Boise Weekly Vol. 22 Issue 01

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LOCAL, INDEPENDENT NEWS, OPINION, ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT WWW.BOISEWEEKLY.COM VOLUME 22, ISSUE 01 JUNE 26 – JULY 2, 2013

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TAK EE E ON E! INSIDE

GUIDE TO MCCALL Best bets for escaping to McCall this summer FEATURE 13

BLACK AND WHITE ALL OVER BW’s annual Black and White Photo Contest SCREEN 29

LITTLE BIG SCREEN Cascade’s small-town movie theater is reborn FOOD 32

MOUNTAIN CUISINE BW heads north for The Narrows at Shore Lodge

“That may have been legal, but it was wrong.”

NEWS 8


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BW STAFF Publisher: Sally Freeman Sally@boiseweekly.com

NOTE

Editorial Editor: Zach Hagadone ZHagadone@boiseweekly.com Features Editor: Deanna Darr Deanna@boiseweekly.com Arts & Entertainment Editor: Tara Morgan Tara@boiseweekly.com News Editor: George Prentice George@boiseweekly.com Sultan of Events: Harrison Berry Harrison@boiseweekly.com Listings: calendar@boiseweekly.com Copy Editors: Amy Atkins, Jay Vail Interns: Skylar Barsanti, Chris Grapes, Ryan Thorne Contributing Writers: Bill Cope, Andrew Crisp, Josh Gross, David Kirkpatrick, Ted Rall Advertising Advertising Director: Lisa Ware Lisa@boiseweekly.com Account Executives: Karen Corn, Karen@boiseweekly.com Brad Hoyt, Brad@boiseweekly.com Jessi Strong, Jessi@boiseweekly.com Nick Thompson, Nick@boiseweekly.com Jill Weigel, Jill@boiseweekly.com Classified Sales Classifieds@boiseweekly.com Creative Art Director: Leila Ramella-Rader Leila@boiseweekly.com Graphic Designer: Jen Grable, Jen@boiseweekly.com Contributing Artists: Derf, Elijah Jensen, Jeremy Lanningham, James Lloyd, Laurie Pearman, E.J. Pettinger, Ted Rall, Patrick Sweeney, Tom Tomorrow, Garry Trudeau Circulation Man About Town: Stan Jackson Stan@boiseweekly.com Distribution: Tim Anders, Jason Brue, Andrew Cambell, Tim Green, Shane Greer, Stan Jackson, Lars Lamb, Barbara Kemp, Michael Kilburn, Amanda Noe, Warren O’Dell, Steve Pallsen, Jill Weigel Boise Weekly prints 32,000 copies every Wednesday and is available free of charge at more than 1000 locations, limited to one copy per reader. Additional copies of the current issue of Boise Weekly may be purchased for $1, payable in advance. No person may, without permission of the publisher, take more than one copy of each issue.

IN PRAISE OF MONOCHROME That song “Kodachrome” by Paul Simon always kind of pissed me off. First, I was—putting it mildly—a bit of a nerd in school. I didn’t feel like “all the crap I learned in high school” had made it hard to “think at all.” Even as a teenager, the editorial urge was strong in me, and Simon’s gleefully bad grammar (“And though my lack of education hasn’t hurt me none”) always grated. Combine that with the creepy passage about Simon’s “sweet imagination” musing about an orgy with all the girls he’d known when he was single, and you come up with the profile of a horny underachiever running around poking his camera in everyone’s face. Looking at it now, I can imagine a character like that being one of those people who fills your Facebook feed with pictures of whatever he’s eating. Beyond that, the whole premise rubbed me the wrong way: I’ve always taken exception to the idea that “everything looks worse in black and white.” In a culture as image-saturated as the one in which we live, black-andwhite photography has the ability to cut through the noise of digital color correction, airbrushing and that infuriating ’70s-style Instagram filter that turns even the most mundane photograph into an exercise in post-post-modern pretension. Maybe I’m an atavist, but when I think of the greatest photos and photographers (Walker Evans, Frank Capa, Annie Leibovitz, Ansel Adams, etc.), my default is to imagine their work in black-and-white—a style of art whose power lies in its invitation to fill in the blanks, thus allowing us to interact with the subject more fully and making an image more real, in our minds, than reality. In other words, we are given the power to paint the world ourselves, rather than it being handed to us either as a stylized swirl or a dead record of Things As They Are (take that, Paul Simon). This week, we pay tribute to the subtleties of gray scale in Boise Weekly’s 11th annual Black and White Photo Contest. Starting on Page 13, feast your eyes on work that proves there’s nothing monotonous about monochrome. And speaking of tweaking reality, we made a rather embarrassing mistake in last week’s paper. On Page 19, in a BW Pick profiling the work of artist Kehinde Wiley showing at the Boise Art Museum, we mistakenly identified Wiley as a female in the photo cutline. Wiley was correctly identified as a male in the write-up. We sincerely regret the error.

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6 months-$50, 12 months-$95, Life-$1,000. ISSN 1944-6314 (print) ISSN 1944-6322 (online) Boise Weekly is owned and operated by Bar Bar Inc., an Idaho corporation. To contact us: Boise Weekly’s office is locat-

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E-mail: info@boiseweekly.com www.boiseweekly.com Address editorial, business and production correspondence to: Boise Weekly, P.O. Box 1657, Boise, ID 83701 The entire contents and design of Boise Weekly are ©2013 by Bar Bar, Inc. Editorial Deadline: Thursday at noon before publication date. Sales Deadline: Thursday at 3 p.m. before publication date. Deadlines may shift at the discretion of the publisher.

ARTIST: Keith S. Walklet TITLE: Puddles and Reflections MEDIUM: Digital capture (Canon G-11) printed on Ilford Galerie Prestige Smooth Pearl. ARTIST STATEMENT: I never cease to be amazed at the beauty underfoot and always carry my camera. This scene presented itself during a downpour in Stanley. For more, visit quietworks.com.

Boise Weekly was founded in 1992 by Andy and Debi Hedden-Nicely. Larry Ragan had a lot to do with it too. Boise weekly is an independently owned and operated newspaper.

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SUBMIT

Boise Weekly pays $150 for published covers. One stipulation of publication is that the piece must be donated to BW’s annual charity art auction in November. A portion of the proceeds from the auction are reinvested in the local arts community through a series of private grants for which all artists are eligible to apply. To submit your artwork for BW’s cover, bring it to BWHQ at 523 Broad St. All mediums are accepted. Thirty days from your submission date, your work will be ready for pick up if it’s not chosen to be featured on the cover. Work not picked up within six weeks of submission will be discarded.

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WWW.BOISEWEEKLY.COM What you missed this week in the digital world. B EAU VAN GR EENER

INSIDE

READY TO RIDE Are you ready to meet the challenge of the annual Boise Weekly Bars and Stripes alley cat race? BW is gearing up for the bacchanalia of bikes and beer, and it’s time to start planning your attack. Get the details at Cobweb.

A PLACE IN HISTORY A group of Japanese-Americans made an emotional annual pilgrimage to Minidoka recently, returning to the place they were held during WWII. Read all about it at Citydesk.

FLARE UP Natural gas exploration may be roaring back in Idaho thanks to a set of new rules being considered by Payette County—where the bulk of the controversy over fracking in Idaho has been centered. Find out what’s being considered at Citydesk.

OOPS, AGAIN A former Twin Falls County judge is having a hard time these days. After resigning from her position in the wake of a DUI conviction in Boise, she was arrested again for a driving/alcohol-related charge. What was it? Check it out at Citydesk.

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EDITOR’S NOTE

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GUEST OPINION

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BILL COPE

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TED RALL

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NEWS Drama continues in McCall city government

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CITYDESK

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CITIZEN Jeff Speck

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FEATURE Black and White Photo

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BW PICKS

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FIND

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8 DAYS OUT

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EYESPY

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SUDOKU

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DOONESBURY

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MUSIC GUIDE

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ARTS McCall’s own artists’ co-op, Gallery 616

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SCREEN Cascade’s Roxy theater is reborn

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FOOD The Narrows at Shore Lodge

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BEER GUZZLER

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CLASSIFIEDS

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NYT CROSSWORD

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FREEWILL ASTROLOGY

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GUEST/OPINION

TROJAN HORSE Teach for America is a step toward privatizing public schools TRAVIS MANNING The Idaho State Board of Education continues to make decisions toward privatizing Idaho’s public schools. In a move by the board on June 20, the Teach For America program was, according to their Facebook post, “approved as a state sanctioned vehicle for the preparation of teachers in Idaho.” TFA takes Ivy League graduates, among others, trains them for five weeks, then sends them out into schools for two-year stints as “teachers.” Add water, mix and stir slightly— voila—insta-teacher! “Teach For America teachers are full-fledged faculty members at their schools, receiving the normal school district salary and benefits as well as a modest AmeriCorps ‘education voucher’ (which can be used to pay for credentialing courses, cover previous student loans or fund further education after the two-year commitment),” reads a Wikipedia entry on the group. In districts across the country, Teach for America “teachers” get their feet wet for a couple years before moving on to be hedge fund managers, directors of nonprofits, attorneys and CFOs with for-profit education companies, etc. The vast majority of TFA “teachers” do not go on to teach for a career, but merely use it as a steppingstone into another profession where they can make three to five times as much. Former Washington, D.C., schools chancellor Michelle Rhee may be the most notable example, who went on to found StudentsFirst, an aggressive school reform organization. This past May, Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton rejected a line-item grant of $1.5 million to fund TFA teachers, citing lack of competition in the application process. Dayton noted TFA’s $50 million profit margin in 2011, and wondered why they would need state assistance (read: corporate welfare) to fund teachers. Incidentally, TFA is currently looking for an Idaho executive director, someone who, according to the job announcement, “Exercises an innovative, entrepreneurial spirit, exhibits an uncommon level of personal responsibility and aggressively pursues outcomes that will position Teach For America to help fuel the local movement to eliminate the educational opportunity gap and maximize our long-term impact in the community.” Read: TFA needs a hard-nosed, type-A personality willing to lobby for corporate welfare despite the cadre of “highly qualified” teachers graduating from Idaho colleges. For years, entrepreneurs worldwide have been salivating over the United States’ halftrillion dollar education market. Unfortunately, the corporate business model—the one that demands profits—is the proverbial square peg in a round hole. Conflicts of interest abound when education corporations like TFA get involved in the “business” of education. What may be good for kids, or what may be best teaching practices, fall by the wayside when shareholder profits are at stake. Hiring temporary, fly-by-night “teachers” looking to pad their resumes doesn’t seem to fall into the category of best educational practices. For this reason, Teach For America ought to be looked at a little more closely. The acceptance of TFA as an alternate teacher certification option in Idaho comes on the heels of a study released June 18 by the National Council on Teacher Quality that made national news. TFA founder Wendy Kopp serves on the NCTQ Advisory Board. Regrettably, the study—called The Teacher Prep Review—seems to have been assembled with outcomes already firmly in mind. “Our profound belief that new teachers and our children deserve better from America’s preparation programs is the touchstone of this project,” states the study. The study, funded in part by The Albertson’s Foundation—which has strong ties to online provider K-12, Inc., etc.—and others which have a stake in the for-profit education industry, causes one to question the validity of NCTQ’s findings. Travis Manning is executive director of the Common Sense Democracy Foundation of Idaho.

S U B M I T Letters must include writer’s full name, city of residence and contact information and must be 300 or fewer words. OPINION: Lengthier, in-depth opinions on local, national and international topics. E-mail editor@boiseweekly.com for guidelines. Submit letters to the editor via mail (523 Broad St., Boise, Idaho 83702) or e-mail (editor@boiseweekly.com). Letters and opinions may be edited for length or clarity. NOTICE: Ever y item of correspondence, whether mailed, e-mailed, commented on our Web site or Facebook page or left on our phone system’s voice-mail is fair game for MAIL unless specifically noted in the message. WWW. B OISEWEEKLY.C O M

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OPINION/BILL COPE

COMMENCELESS A message of hopeless for those degreeless I have prepared a number of commencement addresses over the years—for high-school graduations, college graduations, even one for a kindergarten graduation. That I never delivered any of them is no fault of mine. I was ready. The speeches were ready. My delivery was ready (I practiced in front of a mirror until I could do six minutes without scratching myself.) I also let it be known that any honorary doctorates, pecuniary honorariums, expense reimbursements, gift certificates or coupons for “buy one/get one free” lunch deals I received would be entirely at the discretion of whichever institutions saw fit to ask me to contribute my words of wisdom to those young adventurers about to embark on a new phase of their lives. Tragically, I was not asked. Out of all those institutions charged with preparing all those young adventurers for all those new phases, not a damn one of them saw fit to bring me and my words of wisdom to the podium. And don’t tell me my words of wisdom aren’t just as wise as some of the people they do ask. For instance, this spring a University of Idaho satellite campus in Idaho Falls had Larry Craig deliver their commencement address. Larry Craig! I don’t know what his words of wisdom to those young adventurers were, but I’ll bet one of them wasn’t “Minneapolis.” Anyway, I’m sick of trying to get the attention of whoever it is that lines up commencement speakers. So this year, I’m addressing mine to those who won’t be graduating, won’t be sitting through any hooty-snooty graduation ceremonies, and with the way things are going, won’t be enrolled in any institution of learning higher other than the ones they can still ride to on a yellow bus. And believe me, there are a lot more of them than there are graduates. In fact, I don’t even know yet where I’m going to give my address, because I don’t think they’ll all fit in Taco Bell Arena. U To all nongraduates and their families, I welcome you to this noncommencement ceremony of 2013. You should know this is the first such observance ever held in the annals of non-academia. For whatever reason, those either associated or unassociated with even the earliest known universities could see no value in commemorating the fact that so many young nonscholars did not attend those universities, or if they did, did not stick around long enough to finish. Truly, you will find no record of an event such as this either inside or outside the archival halls of Cambridge, Oxford—wherever. And frankly, we wouldn’t be holding this ceremony now, nor would I be delivering this noncommencement address, if not for the reality that, of the thousands upon thousands of young Idaho adults not graduating this fine

