021.

bon in mid- to late October. The equipment at the plant is already in place. Initially the company would process a truckload, or about 40,000 pounds, of activated carbon per week, he said. Along with securing the air permit, the company will have to detail what the filters were used for before they can start operation, said Walt West, a DEQ permit writer in Bend. “They will have to identify the source and the activities it was used in,� West said. During the process International Tech Corp. will heat the spent carbon — which can no longer absorb any material as a filter — to 1,200 to 1,500 degrees using natural gas burners, Ballantine said. The

wolf earlier this year on the east side of the lower end of the drainage. But she is not part of the new pack, Morgan said. The lactating wolf was black, and the adults in the new pack are both gray. The department is still a long way from winning over ranchers to the idea of more wolves, largely because of ranchers’ frustrations that conservation groups have been able to block, at least temporarily, department plans to kill more members of the Imnaha Pack for preying on livestock. Conservation groups are frustrated, as well, feeling ranchers have not done enough to protect their herds from wolves, short of demanding wolves be shot.

process won’t create smoke, soot or odors. The process will put off carbon dioxide, water vapor and volatile organic compounds, remnants of the organic matter strained out of the filtering of water and air, West said. The permit won’t allow the heating of spent carbon tainted by hazardous wastes. While Ballantine said the water vapor created in the process could be heated to make steam to turn a powerproducing turbine, there are no immediate plans to do so. The plant is located on the same property as the old Prineville Energy power plant that supplied the Pine Products saw mill on Lamonta Road, so there are already

International Tech Corp. of Bend is applying for a state air permit to allow a carbon reactivation plant in Prineville. The facility would be the first in the state and recycle spent carbon, after it has been used to filter water and other uses.

Planned location of carbon plant

26

PRINEVILLE 126

27

Scott Steussy / The Bulletin

power lines to connect to if it ever does create electricity, he said. It is also near an old train depot, which could be utilized in the hauling and storing of spent carbon. “There were a lot of advantages for us to locate our facility over in Prineville,� Ballantine said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com


THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

C8

W E AT H ER FOR EC A ST Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2012.

TODAY, SEPTEMBER 1

SUNDAY

Today: A little bit cooler, a few clouds are possible in the afternoon, staying dry.

HIGH

76

Tonight: Partly cloudy to mostly clear skies through the night.

LOW

40 WEST Mostly sunny and pleasant conditions.

Astoria 64/49

61/53

Cannon Beach 61/50

Hillsboro Portland 76/51 76/43

Tillamook 67/47

Salem

62/45

77/50

82/49

Maupin

81/49

Corvallis 79/46

Yachats

73/41

Prineville 75/45 Sisters Redmond Paulina 71/41 76/43 78/44 Sunriver Bend

63/50

Eugene

Florence

79/42

67/48

75/43

79/44

Coos Bay

74/41

Oakridge

Cottage Grove

Crescent

Roseburg

63/49

Silver Lake

73/38

Port Orford 67/50

Gold Beach 63/51

Hampton

Unity 81/41

84/41

87/52

Vale 89/52

Riley

86/52

Juntura

Burns

73/41

88/45

76/42

82/42

Jordan Valley

77/43

79/45

Frenchglen 85/43

Yesterday’s state extremes

Rome

• 91°

85/45

Baker City

83/46

Chiloquin

Medford

80/42

Klamath Falls 79/41

Ashland

61/49

John Day

Paisley 87/52

Brookings

79/40

81/35

Grants Pass 87/48

EAST Mostly sunny and pleasant condiOntario tions.

Baker City

Christmas Valley

Chemult

82/46

79/41

CENTRAL Mostly sunny and pleasant conditions.

Nyssa

Fort Rock 76/42

73/39

68/34

Bandon

81/39

Brothers 75/40

La Pine 75/40

Crescent Lake

64/48

76/40

78/38

Union

Mitchell 77/46

79/47

Camp Sherman

78/36

Joseph

Granite Spray 90/41

Enterprise

Meacham 79/42

78/43

Madras

77/36

La Grande

Condon

Warm Springs

Wallowa

73/32

81/43

85/46

80/48

79/46

82/45

Ruggs

Willowdale

Albany

Newport

Pendleton

88/50

82/45

78/46

62/45

Hermiston 85/46

Arlington

Wasco

Sandy

Government Camp 65/43

77/45

86/50

The Biggs Dalles 84/47

76/49

McMinnville

Lincoln City

Umatilla

Hood River

82/48

• 34°

Fields

Lakeview

McDermitt

85/53

80/45

Meacham

86/41

-30s

-20s

Yesterday’s extremes (in the 48 contiguous states):

• 105° Laredo, Texas

• 31° Stanley, Idaho

• 4.58” Pine Bluff, Ark.

Honolulu 88/73

-10s

0s

Vancouver 69/55 Seattle 75/52

10s

20s

30s

40s Winnipeg 80/66

50s

60s

Thunder Bay 81/54

70s

80s

90s

100s 110s

Quebec 72/51

Halifax 68/48 Portland To ronto Portland 76/53 78/56 76/51 St. Paul Green Bay Boston 85/65 81/60 Boise 76/59 Buffalo Rapid City Detroit 83/50 81/58 New York 96/65 Chicago 81/64 86/68 79/72 Cheyenne Philadelphia Columbus 88/58 86/70 89/67 Des Moines Omaha San Francisco Salt Lake Washington, D. C. 81/69 89/66 63/54 City 91/71 Las Denver Louisville 85/64 Kansas City Vegas 91/61 84/75 81/69 St. Louis 95/77 Charlotte 81/73 92/71 Albuquerque Los Angeles Oklahoma City Nashville Little Rock 91/66 79/68 97/71 89/74 90/73 Phoenix Atlanta 101/85 89/74 Birmingham Dallas Tijuana 89/74 97/76 84/68 New Orleans 91/78 Orlando Houston 92/72 Chihuahua 93/78 88/66 Miami 89/77 Monterrey La Paz 99/74 89/77 Mazatlan Anchorage 90/75 55/48 Juneau 56/47 Billings 92/60

FRONTS

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW

81 45

Still sunny and warm, temperatures near average.

A near repeat of Monday.

HIGH LOW

82 47

83 47

BEND ALMANAC

PLANET WATCH

TEMPERATURE

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury . . . .5:47 a.m. . . . . . 7:30 p.m. Venus . . . . . .2:44 a.m. . . . . . 5:28 p.m. Mars. . . . . .11:26 a.m. . . . . . 9:38 p.m. Jupiter. . . . .11:34 p.m. . . . . . 2:45 p.m. Saturn. . . . .10:26 a.m. . . . . . 9:28 p.m. Uranus . . . . .8:31 p.m. . . . . . 8:58 a.m.

Yesterday’s weather through 4 p.m. in Bend High/Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81/46 24 hours ending 4 p.m.*. . 0.00” Record high . . . . . . . . 93 in 1967 Month to date . . . . . . . . . . 0.04” Record low. . . . . . . . . 29 in 1975 Average month to date. . . 0.48” Average high . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 Year to date . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.61” Average low. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Average year to date. . . . . 6.76” Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.29.84 Record 24 hours . . .0.22 in 1984 *Melted liquid equivalent

Sunrise today . . . . . . 6:29 a.m. Sunset today . . . . . . 7:40 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow . . 6:30 a.m. Sunset tomorrow. . . 7:38 p.m. Moonrise today . . . . 7:54 p.m. Moonset today . . . . 7:48 a.m.

Moon phases Last

New

First

Full

Sept. 8 Sept. 15 Sept. 22 Sept. 29

OREGON CITIES

FIRE INDEX

Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Precipitation values are 24-hour totals through 4 p.m.

Bend, west of Hwy. 97......Ext. Bend, east of Hwy. 97.....High Redmond/Madras.......High

Astoria . . . . . . . .66/44/0.00 Baker City . . . . . .91/38/0.00 Brookings . . . . . .58/52/0.00 Burns. . . . . . . . . .87/37/0.00 Eugene . . . . . . . .79/43/0.00 Klamath Falls . . .82/39/0.00 Lakeview. . . . . . .84/34/0.00 La Pine . . . . . . . .82/34/0.00 Medford . . . . . . .85/54/0.00 Newport . . . . . . .63/50/0.00 North Bend . . . . . .64/48/NA Ontario . . . . . . . .88/49/0.00 Pendleton . . . . . .82/48/0.00 Portland . . . . . . .76/55/0.00 Prineville . . . . . . .81/45/0.00 Redmond. . . . . . .82/42/0.00 Roseburg. . . . . . .80/52/0.00 Salem . . . . . . . . .77/48/0.00 Sisters . . . . . . . . .83/44/0.00 The Dalles . . . . . .83/56/0.00

Mod. = Moderate; Ext. = Extreme

. . . . .64/49/s . . . . . .64/52/c . . . . .79/40/s . . . . . .82/42/s . . . . .61/49/s . . . . . .64/50/s . . . . .84/41/s . . . . . .85/44/s . . . . .79/42/s . . . . . .79/45/s . . . . .79/41/s . . . . . .82/43/s . . . . .80/45/s . . . . . .82/46/s . . . . .75/40/s . . . . . .81/29/s . . . . .87/52/s . . . . . .90/55/s . . . . .62/45/s . . . . .63/47/pc . . . . .62/47/s . . . . .63/49/pc . . . . .87/52/s . . . . . .87/54/s . . . . .82/45/s . . . . . .84/48/s . . . . .76/51/s . . . . .75/54/pc . . . . .75/45/s . . . . . .82/42/s . . . . .78/36/s . . . . . .82/41/s . . . . .82/46/s . . . . . .82/50/s . . . . .78/46/s . . . . . .78/48/s . . . . .76/43/s . . . . . .81/33/s . . . . .82/49/s . . . . . .84/53/s

PRECIPITATION

WATER REPORT Sisters ..............................High La Pine................................Ext. Prineville...........................Ext.

The following was compiled by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as a service to irrigators and sportsmen.

Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie . . . . . . . . . . . . 35,336 . . . . . . 55,000 Wickiup. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117,303 . . . . . 200,000 Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . . . . 70,842 . . . . . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir . . . . . . . . 22,767 . . . . . . 47,000 Prineville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102,793 . . . . . 153,777 The higher the UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Index is River flow Station Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie . . . . . . . 428 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup . . . . . . . . . . 1,400 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . 69 LOW MEDIUM HIGH V.HIGH Little DeschutesNear La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls . . . . . . . . . 1,900 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . . NA Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . 226 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow Ochoco Res. . . . . . . . . . 15.1 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne . . . . . . . . . . . 106 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 LOW MEDIUM HIGH or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

To report a wildfire, call 911

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 6

POLLEN COUNT

TRAVELERS’ FORECAST NATIONAL

Saskatoon 85/52

Calgary 65/47

WEDNESDAY

Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation, s-sun, pc-partial clouds, c-clouds, h-haze, sh-showers, r-rain, t-thunderstorms, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, rs-rain-snow mix, w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace

NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS -40s

TUESDAY More sunshine, a great Labor Day!.

Another sunny day with warming temperatures.

80 44

FORECAST: STATE Seaside

MONDAY

Bismarck 98/66

Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX . . . . .100/67/0.00 . . . 98/73/s . 99/75/pc Akron . . . . . . . . . .92/60/0.00 . . . 84/62/t . . .81/66/t Albany. . . . . . . . . .89/56/0.00 . . . 81/53/s . . 79/59/s Albuquerque. . . . .91/65/0.00 . . . 91/66/s . 92/67/pc Anchorage . . . . . .55/50/0.08 . . . 55/48/r . . .56/48/r Atlanta . . . . . . . . .89/73/0.00 . . . 89/74/t . . .90/73/t Atlantic City . . . . .92/66/0.00 . . . 86/65/s . 83/70/pc Austin . . . . . . . . . .99/71/0.00 . .97/76/pc . 97/75/pc Baltimore . . . . . . .93/69/0.00 . .90/68/pc . . .83/69/t Billings . . . . . . . . .91/56/0.00 . .92/60/pc . . 87/54/s Birmingham . . . . .87/77/0.00 . . . 89/74/t . . .90/74/t Bismarck. . . . . . . .76/50/0.00 . . . 98/66/t . 88/56/pc Boise . . . . . . . . . . .87/63/0.00 . . . 83/50/s . . 83/49/s Boston. . . . . . . . . .90/68/0.00 . . . 76/59/s . . 73/60/s Bridgeport, CT. . . .90/67/0.00 . . . 83/64/s . 77/66/pc Buffalo . . . . . . . . .83/64/0.00 . . . 81/58/s . . 82/64/s Burlington, VT. . . .82/69/0.00 . . . 76/50/s . . 77/54/s Caribou, ME . . . . .79/65/0.11 . . . 70/43/s . . 70/46/s Charleston, SC . . .90/72/0.00 . .91/75/pc . 92/74/pc Charlotte. . . . . . . .92/72/0.00 . .92/71/pc . . .89/71/t Chattanooga. . . . .89/75/0.00 . . . 87/72/t . . .90/73/t Cheyenne . . . . . . .88/54/0.00 . .88/58/pc . 84/56/pc Chicago. . . . . . . . .92/72/0.00 . .79/72/sh . 80/71/sh Cincinnati . . . . . . .90/64/0.00 . . . 83/72/t . . .85/72/t Cleveland . . . . . . .92/65/0.00 . .80/64/pc . . 80/67/c Colorado Springs .86/53/0.00 . .88/60/pc . 89/58/pc Columbia, MO . . .79/73/1.92 . . . 77/72/t . 85/69/sh Columbia, SC . . . .93/73/0.00 . .94/73/pc . . .93/71/t Columbus, GA. . . .92/73/0.00 . . . 91/73/t . . .92/74/t Columbus, OH. . . .97/63/0.01 . . . 86/70/t . . .84/69/t Concord, NH. . . . .87/53/0.00 . . . 78/48/s . . 77/51/s Corpus Christi. . .102/84/0.00 . . . 91/80/t . 92/79/pc Dallas Ft Worth. .101/79/0.00 . .97/76/pc 100/77/pc Dayton . . . . . . . . .92/69/0.00 . . . 83/70/t . . .84/70/t Denver. . . . . . . . . .93/57/0.00 . .91/61/pc . 89/62/pc Des Moines. . . . . .92/68/0.00 . . .81/69/c . 86/69/pc Detroit. . . . . . . . . .95/62/0.00 . .81/64/pc . 80/69/pc Duluth. . . . . . . . . .83/53/0.00 . . . 76/61/s . . .77/65/t El Paso. . . . . . . . . .95/64/0.00 . .96/70/pc . . 97/71/s Fairbanks. . . . . . . .59/51/0.02 . . . 58/42/r . . 61/41/c Fargo. . . . . . . . . . .82/48/0.00 . .88/68/pc . . .88/59/t Flagstaff . . . . . . . .78/56/0.00 . . . 76/51/t . . .77/54/t

Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Grand Rapids . . . .89/69/0.00 . .82/60/pc . 84/67/pc Green Bay. . . . . . .83/67/0.00 . . . 81/60/s . 80/65/pc Greensboro. . . . . .90/73/0.00 . .91/69/pc . . .87/69/t Harrisburg. . . . . . .90/59/0.00 . . . 88/62/s . 84/67/pc Hartford, CT . . . . .91/57/0.00 . . . 84/58/s . . 77/59/s Helena. . . . . . . . . .90/47/0.00 . .84/48/pc . . 82/49/s Honolulu. . . . . . . .87/74/0.00 . . . 88/73/s . . 88/74/s Houston . . . . . . . .96/82/0.00 . . . 93/78/t . 94/78/pc Huntsville . . . . . . .89/77/0.30 . . . 88/71/t . . .88/72/t Indianapolis . . . . .87/67/0.00 . . . 80/70/t . . .81/72/t Jackson, MS . . . . .89/75/0.49 . . . 90/74/t . 92/75/pc Jacksonville. . . . . .89/74/0.00 . .92/72/pc . 93/74/pc Juneau. . . . . . . . . .64/40/0.00 . . . 56/47/r . 53/45/sh Kansas City. . . . . .80/70/0.45 . . . 81/69/t . 89/70/pc Lansing . . . . . . . . .92/69/0.00 . .82/59/pc . 83/66/pc Las Vegas . . . . . . 97/83/trace . . . 95/77/t . 96/82/pc Lexington . . . . . . .86/71/0.00 . . . 82/71/t . . .82/71/t Lincoln. . . . . . . . . .99/58/0.00 . .89/66/pc . 91/71/pc Little Rock. . . . . . .90/73/0.68 . . . 90/73/t . 93/75/pc Los Angeles. . . . . .78/67/0.00 . . . 79/68/s . . 80/69/s Louisville. . . . . . . .91/75/0.00 . . . 84/75/t . . .84/73/t Madison, WI . . . . .92/70/0.00 . .82/63/pc . 83/66/pc Memphis. . . . . . . .95/77/0.00 . . . 89/75/t . . .92/76/t Miami . . . . . . . . . .90/81/0.00 . .89/77/pc . 89/79/pc Milwaukee . . . . . .92/71/0.00 . .75/69/pc . 76/69/pc Minneapolis . . . . .86/63/0.00 . . . 85/65/s . 88/69/pc Nashville. . . . . . . .88/77/0.04 . . . 89/74/t . . .87/73/t New Orleans. . . . .87/79/0.00 . . . 91/78/t . 91/77/pc New York . . . . . . .91/69/0.00 . . . 86/68/s . 81/68/pc Newark, NJ . . . . . .94/64/0.00 . . . 87/67/s . 84/68/pc Norfolk, VA . . . . . .90/71/0.00 . .94/73/pc . . .86/72/t Oklahoma City . . .95/71/0.00 . .97/71/pc . . 98/73/s Omaha . . . . . . . . .95/63/0.00 . .89/66/pc . 90/71/pc Orlando. . . . . . . . .92/76/0.00 . .92/72/pc . 91/72/pc Palm Springs. . . .100/77/0.00 . . 103/84/t . 106/83/t Peoria . . . . . . . . . .84/69/0.00 . . . 78/70/t . 83/70/sh Philadelphia . . . . .92/70/0.00 . . . 89/67/s . 85/68/pc Phoenix. . . . . . . .102/84/0.00 . . 101/85/t . 105/85/t Pittsburgh . . . . . . .91/57/0.00 . .82/64/sh . 80/64/sh Portland, ME. . . . .80/63/0.00 . . . 76/53/s . . 75/55/s Providence . . . . . .90/61/0.00 . . . 82/58/s . . 75/60/s Raleigh . . . . . . . . .92/71/0.00 . .94/71/pc . . .88/72/t

Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Rapid City . . . . . . .90/62/0.00 . .96/65/pc . 87/62/pc Reno . . . . . . . . . . .92/59/0.00 . . . 87/55/s . . 89/58/s Richmond . . . . . . .95/72/0.00 . .94/71/pc . . .85/69/t Rochester, NY . . . .93/59/0.00 . . . 79/55/s . . 79/61/s Sacramento. . . . . .73/56/0.00 . . . 88/59/s . . 96/62/s St. Louis. . . . . . . . .82/75/0.84 . . . 81/73/t . . .83/72/t Salt Lake City . . . .86/69/0.27 . . . 85/64/t . 86/63/pc San Antonio . . . . .99/81/0.00 . .96/76/pc . 96/76/pc San Diego . . . . . . .81/72/0.00 . .81/71/pc . 80/71/pc San Francisco . . . .62/57/0.00 . . . 68/55/s . . 71/57/s San Jose . . . . . . . .69/56/0.00 . . . 76/57/s . . 83/59/s Santa Fe . . . . . . . .88/59/0.00 . .83/59/pc . 84/60/pc

Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Savannah . . . . . . .92/73/0.00 . .91/74/pc . 92/74/pc Seattle. . . . . . . . . .72/51/0.00 . . . 75/52/s . 73/53/pc Sioux Falls. . . . . . .86/61/0.00 . .92/66/pc . . 93/67/s Spokane . . . . . . . .82/50/0.00 . . . 73/46/s . . 75/49/s Springfield, MO . .76/71/1.42 . . . 82/70/t . 89/69/pc Tampa. . . . . . . . . .93/78/0.00 . .92/75/pc . 91/76/pc Tucson. . . . . . . . . .97/75/0.00 . .97/76/pc . . .99/78/t Tulsa . . . . . . . . . . .90/73/0.09 . .94/71/pc . 99/76/pc Washington, DC . .97/73/0.00 . .91/71/pc . . .84/71/t Wichita . . . . . . . . .94/68/0.00 . .87/69/pc . 95/74/pc Yakima . . . . . . . . .87/50/0.00 . . . 82/45/s . . 83/51/s Yuma. . . . . . . . . .101/80/0.00 . . . 99/80/t . 103/82/t

INTERNATIONAL Amsterdam. . . . . .64/52/0.00 . .66/55/pc . . 68/59/c Athens. . . . . . . . . .86/77/0.00 . . . 91/69/s . . 84/70/s Auckland. . . . . . . .63/45/0.00 . .60/50/pc . . .58/50/r Baghdad . . . . . . .109/73/0.00 . .106/76/s . 107/76/s Bangkok . . . . . . . .90/79/0.00 . . . 92/76/t . . .84/79/t Beijing. . . . . . . . . .91/75/0.00 . .84/66/sh . 76/64/sh Beirut . . . . . . . . . .90/81/0.00 . . . 88/79/s . . 87/78/s Berlin. . . . . . . . . . .66/59/0.15 . .67/54/sh . 70/54/pc Bogota . . . . . . . . .59/45/0.11 . .66/48/sh . 64/49/sh Budapest. . . . . . . .91/55/0.00 . .84/63/sh . 87/65/pc Buenos Aires. . . . .75/45/0.00 . .74/59/pc . . 75/51/s Cabo San Lucas . .88/75/0.00 . .89/77/pc . . .90/78/t Cairo . . . . . . . . . . .93/75/0.00 . . . 93/72/s . . 94/72/s Calgary . . . . . . . . .70/43/0.00 . . . 65/47/s . . 72/43/s Cancun . . . . . . . . .88/79/0.00 . . . 87/77/t . . .88/78/t Dublin . . . . . . . . . .61/46/0.00 . .62/58/sh . 71/59/pc Edinburgh. . . . . . .57/39/0.00 . . .61/53/c . . 66/56/c Geneva . . . . . . . . .59/54/0.00 . .56/49/sh . 66/53/sh Harare. . . . . . . . . .81/57/0.00 . .81/55/pc . 79/50/pc Hong Kong . . . . . .90/81/0.00 . . . 89/80/t . . .89/81/t Istanbul. . . . . . . . .82/66/0.00 . .81/71/pc . 83/71/pc Jerusalem . . . . . . .83/68/0.00 . . . 87/66/s . . 87/67/s Johannesburg. . . .77/52/0.00 . . . 69/42/s . . 70/52/s Lima . . . . . . . . . . .64/61/0.00 . .66/60/pc . 67/60/pc Lisbon . . . . . . . . . .90/66/0.00 . . . 90/70/s . . 93/71/s London . . . . . . . . .64/45/0.00 . .72/57/pc . . 72/57/c Madrid . . . . . . . . .82/55/0.00 . . . 78/53/s . . 82/52/s Manila. . . . . . . . . .86/77/0.00 . . . 86/77/t . . .85/78/t

Mecca . . . . . . . . .109/86/0.00 . .107/86/s . 107/85/s Mexico City. . . . . .77/59/0.00 . . . 75/55/t . . .73/52/t Montreal. . . . . . . .79/68/0.00 . . . 76/53/s . 76/58/pc Moscow . . . . . . . .57/46/0.00 . . . 60/43/s . . 60/46/c Nairobi . . . . . . . . .82/55/0.00 . .77/59/sh . 76/57/pc Nassau . . . . . . . . .88/81/0.00 . . . 88/79/t . 89/79/pc New Delhi. . . . . . .91/77/0.00 . . . 96/83/t . . .93/82/t Osaka . . . . . . . . . .93/79/0.00 . . . 90/77/t . . .88/77/t Oslo. . . . . . . . . . . .64/46/0.00 . .67/51/pc . 67/52/sh Ottawa . . . . . . . . .81/64/0.00 . . . 78/55/s . . 77/58/s Paris. . . . . . . . . . . .66/50/0.00 . .67/58/pc . . 72/61/c Rio de Janeiro. . . .77/63/0.00 . .79/63/pc . 82/66/pc Rome. . . . . . . . . . .84/70/0.00 . . . 84/64/t . 76/62/sh Santiago . . . . . . . .75/43/0.00 . .73/57/pc . . 73/50/s Sao Paulo . . . . . . .79/55/0.00 . .80/63/pc . 83/59/pc Sapporo . . . . . . . .72/72/0.00 . .79/71/pc . 78/67/pc Seoul. . . . . . . . . . .82/64/0.00 . .81/68/pc . 84/71/sh Shanghai. . . . . . . .88/77/0.00 . .90/79/sh . 89/77/pc Singapore . . . . . . .84/75/0.00 . . . 87/79/t . . .88/79/t Stockholm. . . . . . .61/59/0.52 . .65/55/sh . . 66/53/c Sydney. . . . . . . . . .64/45/0.00 . .66/56/pc . . 66/51/s Taipei. . . . . . . . . . .91/77/0.00 . .90/78/pc . 90/78/pc Tel Aviv . . . . . . . . .90/77/0.00 . . . 90/75/s . . 89/75/s Tokyo. . . . . . . . . . .93/79/0.00 . . . 89/75/t . . .87/74/t Toronto . . . . . . . . .91/66/0.00 . . . 78/56/s . . 77/59/s Vancouver. . . . . . .68/54/0.00 . . . 69/55/s . . 68/54/s Vienna. . . . . . . . . .73/55/0.00 . .71/59/pc . 80/60/sh Warsaw. . . . . . . . .79/54/0.00 . .77/60/pc . . 74/55/c


SPORTS

Scoreboard, D2 College football, D3 Tennis, D3 MLB, D4

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

www.bendbulletin.com/sports

LOCAL GOLF

NFL League, officials talking again FLORHAM PARK, N.J. — The NFL and its on-field officials’ union began negotiating again Friday, hoping to end the lockout that resulted in replacement officials working the preseason. The league locked out the NFL Referees Association in early June, then hired replacements, whose work in exhibition games has been heavily criticized. There even was some optimism surrounding Friday’s talks, as Michael Arnold, lead negotiator for the officials, said in a statement: “Reports on the economic gap between the NFL and NFLRA are inaccurate.” League spokesman Greg Aiello said that statement was accurate. Earlier this week, NFL executive Ray Anderson said the regular season would open with replacement officials. But the NFL has seen and heard the problems the replacements have had this summer. In 2001, the NFL used replacements for the first week of the regular season before a contract was finalized. The speed of the game and the amount of time starters are on the field increase exponentially for real games, making the replacements’ task more challenging. With talks reopening for the first time in more than a month, the regular officials could be back to work before the Cowboys visit the Giants on Wednesday night to open the schedule.

Kathy McDonald watches her ball while playing on the fourth hole during the championship round of the GolfWorld Pacific Amateur at Crosswater in Sunriver on Friday. McDonald, of Bellevue, Wash., won Flight 19 by shooting a net 76.

Pacific Amateur rookie from Roseburg wins tournament By Zack Hall The Bulletin

SUNRIVER — Apparently experience is overrated. Roseburg’s Kenneth Linden shot a net 66 Friday at Crosswater Club to win the overall championship of the 2012 Golf World Pacific Amateur Golf Classic. Not bad for the first time the 60-year-old radiologist has ever played in the annual amateur net stroke-play tournament. “I was just happy to be the

flight winner,” said Linden, who said he decided to play in the tournament after receiving an email promoting the event. “Amazing.” Linden, who took up golf just six years ago, made up for his inexperience during a frost delay that pushed back his tee time one hour. During the break he studied a Crosswater yardage book and devised a winning strategy. It obviously worked. “This is a thinking person’s golf course,” said Linden, who

played the tournament with a respectable 15.6 handicap index. “I’ve never played any place like it. You have to think about every shot. “I really enjoyed that aspect of it.” Linden was not the only first-time Pac Am winner. Kathy McDonald — a saleswoman from Bellevue, Wash., who won her flight with a net 76 — showed just what it means to win at the Pac Am for some golfers. See Tournament / D6

Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

PREP FOOTBALL

Cougs hold off Warriors for 35-21 victory

Bend quarterback Jonah Koski (13) scrambles as Marist defenders Josh Harper (7), Cameron Jack (9), and Zach Caprai (5) close in during the first half of the seasonopening game on Friday at Bend High School. Joe Kline / The Bulletin

— The Associated Press

GOLF

Bend falls to Marist • The Spartans open up a 20-0 lead before holding off a second-half Lava Bear rally in both teams’ opener Seung-Yul Noh

By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

South Korean takes early lead Tiger Woods trails Seung-Yul Noh by two strokes at the Deutsche Bank Championship, D6

Bend High more than held its own against No. 3-ranked Marist in the second half of the two teams’ 2012 football season opener Friday night at Punk Hunnell Stadium. Before halftime, though, was a different story. The Spartans of Eugene (1-0), who led

20-0 at the end of two quarters, held off a late Lava Bear rally to win the nonconference contest 41-20. Marist senior quarterback Kamerun Smith passed for 234 yards and four touchdowns — three of which came in the first half — and receiver Josh Harper recorded five catches for 87 yards and three touchdowns against Bend. “We shot ourselves in the foot,” said

Bend quarterback Jonah Koski. “We had a lot of guys starting for the first time and we were just too excited.” Early on, the Bears (0-1) looked very much like a team trying to replace 13 starters before settling down after the break. Koski passed for 248 yards and three touchdowns — two to fullback Kyle Bailey, both in the second half — but Bend could not keep pace with Marist’s offense, which scored on three of its first four drives after halftime. See Bend / D5

CORRECTION A Friday Night Lights advertisement that appeared in Friday’s Bulletin on page A6 included incorrect dates and game sites on several high school football schedules. Five Central Oregon teams played home games on Friday night. The 2012 season openers for Ridgeview, Redmond, La Pine, Sisters, Madras, Summit and Mountain View high schools were all played on Friday night. The Redmond game versus Sweet Home was played at Redmond High; the Summit game versus North Eugene was played at Summit High. Also, the Sept. 14 Summit game versus Klamath Union is set to be played at Summit, and Summit’s home game against Mountain View is scheduled for Oct. 12. On the Sisters schedule, the Outlaws’ game versus Sweet Home on Sept. 28 is set to be played at Sisters. The Bulletin regrets the errors.

D

Prep sports, D5 NFL, D6 Golf, D6

Ridgeview scores victory in opener

Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

Reece Rollins runs through a hole to score the first touchdown for Ridgeview High School on Friday in Redmond.

Bulletin staff report REDMOND — Kicking off its first-ever athletic contest in style, Ridgeview blew out visiting Medicine Hat High 53-6 on Friday to celebrate the opening of the new Redmond high school. Reece Rollins set the tone early, rushing for a 65-yard touchdown on the Ravens’ first offensive play of the game.

Rollins, Boomer Fleming and Tanner Stevens each scored two touchdowns apiece for Redmond in its nonleague rout. The Ravens (1-0) led 40-6 at halftime. “It’s pretty special,” Ridgeview coach Andy Codding said about the win. “We haven’t even had school yet, so it’s nice to get this for the building.” See Ridgeview / D5

Bulletin staff report LEBANON — Mountain View’s quest toward a second straight Class 5A football state championship began Friday with a winning first step, as the Cougars weathered a 21point Lebanon second quarter en route to a 35-21 win. “It’s a long journey from here on out,” Mountain View coach Brian Crum said. “(That first game) is off our backs now, and I know we’re going to be a better football team next week.” The Cougars, who defeated the Warriors in last year’s quarterfinals, were paced by senior quarterback Toby Webb, who completed 12 of 22 passes for 242 yards and a touchdown. Senior John Carroll was on the receiving end of eight of those tosses and finished with 212 yards receiving and a score. See Cougs / D5

Scoreboard The scores of Friday night’s prep football games involving teams from Central Oregon. For more on all the games, see D5: Marist...........................................41 Bend .............................................20 Mountain View ............................35 Lebanon .......................................21 Summit ........................................30 North Eugene ..............................22 Redmond .....................................35 Sweet Home ..................................0 Ridgeview ....................................53 Medicine Hat..................................6 Madras.........................................36 Stayton ........................................14 Crook County ..............................20 Henley ..........................................14 Sisters..........................................34 McLoughlin .................................16 La Pine .........................................47 Chiloquin........................................0

Arkansas State is about to see fast in Oregon By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press

EUGENE — New Arkansas State coach Gus Malzahn wants his Red Wolves to play fast. They’re about to get quite a lesson on football speed. Malzahn makes his debut as Arkansas State’s head coach tonight against the No. 5 Oregon Ducks, whose speed has become the hallmark of their high-scoring, yard-reaping

COLLEGE FOOTBALL offense. The Ducks averaged more than 46 points and 522 yards of total offense per game last season. They had 88 plays from scrimmage that went for 20 yards or more. Their offense averaged a point every 32.6 seconds of possession.

All of which could be pretty daunting for the Red Wolves. Or not. “A lot of people are probably doubting us and saying we’re going to get killed and whatnot, but that’s just fuel to our fire,” Red Wolves senior quarterback Ryan Aplin said. “We’re going to go out there and give them hell and do what we do best, up-tempo, and hopefully put a shock to them.” See Oregon / D6

Next up Arkansas State at Oregon • When: Today, 7:30 p.m. • TV: ESPN • Radio: KBNDAM 1110


D2

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

SC OREBOA RD ON DECK Today Volleyball: Culver at Warrenton tournament, TBA Boys soccer: Sandy at Crook County, 4 p.m. Girls soccer: Sandy at Summit, noon Tuesday Boys soccer: Culver at Ridgeview, 4 p.m.; Sisters at Crook County, 4 p.m.; Summit at Sherwood, 4 p.m. Girls soccer: Sherwood at Summit, 4 p.m. Volleyball: Burns at Bend, 6:30 p.m.; Ridgeview at La Pine, 6:45 p.m.; Regis at Culver, 6 p.m. Boys water polo: Mountain View at Madras, TBA Wednesday Girls soccer: Madras at La Pine, 4:30 p.m. Boys soccer: La Pine at Summit JV2, 4:30 p.m. Volleyball: Churchill at Summit, 4:30 p.m.; West Albany at Summit, 6:30 p.m.; Mountain View vs. West Albany at Summit, 4:30 p.m.; Mountain View vs. Churchill at Summit, 6:30 p.m. Thursday Cross-country: Madras at the Darrel Deedon Cascade Invite in Turner, TBA Boys soccer: Mazama at Ridgeview, 3 p.m.; Madras at Redmond, 4:30 p.m.; East Linn Christian at Culver, 4 p.m.; Molalla at Sisters, 5:30 p.m. Girls soccer: Mazama at Ridgeview, 4:30 p.m.; Molalla at Sisters, 4 p.m.; Redmond at Madras, 4 p.m. (Red schedule says at 4:30 p.m.) Volleyball: Redmond at Ridgeview, 6 p.m.; Stayton at Sisters, 7 p.m.; La Pine at Phoenix, 7 p.m.; Cascade at Madras, 6:30 p.m.; East Linn Christian at Culver, 6 p.m. Boys water polo: Summit at Madras, TBA Friday, Sept. 7 Football: Bend at Silverton, 7 p.m.; Century at Mountain View, 7 p.m.; Summit at Eagle Point, 7 p.m.; Redmond at Madras, 7 p.m.; Klamath Union at Ridgeview, 7 p.m.; Crook County at Cascade, 7 p.m.; Burns at Sisters, 7 p.m.; La Pine at Oakridge, 7 p.m.; Culver at Grant Union, 7 p.m.; Gilchrist at Elkton, 4 p.m. Boys soccer: Mountain View at North Medford, 4 p.m.; Bend at South Medford, 4 p.m.; McLoughlin at Redmond, 4:30 p.m. Girls soccer: North Medford at Mountain View, 4 p.m.; Willamette at Summit, 4 p.m.; South Medford at Bend, 4 p.m.; McLoughlin at Redmond, 3 p.m. Volleyball: Gilchrist at Prospect, 5 p.m.; Trinity Lutheran at Butte Falls, 1 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 8 Cross-country: Bend, Mountain View, Redmond, Summit, Sisters, La Pine, Ridgeview and Crook County at the Breese Ranch Stampede in Prineville, 8 a.m.; Madras at the Trask Mountain Assault in McMinnville, noon Volleyball: Summit at Central Catholic Invitational, 9 a.m.; Bend, Redmond, Ridgeview, Crook County at Mountain View tournament, TBA; Sisters, Madras at Cascade tourney, 8 a.m.; Culver at Heppner tournament, TBA; Trinity Lutheran at Prairie City tournament, TBA; Central Christian at Paisley, 2 p.m.. Boys soccer: Summit at Madras, 10 a.m.; Mountain View at South Medford, 11 a.m.; Bend at North Medford, 11 a.m.; Central Christian at Irrigon, 1 p.m. Girls soccer: North Medford at Bend, 11 a.m.

GOLF Local 2012 GOLF WORLD PACIFIC AMATEUR GOLF CLASSIC Championship Round Aug. 31 At Crosswater Net Stroke Play Flight 1 — 1, Robert Donnelly (Camas, Wash.), 68. 2, Joe Schulte (Gearhart), 70. 3, Ross Bridges (Eugene), 72. 4, Greg Cheever (Redmond, Wash.), 73. Flight 2 — 1, Tim Holstein (Tigard), 69. 2, Vernon Carlson (Pasco, Wash.), 74. 3, Jeff Vig (Tacoma, Wash.), 75. 4, Tom Carroll (Renton, Wash.), 83. Flight 3 — 1, Stanley Anderson III (Aurora), 76. 2, Gonzo Paigen (Santa Clarita, Calif.), 78. 3, Jared Ewen (Kennewick, Wash.), 85. 4, Kyle Cronk (Renton, Wash.), 87. Flight 4 — 1, Don Goethals (Lake Tapps, Wash.), 69. 2, Don Sherman (Portland), 74. 3, Dwight Stadeli (Silverton), 83. 4, Jeff Moore (Lake Oswego), 84. Flight 5 — 1, Larry Hurley (Kingston, Wash.), 70. 2, Daniel Proulx (Keizer), 71. 3, Robert Seabeck (Wenatchee, Wash.), 73. 4, Randy Wright (Broomfield, Colo.), 79. Flight 6 — 1, Ronald Colarchik (Oregon City), 69. 2, Jeffrey Braden (Snohomish, Wash.), 71. 3, Ed Yanke (Gresham), 72. 4, Clint Walker (Yuba City, Calif.), 75. Flight 7 — 1, Joe Murray (Aloha), 69. 2, Bruce Burson (Madras), 73. 3, Gary Erb (Seattle), 74. 4, Joel Westvold (Tigard), 81. Flight 8 — 1, Charles Korom (Phoenix), 67. 2, Stan Richins (Yuba City, Calif.), 72. 3, James Bach (Kirkland, Wash.), 79. 4, Randy Camp (Albany), 84. Flight 9 — 1, Thomas Ingram (Rohnert Park, Calif.), 76. 2, Mike Premo (Seattle), 78. 3, Russ Peterson (Star, Idaho), 79. 4, Wayne Neuburger (Keizer), 84 Flight 10 — 1, Gary DeMattei (San Leandro, Calif.), 74. 2, Arnie Ecklund (Ridgefield, Wash.), 77. 3, Timothy Swope (Redmond), 83. 4, William Hatch (Ojai, Calif.), 84. Flight 11 — 1, Dennis Cassady (Sammamish, Wash.), 71. 2, Al Stautz (Ridgefield, Wash.), 73. 3, Bob Wyrick (Arroyo Grande, Calif.), 75. 4, Mike Mirgeaux (Belmont, N.C.), 88. Flight 12 — 1, Thomas Rehorst (Colorado Springs, Colo.), 70. 2 (tie), Frank Scorcio (Hillsboro), 78; Phil McCage (Redmond), 78. 4, Peach Waller (Pace, Fla.), 82. Flight 13 — 1, Kenneth Linden (Roseburg), 66. 2, John O’Rullian (Rigby, Idaho), 74. 3, Don Morton (Garden Valley, Idaho), 84. 4, Gary Wiebusch (Issaquah, Wash.), 91. Flight 14 — 1, John Newnham (Randwick, Australia), 73. 2, Al Davis (Anchorage, Alaska), 76. 3 (tie), Glenn Murray (Surprise, Ariz.), 78; Mike Seashols (Belmont, Calif.), 88. Flight 15 — 1, 4, Jerry Gallardo (Grants Pass), 72. 2 (tie), Ken Schwoerer (Villa Park, Calif.), 75; Mike Laughlin (Springville, Calif.), 75. 4, Jerry Taylor (Galt, Calif.), 76. Flight 16 — 1, Hans Behrens (Sisters), 75. 2, Jim Breymeyer (Yakima, Wash.), 77. 3, Ken Richter (Santa Rosa, Calif.), 87. 4, Ron Goodrich (Bend), 88. Flight 17 — 1, Devon Bratsman (Rexburg, Idaho), 73. 2, Gilbert LeVander (Buckley, Wash.), 74. 3 (tie), Raymond Walker (Concord, Calif.), 78; Gordon Franke (Anchorage, Alaska), 78. Flight 18 — 1, Eleanor Devlin (Sammamish, Wash.), 72. 2, Valerie Robbins (San Diego), 76. 3, Felicia King (Nampa, Idaho), 79. 4, Jackie Minnis (Long Beach, Calif.), 81. Flight 19 — 1, Kathy McDonald (Bellevue, Wash.), 220. 2, Colleen Moulton (San Jose, Calif.), 79. 3, Opal Harvey (Yucca, Ariz.), 80. Linda Bacchi (Klamath Falls), WD. Flight 20 — 1, Carmen Eriksen (Surprise, Ariz.), 78. 2, Linda Stead (Stockton, Calif.), 83. 3, Judy Knight (Hidden Valley Lake, Calif.), 94 4, Young Cho (Tacoma, Wash.), 102. Flight 21 — 1, Laurilee Hatcher (Dallas, Ore.), 78. 2, Mary Ellen Knowles (Glendale, Calif.), 81. 3, Sharon Shattuck (McKenna, Wash.), 85. 4, Tracey Doyle (Gig Harbor, Wash.), 92. Flight 22 (Gross) — 1, Paull Veroulis (Eureka, Mont.), 71. 2, Gabriel Robles-Ellis (Beaverton), 74. 3, Brett Johnson (Vancouver, Wash.), 75. David LaRosa (Oakland), WD.

Professional PGA Tour Deutsche Bank Championship Friday At TPC Boston Norton, Mass. Purse: $8 million Yardage: 7,216; Par 71 (36-35) First Round Seung-Yul Noh 31-31—62 Chris Kirk 32-31—63 Tiger Woods 32-32—64 Jeff Overton 34-30—64 Ryan Moore 30-34—64 Rory McIlroy 33-32—65 Bryce Molder 34-31—65 John Senden 33-33—66 Louis Oosthuizen 34-32—66 Ian Poulter 34-33—67 Luke Donald 33-34—67 Dustin Johnson 35-32—67 Charley Hoffman 35-32—67 Jonas Blixt 35-32—67 David Hearn 32-35—67 Jason Dufner 34-33—67 Charl Schwartzel 34-34—68 D.A. Points 36-32—68 Bud Cauley 36-32—68 Lee Westwood 34-34—68 Aaron Baddeley 34-34—68 Jason Day 35-33—68 John Merrick 34-34—68 Kevin Stadler 35-33—68 Phil Mickelson 35-33—68

Hunter Mahan J.J. Henry Kevin Na William McGirt Adam Scott Steve Stricker Webb Simpson Bo Van Pelt Brandt Snedeker Ted Potter, Jr. Greg Owen Blake Adams Dicky Pride Pat Perez Tom Gillis John Rollins Greg Chalmers Ernie Els Jim Furyk Sang-Moon Bae Harris English Scott Stallings Padraig Harrington Johnson Wagner Sean O’Hair Brendon de Jonge Matt Kuchar Kyle Stanley Zach Johnson K.J. Choi Bob Estes Josh Teater Charlie Wi Carl Pettersson Matt Every Charles Howell III Brian Harman Ryan Palmer Rickie Fowler Tim Clark Keegan Bradley Bill Haas Robert Garrigus John Huh Ricky Barnes Rory Sabbatini George McNeill Daniel Summerhays Ken Duke Graham DeLaet Geoff Ogilvy Nick Watney Jonathan Byrd J.B. Holmes Martin Laird Marc Leishman Scott Piercy Troy Matteson Roberto Castro Tommy Gainey Martin Flores Vijay Singh Jimmy Walker Cameron Tringale Ben Crane Graeme McDowell Mark Wilson Michael Thompson Justin Rose Bubba Watson Brian Davis Ben Curtis

36-32—68 36-33—69 35-34—69 34-35—69 34-35—69 35-34—69 37-32—69 36-33—69 34-35—69 36-33—69 35-34—69 35-34—69 34-35—69 34-35—69 35-34—69 34-35—69 36-33—69 35-34—69 37-32—69 32-37—69 36-34—70 33-37—70 34-36—70 34-36—70 34-36—70 36-34—70 34-36—70 35-35—70 34-36—70 35-35—70 37-34—71 36-35—71 33-38—71 36-35—71 37-34—71 34-37—71 37-34—71 35-36—71 38-33—71 37-34—71 37-34—71 34-37—71 35-36—71 37-34—71 37-34—71 35-36—71 33-38—71 35-36—71 35-37—72 35-37—72 34-38—72 36-36—72 36-36—72 35-37—72 36-36—72 38-34—72 36-36—72 37-35—72 37-35—72 36-36—72 34-38—72 38-35—73 36-37—73 35-38—73 36-38—74 35-39—74 38-36—74 37-37—74 39-36—75 38-37—75 38-37—75 43-36—79

LPGA Tour MONEY LEADERS Through Aug. 31 Trn 1. Inbee Park 17 2. Stacy Lewis 18 3. Na Yeon Choi 17 4. Ai Miyazato 16 5. Yani Tseng 16 6. Shanshan Feng 14 7. Azahara Munoz 18 8. Mika Miyazato 15 9. So Yeon Ryu 17 10. Amy Yang 16 11. Sun Young Yoo 17 12. Karrie Webb 16 13. Jiyai Shin 12 14. Suzann Pettersen 17 15. Angela Stanford 18 16. Brittany Lang 18 17. Anna Nordqvist 18 18. Hee Kyung Seo 18 19. Chella Choi 18 20. Cristie Kerr 16 21. I.K. Kim 15 22. Brittany Lincicome 17 23. Sandra Gal 18 24. Paula Creamer 17 25. Jenny Shin 18 26. Se Ri Pak 9 27. Candie Kung 17 28. Vicky Hurst 18 29. Lexi Thompson 15 30. Eun-Hee Ji 17 31. Meena Lee 18 32. Karine Icher 15 33. Giulia Sergas 14 34. Natalie Gulbis 16 35. Katherine Hull 18 36. Hee Young Park 17 37. Haeji Kang 15 38. Jessica Korda 14 39. Ilhee Lee 14 40. Morgan Pressel 18 41. Julieta Granada 18 42. Beatriz Recari 18 43. Karin Sjodin 15 44. Hee-Won Han 18 45. Catriona Matthew 13 46. Mina Harigae 18 47. Caroline Hedwall 13 48. Jodi Ewart 14 49. Nicole Castrale 12 50. Jennifer Johnson 16

Money $1,419,940 $1,301,496 $1,165,091 $1,115,351 $1,056,423 $1,028,057 $1,018,930 $871,050 $801,887 $743,124 $704,973 $582,557 $545,282 $545,136 $519,519 $496,204 $493,505 $492,498 $470,803 $455,092 $428,755 $426,430 $418,246 $408,504 $343,761 $335,855 $326,172 $315,433 $309,043 $306,012 $301,043 $298,027 $296,406 $294,541 $290,933 $280,822 $269,679 $261,418 $254,511 $249,573 $248,224 $243,850 $226,375 $214,434 $211,732 $194,128 $174,029 $169,736 $168,948 $167,096

SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER All Times PDT ——— Eastern Conference W L T Pts GF Sporting Kansas City 14 7 5 47 32 New York 13 7 7 46 46 Houston 11 6 9 42 38 D.C. 12 9 5 41 43 Chicago 12 8 5 41 32 Columbus 11 8 6 39 31 Montreal 12 13 3 39 42 Philadelphia 7 13 4 25 25 New England 6 14 6 24 33 Toronto FC 5 15 6 21 29 Western Conference W L T Pts GF San Jose 15 6 5 50 52 Real Salt Lake 13 10 4 43 37 Seattle 12 6 7 43 40 Los Angeles 12 11 4 40 46 Vancouver 10 10 7 37 29 FC Dallas 8 12 8 32 33 Chivas USA 7 10 7 28 20 Portland 7 13 6 27 27 Colorado 8 17 2 26 33 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. ——— Friday’s Games Portland 1, Colorado 0 Today’s Games Montreal at Columbus, 4:30 p.m. Philadelphia at New England, 4:30 p.m. Toronto FC at Sporting Kansas City, 5:30 p.m. D.C. United at Real Salt Lake, 6 p.m. Vancouver at Los Angeles, 7 p.m. Sunday’s Games Houston at Chicago, 4 p.m. Seattle FC at FC Dallas, 4 p.m. Chivas USA at San Jose, 6 p.m.

FOOTBALL NFL NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE All Times PDT ——— Wednesday, Sept. 5 Dallas at New York Giants, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 9 Indianapolis at Chicago, 10 a.m. Atlanta at Kansas City, 10 a.m. Philadelphia at Cleveland, 10 a.m. Washington at New Orleans, 10 a.m. St. Louis at Detroit, 10 a.m. New England at Tennessee, 10 a.m. Jacksonville at Minnesota, 10 a.m. Buffalo at New York Jets, 10 a.m. Miami at Houston, 10 a.m. Seattle at Arizona, 1:25 p.m. San Francisco at Green Bay, 1:25 p.m.

GA 23 39 30 37 30 29 44 30 38 46 GA 33 32 26 40 35 37 35 43 41

IN THE BLEACHERS

Carolina at Tampa Bay, 1:25 p.m. Pittsburgh at Denver, 5:20 p.m. Monday, Sept. 10 Cincinnati at Baltimore, 4 p.m. San Diego at Oakland, 7:15 p.m.