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June day, many of you would not be here, if you’d had your way. I’m convinced many, maybe even most, of you would prefer to be graduating, had only things worked out differently for you and your families. Were we living in a country that actually valued education in deed as well as rhetoric—that did whatever it takes to make higher education more affordable rather than less—that was not continually stripping the financial foundations from middle-class parents who might have helped you more if only they weren’t struggling to hold onto their homes and jobs and, indeed, their very presence in the middle class—were we living in that sort of country, where college graduates were as common as college aspirants, you’d likely not be here today. Instead, you might be walking across a broad stage where one professor is acknowledging your achievement and another is handing you your sheepskin. You may not know this, but we used to be that sort of country. There was a time, and not so long ago, when state and national leaders supported our institutions—when prospective students could be real students without facing tuitions so daunting and loans so steep that the only ones who dared attend were either the sons and daughters of wealth, or those willing to put themselves into crippling debt for much of their natural life spans—when phony online universities weren’t hawking false dreams in endless television ads, all designed to get their hands on that Sallie Mae money. As it is now, however, only one in 10 Idaho high-schoolers will graduate from college. In this demanding, modern reality, our state slides further and further backward on every education scale available. As organized labor is vilified and crushed—as manufacturing work bleeds out to offshore hellholes where the poorest of the world’s poor will do anything demanded of them for crumbs—as more blue-collar jobs are filled by machines and more menial jobs are filled by desperate immigrants—the day is coming soon when even that minimum wage you’re making now may slip beyond your grasp. So sally forth, young nonalums, and commence your years of drudgery. Scrimp and scrape and scratch out what little you can get in that dreary future awaiting you. But as your worried days go by, forget not to give due credit to those who forged this bleak new world using nothing but their lawyers and political lackeys to accomplish the task—those powerful overlords who gain the most from your powerlessness—those with riches enough to enrich themselves even further with your desperation. You know who they are. One more thing: Please, do curb your envy for those who aren’t here today, but are instead crossing that broad stage for their sheepskin. Keep in mind, most of them are boarding the same leaky boat as you. WWW. B O I S E WE E KLY. C O M


TED RALL/OPINION

AMERICA’S LAST CHANCE Will we resist a massive conspiracy? Turkey teeters on the brink of revolution—because the government wants to build a mall in a public square in Istanbul. What will we do about the PRISM conspiracy? With due respect to the Turkish protesters, PRISM is a trillion times worse. The charter of the National Security Agency specifically states that it is prohibited from “acquiring information concerning the domestic activities of United States persons.” The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s selfprofessed mission is to “protect and defend the United States against terrorist and foreign intelligence threats, to uphold and enforce the criminal laws of the United States, and to provide leadership and criminal justice services to federal, state, municipal and international agencies and partners.” The darkest dystopian visions of the future have come to chilling, horrific life. Everything we learned as schoolchildren was a lie. The U.S. government does not serve us. This is not a government by the people or for the people. The regime in Washington, D.C., no more respects our rights as citizens than the North Korean dictators of Pyongyang. The Washington Post and the British newspaper The Guardian have broken a startling blockbuster, perhaps the biggest story of our lives. “The NSA and the FBI,” writes the Post, “are tapping directly into the central servers of nine leading U.S. Internet companies, extracting audio and video chats, photographs, emails, documents, and connection logs that enable analysts to track one target or trace a whole network of associates.” This is a government-big business conspiracy of the first order, so breathtaking in scope

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that it is scarcely comprehensible. According to a classified PowerPoint presentation leaked by a patriotic intelligence officer, the government taps directly into the servers of Microsoft, Yahoo, Google, Facebook, PalTalk, AOL, Skype, YouTube and Apple. Google, the biggest Internet company on Earth, controls 16 percent of global Internet traffic. If you’re online, Google has given your “private” information to the feds. If capitalism counts for anything, contracts have to be enforced. There is a universally understood implicit contract between Internet users and companies: They keep your data private to the best of their abilities. They might get hacked; a court may serve them with a subpoena. Stuff happens. But they’re not supposed to voluntarily give every bit and byte to the government just because they asked nicely. These Internet giants had a choice. According to the Post: “Apple demonstrated that resistance is possible when it held out for more than five years, for reasons unknown, after Microsoft became PRISM’s first corporate partner in May 2007. Twitter, which has cultivated a reputation for aggressive defense of its users’ privacy, is still conspicuous by its absence from the list of ‘private sector partners.’” It also belies previous official claims that anti-terrorism and other security-based intelligence-gathering operations are specifically targeted at likely threats. To the contrary, the U.S. government is plainly interested in intercepting, collecting and analyzing every electronic communication in the United States. 12 For example: “Google’s offerings

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CITYDESK/NEWS PATR IC K S W EENEY

NEWS

SSTTOP OR GO? It’s hard to fathom which makes the head hurt more: how to fix State Street or how much it will cost. In April 2011, Boise Weekly first reported on something called SSTTOP, aka the State Street Transit and Traffic Operations Plan (BW, News, “SSTOP Waits for Green Light,” April 13, 2011), and the prediction that the current volume of vehicles traveling along State—30,000 on an average weekday— would balloon to more than 56,000 vehicles by 2035, an increase of 93 percent. A 100-plus-page analysis included a halfdozen scenarios to widen State Street and introduce high-occupancy lanes. “It’s the funding part that could drive someone to drink,” Mayor Dave Bieter told planners on March 31, 2011. Hizzoner may want to make it a double. When Sabrina Anderson, director of planning and project management, and transportation funding coordinator Ryan Head, both from the Ada County Highway District, returned to Boise City Council chambers more than two years later, on June 18, they updated city officials on SSTTOP—flying through a series of maps. They said that if and when State Street is widened, presumably by 2030, the price tag might need $45.7 million in local funding and an additional $15 million in federal dollars. “We know it will be a while before we get to the widening of State Street,” cautioned Anderson, adding that federal funding should probably focus on maintenance while local funding should be earmarked for larger, street-widening projects. The most recent version of SSTTOP recommends that much of State Street be widened to seven lanes, with lanes dedicated to transit and other high-occupancy vehicles. The plan also “recommends projects to expand the capacity of the transit system and bicycle and pedestrian facilities and to design State Street to accommodate all travel modes.” “But we should focus on funding pedestrian facilities and sidewalks and the connection of a safe path as soon as possible,” said Anderson. Improved sidewalks and intersections would occur incrementally, with most—between 27th Street and Glenwood Avenue— completed by 2020. Widening of State Street would follow with 27th to Veterans Parkway completed by 2026, Veterans to Collister by 2028 and Collister to Glenwood completed by 2030. Anderson told policymakers that ultimate decisions on funding “will be determined” by ACHD’s budget, but she promised to return with another update sooner than later. —George Prentice

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GEOR GE PR ENTIC E

Early estimates are that the State Street widening project could top $60 million.

SMALL TOWN, BIG HEADLINES Transparency, police department controversies cast long shadows over McCall City Hall GEORGE PRENTICE It’s not as if Don Bailey doesn’t know his way around McCall City Hall. “Let’s duck in here,” he said, ushering Boise Weekly to a back office. It’s just that Bailey, the two-term mayor of McCall, doesn’t even have an office of his own in the building. In fact, he’s not really the person in charge. “McCall is one of only three Idaho cities—Lewiston and Twin Falls are the other two—that have a city manager form of government,” said Bailey. “I only get paid $350 a month.” Bailey isn’t a political novice; after moving to McCall in 1996, he served on the city’s Planning and Zoning Commission from 2000-2006 and, beginning in 2006, was elected to the City Council four times.The council has, in turn, elected him mayor twice, first in 2010. “I never ran for public office before,” said Bailey, who grew up in the Valley County mining town of Stibnite before working as an aerospace technician in Southern California. But rocket science has nothing on politics, just a few months into his first year in office. “The same year I first got elected to council, I was the target of a recall along with three other council members,” said Bailey, with a laugh. “It was my second election in just a few months and I won both times. “We had a few citizens complaining about the city’s building ceiling limits,” he said. “It was kind of a stupid thing. They were arguing about 35 feet versus 50 feet. For goodness sakes, look at all the trees here. They’re over 100 feet tall. It was silly.” Bailey said surviving the recall effort strengthened his political resolve. But it would be far from Bailey’s or McCall’s last controversy during his time in office. In a scathing editorial—going so far as to accuse the City Council of “cowardice” and writing that elected officials were “filled with ignorance for the public interest”—the McCall Star-News took aim at city leaders for their lack of transparency in the suspension and ultimate firing of McCall’s chief of police (BW, Citydesk, “Blistering Editorial Rips McCall Council,” Feb. 9, 2013). “Don Bailey is a nice fellow, a good guy

Don Bailey, 76, has served on the McCall City Council since 2006 and as McCall mayor since 2010, but says he’ll be stepping away from public office at the end of this year.

and sincere,” said Star-News Editor and CoPublisher Tom Grote, who wrote the editorial, “but he doesn’t have the right attitude as far as transparency. I respect his philosophies but I disagree with him.” Grote has seen plenty since he took the reins of the Star-News in 1983, following six years of reporting for the Idaho Statesman. “It takes no courage on our part to simply blast politicians in the paper or write about scandals. Shit comes down all the time around here, as it does in most small towns,” said Grote. “But most daily papers don’t pay attention. The Star-News pays attention.” Grote and his staff were paying particular attention during the summer of 2012, when Bailey and his fellow City Council members needed to hire a new city manager. Grote ripped into city officials for keeping a number of their job interviews with potential candidates behind closed doors (BW, Citydesk, “McCall Officials Secretive About City Manager Contenders,” July 20, 2012). “That may have been legal, but it was wrong,” said Grote. “Hiring a city manager is the most important thing that the City Council will do. Nothing else compares to that. What could they possibly think would be wrong with an open process? Are they worried about people’s backgrounds being investigated? Duh.” Bailey’s recollection was a bit different. “They were done in public. Some of us may have met individually with the applicants. But as far as I’m concerned, this was much more transparent than what I was used to when I was working in the private sector,” said Bailey. Grote told BW that Bailey’s previous experience in the private sector was actually the root of the problem. “They’re just not accustomed to the ethics of public transparency,” said Grote. “If they’re going to run things like a business, then they ought to remember that their cus-

tomer is the taxpayer.” Bailey laughed off the criticism. “Tom’s a nice guy but he likes to create controversy,” said the mayor. “It sells papers.” Indeed, shortly after Bailey and the council completed the interviews and hand-picked their new city manager, Gene Drabinski, the controversies only got bigger. Next in line was the police department. “I think, from day one, [McCall Police Chief] Jerry Summers and Gene [Drabinski] clashed,” said Bailey. “And it was Gene’s decision to part company with Jerry.” Grote traces Summers’ April ouster as police chief to a September 2012 citizen survey, launched by Drabinski, to garner opinions on Summers and his police force. “That was really his first tit in the ringer,” said Grote. “They asked a bunch of questions and some of them were softballs. But they got over 400 written comments, many of them critical. Four hundred from a city this size!” McCall’s official population is 3,000, with only about 60 percent claiming full-time residency. “There were general criticisms and specific criticisms of the police department, but hundreds of them,” he said. “That survey really woke up the council and [the new city manager] wanted to redirect the chief to pay attention to that criticism. The chief resisted and that’s when Gene [Drabinski] and Jerry [Summers] came to blows.” Summers was suspended in February and fired in April. He has since filed a tort claim against the city, warning of a pending lawsuit. “It’s an ugly situation,” McCall City Councilman Nic Swanson told the Star-news in April. Bailey told BW that the city wasn’t “in a big rush” to find Summers’ permanent replacement. 10 “We have an interim police chief, Larry Stokes,” said Bailey. “I think WWW. B O I S E WE E KLY. C O M


Shakespeare UNDER

T H E S TA R S

S E A S O

N S

2013 Plays Blithe Spirit

By Noël Coward Sponsored by Hawley Troxell and Idaho Public Television

Much Ado About Nothing

By William Shakespeare Sponsored by ACHD Commuteride and Idaho Statesman’s Scene and Treasure Magazines

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street

A Musical Thriller. Music & Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim. Book by Hugh Wheeler. Sponsored by Stoel Rives LLP and Boise Weekly

King Richard III By William Shakespeare Sponsored by Merrill Lynch and Boise State Public Radio

The Foreigner

By Larry Shue Sponsored by Holland & Hart and 107.1 KHITS

L ayaway Available Karen Thorla, Cassandra Bissel*, Much Ado About Nothing (2013). *Member Actors’ Equity. Photo—DKM Photography.

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M–F, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

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NEWS

A PRIVATE PERFORMANCE Shakespeare meets with GBAD behind closed doors over Macy’s project GEORGE PRENTICE The drama surrounding the possibility of the Idaho Shakespeare Festival moving its headquarters, administrative, educational and rehearsal space into the former Macy’s building has entered its second act. But it’s a bit more improvised than on-script. “You’re not invited,” Greater Boise Auditorium District Chairman Hy Kloc told Boise Weekly as he and fellow GBAD commissioners prepared to gather in private June 24. In fact, all non-invitees were ushered out the door as GBAD went into executive session, which according to Idaho Code can include matters concerning “an interest in real property which is not owned by a public agency.” When BW asked Kloc who was invited to the

clandestine meeting, he smiled and said, “Our guests from the Idaho Shakespeare Festival.” We turned around to see a full ISF contingency, including Producing Artistic Director Charlie Fee, Managing Director Mark Hofflund, Director of Finance Sherrill Livingston, and Lynn Johnston, Karen Meyer and John Sims, from the ISF Board of Trustees. Also invited to the closed-door meeting was Jeff Shneider, principal emeritus of CSHQA.

ISF Managing Director Mark Hofflund told BW that the organization “has been down enough roads to be naturally cautious about getting our collective hopes too high.”

the department is doing fine. There has been a lot of criticism [leveled at the department], but I think most of that was in the 8 past.” But Grote said that the prolonged vacancy leads to uncertainty. “Gene Drabinski is in no hurry to fill that position and that makes him the de facto chief of police. Gene has decided to set his own tone and he wants to find someone that matches his personality,” said Grote. “And that is the conundrum of a city manager form of government. People don’t realize the power that a city manager has. He has total control over hiring and firing. The council is asked to give consent in what he’s doing; not necessarily approval, but consent. And in the absence of any direction, the city manager has total authority to move forward and ask for forgiveness rather than permission.” Meanwhile, Bailey insists he wants to look to the future, not McCall’s recent controversial past. “After all, this will be my last year in office. I’m stepping down to give somebody else a shot at this,” he said. “But we’ve got plenty of work to do in the next few months. “We want to complete a governance manual—a guide to the city’s rules and regulations,” he added. “We’ve got a lot of new construction, including improvements to Third Street—that project will probably cost about $1.2 million. We’re starting to work on creat-

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“This would give [ISF] a permanent home and they have a huge education program during the day, which would bring a lot of people into that area every day,” he told BW in May. Boise Weekly first reported in November 2012 about ISF’s desire to move into the former Macy’s building, which has sat empty since March 2010 (BW, News, “Much Ado About Macy’s,” Nov. 14, 2012). CSHQA has plans to build about 62 apartments on the second through fifth floors, leaving the main floor and mezzanine open for a high-profile project. “But this is all pre-campaign and predevelopment, and [ISF] has been down enough roads to be naturally cautious about getting our collective hopes up too high,” Hofflund told BW after the June 24 executive session, which at approximately 80 minutes, ran longer than the public portion of GBAD’s meeting. Because GBAD’s mission includes the construction and development of performing arts space, its directors have been quietly meeting with ISF, CSHQA and public interests—including the city of Boise and the Capital City Development Corporation—about a plan to convert former retail space into a new home for ISF. Hofflund told BW that ISF has explored several long-term plans over the years, “But nothing as unusual or unique as this.” Sixty minutes into the executive session, GBAD legal counsel Don Knickrehm emerged from the private proceedings. “They’re wearing us down,” he said, before taking a breath and returning behind closed doors.

ing a new local improvement district in the south part of McCall; and, perhaps most importantly, I really want us to introduce a new local-option tax to help pay for infrastructure. We simply don’t have enough money for our streets.” Bailey ought to know. In spite of the fact that he’s not the ultimate authority at City Hall, part of his part-time duties as mayor is to sign the checks. “You quickly learn how damn expensive it is to run the city,” said Bailey, who added that McCall’s current fiscal year spending plan was approximately $15 million. “That’s a lot of money for a town of 3,000 people.” Grote conceded that McCall’s elected officials usually run for office for “a noble cause.” “But let’s face it, it’s a lot of grief, and they find that out shortly after they get into office,” he said. “The names and faces at City Hall come and go. It’s not just McCall. It’s the nature of all politics. But the same mistakes continue to be repeated because there is no real institutional memory in government. So as the press, we have to be constantly vigilant.” Grote already has his sights set on what could easily become City Hall’s newest controversy: Drabinksi is recommending that McCall raise property taxes by 9 percent and eliminate five city positions. “Politics is like shooting fish in a barrel,” said Grote. WWW. B O I S E WE E KLY. C O M


CITIZEN

JEFF SPECK Author of Walkable City says something is afoot in Boise GEORGE PRENTICE

Are you working on concurrent projects for a number of communities? I probably have five overlapping clients at any time, but I’m typically focusing on one. In the case of my walkability studies, I associate with firms that help me with renderings or graphic layouts; but, unlike most city planners, when you’re hiring my firm, you’re really just getting me. Because of that, I’ve chosen to do less work more craftily rather than doing more work with a larger team. I’ve heard that one of your earliest visions of an ideal city was when you watched the Mary Tyler Moore Show. My recollection was that Mary Tyler Moore was probably the only thing on television that portrayed a city as something other than crime-infested. If you remember, most of the programs at that time were about violence in our cities. More recent generations grew up watching shows that portrayed cities more lovingly: Friends, Seinfeld, Sex and the City. Those programs were all set in Manhattan. For good reasons. Manhattan is a self-reinforcing cycle of transit and walkability. New

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Yorkers probably burn the least gasoline per citizen than anywhere else in America. Plus, they have the lowest vehicle fatality rate in the country. If the whole country shared that fatality rate, we’d save 24,000 people per year. Is there a distinction between walkable cities east or west of the Mississippi? It’s not east or west. It’s cities that developed before or after World War II. You’ll find many West Coast cities like San Francisco perform a lot better than some East Coast cities. Jacksonville, Tampa and even Atlanta saw most of their development occur after World War II. They were all designed around the automobile. And of course, those are cities that are most effective in smashing automobiles into one another. These are cities that require you to drive. As a result, the automobile is transformed from an instrument of freedom into a prosthetic device. Do you tailor your message from city to city? There are 50 different parts of my presentation; 40 are relevant to wherever I speak and the rest are specific to where I’m talking.

JER EM Y LANNINGHAM

It was a foregone conclusion that at some point in his conversation with Boise Weekly, Jeff Speck would be walking while talking. In fact, as BW was going to press, the author of Walkable City said he would be doing quite a bit of walking in and around downtown Boise in the coming week. After officials from the city of Boise and the Capital City Development Corporation first heard Speck speak at a Boise Metro Chamber of Commerce conference in Sun Valley, they instantly asked the smart growth consultant to return to Idaho, this time spending some more time in the City of Trees. BW got Speck, 49, to stand still long enough to talk about what he’s been asked to do for Boise city planners, one-way versus two-way thoroughfares, and how he’s not interested in hearing what everybody wants.

For instance, the issue of one-way streets or a city’s bicycle infrastructure is going to be more important in some cities. Perhaps more than any time in recent memory, officials in Boise have moved their conversations about one-way versus two-way and bicycle infrastructure into the fast lane. There’s a lot afoot. I’ve heard a lot of good things about Boise in terms of its livability and a great deal of enthusiasm. Nothing pleases a consultant more than to arrive in a city that is already improving. In addition to your June 24 presentation about walkability at the Egyptian Theatre, what has CCDC and the city of Boise asked you to do? I’m doing a walkability study for Boise. But I should tell you that I’m not playing secretary of the mob. I’m not necessarily interested in hearing what everyone wants. This is study based on facts on the ground. It will be based on my objective and subjective analysis as to how things are working or not working. I’ll have three full mornings of multiple meetings. My advice to my hosts [CCDC and the city of Boise] was to select people for me to talk with—not based on political framework or their desire to be heard, but because they’re people who will give me the best information. Do you have a sense of Boise’s big-

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CITIZEN 11

gest challenges? First of all, there’s the fact that the city of Boise doesn’t own its own streets. Instead, you have this… what is it called?

The Ada County Highway District manages the majority of the curb-to-curb space. That’s a huge challenge. And helping you to surmount that challenge will be one of my goals. Does that mean you’ll be coming back to Boise to make a presentation later this summer? Yes, in a couple of months I’ll come back with a full report and my recommendations. Let’s talk about a specific real-world challenge. Charter schools are becoming more successful here, but transporting kids far from home is in direct conflict with the scenario of children walking to a neighborhood school. Do you know why I own an SUV? It’s because I send my kids to a charter school. Unfortunately, charter schools seem to be the best hope for education in many cities, but they’re horrible from a planning perspective. No. 1, they dramatically increase the number of commuters. And No. 2, we’re missing the way we used to form our communities around

schools. Social capital usually arises around a schoolyard. I’m presuming you’ve heard the cliche that Americans will walk more once gasoline is $10 a gallon. That’s certainly true. The greater question I have is: What will happen to cities like Atlanta, Jacksonville and Tampa that were designed around compulsory automobile use? Can you point to a good example for Boiseans to look to as a walkable, bikeable model? I’m sure you’ve heard this plenty, but I think Portland is a great model. They spent three decades investing less in driving and more in transit and bikeways. Portlanders now drive 20 percent less than the rest of America, and when you’re saving money on driving, you tend to spend more on housing. How do you encourage naysayers or those still uncommitted to your message? I have to run, so I’m walking out the door as I talk to you. You may be on the fence whether you see what I see, but a walkable, bikeable city is one of the things that both millennials and empty nesters are demanding. And if you don’t attract or keep those millennials, your city doesn’t have a future.

RALL include Gmail, voice and video chat, Google Drive files, photo libraries, and live surveillance of search terms.” Yeah, of course, we knew they were spying on Americans on an epic scale. First came the 2001 USA-Patriot Act, which opened the door to officially sanctioned law-breaking in the supposed service of national security. In 2002, there was DARPA’s Total Information Awareness, the Bush administration’s post-9/11 data mining operation, an attempt to, as the New Yorker wrote at the time, “turn everything in cyberspace about everybody—tax records, driver’s license applications, travel records, bank records, raw FBI files, telephone records, credit card records, shopping mall security camera videotapes, medical records, every email anybody ever sent—into a single, humongous, multi-googolplexibyte database that electronic robots will mine for patterns of information suggestive of terrorist activity.” After an uproar, Congress defunded TIA—so its staff and activities simply moved to the NSA. There was also AT&T’s secret room 641A, the site of “clandestine collaboration between one big telecommunications company, AT&T, and the National Security Agency to facilitate the most comprehensive illegal domestic spying program in history.” That story broke in 2007. Recently, another sweeping violation of privacy came to light. This time, “the govern7

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ment obtained phone numbers of both parties on every Verizon call, the call’s duration, location data and the time of day the calls were made.” That program is ongoing. It doesn’t take a genius to extrapolate from these stories to the massive scope of PRISM. So what are we going to do about this? First: We need an independent investigation. Not by Congress. By someone we can trust. Second: If this story is true, President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and the entire cabinet must resign and face prosecution. According to the Post, data collected from the rogue PRISM program is relied upon for roughly one out of seven of the president’s daily briefs on intelligence matters. “That is a remarkable figure in an agency that measures annual intake in the trillions of communications,” notes the newspaper. It means that knowledge of PRISM, and authorization thereof, goes to the Oval Office. Members of Congress, executives of the Internet companies involved, and of any other companies, must be held to account as well. Prosecutions should come quickly. Finally, we have some hard questions to ask ourselves. I’d start with this one: What does it mean to be an American? Are we citizens; free men and women? Or are we serfs, not vested in even the primal right to talk to our friends and family members without some goddamn government asshole listening in? WWW. B O I S E WE E KLY. C O M


Each year, photographers from across the Treasure Valley converge on Boise Weekly headquarters, their best work tucked under their arms. They come with stunning portraits, breathtaking landscapes or intricate images that turn everyday

objects into abstract art—all accomplished in the subtle blacks, whites and grays of black-andwhite photography. For non-photographers, it may seem simple to capture an image—especially in an age where everyone seems addicted to posting smartphone pics on social media sites. But for true photographers, it’s an artform that is never truly mastered. This year our panel of judges pored through piles of images in search of those that stood out from the rest. It was a tough job, given the quality of the entries, but somehow they were able to narrow the

field. Photographers Laurie Pearman, whose images regularly fill the pages of Boise Weekly, and Mike Shipman bravely took on the task, as well as BW Art Director Leila Ramella-Rader and Graphic Designer Jen Grable. For the second year, BW readers had a chance to cast votes for their favorites as well, thanks to an online contest—and we must say, you chose wisely. Thanks to all those who entered work in this year’s contest—we can’t wait to see what you bring us next year. —Deanna Darr

first place & grand prize // $250 // Keith S. Walklet, Boise WWW. B OISEWEEKLY.C O M

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honorable mention // Kira Tabor, Meridian

second place // $75 // Cecilia Vega, Boise

third place // $50 // Maria G. Essig, Boise 14 | JUNE 26 – JULY 2, 2013 | BOISEweekly

honorable mention // Keith S. Walklet, Boise

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first place // $100 // Greg Worthen, Boise

second place // $75 // Shaun Shannon, Boise

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third place // $50 // Greg Worthen, Boise

honorable mention // Jessica Ramone, Boise

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honorable mention // cecilia vega, Boise

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first place // $100 // Rachel Loomis, Boise

Second place // $75 // Cecilia Vega, Boise WWW. B OISEWEEKLY.C O M

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honorable mention // Vincent Leech, Boise

honorable mention // justin howells, Boise third place // $50 // Rachel Loomis, Boise

honorable mention // Martin J. Grumet, Boise 18 | JUNE 26 – JULY 2, 2013 | BOISEweekly

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readers' choice // $15 // Shane johnson, nampa

readers' choice // $15 // shane johnson, nampa WWW. B OISEWEEKLY.C O M

readers' choice // $15 // Todd allman, boise BOISEweekly | JUNE 26 – JULY 2, 2013 | 19


U S A C YC LING, INC .

BOISEvisitWEEKLY PICKS boiseweekly.com for more events S IC M ANTA

Have bike, will travel—to Sun Valley.

FRIDAY-SUNDAY JUNE 28-JULY 7 singletrack Follow one hunter’s quest to find “Steve,” the deer in the feature The River’s Divide— part of the Full Draw Film Tour.

THURSDAY JUNE 27 katniss FULL DRAW FILM TOUR It’s probably an understatement to say that hunting is pretty popular in the West, and for many of those hunters, nocking an arrow is as familiar as chambering a round. Following the wave of bow-wielding screen icons in The Hunger Games and The Avengers, bow hunting— along with archery in general—has seen a surge of interest worldwide. The Full Draw Film Tour invites the hunting and archery communities to come together at the Egyptian Theatre Thursday, June 27, to experience the visceral thrill of bow hunting on the big screen. Coming to Boise for its third year, the tour highlights independent filmmakers who specialize in capturing the traditional bow hunting experience. Including both short and feature-length films, topics range from professional, fully kitted hunters climbing the high peaks in search of mountain goats, to documentaries following enthusiastic young amateurs on their first bow hunts. Even Hawkeye and Katniss could pick up a few tips. But it’s not just about the films—audiences are entered for the chance to win a bow, along with other hunting equipment, in raffle drawings held throughout the evening. The tour will raise funds for Hunt of a Lifetime—a hunt-themed nonprofit that helps kids with life-threatening illnesses experience the hunts of their dreams. 6:30 p.m. $9-$12. The Egyptian Theatre, 700 W. Main St., Boise, 208-345-0454, fulldrawfilmtour.com.

SATURDAYSUNDAY JUNE 29-30 meridian MERIDIAN SUMMER ARTS FESTIVAL Many summer festivals are bulked up with insurance

booths, chiropractic services and other commercial ventures, but the Meridian Summer Arts Festival’s strict arts-and-crafts-only policy ensures there’s no one but local artists and crafters competing for your attention and dollars. After a successful debut last year, event coordinator Dead Bird Local Art and Framing has teamed up with

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Green Chute Artists Co-op to bring the festival back to Meridian’s Storey Park on Saturday, June 29, and Sunday, June 30. More than 50 artists and crafters from across the Treasure Valley will be on hand to sell their creations, including everything from traditional watercolors to modern art installations to steampunk-inspired jewelry to soy candles.