College All Times PDT (Subject to change) ——— Friday’s Games EAST Bentley 42, Pace 0 Temple 41, Villanova 10 SOUTH FAU 7, Wagner 3 Tennessee 35, NC State 21 MIDWEST Bemidji St. 25, Upper Iowa 23 John Carroll 40, St. Norbert 3 Michigan St. 17, Boise St. 13 Northwood (Mich.) 54, Quincy 31 SOUTHWEST Stephen F. Austin 49, SW Oklahoma 14 FAR WEST Stanford 20, San Jose State 17 ——— Today, Sept. 1 EAST Notre Dame vs. Navy at Dublin, Ireland, 6 a.m. Marshall at West Virginia, 9 a.m. Ohio at Penn St., 9 a.m. Northwestern at Syracuse, 9 a.m. Monmouth (NJ) at Lehigh, 9:30 a.m. Marist at Bryant, noon Miami at Boston College, 12:30 p.m. Colgate at Albany (NY), 3 p.m. Youngstown St. at Pittsburgh, 3 p.m. CCSU at Stony Brook, 3 p.m. SOUTH Appalachian St. at East Carolina, 9 a.m. Troy at UAB, 9 a.m. Buffalo at Georgia, 9:21 a.m. Elon at North Carolina, 9:30 a.m. Sacred Heart at Morgan St., 10 a.m. VMI at Delaware St., 11 a.m. Brevard at Presbyterian, 11 a.m. William & Mary at Maryland, noon Richmond at Virginia, noon Bowling Green at Florida, 12:30 p.m. Howard at Morehouse, 12:30 p.m. Furman at Samford, 1:30 p.m. NC A&T at Coastal Carolina, 3 p.m. Georgetown at Davidson, 3 p.m. Murray St. at Florida St., 3 p.m. Wofford at Gardner-Webb, 3 p.m. Jacksonville at Georgia Southern, 3 p.m. St. Francis (Pa.) at James Madison, 3 p.m. Concordia-Selma at MVSU, 3 p.m. Fayetteville St. at NC Central, 3 p.m. Virginia St. at Norfolk St., 3 p.m. Duquesne at Old Dominion, 3 p.m. Charleston Southern at The Citadel, 3 p.m. Liberty at Wake Forest, 3:30 p.m. Tuskegee vs. Alabama A&M at Birmingham, Ala., 4 p.m. Grambling St. vs. Alcorn St. at Ruston, La., 4 p.m. Clemson vs. Auburn at Atlanta, 4 p.m. FIU at Duke, 4 p.m. North Texas at LSU, 4 p.m. Lamar at Louisiana-Lafayette, 4 p.m. UT-Martin at Memphis, 4 p.m. Cent. Arkansas at Mississippi, 4 p.m. Jackson St. at Mississippi St., 4 p.m. Chattanooga at South Florida, 4 p.m. Florida A&M at Tennessee St., 4 p.m. Austin Peay at W. Kentucky, 4 p.m. Rutgers at Tulane, 5 p.m. MIDWEST W. Michigan at Illinois, 9 a.m. Tulsa at Iowa St., 9 a.m. Miami (Ohio) at Ohio St., 9 a.m. Dayton at Illinois St., 11 a.m. Iowa vs. N. Illinois at Chicago, 12:30 p.m. Southern Miss. at Nebraska, 12:30 p.m. E. Kentucky at Purdue, 12:30 p.m. N. Iowa at Wisconsin, 12:30 p.m. S. Dakota St. at Kansas, 4 p.m. Missouri St. at Kansas St., 4 p.m. SE Louisiana at Missouri, 4 p.m. Robert Morris at N. Dakota St., 4 p.m. Grand View at Drake, 5 p.m. Indiana St. at Indiana, 5 p.m. SOUTHWEST Langston vs. Ark.-Pine Bluff at Little Rock, Ark., 3 p.m. Jacksonville St. at Arkansas, 4 p.m. Savannah St. at Oklahoma St., 4 p.m. Northwestern St. at Texas Tech, 4 p.m. Texas St. at Houston, 5 p.m. Wyoming at Texas, 5 p.m. Prairie View at Texas Southern, 5 p.m. Michigan vs. Alabama at Arlington, Texas, 5 p.m. Oklahoma at UTEP, 7:30 p.m. FAR WEST Idaho St. at Air Force, 11 a.m. Nevada at California, noon Nicholls St. at Oregon St., ppd., hurricane South Dakota at Montana, 12:30 p.m. Colorado St. vs. Colorado at Denver, 1 p.m. Southern U. at New Mexico, 2 p.m. San Diego at Cal Poly, 4:05 p.m. Hawaii at Southern Cal, 4:30 p.m. Carroll (Mont.) at Portland St., 5:05 p.m. Azusa Pacific at UC Davis, 6 p.m. Chadron St. at Montana St., 6:05 p.m. Weber St. at Fresno St., 7 p.m. Toledo at Arizona, 7:30 p.m. Arkansas St. at Oregon, 7:30 p.m. San Diego St. at Washington, 7:30 p.m. ——— Sunday, Sept. 2 SOUTH Alabama St. vs. Bethune-Cookman at Orlando, Fla., 9 a.m. Kentucky at Louisville, 12:30 p.m. SOUTHWEST SMU at Baylor, 3:30 p.m. ——— Monday, Sept. 3 SOUTH Georgia Tech at Virginia Tech, 5 p.m. PAC-12 CONFERENCE All Times PDT ——— North Conf. Overall Stanford 0-0 1-0 California 0-0 0-0 Oregon 0-0 0-0 Oregon State 0-0 0-0 Washington 0-0 0-0 Washington State 0-0 0-1 South

Fabio Fognini, Italy, def. Guillermo Garcia-Lopez, Spain, 6-4, 6-4, 6-2. John Isner (9), United States, def. Jarkko Nieminen, Finland, 6-3, 6-7 (5), 6-4, 6-3. Grega Zemlja, Slovenia, def. Cedrik-Marcel Stebe, Germany, 6-4, 2-6, 6-4, 6-4. Julien Benneteau (31), France, def. Dennis Novikov, United States, 3-6, 6-4, 7-6 (1), 7-5. Philipp Kohlschreiber (19), Germany, def. Benoit Paire, France, 6-7 (4), 6-3, 3-6, 6-2, 7-6 (4). Andy Roddick (20), United States, def. Bernard Tomic, Australia, 6-3, 6-4, 6-0. Women Third Round Sam Stosur (7), Australia, def. Varvara Lepchenko (31), United States, 7-6 (5), 6-2. Marion Bartoli (11), France, def. Kristina Mladenovic, France, 6-2, 6-4. Laura Robson, Britain, def. Li Na (9), China, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 6-2. Petra Kvitova (5), Czech Republic, def. Pauline Parmentier, France, 6-4, 6-4. Maria Sharapova (3), Russia, def. Mallory Burdette, United States, 6-1, 6-1. Nadia Petrova (19), Russia, def. Lucie Safarova (15), Czech Republic, 6-4, 7-5. Anna Tatishvili, Georgia, def. Mandy Minella, Luxembourg, 7-5, 6-0. Victoria Azarenka (1), Belarus, def. Zheng Jie (28), China, 6-0, 6-1.

Conf. Overall 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0

Arizona State UCLA Utah Arizona Colorado USC

Friday’s Game Stanford 20, San Jose State 17 Today’s Games Nevada at California, noon Colorado State vs. Colorado, 1 p.m. Hawaii at USC, 4:30 p.m. Toledo at Arizona, 7:30 p.m. San Diego State at Washington, 7:30 p.m. Arkansas State at Oregon, 7:30 p.m. Nicholls State at Oregon State, ppd., hurricane

Top 25 Schedule All Times PDT ——— Thursday’s Game No. 9 South Carolina 17, Vanderbilt 13 Friday’s Games No. 13 Michigan State 17, No. 24 Boise State 13 No. 21 Stanford 20, San Jose State 17 Today’s Games No. 1 Southern Cal vs. Hawaii, 4:30 p.m. No. 2 Alabama vs. No. 8 Michigan at Arlington, Texas, 5 p.m. No. 3 LSU vs. North Texas, 4 p.m. No. 4 Oklahoma at UTEP, 7:30 p.m. No. 5 Oregon vs. Arkansas State, 7:30 p.m. No. 6 Georgia vs. Buffalo, 9:21 a.m. No. 7 Florida State vs. Murray State, 3 p.m. No. 10 Arkansas vs. Jacksonville State, 4 p.m. No. 11 West Virginia vs. Marshall, 9 a.m. No. 12 Wisconsin vs. Northern Iowa, 12:30 p.m. No. 14 Clemson vs. Auburn at Atlanta, 4 p.m. No. 15 Texas vs. Wyoming, 5 p.m. No. 17 Nebraska vs. Southern Miss., 12:30 p.m. No. 18 Ohio State vs. Miami (Ohio), 9 a.m. No. 19 Oklahoma State vs. Savannah State, 4 p.m. No. 22 Kansas State vs. Missouri State, 4 p.m. No. 23 Florida vs. Bowling Green, 12:30 p.m. Sunday’s Game No. 25 Louisville vs. Kentucky, 12:30 p.m. Monday’s Game No. 16 Virginia Tech vs. Georgia Tech, 5 p.m.

Betting line NFL (Home teams in Caps) Wednesday GIANTS 4 4 Cowboys Sunday, Sept. 9 BEARS 9.5 9.5 Colts Eagles 8 8 BROWNS JETS 3 3 Bills SAINTS 9.5 9.5 Redskins Patriots 6.5 6.5 TITANS VIKINGS 4.5 4.5 Jaguars TEXANS 10.5 10.5 Dolphins LIONS 8.5 8.5 Rams Falcons 2 2 CHIEFS PACKERS 5.5 5.5 49ers Panthers 2.5 2.5 BUCCANEERS Seahawks 2 2 CARDINALS BRONCOS 1 1 Steelers Monday, Sept. 10 RAVENS 6 6 Bengals Chargers 1.5 1.5 RAIDERS COLLEGE (Home teams in Caps) Today i-Notre Dame 16.5 15.5 Navy W VIRGINIA 24 26 Marshall PENN ST 6.5 6.5 Ohio U Northwestern 1 PK SYRACUSE OHIO ST 22.5 25.5 Miami-Ohio ILLINOIS 9.5 10 W Michigan Tulsa 1 1.5 IOWA ST CALIFORNIA 11.5 11 Nevada NEBRASKA 17.5 20 So Miss Miami-Fla PK 2.5 BOSTON COLL c-Iowa 6.5 9.5 No Illinois d-Colorado 5.5 6.5 Colorado St GEORGIA 37.5 38.5 Buffalo FLORIDA 29 29 Bowling Green TEXAS 28.5 31.5 Wyoming HOUSTON 37.5 36.5 Texas St a-Clemson 3 3 Auburn USC 38.5 42 Hawaii ar-Alabama 12 14 Michigan Rutgers 17.5 20 TULANE Oklahoma 30.5 30 UTEP ARIZONA 10.5 11 Toledo WASHINGTON 14.5 14.5 San Diego St Troy 5.5 6 UAB DUKE 4 2.5 Florida Int’l LSU 43.5 44 N Texas OREGON 35.5 37 Arkanas St Sunday LOUISVILLE 14.5 13 Kentucky BAYLOR 11 9 Smu Monday VA TECH 7.5 7.5 Ga Tech d-Dublin, Ireland.; c-Chicago, Ill.; de-Denver, Colo..; ar- Arlington, Texas.

Show Court Schedules Today All Times PDT Play begins at 8 a.m. Arthur Ashe Stadium Jelena Jankovic (30), Serbia, vs. Agnieszka Radwanska (2), Poland Not before 10 a.m.: Ekaterina Makarova, Russia, vs. Serena Williams (4), United States Roger Federer (1), Switzerland, vs. Fernando Verdasco (25), Spain Night Session (Play begins at 4 p.m.) Sloane Stephens, United States, vs. Ana Ivanovic (12), Serbia Mardy Fish (23), United States, vs. Gilles Simon (16), France Louis Armstrong Stadium Dominika Cibulkova (13), Slovakia, vs. Roberta Vinci (20), Italy Not before 10 a.m.: Andy Murray (3), Britain, vs. Feliciano Lopez (30), Spain Angelique Kerber (6), Germany, vs. Olga Govortsova, Belarus Sam Querrey (27), United States, vs. Tomas Berdych (6), Czech Republic Grandstand Nicolas Almagro (11), Spain, vs. Jack Sock, United States Maria Kirilenko (14), Russia, vs. Andrea Hlavackova, Czech Republic James Blake, United States, vs. Milos Raonic (15), Canada

BASKETBALL WNBA WOMEN’S NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PDT ——— Eastern Conference W L Pct GB x-Connecticut 19 6 .760 — Indiana 16 8 .667 2½ Atlanta 13 13 .500 6½ Chicago 9 15 .375 9½ New York 9 16 .360 10 Washington 5 20 .200 14 Western Conference W L Pct GB x-Minnesota 21 4 .840 — x-Los Angeles 19 7 .731 2½ x-San Antonio 17 8 .680 4 Seattle 11 14 .440 10 Tulsa 6 20 .231 15½ Phoenix 5 19 .208 15½ x-clinched playoff spot ——— Friday’s Game Minnesota 92, Tulsa 83 Today’s Games Washington at New York, 1 p.m. Chicago at Indiana, 4 p.m. San Antonio at Phoenix, 7 p.m. Sunday’s Games Connecticut at Atlanta, noon Los Angeles at Chicago, 3 p.m.

MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup AdvoCare 500 Lineup After Friday qualifying; race Sunday At Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Lap length: 1.54 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 186.121 mph. 2. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 185.648. 3. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 185.493. 4. (17) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 185.319. 5. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 185.307. 6. (55) Mark Martin, Toyota, 185.232. 7. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 185.22. 8. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 185.139. 9. (20) Joey Logano, Toyota, 185.084. 10. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 185.053. 11. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 184.997. 12. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 184.929. 13. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 184.874. 14. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 184.738. 15. (22) Sam Hornish Jr., Dodge, 184.609. 16. (51) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 184.566. 17. (39) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 184.48. 18. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 184.425. 19. (13) Casey Mears, Ford, 184.082. 20. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 184.07. 21. (2) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 184.058. 22. (36) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 183.747. 23. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 183.673. 24. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 183.643. 25. (47) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 183.509. 26. (31) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 183.412. 27. (78) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 183.388. 28. (56) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 183.37. 29. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 183.364. 30. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 183.333. 31. (30) David Stremme, Toyota, 183.037. 32. (21) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 182.886. 33. (42) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 182.759. 34. (49) Jason Leffler, Toyota, 182.675. 35. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 182.627. 36. (95) Scott Speed, Ford, 182.549. 37. (87) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 182.38. 38. (91) Reed Sorenson, Toyota, 182.189. 39. (23) Scott Riggs, Chevrolet, 182.141. 40. (83) Landon Cassill, Toyota, Owner Points. 41. (93) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, Owner Points. 42. (32) T.J. Bell, Ford, Owner Points. 43. (37) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, 182.069. Failed to Qualify 44. (98) Michael McDowell, Ford, 181.776. 45. (26) Josh Wise, Ford, 181.39. 46. (33) Stephen Leicht, Chevrolet, 181.283. 47. (19) Mike Bliss, Toyota, 180.651.

TENNIS

DEALS

Professional

Transactions

U.S. Open Friday At The USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center New York Purse: $25.5 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Second Round David Ferrer (4), Spain, def. Igor Sijsling, Netherlands, 6-2, 6-3, 7-6 (12). Steve Johnson, United States, def. Ernests Gulbis, Latvia, 6-7 (3), 7-6 (5), 6-3, 6-4. Richard Gasquet (13), France, def. Bradley Klahn, United States, 6-3, 6-3, 6-1. Novak Djokovic (2), Serbia, def. Rogerio Dutra Silva, Brazil, 6-2, 6-1, 6-2. Leonardo Mayer, Argentina, def. Tommy Robredo, Spain, 6-1, 6-4, 4-6, 7-5. Juan Martin del Potro (7), Argentina, def. Ryan Harrison, United States, 6-2, 6-3, 2-6, 6-2. Lleyton Hewitt, Australia, def. Gilles Muller, Luxembourg, 3-6, 7-6 (5), 6-7 (5), 7-5, 6-4. Alexandr Dolgopolov (14), Ukraine, def. Marcos Baghdatis, Cyprus, 6-4, 3-6, 6-0, 7-6 (5). Stanislas Wawrinka (18), Switzerland, def. Steve Darcis, Belgium, 6-7 (6), 6-3, 4-6, 6-1, 7-5. Janko Tipsarevic (8), Serbia, def. Brian Baker, United States, 6-4, 6-3, 6-4.

FOOTBALL KANSAS CITY CHIEFS—Released DT Amon Gordon, LB Leon Williams, FB Patrick DiMarco, OL Darryl Harris, OL David Mims, DL Brandon Bair, DB Neiko Thorpe, DB Terrance Parks, DB Chandler Fenner, DB Mikail Baker, OL Darryl Harris, OL Lucas Patterson, OL Rob Bruggeman, OL Rich Ranglin, DL Jerome Long, LB Gabe Miller, WR Jamar Newsome, WR Josh Bellamy, WR Junior Hemingway and S Donald Washington. Placed DB De’Quan Menzie and QB Alex Tanney on injured reserve. Placed LB Tamba Hali on the reserve/suspended list. MIAMI DOLPHINS—Traded OL Ryan Cook to Dallas Cowboys for a 2013 late-round draft pick. Waived WR Roberto Wallace, WR B.J. Cunningham, WR Clyde Gates, WR Chris Hogan, WR Jeff Fuller, DE Jamaal Westerman, OT Lydon Murtha, OT Ray Feinga, OT Will Barker, OL Andrew McDonald, OL Chandler Burden, CB Vincent Agnew, DB Anderson Russell, CB Quinten Lawrence, LB Cameron Collins, LB Shelly Lyons, DT Isaako Aaitui and DT Ryan Baker. Waived/injured DE Jarrell Root and DB Kevyn Scott. Terminated the contract of LB Gary Guyton. MINNESOTA VIKINGS—Placed OT DeMarcus Love on injured reserve. Terminated the contracts of CB Chris Carr, DE Jeff Charleston, S Eric Frampton and QB Sage Rosenfels. Waived WR Emmanuel Arceneaux, DT Chase Baker, G Chris DeGeare, FB Ryan D’Imperio, CB Bobby Felder, DT Trevor Guyton, RB Lex Hilliard G Trevor Holmes, CB Reggie Jones, OT Kevin

Murphy, LB Corey Paredes, G Austin Pasztor, DE Nick Reed, C Quentin Saulsberry, TE Mickey Shuler and RB Jordan Todman. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS—Released WR Deion Branch, S Sergio Brown, DL Marcus Harrison, WR Jesse Holley, QB Brian Hoyer, S James Ihedigbo, OL Matt Kopa, C Dan Koppen, LB Niko Koutouvides, S Derrick Martin, LB Jeff Tarpinian, S Malcolm Williams, FB Eric Kettani, DL Aaron Lavarias, TE Alex Silvestro, WR Kerry Taylor, WR Jeremy Ebert, OL Derek Dennis, TE Tyler Urban, OL Dustin Waldron, OL Jeremiah Warren and OL Darrion Weems. Placed RB Jeff Demps on injured reserve. NEW ORLEANS—Terminated the contracts of WR Greg Camarillo, K John Kasay and TE Derek Schouman. Waived LB Kadarron Anderson, DE Braylon Broughton, LB Ezra Butler, QB Sean Canfield, DE Alex Daniels, TE Michael Higgins, CB Nick Hixson, S Jerico Nelson, G DeOnt’ae Pannell, T Aderious Simmons, WR Andy Tanner, C-G Matt Tennant and LB Lawrence Wilson. Placed RB Joe Banyard, S Jose Gumbs, CB Marquis Johnson and WR Nick Toon on injured reserve. Placed LB Ramon Humber and DE Will Smith on the reserve/suspended list. NEW YORK GIANTS—Waived WR Greg Jones, WR David Douglas, WR Dan DePalma, DE Craig Marshall, DE Matt Broha, DT Dwayne Hendricks, LB Jake Muasau, TE Larry Donnell, OL Matt McCants, OL Selvish Capers, OL Stephen Goodin, QB Ryan Perrilloux and DB Laron Scott. Terminated the contracts of RB D.J. Ware, CB Dante Hughes, DT Marcus Thomas, WR Isaiah Stanback and OL Chris White. Waived/injured CB Bruce Johnson. Placed CB Terrell Thomas and DT Shaun Rogers on injured reserve. Placed S Tyler Sash on the reserve/suspended list. NEW YORK JETS—Waived WR Joseph Collins, LB Marcus Dowtin, OT Robert Griffin, G Fredrick Koloto, C Matt Kroul, P Spencer Lanning, DB LeQuan Lewis, TE Tarren Lloyd, S D’Anton Lynn, DB Julian Posey, DE Jay Richardson, WR Eron Riley, LB Brett Roy, QB Matt Simms, DB Donnie Fletcher, LB Ricky Sapp, WR Royce Pollard, WR Jordan White OT Paul Cornick, TE Hayden Smith, RB Terrance Ganaway and NT Martin Tevaseu. OAKLAND RAIDERS—Placed LB Aaron Curry on the physically unable to perform list. Waived KR Roscoe Parrish, LB Nathan Stupar, LB Kaelin Burnett, LB Chad Kilgore, WR Derek Carrier, WR Brandon Carswell, WR Eddie McGee, WR Travionte Session, OL Kevin Haslam, OL Nick Howell, OL Dan Knapp, OL Colin Miller, DL Hall Davis, DL Dominique Hamilton, TE Kyle Efaw, RB Lonyae Miller, S Curtis Taylor and K Eddy Carmona. Placed TE Tory Humphrey, P Marquette King and S Brandon Underwood on the reserveinjured list. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES—Acquired DB David Sims from Cleveland for a conditional draft piuk. Released DB Joselio Hanson, DB O.J. Atogwe WR Chad Hall, WR Mardy Gilyard, WR Marvin McNutt, LB Keenan Clayton, TE Brett Brackett, TE Chase Ford, P Mat McBriar, DT Antonio Dixon, DT Ollie Ogbu, DT Frank Trotter, DT Landon Cohen, FB Emil Igwenagu, OT D.J. Jones, LB Adrian Moten, LB Ryan Rau, DE Monte Taylor, S Phillip Thomas, OL Steve Vallos, QB Mike Kafka and OL Brandon Washington. PITTSBURGH STEELERS—Released OL Trai Essex, P Jeremy Kapinos, QB Jerrod Johnson, DB Damon Cromartie-Smith, DB Terrence Frederick, DB Josh Victorian, LB Brandon Hicks, LB Marshall McFadden, DL Corbin Bryant, DL Igbinosun Ikponmwosa, DL Jake Stoller, RB DuJuan Harris, WR Tyler Beiler, WR Toney Clemons, WR David Gilreath, WR Marquis Maze, WR Derrick Williams, OL linemen Ryan Lee, OL John Malecki and OL Chris Scott. Placed LB Sean Spence on injured reserve. ST. LOUIS RAMS—Released DT Cornell Banks, C Tim Barnes, QB Tom Brandstater, DE Mason Brodine, LB Aaron Brown, LB Sammy Brown, CB Kendric Burney, QB Kellen Clemens, DE Vernon Gholston, FB Ben Guidugli, TE Cory Harkey, OL T. Bob Hebert, DE Jamaar Jarrett, WR Nick Johnson, T Joe Long, G Bryan Mattison, FB Ovie Mughelli, TE Deangelo Peterson, RB Chase Reynolds, DE Scott Smith, OL Jose Valdez. Placed WR Austin Pettis on the reserve/suspended list. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS—terminated the contracts of DE Jacques Cesaire, OT Anthony Davis, OT Mario Henderson, RB Jacob Hester and K Nick Novak. Waived RB Edwin Baker, C Colin Baxter, LB Bront Bird, DT Charlie Bryant, LB Ricky Elmore, LB Daryl Gamble, DB Gregory Gatson, DE Logan Harrell, DE Arthur Hobbs, QB Jarrett Lee, P Robert Malone, DB DeAndre Presley, DE Damik Scafe, G Stephen Schilling, TE Kory Sperry and WR Mike Willie. Placed S Sean Cattouse on injured reserve. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS—Released LB Ikaika Alama-Francis, LB Eric Bakhtiari, RB Rock Cartwright, OT Derek Hall, LB Joe Holland, DT Tony Jerod-Eddie, LB Cam Johnson, QB Josh Johnson, DT Matthew Masifilo, CB Anthony Mosley, TE Kyle Nelson, OT Al Netter, WR Chris Owusu, WR Nathan Palmer, OT Mike Person, TE Konrad Reuland, LB Kenny Rowe, WR Brett Swain, S Michael Thomas, OT Kenny Wiggins and LB Michael Wilhoite. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS—Waived DB Phillip Adams, DE Pierre Allen, LB Allen Bradford, WR Deon Butler, WR Kris Durham, G Paul Fanaika, G Rishaw Johnson, WR Jermaine Kearse, LB Kyle Knox, DE Cordarro Law, WR Ricardo Lockette, TE Sean McGrath, C Kris O’Dowd, QB Josh Portis, DB DeShawn Shead, LB Korey Toomer and WR Lavasier Tuinei. Waived/injured TE Cooper Helfet and RB Vai Taua. Waived/injury settlement DL Lazarius Levingston. Placed LB Matt McCoy on injured reserve. Placed DB Walter Thurmond on the reserve/physically unable to perform list. Placed G Allen Barbre on the reserve/suspended list. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS—Waived DT Frank Okam, DT Amobi Okoye (injury settlement), S Larry Asante, S Sean Baker, WR Landon Cox, LB Rennie Curran, LB Jacob Cutrera, TE Drake Dunsmore, K Kai Forbath, T Jermarcus Hardrick, RB Robert Hughes, FB Cody Johnson, RB Mossis Madu, DT Jordan Nix, C Moe Petrus, TE Zack Pianalto, QB Brett Ratliff, CB James Rogers, WR Jordan Shipley, WR Tiquan Underwood, DT Teryl White, DL E.J. Wilson and G Desmond Wynn (waived/injured). TENNESSEE TITANS—Waived WR Devin Aguilar, TE Brandon Barden, DT Zach Clayton, G Kyle DeVan, DT Lamar Divens, S Aaron Francisco, TE Cameron Graham, CB Chris Hawkins, G Michael Jasper, WR James Kirkendoll, FB Collin Mooney, C Chris Morris, WR Michael Preston, DE Malcolm Sheppard, S Tracy Wilson and WR DJ Woods. Placed DE Dave Ball, DE Leger Douzable, G Ryan Durand, LB Kevin Malast and CB Terrence Wheatley on injured reserve. WASHINGTON REDSKINS—Released CB David Jones, LB Bryan Kehl, DL Darrion Scott, WR Anthony Armstrong, WR Terrence Austin, DB Travon Bellamy, OT Tom Compton, C Erik Cook, QB Jonathan Crompton, RB Tristan Davis, NT Marlon Favorite, C Grant Garner, LB Donnell Holt, NT Delvin Johnson, TE Richard Quinn, OT Willie Smith, CB Brandyn Thompson, LB Markus White and DE Doug Worthington, Waived/injured FB Dorson Boyce and LB Brian McNally. Placed DE Kentwan Balmer on the reserve/left squad list. Placed S Tanard Jackson on the reserve/ suspended list. SOCCER MLS MLS—Suspended Columbus D Julius James one game and fined him an undisclosed amount for violent conduct during an Aug. 29 game against Philadelphia. U.S. ANTI-DOPING AGENCY USADA—Announced cyclist Cesar Lopez tested positive for a prohibited substance and accepted a three-month suspension, which began on Aug. 2, for his doping offense. Announced wrestler Steven Andrus tested positive for a prohibited substance and accepted a one-year period of ineligibility, which began on May 25, 2012. WINTER SPORTS U.S. Bobsled & Skeleton Federation USBSF—Named BobbyRahal as chairman of the USA Bobsled & Skeleton Foundation. COLLEGE MICHIGAN—Suspended RB Fitzgerald Toussaint and DE Frank Clark one game apiece. TARLETON—Named Casey Hogan assistant athletic director for development and major gifts. UNC GREENSBORO—Named Joey Holcomb volunteer assistant baseball coach. WAGNER—Announced freshman G Dwaun Anderson was granted a waiver from the NCAA that will make him eligible this men’s basketball season. WAKE FOREST—Named Gayle Coats Fulks women’s assistant basketball coach.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Thursday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 7,207 1,565 2,022 574 The Dalles 3,827 1,018 1,975 618 John Day 1,865 563 719 261 McNary 1,514 230 731 293 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Thursday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 298,243 32,932 171,224 66,834 The Dalles 215,270 25,114 106,317 45,382 John Day 184,261 21,718 64,951 29,426 McNary 178,879 11,990 58,201 23,500


SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

O A

S B Soccer

TELEVISION

• Dike’s goal lifts Timbers in 1-0 win over Rapids: Bright Dike scored just before halftime and the Portland Timbers beat the Colorado Rapids 1-0 Friday night in Portland to get consecutive wins for the first time this season. Dike broke free, took a beautiful cross from Sal Zizzo and blasted the ball into the net in the 45th minute. Dike, making his third consecutive start after spending part of the season on loan to the Los Angeles Blues of USL Pro, celebrated his goal with a handspringflip combination.

Today GOLF 4 a.m.: European Tour, European Masters, third round, Golf Channel. 11 a.m.: PGA Tour, Deutsche Bank Championship, second round, Golf Channel. 3:30 p.m.: Web.com Tour, Mylan Classic, third round, Golf Channel. FOOTBALL 6 a.m.: College, Navy vs. Notre Dame, CBS. 9 a.m.: College, Ohio at Penn State, ESPN. 9 a.m.: College, Northwestern at Syracuse, ESPN2. 9 a.m.: College, Marshall at West Virginia, FX. 9 a.m.: College, Appalachian State at East Carolina, Root Sports. Noon: College, Nevada at California, Pac-12 Network. 1 p.m.: College, Colorado State at Colorado, FX. 12:30 p.m.: College, Bowling Green at Florida, ESPN2. 12:30 p.m.: College, Tulsa at Iowa State, Root Sports. 4 p.m.: College, Hawaii at USC, Fox. 4 p.m.: College, Auburn vs. Clemson, ESPN. 5 p.m.: College, Alabama vs. Michigan, NBC. 5 p.m.: College, Rutgers at Tulane, CBS Sports Network. 7:30 p.m.: College, Toledo at Arizona, ESPNU. 7:30 p.m.: College, Arkansas State at Oregon, ESPN. 7:30 p.m.: College, San Diego State at Washington, Pac-12 Network. 7:30 p.m.: College, Oklahoma at Texas-El Paso, Root Sports. TENNIS 9 a.m.: U.S. Open, men’s and women’s third round, CBS. 4 p.m.: U.S. Open, men’s and women’s third round, Tennis Channel. SOCCER 11:30 a.m.: Women’s international friendly, United States vs. Costa Rica, NBC. BASEBALL 1 p.m.: MLB, St. Louis Cardinals at Washington Nationals or Philadelphia Phillies at Atlanta Braves or Los Angeles Angels at Seattle Mariners. Fox. 6 p.m.: MLB, Arizona Diamondbacks at Los Angeles Dodgers or Boston Red Sox at Oakland Athletics, MLB Network, HORSE RACING 2 p.m.: Woodward Stakes, NBC. MOTOR SPORTS 3 p.m.: IndyCar, Baltimore Grand Prix qualifying (same-day tape), NBC Sports Network. 4 p.m.: NASCAR, Nationwide Series, NRA American Warrior 300, ESPN2.

Sunday GOLF 4 a.m.: European Tour, European Masters, final round, Golf Channel. 10 a.m.: PGA Tour, Deutsche Bank Championship, third round, Golf Channel. Noon: PGA Tour, Deutsche Bank Championship, third round, NBC. 4 p.m.: Web.com Tour, Mylan Classic, final round, Golf Channel. TENNIS 8 a.m.: U.S. Open, men’s and women’s fourth round, CBS. 4 p.m.: U.S. Open, men’s and women’s fourth round, Tennis Channel. MOTOR SPORTS 8 a.m.: NHRA, Mac Tools, U.S. Nationals qualifying, ESPN2. 11 a.m.: IndyCar, Baltimore Grand Prix, NBC Sports Network. 4:30 p.m.: NASCAR, Sprint Cup, AdvoCare 500, ESPN. FOOTBALL 9 a.m.: College, Alabama State at BethuneCookman, ESPN. 11 a.m.: High School, teams TBA, ESPN2. 12:30 p.m.: College, Kentucky at Louisville, ESPN. 4:30 p.m.: College, Southern Methodist at Baylor, Root Sports. BASEBALL 10 a.m.: MLB, Baltimore Orioles at New York Yankees, TBS. 1 p.m.: MLB, Los Angeles Angels at Seattle Mariners, Root Sports. 5 p.m.: MLB, Chicago White Sox at Detroit Tigers, ESPN2. SOCCER Noon: Women’s college, San Francisco at California, Pac-12 Network. 6 p.m.: MLS, Club Deportive Chivas USA at San Jose Earthquakes, NBC Sports Network. 7 p.m.: MLS, Seattle Sounders FC at FC Dallas (same-day tape), Root Sports.

RADIO Today BASEBALL 10 a.m.: MLB, Baltimore Orioles at New York Yankees, KICE-AM 940. FOOTBALL 5 p.m.: College, Hawaii at Southern Cal, KICE-AM 940. 7:30 p.m.: College, Arkansas State at Oregon, KBND-AM 1110.

Sunday BASEBALL 5 p.m.: MLB, Chicago White Sox at Detroit Tigers, KICE-AM 940. Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations.

D3

Football

Al Goldis / The Associated Press

Michigan State’s Le’Veon Bell (24) celebrates with teammates Keith Mumphrey (25) and Jack Allen (66) after scoring the game-winning touchdown against Boise State during the fourth quarter of Friday’s game in East Lansing, Mich.

MSU holds off Boise The Associated Press EAST LANSING, Mich. — After 44 carries, six receptions and more yards than the entire Boise State team, Michigan State’s Le’Veon Bell was too tired to say much. “I had no idea how many carries or yards I had. It was the most I’ve had in my collegiate career,” Bell said. “But I’ve still got a lot of things to work on to get better.” Bell’s first game as the Spartans’ featured running back was an exhausting one, but his second touchdown of the night — with 8:12 remaining in the fourth quarter — was enough to give No. 13 Michigan State a 17-13 victory over No. 24 Boise State on Friday. Bell ran for a career-high 210 yards, helping the Spartans overcome four turnovers. He scored from 5 yards out midway through the fourth quarter. The Broncos drove to the Michigan State 42, but Joe Southwick’s pass on fourth-and-2 was broken up. The Spartans (1-0) then ran off the final 6:32. Boise State (0-1) was sluggish in its first game after losing standouts Kellen Moore and Doug Martin from last season’s explosive offense. The Broncos’ only touchdown came on Jeremy Ioane’s 43-yard interception return in the second quarter. Bell became Michigan State’s undisputed top running back when Edwin Baker left to enter the NFL draft after last season. His 44 carries Friday more than doubled his previous career high of 20, and the junior also set career marks with six receptions for 55 yards. Perhaps his biggest highlight didn’t even lead to any points. In the third quarter, with Michigan State facing third-and-16 from its own 4, Bell ran to the right a bit, then spun away from a couple of tacklers en route to a 35-yard gain and an improbable first down. “A number of times he made something out of nothing,” Spartans coach Mark Dantonio said. “You can’t underestimate — 44 touches, and not fumbling the ball, and not coming close to fumbling it. He had some huge plays out there.” The Spartans outgained Boise State 461 yards to 206. The Broncos had won six straight against BCS-conference teams. “We’ve got to do better in the red zone and we’ve got to be able to run the ball better,” Boise State coach Chris Petersen said. “If we do those two things we’ll be OK on offense.” Michigan State leaned on Bell, especially after new starting quarterback Andrew Maxwell

COLLEGE FOOTBALL ROUNDUP threw three first-half interceptions. Maxwell finished 22 of 38 for 248 yards. Southwick, replacing Moore at quarterback, went 15 of 31 for 169 yards with an interception. Bell started Michigan State’s go-ahead drive with a 7-yard run and later caught a pass for 11 yards. He even blocked a pass rusher to allow Maxwell to find Dion Sims for an 18-yard pass on third down that put the ball at the Boise State 7. Two plays later, the Spartans had the lead. On fourth-and-2 in Michigan State territory, Boise State’s D.J. Harper appeared to have an easy first down on a pitchout, but officials blew the play dead for a Michigan State timeout. Southwick then attempted a pass that was defended well by Darqueze Dennard. Boise State looked overmatched at the start. After a quick three-and-out, the Broncos punted and let Michigan State drive 60 yards in 12 plays for a 7-0 lead on Bell’s 1-yard touchdown run. The Spartans never really took control, though. Maxwell completed his first four passes, but his slant attempt was dropped by Tony Lippett right into the arms of Boise State’s Jamar Taylor. The interception led to a field goal, which the Spartans answered when Dan Conroy made a 50-yarder to give Michigan State a 10-3 lead. In another game on Friday: No. 21 Stanford. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 San Jose State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 STANFORD, Calif. — Jordan Williamson kicked a career-long 46-yard field goal and the go-ahead score from 20 yards, and Stanford survived a win over San Jose State. Former backup quarterback Josh Nunes threw for 125 yards and a touchdown in his first start in place of Andrew Luck, the No. 1 overall draft pick. But the redshirt junior struggled to move the offense when it counted and it almost cost the Cardinal (1-0) dearly. The David Fales-Blake Jurich quarterback combo gave Stanford fits until De’Leon Eskridge fumbled in Spartans (01) territory late in the third quarter. That set up Williamson’s tiebreaking kick, giving the redshirt sophomore who missed three field goals in a 41-38 loss to Oklahoma State in the Fiesta Bowl a small stroke of redemption.

• Redskins S Jackson suspended indefinitely by NFL: Washington Redskins safety Tanard Jackson was suspended indefinitely without pay Friday by the NFL for violating the league’s substance abuse policy, complicating the team’s plans on the day players were cut to establish a 53-man roster for the start of the regular season. Jackson’s suspension began immediately. He will be able to apply for reinstatement in exactly one year. This is Jackson’s third drugs-related suspension, the previous two coming during his five seasons with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The 2007 fourth-round pick was banished for four games in 2009 and for 12 months starting in September 2010. • Fan falls to death at Texans stadium in Houston: A 25-year-old fan died after tumbling about 60 feet from a fifth-floor escalator at Reliant Stadium during a preseason Houston Texans game, officials said Friday. Jonathon Kelly, of Houston, fell to the ground floor during the Thursday night game against the Minnesota Vikings, and frantic witnesses called police to report where his body had landed, police spokesman John Cannon said. The fall appeared to be an accident, according to police, who didn’t immediately release the victim’s name pending notification of his family. • Viking fined $21K for hit: Minnesota Vikings rookie safety Harrison Smith has been fined $21,000 by the NFL for a hit on San Diego Chargers receiver Mike Willie on Aug. 24. The hefty fine sends a stern message to the first-round draft pick, who has already established a reputation as a hard-nosed, big hitter. Smith was penalized for the hit against Willie late in the third preseason game.

Motor sports • Tony Stewart claims rare pole at Atlanta: Defending Sprint Cup champion Tony Stewart claimed the pole for Sunday night’s NASCAR race at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Ga. Stewart turned a fast lap of 186.121 mph Friday night to take his first pole of the season and second of his career at the 1.54-mile tri-oval. Greg Biffle (185.648) will start on the outside of the front row for the AdvoCare 500. Kyle Busch (185.493) and Matt Kenseth (185.319) took spots on the second row. • Truex, NAPA sign on for another 3 years: Martin Truex and primary sponsor NAPA have agreed to a three-year contract extension with Michael Waltrip Racing. The team has made dramatic improvement this season, going into Sunday’s race at Atlanta Motor Speedway fifth in the Sprint Cup standings and looking to give Waltrip a spot in the Chase for the championship for the first time as a car owner.

Hockey • Lockout looming after NHL talks break off: NHL labor negotiations are at a standstill after talks broke off on Friday, significantly raising concerns the league is two weeks away from its fourth labor dispute in 20 years. Negotiations that were scheduled to resume in New York next week are now in limbo after NHL Players’ Association executive director Don Fehr announced that the league had asked that talks be “recessed.” The latest development came after the union presented its latest proposal during negotiations at the NHL headquarters in New York. The league has threatened to lock out its players once the current collective bargaining agreement expires on Sept. 15. For the first time since talks began in late June, NHL officials began expressing concern as to whether a deal can be reached to avoid a disruption of training camps. — From wire reports

TENNIS: U.S. OPEN

British teen Robson posts another upset By Rachel Cohen

Roddick extends career with win

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Laura Robson dissolved into giggles at a reference to British boy band One Direction. Yes, she’s definitely 18. She also has beaten two former Grand Slam champions at the U.S. Open, and will face another in her next match. The British teen beat 2011 French Open winner Li Na in the third round Friday, two days after she ended the career of four-time major champ Kim Clijsters. Next up: Sam Stosur, who happens to be the defending champion. “I have had a fairly tough draw, haven’t I?” Robson said with the smile of a player racking up confidence. Ranked 89th, Robson had never been past the second round of a major tournament or knocked off a top 10 opponent before this year’s Open. Now she’s done both, after eliminating the ninth-seeded Li 64, 6-7 (5), 6-2. Robson put her hands to her head in I-can’t-believe-this joy after the Chinese star returned her serve long on the final point. “I have had lots of tough matches against some very experienced opponents, so the way that I see it, it

Paul Bereswill / The Associated Press

Britain’s Laura Robson reacts after her match against China’s Li Na in the third round of play at the 2012 U.S. Open, Friday, in New York.

was time to start winning a few of them,” Robson said. Stretching before the match, Robson noticed a tweet from English soccer star Wayne Rooney wishing her luck. Except he called her “Laura Robinson.” Rooney later faulted predictive text for the gaffe, which didn’t seem to dent Robson’s

self-assurance. “Can you blame that on predictive text, though?” she joked. “I’m not so sure.” Following her from the stands Friday was British actor James Corden. “I spotted him midway, like, first set, and then spent the rest of the

NEW YORK — Andy Roddick is not ready for retirement just yet. A day after surprisingly announcing the U.S. Open will be the last tournament of his career, Roddick dominated Australian teenager Bernard Tomic from start to finish Friday night in Arthur Ashe Stadium and reached the third round with a 6-3, 6-4, 6-0 victory. Roddick, the 2003 U.S. Open champion and former No. 1ranked player, will get to play at least one more match before walking away from professional tennis. It’ll be against 59thranked Fabio Fognini of Italy. — The Associated Press

time trying not to wave,” Robson said. She also showed poise after failing to close out the match in the second-set tiebreaker, then overcoming two incorrect calls in the third set where she had to replay points she would’ve won if the initial ruling had been right.


D4

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

MA JOR L EAGUE BASEBALL STANDINGS, SCORES AND SCHEDULES

AL Boxscores Orioles 6, Yankees 1 Baltimore Markakis rf Hardy ss McLouth lf Ad.Jones cf Wieters c C.Davis dh Mar.Reynolds 1b Quintanilla 2b Andino 2b Machado 3b Totals

AB 5 5 4 4 4 3 4 3 1 4 37

R 0 1 0 1 1 0 2 0 1 0 6

H 3 1 0 1 1 1 2 0 1 2 12

BI 1 1 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 6

BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

American League SO 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 4

Avg. .297 .231 .250 .285 .238 .257 .224 .253 .224 .243

New York AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Jeter ss 4 0 1 0 0 0 .320 Swisher 1b 4 0 0 0 0 4 .272 Cano 2b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .304 Granderson cf 4 1 1 1 0 1 .235 Er.Chavez 3b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .292 Ibanez lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .235 R.Martin c 3 0 1 0 0 1 .198 I.Suzuki rf 3 0 1 0 0 1 .267 J.Nix dh 2 0 0 0 1 0 .255 Totals 32 1 5 1 1 12 Baltimore 030 001 002 — 6 12 0 New York 000 000 001 — 1 5 0 LOB—Baltimore 5, New York 5. HR—Mar.Reynolds (13), off Kuroda; Hardy (18), off Kuroda; Mar. Reynolds (14), off D.Lowe; Granderson (34), off Matusz. DP—New York 1. Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP Gonzalez W, 6-3 7 4 0 0 1 9 97 O’Day 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 Matusz 1 1 1 1 0 2 13 New York IP H R ER BB SO NP Kuroda L, 12-10 8 1-3 8 4 4 0 4 99 Rapada 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 5 D.Lowe 1-3 4 2 2 0 0 18 T—2:38. A—43,352 (50,291).

New York Baltimore Tampa Bay Boston Toronto

W 75 73 71 62 60

L 56 58 61 71 71

Chicago Detroit Kansas City Cleveland Minnesota

W 72 70 59 55 53

L 59 61 71 77 78

Texas Oakland Los Angeles Seattle

W 78 74 70 64

L 53 57 62 69

East Division Pct GB WCGB .573 — — .557 2 — .538 4½ 2½ .466 14 12 .458 15 13 Central Division Pct GB WCGB .550 — — .534 2 3 .454 12½ 13½ .417 17½ 18½ .405 19 20 West Division Pct GB WCGB .595 — — .565 4 — .530 8½ 3½ .481 15 10

Friday’s Games Baltimore 6, N.Y. Yankees 1 Detroit 7, Chicago White Sox 4 Texas 5, Cleveland 3 Toronto 2, Tampa Bay 1 Minnesota at Kansas City, ppd., rain Oakland 20, Boston 2 L.A. Angels 9, Seattle 1

National League

L10 3-7 7-3 3-7 3-7 4-6

Str Home Away L-2 40-27 35-29 W-2 37-30 36-28 L-2 35-30 36-31 L-4 32-38 30-33 W-3 33-30 27-41

L10 6-4 6-4 5-5 1-9 2-8

Str Home Away L-2 38-26 34-33 W-1 40-26 30-35 W-3 29-33 30-38 L-6 31-36 24-41 L-1 25-40 28-38

L10 7-3 9-1 8-2 5-5

Str Home Away W-1 43-25 35-28 W-7 40-27 34-30 W-4 36-29 34-33 L-1 33-31 31-38

Today’s Games Baltimore (W.Chen 12-7) at N.Y. Yankees (Phelps 3-4), 10:05 a.m. Tampa Bay (Niemann 2-3) at Toronto (H.Alvarez 7-11), 10:07 a.m. L.A. Angels (E.Santana 7-11) at Seattle (F.Hernandez 13-5), 1:05 p.m. Minnesota (De Vries 3-5) at Kansas City (W.Smith 4-6), 1:10 p.m., 1st game Chicago White Sox (Liriano 5-10) at Detroit (Scherzer 14-6), 4:05 p.m. Texas (Feldman 6-10) at Cleveland (J.Gomez 4-7), 4:05 p.m. Minnesota (Hendriks 0-7) at Kansas City (Hochevar 7-12), 4:40 p.m., 2nd game Boston (Doubront 10-6) at Oakland (Griffin 3-0), 6:05 p.m.

ERA 3.31 2.39 5.32 ERA 3.04 2.91 5.47

Washington Atlanta Philadelphia New York Miami

W 80 74 63 62 59

L 51 58 69 70 73

Cincinnati St. Louis Pittsburgh Milwaukee Chicago Houston

W 81 71 70 63 51 40

L 52 61 61 68 80 92

San Francisco Los Angeles Arizona San Diego Colorado

W 74 70 66 62 53

L 58 63 67 71 77

East Division Pct GB WCGB .611 — — .561 6½ — .477 17½ 8 .470 18½ 9 .447 21½ 12 Central Division Pct GB WCGB .609 — — .538 9½ — .534 10 ½ .481 17 7½ .389 29 19½ .303 40½ 31 West Division Pct GB WCGB .561 — — .526 4½ 1½ .496 8½ 5½ .466 12½ 9½ .408 20 17

Friday’s Games Chicago Cubs 6, San Francisco 4 Washington 10, St. Louis 0 N.Y. Mets 3, Miami 0 Philadelphia 8, Atlanta 5, 10 innings Cincinnati 9, Houston 3 Milwaukee 9, Pittsburgh 3 San Diego 5, Colorado 4 Arizona 4, L.A. Dodgers 3, 11 innings

L10 5-5 4-6 6-4 5-5 4-6

Str Home Away W-3 38-24 42-27 L-2 36-30 38-28 W-2 32-37 31-32 W-1 30-35 32-35 L-2 30-33 29-40

L10 7-3 5-5 3-7 8-2 4-6 1-9

Str Home Away W-4 42-24 39-28 L-4 40-26 31-35 L-1 40-26 30-35 W-1 39-28 24-40 W-2 34-32 17-48 L-6 27-39 13-53

L10 7-3 3-7 4-6 9-1 6-4

Str Home Away L-1 37-28 37-30 L-2 35-31 35-32 W-2 33-34 33-33 W-2 33-33 29-38 L-2 28-41 25-36

Today’s Games San Francisco (Lincecum 7-14) at Chicago Cubs (Germano 2-4), 10:05 a.m. Philadelphia (Cl.Lee 3-7) at Atlanta (T.Hudson 13-4), 1:05 p.m. St. Louis (Lohse 14-2) at Washington (Zimmermann 9-8), 1:05 p.m. Cincinnati (H.Bailey 10-9) at Houston (Harrell 10-9), 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Hefner 2-5) at Miami (Jo. Johnson 7-11), 4:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (A.J.Burnett 15-5) at Milwaukee (Estrada 2-5), 4:10 p.m. San Diego (Volquez 9-9) at Colorado (Chacin 1-4), 5:10 p.m. Arizona (Skaggs 1-1) at L.A. Dodgers (Beckett 0-1), 6:10 p.m.

Blue Jays 2, Rays 1 Tampa Bay De.Jennings lf B.Upton cf Zobrist ss Longoria 3b Joyce rf Keppinger 1b 1-E.Johnson pr Scott dh R.Roberts 2b J.Molina c a-C.Pena ph Totals

AB 4 4 4 4 3 4 0 4 4 3 1 35

R 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

H 2 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 2 0 1 10

BI 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

BB 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

SO 0 1 1 1 2 0 0 2 1 1 0 9

Avg. .249 .247 .265 .285 .253 .332 .247 .224 .220 .204 .190

Toronto AB R H BI BB SO Avg. R.Davis lf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .246 Rasmus cf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .228 Encarnacion dh 3 1 2 1 0 0 .288 Lind 1b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .234 Y.Escobar ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 .253 K.Johnson 2b 2 0 0 0 1 0 .227 Sierra rf 3 1 1 1 0 0 .286 Mathis c 3 0 0 0 0 0 .210 McCoy 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .174 Totals 26 2 4 2 1 3 Tampa Bay 001 000 000 — 1 10 0 Toronto 001 100 00x — 2 4 0 a-singled for J.Molina in the 9th. 1-ran for Keppinger in the 9th. LOB—Tampa Bay 8, Toronto 1. 2B—De.Jennings (18), Keppinger (14), R.Roberts (6). HR—De.Jennings (11), off Morrow; Sierra (3), off Hellickson; Encarnacion (35), off Hellickson. DP—Tampa Bay 2. Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Hellickson L, 8-10 6 4 2 2 1 2 74 3.41 McGee 1 0 0 0 0 1 11 2.11 Farnsworth 1 0 0 0 0 0 11 2.70 Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Morrow W, 8-5 6 2-3 8 1 1 1 5 102 2.93 Delabar H, 7 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 3 20 3.74 Janssen S, 19-22 1 2 0 0 0 1 13 2.22 Hellickson pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. T—2:28. A—20,158 (49,260).