RIDE SUN VALLEY BIKE FESTIVAL From the casual pedaler to the hard-core racer, the urban cyclist to the off-road mountain biker, Sun Valley is a hell of a place to be a biker. There are more than 32 miles of multiuse bike paths, parks and scenic roads, as well as more than 400 miles of singletrack, meaning bikers have plenty of places to lose themselves. There’s so much for bikers to do that the area celebrates its two-wheeled offerings with the annual Ride Sun Valley Mountain Bike Festival. The 10-day festival kicks off on Friday, June 28, and continues through Sunday, July 7, with a full schedule of bike-oriented parties and activities. Things start off right with an opening party at the Sawtooth Brewery in Ketchum that includes live music and a raffle. The party acts as a fundraiser for the Wood River Bike Coalition and supports the Sun Valley chapter of the International Mountain Bike Association. For the next nine days, Sun Valley opens its doors for competitions like the Sun Valley Super Enduro, a two-day race taking riders on four different downhill tracks. Other events include a bike demo, where attendees can shop for the latest cycling gear, as well as test-ride bikes by Cannondale, GT, Mongoose, Ellsworth and Scott on a section of singletrack accessible from the demo site. The Ride Sun Valley Festival will also feature women’s rides, kids-only bike races and plenty of assorted diversions. The week closes out with the USA Cycling Marathon Mountain Bike National Championships, where racers compete on a 45-mile course that climbs and descends a total of 5,000 feet. Meanwhile, the Lawn-athon brings Caribbean and Mexican-style tacos, lawn game tournaments and live music to spectators. Get a full list of events online. Friday, June 28-Sunday, July 7, Sun Valley, ridesunvalley.com.

After checking out the arts and crafts, stay for the live performance and painting by avant garde art group Marten Evergreen, as well as story and poetry readings choreographed to music by True Story. Velocity Pole Art will demonstrate pole acrobatics and local jam band The KOR will keep the tunes going. Local food purveyors Life’s Kitchen, Bang On The Wall Burgers and Kona Ice will offer grub that visitors can wash down with a beer from Payette Brewing Company.

Saturday, June 29, 11 a.m.-8 p.m. and Sunday, June 30, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. FREE. Storey Park, 205 E. Franklin Road, Meridian, 208-639-1378, meridiancity. org.

SATURDAYSUNDAY JUNE 29-30 dogfight WARBIRD ROUNDUP There’s something about

the industrial F sharp hum of an old fighter plane that pricks the ears. For those who served in World War II, it’s the signal to drop what you’re doing and look to the sky. Saturday, June 29-Sunday, June 30, the Warhawk Air Museum in Nampa hosts the Warbird Roundup featuring the P-47 Thunderbolt, which WWII fighter ace Capt. Richard Fleischer piloted through more than 200 missions while stationed in West New Guinea. The two-day event features flybys by WWII-era fighter planes, WWW. B O I S E WE E KLY. C O M


FIND JENNIFER M C C U LLOU GH

ICE CREAM FROM WIRED BEAN’S COFFEE RIVER

You don’t get fresher than this.

Does Homeland Security have a plan for houses landing in Munchkin Land?

SATURDAY JUNE 29

SATURDAY JUNE 29

farm fresh

homeland security

ORGANIC GEMS FARM DINNER AND BUS TOUR

DISASTER DAYS

Locally grown, organic delicacies: They’re not just for vegans anymore. To mark the end of the third annual Idaho Organic Week, the Treasure Valley Food Coalition and Northwest Center for Alternatives to Pesticides invite Boiseans to embark on a pilgrimage to two Gem County organic farms. Back by popular demand, the Organic Gems Farm Dinner and Bus Tour departs from the Albertsons location at 16th and State streets in Boise at 3 p.m. on Saturday, June 29, for a quick trip to Emmett and a tour of Joe and Carmen Morton’s vineyard at Silver Leaf Farm. Following the tour, casual sippers and alcohol aficionados alike can sample wine by Vale Wine Company, based in Caldwell. From Emmett, the bus heads east to Sweet for a tour of area farms and Sweet Valley Organics. At Sweet Valley, tourists can see the process of tomato, basil and pepper farming in action, in addition to vermicomposting and pastured chicken demos. And, since bus riders’ minds will be on food by this point, dinner featuring products from Sweet Valley Organics and other local farmers will be the next item on the agenda. Idaho Organic Week, in conjunction with the Idaho Department of Agriculture, showcases the efforts of producers, farmers and organizations seeking to emphasize the diverse organic alternatives the state has to offer. A spot on the Organic Gems bus costs $75, but includes round-trip transportation to all destinations. The admission price also covers the cost of vineyard and farm tours, wine tasting and dinner. 3-10:30 p.m. $75. Corner of 16th and State streets, Boise, 208-850-6540, treasurevalleyfoodcoalition.org.

presentations by Fleischer, museum tours and plenty of food. The Roundup runs from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. both days and admission costs $4 for children 12 and younger, $8 for seniors and veterans and $10 for adults. Several of the planes in flight and on display at the

S U B M I T

Roundup are rare, including a P-47G Thunderbolt—one of three such planes remaining in the world, though at the time of its production it was the heaviest and most expensive single-engine fighter flying the skies of Europe and the Pacific. The P-40 Warhawk, of which

Between flooded communities, neighborhoods torn apart by twisters and massive factory explosions, the country has experienced its share of disasters. But don’t head to the bunker yet—the Discovery Center of Idaho is ready to jump into the fray, kind of. DCI is teaming with the Idaho Bureau of Homeland Security to host Disaster Days Saturday, June 29, from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Ten local and federal agencies will be at the ready to offer advice and training to families looking to prepare for calamities. Each organization will present working models and demonstrations that can help old and young deal with disaster. While the Red Cross teaches participants what makes an effective 72-hour emergency kit (sorry, it doesn’t include your gaming system), the National Weather Service shows off how it operates weather balloons to predict patterns in the atmosphere. The Idaho Department of Water Resources will even show you if your house would flood if Lucky Peak Dam ever bursts. The Boise Fire Department will also have a hazmat truck on-site for kids to walk through and learn what civilians and professionals should do in the event of a hazardous materials spill. Need more motivation to get prepared? Anyone who visits every booth at Disaster Days is eligible to enter a raffle for a family pass to an upcoming Discovery Center event. Of course, the Discovery Center crew doesn’t want to leave Disaster Days visitors with a bad taste in their mouths (or nightmares), so they’ll be whipping up some liquid nitrogen ice cream. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. FREE-$9. Discovery Center of Idaho, 131 Myrtle St., Boise, 208-343-9895, dcidaho.org.

just 20 remain flying out of more than 14,000 planes produced, engaged Japanese aircraft at Pearl Harbor. There will also be flybys by the famous P-51 “Boise Bee” Mustang. For an older generation, the Warhawk Roundup is a

Cresting the summit into Horseshoe Bend with gusts of warm wind whipping through the open car windows, the urge for ice cream hit. There were probably a few options at the approaching Chevron station, we mused, but Drumsticks or Push-ups just weren’t going to WIRED BEAN’S COFFEE RIVER cut it. 438 Highway 55, That’s when Wired Bean’s Horseshoe Bend Coffee River espresso stand came into view off Highway 55 like a mountain mirage. A hand-lettered sign advertised homemade ice cream in three flavors: key lime pie, fresh huckleberry and, oddly, black licorice. Intrigued, we ordered a scoop of the black licorice, which owner Rindy Quijas said she makes with a syrup procured from a specialty online retailer. Grabbing a seat on an adjacent wooden porch swing stationed behind the stand, we dug in. Though the ice cream was the color of wet ash in a drowned campfire—a transfixing gray-ish purple—it had a subtle and surprisingly refreshing licorice flavor. And, oh boy, was it creamy. We didn’t try the huckleberry or the key lime pie, but there’s no doubt we’ll be back on our next trip up to McCall. It’s not a proper road trip without the windows down and ice cream dripping down your arm. —Tara Morgan

rendezvous with history, but for families it’s a chance to see some rare birds in flight. Saturday-Sunday, June 29-30, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $4$10. Warhawk Air Museum, 201 Municipal Drive, Nampa, 208-465-6446, warhawkairmuseum.org.

an event by e-mail to calendar@boiseweekly.com. Listings are due by noon the Thursday before publication.

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8 DAYS OUT WEEK IN REVIEW K EHINDE W ILEY, LEVIATHAN Z ODIAC (THE W OR LD STAGE: IS R AEL), 2011, OIL AND GOLD ENAM EL ON C ANVAS, 95.75” X 71.75”, C OLLEC TION OF B LAK E B YR NE. C OU R TESY OF THE ARTIST AND ROBERTS & TILTON, CULVER CITY, CALIFORNIA

WEDNESDAY JUNE 26 On Stage BLITHE SPIRIT—In this Noel Coward comedy, a novelist looking for source material hires a medium to help him connect with the dead. When the medium conjures the spirit of the novelist’s deceased wife, shenanigans ensue. 8 p.m. $24-$66. Idaho Shakespeare Festival, 5657 Warm Springs Ave., Boise, 208429-9908, box office 208-3369221, idahoshakespeare.org. BOISE’S FUNNIEST PERSON OPEN TRYOUTS—Impress a panel of judges with comedy skills for eligibility to participate in the July 27 finale and the $1,000 cash prize for best performance. 6-9 p.m. $5. Liquid, 405 S. Eighth St., Ste. 110, Boise, 208-287-5379, boisesfunniestperson.com.

Concerts BOISE COMMUNITY BAND—7 p.m. FREE. Julius M. Kleiner Memorial Park, 1900 N. Records Ave., near Fairview Avenue and Eagle Road, Meridian.

THURSDAY JUNE 27 On Stage BLITHE SPIRIT—See Wednesday. 8 p.m. $24-$66. Idaho Shakespeare Festival, 5657 Warm Springs Ave., Boise, 208429-9908, box office 208-3369221, idahoshakespeare.org. INSERT FOOT IMPROV COMEDY—9 p.m. $5. Reef, 105 S. Sixth St., Boise, 208-287-9200, reefboise.com. LIQUID LAUGHS: BRIAN MOOTE—Featuring Lukas Seely. Two-for-one tickets. 8 p.m. $10. Liquid, 405 S. Eighth St., Ste. 110, Boise, 208-287-5379, liquidboise.com.

Food & Drink DISHCRAWL: HOT EATS IN BOISE STREETS—Explore a variety of culinary creations from four downtown Boise restaurants. Ticket holders are notified of meeting location via email 48 hours prior to the event. For more info or tickets, email rebekaho@dishcrawl.com. 7 p.m. $45, dishcrawl.com/boise.

Literature UNDOING & DOING POETRY READING—Poetry reading with Kate Menzies, Surel’s Place artist in residence. Participants from Menzie’s writing workshop, UNdoing EGO, share their work. 6:30-8 p.m. FREE. Surel’s Place, 212 E. 33rd St., Garden City, 208-407-7529, surelsplace.org.

22 | JUNE 26 – JULY 2, 2013 | BOISEweekly

Kehinde Wiley’s work explores struggle, but empowers without politics.

KEHINDE WILEY DISCUSSES BAM EXHIBIT, THE WORLD STAGE: ISRAEL Kehinde Wiley introduced himself as a poor public speaker at an art talk organized by Boise Art Museum June 21 at Boise State University. Standing at the podium in a rust-colored sport coat, he opened with a jab at his own slideshow presentation. “This is not Boston. Clearly,” he said, after mistakenly pulling up a slide with the logo for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. The audience chuckled. Wiley delivered an address on the sources and inspirations behind The World Stage: Israel, an exhibition that opened June 22 and runs through Sunday, Oct. 27 at BAM. The presentation included nary an “um” or “uh,” demonstrating Wiley’s mastery of the theory and praxis of fine art, humor and rhetorical fluency. From his paintings of young black men striking poses found in European portraiture, to the coat he wore, Wiley is rife with conceits. “I want you as the viewer to be suspicious,” he said. Wiley’s portraits evoke ethnic, cultural, economic and gender struggles. But Wiley empowers his subjects through hypermasculine poses and imperious facial expressions without irony or anger. “For artists, it can be suffocating to have a transgressive agenda presupposed upon you. You can never be free, but sort of act like it,” he said. The World Stage: Israel is one of several similar exhibitions of Wiley’s work featuring street-sourced models from around the world. The BAM exhibition draws faithfully from black Jewish and Arab-Israeli models who Wiley encountered in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, as well as motifs from Jewish marriage contracts, Torah scrolls and other examples of Jewish visual art. His portraits are enormous. One of the largest, “Alios Itzhak” (2001), is 115 inches by 80 inches, with the subject holding a pose recalling 18th century Dutch portraiture. Wound about his arms and chest are decorative blooming vines and wild animals rendered in explosive color that seem to draw the hyper-real subject into the background. “Scale has a lot to do with modernism, bravado and chest beating,” Wiley said. Wiley’s paintings give nods to traditional culture, marginalization, race and gender, but they don’t tackle wealth and poverty of power so much as they convey yearning and desire, pivoting away from the politics of oppression. Standing in BAM, it’s easy to spend 15 minutes looking at a single painting, examining its nuance and realism, seeking out details and absorbing Wiley’s grand visions. The portraits exude sage humor and grace—never indulging in bitterness or lofty philosophizing. “It’s not a direct portrait of anyone. It’s a picture of a set of desires,” he said. “I’m jettisoning some of the high seriousness that was in the room.” —Harrison Berry WWW. B O I S E WE E KLY. C O M


8 DAYS OUT Kids & Teens TEEN HENNA TATTOOS—Teens submit permission slips to get inked with temporary henna. 4 p.m. FREE. Ada Community Library, Lake Hazel Branch, 10489 Lake Hazel Road, Boise, 208-297-6700, adalib.org.

Odds & Ends IDAHO STATE BUTTON SHOW— Check out the annual meeting of the Idaho State Button Society. Button design and ornamentation take center stage at this display and sale event. Winners at the judged event go to the national button show. See Facebook for more info. 4-6 p.m. FREE-$84. Red Lion, 1800 W. Fairview Ave., Boise, 208-3447691. LADIES’ LOUNGE—Toss back some cocktails with the ladies of Boise Weekly and enjoy prize giveaways, drink specials and ohso-much more. Visit BW’s promo page to get the 4-1-1. 5 p.m. FREE. Willi B’s Saloon, 12505 Chinden Blvd., Boise, 208-3315666, willibs.com.

FRIDAY JUNE 28 On Stage LIQUID LAUGHS: BRIAN MOOTE—See Thursday. 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. $10. Liquid, 405 S. Eighth St., Ste. 110, Boise, 208287-5379, liquidboise.com.

Concerts THE KINGS OF SWING—7:30 p.m. $16-$22. Woodriver Cellars, 3705 N. Hwy. 16, Eagle, 208286-9463, woodrivercellars.com.

Kids & Teens ANIMALS OF THE WATERSHED WITH MATT LAURANCE—This course guides students through sculpting animals that live in the Boise area and creating “seed bombs” to throw into WaterShed pond banks to help riparian area habitats. 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m. FREE. Boise WaterShed, 11818 W. Joplin Road, Boise, 208489-1284, cityofboise.org/bee/ watershed.

Odds & Ends FOOTHILLS IN BLOOM—Join Ann DeBolt from Idaho Botanical Garden to learn about native flowers and how to paint flowers with watercolorist Brian Schreiner. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. FREE. Foothills Learning Center, 3188 Sunset Peak Road, Boise, 208-514-3755, boiseenvironmentaleducation.org. IDAHO STATE BUTTON SHOW— See Thursday. 8 a.m.-10 p.m. FREE-$84. Red Lion, 1800 W. Fairview Ave., Boise, 208-3447691. IMPROVOLUTION AT THE SESQUI-SHOP—Explore musical improv via voice and character building at improvisational performance workshops. Contact Mike at mike@boiselaughs.com for more info. 7 p.m. Boise 150 Sesqui-Shop, 1008 Main St., Boise, 208-433-5671, boise150. org.

SATURDAY JUNE 29 On Stage BLITHE SPIRIT—See Wednesday. 8 p.m. $24-$66. Idaho Shakespeare Festival, 5657 Warm Springs Ave., Boise, 208429-9908, box office 208-3369221, idahoshakespeare.org.

Festivals & Events THE MEPHAM GROUP

| SUDOKU

BOGUS BASIN STAR PARTY— The Boise Astronomical Society invites the public to view objects in the night sky, a constellation tour, astronomy education and a nature hike, plus food and beverages for purchase. Canned food donations for Idaho Foodbank are appreciated. This event is weather permitting. Call for updates. 7 p.m. FREE. Bogus Basin Frontier Point Lodge, Bogus Basin Road, Boise, 208-332-5390, boiseastro.org. THIRD SPACE SATURDAY—Join Spacebar Arcade, DJ I.G.A. the Independent Grocer and the Vinyl Preservation Society for video games, beer and community. 10 p.m.-1 a.m. FREE. Spacebar Arcade, 200 N. Capitol Blvd., Boise, 208-918-0597, spacebararcade.com. WARBIRD ROUNDUP— Catch fly bys of rare WWII-era fighters, including the P-40 Warhawk and P-47 Thunderbolt, as well as presentations by pilot Capt. Richard Fleischner and food. See Picks, Page 20. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $4-$10. Warhawk Air Museum, Nampa Airport, 201 Municipal Drive, Nampa, 208-465-6446, warhawkairmuseum.org.

| EASY | MEDIUM

| HARD |

PROFESSIONAL |

Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit 1 to 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, visit www.sudoku.org.uk. Go to www.boiseweekly.com and look under odds and ends for the answers to this week’s puzzle. And don’t think of it as cheating. Think of it more as simply double-checking your answers. © 2009 Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Media Services. All rights reserved.

WWW. B OISEWEEKLY.C O M

LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS

On Stage COMEDYSPORTZ: ANGELS VS. NERD HERD—Can the mysterious Randy lead his team of highly trained and beautiful Angels to victory against the questionably nefarious, but definitely hilarious Nerd Herd? Improvised comedy suitable for all ages. 7 p.m. $5-$10. ComedySportz Boise, 3250 N. Lakeharbor Lane, Ste. 184A, Boise, 208-991-4746, boisecomedy.com.

BOISEweekly | JUNE 26 – JULY 2, 2013 | 23


8 DAYS OUT LIQUID LAUGHS: BRIAN MOOTE—See Thursday. 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. $10. Liquid, 405 S. Eighth St., Ste. 110, Boise, 208287-5379, liquidboise.com. MISSOULA CHILDREN’S THEATRE: SECRET GARDEN—Mistress Mary Quite Contrary moves from India to England, making friends along the way. 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. FREE. Eagle United Methodist Church, 651 N. Eagle Road, Eagle, 208-939-0108, idahoarts.org.

Food & Drink

REUNION FESTIVAL

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ORGANIC GEMS FARM DINNER AND TOUR—Take a bus tour of organic farms, including Silver Leaf Farm and Sweet Valley Organics, wine tasting and a dinner. See Picks, Page 21. 3-10:30 p.m. $75. Albertsons, 1650 W. State St., Boise, 208-850-6504, treasurevalleyfoodcoalition.org.

Workshops & Classes

Sports & Fitness

LATE-NIGHT SWING DANCE— Beginner lesson followed by dancing until midnight. Now with a late-night Lindy special move and opportunities to win music and other vintage-themed prizes. 8 p.m. $5. Heirloom Dance Studio, 765 Idaho St., Boise, 208-871-6352, heirloomdancestudio.com.

MERIDIAN BARN SOUR FUN RUN—Join Meridian Parks and Recreation for a 10K, 6K or onemile fun run along Meridian’s pathways and through its parks. 8:30 a.m. $10-$25, meridiancity.org/barnsour. Settlers Park, corner of Meridian and Ustick roads, Meridian, meridiancity. org/barnsour.

Art MERIDIAN SUMMER ART FESTIVAL—Green Chutes Artists Cooperative and Dead Bird Local Art and Framing present food, beverage, entertainment and works by local artists. See Picks, Page 20. FREE. Storey Park, corner of Main Street and Franklin Road, Meridian.

SUN VALLEY BIKE FESTIVAL—Watch or participate in dozens of world-class bike events taking place on more than 400 miles of singletrack at Sun Valley. See Picks, Page 20. FREE-$120. Sun Valley, Idaho, Ketchum, ridesunvalley.com.

tickets avaiable at the gate day of shows or online at

Check out the entire week’s worth of Doonesbury online at boiseweekly.com—select “Extras” then “Cartoons.”

24 | JUNE 26 – JULY 2, 2013 | BOISEweekly

WWW. B O I S E WE E KLY. C O M


8 DAYS OUT Kids & Teens

MONDAY JULY 1

DISASTER DAY—Learn about disaster preparedness from the Bureau of Homeland Security and nine other agencies entrusted to protect the public in case of emergency. See Picks, Page 21. 9:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m. FREE-$9. Discovery Center of Idaho, 131 Myrtle St., Boise, 208-343-9895, dcidaho.org.

Art MONDAY NIGHT DEMOS NAMPA ART GUILD—Nonmembers are invited for paint-alongs and art demos. 7:30-9:30 p.m. $5. Nampa Valley Grange, Fifth Avenue and Second Street South, Nampa.

Sports & Fitness

SUNDAY JUNE 30

MONDAY NIGHT COED DROP-IN VOLLEYBALL—Games begin at 6 p.m. Players must be present by 5:45 p.m. for the draw. No preregistration required. 5:459:30 p.m. $4. Julia Davis Park, 700 S. Capitol Blvd., Boise.

Festivals & Events WARBIRD ROUNDUP— See Saturday. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $4-$10. Warhawk Air Museum, Nampa Airport, 201 Municipal Drive, Nampa, 208-465-6446, warhawkairmuseum.org.

TUESDAY JULY 2 On Stage

On Stage

Literature BOISE’S NOVEL ORCHARD CRITIQUE NIGHT—Bring your current writing project and a red pen, and share opinions with other writers. 6:30 p.m. FREE. Hyde Park Books, 1507 N. 13th St., Boise, 208-429-8220, boisenovelorchard.org. MORNING BOOK CLUB FOR GROWN-UPS—Join the discussion of Half Broke Horses by Jeannette Walls. 10:30 a.m. FREE. Meridian Public Library, 1326 W. Cherry Lane, Meridian, 208-888-4451, mld.org.

Sports & Fitness EAGLE FOOTHILLS BMX RACE—Participate in one of the newest Olympic sports—BMX racing—or relax and enjoy the excitement and action for free as a spectator. 6-9 p.m. FREE. Eagle Foothills BMX, Eagle Sports Complex, 11800 Horseshoe Bend Way, Eagle, 208-870-6138, ef-bmx.com.

Kids & Teens

BLITHE SPIRIT—See Wednesday. 7 p.m. $24-$66. Idaho Shakespeare Festival, 5657 Warm Springs Ave., Boise, 208429-9908, box office 208-3369221, idahoshakespeare.org.

COMPANY OF FOOLS: OTHER DESERT CITIES—In this family drama, Brooke uncovers a secret that might destroy her family. 7 p.m. $10-$35. Liberty Theatre, 110 N. Main St., Hailey, 208578-9122, companyoffools.org.

LIQUID LAUGHS: BRIAN MOOTE—Two-for-one tickets. 8 p.m. $10. Liquid, 405 S. Eighth St., Ste. 110, Boise, 208-2875379, liquidboise.com.

Concerts BOISE SUMMER MUSIC GAMES—Seven brass and percussion marching corps on their way to the world championship in Indianapolis. Performances by The Spokane Thunder, The Columbians, Impulse, The Denver Blue Knights, The Oregon Crusaders, The Seattle Cascades and Santa Clara Vanguard. 8 p.m. $15-$35. Kuna High School, 637 E. Deer Flat Road, Kuna, 208-955-0231.

EYESPY Real Dialogue from the naked city

PCS EDVENTURELABS BOISE GRAND OPENING—After-school and summer STEM education program students showcase their projects while kids participate in activities and nosh on snacks. 5-8 p.m. FREE. PCS EDventure Labs, 345 Bobwhite Court, Ste. 200, Boise, 208343-3110, newlearningnewworld. com. WOVEN ROOTS WITH NELLIE BAKER AND JOY STEINER—After hearing stories about plants and the little creatures who live among the roots, students learn to weave with yarn, sticks and wildflowers. 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m. FREE. Boise WaterShed, 11818 W. Joplin Road, Boise, 208489-1284, cityofboise.org/bee/ watershed.

WEDNESDAY JULY 3 On Stage COMPANY OF FOOLS: OTHER DESERT CITIES—See Tuesday. 7 p.m. $10-$35. Liberty Theatre, 110 N. Main St., Hailey, 208578-9122, companyoffools.org.

Food & Drink LADIES NIGHT OUT—Wine tasting, beers, free apps, shopping discounts, networking, music, karaoke and more. 6-10 p.m. Helina Marie’s Wine and Gift Shop, 11053 Highway 44, Star, 208-286-7960, helinamaries. com.

Overheard something Eye-spy worthy? E-mail leila@boiseweekly.com

WWW. B OISEWEEKLY.C O M

BOISEweekly | JUNE 26 – JULY 2, 2013 | 25


LISTEN HERE/GUIDE LIZ DEVINE

GUIDE WEDNESDAY JUNE 26 ALIVE AFTER FIVE—Featuring Sallie Ford And The Sound Outside with Finn Riggins. See Listen Here, this page. 5 p.m. FREE. Grove Plaza BARBARA LAING AND KAY LEIGH JACK—8 p.m. FREE. Jo’s Sunshine Lounge BRANDON PRITCHETT—8:30 p.m. FREE. Reef

SALLIE FORD AND THE SOUND OUTSIDE, JUNE 26, AA5 Three years ago, while the inaugural Boise Music Festival was taking over Ann Morrison Park with thousands of music fans pretending it was still 1989, another tiny festival was booming out at a backyard barbecue on the Bench overlooking the park. One of the acts on that bill was Portland, Ore.’s, Sallie Ford and the Sound Outside. Though the band wasn’t a headlining act, its country-influenced take on rock ’n’ roll—fronted by the cat-eye-glasses glare of Sallie Ford—immediately stood out. By the time the band came back to Boise for the inaugural Treefort Music Fest, it had won the hearts of critics nationwide. Sallie Ford is back to playing a sun-drenched outdoor summer show for Boiseans. And, yes, you better believe it got the headlining slot.

THE CAVE SINGERS—With Radiation City. 7 p.m. $12 adv., $14 door. Neurolux

KEN HARRIS—With Lawson Hill and Rico Weisman. 6 p.m. FREE. Berryhill KRIZZ KALIKO—With Mayday, Stevie Stone and Cool Nutz. 8:30 p.m. $20-$30. Knitting Factory OPHELIA—8:45 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s PATRICIA FOLKNER—5:30 p.m. FREE. Flatbread-Bown PAUL TILLOTSON JAZZ TRIO—8 p.m. FREE. Lock Stock & Barrel POSSUM LIVIN—6 p.m. FREE. Sandbar SAM MATISSE—6:30 p.m. FREE. Highlands Hollow SPEEDY GRAY—With Johnny Shoes. 6 p.m. FREE. Salt Tears

FRANK MARRA—With Steve Eaton and Phil Garonzik. 6:30 p.m. FREE. Chandlers

SURVAY SAYS!—With Domino and The Derelicts, Piranhas and Skittish-Itz. 8 p.m. $5. Shredder

JAMES MILLER—6 p.m. FREE. Gelato Cafe JEFF MOLL—7 p.m. FREE. Varsity Pub JIM LEWIS—7 p.m. FREE. Smoky Mountain Pizza-Eagle

THURSDAY JUNE 27 DAN COSTELLO—With Chuck Smith and Corrina Steinbach. 6:30 p.m. FREE. Chandlers

M CO E C. IV SI OL U H EM A IV /ID OL OM H A C ID K. W. BOO W E W

C FA

NICKI BLUHM AND THE GRAMLERS WITH TUMBLEWEED WANDERERS

DAMN UNION—With Business Venture. 8:30 p.m. $3. Red Room EMILY TIPTON BAND—7 p.m. FREE. Willi B’s

HYMN FOR HER—With Hillfolk Noir and Angie Jean Gillis. 8:30 p.m. $5. Visual Arts Collective

HILLFOLK NOIR—7 p.m. FREE. Sockeye

KEN HARRIS AND RICO WEISMAN—5 p.m. FREE. Berryhill

JAM SESSION WITH CHAMBERLAIN—6 p.m. FREE. Artistblue Gallery

PAUL TILLOTSON JAZZ TRIO—8 p.m. FREE. Lock Stock & Barrel

JEANNIE MARIE—7 p.m. FREE. Orphan Annie’s

PAUSE FOR THE CAUSE—10 p.m. FREE. Grainey’s

JIM LEWIS—6:30 p.m. FREE. Bonefish Grill

SLOW MOVER—With Eric Anarchy and Fetish 37. 8 p.m. $5. Shredder

NEO TUNDRA COWBOYS—With Possum Livin. 8:45 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s

TAMBALKA—6 p.m. FREE. Sandbar

OPHELIA—With Mary Cutrufello. 6 p.m. FREE. Sandbar

WAYNE COYLE—8 p.m. FREE. Jo’s Sunshine Lounge

OUTLAW FIELD SUMMER CONCERT SERIES: BARENAKED LADIES—With Ben Folds Five and Guster. 6 p.m. $57. Idaho Botanical Garden

FRIDAY JUNE 28

PAUL TILLOTSON JAZZ TRIO—8 p.m. FREE. Lock Stock & Barrel QUICK AND EASY BOYS CD RELEASE PARTY—6 p.m. FREE. Record Exchange

BIG WOW—9 p.m. FREE. Willowcreek-Eagle

THE QUICK AND EASY BOYS— 10 p.m. $5. Grainey’s

THE BLAKES WITH THE MALDIVES—8:30 p.m. $8. Neurolux

—Josh Gross With Finn Riggins. 5 p.m., FREE. The Grove Plaza, downtownboise.org.