Tigers 7, White Sox 4 Chicago Wise cf Youkilis 3b A.Dunn 1b Konerko dh Rios rf Pierzynski c Viciedo lf Al.Ramirez ss Beckham 2b Totals

AB 3 4 3 4 5 4 4 3 2 32

R 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 4

H 0 0 1 0 0 2 1 1 0 5

BI 1 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 4

BB 1 1 2 0 0 1 1 1 0 7

SO 1 1 2 0 1 1 1 0 0 7

Avg. .263 .240 .205 .309 .300 .288 .255 .272 .231

Detroit AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Jackson cf 5 1 1 0 0 3 .304 Dirks lf 3 2 1 1 2 1 .333 Mi.Cabrera 3b 4 2 3 2 0 0 .329 Fielder 1b 3 1 1 0 0 0 .314 D.Young dh 3 0 2 3 1 0 .273 Boesch rf 3 0 1 0 1 1 .246 A.Garcia rf 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Avila c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .247 Jh.Peralta ss 4 1 1 1 0 1 .256 Infante 2b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .272 Totals 33 7 11 7 4 6 Chicago 011 101 000 — 4 5 1 Detroit 210 100 30x — 7 11 2 E—A.Dunn (1), Mi.Cabrera 2 (12). LOB—Chicago 12, Detroit 7. 2B—Pierzynski (15), Dirks (16), Mi.Cabrera (34), D.Young (23). 3B—A.Jackson (9). HR—Pierzynski (24), off Fister; Mi.Cabrera (33), off Peavy; Jh.Peralta (11), off Peavy. SB—Wise (12), Infante (2). DP—Chicago 1. Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Peavy L, 9-10 6 9 6 6 4 4 106 3.28 Thornton 1 1 1 1 0 1 13 3.52 Humber 1 1 0 0 0 1 14 5.81 Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Fister 5 4 3 2 4 2 101 3.67 Smyly H, 1 1-3 0 1 1 2 0 21 4.31 Dotel W, 5-2, 3-4 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 23 2.88 Benoit H, 27 1 0 0 0 0 3 17 3.10 Valverde S, 27-31 1 0 0 0 1 1 13 3.46 Peavy pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. T—3:10. A—36,721 (41,255).

Athletics 20, Red Sox 2 Boston Podsednik lf a-M.Gomez ph-3b Pedroia 2b Ellsbury cf C.Ross rf Loney 1b Saltalamacchia c Aviles dh Ciriaco 3b-lf Iglesias ss Totals

AB 3 1 4 4 3 4 4 4 4 3 34

R 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2

H 1 0 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 9

BI 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2

BB 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1

SO 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1

Avg. .354 .321 .284 .267 .278 .381 .230 .259 .333 .000

Oakland AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Crisp cf 5 1 0 0 1 0 .255 Drew ss 6 1 1 1 0 0 .211 Reddick rf 5 2 2 4 0 0 .262 Cespedes lf 4 3 2 0 0 0 .302 Moss 1b 5 4 4 4 0 1 .254 J.Gomes dh 4 2 2 2 1 1 .252 Donaldson 3b 4 1 1 3 0 0 .228 1-Rosales pr-3b 1 2 1 0 0 0 .242 Kottaras c 5 3 3 5 0 1 .229 Pennington 2b 5 1 3 1 0 1 .204 Totals 44 20 19 20 2 4 Boston 000 100 100 — 2 9 1 Oakland 042 021 92x — 20 19 0 a-grounded out for Podsednik in the 7th. 1-ran for Donaldson in the 7th. E—M.Gomez (5). LOB—Boston 7, Oakland 3. 2B—Reddick (25), Moss 2 (9), Rosales (3), Pennington (16). HR—Saltalamacchia (23), off McCarthy; Donaldson (5), off A.Cook; Moss (15), off Aceves; Kottaras (2), off Bard; Reddick (28), off Melancon; Kottaras (3), off Padilla. DP—Oakland 2. Boston A.Cook L, 3-8 Tazawa Aceves Bard Breslow Melancon Padilla Oakland McCarthy W, 8-5 Figueroa

IP 2 2-3 1 1-3 1 1 1-3 2-3 1 IP 6 1-3 1 2-3

H 7 0 1 2 3 3 3 H 8 1

R 6 0 2 1 5 4 2 R 2 0

ER BB SO NP ERA 6 0 0 37 5.35 0 0 2 11 1.72 2 0 1 23 4.81 1 0 0 18 5.30 4 1 0 23 4.91 4 1 1 29 7.71 2 0 0 17 4.47 ER BB SO NP ERA 2 0 1 103 3.10 0 1 0 28 1.08

American League roundup

National League roundup

• Orioles 6, Yankees 1: NEW YORK — Orioles rookie Miguel Gonzalez struck out a career-high nine over seven shutout innings in a masterful pitching performance and Mark Reynolds homered twice as Baltimore tightened the AL East race with a victory over the skidding New York Yankees. • Rangers 5, Indians 3: CLEVELAND — Adrian Beltre had four hits and scored twice to help Texas hand reeling Cleveland its sixth straight loss. • Tigers 7, White Sox 4: DETROIT — Delmon Young hit a tiebreaking, three-run double in the seventh inning and Detroit beat Chicago, pulling within two games of the AL Central-leading White Sox. • Blue Jays 2, Rays 1: TORONTO — Moises Sierra homered and threw out pinch-runner Elliot Johnson at home plate for the final out, preserving Brandon Morrow’s first win since June 6 and leading the Blue Jays to a victory over the slumping Rays. • Athletics 20, Red Sox 2: OAKLAND, Calif. — Brandon Moss had career highs of four hits, four RBIs and four runs, Josh Reddick hit his first career grand slam, and Oakland routed Boston to match their best winning streak of the season at seven. Josh Donaldson homered for the third straight game with a two-run shot and Moss also had a two-run drive to go with a pair of RBI doubles to help back Brandon McCarthy (8-5) with a season high in runs. • Angels 9, Mariners 1: SEATTLE — Kendrys Morales drove in four runs and Torii Hunter had four hits, helping the Los Angeles Angels snap Seattle’s eight-game home winning streak. Morales hit a three-run homer in the first off Seattle starter Kevin Millwood. His drove in Mike Trout with a single up the middle in the fourth inning.

• Mets 3, Marlins 0: MIAMI — R.A. Dickey pitched a five-hit shutout for his 17th win, Ike Davis backed him with a home run and the New York Mets beat Miami. Dickey (17-4) struck out seven and walked three in his NL-leading fifth complete game. The knuckleballer has three shutouts this year and six in his career. • Nationals 10, Cardinals 0: WASHINGTON — Gio Gonzalez earned his 17th win with his first career shutout and the Nationals handed Adam Wainwright his shortest start this season as Washington routed St. Louis. • Cubs 6, Giants 4: CHICAGO — Alfonso Soriano hit a two-run homer that landed on Waveland Avenue and Anthony Rizzo added a solo shot, helping Chris Volstad and the Chicago Cubs beat weary San Francisco. • Phillies 8, Braves 5: ATLANTA — Erik Kratz homered in the ninth inning off Braves closer Craig Kimbrel and John Mayberry Jr. hit a three-run shot off Cristhian Martinez in the 10th to help Philadelphia rally past Atlanta. • Reds 9, Astros 3: HOUSTON — Jay Bruce had a three-run homer and Zack Cozart added a two-run shot to help Cincinnati beat Houston. • Padres 5, Rockies 4: DENVER — Clayton Richard pitched effectively into the seventh inning, Carlos Quentin homered and surging San Diego beat Colorado. Cameron Maybin had three hits for the Padres, who have won two straight and 10 of 11. • Brewers 9, Pirates 3: MILWAUKEE — Corey Hart and Aramis Ramirez both went three for four with home runs, and Pittsburgh starter Jeff Karstens left for the second consecutive time with an injury as Milwaukee beat the Pirates. • Diamondbacks 4, Dodgers 3: LOS ANGELES — Jason Kubel homered to lead off the 11th inning, helping Arizona beat the Los Angeles Dodgers after they blew a three-run lead for their eighth consecutive win over their NL West rival.

Scribner 1 0 0 0 0 0 10 2.82 T—3:01. A—20,121 (35,067).

Rangers 5, Indians 3 Texas Kinsler 2b Andrus ss Hamilton cf-rf Beltre 3b N.Cruz rf Gentry cf Mi.Young dh Dav.Murphy lf Soto c Moreland 1b Totals

AB 5 5 3 5 4 1 5 4 4 3 39

R 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 5

H 2 1 1 4 0 0 2 2 0 0 12

BI 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 5

BB 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3

SO 2 1 2 0 3 1 0 2 1 0 12

Avg. .268 .299 .293 .316 .262 .305 .268 .314 .231 .292

a-flied out for Tor.Hunter in the 9th. E—Haren (3), Seager (9). LOB—Los Angeles 11, Seattle 4. 2B—Tor.Hunter (19), Callaspo (15). 3B—Aybar (5). HR—K.Morales (18), off Millwood; Bo.Wilson (3), off Luetge. DP—Los Angeles 2; Seattle 2. Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Haren W, 9-10 7 5 1 0 0 3 100 4.58 Richards 1 0 0 0 0 1 7 4.76 Hawkins 1 2 0 0 0 0 14 3.55 Seattle IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Millwood L, 4-12 5 9 5 4 4 1 116 4.38 C.Capps 2 3 1 1 1 4 38 5.59 Kinney 1 1 0 0 0 2 15 4.12 Luetge 1 3 3 3 0 1 17 3.22 T—3:04. A—17,739 (47,860).

Cleveland AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Choo rf 4 0 2 0 0 2 .278 Kipnis 2b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .253 As.Cabrera ss 3 1 0 0 1 0 .270 Brantley dh 3 0 0 0 1 1 .285 C.Santana c 4 1 2 1 0 2 .245 Kotchman 1b 4 1 1 2 0 1 .235 Carrera cf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .306 Hannahan 3b 1 0 0 0 1 0 .226 a-Lillibridge ph-3b 2 0 0 0 0 2 .182 Donald lf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .206 Totals 31 3 5 3 4 10 Texas 102 001 100 — 5 12 2 Cleveland 000 100 002 — 3 5 0 a-struck out for Hannahan in the 7th. E—Andrus 2 (15). LOB—Texas 10, Cleveland 6. 2B—Kinsler (36), Beltre 2 (29), Choo (36), C.Santana (23). 3B—Dav.Murphy (2). HR—Kotchman (12), off Uehara. SB—Kinsler (21). DP—Texas 1.

NL Boxscores Reds 9, Astros 3

Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Dempster W, 4-1 6 2 1 0 3 7 104 4.58 Kirkman 2 1 0 0 1 2 29 3.60 Uehara 1-3 2 2 2 0 0 11 2.59 Nathan S, 28-29 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 11 2.45 Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Jimenez L, 9-14 5 2-3 8 4 4 3 7 117 5.61 E.Rogers 1 1-3 2 1 1 0 3 26 2.43 C.Allen 2 2 0 0 0 2 23 1.83 T—3:08. A—16,700 (43,429).

Houston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Altuve 2b 5 0 0 0 0 0 .294 Greene ss 4 0 1 0 0 2 .226 Wallace 1b 3 1 1 0 1 2 .290 J.Castro c 4 0 2 0 0 1 .263 Paredes rf 2 0 1 1 1 1 .250 F.Martinez lf 4 1 1 1 0 0 .182 W.Lopez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Dominguez 3b 4 1 1 1 0 0 .375 B.Barnes cf 3 0 1 0 0 0 .180 W.Wright p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Fe.Rodriguez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --S.Moore lf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .225 Abad p 2 0 1 0 0 1 .333 Storey p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Bogusevic cf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .209 Totals 34 3 9 3 2 7 Cincinnati 002 040 120 — 9 13 1 Houston 000 200 010 — 3 9 1 a-singled for LeCure in the 8th. b-flied out for Cozart in the 8th. E—Bruce (6), Paredes (1). LOB—Cincinnati 6, Houston 7. 2B—Cozart (32), B.Phillips (29), D.Navarro (1), Greene (13), Wallace (8), J.Castro (13). HR—Cozart (15), off Abad; Bruce (28), off Abad; F.Martinez (3), off Leake; Dominguez (1), off Leake. SB—Heisey (6). DP—Houston 2.

Angels 9, Mariners 1 Los Angeles Trout cf Tor.Hunter rf a-Calhoun ph-rf Pujols dh K.Morales 1b Trumbo lf V.Wells lf Aybar ss Callaspo 3b M.Izturis 2b Bo.Wilson c Totals

AB 5 5 1 4 5 4 0 5 5 3 5 42

R 3 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 9

H 1 4 0 2 2 1 0 2 2 1 1 16

Seattle Ackley 2b Gutierrez cf Seager 3b Jaso dh J.Montero c M.Saunders rf Thames rf Smoak 1b T.Robinson lf Ryan ss Totals Los Angeles Seattle

AB R H 4 0 2 4 1 2 4 0 0 4 0 1 4 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 0 3 0 1 3 0 0 3 0 0 32 1 7 310 101 100 000

BI 0 1 0 1 4 0 0 0 1 0 2 9

BB 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 5

SO 2 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 2 0 1 8

Avg. .335 .304 .176 .289 .276 .278 .223 .275 .249 .256 .221

BI BB SO 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 4 003 — 9 000 — 1

Avg. .232 .288 .249 .277 .256 .245 .239 .190 .239 .201 16 1 7 1

Cincinnati Cozart ss b-Valdez ph-ss Heisey cf-lf B.Phillips 2b Ludwick lf Stubbs cf Bruce rf Frazier 1b-3b Rolen 3b Simon p D.Navarro c Leake p LeCure p a-Cairo ph-1b Totals

AB 4 1 5 5 3 1 3 5 3 0 4 2 0 1 37

R 2 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 9

H 2 0 2 3 1 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 0 1 13

BI 2 0 2 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 9

BB 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4

SO 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 5

Avg. .247 .201 .284 .300 .276 .221 .256 .293 .250 .000 .273 .259 .000 .169

Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Leake W, 7-8 6 7 2 2 2 6 106 4.45 LeCure 1 0 0 0 0 1 7 3.23 Simon 2 2 1 1 0 0 29 2.60 Houston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Abad L, 0-2 4 1-3 9 6 6 2 1 84 4.83 Storey 2 2 1 1 0 4 28 3.18 W.Wright 2-3 2 2 2 2 0 21 3.73 Fe.Rodriguez 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 5.86 W.Lopez 1 0 0 0 0 0 15 2.41 W.Wright pitched to 3 batters in the 8th. T—3:03. A—15,287 (40,981).

Nationals 10, Cardinals 0 St. Louis Jay cf Beltran rf Holliday lf Craig 1b Y.Molina c Boggs p Motte p Salas p a-S.Robinson ph Freese 3b Schumaker 2b Kozma ss Rzepczynski p T.Cruz c Wainwright p Rosenthal p Descalso ss Totals

AB 3 3 3 4 3 0 0 0 1 3 3 2 0 1 1 0 2 29

R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

H 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 5

BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

BB 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

SO 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 8

Avg. .310 .267 .304 .308 .324 ----.000 .260 .296 .301 .000 --.252 .130 --.221

Washington AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Werth rf 3 3 3 1 2 0 .316 Harper cf 4 1 2 2 1 1 .254 Zimmerman 3b 5 2 2 2 0 0 .282 Lombardozzi 3b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .281 LaRoche 1b 4 1 1 2 1 0 .259 Morse lf 5 0 0 0 0 1 .287 Desmond ss 4 1 2 1 0 2 .286 Espinosa 2b 4 1 1 1 0 2 .248 K.Suzuki c 3 1 1 1 1 1 .222 G.Gonzalez p 3 0 0 0 0 2 .111 Totals 35 10 12 10 5 9 St. Louis 000 000 000 — 0 5 0 Washington 204 020 02x — 10 12 0 a-flied out for Salas in the 9th. LOB—St. Louis 5, Washington 7. 2B—Y.Molina (26), Werth (14), Zimmerman (30). HR—Zimmerman (17), off Motte. DP—Washington 3. St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Wainwright L, 13-11 2 2-3 9 6 6 3 3 86 3.90 Rosenthal 2 0 2 2 2 3 37 3.72 Rzepczynski 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 23 4.46 Boggs 1 0 0 0 0 1 14 1.93 Motte 1-3 2 2 2 0 1 22 2.88 Salas 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 4 3.78 Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Gonzalez W, 17-7 9 5 0 0 3 8 119 3.10 T—2:57. A—29,499 (41,487).

Cubs 6, Giants 4 San Francisco Pagan cf Theriot 2b Sandoval 3b Posey c Pence rf Belt 1b Arias ss G.Blanco lf Bumgarner p a-Scutaro ph Kontos p c-F.Peguero ph Mijares p Affeldt p e-H.Sanchez ph Totals

AB 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 32

R 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4

H 1 2 0 3 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8

BI 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4

BB 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

SO 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 7

Avg. .290 .267 .282 .329 .262 .266 .284 .237 .131 .285 .000 .000 .000 .000 .262

Chicago Mather rf Vitters 3b Marmol p Rizzo 1b A.Soriano lf

AB 3 4 0 4 4

R 1 0 0 2 1

H 0 0 0 2 2

BI 0 0 0 1 3

BB 1 0 0 0 0

SO 0 1 0 1 1

Avg. .208 .086 --.287 .261

S.Castro ss 4 1 1 0 0 0 .277 W.Castillo c 4 1 2 1 0 1 .266 B.Jackson cf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .208 Barney 2b 3 0 1 0 1 0 .255 Volstad p 2 0 1 0 0 1 .143 Beliveau p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-LaHair ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .256 Russell p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Camp p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --d-Valbuena ph-3b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .231 Totals 33 6 10 5 3 5 San Francisco 000 101 020 — 4 8 1 Chicago 104 010 00x — 6 10 0 a-grounded out for Bumgarner in the 5th. b-singled for Beliveau in the 6th. c-struck out for Kontos in the 7th. d-grounded out for Camp in the 8th. e-struck out for Affeldt in the 9th. E—Posey (10). LOB—San Francisco 5, Chicago 6. 2B—Posey (30), W.Castillo (7), Barney (25). HR— A.Soriano (24), off Bumgarner; Rizzo (10), off Kontos. SB—Pagan 2 (23), Mather (3). DP—Chicago 2. San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP Bumgarner L, 14-9 4 6 5 4 2 3 85 Kontos 2 2 1 1 1 2 39 Mijares 1 0 0 0 0 0 9 Affeldt 1 2 0 0 0 0 15 Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP Volstad W, 2-9 5 2-3 5 2 2 3 2 88 Beliveau H, 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 2 Russell 1 0 0 0 0 2 20 Camp 1 3 2 2 0 1 22 Marmol S, 17-19 1 0 0 0 0 2 14 T—3:09. A—32,476 (41,009).

ERA 3.07 2.21 5.00 2.81 ERA 6.06 3.09 3.36 3.78 3.83

Mets 3, Marlins 0 New York Tejada ss Dan.Murphy 2b D.Wright 3b I.Davis 1b Duda lf Bay lf Baxter rf An.Torres cf Thole c Dickey p Totals

AB 3 4 4 3 4 0 2 3 3 3 29

R 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

H 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4

BI 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1

SO 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 3

Avg. .296 .285 .316 .224 .239 .152 .278 .225 .236 .175

Miami AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Petersen lf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .197 Ruggiano cf 4 0 2 0 0 0 .329 Reyes ss 3 0 0 0 1 1 .281 Ca.Lee 1b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .275 Stanton rf 4 0 1 0 0 2 .291 Dobbs 3b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .306 D.Solano 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .292 Brantly c 3 0 0 0 0 1 .219 Eovaldi p 2 0 1 0 0 0 .125 LeBlanc p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .111 a-Kearns ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .240 Cishek p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Totals 31 0 5 0 3 7 New York 000 100 200 — 3 4 1 Miami 000 000 000 — 0 5 0 a-walked for LeBlanc in the 8th. E—Dan.Murphy (13). LOB—New York 2, Miami 7. HR—I.Davis (25), off Eovaldi. DP—New York 1; Miami 1. New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Dickey W, 17-4 9 5 0 0 3 7 114 2.63 Miami IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Eovaldi L, 4-10 7 4 3 3 1 1 85 4.48 LeBlanc 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 2.49 Cishek 1 0 0 0 0 1 16 2.03 T—2:07. A—23,099 (37,442).

Phillies 8, Braves 5 (10 innings) Philadelphia Rollins ss Frandsen 3b Utley 2b Howard 1b Wigginton lf 1-Pierre pr-lf Mayberry cf Kratz c M.Martinez rf d-D.Brown ph Lindblom p f-Cl.Lee ph Papelbon p Halladay p Horst p b-Polanco ph Bastardo p Aumont p e-L.Nix ph-rf Totals

AB 5 5 5 4 3 1 3 5 3 1 0 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 40

R 1 2 1 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8

H 1 2 1 2 1 0 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 13

BI 0 0 0 3 1 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8

BB 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

SO 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 11

Avg. .242 .357 .249 .241 .237 .299 .250 .290 .127 .255 --.196 --.140 --.258 ----.255

Atlanta AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Bourn cf 5 0 1 0 0 2 .283 Prado lf 4 1 2 2 1 0 .298 Heyward rf 5 0 0 0 0 0 .272 C.Jones 3b 3 1 0 0 2 3 .301 F.Freeman 1b 3 1 2 2 2 1 .270 McCann c 5 0 0 0 0 0 .231 Uggla 2b 5 1 1 1 0 2 .208 Janish ss 4 0 2 0 1 0 .205 Minor p 2 1 1 0 0 0 .067 Durbin p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --a-Pastornicky ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .247 Venters p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --O’Flaherty p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-J.Francisco ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .249 Kimbrel p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --C.Martinez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 g-Hinske ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .197 Totals 38 5 9 5 7 10 Philadelphia 010 003 001 3 — 8 13 1 Atlanta 000 041 000 0 — 5 9 0 a-walked for Durbin in the 6th. b-singled for Horst in the 7th. c-struck out for O’Flaherty in the 8th. dstruck out for M.Martinez in the 9th. e-grounded out for Aumont in the 9th. f-struck out for Lindblom in the 10th. g-struck out for C.Martinez in the 10th. 1-ran for Wigginton in the 8th. E—Rollins (11). LOB—Philadelphia 6, Atlanta 10. 2B—Janish (6). HR—Howard (10), off Minor; Kratz (8), off Kimbrel; Mayberry (13), off C.Martinez; Prado (8), off Halladay; F.Freeman (19), off Halladay; Uggla (17), off Horst. DP—Philadelphia 1; Atlanta 1. Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP Halladay 4 2-3 7 4 4 4 3 81 Horst 1 1-3 1 1 1 2 1 25 Bastardo 1 0 0 0 0 2 14 Aumont 1 1 0 0 0 1 13 Lindblom W, 3-3 1 0 0 0 1 1 16 Papelbon S, 31-34 1 0 0 0 0 2 18 Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO NP Minor 5 7 4 4 1 3 71 Durbin BS, 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 1 16 Venters H, 17 1 1 0 0 0 1 16 O’Flaherty H, 22 1 1 0 0 0 2 12 Kimbrel BS, 3-35 1 1 1 1 0 2 14 C.Martinez L, 5-4 1 3 3 3 1 2 22 Minor pitched to 4 batters in the 6th. T—3:21. A—31,203 (49,586).

ERA 4.02 1.29 5.01 0.00 3.58 2.56 ERA 4.79 3.19 3.47 2.12 1.29 4.39

Padres 5, Rockies 4 San Diego Ev.Cabrera ss Venable rf c-Denorfia ph-rf Headley 3b Quentin lf Amarista lf Grandal c Alonso 1b Forsythe 2b Maybin cf Richard p Brach p b-Guzman ph Layne p Thayer p Gregerson p Totals

AB 4 4 1 5 4 0 3 4 4 4 2 0 0 0 0 0 35

R 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 5

H 0 1 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 9

BI 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5

BB 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 6

SO 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4

Avg. .235 .261 .294 .276 .267 .253 .275 .274 .270 .234 .082 --.254 ----.000

Colorado Rutledge ss Pacheco 1b C.Gonzalez lf W.Rosario c Nelson 3b A.Brown rf Colvin cf LeMahieu 2b White p Mat.Reynolds p Roenicke p a-Fowler ph 1-Chatwood pr Brothers p W.Harris p

AB 5 4 4 4 3 3 4 4 1 0 1 1 0 0 0

R 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

H 1 1 1 2 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

BI 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

BB 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

SO 0 0 2 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Avg. .345 .306 .309 .255 .276 .265 .291 .289 .130 .000 .083 .308 .143 .000 ---

d-Blackmon ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .146 Totals 35 4 9 4 2 6 San Diego 021 010 010 — 5 9 1 Colorado 001 002 001 — 4 9 0 a-singled for Roenicke in the 7th. b-was intentionally walked for Brach in the 8th. c-singled for Venable in the 8th. d-fouled out for W.Harris in the 9th. 1-ran for Fowler in the 7th. E—Ev.Cabrera (9). LOB—San Diego 10, Colorado 6. 2B—Headley (24), Quentin (18), Maybin (15), Rutledge (13). 3B—Venable (8). HR—Quentin (15), off White; Pacheco (3), off Richard; W.Rosario (23), off Richard; A.Brown (2), off Gregerson. SB—Maybin (25), A.Brown (1). DP—San Diego 1. San Diego IP H R ER BB SO NP Richard W, 12-12 6 1-3 8 3 3 2 2 88 Brach H, 10 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 13 Layne H, 3 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 3 Thayer H, 11 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 9 Gregerson S, 3-6 1 1 1 1 0 1 15 Colorado IP H R ER BB SO NP White L, 2-7 3 2-3 4 3 3 3 2 76 Mat.Reynolds 2-3 1 1 1 0 0 11 Roenicke 2 2-3 2 0 0 2 1 36 Brothers 1 2 1 1 1 1 21 W.Harris 1 0 0 0 0 0 10 T—2:54. A—27,366 (50,398).

ERA 3.74 4.15 0.00 3.69 2.39 ERA 5.58 4.56 2.73 4.36 7.45

Brewers 9, Pirates 3 Pittsburgh Presley cf Tabata lf J.Hughes p Takahashi p d-Mercer ph Snider rf-lf G.Jones 1b-rf P.Alvarez 3b McKenry c J.Harrison 2b Barmes ss Karstens p McPherson p Correia p a-G.Sanchez ph-1b Totals

AB 4 4 0 0 1 4 4 3 4 4 4 0 1 1 2 36

R 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 3

H 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 9

BI 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

BB 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

SO 0 2 0 0 1 2 1 0 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 11

Avg. .238 .231 .000 --.204 .287 .281 .252 .258 .250 .221 .107 .000 .143 .215

Milwaukee AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Morgan rf 5 2 3 0 1 1 .244 R.Weeks 2b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .222 Braun lf 5 1 1 0 0 1 .310 Ar.Ramirez 3b 4 2 3 4 1 0 .295 Hart 1b 4 1 3 2 0 1 .276 Lucroy c 4 1 1 0 1 1 .330 C.Gomez cf 5 1 1 1 0 3 .256 Segura ss 4 0 1 1 1 0 .209 M.Rogers p 3 0 0 0 0 0 .214 Loe p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Ishikawa ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .262 Henderson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Bianchi ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .185 Veras p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 39 9 15 8 5 8 Pittsburgh 000 100 101 — 3 9 1 Milwaukee 410 000 04x — 9 15 0 a-doubled for Correia in the 7th. b-singled for Loe in the 7th. c-walked for Henderson in the 8th. d-struck out for Takahashi in the 9th. E—Presley (3). LOB—Pittsburgh 8, Milwaukee 13. 2B—McKenry (12), J.Harrison (9), G.Sanchez (14), Morgan (5), C.Gomez (15). HR—G.Jones (22), off M.Rogers; Hart (25), off Karstens; Ar.Ramirez (21), off Takahashi. SB—Morgan (11), R.Weeks (9), Lucroy (3), Segura (3). Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Karstens L, 5-4 1-3 5 4 4 0 1 20 3.89 McPherson 1 2-3 1 1 1 2 3 45 2.45 Correia 4 4 0 0 1 2 64 4.40 J.Hughes 1 1 0 0 0 0 7 2.78 Takahashi 1 4 4 4 2 2 27 12.00 Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA M.Rogers W, 3-1 5 1-3 5 1 1 2 5 107 3.92 Loe 1 2-3 1 1 1 0 2 25 3.57 Henderson H, 6 1 1 0 0 0 2 16 3.07 Veras 1 2 1 1 0 2 28 4.39 T—3:39. A—33,877 (41,900).

Diamondbacks 4, Dodgers 3 (11 innings) Arizona C.Young cf A.Hill 2b Kubel lf Goldschmidt 1b J.Upton rf M.Montero c C.Johnson 3b Elmore ss Bergesen p Putz p Cahill p Zagurski p Shaw p b-G.Parra ph Ziegler p D.Hernandez p Jo.McDonald ss Totals

AB 5 4 4 3 5 5 4 4 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 1 38

R 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4

H 0 2 1 0 0 3 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 9

BI 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4

BB 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

SO 3 2 0 3 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 13

Avg. .223 .297 .264 .282 .273 .279 .270 .182 .000 --.107 ----.278 .333 1.000 .232

Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg. M.Ellis 2b 5 0 1 2 0 1 .263 Victorino lf 4 0 0 0 1 1 .257 Ad.Gonzalez 1b 5 0 0 0 0 1 .207 Kemp cf 4 1 0 0 1 3 .332 H.Ramirez ss 3 0 0 0 2 0 .254 Ethier rf 4 0 1 1 1 2 .290 L.Cruz 3b 5 1 2 0 0 1 .295 A.Ellis c 4 1 1 0 0 1 .281 Harang p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .064 a-Punto ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .200 Sh.Tolleson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-A.Kennedy ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .265 Belisario p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --League p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --d-J.Rivera ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .239 Guerrier p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 38 3 6 3 5 12 Arizona 010 020 000 01 — 4 9 0 Los Angeles 000 021 000 00 — 3 6 0 a-singled for Harang in the 5th. b-struck out for Shaw in the 7th. c-grounded out for Sh.Tolleson in the 7th. d-struck out for League in the 10th. LOB—Arizona 5, Los Angeles 8. 2B—A.Hill (33), C.Johnson (23). 3B—C.Johnson (4). HR—Kubel (27), off Guerrier. SB—Kemp (9). DP—Arizona 1; Los Angeles 4. Arizona IP H R ER BB SO NP Cahill 5 2-3 4 3 3 2 4 96 Zagurski BS, 1-1 0 1 0 0 0 0 4 Shaw 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 4 Ziegler 1 0 0 0 0 0 15 D.Hernandez 1 0 0 0 0 2 13 Bergesen W, 1-0 2 0 0 0 2 3 30 Putz S, 28-31 1 1 0 0 1 2 26 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP Harang 5 5 3 3 2 3 82 Sh.Tolleson 2 1 0 0 0 3 30 Belisario 2 2 0 0 1 2 26 League 1 0 0 0 0 3 12 Guerrier L, 0-2 1 1 1 1 0 2 13 Zagurski pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. T—3:51. A—37,622 (56,000).

ERA 4.02 5.57 4.18 2.47 2.17 2.50 2.76 ERA 3.76 4.56 2.65 4.91 3.52

LEADERS Through Friday’s Games NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING—MeCabrera, San Francisco, .346; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, .344; Posey, San Francisco, .329; YMolina, St. Louis, .324; DWright, New York, .316; Braun, Milwaukee, .310; CGonzalez, Colorado, .309. RUNS—AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, 90; Braun, Milwaukee, 89; Bourn, Atlanta, 85; MeCabrera, San Francisco, 84; Holliday, St. Louis, 83; JUpton, Arizona, 83; CGonzalez, Colorado, 80. RBI—Braun, Milwaukee, 92; Holliday, St. Louis, 90; ArRamirez, Milwaukee, 86; Beltran, St. Louis, 85; Bruce, Cincinnati, 84; FFreeman, Atlanta, 84; Headley, San Diego, 83. AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING—Trout, Los Angeles, .335; MiCabrera, Detroit, .329; Jeter, New York, .320; Beltre, Texas, .316; Fielder, Detroit, .314; Mauer, Minnesota, .312; Konerko, Chicago, .309. RUNS—Trout, Los Angeles, 106; Kinsler, Texas, 91; MiCabrera, Detroit, 86; Hamilton, Texas, 86; Jeter, New York, 84; Granderson, New York, 83; AJackson, Detroit, 83. RBI—Hamilton, Texas, 112; MiCabrera, Detroit, 109; Willingham, Minnesota, 96; Fielder, Detroit, 93; Pujols, Los Angeles, 91; Encarnacion, Toronto, 90; ADunn, Chicago, 88.


PREP FOOTBALL ROUNDUP

PREP ROUNDUP

Storm pull away for win

Trinity Lutheran volleyball takes win

Bulletin staff report It took three overtimes to do it, but Summit started the 2012 football season off in triumphant fashion Friday night against North Eugene. Quarterback Chase Dunphy ran 10 yards for a touchdown on the first snap of the third overtime, then completed a conversion pass to tight end Austin Peters for a 30-22 Summit lead. The Storm’s defense did the rest, stuffing the visiting Highlanders on four downs to preserve the nonconference home win. “There were a lot of momentum swings tonight, but our guys stepped up and didn’t get down,” said Joe Padilla, the first-year Summit head coach whose first victory at the Storm’s helm was certainly a memorable one. “We have a lot of inexperienced guys,” Padilla added. “There was a lot of growing up that happened in this game.” J.T. Evans’ 23-yard touchdown run in the first quarter put Summit up 6-0, but the hosts trailed 14-6 in the fourth period and were in serious trouble until a timely defensive stand halted a North Eugene drive deep in Storm territory. Summit forced overtime with a 47-yard touchdown pass from Dunphy to Tyler Mullen with 6:45 left in regulation play. A Dunphy conversion pass to Peters was good for two points and tied the score at 14-14. After a scoreless first overtime session, both teams scored eight points in the second extra period, Summit pulling even on Merritt Barber’s 6-yard touchdown run and a two-point conversion run by Evans. That set the stage for Dunphy’s tie-breaking touchdown run and the clinching defensive stand by the Storm defense. Summit (1-0) plays at Eagle Point next Friday night. In other games Friday night: Redmond. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .35 Sweet Home . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 REDMOND — Quarterback Andrew Leeland passed for three touchdowns, and Redmond rode a solid defensive effort to a season-opening nonconference victory over the Class 4A Huskies. “We

felt like we were bigger and more athletic than they were,” said Panthers coach Nathan Stanley, “and with 30-some seniors, we were hoping to go out and control the game — and we did.” Leeland completed touchdown passes of 12 yards to Trevor Hindman, 24 yards to Cam Peters and 29 yards to Matt Dahlen, who finished with 93 receiving yards. Hindman’s 5-yard touchdown run gave Redmond a 14-0 lead in the first quarter, and Peters added a 19-yard TD run in the second period as part of a 111-yard rushing night for the senior running back. The 5A Panthers (1-0) play at Madras next Friday night. La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47 Chiloquin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 CHILOQUIN — La Pine scored six first-half touchdowns and matched its win total for all of 2011 with a nonconference romp at Class 2A Chiloquin in the Hawks’ season opener. Jeremy Desrosiers and Kole Kimmel rushed for two touchdowns apiece and Erik Page returned an interception 43 yards for another score as the 4A Hawks (10) charged to a 41-0 halftime lead. The shutout defensive effort for La Pine featured a 15-yard return of a recovered fumble for a touchdown by Josh Gacke in the third period. The Hawks’ other touchdown came on a 1-yard run in the second quarter by Chadon Jaynes, who joined Desrosiers, Kimmel and Tucker Allen with 40-plus rushing yards for the winners. La Pine (1-0) plays at home next Friday against Oakridge. Madras . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36 Stayton. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14 STAYTON — Madras senior Devin Ceciliani hauled in three long touchdown receptions to lead the White Buffaloes to a 36-14 road win. The wide receiver opened his final season at Madras by scoring on 85-, 52- and 34-yard receptions and ended the night with 210 yards. Madras (1-0) struck first when quarterback Steele Haugen hooked up with Ceciliani on an 85-yard pass, the first of three bombs Haugen would complete to Ceciliani. Haugen finished the night with 310 yards passing and three touchdowns After the first-half success through the

air, the White Buffaloes went to the running game, where Joe Hisatake scored twice in the third quarter on 10- and 2yard runs to cushion the Madras lead. Hisatake finished with 142 yards on the ground. Madras coach Rick Wells said he was pleased with his team’s balance in its first game. “Sure, both teams made some mistakes, but we did a very good job of establishing what we wanted to do and spread the ball around really well. It was a great game for our defense, as we limited them in the red zone.” The Buffs host Redmond on Friday. Sisters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39 McLoughlin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16 MILTON-FREEWATER — Four touchdowns from senior running back Ethan Luloff set the tone for the Outlaws, who picked up a season-opening win against the Pioneers. Senior wide receiver Isaac Jackson accounted for two touchdowns, as Sisters outscored McLoughlin 25-16 in the second half to earn the victory. The Outlaws (1-0) will have their home opener next Friday when they play host to Burns. Crook County . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20 Henley. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14 PRINEVILLE — Cowboy senior quarterback Joe Saenz connected with Brandon Zemp on a 7-yard touchdown pass to lift Crook County over Henley in overtime after the Cowboys marched down the field on five plays to open extra time. Henley blocked the point-after attempt, but Crook County prevented Henley from getting a first down and wrapped up the season-opening victory. The Cowboys scored twice in the third quarter on touchdown runs by Zemp and Collbran Meeker before Henley answered with scores in the third and fourth quarters to force overtime. Zemp ended the game with 127 yards rushing on 14 carries and 22 yards receiving. Saenz finished with 47 yards passing with one touchdown and one interception. Running back Marcus Greaves had 123 yards rushing on 16 carries and 22 yards receiving. The Cowboys recorded 366 yards of total offense, 297 of which came on the ground.

Bulletin staff report For the first time in its brief volleyball history, Trinity Lutheran of Bend opened its season in winning fashion Friday with a 25-19, 25-15, 25-19 sweep over Central Christian of Redmond. “It’s like a new program,” Trinity Lutheran coach Greg Clift said after his team’s nonconference home victory. “From going from just searching for the one win every season, now it’s like, ‘OK, how do you maintain that now as a program.’ We’ve got to keep chugging along.” Senior Abbey Carpenter and sophomore Katie Murphy supplied five digs apiece for the victorious Saints, while sophomore Megan Clift racked up 19 digs. Trinity Lutheran (1-0) opens Class 1A Mountain Valley League play next Friday against Butte Falls, while Central Christian (0-1) will prep for a matchup against Paisley a week from today. In other Friday contests: GIRLS SOCCER Sandy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Redmond. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 REDMOND — The visiting Pioneers overwhelmed Redmond with a flurry of goals, sending the Panthers to a season-opening loss in a nonconference matchup. Redmond (0-1) will travel to Madras on Thursday to face the White Buffaloes.

Ridgeview Bend Continued from D1 “We made some mistakes early, which you can’t do against a good team,” said first-year Lava Bear head coach Matt Craven. “In the second half, if we could have gotten a couple stops, it could have been a different game.” Trailing by three scores at halftime, Bend calmed down and put together a sixplay, 72-yard scoring drive at the start of the third quarter, which culminated with Koski connecting with Bailey on a 4-yard touchdown pass, making the score 20-7. Marist answered with two touchdowns of its own in the third quarter — Koski and Bailey hooked up again for a touchdown in between Spartan scores — and led 33-13 at the start of the fourth. The Lava Bears made things interesting in the final period when Cody Connell caught an 11-yard touchdown pass from Koski — the score capped an eight-play, 65-yard drive — that narrowed Marist’s lead to 33-20 after Joel Johnson’s extra-point kick. Bend picked Smith off on the Spartans’ next possession and had the ball at the 50-yard line with a little more than 10 minutes left in the fourth quarter. The Bears could not capitalize on the turnover, though, throwing three incomplete passes before punting. Smith marched Marist 73 yards in 10 plays on the ensuing possession, which set up Jet Taylor’s 3-yard touchdown that made the score 41-20. “They were a lot better than we thought they’d be, post-Grim,” Marist

Joe Kline / The Bulletin

Bend defenders struggle to bring down Marist running back Andrew Park (21) during the first quarter of the season-opening game on Friday at Bend High School.

coach Frank Geske said, referring to J.C. Grim, Bend’s all-state receiver from a year ago who is now at Oregon State University as a walk-on freshman. “They ran that screen (pass) like crazy and had a bunch of different receivers step up.” The Lava Bears are back on the field next Friday at Silverton for another non-

league matchup. “We’ll be back next week and we’ll be a Week 2 team,” Craven said about getting the first-game nerves out of the way. “Football’s a game of redemption, and our guys are ready to go redeem themselves.” — Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastes@ bendbulletin.com.

PREP SCOREBOARD FOOTBALL CLASS 5A ——— NONCONFERENCE ——— MARIST 41, BEND 20 Marist 7 13 13 8 — 41 Bend 0 0 13 7 — 20 M— Josh Harper 5 pass from Kamerun Smith (Clark Morton kick good) M— Harper 30 pass from Smith (Morton kick good) M— Austin Baird 2 pass from Smith (kick failed) B— Kyle Bailey 4 pass from Jonah Koski (Joel Johnson kick good) M— Harper 2 pass from Smith (Morton kick good) B— Bailey 6 pass from Koski (kick failed) M— Andrew Park 15 run (kick failed) B— Cody Connell 11 pass from Koski (Johnson kick good) M— Jet Taylor 3 run (Park run) ——— MOUNTAIN VIEW 35, LEBANON 21 Mountain View 14 14 7 0 — 35 Lebanon 0 21 0 0 — 21 M— John Carroll 53 pass from Toby Webb (Bryce Tipton kick) M— Kyler Ayers 23 run (Tipton kick) M— Kyle Shaver 21 interception return (Tipton kick) L— D.J. Knuth 52 run (Brandon Marquoz kick) L— Knuth 85 run (Marquoz kick) M— Ayers 2 run (Tipton kick) L— Marquoz run (Marquoz kick)

M— Keenan Springer 3 run (Tipton kick) NONCONFERENCE ——— REDMOND 35, SWEET HOME 0 Sweet Home 0 0 0 0 — 0 Redmomd 14 14 0 7 — 35 Red— Trevor Hindman 12 pass from Andrew Leeland (J.D. Abbas kick) Red— Hindman 5 run (Abbas kick) Red— Cam Peters 19 run (Abbas kick) Red— Peters 24 pass from Leeland (Abbas kick) Red— Matt Dahlen 29 pass from Leeland (Abbas kick) CLASS 5A ——— NONCONFERENCE ——— SUMMIT 30, NORTH EUGENE 22 N. Eugene 0 6 8 0 0 8 0 — 22 Summit 6 0 0 8 0 8 8 — 30 S— J.T. Evans 23 run (PAT failed) NE— Dane Stapley 68 pass from Tyler Knabe (PAT failed) NE— Knabe 5 run (pass good) S— Chase Dunphy 47 pass to Tyler Mullen (Austin Peters pass from Dunphy) NE— Knabe 12 run (Knabe run) S— Merritt Barber 6 run (Evans run) S— Dunphy 10 run (Peters pass from Dunphy) NONCONFERENCE ——— LA PINE 47, CHILOQUIN 0

La Pine 23 18 6 0 — 47 Chiloquin 0 0 0 0 — 0 LP— Jeremy Derosiers 6 run (Dillon Patrick pass from Justin Wilson) LP— Kole Kimmel 4 run (Wilson run) LP— Erik Page 43 interception return (Derosiers kick) LP— Chadon Jaynes 1 run (kick failed) LP— Kimmel 1 run (run failed) LP— Derosiers 14 run (pass failed) LP— Josh Gacke 15 fumble return (pass failed) CLASS 4A ——— NONCONFERENCE ——— MADRAS 36, STAYTON 14 Madras 10 13 13 0 — 36 Stayton 0 8 0 6 — 14 M— FG Derrick Pacheco 35 M— Devin Ceciliani 85 pass from Steel Haugen (Pacheco kick) S— Jacob Bonilla 4 run (Codi Branch pass from Jacob Watkins) M— Ceciliani 52 pass from Haugen (kick failed)

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Cougs Continued from D1 Carroll’s touchdown reception kicked off the scoring, when on the second play of the game he hauled in a Webb pass for a 53-yard score. Senior running back Kyler Ayers added a 23-yard touchdown run on the next drive to put Mountain View up 14-0. Despite 21 points from the Warriors in the second quarter to pull to within seven at the half, junior Keenan Springer’s 3-yard touchdown run and the Cougars’ stifling defense sealed the season-opening win. “We kind of know what we’ve got,” Crum said. “The biggest thing we can take from this is that our kids are players, and they’re ready to go out there and show it.”

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NONCONFERENCE ——— CROOK COUNTY 20, HENLEY 14 OT Crook County 0 0 14 0 6 — 20 Henley 0 0 7 7 0 — 14 (Henley scores unavailable) CC— Collbran Meeker 7 run (Edgar Toledo kick) CC— Brandon Zemp 15 run (Toledo kick) CC— Zemp 7 pass from Joe Saenz (kick blocked)

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M— Ceciliani 34 pass from Haugen (Pacheco kick) M— Joe Hisatake 10 run (kick failed) M— Hisatake 2 run (Pacheco kick) S— Blake Jartfeil 60 interception return (pass failed)

Continued from D1 Ridgeview, which has a roster made up of all underclassmen, used its speed, according to Codding, to knock off the Mohawks of Alberta, Canada, who went 8-2 last season and returned 12 starters. “We’ve got good team speed,” said Codding, who last year was an assistant at Redmond High and previously was the head coach at The Dalles Wahtonka. “When we were able to get around the corner we were off to the races.” Codding was also pleased with his linebackers and defensive backs. “They were big and strong,” Codding said about Medicine Hat. “Our linebackers stepped up and filled caps and our secondary came and made plays on the outside.” The Ravens are at home again Friday with a nonleague contest against Klamath Union.

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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

D5


D6

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012

Backup quarterbacks among final cuts By Barry Wilner And Arnie Stapleton The Associated Press

Backup quarterbacks were prominent among players cut Friday as teams whittled their rosters to the 53man maximum. Nine-year veteran Seneca Wallace was beaten out by Colt McCoy in Cleveland, Mike Kafka fell to rookie Nick Foles and journeyman Trent Edwards in Philadelphia, Brian Hoyer got axed in New England, Josh McCown was released by Chicago and 12th-year pro Sage Rosenfels didn’t make the cut in Minnesota. The Ravens released quarterback Curtis Painter, who started eight games for the Colts last season. He was in competition with Tyrod Taylor throughout the preseason to be the backup to Joe Flacco. And the San Francisco 49ers released quarterback Josh Johnson, who started five games in four seasons with Tampa Bay.

Other veterans released as team’s prepare for the regular season, which begins Wednesday night with Dallas at the New York Giants, included 2005 Super Bowl MVP receiver Deion Branch and center Dan Koppen in New England; defensive backs Joselio Hanson and O.J. Atogwe in Philadelphia; Pittsburgh offensive lineman Trai Essex and punter Jeremy Kapinos, who were waived injured; Buffalo DT Dwan Edwards; and Giants running back D.J. Ware, who won two Super Bowls with the team. “Today is the worst day of the year,” said John Elway, executive vice president of football operations for the Denver Broncos. “The secondworst is last week when we get down to 75 because of these guys, they put their hearts and souls into being NFL football players. So, you end a lot of dreams and guys put a lot of sweat and tears into trying to make a team. So, it’s always a very tough day.”

NFL Tenth-year cornerback Drayton Florence was cut when Elway decided to keep three quarterbacks in Denver. Caleb Hanie stuck around even though he was sacked nine times in the preseason, an astonishing once every 4.3 drop-backs. The Broncos also kept rookie Brock Osweiler, a second-round draft pick who was selected with the intention of one day succeeding Peyton Manning. Of course, if Manning has his way, neither Hanie nor Osweiler will see the field this season. Teams had until 6 p.m. PDT to trim their rosters to 53. They have until 9 a.m. today to put in waiver claims and sign up to eight practice squad players. Other notable cuts included: • Running back Tim Hightower of Washington. The Redskins also let

go safety Tanard Jackson, who was suspended indefinitely by the NFL for violating the league’s substance abuse policy. • Former Pro Bowl punter Mat McBriar of the Eagles. • Veteran defensive ends Dave Ball and Leger Douzable were placed on IR by the Tennessee Titans. • Former first-round draft pick Vernon Gholston of the St. Louis Rams. • Outside linebacker Clark Haggans, a 12-year NFL veteran, by the Arizona Cardinals. • Long snapper Justin Snow, who had played in 192 straight games for the Indianapolis Colts, the secondlongest streak in franchise history behind Manning. • Fullback Rock Cartwright of the San Francisco 49ers. • Long-time defensive end Jacques Cesaire and veteran fullback Jacob Hester of the San Diego Chargers. • Kicker John Kasay, 42, and vet-

Oregon

GOLF ROUNDUP

Stew Milne / The Associated Press

Seung-Yul Noh hits his tee shot on the 11th hole during the first round of the Deutsche Bank Championship at TPC Boston in Norton, Mass., Friday. Noh shot a 62 to takes the early lead in the tournament.

Noh’s 62 tops Deutsche field The Associated Press NORTON, Mass. — Tiger Woods had his lowest opening round in three years Friday in the Deutsche Bank Championship. It still wasn’t enough to be low man in Sean Foley’s coaching stable. Seung-yul Noh, a rising star from South Korea in his first season on the PGA Tour, ran off four straight birdies early in his round and closed with backto-back birdies on the TPC Boston for a 9-under 62. That gave him a one-shot lead over Chris Kirk, whose 23 putts included an eagle on the new 18th hole. Woods wasn’t too shabby. He stirred up a big gallery on a glorious summer day in New England with six straight birdies, which featured four putts of at least 12 feet and a flop shot executed so perfectly that it cleared a steep bunker and landed in an area of the green no larger than a hula hoop. His lone bogey on the final hole gave him a 7-under 64, putting him in a three-way tie for third with Jeff Overton and Ryan Moore. The average score was just under 70 on a perfect day for scoring, except for the deceptive wind that swirled through the trees. Rory McIlroy struggled off the tee, though he judged one of the lies in the rough beautifully on the ninth hole, a 7iron into tap-in range that led to a 65. Noh stole the show, even if hardly anyone was paying attention or was not re-

ally sure who he was. “Some people say Kevin Na, like, ‘Go Kevin,’” Noh said. The 21-year-old from South Korea won his first Asian Tour title at age 17, and he chose to come over to America this year to ease his travel. He made it through Q-school in December, and on Friday turned in his strongest PGA Tour round to date. “Everything good today,” Noh said. He went to work with Foley in May, mentioning the roster of clients as one of his reasons — Woods, Hunter Mahan, Justin Rose. “He’s a good kid,” Mahan said after a much-needed 68. “If Foley says, ‘Do this 1,000 times,’ he’ll go home and do it 1,000 times.” The start was more meaningful for Overton, whose game has practically disappeared since he played on the Ryder Cup team two years ago. He is No. 83 in the FedEx Cup standings, and only the top 70 advance next week to the third playoff event at Crooked Stick in Indiana — his home state. “I’m constantly getting a lot of great text messages and people say, ‘Hey, we’re really excited to see you at Crooked Stick,’ just the whole Hoosier nation,” Overton said. “It’s just going to be fun if I can get into the event.” He had his own birdie streak, only on the opposite end of the course from Woods. Overton made five straight bird-

eran receiver Greg Camarillo of the New Orleans Saints. The 31-year-old Wallace spent two seasons with the Browns, who acquired him in a 2011 trade from Seattle, where he played for Browns President Mike Holmgren. Wallace started seven games for Cleveland. Kafka, a fourth-round pick in 2010, appeared in four games last year. He completed 11 of 16 passes for 107 yards with two interceptions. Kafka played in one preseason game this summer before breaking his nonthrowing hand. “There was great competition at the quarterback position,” Eagles coach Andy Reid said. “That’s what football and training camp is all about. In the end, we had to make the difficult decision to let Mike Kafka go. Mike is a class act, a student of the game and a great person and I think he’ll have no problem finding a job in the National Football League very soon.”

ies through the 16th hole, and then added one more birdie on the 18th hole for a 64 that put him atop the leaderboard with Woods from the morning session. Woods played with Barclays winner Nick Watney and Brandt Snedeker, two players who are trying to make enough of an impression on Davis Love III to be selected as Ryder Cup captain’s picks on Tuesday. Snedeker scrambled his way to a respectable 69. Watney, who has never finished higher than 33rd on the TPC Boston, never looked comfortable in his round of 72. Dustin Johnson, another candidate to get one of the four Ryder Cup selections, opened with a 67. Rickie Fowler overcame a rugged start to salvage a 71. Jim Furyk and Steve Stricker, likely to get two of the picks, each had a 69. Also on Friday: Quesne up one stroke in Switzerland CRANS-SUR-SIERRE, Switzerland — France’s Julien Quesne shot a 6-under 65 to take a one-stroke lead in suspended second round of the European Masters. Fog delayed the start, and poor visibility ended play with two groups on the course. Quesne finished with four straight birdies to top the leaderboard at 9 under. England’s Danny Willett was second after a 67. Scotland’s Paul Lawrie, the winner last week at Gleneagles, was 7 under after a 66. Greg Norman missed the cut with rounds of 75 and 73.

Continued from D1 Over the past two seasons, the Ducks have grown accustomed to the fact that many of their opponents would like nothing better than to knock them off track. But Oregon looks a bit different this season. Gone is quarterback Darron Thomas, who surprisingly left school early to declare for the NFL draft. He passed for 2,761 yards and a school-record 33 touchdowns last season when the Ducks went 12-2 and defeated Wisconsin in the Rose Bowl. In his place this season is redshirt freshman Marcus Mariota, who has never played in a live college game. Tonight, he will become the first freshman to start in an opener for Oregon since Danny O’Neil in 1991. Mariota was on the practice squad last season before emerging this past April in Oregon’s spring game, in which he completed 18 of 26 passes for 202 yards and a touchdown. He also rushed for 99 yards and two scores — including an 82-yard touchdown run — to lead his team to a 41-14 victory. He won the job over sophomore Bryan Bennett, who started last season in Oregon’s victory at Colorado while Thomas nursed a knee injury. “Last year, my first time suiting up was for the LSU game, so I know the feeling,” said the Ducks’ sophomore center, Hroniss Grasu. “I’m sure he’s going to be nervous, but he’s prepared so well that I know right off the bat he’s going to come in and run with it.” Also gone is LaMichael James, who rushed for a school-record 1,805 yards as a junior last season despite missing two games with a dislocated right elbow. He led the nation with an average of 150.4 yards rushing per game. He also declared early for the draft and was a second-round pick by the San Francisco 49ers. James’ backup for two seasons, senior Kenjon Barner, gets his shot at the spotlight this season after last season rushing for 939 yards and 11 touchdowns and catching three touchdown passes. Barner is backed up by Self Referrals Welcome

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Tournament Continued from D1 On being informed that she had won her flight, McDonald let out an excited scream. She said later that she had entered the Pac Am at the last minute at the urging of friends. “This is fun now,” McDonald joked. She won’t have to be dragged to the tournament next year. The final round of the four-day Pac Am was played on a pleasant and at times breezy afternoon under clear skies, save for a hint of smoke from area wildfires. Many of the 88 golfers (from a starting field of nearly 500) who made it to the championship round at the Pac Am were thrilled to play Crosswater, Central Oregon’s best-known golf course. “This is a tough course,” said McDon-

Golf World Pacific Amateur Golf Classic RESULTS For championship round leaders at the Pacific Amateur Golf Classic, see Scoreboard, D2. For more information, visit www.pacamgolf.com.

ald, 54, who plays most of her golf at Snoqualmie Ridge in Washington. “I’ve never played a course like this. But it was beautiful.” Paull Veroulis, who won the tournament’s gross championship with a 74, was equally impressed with Crosswater. Veroulis, a 28-year-old real estate agent from Eureka, Mont., is the first gross win-

ner since the Pac Am decided to add the division after last year’s tournament. A scratch golfer, Veroulis was impressed with the quality of the Pac Am golf courses, and he said he will be back if the gross division grows. “I think it will be bigger, eventually,” said Veroulis, who was playing in his first Pac Am. “It was a good idea to start (a gross division). “The tournament is really well done. There is a lot of fun things going on.” In other tournament news, the Pac Am — whose field has shrunk in size from nearly 800 golfers in 2008 to fewer than 500 this year — announced that it will be moving the tournament to later in September next year. The 2013 tournament is scheduled for Sept. 16-19. — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletin.com.

De’Anthony Thomas, but the depth chart is deceiving because the quick sophomore also plays at receiver and returns kicks. He set an Oregon freshman record last season with 18 touchdowns, rushing for seven, nine on receptions and two on kickoff returns. Defensively, Oregon has returned key playmakers in four-year starter John Boyett, defensive end Dion Jordan and linebacker Kiko Alonso. Defensive coordinator Nick Aliotti called this season’s defense the best the Ducks have had for some time. Aliotti was wary of the Red Wolves. Malzahn is familiar to Oregon because he was offensive coordinator at Auburn for the past three years — Auburn defeated Oregon in the BCS championship game two seasons ago. “We’re watching Auburn for scheme, and we’re watching Arkansas State for personnel,” Aliotti said. “It’s always tougher preparing for a game with a new staff, just because of the unknowns.” Last season, Arkansas State went 10-3 overall and was undefeated in the Sun Belt Conference. Coach Hugh Freeze took the job as the Mississippi head coach, making way for Malzahn to return to his home state. Malzahn has brought along his hurry-up, no-huddle offense. Aplin, the quarterback, even joked that the team has to grab a drink of water fast. “I think I speak for the team when I say last year was fast, but this is extremely fast,” Aplin said. “Not only in games, but for practice also.” Aplin passed for 3,588 yards and 19 touchdowns last season, and he also rushed for 588 yards and 10 touchdowns. He needs six touchdowns to become Arkansas State’s career leader. He also needs 154 yards of total offense for the school record. But it’s the Arkansas State defense that needs to worry, at least when it comes to the Ducks. The Red Wolves did not fare poorly last season, holding six opponents to under 20 points. They allowed fewer than 350 yards in total offense five times last season, and they kept opponents to an average of 4.7 yards per play.


THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 E1

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Kittens/cats avail. thru rescue group. Tame, shots, altered, ID chip, more. Sat/Sun 1-5, other days by appt. 65480 78th Bend, 541-389-8420; visit www.craftcats.org for photos & more.

Boston Terrier pups, very social, 2 females left, hand raised, dew Want to Buy or Rent claws removed, 1st shots, $600 ea.. Wanted: $Cash paid for 541-815-2216 or vintage costume jew541-815-5651 elry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.I buy by the Lab Pups AKC, black Estate, Honest Artist & yellow, Master Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Hunter sired, performance pedigree, OFA Wanted! cert hips & elbows, Pellet stove Call 541-771-2330 Boxer puppies, AKC reg, www.kinnamanretrievers.com 541-382-4144 1st shots, very social Just bought a new boat? $700. 541-325-3376 Labradoodles - Mini & Sell your old one in the med size, several colors classiieds! Ask about our Chihuahua pups, Apple 541-504-2662 Head, tan, 1 male, 1 Super Seller rates! www.alpen-ridge.com female, 7 wks, $150 541-385-5809 ea. 541-420-4825 Maltese Toy AKC, champ WANTED: RAZORS, Chihuahuas, 2 males, lines, extra small, Double or single541-420-1577 light brown, 8 wks, $250 edged, straight ea 541-385-6167 razors, shaving POODLE (TOY) PUPS Chihuahua, teacups (2), Well-socialized & lovbrushes, mugs & shots & dewormed, scuttles, strops, able. 541-475-3889 shaving accessories $250 ea,541-977-0035 & memorabilia. Queensland Heelers Chocolate lab pups, 5 standard & mini,$150 & Fair prices paid. weeks, shots & Call 541-390-7029 up. 541-280-1537 http:// wormed, 541-389-2283 rightwayranch.wordpress.com between 10 am-3 pm. Dog Food & Supplies Schnauzer Miniature 208 “Taste of the Wild” male puppy. Family Pets & Supplies Assorted Flavors - $38 raised, vaccinations & Quarry Ave groomed. $350. 541-771-1830. The Bulletin recommends extra caution 541-923-2400 Schnoodles,Great w/kids, when purchas4626 SW Quarry Ave., non-shed, shots, $350 ing products or serRedmond males, $450 females. vices from out of the www.quarryfeed.com Pup kit 541-410-7701 area. Sending cash, checks, or credit in- Doxie AKC mini pups, all THANKS to Mike & the formation may be colors inc wheaton &dapl, team at M.C. Smith $375-425. 541-508-4558 subjected to fraud. Sign Co. for their onFor more informa- www.bendweenies.com going suport of Cat tion about an adverRescue, Adoption & DO YOU HAVE tiser, you may call Foster Team, with SOMETHING TO the Oregon State great signs/banners & SELL Attorney General’s for accepting cans/ FOR $500 OR Office Consumer bottles on site for onLESS? Protection hotline at going fundraising. You 1-877-877-9392. Non-commercial rock! Purrs to you! advertisers may www.craftcats.org place an ad with our Yorkie AKC Male,Champ "QUICK CASH lines, potty trained, SPECIAL" Aussies,Mini/Toy's AKC healthy,all shots, health 1 week 3 lines, $12 all colors parents on guarantee $595, or 2 weeks, $20! site 1st shots,wormed 541-233-3534 Ad must include 541-598-5314/788-7799 price of single item 210 Australian Shepherd of $500 or less, or Furniture & Appliances Mix Pups, 1 week old, multiple items reserve now, 4 left, whose total does $100, 541-815-9257 not exceed $500. A1 Washers&Dryers $150 ea. Full warBarn/shop cats FREE, Call Classifieds at ranty. Free Del. Also some tame, some not. 541-385-5809 wanted, used W/D’s We deliver! Fixed, www.bendbulletin.com 541-280-7355 shots, etc. 389-8420 202

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Furniture & Appliances

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Taylor Made Rocket Armoire, dark oak $99; Balls Irons, 4-Pitching Rattan bookcase $45; 1950 Okeefe Merritt gas wedge, $435, leave rattan coffee table stove, restored. msg at 541-480-1014 $35; wine cart $35. $4500. 541-382-3728 541-593-7307 Antiques wanted: tools, 246 furniture, fishing, Guns, Hunting marbles, old signs, & Fishing toys, costume jewelry. Call 541-389-1578 Bend local pays CASH!!

Couch and Love Seat for Sale!!

Oversized & coffee color. 5 years old & good cond!! $400, Kelly, 541-318-0663

The Bulletin reserves for Guns, Knives & the right to publish all Ammo. 541-526-0617 ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Beretta 686 white onyx, Bulletin Internet web30” 12 ga,O/U shotgun site. w/chokes, $1550. Call Ralph, 541-255-3242.

New AR15 carbine, SS Over 30 Million Women barrel, flat top, rings, Suffer From Hair Sept. 1 & 2 collapsible stock, mag Loss! Do you? If So Deschutes Fairgrounds & ammo. $800 OBO. We Have a Solution! Buy! Sell! Trade! 541-977-3173 CALL KERANIQUE SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 TO FIND OUT MORE $8 Admission, Remington 721, 300 877-475-2521. 12 & under free. H&H $750. Ruger 77 (PNDC) OREGON TRAIL GUN Hawkeye 25-06, new, SHOWS 541-347-2120 $525. 541-548-4774

GUN SHOW

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H & H FIREARMS Buy, Sell, Trade, Consign. Across From Pilot Butte Drive-In 541-382-9352

Futon/couch, 6” matBrowning BDA .380 Cal Howa 30-06, $300; Italian coach gun 20 ga., 215 tress, $70. Exc. cond. semi auto. 13 round $300 + 7 boxes ammo; 541-233-6520 capacity. Excellent Coins & Stamps five game winches, condition. Wood GENERATE SOME exnever lift an animal in grips. $499 cash citement in your Private collector buying your pickup again! At only. 541-749-8449 postage stamp alneighborhood! Plan a my cost $220 each; bums & collections, garage sale and don't 8’ Leer canopy, missBrowning Midas Comworld-wide and U.S. forget to advertise in ing rear door, $250 pound Bow, many ex573-286-4343 (local, classified! 541-480-1536 tras, soft case, new cell #) 541-385-5809. arrows, hunt ready, 240 NEED TO CANCEL exc. cond., $250, YOUR AD? 541-410-6242. Crafts & Hobbies The Bulletin Classifieds has an CASH!! Crafters Wanted "After Hours" Line For Guns, Ammo & Open Jury Call 541-383-2371 Reloading Supplies. Sat., Sept. 8, 9:30 a.m. LEARN TO SHOOT 24 hrs. to cancel 541-408-6900. Highland Baptist LIKE THE COPS your ad! Church, Redmond. plus UTAH Permit Tina 541-447-1640 or People Look for Information www.snowflakeboutique.org class. $99. Sisters, DO YOU HAVE 1 p.m., Sun. Sept. 9. SOMETHING TO About Products and 241 Call 817-789-5395 SELL Services Every Day through www.reacttrainingFOR $500 OR Bicycles & The Bulletin Classifieds systems.com LESS? Accessories Table, solid oak pedNon-commercial estal, w/ 4 upholadvertisers may Model 70 Pre 64, 300 stered chairs on roll- Mtn. Bike, Jamiz Full place an ad Winchester mag., origiSuspension new ers. $350 OBO. with our nal, in great condition. tires, & just tuned up, 541-647-1333 "QUICK CASH Savage model 99E carexc. cond., $500 SPECIAL" bine, 243 cal., very good OBO, 541-410-6242. 1 week 3 lines $12 The Bulletin condition. 541-610-8535 or r ecommends extra Just bought a new boat? 2 weeks $20! Sell your old one in the caution when purclassiieds! Ask about our Ad must chasing products or Super Seller rates! include price of services from out of 541-385-5809 single item of $500 the area. Sending or less, or multiple cash, checks, or 242 items whose total credit information Exercise Equipment does not exceed may be subjected to $500. FRAUD. For more information about an 45” Trampoline, paid Call Classifieds at $90, Sacrifice $45. advertiser, you may 541-385-5809 541-410-4596 call the Oregon www.bendbulletin.com State Attorney Bowflex Xtreme like General’s Office new, assembly reConsumer Protecquired, you haul, EAA Elite Witness Match tion hotline at $400. 541-383-3041. pistol, .45 ACP, two1-877-877-9392. tone, adj. sights,10-rnd Tunturi C416 Stair mag, case, & ammo. Stepper, exlnt cond, $400. 541-977-3173 $25. 541-504-6437

US made 38 S.W., 5 Computers shot, antique made 1800s, ammo and THE BULLETIN reholster, $210. quires computer ad209-985-7015 vertisers with multiple ad schedules or those Wanted: Collector selling multiple sysseeks high quality tems/ software, to disfishing items. close the name of the Call 541-678-5753, or business or the term 503-351-2746 "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisWeatherby 7mm Mags ers are defined as (2), 1 left hand, 1 right hand,scope,slink, case, those who sell one exc. new cond., $1095 computer. each 541-593-8294. 260

People Look for Information Misc. Items About Products and Services Every Day through 22’ alum. semi-truck trlr, The Bulletin Classifieds best used for storage, $500. 541-447-4405 Weatherby Orion 12 ga. O/U $875. Ithaca 20 ga. O/U $575. Conti- Bend’s Indoor Swap Meet - A Mini-Mall full nental Arms .410 of Treasures! $150 541-306-0346. 3rd St. & Wilson Ave. 10-5 Thurs-Fri-Sat. Win Model 70 Lightweight, RMEF Sponsor Rifle, 30.06 cal., Buying Diamonds Nikon 3-9 Variable /Gold for Cash scope, bore sighted, Saxon’s Fine Jewelers but never fired, $700, 541-389-6655 incl. 1 box premium shells, 541-410-6242 BUYING Yugoslavian SKS Rifle, Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. Rare, $650 OBO, 541-408-2191. John, 541-771-9902.

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E2 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Noon Sat. Tuesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Noon Mon. Wednesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Tues. Thursday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Wed. Friday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate . . . . . . . . . . . .11:00 am Fri. Saturday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3:00 Fri. Sunday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Sat. Starting at 3 lines

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PLEASE NOTE: Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday. 260

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BUYING & SELLING GENERATE SOME MANTIS Deluxe Tiller. Professional Dart Board All gold jewelry, silver and flights, $35. EXCITEMENT NEW! FastStart enand gold coins, bars, 541-410-4596 IN YOUR gine. Ships FREE. rounds, wedding sets, NEIGBORHOOD. One-Year Moneyclass rings, sterling sil- Plan a garage sale and Back Guarantee when ver, coin collect, vinyou buy DIRECT. Call don't forget to adverFind exactly what tage watches, dental for the DVD and you are looking for in the tise in classified! gold. Bill Fleming, FREE Good Soil 541-385-5809. CLASSIFIEDS 541-382-9419. book! 877-357-5647. GET FREE OF CREDIT (PNDC) COWGIRL CASH CARD DEBT NOW! Stained Glass, 4.5’x We pay cash for boots, Cut payments by up 4.5’, beautiful ocean buckles, jewelry & to half. Stop creditors PATIO SET scenery with tropical more! 924 Brooks St. 5 piece, new, $55. from calling. fish. $800. 541-678-5162 541-389-4030 866-775-9621. 541-233-6520. www.getcowgirlcash.com (PNDC)

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Estate Sales

Sales Southwest Bend

Sales Northeast Bend

Sales Redmond Area

Estate Multi-Family Estate Sale: Sat. 9 am.?, 61018 Tuscany Dr, Sale Sat. & Sun. 8-5, 64745 Old BendRedmond Hwy. Household items, bdrm set, tools & farm equipment, antiques, and collectibles. Proceeds go toward medical expenses. 282

Sales Northwest Bend

household misc, furniture, free piano, 2 elec. wheelchair misc. medical supplies, kitchen items, Toyota Camry.

GARAGE SALE ONE DAY ONLY! Saturday, September 1 8AM to 2PM 1788 SW Knoll Ave

Asian art, pottery, fabric, Multi Family Yard Sale, knick-knacks; Kitchen, Sat., 8-4, 19981 dining, Pic frames; garCovey Ln. (follow deden pots; electronic tour & look for signs. cables, tools, camping, sports, much more. 286 College Way to Saginaw to 2137 NW Cas- Sales Northeast Bend cade View, Sat-Sun 9-2, Early Birds $$. “45 Years of Collecting” Moving Sale - House smalley.c.j@gmail.com Full!! Vintage, colBIG GARAGE SALE lectibles, Bend history, misc. items. Sat. 8-2. fishing, boating, camp2225 NW 5th ing, glassware, paintNO EARLY BIRDS! ings, photos, cameras, huge tool collection, furDownsizing Yard Sale: niture, ‘50s sectional, Fri. 8/31, Sat 9/1, 9-3, women’s clothes, ‘98 64440 Quail Dr., off Ford Taurus (low miles), Tumalo Reservoir Rd. car parts new/used, garden -- fabulous prices! Garage Sale Sat 8-2, 8-4 Sat-Sun, 9/1-2, 1104 20202 NW Star Ridge NE Revere Ave, Bend Ct., Air compressor, skill saw,Bosch cord63265 Silvis Rd. off less drill, Roto Tiller. Butler Mkt Rd. across from Equine OutGarage Sale, Sat., 9-2, reach, follow horse1284 NW Ogden shoe-shape driveway Ave., furniture, sportto back of house to ing goods, vintage. garage. Sat. 8:30-4, Sun. 8:30-1. Vintage Great Variety; Sat., items, mens stuff, 8-noon, 495 NW Soboys clothing, sz 8-16; nora Dr., sports, pets, books, action figures, art, music, books, electronics, kitchen, cameras, baby, Xmas, glassware, computer, clothing, storage. tools, too much to list. Smoke-free home. Moving Sale!Sat-Mon 8am-3pm 1338 NW ESTATE/MOVING Lexington Ave, Baby H SALE H girl clothes infant- 4T, crib, toys, leather Antiques including setsofa & love seat, BOB tee, piano, small furn. stroller, women's pieces, enamelware, clothes size 6-10, kitchenware, china, houseware, lamps etc depression and other glassware, sterling, silverplate sets, Pyrex, Muli-Family Garage framed prints, stereoSale in NW Crossing, optic viewers, toys & children’s toys, clothes, dolls, lots of interestelectronics, furniture & ing smalls PLUS Oak household items, in alchina cabinet, bookley behind 1483 NW cases, ent. centers,, John Fremont, Sat. lamps, artwork, over Only 8 a.m. -Noon 100 pcs. copper, holiday, books, jewelry, 284 canoe, 3 old guns, lawn mower, vintage Sales Southwest Bend Schwinn bikes, cameras, loads misc! Downsizing to full time Hwy 20 E. to 62221 RVing, Bring cash, Butte Hwy take it away. Quality, 2ndPowell house left, 2 miles clean household past Costco! items. Queen size Fri. & Sat. 9-4; bdrm suite, includes: crowd control numbers dresser, headboard Fri. at 8 a.m. /footboard, tall www.atticestatesandresser, dresser with dappraisals.com mirror and two night Attic Estates & Apstands (dark wood). praisals 541-350-6822 Maple dining room table, chairs & hutch, contemporary sofa Take care of and loveseat, leather your investments recliner, many other household items, & with the help from snowblower. Sat. & The Bulletin’s Sun, 9/1 & 9/2, 8am 2pm. 19951 Quail “Call A Service Pine Lp., off Brook- Professional” Directory swood.

HH FREE HH Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES: • 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For “Garage Sale Success!”

PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at

1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

Multi-family sale Sat. only 9-2. large variety of items from antiques, furniture, tools, kitchen and decorater items. Empire to Boyd Acres to Morningstar to High Desert to Cassin or 18th to Morningstar to Eastview to Cassin. Sat. 8-2, baby/children. Home decor furnishings, golf clubs, 63139 Brookstone Ln. 288

Sales Southeast Bend Garage Sale 20950 Vail Run Ct. Sunday Only 9 a.m. -1 p.m. Moving Sale Fri & Sat 8/31 & 9/1, Mini Fridge, coffee tables, 2 barstools, nice decor items, outdoor swing, Marquis hottub, woodstove. 541-961-5830 60586 Ridge Hts at Knott Rd Moving Sale: Sat. Only, 8-5, 21259 Hurita Pl, patio set, lawn equip., furniture, wash/dry, swing set, 410-4413 Multi-family sale. Lots of items! 59865 Cheyenne Rd in DRW. Sat-Sun 9-4 only. No early birds. Shop & Yard Sale! Sept 1-2-3, 9-5. 61445 Ward Rd. Lumber, tools, & garden equip. Yard Sale - Sat 8-2, 61625 Vega St., Household items, furniture and more! 290

Sales Redmond Area 2 Family Garage Sale: Fri.-Sat. 9-5, lots of great items, no early birds & no large bills, 1952 SW 35th Pl 8/30, 31 & 9/1, 9-5, Items for hunting, fishing, camping, RVs household & more. 665 Angus Ln., Terrebonne. 8342 S. Hwy 97, Fri. & Sat. 9-4, Dick & Jane books, bunkbed, furniture, household, toys, holiday decor.

The Bulletin Offers Free Private Party Ads • 3 lines - 3 days • Private Party Only • Total of items advertised must equal $200 or Less • Limit 1 ad per month • 3-ad limit for same item advertised within 3 months Call 541-385-5809 Fax 541-385-5802 261

Medical Equipment ATTENTION DIABETICS with Medicare. Get a FREE talking meter and diabetic testing supplies at NO COST, plus FREE home delivery! Best of all, this meter eliminates painful finger pricking! Call 888-739-7199. (PNDC)

NOTICE TO ADVERTISER Since September 29, 1991, advertising for used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been certified by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as having met smoke emission standards. A certified woodstove may be identified by its certification label, which is permanently attached to the stove. The Bulletin will not knowingly accept advertising for the sale of uncertified woodstoves. Wanted! Pellet stove 541-382-4144

Golden Power Wheelchair, like new, bright 267 red, exc. cond., used Fuel & Wood only 3 mo, orig. $3500, sacrifice at Dry Juniper Firewood $2000, 541-848-7755 $225 per cord, split. or 541-948-7518. or Eagle Crest Sale, 9/1 1/2 cords available. dorene@quailbend.com Antiques, Glassware, Immediate delivery! tools, tires, furniture, 541-408-6193 pictures,799 Widgeon BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area’s most Rd,9-3 alturl.com/xi8ur, 269 comprehensive listing of 541-316-0114 Gardening Supplies classiied advertising... Moving Sale! Pickup, ro- real estate to automotive, & Equipment totiller, ATV, brand new merchandise to sporting hot tub, tools, shotgun, goods. Bulletin Classiieds Craftsman 21” Lawn antiques, lots of Ducks appear every day in the Mower, good shape. Unlimited prints & deprint or on line. $75. 541-410-4596 coys. Sat-Sun, Sept 1-2, Call 541-385-5809 9-4, 10100 Crooked River Dr, #10, (Smith www.bendbulletin.com For newspaper Rock Mobile Estates) delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at Multi-family moving sale 541-385-5800 Fri-Sat, 8-4. furn. appl. Lift Recliner Chair, w/ To place an ad, call const. co. tools, attached remote con541-385-5809 902 NE Yucca Way. trol, taupe color, exc. or email classified@bendbulletin.com cond., used 1 yr., The Biggest Estate Sale $1000 new, now in Central Oregon $400,541-848-7755 or Fri. & Sat. 9-4, 5330 541-948-7518. or NW Coyner Ave, movdorene@quailbend.com ing sale, everything Riding Lawn Mowers must go! (2), Craftsman LTWant to impress the 1000, 16 HP, 42” cut, relatives? Remodel Say “goodbuy” bag & trailer, $800; your home with the Older Murray, 18 HP, to that unused 46” cut, $350, help of a professional item by placing it in 541-548-4029. from The Bulletin’s The Bulletin Classiieds “Call A Service SUPER TOP SOIL www.hersheysoilandbark.com Professional” Directory Screened, soil & com541-385-5809 post mixed, no Medical Alert for Serocks/clods. High huniors 24/7 monitor292 mus level, exc. for ing. FREE Equipment. flower beds, lawns, Sales Other Areas FREE Shipping. Nagardens, straight tionwide Service. screened top soil. Crescent Yard Sale: $29.95/Month CALL Bark. Clean fill. DeSat-Mon, 8-?,206 Ward Medical Guardian Toliver/you haul. St. Tools, tv’s, beds, day 888-842-0760. 541-548-3949. lots of great items! (PNDC) Estate/Garage Sale 263 Contractor tools, campTools ing gear, furniture, scrapbooking, garden stuff, much, much more! 10” Skil table saw Model 3400, extra blades, $75 8/31 & 9/1, 8:30-5, NO obo, 541-647-1333 EARLY SALES. 17315 Bakersfield Rd., Sunriver Chainsaw, McCulloch, 610 Pro, 20” blade, Giant farm yard sale $90. 541-408-4528 Fri-Sat, 8-12, Mon. all day! 5470 Gerke Rd. 7 miles north of Extension Ladders: 24’ - $50; 16’ - $25. OBO. Prineville. Tools, mo541-548-7137 tors, lapidary, 1965 Mercury, lots more! Honda 3000 Generator, 2010, low hrs., $2200 LaPine Garage Sale: 541-749-8060. Sat. 9/1, 8-4, 52195 Elderberry Ln, col- Power Washer, Husky, lectibles, furniture, new, 1800 PSI, $89. household & more. 541-317-2890. Second Tern Thrift Pressure Washer, 1300 Shop Annual Labor Day psi, Cambell Hausfield, Store Wide, 1/2 Price $50, 541-749-8060 Sale.Fri. & Sat. 9-3. 17377 Spring River Rd., Shopsmith Mk V-510 w/11” band saw, 12” Sunriver, next to Sumsanding disk,drill chuck, mit Market. more accessories, 541-593-3367 $800, 541-317-9040. Sisters Garage/Estate 265 Sale: Sat. 9/1, 8-3, 67996 Peterson Burn Building Materials Rd, lots of great items 350’ rough cedar 2x6 NOTICE used decking and 30’ Remember to remove 4x7x10 fir timbers your Garage Sale signs $300, you haul. (nails, staples, etc.) 541-593-7686 after your Sale event REDMOND Habitat is over! THANKS! RESTORE From The Bulletin Building Supply Resale and your local utility Quality at companies. LOW PRICES 1242 S. Hwy 97 541-548-1406 Open to the public. www.bendbulletin.com Cascade Vista Estates Multi-Family Yard Sale, 1 day only, Sat. 9/1, 8-4 3748 SW Xero Pl., No early birds.

FOUND hearing aid on Estate Sale: Sat., Sun. Brianne Place, Bend. 10-4, & Mon. 10-?, Call to ID, 20991 SE Greenmont 707-849-2901. Dr., king size bed, 25 cu.ft. side/side fridge, Found Set of Keys, atwasher/dryer, satellite tached to pink slipper, radio system, classic 1977 14' Blake Trailer, 8/29, on Baker Rd, refurbished by Jeep Sportruck & 541-317-9326 Frenchglen Blackmuch, much more! smiths, a Classy ClasFound Siamese cat sic. Great design for friendly female, cormultiple uses. OverFarm ner of 21st. and Timhead tack box (bunkber, Redmond. if unhouse) with side and Market claimed free to good easy pickup bed achome. 541-604-0063. cess; manger with left side access, windows Found: Sunglasses on and head divider. Toyo lawn outside PacSun radial tires & spare; in lawn, during the new floor with mats; ZZ Top Concert. center partition panel; Call to identify, bed liner coated in key 325 541-382-4530. areas, 6.5 K torsion Hay, Grain & Feed axles with electric HELP YOUR AD TO brakes, and new paint, stand out from the Exc. Orchard Grass $7500 OBO! Call Hay, no rain, barn rest! Have the top line John at 541-589-0777. stored, small bales, in bold print for only $225 per ton, 358 $2.00 extra. 541-548-0731. Farmers Column Premium 1st cutting Orchard Grass hay, shed 80 lineal ft. of welded Injured bicycle found stored, 70-lb bales, pipe horse corral, 4tied to a tree. Old $225/ton. Call Ten Barr rail, 2” pipe with 3” posts & 2 feeders. Bend-Redmond Hwy Ranch, 541-389-1165 $300 541-410-3218 and 93rd St., Call to Wheat Straw: Certified & ID 541-312-8955 Bedding Straw & Garden What are you Lost: 42nd Mason Ring, Straw;Compost.546-6171 looking for? Jim Hignett engraved inside band. Lost at You’ll ind it in Looking for your Walmart in Bend. next employee? The Bulletin Classiieds REWARD! Place a Bulletin 541-382-7473.

300

Lost: 8/29, Blue Surf-Tec stand up paddle board, corner of Columbia & Shevlin Hixon Dr., 541-610-4086 Lost: Black purse, in Redmond on 8/27. Owner is almost blind, left behind while shopping. Please help find. 541-548-3590. Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com Lost Siamese cat near COCC. She’s a Seal Point with blue eyes and white feet. $100 reward if found call. 541-306-3078.

help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

541-385-5809 383

Produce & Food THOMAS ORCHARDS Kimberly, OR U-Pick & Ready Picked: Freestone Canning peaches: Suncrest, Loring, Elberta, Angelus, Necarines, Plums, Bartlett Pears, Gala Apples BRING CONTAINERS Open 7 days a week 8am-6 pm only 541-934-2870. Visit us on Facebook for updates Also we are at Bend Farmer’s Mkt at Drake Park & St. Charles

Have an item to sell quick? If it’s under $ 500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classiieds for:

TURN THE PAGE REMEMBER: If you For More Ads have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Bulletin The Humane Society in Bend 541-382-3537 341 Redmond, Horses & Equipment 541-923-0882 $ Prineville, 10 - 3 lines, 7 days Mini ponies, mares and 541-447-7178; $ 16 - 3 lines, 14 days studs, $250 and up. OR Craft Cats, (Private Party ads only) 541-923-3530. 541-389-8420.

541-385-5809


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 E3 476

Finance & Business

Employment Opportunities

500 800

SOCIAL SERVICES

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454 - Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions

476

Employment

400 421

Schools & Training

Employment Opportunities Banking

We are excited to announce an available position in Bend, Oregon. Branch Supervisor Salary Range: $ 29,000 - $40,000 EOE. For more details, please apply online: www.sofcu.com

AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Train for hands on Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance. Caregiver – All Shifts 1-877-804-5293. avail. Apply in person. (PNDC) Interviews this week. 1099 NE Watt Way, ATTEND COLLEGE Bend. ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, CAREGIVERS *Criminal Justice, *Hospitality. Job At Home Care Group placement assistance. is hiring! Computer available. If you want a career Financial Aid if qualithat makes a real fied. SCHEV certified. difference, apply Call 866-688-7078 online at www.CenturaOnline.c www.athomecaregroup.com Must be 18 or over with om (PNDC) reliable transportation. Background check & TRUCK SCHOOL drug test required. www.IITR.net Phone: 541-312-0051 Redmond Campus Student Loans/Job Waiting Toll Free Caregivers 1-888-387-9252 - Experienced Part time & 24 hrs caregivers. Home In476 stead Senior Care is Employment currently seeking Opportunities Caregivers to provide in-home care to our seniors. Candidates Automotive Technimust be able to lift, cian Needed. Must transfer, provide perhave 5 yrs. min. exp. sonal care & assist in Must have own various home duties. tools. Automatic Alzheimer / Dementia/ transmission reALS experience a building, welding needed. Must have and diesel experiability to pass backence a plus. Must ground checks & have have clean driving valid DL & insurance. record & pass a drug Training provided. Call test. Send resume to 541-330-6400, or fax email darrylhenrysresume to: autorepair@yahoo.c 541-330-7362. om or fax a copy to (541) 388-2800.

personals Meet singles right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 877-955-5505. (PNDC)

DO YOU NEED A GREAT EMPLOYEE RIGHT NOW?

Call The Bulletin before 11 a.m. and get an ad in to publish the next day!

541-385-5809. VIEW the Classifieds at:

www.bendbulletin.com

CALL A SERVICE PROFESSIONAL Call 541-385-5809 to promote your service

Building/Contracting

Landscaping/Yard Care

OREGON NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Landscape Contraclaw requires anytors Law (ORS 671) one who contracts requires all busifor construction work nesses that advertise to be licensed with the to perform LandConstruction Conscape Construction tractors Board (CCB). which includes: An active license planting, decks, means the contractor fences, arbors, is bonded and inwater-features, and sured. Verify the installation, repair of contractor’s CCB liirrigation systems to cense through the be licensed with the CCB Consumer Landscape ContracWebsite www.hirealicensedcontractor. tors Board. This com 4-digit number is to be or call 503-378-4621. included in all adverThe Bulletin recomtisements which indimends checking with cate the business has the CCB prior to cona bond, insurance and tracting with anyone. workers compensaSome other trades tion for their employalso require addiees. For your protectional licenses and tion call 503-378-5909 certifications. or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to Debris Removal check license status before contracting JUNK BE GONE with the business. Persons doing landI Haul Away FREE scape maintenance For Salvage. Also do not require a LCB Cleanups & Cleanouts license. Mel, 541-389-8107 Handyman ERIC REEVE HANDY SERVICES. Home & Commercial Repairs, Carpentry-Painting, Pressure-washing, Honey Do's. On-time promise. Senior Discount. Work guaranteed. 541-389-3361 or 541-771-4463 Bonded & Insured CCB#181595 I DO THAT! Home/Rental repairs Small jobs to remodels Honest, guaranteed work. CCB#151573 Dennis 541-317-9768 Home Improvement Kelly Kerfoot Const.

28 yrs exp in Central OR!

Quality & honesty, from carpentry & handyman jobs, to expert wall covering install / removal. Sr. discounts CCB#47120 Licensed/bonded/insured 541-389-1413 / 410-2422

Join one of the largest child education networks in Oregon preparing children for school. We are looking for an

FINANCE AND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities

Nelson Landscape Maintenance Serving Central Oregon Residential & Commercial •Sprinkler Repair •Sprinkler Installation •Back Flow Testing •Fire Prevention, Lot Clearing • Summer Clean up •Weekly Mowing •Bi-Monthly & Monthly Maintenance •Flower Bed Clean Up •Bark, Rock, Etc. •Senior Discounts

Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB#8759

Call The Yard Doctor for yard maintenance, thatching, sod, sprinkler blowouts, water features, more! Allen 541-536-1294 LCB 5012 Aeration/Fall Clean-up BOOK NOW! Weekly / one-time service avail. Bonded, insured,

BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS free estimates! Search the area’s most COLLINS Lawn Maint. comprehensive listing of Call 541-480-9714 classiied advertising... real estate to automotive, Maverick Landscaping Mowing, weedeating, merchandise to sporting yard detailing, chain goods. Bulletin Classiieds saw work & more! appear every day in the LCB#8671 541-923-4324 print or on line. Holmes Landscape Maint Call 541-385-5809 • Clean-up • Aerate www.bendbulletin.com • De-thatch • Free Est. • Weekly / Bi-wkly Svc. call Josh 541-610-6011

Boats & RV’s

528

ERSEA Supervisor

860

860

870

875

Motorcycles & Accessories

Boats & Accessories

Watercraft

Honda Valkyrie 2001, $7000; Kawasaki KLR650 2008, $4500; Kawasaki Ninja 250 2007, $2500, all in exc. cond., 541-388-1699.

2007 SeaDoo 2004 Waverunner, excellent condition, LOW hours. Double trailer, lots of extras.

18.5’ ‘05 Reinell 185, V-6 $10,000 Volvo Penta, 270HP, 541-719-8444 low hrs., must see, 2010, 805 miles, $17,500, 541-330-3939 Ads published in "WaBlack Chameleon. tercraft" include: Kay18.5’ Bayliner 185 $17,000 aks, rafts and motor2008. 3.0L, open bow, Call Don @ ized personal slim deck, custom watercrafts. For 541-410-3823 cover & trailer, exc. "boats" please see cond., 30-35 total hrs., Class 870. incl. 4 life vests, 865 541-385-5809 ropes, anchor, stereo, ATVs depth finder, $12,000, 541-729-9860. 19.5’ Bayliner Discovery 2008,Merc cruiser 135 HP motor, open bow, full canopy, always garage stored, Eddyline carbonlite Honda TRX300 EX 2005 used 5 times, $16,500 Sky 10 Kayak and sport quad w/Rev, runs 541-977-3120. roller roof rack, like & rides great, new pipe & new. $895 OBO. paddles incl. $1700 obo. 541-420-3277. 541-647-8931

Softail Deluxe

Motorcycles & Accessories Loans & Mortgages at our Madras center to recruit eligible famiCRAMPED FOR WARNING lies into our Head The Bulletin recomCASH? 476 Start programs. Fullmends you use cauUse classified to sell time year-round position when you prothose items you no Employment tion w/excellent benvide personal longer need. Opportunities efits. $19.32 and up, information to compaCall 541-385-5809 depending on exper. nies offering loans or Heavy Truck Diesel Bilingual Spanish/ credit, especially Mechanic. 2 Yrs expeEnglish required. those asking for adrience with own tools. Please visit our webvance loan fees or Harley Davidson SoftFull time with benefits. site www.ocdc.net companies from out of Tail Deluxe 2007, Busy shop in Grants for job description & state. If you have white/cobalt, w/pasPass. Submit resume requirements and to concerns or quessenger kit, Vance & to sales@pacifictrucapply online. Or mail tions, we suggest you Hines muffler system kandtrailer.com or call consult your attorney resume to: Oregon & kit, 1045 mi., exc. Bobby 541-471-4450. or call CONSUMER Child Development cond, $19,999, HOTLINE, Coalition Attn: Hu541-389-9188. Check out the 1-877-877-9392. man Resources, 659 classiieds online Harley Heritage NE “A” St., Madras, www.bendbulletin.com BANK TURNED YOU Softail, 2003 OR 97741 Yamaha Grizzly 700 FI 20.5’ 2004 Bayliner DOWN? Private party $5,000+ in extras, Updated daily Equal Opportunity 2009, 543 mi, 2WD/ 205 Run About, 220 $2000 paint job, will loan on real esEmployer 4WD, black w/EPS, HP, V8, open bow, 30K mi. 1 owner, Hospitality tate equity. Credit, no fuel injection, indepenexc. cond., very fast Front desk positions problem, good equity For more information dent rear suspension BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS w/very low hours, please call part time and full time. is all you need. Call winch w/handle conSearch the area’s most lots of extras incl. 541-385-8090 Apply in person at now. Oregon Land trols & remote, ps, comprehensive listing of or 209-605-5537 tower, Bimini & Sea Kayaks - His & Sugarloaf Mountain Mortgage 388-4200. auto, large racks, exc. classii ed advertising... custom trailer, Hers, Eddyline Wind Motel, 62980 No. Hwy cond., $7850, real estate to automotive, Ever Consider a ReDancers,17’, fiberglass $19,500. 97, Bend, Oregon. HD FAT BOY 541-322-0215 merchandise to sporting boats, all equip incl., verse Mortgage? At 541-389-1413 1996 paddles, personal flogoods. Bulletin Classiieds least 62 years old? The Bulletin’s Completely rebuilt/ tation devices,dry bags, appear every day in the Stay in your home & “Call A Service customized, low spray skirts,roof rack w/ print or on line. increase cash flow! miles. Accepting ofProfessional” Directory towers & cradles -- Just Safe & Effective! Call Call 541-385-5809 fers. 541-548-4807 add water, $1250/boat is all about meeting Now for your FREE www.bendbulletin.com 20.5’ Seaswirl SpyFirm. 541-504-8557. DVD! Call Now your needs. der 1989 H.O. 302, 888-785-5938. HD Screaming Eagle Yamaha Kodiak 400, Where can you ind a 285 hrs., exc. cond., 2005 4x4, 2500 lb winch, Call on one of the (PNDC) Electra Glide 2005, stored indoors for helping hand? professionals today! 103” motor, two tone gun rack & alum loading life $11,900 OBO. LOCAL MONEY:We buy From contractors to candy teal, new tires, ramp, only 542 miles, The Bulletin 541-379-3530 secured trust deeds & 23K miles, CD player, show room cond, $4800. yard care, it’s all here Recommends extra 541-280-9401 note,some hard money Medical/ OR Nurse hydraulic clutch, excaution when purAds published in the loans. Call Pat Kelley in The Bulletin’s cellent condition. 870 chasing products or 541-382-3099 ext.13. "Boats" classification “Call A Service Highest offer takes it. Boats & Accessories services from out of include: Speed, fish541-480-8080. Professional” Directory the area. Sending 573 ing, drift, canoe, cash, checks, or house and sail boats. Business Opportunities Honda 90 Trail Bikes: Full-Time, 4-10 hr. shifts, 880 17’ 1984 Chris Craft credit information For all other types of yellow, 1965, $1200; red Mon.-Fri. Applicant must Scorpion, 140 HP may be subjected to A Classified ad is an 1974, $1400. Low miles, Motorhomes watercraft, please see have scrub and circulatinboard/outboard, 2 FRAUD. Class 875. EASY WAY TO like new cond. Deal on ing experience. Job ofdepth finders, trollFor more informa541-385-5809 REACH over 3 million both! Call 702-578-5009 fers excellent benefit ing motor, full cover, tion about an adverpackage. Interested perPacific Northwestern- or 541-593-3984 EZ - Load trailer, tiser, you may call sons should email their ers. $525/25-word $3500 OBO. the Oregon State resume to jobs@bendclassified ad in 30 Honda Elite 80 2001, 541-382-3728. 1400 mi., absolutely Attorney General’s GENERATE SOME exsurgery.com Open until daily newspapers for like new., comes w/ Office Consumer filled. citement in your neig3-days. Call the Pacarrying rack for 2” Protection hotline at borhood. Plan a ga- Allegro 2002, 2 slides, cific Northwest Daily workhorse receiver, ideal for use 17’ Seaswirl 1988 1-877-877-9392. rage sale and don't 22K mi, Connection (916) Newspaper carrier sub w/motorhome, $995, open bow, rebuilt forget to advertise in chassis, 8.1 Chev en288-6019 or email Adult motor route, P-T, gine, like new, $41,900 541-546-6920 Chevy V6 engine, classified! 385-5809. elizabeth@cnpa.com a.m,. 4 hrs/$60/day, obo. 541-420-9346 new upholstery, for more info (PNDC) Honda Trail 110, great potential 4 more! ODL, $4500 or best offer. rel. car. 541-385-0120. cond, 3000 mi., $1300 707-688-4523 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Advertise VACATION OBO, 541-447-5807 Life vests, old-fashSPECIALS to 3 milioned orange, $10 ea. lion Pacific NorthDoor-to-door selling with Need to get an ad OBO 541-419-6408. westerners! 30 daily fast results! It’s the easiest in ASAP? newspapers, six way in the world to sell. Country Coach Intrigue states. 25-word clasUsed out-drive “Arctic Fox Silver Edition 1140, 2005. 5 hrs on 2002, 40' Tag axle. sified $525 for a 3-day parts - Mercury The Bulletin Classiied Fax it to 541-322-7253 gen; air, slideout, dry bath, like new, loaded! . 400hp Cummins Diead. Call (916) OMC rebuilt ma541-385-5809 Also 2004 Dodge Ram 3500 quad cab dually sel. two slide-outs. 288-6019 or visit rine motors: 151 The Bulletin Classiieds 4x4, 11,800 mi, SuperHitch...” 41,000 miles, new www.pnna.com/advert $1595; 3.0 $1895; Richard, Bend, OR tires & batteries. Most ising_pndc.cfm for the 4.3 (1993), $1995. Looking for your next options. $95,000 OBO Pacific Northwest 541-389-0435 Remember.... employee? 541-678-5712 Daily Connection. Add your web ad- Place a Bulletin help (PNDC) Get Results from Qualified dress to your ad and wanted ad today and Need to get an Central Oregon Buyers! readers on The reach over 60,000 Extreme Value Adverad in ASAP? Call us at 541-385-5809 and ask Bulletin' s web site readers each week. tising! 30 Daily newsabout our Wheel Deal Special! will be able to click Your classified ad papers $525/25-word You can place it through automatically will also appear on classified, 3-days. online at: to your site. bendbulletin.com Reach 3 million Pawww.bendbulletin.com Econoline RV 1989, which currently cific Northwesterners. fully loaded, exc. cond, Resort Housekeeping receives over 1.5 For more information 35K orig. mi., $22,750. www .bendbulletin The Pines at Sunriver, million page views call (916) 288-6019 or 541-385-5809 Call 541-546-6133. call 541-593-2160. every month at email: no extra cost. elizabeth@cnpa.com Sales -Exp. ProfessionBulletin Classifieds for the Pacific Northals - Great opportunity Get Results! west Daily Connecin the logistics industry. Call 385-5809 tion. (PNDC) Good commission or place structure,unlimited poyour ad on-line at Call a Pro tential. Bend based co. bendbulletin.com E-mail: jobs@gotfr8.biz Whether you need a fence ixed, hedges trimmed or a house Data Center Network built, you’ll ind Technicians professional help in The Bulletin’s “Call a Facebook is hiring! We’re seeking a highly Service Professional” motivated Data Center Network Technician to help us build a world-class facility at our Directory

SOLD IN 19 DAYS!

The Bulletin reaches

Prineville, Oregon location.

The ideal candidate will have 3+ years’ experience in data center network deployment, strong troubleshooting skills, a solid understanding of Layer 2 and Layer 3 network switching/routing, and experience in configuring and supporting Cisco, Juniper, and F5 devices.

541-385-5809

For more information please visit our careers page https://www.facebook.com/career or email ristine@fb.com.

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. WIN or Pay Nothing! Start Your Application In Under 60 Seconds. Call Today! Contact Disability Group, Inc. Licensed Attorneys & BBB Accredited. Call 888-782-4075. (PNDC)

Are you a highly competitive sales person who likes to win? If you are having a successful career selling IPBX business telephone systems and you are looking for a position that can provide you a long term competitive advantage WE HAVE IT FOR YOU. We are one of the fastest growing providers of hosted and on-site IPBX solutions in the Northwest and we are heavily committed to our success. If you are tired of competing with the same products and your only advantage is the lowest price, we have the solutions! We offer a competitive base salary, commissions and an excellent benefits package. To view position requirements and to apply, visit us online at www.uidchr.com.

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

Sales

80% of all Deschutes County adults each week.*

! D L O S

975 Automobiles

Range Rover, 2006, low miles, excellent condition, 6 disc CD, A/C, leather interior, great SUV for winter driving.

Independent Contractor

H Supplement Your Income H

Operate Your Own Business

FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF

Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor

& Call Today &

Reach out today.

We are looking for independent contractors to service home delivery routes in:

H Prineville, Sunriver/La Pine H Must be available 7 days a week, early morning hours.

Must have reliable, insured vehicle. Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933 during business hours apply via email at online@bendbulletin.com

Thousands of ads daily in print and online.