COLOR ANIMAL—8 p.m. $3. Flying M Coffeegarage

FRIM FRAM 4—8:45 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s

EMILY TIPTON BAND—10 p.m. FREE. Grainey’s

IMPORT/EXPORT—With Bathsalts, Sun Bones and Celestial Starship. 8:30 p.m. $3. Red Room

FACE TO FACE—With Teenage Bottlerocket, Blacklist Royals and Joshua Black Wilkins. See Listen Here, Page 27. 8 p.m. $18-$35. Knitting Factory

V E N U E S

Don’t know a venue? Visit www.boiseweekly.com for addresses, phone numbers and a map.

SON VOLT

WITH COLONEL FORD FEAT. MEMBERS OF SON VOLT

REX MILLER AND RICO WEISMAN—6 p.m. FREE. Berryhill

CHUCK SMITH—With John Jones Trio. 6:30 p.m. FREE. Chandlers

JUST ANNOUNCED!

TICKETS

RESERVED SEATS ON SALE JUNE 29 @ 10AM THE

YS RBOOY TERB WA WATE WITH FREDDIE STEVENSON

ONLINE AT EGYPTIANTHEATRE.NET CALL 208-387-1273 EGYPTIAN THEATRE BOX OFFICE TU-SA 11A-6P & AT RECORD EXCHANGE

THE ROBERT CRAY BAND WITH GUEST

JULY 9 @

VISUAL ARTS COLLECTIVE 26 | JUNE 26 – JULY 2, 2013 | BOISEweekly

JULY 21 @

VISUAL ARTS COLLECTIVE

AUGUST 18 @

EGYPTIAN THEATRE

OCTOBER 12 @

EGYPTIAN THEATRE WWW. B O I S E WE E KLY. C O M


GUIDE SCI FI SWAG POP INVASION— Featuring Black Gravity, Masta X-Kid, Tre Angle, P Dirt and DJ Pookie. 8 p.m. $5. Shredder SLEEPY SEEDS—7 p.m. $3. Neurolux SOUL SERENE—8:30 p.m. FREE. Piper Pub STEADY RUSH—With Ophelia. 10 p.m. $5. Reef

SATURDAY JUNE 29 605 TO SAN GABRIEL—With Adam Chavarria. 6 p.m. FREE. Artistblue Gallery THE BLAKES—With The Maldives and Fiddle Junkies. 7 p.m. $8 adv., $10 door. Neurolux BRANDON PRITCHETT—9 p.m. FREE. Willowcreek-Eagle CLOWN PARTY—7 p.m. $8. Shredder DOUG CAMERON—8:30 p.m. FREE. Piper Pub EMILY TIPTON BAND—7 p.m. FREE. Julia Davis Park Bandshell ERIC GRAE—6 p.m. FREE. Berryhill

FRANK MARRA—With Ben Burdick Trio and Amy Rose. 6:30 p.m. FREE. Chandlers GABE HESS—8 p.m. FREE. High Note Cafe

GARAGE VOICE—With Wellspring and Honor and Starlings Murmurations. 6:30 p.m. $4. Neurolux

JOSHUA TREE—8:45 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s

JASON BUCKALEW—10:15 a.m. FREE. Berryhill

PAUL TILLOTSON JAZZ TRIO—8 p.m. FREE. Lock Stock & Barrel

JAZZ JAM HOSTED BY SANDON MAYEW—6 p.m. FREE. Sandbar

POSSUM LIVIN—9 p.m. FREE. O’Michael’s

JIM LEWIS—6 p.m. FREE. Lulu’s

THE QUICK AND EASY BOYS— 10 p.m. $5. Grainey’s

MARCUS EATON—Noon. FREE. Ste. Chapelle Winery

THE RAVEN AND THE WRITING DESK—With Le Fleur, Storie Grubb and Color Animal. 8:30 p.m. $5. Red Room

PIRANHAS—10 p.m. FREE. Grainey’s

REBECCA SCOTT BAND—2 p.m. FREE. Sandbar ROBIN SCOTT—7 p.m. FREE. Orphan Annie’s STONE SEED—6:30 p.m. FREE. Highlands Hollow

SOLE—With Moodie Black, Arthur Maddox and Illumneye. 8 p.m. $8. The Shredder

MONDAY JULY 1 1332 RECORDS PUNK MONDAY—9 p.m. $3. Liquid

SUNDAY JUNE 30 ARMED FOR APOCALYPSE—6 p.m. $8. Venue DEMON LUNG—With Mariana and Astral Vapors. 8:30 p.m. $4. Red Room

LISTEN HERE/GUIDE

ABOLISHMENT OF FLESH— With Fields of Elysium and Psychiatric Regurgitation. 8 p.m. $5. Shredder MARY CUTRUFELLO—With Ophelia. 6:30 p.m. FREE. Highlands Hollow

TUESDAY JULY 2 BOISE OLD TIME’S OLD TIME JAM—With The Country Club. 6 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s JOHNNY SHOES—With Kenny Saunders and Boyd Wilson. 7 p.m. FREE. Sockeye JONATHAN WARREN AND THE BILLY GOATS—8:45 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s MAYHEM FESTIVAL—Featuring Rob Zombie, Five Finger Death Punch, Mastodon and Amon Amarth. 1:15 p.m. $50. Idaho Center OPHELIA—9:30 p.m. FREE. Grainey’s

FACE TO FACE, JUNE 27, KNITTING FACTORY So-Cal’s Face to Face is one of the most consistent acts in punk. With the exception of 2004-2008, the four years the band broke up, it has steadily put out albums—from 1992’s Don’t Turn Away all the way to 2013’s Three Chords and a Half Truth. Its nine studio releases rock driving guitars, screaming choruses and balls-out beats with nary a flaw to be found. But solid as the band’s oeuvre is, it all still basks in the shadow of one song: “Disconnected,” a track that not only defines the band, but is so good, it could represent the pop-punk genre as a whole. Classics are generally played last, meaning you can use the rest of the band’s set to reacquaint yourself with its other material before they cut into “Disconnected.”

WEDNESDAY JULY 3 ALIVE AFTER FIVE—Featuring Tony Furtado. 5 p.m. FREE. Grove Plaza JEFF MOLL—7 p.m. FREE. Varsity Pub JESSE JAMES & GGBR—With Edewaard and Sandusky Furs. 8:30 p.m. $3. Red Room PATIO CONCERT SERIES: BILL COURTIAL—With Curt Gonion. 6 p.m. FREE. Berryhill SPEEDY GRAY—With Johnny Shoes. 6 p.m. FREE. Salt Tears

—Josh Gross With Teenage Bottlerocket, Blacklist Royals and Joshua Black Wilkins. 8 p.m., $18-$35. Knitting Factory, 416 S. Ninth St., 208-367-1212, bo.knittingfactory.com. WWW. B OISEWEEKLY.C O M

BOISEweekly | JUNE 26 – JULY 2, 2013 | 27


NEWS/ARTS ARTS/VISUAL TAR A M OR GAN

COLLECTIVE RE-PURPOSE Antiques Roadshow heads to Boise this week.

SOARING VOICES AND HIDDEN TREASURES If you were psyched to hear the Foothills come alive with The Sound of Music Sunday, July 21, you’ll have to soak in your drop of golden sun elsewhere. Opera Idaho has moved the Von Trapps from the Idaho Botanical Garden to Woodriver Cellars for its show Sunday, July 21, at 7 p.m. The Friday, July 19, performance of The Sound of Music will remain at IBG as planned. If you’ve purchased tickets for either performance and would like to make changes, call 208-345-3531, ext. 2. Speaking of Opera Idaho, the company recently announced its 2013-2014 season lineup. Mozart’s comedy, The Marriage of Figaro, will premiere Friday, Nov. 8, and Sunday, Nov. 10, at the Egyptian Theatre, with Susannah Biller starring as Susanna, Austin Kness as Figaro and Jason Detwiler as the Count. The production will move to Idaho State University’s Stephens Performing Arts Center Thursday, Nov. 14. To kick off 2014, Opera Idaho will revive Georges Bizet’s Carmen for a sixth production, which brings the company to the larger Morrison Center stage Friday, Feb. 28, and Sunday, March 2. To close the season, Opera Idaho will return to the Egyptian Theatre for a double billing of Giacomo Puccini’s Gianni Schicchi and Leonard Bernstein’s Trouble in Tahiti Friday, April 11, and Sunday, April 13. But if deep baritones and piercing sopranos aren’t your style, the Antiques Roadshow is bringing its tour to Boise Saturday, June 29. PBS’s highest-rated ongoing primetime series rolls into town to tape its expanded 18th season at Expo Idaho, offering free evaluations of antiques and collectibles by some of the nation’s top appraisal experts. Segments taped for the latest season will air in January of 2014. Tickets to Antiques Roadshow are free, but the application deadline has already passed. For more info, visit pbs.org/antiques. Moving from valuable antiques to rusty rebar salvaged from the Boise Hole, Woman of Steel’s Irene Deely will be installing a rebar sculpture at the Tower at Eighth and Main over the coming months. The sculpture, known as “Cycles,” depicts the history of building the Tower, from the beginning of construction to where it is now. The sculpture, made from reclaimed rebar, stainless steel and cast resin, will be approximately nine feet high and three feet around. Deely’s “Cycles” will be installed in October or November, and a public unveiling has been scheduled for January 2014.

Studio 616 showcases upcycled artwork in McCall TARA MORGAN Megan Henderson seems to know everyone who walks into her McCall shop. In a short cream-colored dress with high boots and a pile of delicate necklaces, she marches over to greet those who trickle through the door, chatting as much about their personal lives as the handmade items that line the naturally lit boutique. Henderson lends Studio 616 a small-town charm, but the artwork inside feels anything but provincial. Instead of the requisite moose kitsch, flannel Studio 616 offers everything from delicate jewelry to painted oil drum lids in its McCall shop. pillows or paintings of snow-frosted mountain landscapes, Studio 616 features simple, modcabin in Billings.” time to be able to make your product,” said ern designs by a collection of cherry-picked In fact, most of the items in Studio 616 are West. “It’s been awesome to be able to share artisans. recycled or repurposed, which seems to be as that time and have the rest of it dedicated to “I would say we’re a little more funky and much of a necessity in a small mountain town actually putting product in the store.” functional,” said Henderson, originally from like McCall as it is an aesthetic statement. So when Alpine Village owner Michael Southern California. “I always say it’s kind Henderson jokingly refers to the dump as the Hormaechea offered to build out the space at of like Anthropologie without the clothes. “New Meadows mall.” 616 N. Third St. specifically to be an artists’ It’s cutting edge; we don’t take ourselves too Barbara Howell with Clementine Design co-op, Henderson, West and the DeMosses seriously. … Most of our art is something that (Jesse DeMoss’ mom) makes copper jewelry you can find at the local dump and turn it into took the opportunity. Over the three years the with reclaimed wiring from old trailers and shop has been in business, the number of artsomething else.” antennas. Grace Wilson crafts colorful flower ists it represented grew exponentially. But this Henderson runs the Studio 616 collective lawn adornments using old dishes, knobs and spring, the quartet decided to reel things in. with three other artists: glass-blowers Jesse hockey pucks. And Henderson’s husband, “We closed in April for a revamp and just and Shelly DeMoss, and quilter Rebecca David, also sells reclaimed items in the shop, sort of whittled West. Though including an engine block that he turned into a out a lot of the Henderson and artists that weren’t wine rack. West previously “Old farmers who come in just think that’s selling because owned their own the coolest,” said Henderson, gesturing toward we realized that shops—red6red the wine rack. “And they know what that with too many, and J. Beck, came from, which is crazy to me. They’re like, we weren’t selling respectively—they ‘Oh, that’s a ’57 Chevy.’” our own,” said decided to pool But perhaps the most uniquely Idaho items Henderson. “So their resources in the place are Melaney Auxier’s spent bullet we kind of had to to save time and regroup, reclaim.” casing bracelets. reduce overhead. “She calls them Caliber Couture,” said Now, knit“Seeing the Henderson. “People dig ’em; it makes you ted antlers and town, and how want to go shoot things and then collect them glass-eyed animal it’s so seasonal skulls greet visitors and make something cool out of them. They’re and we all have not received well by a lot of people, but they’re at the entry to the young kids, we shop, while inside, funky.” realized there’s just STUDIO 616 Though Studio 616 has more in common necklaces and no way the town 616 N. Third St., McCall, 208-631-2661, earrings dangle off with Boise’s handmade hotspots Bricolage or could support it facebook.com/studio616mccall old window frames Indie Made than other stores in McCall, Henyear-round—each derson says the space doesn’t just court young, and upcycled Open Thu.-Sat., Mon. 11 a.m.-5 p.m.-ish; having our own Sun. 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; Closed Tue. and Wed. hip out-of-towners. wooden pallets space and all that “It’s bridged the older generations and the shoulder Hendercomes with it,” said younger ones because they get such a kick out son’s reclaimed, Henderson. of knowing that wire came from a camper patchwork tin mirrors. In addition to not being profitable, West trailer that they probably owned,” Henderson “People love to know that this tin, for said running her own boutique ate up all the example, came from a bowling alley in Texas,” said. “We always joke that the studio is kind time she had previously dedicated to making of like a museum sometimes, we should charge said Henderson, pointing to a mirror. “So her intricate, modern quilts. admission because people love to come in and when I get the tin, I always ask, ‘Do you have “Megan and I both agreed when we first see what creative minds are doing with old any idea where this was salvaged from?’ The started … that we weren’t going to do it if we things.” had to be in there all the time—then there’s no best tin I ever got was from Calamity Jane’s

—Skylar Barsanti and Tara Morgan

28 | JUNE 26 – JULY 2, 2013 | BOISEweekly

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SCREEN/LISTINGS THE BIG SCREEN/SCREEN GEOR GE PR ENTIC E

ROXY: THE SEQUEL The Roxy Theatre is the star of its own show

EAT, PRAY, LOVE—Liz Gilbert travels the world seeking self-discovery. Thursday, June 27, 6 p.m. FREE. Library at Hillcrest, 5246 W. Overland Road, Boise, 208-562-4996, boisepubliclibrary.org.