To place your ad, visit www.bendbulletin.com or call 541-385-5809 *American Opinion Research, April 2006


E4 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

BOATS & RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890 - RV’s for Rent

AUTOS & TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

880

881

882

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

CAN’T BEAT THIS! Look before you buy, below market value! Size & mileage DOES matter! Class A 32’ Hurricane by Four Winds, 2007. 12,500 mi, all amenities, Ford V10, lthr, cherry, slides, like new! New low price, $54,900. 541-548-5216

Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 29’, weatherized, like new, furnished & ready to go, incl Winegard Satellite dish, $26,995. 541-420-9964

Gulfstream Scenic Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, Cummins 330 hp diesel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler 28’ 2007,Gen, in. kitchen slide out, fuel station, exc cond. new tires,under cover, sleeps 8, black/gray hwy. miles only,4 door interior, used 3X, fridge/freezer ice$24,999. maker, W/D combo, 541-389-9188 Interbath tub & shower, 50 amp pro882 pane gen & more! Fifth Wheels $55,000. 541-948-2310

Hunter’s Delight! Package deal! 1988 Winnebago Super Chief, 38K miles, great shape; 1988 Bronco II 4x4 to tow, 130K mostly towed miles, nice rig! $15,000 both. 541-382-3964, leave msg. Itasca Sun Cruiser 1997, 460 Ford, Class A, 26K mi., 37’, living room slide, new awnings, new fridge, 8 new tires, 2 A/C, 6.5 Onan Gen., new batteries, tow pkg., rear towing TV, 2 tv’s, new hydraulic jack springs, tandem axel, $15,000, 541-385-1782

Jayco Greyhawk 2004, 31’ Class C, 6800 mi., hyd. jacks, new tires, slide out, exc. cond, $49,900, 541-480-8648

Immaculate!

Beaver Coach Marquis 40’ 1987. New cover, new paint (2004), new inverter (2007). Onan 6300 watt gen, 111K mi, parked covered $35,000 obo. 541-419-9859 or 541-280-2014

Monaco Dynasty 2004, loaded, 3 slides, diesel, Reduced - now $119,000, 541-9238572 or 541-749-0037

National Sea Breeze 2004 M-1341 35’, gas, 2 power slides, upgraded queen mattress, hyd. leveling system, rear camera & monitor, only 6k mi. Reduced to $41,300! 541-480-0617 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work, You Keep The Cash, On-Site Credit Approval Team, Web Site Presence, We Take Trade-Ins. Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend 541-330-2495

Redmond: 541-548-5254

Southwind 35.5’ Triton, 2008,V10, 2 slides, Dupont UV coat, 7500 mi. Bought new at $132,913; asking $94,900. Call 541-923-2774

Winnebago Class C 27’ 1992, Ford 460 V8,64K mi., good cond., $7000 OBO 541-678-5575 881

Travel Trailers

Fleetwood 28’ Pioneer 2003, 13’ slide, sleeps 6, walk-around bed with new mattress; power hitch, very clean $11,500. Please call 541-548-4284.

Springdale 29’ 2007, slide,Bunkhouse style, sleeps 7-8, excellent condition, $16,900, 541-390-2504

SPRINTER 36’ 2005, $10,500 obo. Two slides, sleeps 5, queen air mattress, small sgl. bed, couch folds out. 1.5 baths, 541-382-0865, leave message!

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809 932

932

935

975

975

975

Antique & Classic Autos

Antique & Classic Autos

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

29th Annual Oregon High Desert Swap Meet & Car Show

Monterrey Saturday, September Mercury 1965, Exc. All original, 8th. Starts 7 a.m. – 4-dr. sedan, in storVendors 6:30 a.m. age last 15 yrs., 390 The Deschutes High Compression County Fairgrounds engine, new tires & liand Expo Center, cense, reduced to Redmond Oregon. $2850, 541-410-3425. Free admission to the public. Special antique section indoors with many dealers from the Pacific Northwest. No Dogs Please. Contact Butch Ramsey for info Plymouth Barracuda & reservations 1966, original car! 300 phone: (541)548-4467 hp, 360 V8, centeronline: lines, (Original 273 bramsey@bendbroadband.com eng & wheels incl.) 541-593-2597 933

Pickups Chev Corvair Monza convertible,1964, new top & tranny, runs great, exlnt cruising car! $5500 obo. 541-420-5205

FIND IT! BUY IT! SELL IT! The Bulletin Classiieds

Taurus 27.5’ 1988

Everything works, $1750/partial trade for car. 541-460-9127 885

Canopies & Campers

Chevy 1 ton 1968, dual tires, 11’ flatbed, 327 engine, 58k miles, $1000. 541-548-4774

‘69 Chevy C-20 Pickup, all orig.Tubro 44; auto 4-spd,396, model CST w/all options, orig. owner, Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4, $24,000, 541-923-6049 1995, extended cab, long box, grill guard, running boards, bed rails & canopy, 178K miles, $4800 obo. 208-301-3321 (Bend)

ALFA 30' RL 2007, front-view bedroom, granite, leather recliners, 4x20 slide, HDTV, micro/conv, central vac, $31,000 909-229-2921

Lance 945 1995, 11’3”, Chevy Wagon 1957, Dodge 1500 2001, 4x4 sport, red, loaded, all appl., solar panel, 4-dr., complete, rollbar, AND 2011 new battery, exc. cond., $15,000 OBO, trades, Moped Trike used 3 $5995, 541-977-3181 please call months, street legal. 541-420-5453. call 541-433-2384 Chrysler 300 Coupe Autos & Ford F250 XLT ‘95, 4WD 1967, 440 engine, auto, long bed, 3/4 ton, Transportation auto. trans, ps, air, 8600 GVW, white,178K frame on rebuild, remi, AC, pw, pdl, Sirius, painted original blue, tow pkg., bedliner, bed original blue interior, rail caps, rear slide original hub caps, exc. window, new tires, rachrome, asking $9000 diator, water pump, or make offer. hoses, brakes, more, 541-385-9350. 908 $5200, 541-322-0215 Aircraft, Parts & Service

Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 by Carriage, 4 slideouts, inverter, satellite sys, fireplace, 2 flat screen TVs. $60,000. 541-480-3923

Chrysler SD 4-Door 1930, CDS Royal Standard, 8-cylinder, body is good, needs some restoration, runs, taking bids, 541-383-3888, 541-815-3318

900

1/3 interest in Columbia 400, located at Sunriver. $138,500. Call 541-647-3718

Ford Ranger 1999, 4x4, 71K, X-cab, XLT, auto, 4.0L, $7900 OBO. 541-388-0232

Ford Ranger XLT 1998 X-cab

Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 4x4. 120K mi, Power seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd row seating, extra tires, CD, privacy tinting, upgraded rims. Fantastic cond. $7995 Contact Timm at 541-408-2393 for info or to view vehicle.

Get your business

G

GROWIN

with an ad in The Bulletin’s “Call A Service Professional” Directory

Pontiac Bonneville SE, 1992, runs great $1350. 541-480-9808

2004 Corvette Convertible. 6 speed. Spiral Gray Metallic with tan leather interior. Only 1,200 miles on new Michelin run flat tires, Corsa exhaust. Lots of extras. Only 25k miles. $28,950. (541) 410-2870.

Jeep Liberty 4x4 2004, silver,exc. cond., 71K mi., sunroof, $7800, 541-504-8961.

PORSCHE 914 1974, Roller (no engine), lowered, full roll cage, 5-pt harnesses, racing seats, 911 dash & instruments, decent shape, very cool! $1699. 541-678-3249

Just too many collectibles? Mercedes E320 2004, 72K miles, silver/silver, Sell them in V6, front wheel drive. Exc. cond. $12,900 Call The Bulletin Classiieds 541-788-4229

Buick LeSabre Limited 1997 111,000 miles, blue, new tires, Mini Cooper Convert541-385-5809 brakes and air, $2900 ible 2007 beautiful firm. Others available, silver and black, 35+ like a 1996 Regal with mpg, very nice, low 86,000 miles, only miles. $16,500 OBO $3500. Call Bob 541-510-2330. Ford Escape 2006, 541-318-9999. Limited edition, 57K mi, $10,950 OBO, call Cadillac CTS Sedan Mitsubishi 3000 GT 1999, auto., pearl Rod at 541-647-1650. 2007, 29K, auto, exc. white, very low mi. Porsche Carrera 1999 cond, loaded, $19,000. black metallic, 46k $9500. 541-788-8218. 541-549-8828 careful mi, beautiful, upgrades, Tiptronic. Mitsubishi Galant Cadillac El Dorado 2011, 4 dr., 28K mi., $20,000. 541-593-2394 1994, Total cream Ford Excursion VIN#023061 puff, body, paint, trunk 2005, 4WD, diesel, $14,310 as showroom, blue exc. cond., $19,900, leather, $1700 wheels call 541-923-0231. w/snow tires although Toyota Avalon, 1999, car has not been wet 541-647-2822 250K miles, everyday in 8 years. On trip to HertzBend.com driver. Moved to MarBoise avg. 28.5 mpg., GMC Denali 2003 DLR4821 shall Islands; need to $5400, 541-593-4016. loaded with options. sell. Best offer over Exc. cond., snow $2000. ALSO:, 1997 tires and rims inNeed to sell a Cadillac Seville STS Camry coming soon, cluded. 130k hwy Vehicle? 2003 - just finished with 100K miles. miles. $12,000. Call The Bulletin $4900 engine work 541-318-9999 541-419-4890. and place an ad toby Certified GM meday! chanic. Has everyAsk about our thing but navigation. Toyota Camry’s "Wheel Deal"! Too many bells and 1984, $1200 for private party whistles to list. I OBO, 1985 $1400 advertisers bought a new one. OBO, 1986 parts $6900 firm. 541-420-1283 car, $500; call for details, Jeep Willys 1947,custom, 541-385-5809 541-548-6592 small block Chevy, PS, Chevy Cobalt 2010 VIN #110478A OD,mags+ trailer.Swap for backhoe.No am calls $12,495 Toyota Matrix 2009, please. 541-389-6990 AWD, 28K mi. VIN#09276A $19,759 541-647-2822 HertzBend.com Nissan Altima 3.5SR DLR4821 2012, 13,200 mi., exc. cond., 6-cyl., 270HP, Chrysler 300 C SRT8 541-647-2822 8-way power driver 2006, exc. cond., HertzBend.com Jeep Wrangler 1999, TJ seat, 60/40 rear seat, 43,800 mi.,, loaded, Sahara Ed., 4.0L, exc. DLR4821 leather steering wheel no DVD, $25,000, tires, body & paint. with audio controls, 541-977-4921. 69,700+ mi, hardtop + AM/FM/CD/AUX with new full buckskin soft & Ford Taurus 1998, low Bose speakers, A/C, bikini tops, Warn winch, miles, very clean, with Bluetooth, USB, back motorhome tow pkg, additional snow tires, VOLVO S40 2006 up camera, heated stinger, alum wheels, $2990. 503-869-4444 AWD, 66k miles, front seats, power $12,300. 541-617-9176 moonroof & more. In Ford Thunderbird 1988, $11,500 Bend, below Blue 3.8 V-6, 35K actual mi., or best offer! Book at $24,000, new hoses, belts, tires, 541-678-3913 (317) 966-2189 battery, pb, ps, cruise, A/C, CD, exc. cond. in & out, 2nd owner, maint. records, must Porsche Cayenne 2004, see & drive! New 86k, immac, dealer Price! - Now $2500, maint’d, loaded, now obo. 541-330-0733 $17000. 503-459-1580 Honda Civic LX 2010 4 Dr. auto. #527652

1/3 interest in well2.5L 4-cyl engine, equipped IFR Beech 5-spd standard trans, Bonanza A36, lolong bed, newer mocated KBDN. $55,000. Fleetwood Wilderness tor & paint, new clutch 541-419-9510 36’, 2005, 4 slides, & tires, excellent conFIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, dition, clean, $4500. rear bdrm, fireplace, door panels w/flowers Executive Hangar Call 541-447-6552 AC, W/D hkup beau& hummingbirds, $16,722 at Bend Airport tiful unit! $30,500. white soft top & hard (KBDN) 541-815-2380 top. Just reduced to 1000 1000 60’ wide x 50’ deep, $3,750. 541-317-9319 w/55’ wide x 17’ high Toyota 4Runner Legal Notices Legal Notices or 541-647-8483 541-647-2822 bi-fold door. Natural 4WD 1986, auto, HertzBend.com gas heat, office, bathwhose rights may be LEGAL NOTICE 2 dr., $1200, DLR4821 room. Parking for 6 affected by this proEstate of BERTRAM J. 541-923-7384 Ford Super Duty F-250 cars. Adjacent to ceeding may obtain GILBERT, JR. NOKomfort 25’ 2006, 1 2001, 4X4, very good Frontage Rd; great additional information TICE TO INTERslide, AC, TV, awning. shape, V10 eng, $8500 visibility for aviation from the court ESTED PERSONS. NEW: tires, converter, OBO. 541-815-9939 bus. 1jetjock@q.com records, the personal Case Number: batteries. Hardly used. Ford Galaxie 500 1963, 541-948-2126 representative, or the 12PB0077. Notice: 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, $19,500. 541-923-2595 attorney for the perThe Circuit Court of 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & sonal representative. Hyundai Accent 2008, the State of Oregon, radio (orig),541-419-4989 DATED and first pub32MPG! $7900 obo for the County of DesFord Mustang Coupe GMC ½-ton Pickup, Toyota 4-Runner 4x4 Ltd, lished: September 1, Hatchback, 47,800 chutes, has ap1972, LWB, 350hi 2006, Salsa Red pearl, 1966, original owner, mi., A/C, one 0wner, 2012. pointed PATRICIA M. motor, mechanically 49,990 miles, exlnt cond, V8, automatic, great Clean, 5 Spd Manual. GILBERT as PerA-1, interior great; professionally detailed, shape, $9000 OBO. 541-550-9935 sonal Representative RICHARD E. FORCUM, $24,599. 541-390-7649 body needs some Montana 3400RL 2008, 4 ONLY 1 OWNERSHIP 530-515-8199 OSB #640340 of the Estate of BERSHARE LEFT! TLC. $3131 OBO. slides, no smokers or TRAM J. GILBERT, Attorney for Personal The Bulletin Economical flying in 940 Call 541-382-9441 pets, limited usage, Representative JR., deceased. All your own Cessna To Subscribe call 5500 watt Onan gen, Vans 141 NW Greenwood persons having claims 172/180 HP for only 541-385-5800 or go to solar panel, fireplace, THE BETTER WAY Ave., Ste. 101 against said estate $10,000! Based at dual A/C, central vac, Bend, OR 97701 TO BUY A CAR! are required to BDN. Call Gabe at www.bendbulletin.com Chevy Astro elect. awning w/sunTel: 541-389-6964 present the same, Professional Air! screen arctic pkg, rear Cargo Van 2001, International Flat Fax: 541-389-6969 with proper vouchers Ford Ranchero ’05 Nissan Xterra 541-388-0019 receiver, alum wheels, 2 pw, pdl, great cond., Bed Pickup 1963, 1 E-mail: to the Personal RepAuto, 4x4 1979 TVs, many extras. business car, well ton dually, 4 spd. 916 resentative c/o Mel- info@forcumlaw.com #648291 ............. $10,995 $35,500. 541-416-8087 with 351 Cleveland maint, regular oil trans., great MPG, issa P. Lande, BRYmodified engine. Trucks & ’10 Chevy Cobalt 1000 changes, $4500, could be exc. wood Look at: ANT, LOVLIEN & Body is in please call #110478A .......... $12,495 Heavy Equipment Legal Notices hauler, runs great, JARVIS, PC at 591 Bendhomes.com excellent condition, 541-633-5149 new brakes, $1950. ’10 Nissan Sentra SW Mill View Way, $2500 obo. for Complete Listings of 4 DR Sedan, Great Fuel Saver 541-419-5480. LEGAL NOTICE Bend, OR 97702, 541-420-4677 Area Real Estate for Sale #651104 ............. $14,695 NOTICE TO within four months NISSAN QUEST INTERESTED from the date of first ’11 Hyundai Accent GLS Toyota Tacoma 2008 1996, 3-seat mini PERSONS Automatic publication of this no4x4 Dbl cab. 19k mil van, extra nice in and #619037 ............. $13,995 tice as stated below, #492390. $28,995 out $3,400. Sold my or they may be BRENT DAVIS has ’10 Ford Focus Diamond Reo Dump Windstar, need anbeen appointed perbarred. All persons #293446.............. $14,995 Truck 1974, 12-14 other van! sonal representative whose rights may be ’11 Suzuki SX-4 541-318-9999, ask yard box, runs good, MONTANA 3585 2008, of the Estate of ROaffected by this pro33 MPG! for Bob. Ask about $7900, 541-548-6812 GMC ½ ton 1971, Only $ exc. cond., 3 slides, SEANN JANE DAVIS, ceeding may obtain #302264 ............. 14,995 $19,700! Original low free trip to D.C. for king bed, lrg LR, ArcDeceased, by the Ciradditional information 541-598-3750 Need help ixing stuff? mile, exceptional, 3rd WWII vets. ’10 Toyota Corolla tic insulation, all op- Call A Service Professional owner. 951-699-7171 cuit Court, State of aaaoregonautosource.com from the records of AT, “Fuel Saver” tions $37,500. Oregon, Deschutes the court, the Perind the help you need. #400886 ............. $13,995 541-420-3250 County, Probate No. sonal Representative, www.bendbulletin.com ’10 Mazda 6 12 PB 0082. All peror the Attorney for the Automatic, Loaded sons having claims Personal Representa#M05673A ......... $15,995 against the estate are tive. Dated and first required to present published: Septem’11 VW Jetta Sedan them with proper ber 1, 2012. Personal #347612 ............. $15,795 vouchers attached, to Representative: Patri’12 Nissan Versa the personal reprecia M. Gilbert, 60535 Pilgrim 27’, 2007 5th Automatic, 5-Door HB, Fuel Saver trailer sentative c/o Richard Woodside Road, wheel, 1 slide, AC, Econoline $ #358909A .......... 16,556 16-Ton 29’ Bed, E. Forcum, Attorney Bend, Oregon 97702, TV,full awning, excelw/fold up ramps, elec. at Law, 141 NW Telephone: (541) lent shape, $23,900. ’10 Honda Civic LX brakes, Pintlehitch, Greenwood Ave. Ste. 312-9399. Attorney for Sedan 4 Dr, Automatic 541-350-8629 $ $4900, 541-548-6812 101, Bend, OR 97701, Personal Representa#527652 ............. 16,722 within four months tive: Melissa P. ’10 Dodge Avenger from the date of first Lande, OSB #91349, R/T Sedan publication of this noBryant, Lovlien & 37K Miles, Loaded! tice as stated below, Jarvis, P.C., 591 SW #177898 ............. $16,995 or the claims may be Mill View Way, Bend, ’12 Hyundai Sonata barred. All persons Oregon 97702, TelePilgrim Open Road Peterbilt 359 potable 4 Dr Sedan, AT, Loaded whose rights may be phone: (541) 2005, 36’, 3 slides, water truck, 1990, #320628 ............. $19,461 affected by this pro382-4331, Fax: (541) w/d hookup, up3200 gal. tank, 5hp ceeding may obtain 389-3386, Email: ’11 Chrysler 200 Sedan grades, $24,440. pump, 4-3" hoses, lande@bljlawyers.com additional information Touring 541-312-4466 camlocks, $25,000. $ from the court #553592 ............. 17,995 541-820-3724 records, the personal LEGAL NOTICE ’11 Subaru Impreza representative, or the 925 NOTICE TO AWD attorney for the perINTERESTED #511600A .......... $18,477 Utility Trailers sonal representative. PERSONS ’09 Toyota Matrix AWD DATED and first pubOnly 28K Miles lished: September 1, $ MICHAEL AL18,495 #009276A .......... Regal Prowler AX6 Ex2012. BRECHT, JR. has treme Edition 38’ ‘05, ’09 Subaru Legacy Sedan been appointed perBig Tex Landscap4 slides,2 fireplaces, all H4 Special Edition sonal representative RICHARD E. FORCUM, ing/ ATV Trailer, maple cabs, king bed/ #235780 ............. $19,995 OSB #640340 of the Estate of ELSA dual axle flatbed, bdrm separated w/slide ALBRECHT, De- Attorney for Personal ’11 Toyota Tacoma D-Cab 7’x16’, 7000 lb. glass dr,loaded,always Representative V6, 4x4, Only 16k miles ceased, by the Circuit GVW, all steel, garaged,lived in only 3 141 NW Greenwood #078811 ............. $32,715 Court, State of Or$1400. mo,brand new $54,000, Ave., Ste. 101 egon, Deschutes 541-382-4115, or still like new, $28,500, ’11 Chevy Silverado Bend, OR 97701 County, Probate No. 541-280-7024. will deliver,see rvt.com, Crew Cab Tel: 541-389-6964 12 PB 0084. All perad#4957646 for pics. Loaded, AT, 4x4, Only 19k miles Fax: 541-389-6969 sons having claims Cory, 541-580-7334 931 #212567 ............. $33,995 E-mail: against the estate are (KBB price $37,000) Roadranger 27’ 1993, Automotive Parts, required to present info@forcumlaw.com A/C, awning, sleeps 6, Service & Accessories ’07 Toyota F-J Cruiser them with proper Auto, Loaded, Only 44K Miles! exc. cond., used little, vouchers attached, to $ $4,495 OBO. #085835 ............. 26,995 LEGAL NOTICE the personal repreHonda Accord 1981 541-389-8963 Through 9/6/12 SEALED BID AUCsentative c/o Richard parts car, $250. All vehicles subject to prior sale, does TION: Sat., Sept. 8, E. Forcum, Attorney 541-447-4405 ROUA Digorgio 1971, not include tax, license or title and reg10am at Prineville at Law, 141 NW fridge,heater,propane Set of 4 Enkei alloy istration processing fee of $100. Vin#’s Self Storage, 1350 Greenwood Ave. Ste. posted at dealership. See Hertz Car & elec. lights, awning, wheels, silver & black, Sales of Bend for details. Dealer #4821 Harwood, Prineville 101, Bend, OR 97701, 2 spares, extra insu- w/studded snow tires. OR. CASH ONLY. within four months lation for late season fits Audi bolt pattern. Public Welcome. 7+ from the date of first hunting/cold weather $250. 541-408-5350 units. Email inquirpublication of this nocamping, well maint, 541-647-2822 ies to sealedbidauctice as stated below, very roomy, sleeps 5, Wheels (4), new, 20x7.5, 535 NE Savannah Dr, Bend tion@hotmail.com. GM,chrome, aluminum, or the claims may be great for hunting, HertzBend.com No phone calls. $3200, 541-410-6561 6x132 $125, 390-8386 barred. All persons


REAL ESTATE For homes online

T H E B U L L E T IN

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S A T U R D A Y , S E P T E M B E R 1, 2 0 12

www.bendhomes.com

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ADVERTISING SECTION F

Discover Sisters!

The Peak of Carefree Living Bordering the 11th fairway of the incomparable Tetherow Golf Club, Tripleknot Townhomes offer maintenance-free lifestyle with killer mountain views. Priced from the low $500,000s, one and two-story floor plans deliver the ultimate in elegance and the utmost in energyefficiency, all just a stones throw from Phil’s Trail, the Deschutes River and downtown Bend. Open house Saturday and Sunday, 12–4. Take Century Drive to Tetherow, turn right on Meeks Trail. Call Judy at 541-390-1411 or Shelly at 541-408-0086.

Come out this weekend and see why this award winning plan is so popular! Discover The Village at Cold Springs, located in Sisters and conveniently located near schools, shopping and all that the Three Sisters Wilderness Area has to offer. Directions: West Highway 20, west on McKinney Butte Road, north on Trinity Way, west on Allingham Avenue. Call 541-549-6681 or find us on the web at www. hayden-homes.com for more information.

HAYDEN HOMES WWW.HAYDEN-HOMES.COM 541-549-6681

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CASCADE SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY JUDY MCCOMBS - SHELLY SWANSON, BROKERS TRIPLEKNOTTOWNHOMES.COM

Design Budget-friendly makeovers can add personality and style in which to nestle. Oftentimes, buying a home opens up a bottomless pit of opportunities for projects and improvements. While some homeowners engage in different repairs and fi x-ups out of necessity, others simply like to refresh their spaces to add more personality. But even the most well-intentioned projects can be waylaid if budgets are tight. What some homeowners may not realize is that there are many ways to make updates and changes to a home that do not require a major overhaul or a large price tag. Here are seven low-cost projects that can be the start of something beautiful.

by CMS, for The Bulletin Advertising Department

3) Add new pillows or drapes Changing a few aspects of a room can give it an entirely new look. If you want to add a splash of color but don’t know what to do, think about incorporating some new throw pillows or change the curtains. Accessories in bright colors add interest to rooms without being overpowering.

5) Brush on a fresh color After you’ve exhausted other avenues, choosing a new paint color may be the new look you desire. Painting is one of the least expensive, yet most dramatic methods of changing a home’s interior. With dozens of hues from which to choose and new apps that enable you to take snapshots of things in nature or in your life and match them up to a paint color, you will have scores of opportunities to explore fresh new colors for your home.

6) Add lighting Lighting at different levels in the room can create a vibrant impact. Many homeowners mistakenly put in a couple of table lamps and think that will be adequate. However, properly illuminating a room means varying the lighting to create different moods at different times. Plus, more light can make a room feel more welcoming.

1) Rearrange furniture You may be able to change the look of a room without spending any money. Interior designers know how to arrange furniture for maximum appeal, and homeowners can follow suit. Start by finding a focal point in the room and angle the furniture toward it. Don’t make the focal point the television, however. Try changing the placement of chairs and sofas. Simply moving a curio cabinet from one corner to another may also make a difference.

2) Decorate with plants Fill empty corners or awkward areas with potted plants. Plants are inexpensive ways to add instant color, texture and visual appeal to a room. Plus, having live plants can help improve indoor air by filtering out contaminants. A home with plants can also feel more cozy. Consider different colored containers to complement décor.

Home built by R.D. Building & Design

4) Hang new wall art It may be time to look at your photos and artwork and make a few adjustments. Finding new prints to hang could instantly change a room’s ambience, and you needn’t spend a lot of money on fine art. Grab your camera and take some new photos. Many of today’s home printers can produce professionalquality prints in minutes. Samples of wrapping paper or fabric mounted on foam core also make unique wall hangings.

Home built by BlackRock Construction

7) Change knobs or small accents Give a room a new look by focusing on the small details. Switch out cabinet knobs for something updated and modern. Take inventory of wall outlets and light switches and think about selecting new ones that coordinate with your home decor. When inspiration to make improvements to your home strikes, avoid the anxiety of breaking your budget, and consider inexpensive tricks that can induce a big “wow” factor. By tackling small, inexpensive projects, homeowners can create the spaces in which they truly feel at home.

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Loan Preservation Assistance Program aids recovered homeowners and prevents foreclosure Homeowners in Central Oregon who have recovered from financial hardships, but continue to struggle with past-due mortgage balances and pentalties, may be eligible for assistance. The Loan Preservation Assistance (LPA) program is the newest program offered by the Oregon Homeownership Stabilization Initiative designed to help Oregon homeowners that have recovered from a financial hardship but have past-due payments threatening foreclosure. The LPA program preserves existing mortgages by paying off past-due balances and penalty fees. Applications submitted by homeowners in Crook and Jefferson Counties are being accepted now through Tuesday, Sept. 4 at noon. Slots for homeowners in Deschutes County will open beginning Wednesday, Sept. 26. Under the LPA program, a one-time payment to the mortgage lender or servicer of qualified applicants will be made for the total amount of past-due payments and fees up to $20,000. “We are very happy to help our neighbors avoid foreclosure,” said Selef Spragg, HomeSource of NeighborImpact manager. “We are here to assist homeowners through the application process, answer questions and most importantly listen.” For more information on qualification, to apply, and for a complete county availability schedule, visit www. oregonhomeownerhelp.org. Homeowners without internet access can visit HomeSource of NeighborImpact located at 20310 Empire Ave., Suite A100 in Bend, or can call 503-986-2025 for more information.

Interior photos by Nicole Werner 61050 Bacchus Court, Bend 3 BDRM, 2 BA. Gorgeous single level on 10 acres, backs up to BLM & county land. 2460 SF, open floor plan, and lots of windows w/ views of: Bachelor, Broken Top & Three Sisters. A/C, hot tub (opt.), large w/W&D hookups. $2,250 laundry No pets please. 3452 NE Fieldstone Ct., Bend 3 BDRM, 2.5 BA. Unbeatable price for GREAT home. Beautiful 3150 SF on Bend’s eastside. Private deck off master, many upgrades throughout, W&D included, beautiful 5 4 landscaped yards w/water 8 , 1 $ feature. No pets please.

$1,5

109 SW Taft, Bend BEAUTIFUL 3 BDRM, 2.5 BA, 1850 SF home blocks from Old Mill District! Side-by-side frig. plus professional series gas cooking kitchen grill and mahogany wood flooring.Double car garage, security alarm 75 system. No pets please.

61751 Bridgecliff Drive, Bend 3 BDRM, 2.5 BA. This beautiful 2314 SF home is located in Pettigrew Highlands in SE Bend with fenced yard! Open kitchen w/lots of light. Master bath has a jetted tub, double car garage. W&D inc. Pets 5 9 3 $1, considered.

If you are a Rental Property Owner, I invite you to call me. I pledge to strongly represent your management interests and surpass your expectations … Always. You have my word on it. Proudly serving Bend, Redmond, Sisters & Prineville

804 B ~ NE Ross Road, Bend 2 BDRM, 2.5 BA. Nearly new 1370 SF duplex on the NE side of Bend. Two master suites!! Fireplace. Laundry area with side-by-side W&D hook-ups, storage space, oversized one-car garage, and fenced patio. $1,025 Small pet considered.

541-389-2486 1199 NW Wall Street, Bend, OR 97701 www.investoregon.com

krestine@investoregon.com KEVIN RESTINE, General Manager/ Property Manager


F2 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - Roommate Wanted 616 - Want To Rent 627 - Vacation Rentals & Exchanges 630 - Rooms for Rent 631 - Condominiums & Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NE Bend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SW Bend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for Rent General 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652 - Houses for Rent NW Bend 654 - Houses for Rent SE Bend 656 - Houses for Rent SW Bend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space 682 - Farms, Ranches and Acreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740 - Condominiums & Townhomes for Sale 744 - Open Houses 745 - Homes for Sale 746 - Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest Bend Homes 748 - Northeast Bend Homes 749 - Southeast Bend Homes 750 - Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756 - Jefferson County Homes 757 - Crook County Homes 762 - Homes with Acreage 763 - Recreational Homes and Property 764 - Farms and Ranches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land 630

Rentals

Rooms for Rent

600

Mt. Bachelor Motel has rooms, starting $150/ week or $35/nt. Incl guest laundry, cable & WiFi. 541-382-6365

605

Studios & Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro & fridge. Utils & linens. New owners.$145-$165/wk 541-382-1885

Roommate Wanted Roommate wanted, male or female, call Jennifer, 541-876-5106 La Pine Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

CHECK OUT THIS HOT DEAL!

$299 1st month’s rent! * 2 bdrm, 1 bath $530 & 540 Carports & A/C incl! Fox Hollow Apts. Share cozy mobile home (541) 383-3152 in Terrebonne, $275+ Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co 1/2 utils 1-503-679-7496 *Upstairs only with lease*

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809

634

648

648

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Houses for Rent General

Houses for Rent General

Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc. 636

Apt./Multiplex NW Bend Fully furnished loft Apt

on Wall Street in Bend, with parking. All utilities paid. Call 541-389-2389 for appt Small studio downtown area, all util. pd. $550, $525 dep. No pets/ smoking. 541-3309769 or 541-480-7870

The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

Call a Pro Whether you need a fence ixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you’ll ind professional help in The Bulletin’s “Call a Service Professional” Directory

541-385-5809 642

Apt./Multiplex Redmond

Real Estate For Sale

730

730

732

New Listings

New Listings

Commercial/Investment Properties for Sale

NW BEND | $234,900 Westside Bend 4 bedPUBLISHER'S Rented your proproom home in wonNOTICE erty? The Bulletin derful neighborhood. All real estate adverClassifieds Open floor plan, gas tising in this newspa- has an "After Hours" fireplace, covered per is subject to the Line. Call front porch and Fair Housing Act 541-383-2371 24 fenced backyard. Pur726 which makes it illegal hours to chase this property for to advertise "any Timeshares for Sale cancel your ad! as little as 3% down. preference, limitation www.HomePath.com. 650 or discrimination Great location - DesMLS#201206361 based on race, color, chutes River views! Houses for Rent Darryl Doser, religion, sex, handiNicely appointed, NE Bend Broker, CRS cap, familial status, turn-key fully-fur541-383-4334 marital status or nanished, 2 bdrm, 2 tional origin, or an in- 4 Bdrm 2.5 bath, 1700 sq bath, 1/10th Timeappls, fenced yd, on tention to make any ft, share/fractional. Enculdesac. No smoking. such preference, Pets? 2400 NE Jeni Jo joy the serenity of the limitation or discrimi- Ct., flowing river below, near hospital. nation." Familial sta- $1050. 503-680-9590 blue sky above & all tus includes children the beauty Central under the age of 18 When buying a home, Oregon and Eagle living with parents or Crest Resort have to 83% of Central legal custodians, offer. $10,500 Oregonians turn to pregnant women, and MLS#201203509, people securing cusJohn L. Scott Real Need to get an tody of children under Estate 541-548-1712 18. This newspaper Call 541-385-5809 to ad in ASAP? 730 will not knowingly acplace your You can place it cept any advertising Real Estate ad. New Listings online at: for real estate which is in violation of the law. www.bendbulletin.com GARDENSIDE | Looking for your next Our readers are $194,947 employee? hereby informed that New Construction by 541-385-5809 all dwellings adver- Place a Bulletin help Group PacWest tised in this newspa- wanted ad today and Homes. Single level & reach over 60,000 BEND | $299,900 per are available on 2-story models avail- NW readers each week. Immaculate 4 bedan equal opportunity able, pick your finYour classified ad room, 3 bath, 2168 basis. To complain of ishes! Great room, will also appear on sq. ft. Craftsman discrimination call open kitchen, double bendbulletin.com, home on Bend's HUD toll-free at garage, & a 2/10 currently receiving Westside. Great room 1-800-877-0246. The Homebuyer’s Warover 1.5 million page floor plan, beautiful toll free telephone ranty. views, every month landscaping. Mostly number for the hearMLS #201206001 at no extra cost. main level living, one ing impaired is Darrin Kelleher, Broker Bulletin Classifieds bedroom, bath, family 1-800-927-9275. The Kelleher Group Get Results! room & entrance 541-788-0029 Call 541-385-5809 or downstairs. Call The Bulletin At place your ad on-line MLS#201206473 at Greg Miller, P.C., 541-385-5809 bendbulletin.com Broker, CRS, GRI Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 541-408-1511 At: www.bendbulletin.com

700

SW BEND | $105,000 Located on a large lot, Commercial Lots In this home sits close to Crooked River Ranch. the front entrance of Great opportunity to Deschutes River start a business or Woods. With rental relocate an existing rates at 3% vacancy business. Near resthis is a great investtaurants, hotel and ment! golf course. Owner MLS#201206464 terms avail. Business 60455 Iroquois Circle. Circle, Lot 82 - 1.05 Megan Power, Broker, acres $25,000; GRI, CDPE Commercial Loop, Lot 541-610-7318 49 - 1.26 acres. Lot 50 - 1.30 acres. Lot 51 - 1.23 acres. $35,000 each or purchase all 3 for $90,000. Juniper Realty, 541-504-5393 FIND IT! BUY IT! SELL IT! TEN BARR RANCH - The Bulletin Classiieds BEND | $1,500,000 For Lease .40/SF Big Cascade Moun$1240/Mo. tain Views on this close-in 161 acre Beautiful, open, second floor space of horse ranch with wa3100 sq. ft., 2 restter rights, a half built rooms, full mountain home and a guest views, operable wincottage. Live in the dows. manufactured home MLS#201203060 while finishing the main house. Call for Paula VanVleck, Broker 541-280-7774 details. MLS#201206445 Diane Lozito, Broker 541-548-3598

Duplex 3 bdrm, 2 bath, Prime Hwy 97 commer1260 sq.ft., 1 story, gacial updated in 2006, rage w/opener, fenced 850 sq.ft., polenty of yard, RV/Boat parking, parking in rear, centfridge, dishwasher, miWhere can you ind a real air. $129,900. 654 cro, walk-in laundry, MLS #201003034 helping hand? W/S/G paid, front gard- Crooked River Ranch, Houses for Rent Pam Lester, Principal ner paid, $775+dep., From contractors to 1350 sq.ft. ranch home, SE Bend Broker, Century 21 541-604-0338 2 bdrm., 2 bath, dbl. yard care, it’s all here Gold Country Realty, garage, cement patio, RENT OWN, $850/mo, Check out the Inc. 541-504-1338 in The Bulletin’s mtn. views, no smok3 bdrm, 2 bath, fresh HOME SWEET HOME | classiieds online Property & Business ing, 1 small pet neg., “Call A Service $649,000 paint, new carpet, www.bendbulletin.com $795, 541-548-4225. $239,500 Custom log home on Professional” Directory nice, easy qualify, Updated daily Living quarters inprivate 11.27 acres, $34,900, $2000 down, cluded with this busiminutes from town. Call 541-548-5511 NW BEND | $449,000 THREE RIVERS ness and the property. 3790 sq. ft., 3 bedSOUTH | $35,000 Located on Hwy 97. room, 3.5 bath, spa- Custom built, sculpted 656 cedar siding, up- Nicely treed .49-acre Business is mainly cious bonus room & Houses for Rent graded appliances, 5 lot located just minfrom the Hwy traffic. media room. Radiant acres, fenced & cross utes away from SunriSW Bend Owner will carry. floor heat. Artistic acfenced with 3 stall ver Resort & restauMLS#201203037 cents throughout. DiAVAILABLE BEND AREA RENTALS barn & tack room. 3 rants. Located on a Rookie Dickens, Broker, Clean 3 (could be 4) rect access to BLM. bedroom, 2.5 bath paved road with sepGRI, CRS, ABR bdrm, 1 yr. lease req., MLS#201206478 • Cute 2 Bdrm/1 Bath Apt. Above Garage over 3400 sq. ft. tic system installed. nearly 1 ac., $1200 Dawn Ulrickson, Broker, 541-815-0436 Nice neighborhood. Garage not included. See MLS#201206470 The 1967 manufacmo. 541-390-4213 or CRS, GRI, SFR mountains from covered stairway and front Minda McKitrick, Broker tured home is of no 818-324-5984. 541-610-9427 porch. Has A/C unit. $625. 541-280-6148 value. • 2 Bdrm/1 Bath Apt. - very close to down658 MLS#201206409 town. Lower end unit. Quite spacious. No Becky Brunoe, Broker Houses for Rent Pets. $625 WST. 541-350-4772 Redmond • 2 Bdrm/1 Bath Apt. - Near Old Mill district. Cheerful, open feeling. Recently refurbished. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath Balcony. On-site laundry. Off-street parking. home on 1.3 acres No Pets. $625 WST •2 Bdrm, 1 Bath SE Duplex - Sgl. garage. in Redmond, $895 Maintained yard. Fireplace insert. W/D Hookmo. 541-548-2408 Get your ups. New carpet & paint. No Pets. $650 WST business NORTHCREST | •Furnished 1 Bdrm/1 Bath Unit in Mt. Bach659 $189,947 SE BEND | $224,900 elor Resort - Great place to transition or vacaHouses for Rent New Construction in Gorgeous light & bright tion. Free Wi, Access to Jacuzzi and pool. GROW NE Bend by Group home in SE Bend. Sunriver Laundry facilities on site. $675 WST PacWest Homes. This home is loaded •2 Bdrm/2 Bath Duplex near Hospital - Cozy, 732 Single level & 2-story with extras including a VILLAGE PROPERTIES with an ad in Cute with gas fireplace, W/D Hook-ups. Single models, pick your fin5 car garage, granite Commercial/Investment Sunriver, Three Rivers, garage. 725 sq. ft. $715 WS The Bulletin’s ishes! Great room, countertops, water La Pine. Great Properties for Sale • Nice 2 Bdrm/2.5 Bath Townhome - Private “Call A Service open kitchen, master feature, mature beauSelection. Prices range deck off back. End unit. Gas fireplace. Single suite & 2/10 Hometiful landscaping in 13735 $425 - $2000/mo. Commercial garage. W/D hookups in laundry room area. Professional” buyer's Warranty. nice established View our full Loop, CRR. CommerGas cooking. Must see. $725 WST Directory MLS#201206009 neighborhood. inventory online at cial building with 900 •Lovely Pahlisch Townhome - 3 Bdrm/2.5 MLS#201206467 Village-Properties.com Darrin Kelleher, Broker sq. ft. of office space Bath in Westview Village. Lots of nice up738 The Kelleher Group Nicolette Jones, Broker 1-866-931-1061 and break room. 2400 grades to enjoy. Trex Deck. Built in computer 541-788-0029 541-241-0432 sq. ft. of open ware- Multiplexes for Sale desk. 1500 sq. ft. W/D included. Oversized 693 house /manufacturing single garage with built-in cabinets. $1200. area with concrete Large duplex in Bend’s •3 Bdrm/2 Bath NW Home - Shevlin Park Ofice/Retail Space desirable westside. floor and two roll up Fenced back yard. Dbl. garage. Tile counters. for Rent $379,900. doors. Owner terms or Hardwood floors. Lots of pine decor. W/D inAd #8932 lease option is availcluded. Dogs only considered. GFA. 1638 sq. Office space, high visable. $179,000 MLS# TEAM Birtola Garmyn ft. $1475. ibility on Highland Ave. Prudential High Desert 201109200 *** FOR ADDITIONAL PROPERTIES *** in Redmond. $425 Realty 541-312-9449 Juniper Realty, CALL 541-382-0053 &/or Stop By the Office mo., incl. W/S/G, call www.BendOregon 541-504-5393 at 587 NE Greenwood, Bend 541-419-1917. RealEstate.com

ING

SPECTACULAR VIEW HOME OPEN HOUSE SAT. & SUN 10-3 Spectacular 4,362 ± sq. ft. view home on the Westside of Bend overlooking Tetherow a n d B r o k e n To p Golf Courses, and Cascade Mtn. Range. 3 bedroom, 3.5 baths. 3 - c a r g a r a g e . To o many amenities to list. FSBO

19426 Cartmill Drive, Bend Directions: Follow the signs. Century Dr. to E. Campbell, go straight on Kemple, turn right on Cartmill. First on the Hill area.

$925,000

This home is being offered as For Sale by Owner, but we welcome Brokers also.

Contact CASEY JONES @ 541-419-9766

or KIM JONES @ 541-419-1243

MOUNTAIN HIGH

TIMBER RIDGE/BEND

SATURDAY 1PM–4PM

SAT & SUN 10AM–2PM

This former model home features 3 bedrooms, 3.5 baths & 3134 SF. Perfect for single level living w/master on the main level. Charming wraparound deck overlooks lushly landscaped yard & common area. Price reduced, don’t miss this one.

Single level home. 2132 square feet, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, large great room & kitchen near Bend Golf & Country Club.

60620 Telluride Directions: From Knott Rd. turn into the private gated community of Mountain High. Turn left & take the next left on Telluride. Follow to the end of the cul-de-sac.

$359,000

Hosted & Listed by:

SUSAN SEALOCK Broker

SPACIOUS OUTDOOR LIVING SATURDAY NOON–3PM

Hosted by:

CHRISTINE HILL Broker

503-442-4486

between Murphy Rd. & Knott Rd. on Country Club Dr. Follow open house signs.

61253 SE Mt. Vista Drive

$299,000

Listed by:

Broker

DANA FURLAN

Listed by: ROBERT EGGERS/ KATRINA SWISHER Principal Brokers

TINA ROBERTS Broker, CDPE, CRIS, ABR

Principal Brokers

541-419-9022

541-241-8880

to NW Crossing to 2325 Lolo.

$495,000

Brokers

UP THE LAZY RIVER

BEND’S NEWEST WESTSIDE NEIGHBORHOOD SAT. & SUN. NOON - 4PM

SATURDAY NOON - 3:00 Enjoy the peace and quiet from the deck of this quality built 2 BR/2 Bath 2142 sq. ft. home on the big Deschutes River. From this .77 acre lot, you are minutes from Sunriver, Mt. Bachelor and Cascade Lakes.

Directions: West on Spring River Rd. Left on Solar Dr. Solar turns into Milky Way. Left on Upland, House is on left.

Hosted & Listed by:

$385,000

WOODY BENNETT

Hosted by

541-306-1557

541-771-8761

NorthWest Crossing home features gourmet kitchen w/quartz counters, light & bright, generous patio for entertaining. 3 bed/2.5 bath in 2278 sq. 2325 NW Lolo ft. Come see this lightly Directions: Mt. Washington lived in home today!

Designed to enjoy the flowing floor plan and views from the minute you walk into the inviting entry. Amazing workmanship and attention to every detail including Pella Windows, Knotty Alder cabinets, 8 ft. solid doors and 60733 Golf Village Loop. Hickory distressed floors. Gourmet kitchen includes a $875,000 16 ft. Mombasa granite island.

KIP LOHR AND TEAM

Principal Broker

STUNNING CONTEMPORARY IN NWX

Hosted by: LINDA WILLIAMS/ NANCY HOOVER

Listed by:

$299,000

CURT GRANT

SAT & SUN 10AM–2PM

Directions: E Ferguson to SE Mt. Vista Dr.

Open floor plan, 2,111 sq. ft., 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. Large kitchen with island. Master bath w/jetted 20248 Gaines Ct. tub. Private setting, large back deck, 3-car Directions: East on Murphy, garage and RV parking. left on Tapadera, left on Gaines. MLS#201205590

$219,000

541-639-2577

541-480-5157

Immaculate home on nearly 1/2 acre. Traditional plan w/formal living, 3 bdrms. upstairs, open kitchen adjoins the family room. A 1/2 acre park-like setting yard that’s fenced & fully landscaped, spacious outdoor living for your enjoyment. Paved RV pad, covered storage & plenty of room for all your toys. A Must See!

20364 Donkey Sled Dr.

STUNNING VIEW SAT, SUN & MON 11:00 - 4:00

SATURDAY 12-3PM

Directions: Timber Ridge is

Hosted & Listed by:

SINGLE LEVEL ON 1/2 ACRE LOT

17079 Upland Road

Newport Landing. New construction in the heart of Bend. Pahlisch Homes, 8 floor plans, fabulous results. Newport Landing. 1800 NW Element Over 18 sold! Enjoy our Directions: Newport Ave. to model this weekend & College Way, left on Rockwood. tour our new community. Cool beverages and snacks.