GEORGE PRENTICE I can’t remember the last time a movie theater gave me a thrill. I’m a child of post-WWII single-screen movie palaces, but those are hazy reflections in today’s age of multiplexes, which push out stadium screenings by the dozen. But on your next trip north I encourage you to carve out a couple of hours and grab two on the aisle at The Roxy Theatre in Cascade. I have visited The Roxy many times over the years, but sitting through a scratchedJason Speer (left), Kristina Pickard (center) and Mark Pickard (right) show off The Roxy’s ritzy revamp. up version of a two-month-old film usually required a winter coat. But that was then. “If you’re going to do it, you might as well soon became a drive-thru landmark as tourists do it right,” said Kristina Pickard, who helped eled concession area with organic popcorn took their money 28 miles north to McCall. and real butter. revamp the theater with her husband, Mark. But the Pickards have changed that. Jason Speer sat nearby and beamed. The But the Pickards didn’t simply rescue the “We’re from Miami Beach; we spend about full-time Valley County sheriff bought the runRoxy, they gave the old girl a new ’do with an two to three months a year here,” said Mark. art deco luster—installing fabulous seating and down Roxy in 2006 and, juggling both jobs, “We built Kelly’s Whitewater Park in 2010 in continues to manage the theater with his wife high-tech projection enhancements. memory of Kristina’s late sister, Kelly.” Trisha and four children. “I’m pretty sure you’re sitting in the most And then one day, the Pickards connected “Everything changed in 2010. technologically advanced movie with Speer, who had launched a Kickstarter That’s when the studios said, theater in the country,” said ROXY THEATER campaign in hopes that his Cascade neighbors ‘Sorry, we’re all going digital by Mark. “That is, unless somebody 205 S. Main St., would help raise $140,000 to fund a digital 2014,’” said Speer. “There were came out with something new in Cascade 208-382-5560 some financial incentive programs upgrade for The Roxy. the last two weeks.” theroxyidaho.com “I told Jason to send me a business plan,” to help out some theaters, but they There’s no other way to put it: said Mark. “What can I say? We spent a lot required two screens or more. The Pickards are rich. of money to build the whitewater park, but That left single-screen mom-and-pop theaters “The Roxy needed to convert to digital it’s quite possible that The Roxy is even more like us out in the cold.” and possibly get some new seating,” Mark meaningful to the people of the town.” Quite literally, in the case of the Roxy, said. “Fine. But we decided to put in quite a Speer opened up an app on his phone, which was notoriously frigid in the winter or bit after that.” dimmed the lights and started a screening of sweltering in the summer. The remodel includes new carpeting fash“We have new heating and air conditioning Star Trek Into Darkness, launching a 3-D expeioned after the White House’s floor covering, rience with impressive wraparound sound. so, no, you don’t need to bring a blanket or two new Dolby 7.1 acoustical systems (one “We’re not huge movie buffs,” whispered umbrella anymore,” said Pickard. for movies, another for conferences), bathKristina. “But it would have been horrible The theater, which was built in 1939 for rooms with gorgeous new tiling and what if they closed this theater down. What a $25,000, didn’t age well as Cascade lost its Kristina calls “flattering” lighting, a restored landmark.” box office with art deco marble and a remod- sawmill and much of its population. Cascade

EXTRA/SCREEN A genre, a prop, a character, a line of dialogue and 48 hours. That’s all the 39 teams which entered this year’s i48 competition had to work with June 7-9 to produce a three- to six-minute short film. “One thing that really impresses me about the teams is that they get better and better every year,” said organizer Andrew Ellis. “The quality has been excellent.” This year saw the addition of a “remake” option, allowing teams to have another go at a film from a previous year’s competition. The team Birthday Problem took on the challenge of remaking their previous entry, Big Mister Whiskers’ Great Adventure, a favorite from 2012 featuring a kitten on the hunt for pizza WWW. B OISEWEEKLY.C O M

H ALLI E D ECIME

I48 CROWNS 2013 WINNERS

Special Screenings

Arcadea won Best Film at the 2013 i48 Film Festival.

in Boise. For the remake, the team substituted humans in costume for the live animals. The film snagged Boise Weekly’s Best Use of Boise Award, which was presented at a Best Of screening at the Egyptian Theatre June 16. In the Novice category, Fairweather Films’ That Is My Art, starring Keith Eastman, took Best Film, Best Actor and Best Sound/Music. Wanda Crowley won Best Actress for her turn in Chocolate Chicken’s Knows Picks. The Open Category saw Travis Wright from Ravenous Schnitzel take Best Actor for the film Cooper and Steele, while Kristy Leigh Lussier from Bumblebird won Best Actress for Short Fuse. Idolness Films nabbed Best Film for its entry, Arcadea. —Chris Grapes

FULL DRAW FILM TOUR—Independent filmmakers present films about bow hunting, with raffle drawings and a chance to win hunting gear to support Hunt of a Lifetime. Thursday, June 27, 6:45 p.m. $9-$12, fulldrawfilmtour.org. Egyptian Theatre, 700 W. Main St., Boise, 208-345-0454. THE TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MADRE—Three poor prospectors strike it rich in the mountains, only to be pulled apart by paranoia. Starring Humphrey Bogart, Walter Huston and Tim Holt. Thursday, June 27, 2 p.m. FREE. Library at Hillcrest, 5246 W. Overland Road, Boise, 208-562-4996, boisepubliclibrary.org. TWO AMERICANS—The ACLU of Idaho hosts a screening of the documentary Two Americans. When the parents of a 9-year-old girl are arrested, a community group succeeds in pressuring the County Board to investigate Sheriff Joe Arpaio’s spending priorities. When the sheriff retaliates against his political foes, his actions spark outrage, and a federal investigation. Friday, June 28, 6 p.m. Donation. Northern Lights Cinema Grill, 1509 Caldwell Blvd. Ste. 1111, Nampa, 208-4752999, northernlightscinemagrill.com. WATERSHED—Watershed: Exploring a New Water Ethic for the New West tells the story of the threats to the Colorado River and offers solutions for the future of the American West. IDAWRA invites you to view the film and then stay for a discussion. Wednesday, June 26, 6 p.m. $7.50-$10. The Flicks, 646 Fulton St., Boise, 208-342-4222, theflicksboise.com.

Opening

THE HEAT—Sarah Ashburn (Sandra Bullock) is a driven special agent with the FBI. When she’s partnered with Shannon Mullins (Melissa McCarthy), a potty-mouthed investigator known for her slovenly ways, to take down a drug lord, they become friends. (R) Opens Friday, June 28. Edwards 9, 22. WHITE HOUSE DOWN—When the White House is occupied by a paramilitary group, John Cale (Channing Tatum) must save President James Sawyer (Jamie Foxx), and the country. (PG-13) Opens Friday, June 28. Edwards 9, 22.

For movie times, visit boiseweekly.com or scan this QR code. BOISEweekly | JUNE 26 – JULY 2, 2013 | 29


SCREEN/EXTRA S PR ING GAR DEN

GARDEN OF GORE Short film Spring Garden shoots around North End CHRIS GRAPES An innocuous apartment around the corner from the Boise Co-op looks like any other building in the North End. But on June 13, the body of a girl was splayed out awkwardly on the living room floor. Blood ran from a stab wound on her neck and soaked into the white rug. Hunched figures stood impassively by, just watching. “Do we need more blood?” someone asked. The room was serving as the main set for the local independent short film Spring Garden, a psychological thriller about a man suffering from paranoia and blackouts who The cast and crew of Spring Garden shot on location at the Boise Co-op. finds dead bodies piling up in his apartment. The film began as an original short help with the art direction,” she said. “He impressed me. He was technically talstory by local writer Matt Shelar, and soon Lewis brought a subtlety to the visual aesented, but also I just got a sense that he had developed into a joint project between Shelar thetics that pushed it beyond gore. She also some great creative vision.” and director Jake Fullilove. Though both are cited Psycho as a creative inspiration. Director of photography Skip Armstrong students at Boise State University, the project “I like the mystery behind it,” she said of also has an impressive resume, with experiisn’t a student film. Spring Garden. “That’s a little bit more of ence working for National Geographic, The Shelar cites director David Fincher as his what I’m into instead of just, ‘Let me chop Associated Press and Vimeo, among others. primary inspiration. your limbs off.’” “I had no idea that there was “I started writing it with Fight Spring Garden is being produced such a busy filmmaking comClub in mind, and then I watched with the festival circuit in mind, though munity here. ...There’s a lot of Seven. That really helped me SPRING GARDEN springgardenfilm.com Fullilove wants Boise to share as much credit insight, and everyone’s really develop from the original story,” psyched to get together and push as the crew. Shelar said. “We’re not hoping to make any money filmmaking in the Treasure Val“We went through 150 pages back on it, which is why I funded it myself,” ley,” said Armstrong. of script,” added Fullilove. “We’ve only had In addition to working with these more ex- Fullilove said. “The purpose is to make an inthis version for a couple of weeks.” perienced crew members, Fullilove and Shelar credibly visually aesthetic film, and other than The team found its producer, Craig Lew, that, we hope to take it to festivals in America also brought some fellow rookies onboard, after hearing him give a talk for Boise Cutand get our names out there, and get Boise’s like art director and associate producer Casters, a local filmmaking community. Lew has name out there.” sandra Lewis. a strong film background, having worked on Spring Garden is currently in post“Originally I was just supposed to be the multi-million-dollar projects and even done production, with an anticipated fall release dead girl for the poster, then they wanted me consultation work for Steven Spielberg. date. To follow the film’s progress, visit to do makeup, then they discovered I really “Jake came up to me afterwards, and we springgardenfilm.com. enjoyed artwork as well, so they asked me to ended up talking until 1:30 a.m.,” said Lew.

SCREEN/EXTRA SMOKE WRAPS FILMING With production wrapped and cast and crew sent home, Smoke directors Cody Gittings and Stephen Heleker heaved a brief sigh of relief. “In pre-production you’ve got several months and you can be like, ‘Oh, I will go to the office and I will dial more things in, but once production starts, there’s no changing anything,” Gittings said. “Everyone is there; the clock has been punched for all the people getting paid.” The two young filmmakers just finished shooting the film adaptation of Smoke, a short story by award-winning Boise author Alan Heathcock. The duo funded the film’s production through a Kickstarter campaign, which netted them more than $20,000. Heathcock remained on set throughout most of the filming as an executive producer, ensuring his words came to life on the silver screen. “People could tell when he was excited about what was going on and that kind of gave everyone some fresh energy,” Heleker said.

30 | JUNE 26 – JULY 2, 2013 | BOISEweekly

After eight days shooting on location in Sweet, Cascade, Kuna and Boise, Gittings and Heleker were able to obtain plenty of outdoor footage, but the duo needed an indoor set to film the story’s cave scenes. Gittings stumbled upon an expert in the field of fake rocks, who helped construct the set in the North End. “This guy just fell out of the sky and offered to build it. We just bought the materials and he donated his time and energy,” Gittings said. Now, Gittings and Heleker will spend the next few months hunched in front of computer screens, piecing together the mass of digital footage in time for submission to film festivals this fall. “We have had so many people give us their time, energy and money,” Heleker said. “They want to see continued movement ... and so do we.” To follow Smoke’s progress, visit smokefilm.com. —Ryan Thorne WWW. B O I S E WE E KLY. C O M


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BOISEweekly | JUNE 26 – JULY 2, 2013 | 31


BEERGUZZLER/DRINK MCCALL BREWING COMPANY

LEMON GINGER HEFEWEIZEN, $4.99-$6.49 Both lemon zest and ginger are added to the boil in this hazy amber pour that has a two-finger head that collapses quickly. Citrus and spice come through on the nose, along with lightly herbal wheatgrass and soft malt. It’s very refreshing, and at 4.6 percent alcohol, extremely quaffable, offering sweet malt balanced by ripe lemon and colored by smooth ginger. It’s great for hot summer days. MINIMALIST BANE IPA, $5.99-$7.99 A crystal-clear, copper-colored brew, this IPA is covered by a thick head that disappears after moments in the glass, leaving a lovely lacing. The aromas are a balanced mix of citruslaced hops and subdued malt and grain. If you are used to the typical Northwest IPA—with its in-your-face hop bitterness—this one may seem a bit tame, but that can be a good thing. The combo of creamy malt, apricot and lightly bitter hops makes for an easy-drinking, very satisfying brew.