Listed by:

KAREN MALANGA

Broker

Broker, CSP, CDPE

541-410-2728

541-390-3326

$255,000 to $355,000


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 F3

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Multiplexes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

NW BEND DUPLEX | Single level in gated community close to $419,000 town. $179,900. Newly built duplex, Ad#3142 fabulous location next to OSU-COCC cam- TEAM Birtola Garmyn pus. Unit one is 3 Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 bedroom, 2 bath; unit www.BendOregon two is 2 bedroom, 2 RealEstate.com bath. Both units have mountain views, great Look at: rooms, fireplaces, & Bendhomes.com spacious kitchens. for Complete Listings of MLS#201203052 Lisa Campbell, Broker Area Real Estate for Sale 541-419-8900 4.75 Acres. This is a wonderful parcel for your custom home, in desirable Powell Butte. Fantastic views of everything from the Cascade Range, to Gray Butte and beyond. Ready to build... water, septic feasibility, power all in place. Adjacent properties TURN THE PAGE have nice homes and For More Ads landscape. Joshua The Bulletin Court is dead-end cul-de-sac, so there is 740 very little traffic. Short drive to Prineville, Condo/Townhomes Redmond and Bend. for Sale MLS #2804050 $169,000 Gorgeous townhome | Team Clark $174,500. ImmacuCentury 21, late and Beautifully Gold Country updated. Incredible Realty landscaped backyard. 541-548-2131 MLS#201206152. Gail Day 541-306-1018 HARD TO FIND PRICE RANGE! Central Oregon Realty 1296 sq. ft. home on 2 Group, LLC acres just north of Great floor plan, three Redmond overlookbedroom townhome. ing the valley below New construction with and Smith Rock. landscaped front yard $99,000. MLS and fenced back yard #201205979 MLS#201201572 Call KELLY $85,000 STARBUCK, Broker D&D Realty Group LLC 541-771-7786 866-346-7868 Redmond Re/Max Land & Homes Real Estate Newer home with 4 large bedrooms, 2 857 - $289,500 Beautibaths, split floor plan, ful 2 bed, 2 bath large workable home, den/office and kitchen, and plenty of custom built-ins, loroom for a large famcated in The Falls, a ily. Nice size yard, 55 and older Active too. $76,000 MLS # Adult Community, 201202015 situated on 15th fairD&D Realty Group LLC way of Challenge Golf 866-346-7868 Course w/stunning south-easterly views. NEW TOWNHOME Upgraded lighting, Very clean, new conslab granite kitchen struction townhome. counter tops, window Well built, double car treatments, electric garage with landawning over back scaped front yard and deck, accent paint fenced backyard. and more! Don’t miss this one! Eagle Crest MLS#201201561 Properties™ $75,000. D&D Realty 866-722-3370 Group LLC 866-346-7868 Large 1/2 acre lot near Big Deschutes. 744 $249,900. Ad #2932 Open Houses TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Open Sat. & Sun. 10-3 Realty 541-312-9449 19426 Cartmill Dr., www.BendOregon Bend • $925,000. RealEstate.com BEST PLACE TO LIVE IN PRINEVILLE Over 2000 sq. ft. 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, quiet neighborhood. Traditional sale. MLS#201202762 TRAVIS HANNAN, Principal Broker, 541-788-3480 Redmond RE/MAX Land & Homes Real Estate

Spectacular 4,362 +/sq.ft. view home on the Westside of Bend overlooking Tetherow and Broken Top Golf Courses, Cascade mtn range, 3 bdrm/3.5 bath, 3 car garage. Too many amenities to list. FSBO Directions: Follow the signs. Century Dr. to 962 - $195,000 Come relax and enjoy as E. Campbell, go you sip your favorite straight on Kemple, beverage on the turn right on Cartmill. paver back patio! This First on the Hill area. 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath Casey & Kim Jones, townhome has up541-419-9766 grades which include: 541-419-1243 slate entry, slate surOPEN SAT & SUN 12-3, round around the fire60849 Yellow Leaf place, tile floor in the 3,229 sq.ft., 4 bdrm master bath and gransuites, huge bonus/ ite tile kitchen counter media room, lovely tops. It’s like waking finishes. $392,000. up everyday on vacaBrookswood South, tion! just past Elk Meadow Eagle Crest School turn left on Properties™ Poplar, take first right. 866-722-3370 MLS #201206555 Jeanne Turner, Broker, 4 Bedroom, 2.5 bath, 1963 sq. ft. home lo541-420-4600 cated in the heart of Prineville. This lovely traditional style home has a low maintenance yard, solid 745 wood cabinetry Homes for Sale throughout, as well as a tile entry, and lamiIf space is what you are nate wood floors. looking for, then look Master on the main at this 60ý acre par- floor and a bonus cel located in the room over the garage. heart of Powell Butte! Wiring for AC unit is Enjoy the views of the already there, short Cascade Mountain distance to movies, Range and the pri- restaurants, and vacy amongst the shopping. MLS natural and well treed #201108663 surroundings. In- $159,950. cludes Avion water Team Clark and the septic system Century 21, is less than 10 years Gold Country Realty old. A very large shop 541-548-2131 with finished office/bonus space Customs home on 1/2 acre, huge back deck. and a clean/basic $254,900. Ad #2942 manufactured home offers many ameni- TEAM Birtola Garmyn ties and options while Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 you build your dream www.BendOregon home. MLS RealEstate.com #201108973 $540,000 877 - $220,000 Very Team Clark private setting, CreekCentury 21, side Village townGold Country Realty home sits beside 541-548-2131 pond & creek in immaculate condition, THE FALLS at and shows true Eagle Crest Resort pride-of-ownership. Central Oregon’s Premium upgrade Premier 55 and Older package, 3 bedrooms, Resort Community. Live the Central Or- 2.5 baths, 1871 SF paver deck with egon lifestyle you’ve wrought iron railing. always dreamed of at Eagle Crest THE FALLS at Eagle Properties™ Crest. Residents of 866-722-3370 THE FALLS enjoy exclusive use of their own clubhouse, ac- 943 - $350,000 One of Gary Austin’s best cess to three golf homes, single level courses, and all the open floor plan and rest of Eagle Crest’s tastefully decorated. amenities. Homesites Hot tub on patio and start at just $59,900. located on the #13 Eagle Crest fairway. Many upProperties™ grades and immacu866-722-3370 late throughout, landGorgeous Bend scaped and in a acreage, 4 Bdrm home upscale neighborhood. Located behind + shop, $235,000 the gate on the ReAd #2072 sort side. 3 bedroom, TEAM Birtola Garmyn 2 bath, 1925 sq.ft. Prudential High Desert Eagle Crest Realty 541-312-9449 Properties™ www.BendOregon 866-722-3370 RealEstate.com

36+ acres, Bend, Cascade Nursery, $749,000. Ad #8452 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com

960 $190,000 On-top-of-the hill. One of our best view locations, quality Creekside Townhome that includes use of all Eagle Crest Ridge amenities. A great buy, location and Rustic home on 2+ priced to move. 2 bedacres close to town. room, 2 bath, 1419 $235,000. Ad #2592 sq.ft. TEAM Birtola Garmyn Eagle Crest Prudential High Desert Properties™ Realty 541-312-9449 866-722-3370 www.BendOregon 945 - $285,000 BeautiRealEstate.com fully maintained home Unique Luxury in The Falls, the 55+ Broken Top community at Eagle Craftsman home Crest. 2039 SF, 2 $955,000. Ad #3472 bed, 2 bath, office/TV TEAM Birtola Garmyn room, 8x20 “project Prudential High Desert room”. Gas fireplace Realty 541-312-9449 in living room w/ slider www.BendOregon to private deck. SpaRealEstate.com cious kitchen w/breakfast bar. Master 954 - $750,000 Private w/walk-in closet, cul-de-sac, w/paver shower & sitting area walkways, front & rear overlooking backyard. deck. Vaulted great Eagle Crest room w/rock and Properties™ knotty alder enter866-722-3370 tainment center, gourmet kitchen, walk-in pantry, mas- Outstanding mountain ter suite w/walk-in views and large farm shower, soaking tub, parcels surround this huge closet w/shelv- 41.75ý acres located ing. Landscaped in the heart of Powell backyard, water fea- Butte with many imture, & greenhouse. 3 provements in place. bed, 2.5 baths 3275 Also, find the winding Sq.ft. driveway lined with a Eagle Crest variety of trees and Properties™ shrubs. Smooth wire 866-722-3370 corrals/pasture areas with steel posts and 941 - $550,000 One of an oversized hay Sage Builders award winning homes. Lo- storage, a large machine shop. Additioncated facing east and ally, the main shop on the #17 fairway of has a set-up that can the Challenge Course. be used while buildLocated behind the ing your dream home! private security gate Don’t miss this speas you enter the Ridge. Many up- cial property! MLS #201102008 grades including $470,000 hardwood flooring. Team Clark Mint condition and a Century 21, truly magnificent setGold Country Realty ting. 3 bedrooms 3.5 541-548-2131 baths, 3376 Sq.ft. Eagle Crest River & Mountain views Properties™ will take your breath 866-722-3370 away. $599,000. Ad#8082 Updated 4 bdrm TEAM Birtola Garmyn charmer in Bend’s Prudential High Desert West Hills, $475,000 Realty 541-312-9449 Ad #3462 www.BendOregon TEAM Birtola Garmyn RealEstate.com Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 120 Private acres of www.BendOregon Central Oregon RealEstate.com Beauty. $499,900. Ad#2692 926 - $259,900 Stun- TEAM Birtola Garmyn ning panoramic views Prudential High Desert from this 1871 SF, 3 Realty 541-312-9449 bedroom, 2 bath www.BendOregon townhome. Featuring RealEstate.com master on the main and a great room 816 - $315,000 Fabuopen floor plan with lous one-level home wall to wall windows located in The Falls at leading out to spa- Eagle Crest. Feacious deck. Upgraded tures great room with finishes throughout. views, garage is extra Washer and Dryer in- long, fireplace and cluded! expansive deck overEagle Crest looking Smith Rock. Properties™ Move-in ready and 866-722-3370 like brand new!!! Enjoy the Falls ClubMagnificent views, house and all other ranch home on 10+ Eagle Crest ameniacres. $429,987. ties. 2 bedrooms, 2 Ad#2122 baths, 1738 Sq.ft. TEAM Birtola Garmyn Eagle Crest Prudential High Desert Properties™ Realty 541-312-9449 866-722-3370 www.BendOregon 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, RealEstate.com 1936 sq. ft. Built in 887 - $340,000 2279 1994. Comfortable SF 3 bed, 3.5 bath floor plan with master Forest Ridge Town- bedroom separation home overlooking the from guest bedrooms, golf course. 2 master large master with suites (1 up w/jetted walk-in closet, living tub & 1 down), Con- and family room, botrol 4 Smart Home, nus room/office/den, security system, gran- large front porch is ite in kitchen and util- perfect for those ity, marble in baths, summer evenings. Pella sliding glass Nice level parcel perdoor and downstairs fect for horses, and windows, auto re- within minutes of tractable deck awning, riding trails... you can extra inside sound- ride from the property! proofing. Crooked River Ranch Eagle Crest offers golf, tennis, and Properties™ community swimming 866-722-3370 pool... and so much more. Great views of 3 Bedroom, 2.5 bath, the Cascades, and in 1876 sq. ft. Built in an area of large par1994. This home is cels, so you can enlocated on a quiet, joy your privacy. MLS level cul-de-sac in the heights of SW Red- #201205395 mond, Oregon. It fea- $284,500 Team Clark tures a triple car gaCentury 21, rage, gas FA heat and Gold Country Realty central AC, 2 ceiling 541-548-2131 fans, vaulted front room with open living 718 - $499,000 Full and dining areas, view of the 7th green separate family room of the Ridge Course, and breakfast nook, plus views of the 7th and large master suite and 8th fairways. with walk-in closet Great home for enterand bathroom with taining. 2680 SF, tiled shower and master suite and 2 double sink vanity. guest bedrooms & Fully fenced back and bathrooms are on the side yard, large patio main floor with a huge and deck, RV parking, loft overlooking the underground sprin- great room, and an kler system, garden expansive trex deck, shed, mature land- ideal for entertaining. scaping, and raised Eagle Crest bed garden. MLS Properties™ #201205519 866-722-3370 Team Clark Builders own custom Century 21, home w/garage + Gold Country Realty shop. $399,000. 541-548-2131 Ad# 3332 Peaceful home in the TEAM Birtola Garmyn pines on over 1 acre. Prudential High Desert $150,000. Ad#8052 Realty 541-312-9449 TEAM Birtola Garmyn www.BendOregon Prudential High Desert RealEstate.com Realty 541-312-9449 1.5 acres adjoining forwww.BendOregon est land, $189,900. RealEstate.com Ad #2802 952 $199,900 TEAM Birtola Garmyn One-level living and Prudential High Desert total privacy off the Realty 541-312-9449 back patio of this imwww.BendOregon maculate and tasteRealEstate.com fully furnished townSpacious 4 bdrm home, home. Wall to wall master w/ fireplace. windows, granite tile $224,900. Ad#3292 counters, slate entry, lots of storage, and no TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert stairs!! Walking disRealty 541-312-9449 tance to pools, sports www.BendOregon center, tennis, hiking RealEstate.com and more! 2 bed, 2 baths, 1419 sq.ft. Gorgeous cedar home Eagle Crest on almost 16 acres, Properties™ $479,900 866-722-3370 Ad #2632 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Need help ixing stuff? Prudential High Desert Call A Service Professional Realty 541-312-9449 ind the help you need. www.BendOregon www.bendbulletin.com RealEstate.com

Northwest lodge style 31.21 Acres. Scenic home w/views! riverfront property on $1,595,000 Ad#2152 the Deschutes, possiTEAM Birtola Garmyn bility of partition into 3 Prudential High Desert parcels, very private, Realty 541-312-9449 and the road is paved www.BendOregon almost to the property. RealEstate.com Excellent opportunity, with lots of possibili3 Bedroom, 2.5 bath, ties! MLS 1876 sq. ft. Live #201109809 among the pines in $350,000 Sunriver! This strateTeam Clark gic and well placed Century 21, home is extremely Gold Country private and yet the Realty many picture win541-548-2131 dows bring the beauty of the surrounding 3 Bedroom, 2.5 bath, pines indoors. Very 3170 sq. ft. Beautiful well kept and ideally custom home on a located near shopvery private and gated ping, dining, and 23+ acres, and ready endless outdoor recto build another home, reation. Newly added as this 23 acres is block-style paver pamade up of 2 tax lots tio, new exterior paint, with separate access and the composite and ready to develop! roof (2003) have been Home boasts many completed in keeping amenities: custom the home in pristine staircase, open loft, condition. Most furriver rock fireplace, nishings included! open beamed and MLS #201008596 vaulted ceilings, $399,900 gourmet kitchen, theTeam Clark atre room, deluxe Century 21, master, and the list Gold Country Realty goes on. Outside you 541-548-2131 will find a large shop, 36x36 horse barn, 820 - $599,900 Gor- double detached gageous custom home rage with guest quaroffers amazing views! ters and 2 full RV Loaded with up- hookups. MLS grades, 2 masters + 2 #201200235 addl. bdrms, sound $609,000 system throughout, Team Clark beautiful private deck Century 21, w/hot tub that backs Gold Country Realty to BLM, slab granite 541-548-2131 kitchen counters, quiet cul-de-sac. De- 1911 farmhouse close signer touches to downtown. throughout! 4 bed, 3.5 $89,900. Ad#3272 baths, 3569 sq.ft. TEAM Birtola Garmyn Owner will carry. Prudential High Desert Eagle Crest Realty 541-312-9449 Properties™ www.BendOregon 866-722-3370 RealEstate.com 831 - $204,000 Beauti- Includes 3.59 acres. fully situated on the The most well known 5th tee box/fairway of greenhouse and garthe Ridge Golf den supply in RedCourse. This 3 bed, 2 mond, Oregon. Great bath, 1328 SF, Sun Highway 97 frontage, Forest built chalet is with lots of possibiliready for you! Owner- ties and room to exship also enjoys all of pand the business. the amenities that Prime opportunity to Eagle Crest has to of- add a landscape fer. business, and landEagle Crest scape maintenance, Properties™ to an already well es866-722-3370 tablished garden supply center. MLS 928 - $169,000 Town- #201202149 home on private, quiet $375,000 cul-de-sac w/golf Team Clark course frontage, reCentury 21, sort side of Eagle Gold Country Crest. Newer flooring, Realty custom kitchen cabi541-548-2131 nets, and kitchen appliances. Master fea- On the 5th green of tures jetted tub & River’s Edge golf private balcony. Liv- Course! $269,500. ing room looks out Ad #8760 over the 10th fairway TEAM Birtola Garmyn w/wood burning fire- Prudential High Desert place and lovely wood Realty 541-312-9449 accents. www.BendOregon Eagle Crest RealEstate.com Properties™ Big River Meadows Re866-722-3370 sort home on the 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, river! $375,000 2124 sq. ft. Built in Ad#8532 1995. Very private TEAM Birtola Garmyn setting, with Cascade Prudential High Desert views, and Prineville Realty 541-312-9449 lights at night. Comwww.BendOregon fortable home, with an RealEstate.com open floor plan. Country living and only 1.56 Acres future development property at minutes from either a discount price, or Prineville, Madras, or nice parcel to build on Redmond. Peace and conveniently located quiet? This is the on the west side of place!! MLS Redmond. MLS #201202008 ##201206251 $289,500 $45,000 Team Clark Team Clark Century 21, Century 21, Gold Country Gold Country Realty Realty 541-548-2131 541-548-2131 4 Bedroom, 2 bath, 2330 sq. ft. Multiple 3 Bedroom, 2.5 bath, 2151 sq. ft. Enjoy this outbuildings and 6.64 acres with 5.6 irri- private setting with sweeping views of the gated acres and 18th hole of the set-up for grass or Driver’s Dream animals. Home has been extensively re- Course on the Ridge Course. The well kept modeled and updated home has all of the and includes a bonus features that you are room, tiled bath, looking for! Open and newer flooring, newer spacious living, with appliances... a great recent upanswer for those look- many ing for space! Also in- grades, like the slate cluded: 1973 manu- entry and newer granite tile countertops, factured home, and the expanded currently rented with master bathroom. Cofgreat tenants! Owner fered ceilings, many terms, for short term built-in cabinets, exwith large down. MLS tensive landscaping, #201202706 and a great floor plan $279,000 make this the perfect Team Clark choice! MLS Century 21, #201205033 Gold Country Realty $389,500 541-548-2131 Team Clark Remodeled custom Century 21, home plus framed Gold Country Realty shop, $139,000. 541-548-2131 Ad#3432 4000+ sq.ft. TEAM Birtola Garmyn Large home with wine cellar, Prudential High Desert $494,987. Ad#3122 Realty 541-312-9449 TEAM Birtola Garmyn www.BendOregon Prudential High Desert RealEstate.com Realty 541-312-9449 880 - $217,000 Beautiwww.BendOregon ful chalet in Eagle RealEstate.com Crest Resort. Enjoy 3 Unique Bend home w/ golf courses, tennis, Cascade Mtn. views. racquetball and $590,000. Ad#8552 swimming. Eagle Crest has over 15 TEAM Birtola Garmyn miles of paved trails, Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 foot paths along the www.BendOregon Deschutes River, and RealEstate.com is bordered on two sides by public (government) lands with 3 Bedroom, 2.5 baths. some motorized ac- Built in 2007. Slate entry, gas fireplace, cess. Deck w/hot tub. tile kitchen counter 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, tops with knotty pine 1361 sq.ft. cabinets, 9 ft. ceilings, Eagle Crest oversized laundry Properties™ room, tons of storage, 866-722-3370 extra deep garage, and just minutes to The Bulletin shopping, schools, To Subscribe call parks, and the hospi541-385-5800 or go to tal. Newly landwww.bendbulletin.com scaped and located on a large corner lot. 8810 FORESTER DR., MLS #201206270 TERREBONNE $169,000 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, Team Clark 1400 sq. ft., quiet Century 21, neighborhood large Gold Country Realty lot, oversized 2+ ga541-548-2131 rage/shop. $76,000. MLS#2011087 Call FIND IT! Don Chapin, Broker BUY IT! 541-350-6777 SELL IT! Redmond Re/Max Land & Homes Real Estate The Bulletin Classiieds


F4 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

2500 sq.ft. Commercial Bldg just off Bus 97. $175,000. Ad #3052 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com Ideally located resort condo in Sunriver. $185,000. Ad#3222 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com Scenic Ridge at Eagle Crest Resort From these homesites you can see forever. Well, almost. Build your ideal dream home on one of these eight, one-acre plus estate homesites with full views of the Cascades. Tucked away in a gated community close to the Lakeside Sports Center and Spray Park. This neighborhood is the only one in the entire resort that allows construction of a separate guest cabin on the property (up to 1,200 square feet). HOMESITES STARTING AT $191,500 Eagle Crest Properties™ 866-722-3370 Custom home on almost an acre in Bend. $199,900. Ad #3032 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com 808 - $330,000 Stunning Smith Rock views from this one-level 2226 sq.ft. custom home. Home features Brazilian cherry floors, granite counter tops, pantry, Jacuzzi tub, plus three-car garage! Walking distance to golf, sports center, pool and more! 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths. Eagle Crest Properties™ 866-722-3370 Exquisite home on acreage with a view, $699,900. Ad #3192 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com $10,000 BUILDABLE LOTS IN LA PINE Ready to build lots in Huntington Meadows! All utilities and roads are in. Perfect location in south La Pine. 74 lots available. Great opportunity. MLS#201103050. wwwjohnlscott.com/89 740. Jayci Larson, Broker 541-325-3955 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend

10 ACRES/CUSTOM HOME/SHOP IN POWELL BUTTE! Unique floor plan w/indoor spa room, wide hallways, single level. $375,000. MLS#201108648 Call VIRGINIA, Principal Broker 541-350-3418 Redmond RE/MAX Land & Homes Real Estate $114,900 New On The Market… Terrific home in established mid-town neighborhood. Spacious corner lot with mature trees offer privacy in the backyard & plenty of room to garden. This would be an excellent starter home or perfect investment. Carolyn King, Broker 541-550-0712 or 541-389-7910 Hunter Properties 1188 NE 27TH ST. #80 Open House Sat. Aug. 11 Snowberry Village #80. Enjoy the carefree lifestyle in Snowberry Village. Bend’s premiere 55+ community. Located near shopping and medical facilities. Well-kept Silvercrest offers 2 bedroom, 2 bath plus den/office. New roof 2011. All appliances included. Move-in ready. www.johnlscott.com/6 6763 Maralin Baidenmann, Broker 541-385-1096 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend

$129,900 With A Little Love… Mid town cutie needs a bit of TLC but has loads of potential. Fenced in yard with lots of room to garden with plenty of sunshine. Structure is sound (just needs a little lipstick). Debbie Tallman, Broker 541-390-0934 or 541-389-7910 Hunter Properties $132,500 Traditional Sale! Home has been recently upgraded with fresh paint, all new appliances, Pergo and tile flooring. Garage and shop brought up to code. Raised garden beds, producing fruit trees, all surrounded by high fence. Susan Pitarro, Broker 541-410-8084 or 541-389-7910 Hunter Properties Advertise your car! Add A Picture! Reach thousands of readers!

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$149,500 $474,500 BROKEN TOP GOLF CUSTOM HOME ON Country Living Close to Fabulous Place To Live! ESTATE SMALL ACREAGE Town Open floor plan Three full master suites, Stellar Golf Course Beautiful 4 bdrm,/4.5 with formal living room 3.5 baths. Gorgeous Views of 17th Tee! bath home, w/day& spacious family Asian walnut flooring, The Pinehurst at Brolight basement. 6.45 room lends itself to new hickory cabinets, ken Top represents AC with 2.5 AC irrig., casual living. On a carpet and tile floors, an unmatched fireplace in living quiet cul-de-sac with large corner lot, exbenchmark for quality room, granite oversized, fully fenced cellent rental history. and craftsmanship in counters in kitchen, .59 acre lot, great for Susan Pitarro, Broker the marketplace! large master suite on entertaining & lots of 541-410-8084 or Single-level by Steven main level, elevator, 2 room for gardening. 541-389-7910 Van Sant masterfully double car garages Debbie Tallman, Broker Hunter Properties rendered by PacWest plus a huge RV ga541-390-0934 or Homes with masonry rage. $669,900 $474,900 541-389-7910 wood-burning firewww.johnlscott.com/6 Set In The Ponderosa Hunter Properties places, hand-textured 6039 Ellen Clough, Pines Soaring ceilwalls & ceilings, elBroker, ABR, CRS $184,500 ings, fireplace, large egant stone baths 541-480-7180 Traditional Sale… family room with high with heated floors, John L. Scott Real Gated Mtn. View Park, windows. This home extensive use of cusEstate, Bend gorgeous open floor sits at the end of a www.JohnLScott.com/Bend tom woodwork & trim, plan, vaulted ceilings, cul-de-sac with over 5 and dynamic show- Cute, turn-key stick built 3 bdrm/2 bath. Spaacres. The deck is case kitchen equipped 1270 sq. ft. home. cious kitchen with 1000 sq. ft. which with Wolf range & $139,900. huge counter space & adds space to outbuilt-in refrigerator. MLS#201202978 cabinets. Large masdoor living. 3-car gaOversized three-car Call Linda Lou ter w/garden tub. rage, plus a detached garage, paver patios, Day-Wright Amenities include RV/boat/barn, sepaand private hot tub 541-771-2585 pool and tennis rate shop, 1/2 bath! enhance this truly Crooked River Realty courts. Susan Pitarro, Mike Wilson, Broker. phenomenal home Broker 541-410-8084 541-977-5345 or DESCHUTES destined for those or 541-389-7910 541-389-7910 RIVER WOODS seeking nothing but Hunter Properties Hunter Properties the best. Call for your 3 bedroom, 1.75 bath in 1329 sq. ft. custom private tour today! $189,900 5 Acres w/mountain home on DRW acre. MLS # 201204424 Country Living Close to views. 3 Bbdrm, 2 Great room floor plan $1,269,000. Town…Great location bath, 1620 sq.ft., irriwith vaulted ceiling. and close to Tumalo gated, 36x40 shop, David D. Gilmore, BroAll kitchen appliances ker. 541-312-7271 Park!!! Over ½ an fenced, extensive are included. Both re Coldwell Banker Moracre with property sprinkler system. cessed & under cabiris Real Estate. backing up to the $279,000. MLS net lighting in kitchen. common area, en#2809225 Pam BUNGALOW ON THE Laundry room w/skyhancing the open feel Lester, Principal BroWESTSIDE! lite and large pantry. of the property. Caker, Century 21 Gold Cute with endless posNew interior paint. sual living and a must Country Realty, Inc. sibilities to re-design Garage is heated and see! 541-504-1338 or plenty of room to finished w/work Carolyn King, Broker add additional square bench. Super fenced 63245 SILVIS ROAD 541-550-0712 or footage on this large yard w/mature PonGated small “farm” with 541-389-7910 double lot. Sturdy derosas, storage 4000 sq. ft. home on Hunter Properties construction of a bybuilding, double 6.95 underground irrigone era with all the 2044 NE FULL MOON canopy carport or gated acres, 3600 sq. quirky charm you just $73,000 storage structure. This ft. shop, barn with don’t find in modern 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, home is move-in stalls and greenhomes today. 1104 sq. ft. condo in ready. $259,000. Call house. Home in$219,900 great NE location. Bobbie at cludes walk-thru panMLS#201204713 Open great room, 541-480-1635 about try, wet bar, vaulted Rhonda Garrison & laminate flooring, MLS#2802056. ceiling, Cascade Chris Sperry Princispacious kitchen, Bobbie Strome, Mountain views and 3 pal Broker & Broker fenced yard area. Principal Broker fireplaces. Sharon 541-279-1768 & Cash only due to fiJohn L Scott Real Abrams, Broker 541-550-4922 nance guidelines for Estate 541-385-5500 541-280-9309 John L. Scott Real condos. John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend DOWNTOWN BEND www.johnlscott.com/3 Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend Overlooking Drake Park 4064 Kathy Caba, www.JohnLScott.com/Bend & the Deschutes CANYON & MOUNPrincipal Broker River! This English TAIN VIEWS! ADORABLE 541-771-1761 cottage brings storyExtraordinary home on COTTAGE STYLE John L. Scott Real book charm to life! the canyon with over HOME. 3 Bdrm, 1.5 Estate, Bend Classic appeal highwww.JohnLScott.com/Bend 2800 sq. ft. of excepbath, 1336 sq. ft. lighted by hardwood tional living. Many, Landscaped with $2,199,000 floors, crown molding, many upgrades to this garden area. $89,500. One-of-a-Kind Home on and plantation shutbeautiful classic MLS# 201203069 2 Lots w/Cascade ters. Enjoy the culione-level home on .8 Call VIRGINIA, Mtn. & golf course nary kitchen updated acres. Must see to Principal Broker views. Master suite with granite counters, believe! Gail Rogers, 541-350-3418 w/fireplace & multiple travertine floors, and Broker 541-604-1649 Redmond RE/MAX decks. Elevator, pristainless steel appliJohn L. Scott Real Land & Homes vate oval office & ances. Tastefully deEstate, Bend Real Estate 4-car garage, www.JohnLScott.com/Bend signed with an eye for Aaron Boehm, ARROWHEAD ACRES timeless detail, this CHARMING Broker Beautiful Cascade home also offers RETREAT 541-647-8851 or Mountain views. Burmarble bathrooms, LOCATED IN 541-389-7910 ied field & landscape WOODSIDE RANCH detached two-car gaHunter Properties irrigation lines. New 2 Bdrm + den (potential rage, and manicured comp roof in 2006. grounds. Additional 3rd bdrm), 2 bath in $2,399,000 New water heater and improvements in1408 sq.ft. on .78 Beautiful Golf Front forced air gas furnace clude a newer furacre. Beautiful flag Property in 2007. 3 bed, 3 nace, water heater, stone hearth in living Hand tumbled Montana baths in 2272+/- sq. ft. and roof. This is room ready for wood rock exterior. Chef’s home on 2.38+/Downtown living at its or gas stove. Kitchen kitchen with dual acres are just waiting finest so don’t miss has tile floor, counters dishwashers, high end for your loving care. out on this rare op& back splash plus appliances, natural This property is a portunity to own the Whirlpool Estate apstone & granite. Inproject and is ideal for dream! MLS # pliances in silvertone. cludes wine cellar, an FHA203K loan. 201205806 $749,000 Garage has huge pottery room with kiln $228,000. bank of cabinets. David D. Gilmore, Bro& large. bonus room MLS#201205271. ker. 541-312-7271 Home completely rewith full bar & library. Bobbie Strome, Coldwell Banker Morfurbished. Nestled in 6-car garage, inPrincipal Broker ris Real Estate. the trees w/easy care cludes RV bay, shop John L Scott Real natural landscaping & & car lift. Aaron DOWNTOWN a tree house too. Tall Boehm, Broker Estate 541-385-5500 PENTHOUSE vaulted ceilings, Top Corner Floor, Mtn + 541-647-8851 Ryan Artistry in Broken Top, 3 beams, natural wood Whitcomb, Broker bdrm, 4.5 baths, mtn. City Views, Open & stone accents. 541-639-1151 views, golf views, boFloorplan, 1800 sq.ft. Leaded beveled glass Hunter Properties nus room, 4100 sq.ft., New Price: $695,000 in living room & foyer. gorgeous finishes. Cate Cushman, $249,900 Newer 30 yr roof & ext New Price Principal Broker Traditional Sale in River paint. $199,900. $1,425,000. MLS# 541-480-1884 Canyon Estates MLS#2711853 or visit 201109001. www.catecushman.com New refrigerator, new johnlscott.com/66140 Cate Cushman, washer/dryer & fresh Bobbie Strome, DOWNTOWN Principal Broker paint makes this Principal Broker Single level, 3 bed541-480-1884 home like new & John L Scott Real Esrooms, 2.5 baths on move-in ready. Gran- www.catecushman.com tate 541-385-5500 over ¼ acre, fenced. ite counters, rich Walking distance to ASTOUNDING CITY VIEWS! cabinetry & hardwood CASCADE MOUNTAIN parks, river and CASCADE VIEW floors. downtown dining. VIEWS ESTATES! Mike Wilson, Broker Theresa Ramsay, Highlands, 10.28 Acres Great room, large of541-977-5345 or Broker 541-815-4442 Offered at $495,000 fice w/French 541-389-7910 John L. Scott Real Cate Cushman, doors, spacious Hunter Properties Estate, Bend Principal Broker master suite. www.JohnLScott.com/Bend 541-480-1884 2913 NW LOWER $142,000. www.catecushman.com BRIDGE WAY, EAGLE CREST! MLS#201200310 TERREBONNE CUSTOM SINGLE Awesome Westside Call VIRGINIA, Prin5 bedroom, 3.5 bath, LEVEL! MOUNcipal Broker Townhome. Enjoy the 4170 sq. ft. home TAIN VIEWS! 541-350-3418 easy lifestyle where located on 4.22 irri3 bdrm, 3 bath, Redmond RE/MAX the HOA cares for the gated acres. Need w/office, Land & Homes landscaping, exterior elbow room? This gated golf Real Estate maintenance and inproperty is for you! community. $369,900. surance. Great open $185,000. MLS#201201743 Find It in feeling with 3 bdrms, MLS#2911254 Call VIRGINIA, Prin(2 master suites), The Bulletin Classifieds! Call Don Chapin, cipal Broker huge vaults and open 541-385-5809 Broker 541-350-3418 kitchen, living room 541-350-6777 Redmond RE/MAX with fireplace, private CLOSE TO SPORTS Redmond RE/MAX Land & Homes deck and a double car COMPLEX! 5.52 Land & Homes Real Estate garage. Upstairs loft is ACRES! Real Estate an office or a 3rd 3 bdrm, 3 bath 3008 FRENCH COUNTRY bdrm. Great place to 2 LOTS/ZONED CHATEAU sq. ft., home. call home or a 2nd FOR DUPLEXES City & Mtn Views, Hill3200 sq. ft. shop home. 132 SW 17th Great opportunity... 2 side Park, 4 Bedw/office. $208,000. MLS #2015204812 tax lots for investor or rooms, 4 Baths 4152 MLS#201108429 $239,000. a family who needs a sq.ft. Offered at Call VIRGINIA, Gary Everett, CCIM large lot. Tons of $2,395,000 Principal Broker Principal Broker character in this Cate Cushman, 541-350-3418 541-480-6130 charming 60s home. 3 Principal Broker Redmond RE/MAX Joan Steelhammer, Bdrm/2 bath, 1490 541-480-1884 Land & Homes Broker sq.ft. Beautiful www.catecushman.com Real Estate 541-419-3717 vaulted. open beam Country living in Bend, GORGEOUS MOUNRemax ceilings & built-ins. 4 bdrm, 4.5 baths, 17 TAIN VIEWS! Gas forced air heat. BANK OWNED HOMES! acres. Offered at 36+/- ACRES Close in location... FREE List w/Pics! $1,295,000. MLS Irrigated w/small walk to Sam Johnson #2101203960 cabin, 1 bedroom, Park. MLS www.BendRepos.com bend and beyond real estate Cate Cushman, 1 bath, possible #201205707. 1604 W. 20967 yeoman, bend or Principal Broker OWC! $245,000. Anter Ave. Redmond. 541-480-1884 MLS# 201201125 www.johnlscott.com/she BETWEEN BEND & www.catecushman.com Call Charlie, REDMOND llyarnold Designated Broker www.johnlscott.com/9 Terrific location - 4 CUSTOM HOME! 20 541-350-3419 bdrm, 1 bath in 1589 Shelley Arnold, ACRES WEST Redmond RE/MAX 2,888ý sq.ft. home on Broker 541-771-9329 POWELL BUTTE Land & Homes 5.75ý acres. A John L. Scott Real EST! Cascade Mt. Real Estate Country feel but close Estate, Bend Views, 4bdrm/4bath, www.JohnLScott.com/Bend to town amenities. 5494 sq. ft., 4-car GREAT Super fireplace w/rock garage, detached $325,000 NEIGHBORHOOD surround for ambishop, bank apHistoric Old Mill District Beautiful home in a ance, plus a Lopi proved price. This duplex has a knoll great neighborhood. Woodstove that can $699,900. top setting, providing This home features a heat the whole house. MLS#201006747 privacy & natural light. spacious kitchen, tile Great room floor plan Call VIRGINIA, PrinJust a few short countertops, hardw/living room & cipal Broker blocks to downtown wood floors, many kitchen having 541-350-3418 restaurants, shopping upgrades. 4 bedwide-plank floors of Redmond RE/MAX & Drake Park. Each rooms, 2.5 baths. reclaimed pine. DisLand & Homes unit has 2 bedrooms, Barbara Jackson, tressed maple cabiReal Estate 2 baths, private balBroker 541-306-8186 nets in Kitchen with 1 cony & large deck. John L. Scott Real Good classiied ads tell 1/2 thick slate Perfect for owner ocEstate, Bend the essential facts in an counters. If you like a www.JohnLScott.com/Bend cupied or vacation cozy country feel. interesting Manner. Write rental. You’ve got it!! Beau- from the readers view - not Juniper Butte in Culver, Mike Everidge, tiful Cascade Moun3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, the seller’s. Convert the Broker tain Views. 2 corrals, 1910 sq.ft., 2.39 facts into beneits. Show 541-390-0098 or pond, shared lake, 3 the reader how the item will acres, spectacular 541-389-7910 acres of irrigation, 2 mtn views, large rear help them in some way. Hunter Properties stall barn. $399,000 deck. $200,000. MLS MLS #201205878 #201203539 Pam 4270 sq ft, 6 bdrm, 6 ba, Bobbie Strome, Lester, Principal Bro4-car, corner, .83 acre Principal Broker ker, Century 21 Gold mtn view, by owner. John L Scott Real Country Realty, Inc. $590,000 541-390-0886 Estate 541-385-5500 541-504-1338 See: bloomkey.com/8779

MOUNTAIN PINE NEW LISTING!! LAKE COUNTY FARM NOTICE: Like-new, lightly lived Incredible 703 acre al- 3 bdrm, 1.75 bath in All real estate adver1518+/sq.ft. on in single level home falfa farm in Lake tised here in is subwith great room floor 7841+/sq.ft. lot. County. Owners have ject to the Federal plan, 1296 sq. ft., Fenced back yard pride in producing Fair Housing Act, 3bed, 2 bath, corner w/concrete & flag2000 tons of dairy which makes it illegal gas fireplace, lamistone patios, small quality alfalfa hay to advertise any prefnate flooring, vaulted shop/storage bldg, yearly. 4 pivots proerence, limitation or ceilings. There is a raised planting beds vide 420 acres of irridiscrimination based covered patio off of w/dripline. Beautiful gation. 3 homes inon race, color, relithe dining area for mature trees on large cluded. Candice gion, sex, handicap, entertaining, nicely lot. RV/Toy parking, Anderson, Broker familial status or nalandscaped lot with fenced & gated. Very 541-788-8878 tional origin, or intenfenced back yard. Exnice starter or retireJohn L. Scott Real tion to make any such tras include nice extement home close to Estate, Bend preferences, limitawww.JohnLScott.com/Bend rior detail for wondershopping, schools, tions or discrimination. ful curb appeal, Old Mill District & acJust bought a new boat? We will not knowingly gutters, alarm system, cess to Parkway. Sell your old one in the accept any advertiswelcoming covered Wonderful pride of classiieds! Ask about our ing for real estate front porch, soaking ownership neighborSuper Seller rates! which is in violation of tub in master. Convehood. Great room 541-385-5809 this law. All persons nient location. floorplan w/vaulted are hereby informed Lodge style home on $175,000 MLS# ceiling adds to openthat all dwellings adDeschutes River, 5 201204678 ness as well as corvertised are available acre, approx 575 ft. of ner fireplace. Great Melody Luelling CRS on an equal opporturiver front, Cascade PC Principal Broker, windows with quality nity basis. The Bulleviews, 5 bdrm, 5 bath, Hasson Company blinds offer a light & tin Classified 4649 sq.ft., 2 master Realtors, bright atmosphere. suites, horses OK. NW Bend 541-330-8522 $225,000. $649,000. MLS Newport Landing MLS#201205203. #201007307 Pam Bobbie Strome, Incredible NW location NORTHWEST Lester, Principal Bro- Principal Broker Starting the mid CHARMER ker, Century 21 Gold John L Scott Real $200,000s NW Bend home on Country Realty, Inc. Estate 541-385-5500 Pahlisch Homes large .2 acre lot w/4 541-504-1338 The Hasson bedrooms, 2.5 baths, Company Realtors. 2583 sq. ft. w/great LOVELY HOME NEAR Tick, Tock Karen Malanga, room, main floor PRIVATE RIVER Broker master & office, famACCESS Tick, Tock... 541-390-3326 ily room upstairs. 3 bdrm/2 bath w/masQuality kitchen ter separation on half ...don’t let time get w/center island, granacre with private away. Hire a Just too many ite counters, bamboo community access to professional out floors. Shows like Little Deschutes! Well collectibles? new. $359,900. cared for, of The Bulletin’s MLS#201200276. pride-of-ownership Sell them in “Call A Service www.DavidFoster.Biz/ shows. Traditional Fresca. David Foster, The Bulletin Classiieds sale, can close Professional” Broker 541-322-9934 quickly. MLS# Directory today! John L. Scott Real 201106802. 541-385-5809 Estate, Bend www.johnlscott.com/4 New Construction: Dewww.JohnLScott.com/Bend 0815. sirable single level Opportunity is KnockFaye Phillips, Broker 1643 sq. ft. home with ing. This westside NORTHWEST 541-480-2945 master separation. 3 home w/a separate 1 CROSSING John L. Scott Real bed, 2 bath true great bdrm apartment is New Estate, Bend room floor plan with Award-winning now available. Over 3 www.JohnLScott.com/Bend Construction by Sage island kitchen includbdrms, private office, Builders! Winner of ing pantry & corner living room w/firetwo COBA Tour of Garage Sales gas fireplace. Alder place plus a cherry Homes™ Awards, this cabinets, vaults, art kitchen w/ss appliEarth Advantage CerGarage Sales niches, ceiling fans, ances, island and tified home on a rare laminate flooring, tiled pantry. The master corner lot features a Garage Sales tops, sound insulation, suite has a tile bathductless HVAC sysblown-in blanket inroom and gas fireFind them tem, blown-in insulasulation & 90% effiplace. Near corner lot tion, and a brilliant in cient gas forced air with RV parking. Enfloor plan. heating, gas cooktop. joy outdoor living with The Bulletin Entertainer’s kitchen Spacious walk-in a covered porch and includes Chroma Classiieds closet. Call for comrear deck. Short sale quartz & porcelain tile plete spec list. bargain...hurry. 2977 counters, bar seating, 541-385-5809 $200,000. MLS# NW Wild Meadow Dr. and stainless steel 201204849. Comple- MLS #201202282. appliances. Bamboo Metolius riverfront tion date end of July. $299,900. flooring, custom property! Rare 2 Melody Luelling CRS Gary Everett, CCIM built-ins, elegant bdrm, 2 bath cabin in PC Principal Broker, Principal Broker master bath, and Camp Sherman. Hasson Company 541-480-6130 fenced yard add the Wonderful vacation Realtors, Joan Steelhammer, finishing touches. property that has 541-330-8522 Broker NorthWest Crossing newer septic system, 541-419-3717 is a nationally recogcommunity water, up- People Look for Information Remax nized model for “New About Products and dated electric, pellet Urbanism” on Bend’s stove & more. Camp Services Every Day through Have an item to Westside! Discover it Sherman Store & KoThe Bulletin Classifieds for yourself! MLS # sell quick? kanee Cafe nearby. 201203825 $339,900 Step out your door to Newer Single Story If it’s under Home, 3 bdrm, 2.5 David D. Gilmore, Bro- $ hiking, fishing, biking. ker. 541-312-7271 500 you can place it in bath, office, sunroom, A truly unique prop Coldwell Banker Mor2260 sq.ft., 60 acres, erty. The Bulletin ris Real Estate. mtn & Smith Rock MLS#201008454. Classiieds for: views. $289,000. MLS $495,000. #201206306 Pam Melody Luelling CRS Find exactly what $ 10 - 3 lines, 7 days Lester, Principal BroPC Principal Broker, $ ker, Century 21 Gold you are looking for in the Hasson Company 16 - 3 lines, 14 days CLASSIFIEDS Country Realty, Inc. Realtors, (Private Party ads only) 541-504-1338 541-330-8522

Call 541-385-5809


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 F5

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Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

Northwest Bend Homes

Northwest Bend Homes

Southwest Bend Homes

Northeast Bend Homes

Southeast Bend Homes

TUMALO 4 Bedroom, 3.5 bath, Very special 3734 sq. ft., .32 acre one-of-a-kind propcorner lot Beautiful erty! Beautiful custom lodge-style home 5180 sq. ft. home fully w/hand crafted timber loaded with views of trusses inside & out. the Cascade MounHardwood, Slab grantains. Features inite, Travertine, Heated clude: 22 Acres, 5000 Floors, Main level sq. ft.-14 stall barn, master and oversized 8600 sq. ft. indoor 4+ car garage. Asarena plus round tonishing HOME ... a arena. Rhonda Garrimust see! $750,000 Call The Bulletin At son & Chris Sperry Tina Roberts, Broker, 541-385-5809 Principal Broker & 541-419-9022 Broker 541-279-1768 TOTAL Property Place Your Ad Or E-Mail & 541-550-4922 Resources, At: www.bendbulletin.com John L. Scott Real 541-330-0588 The perfect rural home. Estate, Bend Beautiful 4 bdrm www.JohnLScott.com/Bend The Bulletin’s home in rural setting “Call A Service yet very close to Turnkey Ranch W/Cascade mtn views, built Professional” Directory shopping and schools. in 1993, 38+ acres is all about meeting Newly upgraded with with 26+ irrigation, your needs. new carpet, paint, roof barn, shop, hay shed, and incredible gourCall on one of the fenced. $550,000. met kitchen with cook MLS #201003925 professionals today! island, quartz Pam Lester, Principal counters and deluxe Broker, Century 21 A BEAUTIFUL NW ss applicances. 3 Bay Gold Country Realty, CROSSING HOME garage plus 24x40 Inc. 541-504-1338 4 bdrm, 3 bath home shop w/huge office w/ great room, masand fireplace. BeautiVIEW PROPERTY ter suite, loft family fully landscaped 2 2.49 acres between area. OPEN Sat. & acres 2/ many trees, Bend & Redmond, Sun 1-4, 2361 NW private decks and 1998 home, dbl gaLemhi Pass Dr, pleanty of RV parking. rage, insulated $499,000, 62508 Quail Ridge heated/cooled of541-550-0333. MLS #201204819. fice/workroom with $399,950. AWBREY BUTTE | full bath separate Gary Everett, CCIM $700,000 from house, ConPrincipal Broker 5 bedroom, 3 bath, crete RV pad and 541-480-6130 4288 sq. ft. home. Flat several hook-up Joan Steelhammer, .82 acre lot on spots. $180,000. Broker cul-de-sac. Vaulted MLS#201205184 541-419-3717 living/dining room, priCall KELLY Remax vate master on main STARBUCK, Broker level. Kitchen opens 541-771-7786 THE PERFECT to family room. Built-in Redmond RE/MAX SETTING FOR YOUR wet bar. Shop with Land & Homes NEW HOME concrete floor. Real Estate Broken Top, 0.53 Acres MLS#201206297 Offered at $275,000 Virginia Ross, Broker, Warm & Welcoming. Cate Cushman, ABR, CRS, GRI Stone fireplace, Principal Broker vaulted great room, 541-480-7501 541-480-1884 4 bdrm, 5.5 bath, 6266 www.catecushman.com sq.ft., short sale. This home & property $975,000. offer it all! Updated, Cate Cushman, well maintained 4+ Principal Broker beds, 3.5 bath home, 541-480-1884 slab granite, hard- www.catecushman.com wood floors, 3 wood WILD RIVER burning fireplaces, COMMUNITY formal & casual living plus bonus room, of- 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 2160 AWBREY BUTTE | sq. ft. custom home in fice & flex space on $899,000 Wild River just walk10+- acres. 7 autoStunning home with ing distance to Prinmatic, underground irviews from Jefferson gle Falls. Whether it’s rigated acres. Fenced to Mt. Hood and twina full-time residence & cross-fenced w/8 kling city lights at or vacation getaway, stall barn & tack room, night. Black walnut you’ll love escaping to 110x220 irrigated floors, blue eyed the Deschutes Naarena, 24x24 shop, granite, 2 master tional Forest with its chicken coop, 2 suites & wine cellar. 4 picturesque Pondeponds, garden area bedroom, 3.5 bath, rosa Pines and Desthat all adjoins acres 3811 sq. ft. chutes River. A must of BLM Public Land MLS#201204524 to see! $219,000 plus Cascade mounKarin Johnson, Broker www.johnlscott.com/d tain views. Adjoining 541-639-6140 aniellesnow Danielle 10+- acres also availSnow, Broker able. $695,000 541-306-1015 MLS#201201941. John L. Scott Real Melody Luelling CRS Estate, Bend PC Principal Broker, Hasson Company www.JohnLScott.com/Bend Realtors, 746 541-330-8522 Northwest Bend Homes True riverfront property in town. Approx. 100’ 1 BLOCK FROM of low bank access DRAKE PARK | BACHELOR TO w/private dock. Home $723,000 ADAMS VIEWS | offers huge living Large, corner, 9000 sq. $699,000 room w/gas fireplace, ft. lot on State Street This one-of-a-kind spacious formal dinin the Drake Park home was remodeled ing. Both have hardHistoric District. with copper in the wood flooring. Kitchen Newer great room, gourmet kitchen, was remodeled in gourmet kitchen, upunique far-eastern 2004. 2nd level has a stairs master suite & carved wood archiliving area, bedroom, maintains the old tectural details, hard3/4 bath & sitting area charm of downtown wood floors & stone w/own entrance. Main Bend. fireplaces. Huge level master plus MLS#201206543 mountain views & great room off of Scott Huggin, minutes to Bend. kitchen. Beautiful Broker, GRI MLS#201108191 grounds abundant 541-322-1500 Lester Friedman, w/roses, fruit trees, P.C., Broker shrubs & flowers. 541-330-8491 Deck access from master, family room & sitting room. Great central location. MLS#201201109 $525,000. Melody Luelling CRS PC Principal Broker, Hasson Company 2 Bdrm, 1 bath, 924 Realtors, sq.ft. Cottage in NW 541-330-8522 Crossing. Adorable Beautiful home on Awbrey Butte. Formal Cottage that sits on a What are you living room and fornice corner landmal dining room, looking for? scaped lot w/private kitchen features infenced side yard. You’ll ind it in clude knotty alder Open floor plan, spacabinets, porcelain cious living room The Bulletin Classiieds counter tops, stainw/hardwood floors. less steel appliances, Nicely appointed hardwood floors, and kitchen adjoins the 541-385-5809 breakfast nook. Famdining area w/vaulted ily room with gas fireTUCKED BACK FOR ceilings. Single car place, 4 bedrooms, PRIVACY attached garage 2.5 baths. Lovely 3 bdrm, 3.5 baths in w/alley access. Great master bedroom with 3262 sq.ft. on 10.29 location! $229,000 cathedral ceilings and acres. This property is Tina Roberts, Broker, views of Pilot Butte, meticulously main541-419-9022 jetted tub. Professiontained & set up for TOTAL Property ally landscaped with easy care use & enResources, sprinklers, security joyment. 4 acres of ir541-330-0588 system. $309,950 rigation with 2 ponds MLS#201205896. Call & irrigation equip- 3 Bedroom, 2.5 baths, 1500 sq. ft., .43 AC lot Johnnie Murray for a ment includes self Nice single level private showing. priming pumps. 1400 home located on Highland Realty sq. ft. barn with tack nearly 1/2 acre at the 541-923-0936 room & runs, fenced & end of a cul-de-sac cross fenced with diending near the Desrect access to BLM TURN THE PAGE chutes River in Tu(ride out from home). For More Ads malo. Main house has 3 bedroom suites, full 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths The Bulletin mud room/utility room with detached guest plus pantry, soaring cottage-bedroom river rock fireplace, /studio, bath and large farm style kitchenette behind the kitchen, 4 car garage 2-car garage. Large with shop area, covfenced yard and RV ered porch. $539,900 parking. Enjoy living in MLS# 201203843 or the country! $179,000 FSBO 3 bdrm, 2 bath w/ visit Tina Roberts, Broker, johnlscott.com/65053 charm, 1 story, dbl. ga541-419-9022 Bobbie Strome, rage, heat pump & TOTAL Property Principal Broker C/A, ¼ acre. Serious Resources, buyers only! $193,900. John L Scott Real 541-330-0588 541-410-8636 Estate 541-385-5500

NW BEND | $279,900 New construction to be completed August 31. One level home with granite, box ceilings, hickory cabinets, office, gas heat & fireplace. Good location for all services with the feel of living out of town. MLS#201205755 Pat Palazzi, Broker 541-771-6996

CASCADE MOUNTAIN VIEWS | $588,000 Fabulous Westside Location! 4 bedroom, 2.75 bath, 4040 sq. ft. home with living room, kitchen, great room, dining room, office, bonus room and storage galore. All situated on a .61 acre lot. MLS#201203538 PattI Geraghty, Broker 541-948-5880

NE BEND | $595,000 Beautiful and private 2.5 acre lot with Cascade views 4 bedroom plus den & bonus room. Separate 1200 sq. ft., 2-bay RV garage & storage area. 1 year home warranty included. MLS#201204530 Megan Power, Broker, GRI, CDPE 541-610-7318

SE BEND | $167,500 Well maintained 2200 sq. ft., 3 bedroom, 2 bath Fuqua home on almost half an acre. 3 decks, landscaped yard & new roof over sunroom. newer furnace, heat pump, double pane windows & electrical panel. MLS#201204000 Sydne Anderson, Broker, CRS, WCR, CDPE, Green 541-420-1111

Own a spacious home Riverfront Estate! on a large 1/2 acre lot Two Residences. Two close to shopping & Triple Garages. Two schools. Well mainLots! This amazing tained home w/newer waterfront estate fearoof, furnace and watures 265 feet of Dester heater. Detached chutes River frontage oversized 2 car gaand river views from rage w/3/4 bath & ofevery room. 4300+ fice/studio behind, not sq. ft. main house w/3 included in house sq. bedrooms and 2.5 ft. Reverse living, baths 900+ sq. ft. great room concept guest home with 3 w/wood burning firebedrooms and 1 bath. place. Master suite Gourmet kitchen with with access to hot tub waterfall edge granite & decks, kitchen & counters. Office loft living & 1/2 bath on space. Six-car gamain level. Downrage, 900 ft. deep stairs offers 3 beds, 1 well, well house, shop bath, family room + to the middle of the office. Lots of room for river with deeded aceveryone. MLS# cess. Radiant heated 201202932. floors and interior $250,000. waterfall. Melody Luelling CRS MLS#201202209. PC Principal Broker, 20015 Chaney Road, Hasson Company Bend, OR Realtors, www.tourfactory.com/85 541-330-8522 6573. $1,695,000 John R. Gist, Panoramic Mountain Principal Broker. Views. 6800 Sq.ft., Cascadia Properties 3500 + sq.ft. shop, 541-815-5000 5 bdrm, 7 baths, 25 acres, $1,299,000. River front home. Enjoy Cate Cushman, all that river front livPrincipal Broker ing has to offer near 541-480-1884 downtown. Fantastic www.catecushman.com opportunity to upgrade this well built 3 bdrm home and creWant to impress the ate your own estate in relatives? Remodel this incredible setting. your home with the Open floor plan with help of a professional mostly main level living space, oak floorfrom The Bulletin’s ing and loft area. Pri“Call A Service vate studio apartment Professional” Directory over the large garage and extensive decks Peaceful Lifestyle, for outdoor living on vacation rental, many the river. Call today. amenitites. 4 Bdrm, 502 NW Harmon Blvd. 3 bath, 1813 sq.ft., - MLS #201204651. $246,000. $995,000. Cate Cushman, Gary Everett, CCIM Principal Broker Principal Broker 541-480-1884 541-480-6130 www.catecushman.com Joan Steelhammer, Broker 541-419-3717 Say “goodbuy” Remax to that unused Check out the item by placing it in classiieds online The Bulletin Classiieds www.b e n d b u lle tin .c o m Updated daily

541-385-5809

RIVER WILD COMMUNITY 2006 immaculate home with 2049 sq. ft., 3 bdrm/2 bath, in Mt. Bachelor Village. 2 master suites, kitchen & great room, stainless steel appliances, 20 miles of Deschutes River hiking, pool, hot tub and lodge all at your disposal. Must see! www.johnlscott.com/s helleytexley. Shelley R. Texley, Principal RECREATIONAL Broker, 541-693-8767 HAVEN John L. Scott Real Tranquil views from Estate, Bend condo at Seventh www.JohnLScott.com/Bend Mountain Resort. Located minutes from SE Bend Mt. Bachelor, lakes, Badger Forest downtown Bend. Affordable Excellence Many amenities! Call Starting in the mid for details. $100,000s MLS#201205410 Pahlisch Homes More photos: The Hasson www.johnlscott.com/1 Company Realtors. 3368 Lisa McCarthy, Rhianna Kunkler, Broker, SRES Broker 541-419-8639 541-306-0939 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend SE Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend The Bridges World Class Amenities REDMOND TOWNSITE Starting in the mid 3 bedroom, 1.5 bath in $200,000s 1064+/- sq.ft. on a Pahlisch Homes 4792+/sq.ft. lot. The Hasson Solid 1950’s conCompany Realtors. struction has been Edie DeLay, Broker professionally refur541-420-2950 bished. It is a must Julie Burgoni, Broker preview property. The 541-306-8927 owner is in the business of moving SNOWBERRY homes, refurbishing VILLAGE #120 them & finding a new $119,000 family to own them. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, The home is vacant, 1674 sq. ft. 2000 Silso a preview of the vercrest. Corian home is EASY, anycounters, Tile floors, time day or night. Trex decking, Solar There is also a generTubes. Formal living & ous detached, dining rooms, enordouble-garage. The mous kitchen with iszoning is C2, so an land, bay window in-home business breakfast area. Mascould be perfect. ter suite, 2 walk-in $90,000. closets and huge MLS#201205193. bath. Den or 3rd Bobbie Strome, bedroom with French Principal Broker doors, 3-car garage, John L Scott Real central A/C, 1 year Estate 541-385-5500 AHS warranty. Marilyn Rohaly, Broker REMARKABLE 541-322-9954 RIVERFRONT HOME John L. Scott Real Riverfront home with Estate, Bend outstanding river www.JohnLScott.com/Bend views in gated community. Beautiful Santa SPOTLESS & Fe home, 3 masters, STYLISH IN triple garage, huge BROKEN TOP shop, 13.46 acres. A 3 Bdrm, 3.5 Bath, 2703 must see! $850,000 sq. ft.., double garage, MLS#201010467 2 master suites & den www.johnlscott.com/9 on main level! Stain2475 Kellie Cook, less, hardwood, tile, Broker 541-408-0463 stone, fireplace. QualJohn L. Scott Real ity craftsmanship! Estate, Bend Bend’s premier gated www.JohnLScott.com/Bend golf course community, close to river trail. Take care of $399,000 More photos: your investments www.johnlscott.com/4 with the help from 3199 Peggy Lee Combs, Broker, The Bulletin’s 541-480-7653 “Call A Service John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend Professional” Directory POWELL BUTTE! 10 ACRES! VIEWS! Custom home, spacious & light, gourmet kitchen, office & more. $825,000. MLS#201106428 Call VIRGINIA, Principal Broker 541-350-3418 Redmond RE/MAX Land & Homes Real Estate

www.JohnLScott.com/Bend

SW Bend Deschutes Landing Riverfront Townhomes Starting in the low $400,000s Pahlisch Homes The Hasson Company Realtors. Edie Delay, Broker 541-420-2950, Julie Burgoni, Broker 541-306-8927

NW BEND | $315,000 Beautifully maintained home just a short distance from the river trail. Wood floors, gas fireplaces, stainless steel appliances, large master suite. Gorgeous fenced yard, paver patio, wrap around decks. MLS#201203962 Margo Degray, Broker, ABR, CRS 541-480-7355

SADDLEBACK | $435,000 Serene & light singlelevel, 4 bedroom, 3 bath home with den/office & attached apartment on 2.6 acres. Beautiful grounds, patios with fire pit and hot tub, fenced yard. Next to 80-acre forest parcel. MLS#201204225 Lynne Connelley, EcoBroker, ABR, CRS 541-408-6720

SW BEND | $539,000 Treasure of a home in River Rim! Warm & inviting single level built by Schumacher. Extensive use of woods & custom window coverings. A must see to appreciate the extensive amenities! MLS#201108147 Jim & Roxanne Cheney, Brokers 541-390-4050 541-390-4030

Find It in The Bulletin Classifieds! 541-385-5809 SW BEND | $749,000 Broken Top 4 bedroom, 4.5 bath located on the 17th fairway with views of Mt. Bachelor. Master and Junior Master on main level. Two bedrooms upstairs, both ensuite. Extra-large 3 car garage. MLS#201104488 Susan Agli, Broker, SRES 541-383-4338 541-408-3773

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Door-to-door selling with fast results! It’s the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classiied

Look at: Bendhomes.com SALE PENDING! 4 for Complete Listings of bdrm, 2.5 bath, 3451 Area Real Estate for Sale sq. ft., .41 acre cor748 ner lot New home under construction by Northeast Bend Homes Greg Welch with luxury finishes. Great NE BEND | $249,900 room plan, Den/office, Custom vintage home Main level master, 3 remodeled in 2006/ bedrooms plus Bonus 2007. 2535 sq. ft., 3 upstairs. Triple car gabedroom, 2.5 bath, rage. $580,000 newer plaster & inteTina Roberts, Broker, rior paint, carpet, tile, 541-419-9022 doors & finish work. TOTAL Property Nestled on a beautiResources, fully treed double city 541-330-0588 lot. RV parking. MLS#201206805 Starwood | $231,500 Park-like setting on .27 Sherry Perrigan, Broker 541-410-4938 acre lot. Remodeled 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1811 sq. ft. home, great room floor plan with vaulted ceilings, entertainer's kitchen, spacious master suite, & outdoor living space. MLS#201203354 John Snippen, Broker, MBA, ABR, GRI 541-312-7273 541-948-9090

541-385-5809

Providence | $175,000 Fabulous 2 story home with mountain views. Very attractive and newly remodeled Great room floor plan, home in established open to kitchen & neighborhood!! Large dining area and large .49 acre lot in the deck overlooking heart of Bend!! Upbackyard. Master on dated from roof to main, large family and plumbing, this is one utility room downyou will want to see stairs. inside of!! 3 bdrm/2 MLS#201206553 bath, beautiful Becky Brunoe, Broker kitchen, large living 541-350-4772 room and a fantastic family room are just the beginning. Fenced backyard, w/fantastic garden area, patio & large garage w/220 electric allow lots of outside living space as well! $250,000 MLS#201202508. John L. Scott Real EsNeed help ixing stuff? tate 541-548-1712 Call A Service Professional ind the help you need. Need to get an www.bendbulletin.com ad in ASAP? You can place it 749 online at: Southeast Bend Homes www.bendbulletin.com 3 Bedroom, 2.5 baths 2166 sq.ft. .47 acre 541-385-5809 lot. Immaculate home on nearly 1/2 acre. 750 Traditional style Redmond Homes w/formal living, vaulted ceiling, family Redmond room w/gas fireplace Affordable home with numerous adjoins the kitchen updates including a and dining area. Nice brand new roof, intekitchen w/breakfast rior paint, upgraded bar. Bedrooms up w/ windows. Outfitted tile baths. Park-like with entry ramps and setting yard w/sprinwide doors to acklers, fenced and commodate handicap spacious outdoor livaccess. Extensive ing area. Paved RV concrete decking pad & covered storaround the home and age. Must See! in-ground sprinklers $299,000 complete the yard. Tina Roberts, Broker, Large storage shed 541-419-9022 shelters your tools TOTAL Property and yard equipment Resources, from the elements. 541-330-0588 Must see, traditional 4 Bedroom, 2.5 baths, sale! $119 ,900 2889 sq. ft., .51 AC MLS#201204932 lot. Charming 2-story D&D Realty Group LLC home, .51 acre lot that 866-346-7868 backs to the canal Too new for MLS! 2159 with no thru traffic. sq. ft. home with huge Beautiful Great room Cascade views, 1 open to Kitchen acre, dbl. garage. Call w/slab granite, vaulted Nancy Popp, Broker ceilings & hardwood 541-815-8000 floors. Game room w/pool table and of- Crooked River Realty fice/den. Beautifully Large single story 3 landscaped w/sprinbdrm, 2 bath, 2408 klers and RV parking. sq. ft., hardwood, $345,000 granite counters, .23 Tina Roberts, Broker, acre lot, mtn. views, 541-419-9022 low maint. landscapTOTAL Property ing. $149,000. MLS Resources, #201205100. 541-330-0588 Pam Lester, Principal Broker Century 21 NE Bend Gold Country Realty, McCall Landing Inc. 541-504-1338 Our Newest Community Starting in the Mid 3 bdrm, 2 bath custom $100,000’s. home, huge shop. Pahlisch Homes $299,000. MLS# The Hasson 201203307 Company Realtors. Call Julie Fahlgren Rhianna Kunkler, Broker, 541-550-0098 Broker, 541-306-0939 Crooked River Realty

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Southwest Bend Homes BROKEN TOP | $1,269,000 The Pinehurst at Broken Top by Steven Van Sant/Pacwest Homes! Unmatched quality & craftsmanship! Single level, 3car garage, custom cabinetry & trim, 0.55 acre golf course view lot. No expense spared! MLS#201204424 David Gilmore, Broker 541-312-7271

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SOUTHWEST BEND

CENTRAL OREGON HOMES Better than new, stunning master on the main plan in desirable River Canyon Estates! This 2452 SF master on the main home sits on a corner lot and features 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, loft, bonus and formal dining room. Lots of builder upgrades and tons of custom touches. A true must see!

Rhianna Kunkler, Broker 541-306-0939


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Crook County Homes

NEW CONSTRUC770 NE Quince Ave., TION COMING Redmond, 3 bdrm, 2 NW REDMOND bath in quiet NE neighborhood near 1602 sq. ft. 3 bdrm 2 public park. Upbath, lg lot, extended graded tile & wood. RV parking, sprinThis home shows klers, landscaped. pride of ownership. 24x24 oversized ga$124,500. rage. Call JEANNE SCHARLUND, PrinciMLS#201202761 pal Broker Call Don Chapin, 541-420-7978 Broker Redmond Re/Max Land 541-350-6777 & Homes Real Estate Redmond RE/MAX Land & Homes NEW CONSTRUCReal Estate TION COMING Beautiful well cared for NW REDMOND ranch-style home on 1504 sq. ft. 3 bdrm 2 .51 acre. 3 bdrms, 2 bath lg lot, RV parkbaths, over 2000 ing, sprinklers, landsq.ft., all on one level. scaped 24x24 overHome has 9’ ceilings, sized garage. Pricing triple garage and view in the $155,000 of Smith Rock and the range. Call JEANNE Cascades. Tons of SCHARLUND, Princiupgrades, this is a pal Broker home you will defi541-420-7978 nitely want to see. Redmond Re/Max Land $223,500. & Homes Real Estate MLS#201107890 John L. Scott Real UPDATED HOME! | Estate 541-548-1712 $139,900. 1098 sq. ft., 3 bedrm, 2 bath, Between Bend and Landscaped. All new Redmond, 4 bdrm, carpet, paint, kitchen 2.75 bath, 2485 sq.ft., cabinets, SS appli2.24 acres, 30x30 ances, bathroom shop, w/RV bay, huge cabinets & sink rear deck. $369,000. Jim Hinton MLS #201103219. 541-420-6229 Pam Lester, Principal Central Oregon Realty Broker, Century 21 Group, LLC Gold Country Realty, Inc. 541-504-1338 1/4 Mi. Deschutes River frontage. Custom Call a Pro single level 3 bdrm, 3 Whether you need a bath, 3962 sq.ft., 12.72 acre gated fence ixed, hedges community, private trimmed or a house setting. $997,000. built, you’ll ind MLS #201205961. Pam Lester, Principal professional help in Broker, Century 21 The Bulletin’s “Call a Gold Country Realty, Service Professional” Inc. 541-504-1338 Directory 2 bdrm, 2 bath on 1.12 541-385-5809 acres. $139,900. MLS#201203821 Linda Lou Day-Wright, Clean single level 1590 sq. ft. home with 3 Broker, Crooked River bdrms, , 2 baths, new Realty, 541-771-2585 flooring and paint, central AC, located in Where can you ind a Forest Commons. helping hand? MLS#201204758. $130,000 John L. From contractors to Scott Real Estate yard care, it’s all here 541-548-1712 in The Bulletin’s Cottage-Style Bunga“Call A Service low. $65,000. 2 bdrm, Professional” Directory 1 bath, 780 sq. ft. completely remodeled, 9148 sq. ft. lot, 32.42 Acres in Urban park-like landscaping, Growth Boundary, greenhouse. Adjacent to The MLS#201205043. Greens, kitty corner to Pam Lester, Principal new Ridgeview High Broker, Century 21 School. $599,000. Gold Country Realty, MLS #201203193 Inc. 541-504-1338 Pam Lester, Principal Broker, Century 21 Gold Country Realty, Inc. 541-504-1338 3360 sq. ft. shop with 3 overheads. Oversized dbl. garage, 1109 sq. ft. home - 1 Eagle Crest, on 16th tee/Ridge GC, FSBO, acre. $125,000. MLS $367,000 3 Bdrm, 3 #201206048Call bath, large den, 2166 Nancy Popp, Broker sq ft. For details, visit 541-815-8000 Central-oregon-resort-home.com Crooked River Realty 541-504-7166

Custom NEW SINGLE LEVEL Fabulous Canyon Rim. Immaculate Looking for your next HOME | $159,900 home! Spectacular Once in a lifetime opemployee? panoramic views. Pri- 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, portunity. Breathtak1554 sq. ft. Ranch Place a Bulletin help vate, fenced 0.44 acre ing views of the canStyle. Landscaped wanted ad today and yard landscaped to yon from your reverse reach over 60,000 w/sprinkler sys. perfection. Over 1000 living floor plan. readers each week. sq. ft. of decking & MLS#201203740 Vaulted living room, Your classified ad Jim Hinton water feature w/3 pellet stove. The will also appear on 541-420-6229 ponds. Single level kitchen has an island bendbulletin.com home features hard- Central Oregon Realty & solid oak cabinetry. which currently reGroup, LLC wood flooring, granite Many upgrades inceives over countertops, eating NICE LARGE HOME | cluding tiled baths, 1.5 million page bar, Triple garage with huge bonus room on $139,000. All remodviews every month shop area & RV lower level, attached eled and ready to at no extra cost. parking. $324,750 garage, landscaping, move into. DownBulletin Classifieds MLS#201203630 circular drive, carport, stairs with huge living Get Results! John L. Scott Real decks, paver patio, area, 4 bdrms, 2 Call 385-5809 or Estate 541-548-1712 garden area & more! baths. Fred Crouch place your ad on-line 8x10 storage shed & Impeccable 541-350-1945 custom at partial fencing. home. 3 Bdrm, 2.5 Central Oregon Realty bendbulletin.com MLS#201206225 Group, LLC bath, bonus room, $269,000 den, 2633 sq.ft., 5+/- ON THE 11th FAIRD&D Realty Group LLC 755 acres, hardwood, WAY behind the gate 866-346-7868 Sunriver/La Pine Homes large rear deck. at Eagle Crest. 3725 $300,000. MLS sq. ft., 4 bedrooms, #201201384 Pam Just too many 3.75 baths, 2 huge 52050 White Fir $340,000. 2360 sf, 3 Lester, Principal Brobonus rooms, large collectibles? bdrm, 3 bath, horse ker, Century 21 Gold deck, 3 car garage, set-up, fencing, barn. Country Realty, Inc. alder cabinetry, granSell them in High Lakes Realty & 541-504-1338 ite countertops. Property ManageThe Bulletin Classiieds LAKESIDE - The views MLS#201203992. ment, 541-536-0117 $577,000 don’t get any better than this from your John L. Scott Real Es- Craftsman style home 3 541-385-5809 tate 541-548-1712 patio! 3 bdrm/2 bath, bdrm, 2.5 bath, mas1871 sq.ft. Creekside ter on main floor. Fieldstone crossing, 4 Townhome - partially Hickory floors, tile Get your bdrm, 2.5 bath, 2130 furnished. counter tops, private business sq.ft., gas fireplace, MLS#201202466 patio, gas fireplace. tile countertops, slate $239,950 John L. Too many extras to entry, hardwood, huge Scott Real Estate list! $185,000 MLS# G R O W deck, fenced, RV 541-548-1712 201204253 area. $189,900. MLS Cascade Realty, Large Home in NW #2012059483. Pam with an ad in Dennis Haniford, Redmond $162,500. Lester, Principal BroPrinc. Broker The Bulletin’s Huge master suite, ker, Century 21 Gold 1-541-536-1731 huge fenced back“Call A Service Country Realty, Inc. yard, well maintained 14211 Whitewater 541-504-1338 Professional” home. MLS $359,900. 2947 sf, 4 Directory #201103365 bdrm 3 bath, custom Great family home in Call Jim Hinton home in Wildriver. Redmond’s only golf Price reduced! 4 bdrm, 541-420-6229. High Lakes Realty & community. Immacu2 bath beautiful home Central Oregon Realty Property Managelate 3 bed, 3 bath with big shop. Group, LLC ment, 541-536-0117 home with living & $99,900. MLS# large family room The Bulletin 201106461 151719 Wagon Trail, overlooking the Call Julie Fahlgren To Subscribe call LaPine, $178,000. 3 course and beautiBroker, 541-550-0098 bdrm, 2 bath, 1702 fully landscaped 541-385-5800 or go to Crooked River Realty sq. ft. home, 3 acres. backyard with water www.bendbulletin.com Oversize 2-car gafeature, large deck Located in the heart of Single level on 1 acre, 3 rage with bath. High bdrm, 2 bath, 1716 with awning, over- Redmond. Beautifully Lakes Realty & Propsq.ft., master separasized garage with updated home on .37 erty Management tion, office, fenced, room for a shop or acre lot w/upgrades. 541-536-0117 flower garden, RV cart. RV gated park- Brand new master parking. $145,000. 15676 ing. In new high Twin Dr., suite. Home is 44 MLS #201007848. school Ridgeview dis- bdrm/2 bath, large $135,900. Spotless 3 Pam Lester, Principal trict. $257,500. bdrm, 2 bath, covliving room, formal Broker, Century 21 MLS#201204230. Call ered porch, oversized dining, nice kitchen! Gold Country Realty, Tena Grabar for pri- Outside: pull through garage, 1 acre. High Inc. 541-504-1338 vate showing. High- garage, extra storage Lakes Realty & Propland Realty erty Management bldg. Alley access SPACIOUS AND IM541-923-2311 541-536-0117 MACULATE 2250 sq. makes moving your ft. craftsman style toys around a breeze! Gorgeous mountain and home with 4 bdrms, 3 15862 Bristlecone lane. Call to see this one of $92,500. Darling 1128 pasture views. baths, triple garage on a kind home today! sq. ft. 2 bdrm + bo$184,900. the Dry Canyon in MLS#201202360. nus room, 2 bath, MLS 201205061 Redmond. $235,000 $225,000 decks, on 1 acre. High Call Melody Curry, MLS#201204870. John L. Scott Real EsLakes Realty & PropBroker, 541-771-1116 John L. Scott Real tate 541-548-1712 erty Management Crooked River Realty Estate 541-548-1712 541-536-0117 Main level living... Except for bonus room FIND IT! Great neighborhood. 16033 Cascade upstairs! Granite BUY IT! wonderful floor plan $130,000. 1538 sq. ft. counters, wood floorSELL IT! with large bonus room 3 bdrm, 2 bath, overing, gas range. The Bulletin Classiieds or could be considsized garage, .89 acre Double up/down ered another bedon paved road. High blinds. Den/office. 3 UPDATED OLDER room, fenced back Lakes Realty & Propcar garage and RV HOME $149,000 yard. Master bederty Management parking behind gate. New flooring, paint, aproom is on the main 541-536-0117 Fully landscaped with pliances & RV parkfloor as well. sprinkler system. ing. MLS#201205102 Advertise your car! $130,000 MLS#201204020 Call Jim Hinton Add A Picture! MLS#201205216 Reach thousands of readers! John L. Scott 541-420-6229. D&D Realty Group LLC Call 541-385-5809 Real Estate Central Oregon Realty 866-346-7868 The Bulletin Classifieds 541-548-1712 Group, LLC

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1764 Lariat Dr., This 3 bdrm/2 bath RESIDENTIAL/Investment | $89,000 $95,000. 3 bdrm, 2 home has it all vaulted bath, 1296 sq. ft. dbl. ceilings, new win- Recent remodel w/new windows, doors, paint, garage with shop dows, open floor conand flooring. area. 1 acre. High cepts, granite counter MLS#201203189 Lakes Realty & Proptops, slate shower in Call Fred Crouch, erty Management master. Outside is a 541-350-1945 541-536-0117 back deck that wraps around with a hot tub Central Oregon Realty Group LLC and covered access 2532 Cuevas Ct., to the double garage. $219,000. ImmacuMETICULOUS HOME! $128,500 MLS late 2786 sq. ft. 4 Desirable location, only 201206017 bdrm, 2 bath home on minutes from town & Cascade Realty, 1.6 acres. High Lakes Prineville Reservoir Realty & Property Dennis Haniford, Princ. has breathtaking CasBroker Management cade views. Low 1-541-536-1731 541-536-0117 maintenance yard. Open roomy floor 3 Bedroom, 2.5 baths, Very clean home which plan, vaulted ceilings, has been newly 1389 sq. ft. in Sunrilots of light from the painted inside. Has a ver. Charming cotlarge windows, nice large shop/garage tage w/separate guest office, and nook. Two with 10’ door and adquarters. Recent retreed acres, plenty of ditional storage. model includes fresh room for your toys!!! $104,000 MLS paint, counters, carMLS#201204820 201205574 Cascade pet & rustic charm. $159,900 Realty, Dennis HaniCozy living room D&D Realty Group LLC ford, Princ. Broker w/gas fireplace, 866-346-7868 1-541-536-1731 kitchen, bedrooms & Just bought a new boat? bath. A large Sell your old one in the 756 wrap-around deck, mature trees and Jefferson County Homes classiieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! yard, cul-de-sac loca541-385-5809 tion. Top rated Sunri- Reduced! Private nice ver resort! $249,900 area close in at 762 Tina Roberts, Broker, Crooked River Ranch. Homes with Acreage 541-419-9022 3 bdrm., 2 bath, very TOTAL Property nice DBL car garage, 145040 Hwy 31 Resources, $99,900, MLS $149,900. 5 acres, 541-330-0588 201202001. pole barn, greenCall Julie Fahlgren house, 2 Bdrm, 2 Broker 541-550-0098 bath, 1120 sf, sunFind It in Crooked River Realty room. High Lakes ReThe Bulletin Classifieds! alty & Property Man246 Jefferson St, Me541-385-5809 agement, tolius. Exc. invest541-536-0117 ment or first home. BEAUTIFUL CUSTOM mountain Home has good rental Fantastic LOG HOME $323,925 views! Beautiful Powhistory. Located close Log home on acreage ell Butte log home on to the school. Owner with mountain views. 5.81 acres with 2 bed will carry contract. Granite countertops, 2 bath, with master on $54,900. MLS hardwoods, Shaw the main. Den/loft up201205682 Juniper farm sink. Barn, passtairs leading out to Realty 541-504-5393 ture, & pond. wrapporch and fantastic around porch. Master $49,900. Well kept mountain views. Trasuite & bath with claw home just off paveditional sale. call for foot tub. please call ment, close to school showing! $278,000. for more information. and easy access to MLS#201200717 MLS#201206973 highway. Move in John L. Scott TenBroek-Hilber ready with kitchen apReal Estate Group, LLC pliances and washer 541-548-1712 541-550-4944 & dryer. Enclosed Dawn carport gives feeling 16048 $329,000. Custom of garage. Wall A/C in home on 4.15 acres, dining room, 3 bdrms 1699 sf built in 2002. and 2 baths. Small High Lakes Realty & fenced backyard. Property ManageMLS#201203697 ment, 541-536-0117 D&D Realty Group LLC 866-346-7868 16249 South Dr. $595,000. 6.27 acre Close to schools. Nice 3 horse property with bedroom home in gorgeous 2922 sf Nice 2 story home with town and close to home, shop. High 4 bdrm, 2bath, 2 are schools. Landscaped Lakes Realty & Propmaster bedrooms. with a fenced yard, erty Management, Upstairs has a family RV parking too! 541-536-0117 room & full bath, dbl. MLS#201106963 garage and is fully $79,900 D&D Realty 145650 Buckaroo fenced. $129,900. $149,900. 3 Bdrm, 2 Group LLC MLS 201205524 bath, 1950 sf, 2 story, 866-346-7868 Cascade Realty, garage, 1.5 acres. Dennis Haniford, Princ. Very clean, very cute High Lakes Realty & Broker Property Managehome in Culver with 1-541-536-1731 ment, 541-536-0117 fully fenced back yard and RV parking in 50760 South Fawn Dr Ranch-style 3 bdrm, 2 back. Turn key ready $169,000. Top of the bath, open floorplan, and a great buy. Don’t line 3 Bdrm 2 bath, DRRH area, ½ ac.. miss this one! 840 sf shop, 1.16 adjoining ½ ac. view MLS#201205983 acres. High Lakes lot can be purchased $94,500 D&D Realty Realty & Property separately. Group LLC Management, 509-585-9050. 866-346-7868 541-536-0117

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Homes with Acreage

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Recreational Homes & Property

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Acreages

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

Snowberry Village #120 $119,000 • 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 1674 sq. ft. 2000 Silvercrest • Corian counters, Tile floors • Trex decking, Solar Tubes • Formal living & dining rooms • Enormous kitchen with island and bay window breakfast area • Master suite 2 walk-in closets and huge bath • Den or 3rd bedroom with French doors • 3-Car Garage • Central A/C, 1 year AHS warranty Call Marilyn Rohaly, Broker, 541-322-9954 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com

Suntree Village #72 $25,000 • 3 bedrooms, 2 baths • 1989 Guerdon • Very open floor plan • Upgraded – 1296 sq. ft. • Newer roof, windows, appliances and more • Walk to Senior Center Call Marilyn Rohaly, Broker, 541-322-9954 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com Snowberry Village #119 $144,500. 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, 1920 sq.ft., 2000 Silvercrest - triplewide. Living room, family room, dining room, remodeled kitchen w/breakfast bar, private master suite w/walk in closet, master bath w/garden tub & double shower, gas FA heat plus air conditioning, immaculate - too many upgrades to list! Call Marilyn Rohaly, Broker, 541-322-9954 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com 2350 NW 36TH ST., REDMOND 4 bdrm, 2 bath, 1840 sq. ft., newer manufactured home. Large 1+/acre corner lot, many upgrades. $115,000. MLS#201205016 Call Don Chapin, Broker 541-350-6777 Redmond RE/MAX Land & Homes Real Estate

Possible owner terms. 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1107 sq.ft., laminated wood flooring, carport w/ storage, fenced, landscaped, sprinkler system. $33,000. MLS #201205972 Pam Lester, Principal Broker, Century 21 Gold Country Realty, Inc. 541-504-1338

13206 SW Golden Beautiful & peaceful Mantel, CRR Custom setting | $649,000 2470 sq. ft., 3 bed- 4 bdrm, 2.5 baths, 2275 room, 2.5 bath on sq. ft. on 40 acres 1.98 acres. Hexagon horse property, access to BLM. shaped great room MLS#201204029. has lots of windows to Vicci Bowen enjoy the views. 1600 541-410-9730 sq. ft. garage/shop with RV door. Land- Central Oregon Realty Group, LLC scaped, fruit trees and fenced. $239,000 MLS# 201205217. Need to get an ad Juniper Realty 541-504-5393 in ASAP? Log home on 2+ acres $264,000 | Mtn. views Fax it to 541-322-7253 with rustic feeling, two acres irrigation, New The Bulletin Classiieds tile in master bath. New paint & carpet. Great small acreage COUNTRY RANCH | w/privacy, room for $421,900 animals & your toys. Beautiful ranch on Detached shop, 15.74 acres. 3 bedMLS#201200600 room, 2.5 bath with Fred Crouch, wrap-around covered 541-350-1945 porch, 115'x215' Central Oregon Realty smooth welded pipe Group LLC arena, 3 stall 36'x48' barn. End of road pri52916 Old Lake Rd vacy, 2 large ponds $199,000. Two 1848 attract waterfowl & sf homes, two 20-acre wildlife. parcels, 4 car garage. MLS#201202834 High Lakes Realty & Craig Long, Broker Property Manage541-480-7647 ment, 541-536-0117 Redmond. 109ý acres with 64 acres COI. Full Cascade Mtn. views. $499,000. MLS#201006080 TRAVIS HANNAN, Principal Broker, 541-788-3480 Redmond RE/MAX Land & Homes Real Estate

Find exactly what you are looking for in the KOZY KABIN | CLASSIFIEDS $265,000 Cozy log home with Cascade views at Custom home and outCrooked River Ranch. standing Cascade Horse barn & tack Views! $299,450 room, enormous shop MLS#201204034 with separate room Call Melody Curry, Extra space in the bunk Broker house/storage build541-771-1116 ing. MLS#201203985 Crooked River Gail Day 541-306-1018 Realty Central Oregon Realty Group, LLC Fantastic river views from the overlooking People Look for Information trex decking of this About Products and expansive home minServices Every Day through utes from the heart of Central Oregon. Over The Bulletin Classifieds 4500 sq. ft. of 50040 Darlene Way well-appointed living $179,900. 10 acres, which includes an 1112 sf cabin, bunkopen concept kitchen house, shop, garage. with granite slab High Lakes Realty & countertops, slate Property Manageflooring, and high end ment, 541-536-0117 appliances. Cobblestone fireplaces adorn 12250 NW Dove Rd. multiple rooms with Custom cedar sided large windows exhome with floor to posing the Cascade ceiling windows to Mountains and Destake in the mtn., chutes River Canyon. views. Immaculate Large outbuilding for 1841 sq. ft., 3 bdrm, 2 your toys or animals bath home, tongue & as well as a shop and groove vaulted ceiltriple attached garage. ings, gas free stand10+ acres waiting for ing stove, and wood you! MLS#201206326 accents throughout. $530,000 Completely fenced D&D Realty Group LLC 4.81 acres. $385,000 866-346-7868 MLS# 201101447 Juniper Realty, GATED ACREAGE 541-504-5393 Very secluded gated 10 fenced acres with 15775 Parkway Dr., 2000 sq. ft. custom $139,900. 2 bdrm, 2½ home, trex decking, bath 1386 sq. ft. shop Mtn. Views, 60x36 in/barn, 4.69 acres, sulated Shop with athorse ready! High tached guest quarters, Lakes Realty & Prop2 septic, loafing shed, erty Management RV hook-up, private 541-536-0117 well, plenty of room to park toys and have 1592 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 animals. NO CC&R’s bath, site-built, 2 car or HOA, easy access garage, 24x36 shop to Bend, Redmond or w/10’ ceilings & 220V Sisters. One-of-a-kind power, all on 1.22 treed property. $475,000 acre lot in CRR. MLS#201203090. $195,000. Call Tena Grabar at http://bend.craigslist.org/ reo/3069581828.html Highland Realty Call 541-633- 9613 541-923-2311

Log home on 5 acres has 3 bdrm/2 bath RV lot, or build your with remodeled dream home! $44,900 kitchen with stainless MLS#201008906 stove & fridge. 36x40 Call Melody Curry, barn, 36x40 shop/gaBroker rage fenced & cross 541-771-1116 fenced. So much here Crooked River for $329,000 MLS Realty 201206125 Cascade Realty, Check out the Dennis Haniford, classiieds online Princ. Broker www.bendbulletin.com 1-541-536-1731 Updated daily MOTIVATED SELLER! The perfect vacation 41 acres with a custom home on one acre! A 3135 sq. ft. home. fully furnished 2 Open living area with bdrm/1 bath retreat in large river rock fireCrescent Lake. Close place, heated bathto numerous lakes, room floor, granite trails and Willamette counters & more. 25 Ski Pass. Quality conacres of COI irrig. struction, Homes by Add’l horse & shop David & David shows bldgs. RV hookup. throughout the chalet. $599,000 MLS Knotty Blue Pine inte#201107246 John L. rior, river rock fireScott Real Estate place, upper & lower 541-548-1712 decks, upgraded inNice gentle sloping lot stallation. on 2+ acres with small $265,000 MLS# barn with two stalls. 201104526 Call Great horse property, Linda 541-815-0606 or for those 4-H kids. Cascade Realty 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, recently pro764 fessionally cleaned. Farms & Ranches Nice sized deck, mature landscaping, plus Equestrian 5-acres, a small greenhouse. 36x48 6-stall barn, MLS#201009070 grooming stall, wash $149,900 rack, hay barn & more D&D Realty Group LLC + 1560 sq.ft. home! 866-346-7868 $310,000. MLS#201204782 Call Park like setting on 2.27 Nancy Popp, acres with 322’ of 541-815-8000 river frontage. Has Crooked River Realty 1430 sq. ft. with 2 bd/2ba with large of771 fice den. Large 28x32 Lots shop/garage & landscaped. $124,900 870 - $149,000 ProbMLS 201205526 ably the finest golf Cascade Realty, course lot remaining. Dennis Haniford, Princ. Located behind a priBroker vate gate of upscale 1-541-536-1731 homes. Looks east at PRINEVILLE the mountains and New 3 bedroom, 2 sits on the #17 hole of bath 1623 sq. ft. 1/2 the golf course. Level acre lot park-like and easy to build. setting, home just Eagle Crest recently updated. Properties™ $139,500. MLS 866-722-3370 #201205863 TRAVIS HANNAN, LOTS Principal Broker • .5 Acre, nicely treed 541-788-3480 lot $18,000 Redmond ReMax AD#3362 Land & Homes Real • .6 Acre, septic apEstate proved $32,500 AD#2092 RECENT PRICE RE- • .5 Acre, close to river DUCTION!! Custom $34,900 AD#2302 home on 7+ acres. • 5 Acres, ready for your Cascade Mountain dream home views, 2146 sq. ft., $69,999 AD#8572 3Bdrm/2Bath, living • .63 Acre, Deschutes room PLUS a family River $76,500 room and separate AD#2542 office. Tile, granite • 1.24 Acre, NW Bend and hickory. 2016 acreage $79,900 sq.ft. shop. $379,900 AD#2962 MLS#201106497 • 20 Acres, fully fenced John L. Scott Real w/security gate Estate 541-548-1712 $89,000 AD#2822 SISTERS | $579,900 • 1.83 Acre, Deschutes River lot $124,000 Great Cascade MounAD#2182 tain views from this • 2+ Acre Riverfront, 3,000 sq. ft. home on owner financing 6.75 acres with 4 $135,000 AD#3202 acres of Three Sisters irrigation. 40'x40' • 26+ Acres, NW Bend home site $279,000 barn, 5 loafing sheds, AD#8112 3-car garage with shop. 2 bedrooms, • 40+ Acres, Cascade Mtn. views bonus room & office. $385,000 AD#3452 MLS#201205094 • 395.77 Acres, Mtn. & Mark Valceschini, P.C., Butte views Broker, CRS, GRI $399,000 AD#2642 541-383-4364 TEAM Birtola Garmyn Prudential High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www.BendOregon RealEstate.com 908 - $85,000 Enjoy views of the Cascade Mountain range from this large home site conveniently located close to the Lakeside Sports Center and kids spray park. Enjoy all the resort amenities that come with ownership at Eagle Crest Resort. Eagle Crest Properties™ 866-722-3370

2.4 mtn. view acres, Golf course home, 2363 SMITH ROCK & Cascade views with a 2288 sq. ft. 2-story sq. ft., 3 masters, one very clean cottage on home w/dbl. garage, with sitting room and 2 acres of irrigated exc. cond., 1200 sq. kitchenette, 243 sq. ft. property. $250,000 ft. shop. $269,000. bonus room, Close to Smith Rock MLS#201204852 $299,000. State Park. MLS# Call Nancy Popp, MLS#201103975 201204828. 541-815-8000, Call Nancy Popp John L. Scott Real EsCrooked River Realty Broker, 541-815-8000 tate 541-548-1712 Crooked River Realty 3 bdrm, 2 bath horse Build Your Dream Views! Views! Views! property w/barn GORGEOUS LOG Home! $52,500 MLS# 79.69 acres w/27 & incredible views. HOME | $549,000 201105164 acres of irrigation. MLS#201203441. Beautiful home on 9.5 Call Melody Curry, Barn, shop, & guest $154,000. acres. Cascade Broker, 541-771-1116 quarters w/almost Call Julie Fahlgren, Mountain views, priCrooked River Realty 2200ý sq. ft. house. 541-550-0098, vate and peaceful. 4 $400,000. Crooked River Realty acres of irrigation. 4 North Powell Butte MLS#201200048 car heated garage/ Acreage . 2 buildable, Call TRAVIS HANshop. Meticulously rare lots. Cascade NAN, Principal Bro3 bdrm, 2 bath on 1.15 maintained 2291 sq. mountain views, quiet ker 541-788-3480 acres. $105,000. ft. home. area. Vicci Bowen Redmond ReMax MLS#201205372 MLS#201202524 541-410-9730 Land & Homes Real Call Linda Lou Cathy Del Nero, Broker Central Oregon Estate Day-Wright, 541-410-5280 Realty Group 541-771-2585, 763 Crooked River Realty 963 - $55,000 Seller ofRecreational Homes fering excellent terms 3 bdrm, 2 bath on 6.5 & Property to qualified buyer. acres. Call for deGreat location on Jutails. MLS#201205303 Borders government niper Glen Circle. Flat Call Linda Lou lands this 3 bedroom lot next to walking Day-Wright, home has walk-in trail. Eagle Crest is a 541-771-2585, closets in each bedresort destination with Crooked River Realty room & ceiling fans. three sports centers, Front deck has been three 18 hole golf 3 bedroom, 2 bath Good classii ed ads tell made into a sunroom. courses. beautiful home. Barn, the essential facts in an Oversized 2-car gaEagle Crest shop, 3-car garage. interesting Manner. Write rage with propane Properties™ $145,000. heater plus extra RV from the readers view not 866-722-3370 MLS#201204133 cover. $89,000 the seller’s. Convert the Call Julie Fahlgren, Driveway in and mtn. MLS#201200073 facts into beneits. Show Broker, Crooked River views. 1.02 acres. 541-536-1731 Realty, 541-550-0098 the reader how the item will $$46,900 Cascade Realty help them in some way. MLS#201103466 Beautifully maintained 3 Call Melody Curry, bdrm/2 bath home on Broker, 541-771-1116 6.5 acres on Cres- Crooked River Realty cent Creek. Over 600’ creek frontage with 925 - $169,000 ExAttn: Outdoor trails, landscaped. traordinary opportuEnthusiasts 1380 sq ft garage inHOME & SHOP ON nity to own a golf (with all the toys) cludes a workshop, ACREAGE |$459,000 course lot at Eagle & Gourmet Cooks: two-car garage, tracOver 3000 sq. ft. home Crest in gated comWe’ve found tor garage and storon 4.42 acres! 3 bedmunity. One half acre your new home! age area with covroom, 2.5 bath, downlot on the 12th This ready-to-move-into ered RV parking. stairs master, den, green/Resort Course. spacious home has atNew roof, new heat media room formal One block to Destached dbl garage & pump, new pressure dining and living chutes River hiking shop + many updates. tank in well. room. 1600 sq. ft. trail. Vaulted wood ceilings, $345,000 MLS# shop with 12' and 14' Eagle Crest gourmet kitchen with 2 201104361. Call doors. Properties™ cooktops, mega cabiKerry 541-815-6363 MLS#201202244 866-722-3370 nets & counter space galore! Lots of big win- Judy Meyers, Broker, Cascade Realty 885 - $125,000 BeautiGRI, CRS dows & window seats to ful lot with Cascade 541-480-1922 enjoy nature. Huge Mountain views. Bring Eagle Crest Income 28x32 shop with adyour builder and build property and/or your dtional 28x32 covered your dream home! own vacation get-aRV parking! Guest/stuOwnership also enway on the fairway. dio, deck & hot tub, all Completely turn-key joys all of the amenion 4.76 acre parcel. ready to use. ties that Eagle Crest $269,900. Call Karol Ald$194,900. has to offer. rich, Broker, today! MLS#201203443 Eagle Crest 541-771-1144 John L. Scott Real Properties™ Windemere Central Oregon Real Estate Estate 541-548-1712 866-722-3370

890 $139,000 Perfect 5 acres adjoins public land over Deschutes location for your River. Short distance dream home at Eagle to river. $79,900. Crest! Located on a beautiful and presti- MLS#201102328 Call Linda Lou gious cul-de-sac on Day-Wright, The Ridge. 1/3 acre 541-771-2585, lot in coveted Phase. Crooked River Realty Bring your builder or meet with one of our many partners to exTick, Tock plore the possibilities. Eagle Crest Tick, Tock... Properties™ 866-722-3370 ...don’t let time get away. Hire a 1 acre buildable lot, SW Redmond. $26,600. professional out Call Chris Quinn, of The Bulletin’s 541-228-4767 “Call A Service 4.38 Acre view lot Professional” backs to BLM, Cascade mtn & Smith Directory today! Rock views. Corner lot, approved for stan- READY TO BUILD! dard septic. $199,000. 5.07 acres, flat lot, MLS #2809381 Pam mature trees, paved Lester, Principal Broroad, 1/3 interest in ker, Century 21 Gold well, applied for stanCountry Realty, Inc. dard septic. $99,900. 541-504-1338 MLS# 201204695 Pam Lester, Principal 9148 Sq.ft. lot, Broker, Century 21 cul-de-sac, utilities Gold Country Realty, stubbed into PUE, Inc. 541-504-1338 close to West Canyon Rim Park and ac*** cess to the dry canCHECK YOUR AD yon trail. $35,000. Please check your ad MLS# 201005021 on the first day it runs Pam Lester, Principal to make sure it is corBroker, Century 21 rect. Sometimes inGold Country Realty, structions over the Inc. 541-504-1338 phone are misunderstood and an error Canyon Dr., Redmond can occur in your ad. 1.13 acres with access If this happens to your from two streets proad, please contact us viding you many the first day your ad building site options. appears and we will Owner terms availbe happy to fix it as able. $58,500 MLS# soon as we can. 201106385 Deadlines are: WeekJuniper Realty, days 11:00 noon for 541-504-5393 next day, Sat. 11:00 Nice flat lot in Terreba.m. for Sunday and onne, .56 acres, Monday. paved street, ap541-385-5809 proved for cap-fill Thank you! septic, utilities are at The Bulletin Classified the lot line. $42,000. *** MLS 32012001172 Pam Lester, Principal Chinook Dr., Crooked River, Smith Rock & Broker, Century 21 mtn. views. Owner Gold Country Realty, terms avail. 6.9 acres Inc. 541-504-1338 with all utilities & custom home plans. Garage Sales $189,000 MLS# 201008671 • 5.68 Garage Sales acres has many building sites. Garage Sales $225,000 MLS# Find them 201106408 Juniper Realty, in 541-504-5393 The Bulletin Chipmunk Rd., CRR. Classiieds Level 5.19 acres with mtn. views. Well treed 541-385-5809 with several possible building sites. Comm. Shevlin Ridge Lots water & power avail. Find a homesite that fits at street. Owner your vision within this terms. $69,000 MLS# family friendly neigh20110609 borhood. Large flat Juniper Realty, lots range from .25 to 541-504-5393 .50 acre with privacy and mature PondeTURN THE PAGE rosa trees. Near parks For More Ads and trails. www.shevlinridge.com Starting The Bulletin at $104,000 Tina Roberts, Broker, Golden Mantel Rd., 541-419-9022 CRR. 5 acre lot TOTAL Property ready to build. There Resources, is an old rock building 541-330-0588 adding to the charm of the property with outThe Highlands at Brostanding views of the ken top, 10 acres, Cascades and plenty gated, private well, of privacy. $155,000 utilities at lot, app for MLS# 201200629 cap-fill septic. Juniper Realty, $535,000. MLS 541-504-5393 #201200937. Pam Lester, Principal BroMOUNTAIN VIEW ker, Century 21 Gold ACREAGE | $385,000 Country Realty, Inc. 10.17 acre parcel be541-504-1338 tween Bend and Sisters. Beautiful hilltop Two 1/2 acre lots in acreage boasting DRRH, south of Sunstunning Cascade river: one with well, Mountain views. Borbuildable. Call for info. ders National Forest 509-585-9050 land on two sides. Two Rivers North Community domestic Lots water available. A River Runs Through MLS#201206678 It in Two Rivers North! Shelly Hummel, Broker, Beautiful 1.26, 1.45, & CRS, GRI, CHMS 1.84 acre river front 541-383-4361 parcels. Owner will consider carrying. Priced from $124,900, Multi-lot discount possibilities. Fish on! MLS#201104945 Dana Miller, Broker 541-408-1468

Suntree Village #219 $35,400. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2000 Marlette, Open floor plan - vaulted, Large kitchen - oak cabinets, Attached garage, Master suite walk-in closet, Master bath w/garden tub & shower, Beautifully landscaped. Call Marilyn Rohaly, Broker, 541-322-9954 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com

Premier senior park, clubhouse & pool, 3/2+, garage with workshop, kitchen appliances +. $49,900. 541-977-7238 Very nice 1900 sq. ft. home, lots of upgrades including extra large center island cook’s kitchen. Completely fenced private backyard with patio for entertaining. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, living room & large family room with fireplace. A must see! 20754 Valentine, Bend. $55,750. Cascade Village Homes. 541-388-0000 Very open plan, with French doors off living room area, beautiful updated kitchen, nice size dining area, large covered front porch, 2 bdrm, 2 bath & den. Turn-key move-in condition with nice outside entertaining patio & fire pit. 63730 Cascade Village Dr. $53,200. Cascade Village Homes. Bend, 541-388-0000

Suntree Village #93 $37,800. 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1876 sq.ft., 1982 Fleetwood, vaulted living and formal dining, 780 huge kitchen/family room with fireplace, Mfd./Mobile Homes two carports plus front with Land Look at: deck and back patio. Bendhomes.com $2500 carpet credit Palm Harbor mfd. home 1 year AHS warranty for Complete Listings of with 4 bdrm, 3 full included. Area Real Estate for Sale baths. Open floor Call Marilyn Rohaly, plan, all appliances, Broker, 541-322-9954 FACTORY SPECIAL lots of storage space New Home, 3 bdrm,1026 John L. Scott Real and block perimeter sq.ft., $46,900 finished Estate, Bend foundation. All this on www.JohnLScott.com on your site,541.548.5511 9.52 acres. $223,000 www.JandMHomes.com MLS#201105757 New 3 bdrm, 2 bath Cascade Realty USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! home is loaded with 541-536-1731 upgrades including Door-to-door selling with 1904 sq. ft. home on custom paint, new fast results! It’s the easiest 1+ acre, 3-car garage, lighting, skylight, and way in the world to sell. covered RV/auto park, custom decking. Outstanding Cascade Oversized 2-car gaThe Bulletin Classiied views. $148,900. rage with storage and 541-385-5809 MLS#201106356 workshop area. 20774 Livingood Way, Bend. Call Nancy Popp Broker 541-815-8000 $78,600. Cascade Snowberry Village #127 Village Dr. Crooked River Realty $90,425 541-388-0000 NEW LISTING! 1976 sq. ft. 3-wide mfd. • 2 bedrooms, 2 baths New 3 bed homes start home with Cascade • 1404 sq. ft., 2000 Sil- at $34,160 delivered views, dbl. garage, vercrest and set up J&M family & living rooms • Large great room, bay Homes 541-548-5511 + formal dining. window dining area www.JandMHomes.com $179,900. • Front & back decks In mfd. section. MLS#201203416 • Laundry room + 2 car Newer 2003 3 bdrm/2 Call Nancy Popp, brogarage ker, Crooked River • Sold tastefully fur- bath turn -key home. Realty 541-815-8000 New appliances, lots nished of upgrades, custom Call Marilyn Rohaly, Need help ixing stuff? window coverings, Broker, 541-322-9954 front & back decks. Call A Service Professional John L. Scott Real Pristine fenced court- ind the help you need. Estate, Bend yard entry. Very open www.bendbulletin.com www.JohnLScott.com concept with close to VIEWS 1500 sq. ft. 20737 GIGANTIC Snowberry Village #46 $136,900 Spacious Livingood Way, Bend. $89,150. quality Fuqua home. $72,500 Cascade 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1600+ Enjoy gigantic mounVillage Dr. sq.ft., 1994 Silvertain views. MLS# 541-388-0000 crest, living room, 201200450 Gail Day separate dining room Newer Goldenwest 541-306-1018 and large kitchen with 1568 sq. ft., 3 bdrm, 2 Central Oregon eating area, huge bath, very open big Realty Group covered BBQ deck, spaces, vaults nice views, pellet Rental or build your throughout, oversized stove, large laundry dream home! single attached garoom and 2 car at$56,230 rage with lots of stortached garage. MLS#201201421 age. New paint Call Marilyn Rohaly, Melody Curry, throughout & ready to Broker, 541-322-9954 Broker enjoy. 20776 ValenJohn L. Scott Real 541-771-1116 tine, Bend $53,700. Estate, Bend Crooked River Cascade Village www.JohnLScott.com Realty Homes. 541-388-0000

Nice mtn. views, 3.09 acres, $95,950 MLS#201101554. Call Linda Lou Day-Wright, Broker, 541-771-2585 Crooked River Realty 773

Acreages

Powell Butte 6 acres, 360 views, great horse property, 10223 Houston Lake Rd. $99,900. 541-350-4684

19.5 ACRES - VIEWS $299,000 Well, barn/shop & tack Shop and septic inhouse are all in, now stalled! $108,430 just add a home! ParMLS#2802042 cel has a permanent Melody Curry, CUP in place for farm Broker dwelling. Cascade 541-771-1116 Mountain views! 16 Crooked River acres of COI water Realty rights. Near Badlands SW DOVE RD. Mt. Wilderness Area. Washington & Three MLS#201204953 Sisters views from this Steve Payer, 6.1 acre property with Broker, GRI power installed. Close 541-480-2966 to the Deschutes River and Steelhead Falls. $99,500 MLS# too new! Juniper Realty, 541-504-5393

SW Geneva View Rd. , Terrebonne. Level 1.14 acres that will be easy to build on. Well treed with an abunCall The Bulletin At dance of wildlife passing through. 541-385-5809 $41,500 MLS# Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 201102002 At: www.bendbulletin.com Juniper Realty, 541-504-5393 5.64 acres, Mt. Views. $99,900. SW River Rd. Exc.view MLS#2609088 from top of property. Call Linda Lou 2.79 acres walking Day-Wright, distance to the Des541-771-2585, chutes River & SteelCrooked River Realty head Falls. Hike, bike, 5-acre corner lot, flat ride horses, fly fish. & fully treed. $49,900 Quiet & natural setMLS#201109114 ting is ideal for vacaCall Nancy Popp, tions or year round Principal Broker living. $49,000 MLS# 541-815-8000 201009429 Crooked River Juniper Realty, Realty 541-504-5393

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541-385-5809


F 8SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809

COLDWELL BANKER MORRIS REAL ESTATE

541-382-4123 REALTOR

Thousands of listings at www.bendproperty.com This Week’s New Listings REDMOND | $2,500,000

NW BEND | $1,065,000

ONE BLOCK FROM DRAKE PARK | $723,000

NW BEND | $649,900

5 ACRE MOUNTAIN VIEW PROPERTY | $625,000

Established car wash business located on main Central Oregon state highway. Center of Redmond retail business district. Includes real estate, fixtures, equipment and inventory. Call for details. MLS#201206492 (730)

Gorgeous Gary Norman built home on a private .89 acre lot on Awbrey Butte. Exquisite craftsmanship and stunning views of the city lights. Incredible outdoor living space with USGA golf green. MLS#201206604 (746)

Large, corner, 9000 sq. ft. lot on State Street in the Drake Park Historic District. Newer great room, gourmet kitchen, upstairs master suite & maintains the old charm of downtown Bend. MLS#201206543 (730)

3450 sq. ft., 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath with inviting warm French country decor. Newly updated, large vaulted, open beamed family room. Beautiful Cascade Mountain views, .7 acre lot backing to Wyndemere Park. MLS#201206583 (730)

Very Private home with fine finishes on 5 acres surrounded by Mountain Views in Odin Falls Ranch. Outdoor kitchen & in-ground pool + large detached 42'x40' shop building, total 6 enclosed parking areas. MLS#201206500 (730)

STEVE PAYER, BROKER, GRI 541-480-2966

DAWN ULRICKSON, BROKER, CRS, GRI, SFR 541-610-9427

SCOTT HUGGIN, BROKER, GRI 541-420-3915

SHERRY PERRIGAN, BROKER 541-410-4938

DIANE LOZITO, BROKER 541-548-3598

SW BEND | $330,000

NE BEND | $299,000

LA PINE | $211,900

PROVIDENCE | $175,000

LA PINE | $143,000

Beautiful 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath home. Wood floors, wine cooler, stainless appliances, soaking tub, tile shower, large dining room, and master with fireplace and deck. Covered front porch and back patio. MLS#201206495 (730)

Custom home in desirable Barton Crossing on large lot. Hardwood floors, master on main, kitchen with granite counters & breakfast nook, formal dining with double sided fireplace. Cascade views! MLS#201206451 (730)

Single-story 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1747 sq. ft. home. Wood floors, stainless appliances, pantry, granite countertops, propane fireplace, soaking tub in the master. Great floor plan. Fenced .47 of an acre lot. MLS#201206562 (730)

Fabulous 2 story home with mountain views. Great room floor plan, open to kitchen & dining area and large deck overlooking backyard. Master on main, large family and utility room downstairs. MLS#201206553 (730)

Single level home in the pines, circular gravel driveway with lots of extra parking & room for your toys. Master bath has large soaking tub & separate shower. High ceilings with fans. Large back deck covered. MLS#201206558 (730)

MARK VALCESCHINI, P.C., BROKER, CRS, GRI 541-383-4364

BECKY BRUNOE, BROKER 541-350-4772

SUSAN AGLI, BROKER, SRES 541-383-4338 • 541-408-3773

MARK VALCESCHINI, P.C., BROKER, CRS, GRI 541-383-4364

JEN BOWEN, BROKER THE KELLEHER GROUP 541-280-2147

Visit our office conveniently located at 486 SW Bluff Dr. in the Old Mill District, Bend. Visit us online or call 541-382-4123 | Visit us at TEN BARR RANCH - BEND | $1,500,000

IT’S A LIFESTYLE | $899,000

NW BEND |$769,000

NEW PRICE | $745,000

NE BEND | $695,000

ICE D PR UCE D RE

4173 sq. ft., 4 bedroom, 4 bath, 1200 sq. ft. of decks sits high above the river. Deschutes River frontage, corporate retreat, vacation home, private location, gated community on the way to Mt. Bachelor. MLS#201009509 (747)

Rare find! Vintage style farmhouse with modern features on 39 irrigated acres close to town. 3 bedroom, 3 bath, 3731 sq. ft. Full basement. 2 bedroom apartment above garage. 4-stall barn with loft. MLS#201204031 (762)

BONNIE SAVICKAS, BROKER 541-408-7537

LYNNE CONNELLEY, ECOBROKER, ABR, CRS 541-408-6720

SW BEND | $579,000

NW BEND | $525,000

NW BEND | $449,000

Custom log home on private 11.27 acres, minutes from town. 3790 sq. ft., 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath, spacious bonus room & media room. Radiant floor heat. Artistic accents throughout. Direct access to BLM. MLS#201206478 (730)

4 bedroom, 4.5 bath, 3035 sq. ft. townhome nestled in the pine trees, close to the Deschutes River trail. Great room floor plan, vaulted beam ceilings, gourmet kitchen, paver patio, water feature. MLS#201203181 (747)

Panoramic city views, custom built 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath Craftsman, modern touches. Walnut hardwoods, concrete counters, alder cabinets, granite, slate, cork floors, plantation shutters & private backyard. MLS#201204489 (746)

Custom built, sculpted cedar siding, upgraded appliances. 5 acres, fenced & cross fenced. 3 stall barn & tack room. 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath over 3400 sq. ft. MLS#201206470 (746)

GREG MILLER, P.C., BROKER, CRS, GRI 541-408-1511

DAWN ULRICKSON, BROKER, CRS, GRI, SFR 541-610-9427

DEBORAH BENSON, PC, BROKER, GRI 541-480-6448

AMY HALLIGAN, BROKER 541-410-9045

MINDA MCKITRICK, BROKER 541-280-6148

PARKS AT BROKEN TOP | $439,000

COUNTRY RANCH | $421,900

NW CROSSING | $409,000

NW BEND/MARKEN HEIGHTS | $409,900

GOLF COURSE HOME | $399,900

4 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 2653 sq. ft. Professionally landscaped fenced corner lot. Granite tile in kitchen, GE Profile SS appliances. Hardwood flooring, travertine tile in bathrooms, jetted tub in master. MLS#201206914 (747)

Beautiful ranch on 15.74 acres. 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath with wrap-around covered porch, 115x215 smooth welded pipe arena, 3 stall 36x48 barn. End of road privacy, 2 large ponds attract waterfowl & wildlife. MLS#201202834 (762)

Charming two-story Craftsman home. 3 bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms, 1964 sq. ft., open floor plan, gas fireplace, covered deck and hard-to-find large fenced yard. Close to shops and outdoor trail network. MLS#201206205 (746)

New construction on Bend’s Westside. 2322 sq. ft. home has 3 bedrooms, den and bonus room. Quality upgrades, fully landscaped, plus Cascade Mountain Views! MLS#201203945 (746)

Elevated views of BG&CC fairways 5, 6 & 7. Mostly single level living; only bonus room is up. 2350 sq. ft., hardwood floors, and lots of storage. Wonderful low-maintenance yard. MLS#201205068 (749)

JIM MORAN, BROKER 541-948-0997

CRAIG LONG, BROKER 541-480-7647

JERRY STONE, BROKER 541-390-9598

DIANE ROBINSON, BROKER, ABR 541-419-8165

CRAIG SMITH, BROKER 541-322-2417

AWBREY BUTTE GREAT PRICE | $374,500

NE BEND | $369,000

PORTLAND | $359,900

EAGLE CREST | $359,900

PRINEVILLE | $310,000

Cozy home on large nicely landscaped lot with views of Pilot Butte, city lights & great southern exposure. Bright throughout. Designer colors, vaulted ceilings, on 1 of the nicest streets, a must see. MLS#201103293 (746)

Enjoy peace and tranquility on 2.85 private acres with Gorgeous Cascade views. Large master suite. Vaulted wood ceilings. Possible mother-in-law suite. Borders BLM. Bring your horse and toys. RV area. MLS#201205268 (762)

Custom built, upgraded 2694 sq. ft., 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath home. Remodeled kitchen with 18 inch tile flooring, solid cherry cabinets & granite counters. Red oak solid strip flooring. Beautiful backyard. MLS#201206213 (745)

Custom built home on the 13th Hole of the Resort Course. Split level with 2 master suites on the main level. It’s just a quick jaunt over to the owner’s only pool & tennis courts. Large .63 acre lot. MLS#201202347 (750)

LIVE GREEN, OFF the grid! No utility bills here! Gorgeous 2600 sq. ft. home nestled in the pines on 20 acres. Giant shop with guest quarters. RV/boat parking and backside barn/loafing shed. Green house too! MLS#201103546 (762)

DEBBIE JOHNSON, BROKER 541-480-1293

JANE STRELL, BROKER, ABR, GRI 541-948-7998

GARY ROSE, BROKER 541-588-0687

NICOLETTE JONES, BROKER 541-241-0432

KELLY NEUMAN, BROKER 541-480-2102

SE BEND | $299,900

LA PINE | $299,000

GREAT LOCATION | $239,900

POWELL BUTTE | $210,000

THREE RIVERS SOUTH | $199,000

3 bedroom, 2.5 bath on .46 acre park-like setting among tall pines. Total remodel. High end finishes throughout, stainless appliances, 7” long soapstone kitchen island, porcelain tile floors. MLS#201205779 (749)

Spectacular custom home with all upgrades! Great for fun, family, entertaining and horses. 4 bedroom, 3 bath, bonus room. MLS#201205284 (730)

Great Westside location close to downtown and The Old Mill District. 2 lots with 1 bedroom, 1 bath home. RM zoned in the historic district. MLS#201203906 (746)

2116 sq. ft., 4 bedroom, 2 bath home on .94 acre in Oregon Water Wonderland. RV garage & shop with 2 rolling doors, outbuildings & the ability to have horses. Access BLM land behind the property. MLS#201205728 (755)

GREG FLOYD, P.C., BROKER 541-390-5349

TENBROEK - HILBER GROUP, LLC 541-550-4944

RARE opportunity for 11 acres in Twin Lakes Ranch. May be dividable. Home sits well off the road for a quiet, PRIVATE settting. Spectacular SMITH ROCK views. Fenced & crossed fenced. Backs to PUBLIC LAND! MLS#201108416 (762)

JJ JONES, BROKER 541-610-7318 • 541-788-3678

KATHY POWELL, BROKER 541-383-4342

JACK JOHNS, BROKER, GRI 541-480-9300

CASCADE VIEWS, POWELL BUTTE | $169,000

EAST SIDE|$155,000

SE BEND | $95,000

BUILD YOUR DREAM HOME | $59,900

THREE RIVERS SOUTH | $59,500

1680 sq. ft. Large master upstairs with its own office. Convenient location, fenced yard. Bank owned. MLS#201206978 (749)

Darling 2 bedroom, 1 bath cottage near Old Mill District. Some updating with wood & tile floors, vinyl windows, remodeled kitchen with new cabinets & countertops, clawfoot bathtub & picket fenced yard. MLS#201203278 (749)

Large .47 acre lot on desired Fairway Heights Drive. Beautiful views of the city, Pilot Butte, eastern mountain range, and a glimpse of the golf course. Nestled in pine trees. Close to river trail. MLS#201105195 (771)

Flat .48 of an acre building lot on corner with canal along 1 side, canal flows directly into the Big Deschutes River. Area has boat launch & dock, clubhouse and road maintenance. MLS#201105237 (771)

CATHY DEL NERO, BROKER 541-410-5280

DARRYL DOSER, BROKER, CRS 541-383-4334

JACKIE FRENCH, BROKER 541-480-2269

Big Cascade Mountain Views on this close-in 161 acre horse ranch with water rights, a half built home and a guest cottage. Live in the manufactured home while finishing the main house. Call for details. MLS#201206445 (762)

Timber Framed Construction using 100 year old reclaimed timbers, beams & flooring, this home will warm your heart with character & charm. Main home, guest home, shop, 20 private acres minutes from Sisters. MLS#201200880 (762)

This immaculate home on very quiet, private acreage with Mountain views near Tumalo, features great room living, formal dining, 2 masters, huge bonus room, dream kitchen, oversized 4 car garage. MLS#201007051 (746)

DIANE LOZITO, BROKER 541-548-3598

BRANDON FAIRBANKS, BROKER, SRES, GRI, CDPE 541-383-4344

DARRIN KELLEHER, BROKER THE KELLEHER GROUP 541-788-0029

DRAKE PARK & RIVER VIEWS | $649,000

HOME SWEET HOME | $649,000

3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2119 sq. ft., English cottage, Deschutes River & Drake Park views, heart of downtown Bend’s historic district. Meticulously updated home, perfect combination of elegance & comfort. MLS#201205806 (746)

ICE PR UCED RED

VIEWS! VIEWS! VIEWS! Beautiful Cascade Views from this 19.62 acre vacant land home site in Powell Butte. Gently sloped parcel, perfect to build your dream home. Might have natural springs on property. MLS#201205095 (773)

CAROLYN PRIBORSKY, P.C., BROKER, ABR, CRS 541-383-4350

G N I D PEN

G N I D N PE

DON KELLEHER, BROKER THE KELLEHER GROUP 541-480-1911


VISIT DASHRECIPES.COM FOR DISHES THAT PAIR PERFECTLY WITH

WINES

simple fast delicious

BACK TO SCHOOL BONANZA! Get organizing tips, easy morning routines, and homework strategies— free in our iPad edition dashrecipes.com/app

SEPTEMBER 2012

dashrecipes.com

PIZZAY! PART s Pies No-Fuslz es and Ca on

8

WAKE-UP CALL!

BAKE SALE WINNERS

EASY MAKE-AHEAD BRUNCH

READY IN MINUTES!

Featuring Tips and Recipes From ©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


Fall in love with chocolate From entertaining to family fun, celebrate the change of season with fall treats and top them off with M&M’S® Chocolate Candies to add delicious milk chocolate to every bite.

Not Your Party Pizza Average friends over and

few ocolate Have a table ch c le e d okie create a ng a tube of co si u w y mallo s, pizza b ini marsh m , h g u do hocolate s. ® Brand C g n toppin M&M’S other fu d n a s Candie servings

Make Fall Delicious Nothing says fall like candy apples. Dip apples into caramel or chocolate and roll in M&M’S® Brand Chocolate Candies to create a delicious finishing touch.

F more fall treats, For visit brightideas.com v

Bringing B ringing Friends Together Toge Since 1941 ©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.

®/TM Trademark ©Mars, Incorporated, 2012.

2 Makes 1 er serving ries p lo a c 4 2 3


MORE than a

CHIP OFF THE OLD BLOCK Sure, Ms. Brown is made

of CHOCOLATE

of mouthwatering milk chocolate. But she’s also an Ivy League–educated MBA who’s spent years making

M&M’S®

succes sful

the

cho colate

brand it is today. So please show the CCO (Chief Chocolate Officer)

of Mars Inc. some respect, and refrain from licking the page.

“The fact is, it doesn’t get better than the original.” ™

Photography by Martin Wonnaco Chocolate by Mars facebook.com/mms

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


WANT BETTER MEATBALLS? START WITH BETTER MEAT.

© 2012 JOHNSONVILLE SAUSAGE, LLC

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


from

BON ´ APPETIT

board Tips, Tricks & Tools of the Kitchen

Q: Can you suggest a meaty soup that would be hearty enough for dinner? E. Elliot, via email

IT’S CRUNCH TIME Try one of these instead of bread crumbs

from

GOURMET

A: This soup takes less than half an hour to prepare and can be made up to two days ahead of time.

Pepitas

Toasted and crushed pepitas (hulled pumpkin seeds) are a great coating for fish or chicken. You can also stir them into salsas.

ALL PHOTOS, UNLESS OTHERWISE CREDITED: ANDREW MCCAUL; FOOD STYLING, PAUL GRIMES; PROP STYLING, TIZIANA AGNELLO. THIS PAGE, BON APPÉTIT PHOTOS: ZACH DESART; FOOD STYLING, KAY CHUN. NUTRITION CONSULTING/ANALYSIS: JEANINE SHERRY, M.S., R.D.

Steak and Vegetable Soup Hands-on: 25 min Total: 40 min Serves: 6 1 lb boneless top loin steak (New York strip or shell), trimmed and cut into 1-inch pieces 2 Tbsp olive oil 2 onions, chopped 4 carrots, sliced 4 celery ribs, thinly sliced crosswise 6 garlic cloves, finely chopped 1 Tbsp finely chopped thyme 1 ⁄2 tsp salt, plus more to taste 1 ⁄2 tsp black pepper, plus more to taste

1 lb Yukon Gold potatoes, peeled and cut into ½-inch cubes 2 cups canned diced tomatoes with some juice 31⁄2 cups beef broth 4 cups chopped kale leaves 2 cups medium egg noodles, cooked 1. Pat steak dry. Heat oil in a heavy 4- to

5-quart pot over medium-high until it shimmers. Cook steak until browned on all sides and mediumrare, about 3 minutes; transfer to a plate. 2. Cook onions, carrots, celery, garlic, thyme, 1⁄2 tsp salt, and 1 ⁄2 tsp pepper over medium, stirring occasionally, until softened, about

8 minutes. 3. Stir in potatoes, tomatoes with juice, broth, and 41⁄2 cups water; simmer, partly covered, until potatoes are tender, about 15 minutes. Stir in kale. Cook until tender, about 5 minutes. Add steak with meat juices and noodles; season with salt and pepper, if needed.

Rice

Finely ground, toasted raw jasmine rice crisps up seared trout. For a cool color hit, choose black rice. Basmati rice lends a floral note.

PER SERVING: 340 cal, 39g carbs, 25g protein, 9g fat, 60mg chol, 850mg sodium, 5g fiber

Don’t miss our back-to-school guide in this month’s iPad edition. You’ll find everything you need to start the year off right! dashrecipes.com/app Q: My child is allergic to nuts. Any ideas for a filling snack I can pack for school? L. McCormack, via email

A: This delicious dip can be served with tortilla chips, strips of pita bread, or whichever raw vegetables your child likes most. Be sure to send it to school in an insulated container with an ice pack.

Nuts

Nuts add both flavor and texture. Top fish with almonds, pair chicken with chopped pecans, or try lamb chops with pistachios.

Lemony Pea Dip with Raw Vegetables Hands-on: 20 min Total: 20 min Serves: 6 1 (10-oz) package frozen peas, defrosted 1 tsp minced garlic 2 tsp lemon juice 1 ⁄2 cup grated Parmesan cheese 1 ⁄2 tsp salt 1 ⁄4 tsp black pepper

⁄3 cup olive oil + Assorted raw vegetables 1. In a food processor, combine peas, garlic, lemon juice, Parmesan, salt, and pepper. Process for 30 seconds. Add oil and blend until smooth. Cover and refrigerate. 1

PER SERVING: 200 cal, 16g carbs, 6g protein, 13g fat, 5mg chol, 400mg sodium, 5g fiber

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


OPENING ACTS

Brunch for a Bunch Prep this veggie-packed dish in advance, pop it in the oven—then kick back

Find more breakfast casseroles at dashrecipes .com/brunch

Italian Vegetable Strata with Turkey Sausage Hands-on: 20 min Total: 1 hr 40 min (includes resting time) Serves: 8 ⁄2 1 1 4 1

cup sliced scallion large red bell pepper, diced zucchini, chopped cups fresh baby spinach lb sweet turkey sausage, casings removed, broken into bite-size chunks 7 eggs

1

6

SEPTEMBER 2012 dashrecipes.com

21⁄2 1 ⁄2 1 ⁄2 1 ⁄4 1

cups 2% milk cup nonfat milk cup grated Parmesan-Romano cheese tsp black pepper medium loaf French bread (about 5 cups), cut into large chunks 1 cup grated reduced-fat Monterey Jack

1. Preheat oven to 350°F. Coat a 13-by-9inch baking dish and a small skillet with cooking spray. 2. Sauté scallion, red pepper, and zucchini in skillet for 4 minutes. Add spinach and

sausage and continue cooking until sausage is browned. 3. In a large bowl, whisk eggs with milk, Parmesan-Romano, and black pepper. 4. In baking dish, layer half the bread, half the egg mixture, and half the sausage-vegetable mixture. Repeat layers. 5. Press down to make sure bread is completely submerged. Set aside for 20 minutes. (You can also prepare this up to a day ahead and store in fridge.) 6. Sprinkle with Monterey Jack. Bake for 1 hour or until golden brown and puffy.

PER SERVING: 380 cal, 40g carbs, 26g protein, 14g fat, 200mg chol, 740mg sodium, 3g fiber

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


Eggs have high-quality protein for incredible mental energy. And are a naturally good source of Vitamin D, too. *Microwave Egg, Ham ’n’ Cheese Muffin.

*Average amount of cholesterol in one egg is 185 mg, down from 215 mg. Brought to you by America’s egg farmers.

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


SHOP SMART

Any Way You Slice It Look what you can make with a store-bought crust!

start with

PREMADE PIECRUST

Vegetable Tart Hands-on: 10 min Total: 55 min Serves: 6 ½ (12-oz) bag Italian-style frozen mixed vegetables, cooked and drained 1 (9-inch) ORONOQUE ORCHARDS deep-dish frozen pie shell, thawed 1 cup shredded cheddar cheese 4 eggs 2 cups heavy cream 1 tsp salt ½ tsp black pepper 1 tsp dried oregano 1. Preheat oven to 425°F. 2. Arrange vegetables in pie shell. Top with cheese. In a bowl, beat eggs. Add cream, salt, pepper, and oregano. Pour over cheese and vegetables. Bake for 15 minutes. 3. Reduce oven temperature to 300°F. Bake tart for 30 minutes more or until filling is set.

y 3 More to Try rt Ham & Swiss Tart am am Sub in 1⁄2 cup diced ham for vegetables. Use e Swiss cheese instead d of cheddar and 1 tsp p nutmeg in place of oregano. Pour into thawed frozen MARIE IE CALLENDER’S piecrust. usstt.. u

8

Banana Coconut Pi P Pie ie

Cherry Crumb Pie

Prepare 2 (3.4-oz) b boxes ox o xes es instant vanilla pudding, ding ing, in using 2¾ cups milk. lk k. Line a thawed frozen en en

Fit a PILLSBURY refrigerated d piecrust into a 9-inch pie pan. n. Spoon in 2 (21-oz) cans cherry ry ry pie filling. In a bowl, rub ½ cup p cold butter, 1 cup flour, and ½ cup brown sugar until crumbly. Sprinkle over filling.. Bake at 375°F for 35 minutess or until topping is golden brown and filling bubbles.

PILLSBURY PET-RITZ TZ

piecrust with banana a slices. Spoon pudding ng over bananas. Top with ith th whipped cream and d toasted coconut. Chill. hiillll. h l.

SEPTEMBER 2012 dashrecipes.com

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


All the sound without all the wires.

NEW Bose Wave ®

Shown in Platinum White.

Just plug it in and hear what you’ve been missing. With the new Bose® Wave® music system III, there are no stacks of components. No tangle of wires. No dials to adjust. Advanced Bose technologies work together to fill the room with the acclaimed performance that has made Bose the most respected name in sound. You enjoy clear, realistic sound that you may have only thought possible from a much larger, more complicated stereo. And the Wave® music system III also has a new FM/AM tuner for improved radio reception. New radio text for song and station information. Convenient new touch-top controls for on, off and snooze. And new dual alarms so you can set two different wake-up times. You enjoy an audio system like no other, an improvement on what was already the most highly acclaimed system in its class.

Shown in Titanium Silver with optional Multi-CD Changer.

®

music system III

A roomful of premium sound…not wires. With the new Wave® music system III, you’ll experience the pleasures of Bose quality sound moments after you open the box. Everything you need is built in, including the radio tuner and a CD/MP3 CD player. You control them all with a convenient, credit cardstyle remote. You can also add the optional MultiCD Changer to enjoy your music uninterrupted for hours on end. Try it for 30 days, risk-free. Experience the Wave® music system in your own home risk-free for 30 days. Choose your favorite color: Platinum White, Graphite Gray or Titanium Silver. And when you call, ask about making 12 easy payments, with no interest charges from Bose.* Order now and you’ll even receive our IE2 audio headphones free – a $99 value. They set a new standard for sound reproduction that conventional earbuds can’t match, and an advanced design and durable materials contribute to lasting quality. They’re also very comfortable, with flexible StayHear® tips that rest securely in your ears during exercise and other activities. Use them at home or on the go, or give them as a gift. Like the Wave® music system itself, the IE2 headphones are from Bose, the most respected name in sound.

FREE Bose IE2 audio headphones, a $99 value, when you order by September 30, 2012.

To order or learn more:

1-800-474-2073, ext. TX942

www.Bose.com/WMS

*Bose payment plan available on orders of $299-$1500 paid by major credit card. Separate financing offers may be available for select products. See website for details. Down payment is 1/12 the product price plus applicable tax and shipping charges, charged when your order is shipped. Then, your credit card will be billed for 11 equal monthly installments beginning approximately one month from the date your order is shipped, with 0% APR and no interest charges from Bose. Credit card rules and interest may apply. U.S. residents only. Limit one active financing program per customer. ©2012 Bose Corporation. The distinctive design of the Wave® music system III and blackand-white headphone cord are registered trademarks of Bose Corporation. Financing and headphone offers not to be combined with other offers or applied to previous purchases, and subject to change without notice. If the system is returned, the headphones must be returned for a full refund. Offers valid 8/1/12-9/30/12. Risk-free refers to 30-day trial only, requires product purchase and does not include return shipping. Delivery is subject to product availability.

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


The #1 kitchen is German-engineered. Fill your kitchen with the appliances most frequently recommended by a leading consumer publication. Receive a rebate of up to

15

%

when you purchase three or more Bosch kitchen appliances via a Bosch VISA® prepaid card.* To find out more, scan this MS tag. Get the free mobile app at http://gettag.mobi

Bosch delivers top performance through top technology in every appliance, and right now, when you buy three or more Bosch kitchen appliances, you’ll get a rebate of up to 15%. There has never been a better time to upgrade your home with a Bosch kitchen. Visit your local Lowe’s to find out how German engineering and European styling are the perfect upgrade to your home. www.lowes.com/bosch Offer valid from September 1, 2012 through January 5, 2013.

© 2012 BSH Home Appliances Corporation. ©2012 Lowe’s Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Lowe’s, the gable design, and Never Stop Improving are trademarks of LF, LLC. All are used with permission. *Purchase at least three Ascenta, 300 series, 500 series or 800 series Bosch Appliances and receive a 10% reward of the purchase price or purchase at least three 800 Series Bosch Appliances and receive a 15% reward of the purchase price. Purchase price is actual net price paid on receipt after any discounts and excludes sales tax, installation, disposal or any other fees. All eligible appliances must be refl ected on the same sales receipt. Card can be used anywhere Visa debit cards are accepted. BFK891-14-102204-2

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


THE PIE’S THE LIMIT! Pizza and calzones that are as easy as ... you know 1 (12-inch) baked pizza crust 1 ⁄2 cup barbecue Hands-on: 10 min sauce Total: 25 min 1 (9-oz) package Serves: 8 Perdue Short Cuts roasted chicken, cut into bite-size pieces 1 ⁄2 cup chopped fresh cilantro 1 ⁄2–1 roasted red bell pepper, sliced 1 ⁄2 cup chopped red onion 11⁄2 cups grated Monterey Jack cheese

Barbecued Chicken Pizza

1. Preheat oven to 400°F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. 2. Place pizza crust on baking sheet and spread evenly with barbecue sauce, leaving a ½-inch border around edge. Top with chicken, ¼ cup cilantro, bell pepper, onion, and cheese. 3. Bake for 15 minutes or until cheese melts. Sprinkle with remaining cilantro. PER SERVING: 240 cal, 27g carbs, 16g protein, 8g fat, 40mg chol, 580mg sodium, 1g fiber

dashrecipes.com SEPTEMBER 2012

11

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


PIZZA & CALZONES

Hands-on: 10 min Total: 30 min Serves: 4 1 (12-inch) baked pizza crust 2 Tbsp olive oil 1 ⁄2 cup pizza sauce 1 ⁄4 lb refrigerated meatballs, cut in half 1 small onion, finely diced 1 cup grated

mozzarella cheese 1 ⁄4 cup grated Parmesan cheese 1 Tbsp chopped fresh oregano 1. Preheat oven to 425°F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. 2. Drizzle crust with olive oil. Spread with sauce. Top with

meatballs, onion, mozzarella, and Parmesan. 3. Bake for 10 to 15 minutes or until mozzarella melts. Sprinkle evenly with oregano. PER SERVING: 490 cal, 44g carbs, 23g protein, 24g fat, 20mg chol, 1,020mg sodium, 3g fiber

Double Cheese and Prosciutto Calzone

from

EPICURIOUS .COM

Hands-on: 10 min Total: 30 min Serves: 4 1 cup grated mozzarella cheese 31⁄2 oz soft fresh goat cheese, crumbled 1 oz prosciutto, chopped 21⁄2 tsp chopped fresh thyme

1 garlic clove, pressed + Black pepper 1 (13.8-oz) tube refrigerated pizza dough 1 Tbsp olive oil 1. Preheat oven to 425°F. Toss first 5 ingredients in a medium bowl. Season with pepper to taste. 2. Unroll dough into a rectangle on a rimmed baking sheet. Spoon filling

GIVEAWAY! Mediterranean Vegetable Pizza Hands-on: 15 min Total: 25 min Serves: 6 ⁄4 cup sun-dried tomatoes (not oil-packed) 2 Tbsp canola oil 21⁄2 cups sliced mushrooms 1 green bell pepper, diced 1 ⁄2 medium red onion, sliced into thin strips 2 tsp minced garlic 1

12

1 (12-inch) baked pizza crust 1 ⁄2 cup pizza sauce 1 cup shredded part-skim mozzarella cheese 1 ⁄4 cup grated Parmesan 1 ⁄4 cup sliced fresh basil 1. Preheat oven to 425°F. 2. Cover tomatoes in hot water; soak for 10 minutes. Drain and slice. 3. In oil, sauté mushrooms, bell

SEPTEMBER 2012 dashrecipes.com

pepper, and onion for 8 minutes. Add garlic and cook for 1 minute. 4. Place crust on a parchment-lined baking sheet and spread with sauce, leaving a 1⁄2-inch border around edge. Top with vegetables, tomatoes, and cheeses. Bake for 10 minutes or until cheese melts. Garnish with basil. PER SERVING: 280 cal, 32g carbs, 13g protein, 11g fat, 15mg chol, 500mg sodium, 3g fiber

Win this pizza stone, plus a pizza cutter and a bag of King Arthur Flour, at dashrecipes .com/win

onto half of dough, leaving a 1-inch border on sides. Fold other half over. Crimp edges to seal; fold corners under to form a half circle. 3. Bake until puffed and brown, about 18 minutes. Brush with oil. Transfer to a platter and cut into 4 pieces to serve. PER SERVING: 440 cal, 48g carbs, 22g protein, 18g fat, 30mg chol, 1,170mg sodium, 2g fiber

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. TO ENTER AND FOR FULL RULES, VISIT WWW.DASHRECIPES.COM/WIN. STARTS 9:00 AM E.T., 9/05/12, AND ENDS 9:00 AM E.T., 10/03/12. OPEN TO LEGAL RESIDENTS OF THE 48 CONTIGUOUS UNITED STATES (D.C.) 18 YEARS AND OLDER, EXCEPT EMPLOYEES OF SPONSOR, RANDOM HOUSE PUBLISHING COMPANY, AND AFFILIATED PARTNERS AND THEIR IMMEDIATE FAMILIES AND THOSE LIVING IN THE SAME HOUSEHOLD. ODDS OF WINNING DEPEND ON THE NUMBER OF ENTRIES RECEIVED. VOID OUTSIDE THE 48 CONTIGUOUS UNITED STATES (D.C.) AND WHERE PROHIBITED. A.R.V. OF 3 GRAND PRIZES: $60 EACH. SPONSOR: PARADE PUBLICATIONS.

Meatball Pizza

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


Lo S B ng ou ett Want a cell phone that’s er nd er Ba a tte nd just a phone? Your choice is simple. ry L

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GreatCall® created the Jitterbug with one thing in mind – to offer people a cell phone that’s easy to see and hear, and is simple to use and affordable. Now, they’ve made the cell phone experience even better with the Jitterbug Plus. It features a lightweight, comfortable design with a backlit keypad and big, legible numbers. There is even a dial tone so you know the phone is ready to use. You can also increase the volume with one touch and the speaker’s been improved so you get great audio quality and can hear every word. The battery has been improved too– it’s one of the longest lasting on the market– so you won’t have to charge it as often. The phone comes to you with your account already set up and is easy to activate. The rate plans are simple too. Why pay for minutes you’ll never use? There are a variety of affordable plans. Plus, you don’t have to worry about finding yourself stuck

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o N tra n Co

ct

IMPORTANT CONSUMER INFORMATION: Jitterbug is owned by GreatCall, Inc. Your invoices will come from GreatCall. All rate plans and services require the purchase of a Jitterbug phone and a one-time set up fee of $35. Coverage and service is not available everywhere. Other charges and restrictions may apply. Screen images simulated. There are no additional fees to call Jitterbug’s 24-hour U.S. Based Customer Service. However, for calls to an Operator in which a service is completed, minutes will be deducted from your monthly balance equal to the length of the call and any call connected by the Operator, plus an additional 5 minutes. Monthly rate plans do not include government taxes or assessment surcharges. Prices and fees subject to change. 1We will refund the full price of the Jitterbug phone if it is returned within 30 days of purchase in like-new condition. We will also refund your first monthly service charge if you have less than 30 minutes of usage. If you have more than 30 minutes of usage, a per minute charge of 35 cents will apply for each minute over 30 minutes. The activation fee and shipping charges are not refundable. Jitterbug is a registered trademark of GreatCall, Inc. Samsung is a registered trademark of Samsung Electronics America, Inc. and/or its related entities. Copyright © 2012 GreatCall, Inc. Copyright © 2012 by firstSTREET for Boomers and Beyond, Inc. All rights reserved.

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PIZZA & CALZONES

New Orleans–Style Pizza

Pesto Pizza

Southwestern Pizza

Hands-on: 10 min Total: 20 min Serves: 4

Hands-on: 10 min Total: 20 min Serves: 4

Hands-on: 10 min Total: 20 min Serves: 4

1 2 1 ⁄2 2 1 ⁄4 1

(10- or 12-inch) baked pizza crust Tbsp olive oil cup pitted, chopped green olives oz salami, sliced thin cup deli ham, sliced thin cup shredded provolone cheese

1. Preheat oven to 425°F. Place crust on a parchment-lined baking sheet. 2. Spread crust with oil. Top with olives, salami, ham, and provolone, leaving a 1⁄2-inch border around edge. Bake for 10 minutes or until cheese is melted and pizza is piping hot. PER SERVING: 400 cal, 33g carbs, 17g protein, 22g fat, 40mg chol, 1,120mg sodium, 3g fiber

Sausage and Pepper Calzones Hands-on: 15 min Total: 30 min Serves: 4 1 onion, sliced ⁄2 each red and green bell pepper, sliced 1 Tbsp olive oil 1 tsp garlic 1 ⁄2 lb sweet Italian sausage, sliced 1 (10-oz) can refrigerated pizza crust 1 ⁄2 cup ricotta

1

14

⁄4 cup grated mozzarella

1

1. Preheat oven to 425°F. 2. In a skillet, cook onion and peppers in oil for 5 minutes or until soft. Add garlic and sausage and sauté until sausage is thoroughly cooked. 3. Unroll crust onto a work surface and cut into 4 squares. On a parchmentlined baking sheet, stretch each square into a 5-by-6-inch rectangle. Trim

1 (10- or 12-inch) baked whole wheat pizza crust 1 ⁄2 cup prepared pesto 1 cup shredded mozzarella cheese 1 ⁄2 cup grated Parmesan cheese

1 ⁄2 3 ⁄4 1 ⁄4 1

1

(10- or 12-inch) baked pizza crust cup salsa cup shredded Monterey Jack cheese cup diced, cooked chorizo Tbsp thinly sliced scallion

1. Preheat oven to 425°F. Place crust on a parchment-lined baking sheet. 2. Spread crust with pesto, leaving a 1⁄2-inch border around edge. Sprinkle with cheeses. Bake for 10 minutes or until mozzarella is melted and beginning to blister.

1. Preheat oven to 425°F. Place crust on a parchment-lined baking sheet. 2. Spread crust with salsa, leaving a 1⁄2-inch border around edge. Top with cheese and chorizo. Bake for 10 minutes or until cheese is melted and pizza is piping hot. Sprinkle with scallions.

PER SERVING: 380 cal, 31g carbs, 20g protein, 19g fat, 30mg chol, 900mg sodium, 3g fiber

PER SERVING: 320 cal, 34g carbs, 15g protein, 13g fat, 35mg chol, 900mg sodium, 2g fiber

edges so they’re even. Spread rectangles with ricotta. Top with sausage and mozzarella. 4. Bring together 2 opposite corners of each rectangle. Repeat with other 2 corners. Pinch edges together to seal. Bake for 15 minutes or until golden brown. PER SERVING: 370 cal, 40g carbs, 20g protein, 14g fat, 30mg chol, 920mg sodium, 2g fiber

SEPTEMBER 2012 dashrecipes.com

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


BEFORE AFTER

®

Light up your life with LifeStyle Lift.

Call today for your FREE GUIDE TO LOOKING YOUNGER information kit

1-866-361-2343

Debby Boone

Grammy Award Winner

Paid Spokesperson

®

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.

©2012 Lifestyle Lift.® Lifestyle Lift® offers surgical and non-surgical procedures performed under local anesthesia. Single procedures take about one hour to complete but more time may be required for multiple procedures or to achieve best results. Most Lifestyle Lift patients return to normal activities in about a week but some need extra healing time, particularly if they have multiple procedures. Lifestyle Lift medical procedures involve a certain amount of risk. Ask your Lifestyle Lift physician and review the consent forms to find out more about your individual case and what you can expect. Patients depicted are compensated and have given their permission to appear. Photos are from various doctors and are for illustrative purposes only and do not constitute a promise AYMENT HAS A RIGHT TO REFUSE PAY, CANCEL PAYMENT, OR AYMENT FOR ANY OTHER SERVICE, EXAMINATION, OR TREATor representation of any particular outcome or experience. Each patient’s experience, recovery and results will be unique depending on their skin, age, health and other individual factors. THE PATIENT AND ANY OTHER PERSON RESPONSI MENT THAT IS PERFORMED AS A RESULT OF AND WITHIN 72 HOURS OF RESPONDING TO THE ADVERTISEMENT FOR FREE, DISCOUNTED FEE, OR REDUCED FEE SERVICE, EXAMINATION, OR TREATMENT. (8/12) DASH081012-110


EASY ENTERTAINING Beef and Bean Chili Hands-on: 10 min Total: 25 min Serves: 4

Turn Up the Heat

1 1 3 2 ½

This hearty dinner has just the right amount of kick

2

1 3–4 1½–2

4 1 + 2

Tbsp canola oil tsp minced garlic sliced scallions tsp cumin or to taste tsp chili powder or to taste (15-oz) cans black beans, drained and rinsed cup beef broth Tbsp tomato paste cups pot roast or other cooked beef, cut into bite-size pieces Tbsp sour cream lime, in wedges Sliced radishes Tbsp chopped fresh cilantro

1. In a large skillet, heat oil for 30 seconds. Add garlic and scallions and sauté for 2 minutes. Add cumin, chili powder, beans, broth, and tomato paste. Cook on low for 5 minutes or until hot. 2. Stir in meat. Simmer about 5 minutes. 3. Serve garnished with sour cream, lime wedges, radishes, and cilantro.

More chili toppers to try ■ Guacamole

cheddar or Monterey Jack k cheese ■ Sliced jalapeño chile peppers ■ Diced tomatoes ■ Chopped fresh basil ■ Thinly sliced scallions

16

SEPTEMBER 2012 dashrecipes.com

PHOTOS: ISTOCKPHOTO

■ Shredded

PER SERVING: 360 cal, 33g carbs, 26g protein, 17g fat, 75mg chol, 650mg sodium, 11g fiber

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


CORNFLAKE COOKIES

10 Easy Things to Do With

CEREAL BAKED FRENCH TOAST In a large, shallow bowl, beat 4 eggs with 1 cup milk. Stir in 1½ tsp vanilla extract and 1 tsp cinnamon. Soak 12 (½-inchthick) slices French bread in egg mixture for 5 minutes. Arrange on a parchment-lined baking sheet. Bake for 8 minutes or until golden brown. Flip over slices. Sprinkle with 1 cup Raisin Bran, pressing cereal into bread. Bake at 425°F for 6 to 7 minutes. When cereal is golden brown and bread is crisp, remove from oven. Serve with butter and maple syrup. Serves 6.

4

CHOCOLATE DIP WITH ASSORTED DIPPERS

6

CRUNCHY CHICKEN TENDERS

Beat 2 eggs until frothy. On a plate, combine 1 cup flour, 1 tsp onion salt, ½ tsp garlic power, and ¼ tsp black pepper. Dip 1½ lb thinly sliced chicken breast tenders in flour, then in egg, and then in 2 cups finely crushed Cap’n Crunch. Heat ¼ cup oil in a large sauté pan. Fry chicken for 6 minutes or until done. In a bowl, combine ½ cup mayonnaise and 3 Tbsp honey mustard; serve dip with chicken. Serves 4.

Spoon 1 container milk chocolate– flavored Philadelphia Indulgence spread into a serving bowl. Surround with 2 cups Lightly Frosted Shredded Wheat, 1 cup Teddy Graham crackers, and 1 cup Nilla Wafers. Serves 6.

2

FRUIT SMOOTHIE

In a blender, whirl 2 (6-oz) containers vanilla yogurt, 1⁄3 cup orange juice, 1 cup strawberries, and 1 ripe sliced banana. Pour into 2 glasses. Sprinkle with 3 Tbsp coarsely crushed Froot Loops cereal.

5

NO-BAKE TRIPLE CHOCOLATE PIE

In a 9-inch pie plate, combine 1½ cups crushed Cocoa Puffs and 1⁄3 cup melted butter. Press into pan. Refrigerate. Prepare 2 (3.9-oz) packages instant chocolate pudding mix, using 2¾ cups milk. Spoon into prepared crust. Top with ½ cup hot fudge and sprinkle with 3 Tbsp chopped nuts. Freeze for at least 1 hour. Serves 6.

FRUIT AND NUT SALAD In a serving bowl, toss 4 cups romaine lettuce leaves, torn into pieces; 2 diced Honeycrisp apples; ¼ cup dried cranberries; ¼ cup chopped walnuts; and ¼ cup thinly sliced celery. Add ¾ cup Honeycomb cereal. Toss with balsamic vinaigrette. Serves 4.

7

MEATLOAF Mix 1½ lb lean ground beef, ½ cup All Bran cereal, 4 chopped shallots, 1 tsp salt, ¼ cup ketchup, 1 tsp garlic, and 1 egg. Transfer to a loaf pan. Bake at 350°F for 30 minutes. Top with ¼ cup ketchup. Bake 30 minutes more or until done.

NO-BAKE CHOCOLATE PEANUT BUTTER COOKIES In a large bowl, melt 1 (12-oz) package milk chocolate chips and ½ cup peanut butter in microwave, stirring every 30 seconds. Stir 3¾ cups Fiber One cereal into melted chocolate until completely coated. Drop mixture by the teaspoonful onto a waxed paper–lined baking sheet. Refrigerate. Cookies will firm up as they chill. Makes 4 dozen. 18

In a mixing bowl, combine 1 (17.5-oz) bag sugar cookie mix, ½ cup soft butter, and 1 egg. Beat well. Stir in 1½ cups slightly crushed cornflakes. Drop by the tablespoonful onto parchment-lined baking sheets. Bake at 350°F for 10 minutes or until cookies are golden brown.

10

KIWI GRAPE PARFAITS

Layer 12 oz (two 6-oz containers) strawberry yogurt, 2 diced kiwifruit, 1 cup halved seedless green grapes, and 1 cup Honey Nut Clusters in 2 parfait dishes or other glass bowls. Serves 2.

SEPTEMBER 2012 dashrecipes.com

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


©2012 Post Foods, LLC THE FLINTSTONES: TM & © Hanna-Barbera. (s 12)

PEB

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.

1/4 c BLES ® C u 1 pkg p ( 1/2 s aterpil . ( 1 pkg 10 1/2 o tick) bu lar pre t . (11 o p z.) P z.) minia ter or m time: 1 OST a t u Fruit re ma rgarin 0 minu y or rsh e tes Coco mall a Pe ows bble ME s Ce real cer LT bu on ea tra

in T I R i o ns microwave. COMBIN e h t S n i s . d n E marshm ect . ugh 5 seco allows an thro LACE s rvings for 4 ions, with moistened or grease t y d c l H e a E s A w w T r f P l for 60-90 seconds, stirring ha d o se . la rt b caterpil ing each section to resemble a cate hands, using abou ction KES 24 e a s u h r v p t c A illar. ADD 1 -q 24 r, cur decoration /3 cup of cereal mixture for ea ve set. M in 4 E into x pape s a a s h r d s e s i w r e o e d l . l SERVE after marshma tt SHAP th wa d d wi n l a line y

For more great PEBBLES recipes, go to postcereal.com


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BACK TO SCHOOL

Bake Sale? Bingo! These easy treats will make you the envy of all the moms CK TIP QUI

BR

O

Ask a local bakery for a donation to your bake sale—they can help a good cause and reach potential new customers. U

Morning Glory Muffins Hands-on: 20 min Total: 45 min Makes: 18 muffins 2 ⁄4 1 ⁄4 1 3

eggs cup canola oil cup milk tsp vanilla extract

For the banana chocolate chip bread you see here, go to dashrecipes.com/banana

2 1 2 2 1 ⁄2 2

cups flour cup brown sugar tsp baking soda tsp cinnamon tsp salt medium carrots, shredded 1 ⁄2 cup shredded coconut 1 ⁄2 cup golden raisins 1 ⁄2 cup slivered almonds, divided

1. Preheat oven to 350°F. Spritz 18 muffin cups with cooking spray. Place a paper

GH

TT

O YOU BY

liner in each. 2. In a large bowl, beat eggs, oil, milk, and vanilla on medium for 1 minute. Add flour, brown sugar, baking soda, cinnamon, and salt. Beat just until combined. (Don’t overmix!) Add carrots, coconut, raisins, and half the almonds. Spoon batter into liners. Sprinkle with remaining almonds. 3. Bake for 20 minutes or until muffin tops spring back when pressed. Cool on wire racks.

PER SERVING: 240 cal, 29g carbs, 3g protein, 12g fat, 20mg chol, 230mg sodium, 1g fiber

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


HERO

Movable Feasts The Veggie Mobile brings fresh produce to urban food deserts

cooking demos for customers. “We do something called a ‘Taste and Take,’ where people can try new foods—maybe you’ve never had a kiwi before!—and then take home a sample with a very simple recipe,” Klein says. The truck, along with a smaller vehicle (the Veggie Mobile Sprout), has made a big impact along its 30-plus neighborhood route. Reggie Harrell

I

t’s hard to miss the Veggie Mobile when it cruises down the streets of Albany, N.Y. The bright-green refrigerated truck has a mural of watermelon, corn, lettuce, and tomatoes painted on its side, with big solar panels on its roof and loud music pouring from the speaker system. “It’s kind of like a healthy version of the ice cream truck,” says founder Amy Klein, executive director of Capital District Community Gardens (CDCG), which promotes healthy food access and community gardening in upstate New York. For more than five years, the Veggie Mobile has served as a produce aisle on wheels for residents of public housing, senior centers, and other inner-city locations in Albany, Troy, and Schenectady. “These places are what we call ‘food deserts’—the nearest grocery store is miles away, and many lowincome residents here don’t have access to a car or public transpor-

“People can step in and be greeted by a bounty of fresh foods,” says Amy Klein (left).

tation,” says Klein. “At CDCG, we manage a lot of neighborhood food gardens, but I realized that gardening alone couldn’t solve this problem.” So with a grant from the New York Department of Health, Klein created the Veggie Mobile to deliver fresh fruits and veggies at wholesale cost. “We try to stock a broad array, so people can step in and be greeted by a bounty of fresh foods,” says Klein. The staff also has regular tastings and

of Schenectady uses a wheelchair, so staffers from the Veggie Mobile knock on his door every week to take his order. “Being disabled, it’s just really difficult for me to get to a grocery store,” says Harrell, 62. “Plus, I have diabetes, so getting fresh fruits and vegetables—even if it’s just once a week—is a blessing.” —Jennifer Rainey Marquez

To learn more or to make a donation to help support the Veggie Mobile, go to cdcg.org.

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


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Offer good on purchase of new 28-Day Core and Select Auto-Delivery plans only. 50% off full retail value on first order only. With Auto-Delivery you receive a discount off the full retail value and free shipping Continental US only. With Auto-Delivery, you are automatically charged and shipped your 28-Day plan once every 4 weeks unless you cancel. You can cancel Auto-Delivery by calling 1-800-727-8046. Other restrictions apply. Call or see website for details. The Nutrisystem Select plan is available to Continental US residents only and cannot be shipped to PO Boxes, APO Boxes or military addresses. Cannot be combined with any prior or current discount or offer. Limit one offer per customer. ©2012 Nutrisystem, Inc. All rights reserved.

On Nutrisystem you add in fresh grocery items. ©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


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