—David Kirkpatrick

32 | JUNE 26 – JULY 2, 2013 | BOISEweekly

THE NARROWS AT SHORE LODGE New chef accents mountain panorama with excellent eats TARA MORGAN Damn, the view. Pressed against the Shore Lodge’s massive windows overlooking Payette Seared scallops and white beans—one of the stars of The Narrows’ rotating starter menu. Lake at twilight—boats rocking rhythmically against the dock and mountains rising up to grab the last tendrils of sunlight—those words Though the entree list was peppered with bowl of Mediterranean fish soup ($7) flew are likely to fall from your mouth. But The some familiar, old-school country clubby out of the kitchen with a mound of meaty Narrows no longer serves solely views. standbys—potato-crusted Idaho trout ($29), smoked prawns, chopped chorizo, salmon, Under the helm of new executive chef filet mignon ($38), the option to “accessorize” corn and rice in an otherwise empty bowl. Steven Topple, who recently took the reins your meal with a lobster tail ($21 half, $35 As one server placed the dish on the table, from Matt Renshaw, McCall’s Shore Lodge has upped its game—literally and figuratively. another poured a stream of hot tomato broth whole) or seared fois gras ($12)—there are also some interesting game options. We chose over it. Though the soup was a bit bland, Though the menu had already transitioned the duo of quail stuffed with chorizo wild rice the presentation and service were notable toward using more seasonal and local ($29), balanced on a couple fried green onion without being too showy. ingredients, Topple, who previously worked pancakes and surrounded by a bacon-y stew of The beet tarte tatin ($13) was also pleasfor the Sonnenalp Resort in Vail, Colo., pearl onions. The tiny quails had the picturant—with a buttery circle of is focusing on simplicity. A puff pastry topped with pesto, esque sheen of miniature Norman Rockwell perfect example is the buffalo turkeys, but weren’t the least bit overcooked. a few clumps of goat cheese, carpaccio ($11)—thin slices THE NARROWS AT And while the dish didn’t benefit from the microgreens and a drizzle of of deep red buffalo so tender SHORE LODGE 501 W. Lake St., McCall so-so chorizo, the onions and chewy wild rice port reduction—but the real it had to be scraped from the 1-800-657-6464 were a great pairing. As was a glass of the star of the app menu was the plate, topped with curled shavshorelodge.com Tamarack Cellars Firehouse Red ($10). duo of scallops ($16), served ings of parmesan and cracked As the windows darkened with the setting on a pile of giant white beans pepper. When slid onto a sliver sun, we were surprised to see that the dining in a creamy, bacon-flecked of crostini and accented with room had mostly cleared out by 9:30 p.m. on a sauce, topped with crisp fried shallots and a couple of leaves of lemony arugula, each Friday night. The Narrows might be gaining a a large sprig of parsley. Scallops and giant flavor was magnified, not overshadowed. In fact, the starters were the most interest- beans? What a fantastically simple, yet unex- following under its new chef, but the view still adds an undeniable magic. pected pairing. ing part of Topple’s ever-changing menu. A

FOOD/NEWS spent the past three years on opposite sides of the country working for the Patina Group—Alegria at the Michelin-starred Patina in Los Angeles Clad in matching old-timey striped aprons, Everett Beck and Brandon and Beck at Brasserie in New York City. Alegria passed a duck confit amuse “We had the opportunity to come out bouche through the tiny window of their and start a food truck so we kind of quit new food truck, The Shack. our jobs and our lives out there to start The truck, parked in front of Chalice this,” said Beck. Tattoo Studio off Latah Street, is a minThough they eventually hope to park iscule nine feet long, five feet wide and the tiny truck on the main downtown drag, seven feet high. But the pair is putting its Beck and Alegria are currently set up for two gas burners and 15-inch flat top grill lunch weekdays at Chalice and evenings at to use, pumping out eclectic grub: pouOakley Moody Thursday through Saturday. tine with pepper gravy, risotto tots with a “We really just want to give some new tomato ragu and a quinoa and couscous food back to Boise because we go downsalad with string beans. town and all we have to eat is hotdogs,” “We plan to continuously change the said Alegria. menu so we have a variety of things goFollow The Shack on Twitter at ing on—to keep it fresh,” said Alegria. @theshackboise. Alegria and Beck met while attending Disco-ver one of Boise’s newest food trucks: The Shack. —Tara Morgan Mountain View High School, but they’ve

THE SHACK IS A LITTLE OLD PLACE WHERE ...

TARA MO RG A N

WOBBILY MAN SMOKED SCOTCH, $5.99-$7.99 A deep ebony in color with a decent mocha head that holds on nicely, this brew offers up toasted malt aromas backed by chocolate and caramel. Full disclosure: I’m not a fan of the smoked beer style. That said, Wobbily Man, which is made with Bavarian Rauch malt, is surprisingly subdued in that department. Just an intriguing whiff of smoke backs the velvety sweet, earth-tinged malt. This beer is a rich, full-flavored hybrid.

Restaurants get one chance to hit BW with their best shot. GEOR GE PR ENTIC E

It’s hard to believe that the McCall Brewing Company has been around for almost 20 years. Their brewpub is a must-visit if you find yourself near the shores of Payette Lake. It offers pub fare that’s just the thing to match its hand-crafted brews, available on tap. But if you’re like me (and don’t get up to McCall much anymore), you can enjoy the 22-ounce bottled versions in the comfort of your own home. Here are three worth seeking out.

FOOD/REVIEW

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EXTRA/FOOD LAU R IE PEAR M AN

Fuel up and un-fog at Fogglifter Cafe.

A DAY OF DINING OUT Where to eat your way through the day in McCall TARA MORGAN In the thick of the summer tourist season in McCall, the town’s restaurants have you held hostage. After a day spent shivering in Payette Lake or scouring the mountains for huckleberries, you’ll happily shell out mega-bucks on a mediocre burger and fries to calm that gnawing rumble in your stomach. But there are some spots serving up tasty, fresh fare without an outrageous price tag. Here is Boise Weekly’s guide to a day of awesome and relatively inexpensive eating in McCall.

BREAKFAST AT FOGGLIFTER CAFE

SNACK AT STACEY CAKES

In addition to offering a primo people-watchIn the summer months, Stacey Cakes ing patio in the summertime, the Fogglifter owner Stacey Kucy rolls into her small sweet Cafe also boasts an eclectic breakfast menu, shop—situated in a strip mall adjacent to including East Indian huevos with lentils and Paul’s Market—as early as 3:30 a.m., then chutney ($6.95) and a veggie benedict layered spends all day crafting delicate strawberry with tomato, basil and a tangy hollandaise rhubarb tarts ($3.85), salted caramel cheesesauce ($6.95 full, or $4.95 half). The half cakes ($4.50) and coconut macaroons ($2). benny, which also comes in traTreat yourself. ditional or bacon and avocado varieties, will fill you up without DINNER AT SALMON FOGGLIFTER CAFE 1003 N. Third St., McCall, weighing you down, while you RIVER BREWERY 208-634-5507 nurse a hot latte. Situated on another hard-toEVENING RISE BREAD CO., find side street, Salmon River 303 Sunset St., McCall, LUNCH AT EVENING Brewer y is the per fect place 208-634-5031 to drink your dinner, if you’re RISE BREAD CO. STACEY CAKES still too full from those porky When you stroll up to this 136 E. Lake St., McCall, sandwiches and sugar y tarts. small bakery and sandwich 208-634-2537 With staples like the Udaho shack, hidden off the main McSALMON RIVER BREWERY Gold or the coffee-infused Buzz Call drag, you’ll most likely have 300 Colorado St., McCall, Buzz Porter ($4.25 pint, $15 to stand in line. The bakery 208-634-4772 pitcher), Salmon River also cranks out fresh loaves, while has a sweet back patio with the sandwich counter churns a small stage boasting live out build-your-own bready behemusic. And don’t miss happy hour from 4-6 moths. A chalkboard menu lists what’s fresh— p.m. daily, when pints are only $3. If you are ciabatta, sourdough, nine-grain, focaccia—and in the mood for a snack, Salmon River offers whatever daily specials are on hand. To get an array of pub grub, including beer-battered your sandwich ($8.96 whole, $5.57 half), fill pickle spears with ranch ($3), fish and chips out a small sheet of paper detailing what kind with lemon dill aioli ($8) or a flame-broiled elk of meat, cheese, veggies and condiments you burger with local grass-fed elk, grilled onions crave. But beware: If you can’t wolf down a pound of pork, don’t ask the dudes behind the and melted blue cheese ($10.50). line to make you “something special.” WWW. B OISEWEEKLY.C O M

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BW COUNSELING MUSIC THERAPY Musicologist Cary William White performs individual and group sessions of classical guitar music, popular songs, nature walk therapy, and personal warmth interactions with clients. He prefers one on one sessions, so that the client gets total attention and customized therapy, but also works with groups. Music therapy is one of the most beneficial helps offered to anyone suffering from mental or physical discomfort or disease, such as dementia or Alzheimer’s. Please see his web site at thesongwright.com for more information or contact details: thesongwright@gmail.com

BW MASSAGE

*A MAN’S MASSAGE BY ERIC*

1/2 hr. $15. FULL BODY. Hot oil, 24/7. I travel. 880-5772. Male Only. Private Boise studio. MC/ VISA. massagebyeric.com.

FULL ROOM MASSAGE

Deep tissue Swedish. Full body: $50/hr., $40/half hr. Foot Massage: $25/hr., $20/half hr. 7 days a week. 9am-10pm. 626-3454266. 320 N. Orchard St.

BW SPIRITUAL

PHONE (208) 344-2055

Visit: MiraclesInYourLife.com

FAX (208) 342-4733

CAREER TRAINING

E-MAIL

YOGA RELAXATION MASSAGE Call Ami at 208-697-6231.

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DEADLINES* LINE ADS: Monday, 10 a.m. DISPLAY: Thursday, 3 p.m. * Some special issues and holiday issues may have earlier deadlines.

RATES We are not afraid to admit that we are cheap, and easy, too! Call (208) 344-2055 and ask for classifieds. We think you’ll agree.

DISCLAIMER Claims of error must be made within 14 days of the date the ad appeared. Liability is limited to in-house credit equal to the cost of the ad’s first insertion. Boise Weekly reserves the right to revise or reject any advertising.

SERVICES - HOME

PAYMENT Classified advertising must be paid in advance unless approved credit terms are established. You may pay with credit card, cash, check or money order.

34 | JUNE 29 – JULY 2, 2013 | BOISEweekly C L A S S I F I E D S

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RELAXING FULL BODY MASSAGE $40 for 60 mins., $60 for 90 mins. Quiet and relaxing environment. Call or text Richard at 208-6959492.

COMMUNITY BW CLASSES & WORKSHOPS

SPECIALIZING IN PAIN RELIEF

FREE Head & Should Massage with 1 hr. Chinese Reflexology Foot Massage at VIP Massage. 377-7711. Stop by 6555 W. Overland Rd near Cole. Stress relief & relaxing massage. $35/hr. Avail. 11-9, Mon.-Sat. By appt. only. Call Betty 283-7830. Tantra massage. Call Jamie. 4404321. THERAPEUTIC MASSAGE Experienced massage therapist who enjoys healing others. $30/ half hr., $55/hr., $125/2 hrs. Please call Petra 658-6587. ULM 340-8377.

BW PSYCHIC

EARN $500 A DAY. Airbrush & Media Makeup Artists For: Ads - TV - Film - Fashion Train & Build Portfolio in 1 week. Lower Tuition for 2013. www.AwardMakeupSchool.com

BW YOGA BECOME A CERTIFIED YOGA INSTRUCTOR. Shanti Yoga. Ongoing Registration, call 208-634-9711, or email deb@shantiyogastudio.org MUUV Yoga in an incredible setting on the Boise River: Vinyasa Flow is a fun, challenging class to build strength, body, mind, spirit. Visit MUUV.com to sign up! NORTH END IN BOISE Workshop & new classes for beginners & experienced. YogaTreeBoise.com or call 631-4727.

BW ANNOUNCEMENTS A DUNDEE DETECTIVE A Dundee Detective and Sleeping with Jane Austen by David Aitken. Kindle novels. davidaitken. org AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHERS Photographers are invited to the Lakeside Lavender Farm before the festival on Thursday, July 11th, from sunrise to sunset. The address of the farm is 1003 W. Locust Lane, Nampa.

PSYCHIC GINA Angel Reader, medium & clairvoyant. Available for private readings & psychic parties. Call 323-2323.

OPEN FOR THE SEASON Check out the fruit stand on W. State St. between the old Moxie Java & Burger & Brew! Nicest guys in town!

THERAPEUTIC MASSAGE

BW RIDES TEN DOLLAR RIDE Rides anywhere in Boise for just 10 bucks! Call or text me. 208286-6277. Also deliveries and rides anywhere else for cheap!

ADOPT-A-PET

BW WEEKEND MARKETS THE TREASURE GARDEN FLEA MARKET Art, crafts, antiques and other good stuff. Friday, Saturday & Sunday. 10-6, 6521 Ustick Road East of Cole. Antiques, art, crafts, vintage and retro clothing and accessories. Unusual treasures from the past, present and future! 3000 sq. ft. of treasures. Great prices and easy parking. Stop in this weekend and check it out!

These pets can be adopted at the Idaho Humane Society. www.idahohumanesociety.com 4775 W. Dorman St. Boise | 208-342-3508

CAREERS

COUNSELING 6DIHW\ +HDOLQJ )UHHGRP Tour the WCA ,I 7KHVH :DOOV &RXOG 7DON Learn more about our services and creating healthy relationships

BUSTER: 1-year-old male border collie mix. Knows basic obedience. Houseand crate-trained. Good with dogs. Prefers a cat-free home. (Kennel 401- #20142557)

ROCKO: 1-year-old male mastiff mix. An extralarge puppy. Strong and independent, but happy. Will need firm training. (Kennel 409#20085484)

LADY: 7-month-old female pit bull terrier mix. Petite gal. Good with older kids. Needs an owner ready to train her. (Kennel 419#19595122)

TOBIN: 9-week-old male domestic shorthair. Playful, rowdy and charming. Good with other cats. Litterboxtrained. (Kitten Room#20208574)

PATTY: 2-year-old female domestic shorthair. Uniquely marked cat. Friendly, outgoing. Prefers to be an only cat. Litterbox-trained. (Kennel 5- #20141781)

BOO: 7-year-old female domestic shorthair. Very affectionate, but may need to lose a few pounds. Would do great in a calmer home. (Kennel 17- #20183312)

Call today: 208-343-3688 ZZZ ZFDERLVH RUJ

MASSAGE

These pets can be adopted at Simply Cats. www.simplycats.org 2833 S. Victory View Way | 208-343-7177

BELLFLOWER: For only $10, you can have this bundle of friendly cuteness.

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DELSA: I’ll be the object of your affection. Let’s snuggle together. $10.

CHEROKEE: Part cat, part comedian. Stop by and meet me today. $10.

BOISEweekly C L A S S I F I E D S | JUNE 29 – JULY 2, 2013 | 35


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B O I S E W E E K LY NOTICES BW LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL & COURT NOTICES Boise Weekly is an official newspaper of record for all government notices. Rates are set by the Idaho Legislature for all publications. Email jill@boiseweekly. com or call 344-2055 for the rate of your notice. IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR THE 3RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT FOR THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CANYON Carrie Serena Wells Plaintiff, vs. Kenneth Michael Leavitt Defendant. Case No. 2011-7750-CV ORDER FOR SERVICE After examining the record Plaintiff’s Verified Complaint/Motion, Motion and Affidavit for Service, the Court finds the Plaintiff is a necessary and proper party. After due diligence, Defendant’s

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current whereabouts are unknown, and IT IS ORDERED that service of the Summons be made by publication, in the Boise Weekly a newspaper published and printed at, Boise , Idaho, the newspaper most likely to give notice. Publication shall be made at least once a week for four (4) consecutive weeks. Within ten days of this Order, Plaintiff shall also mail a copy of the Summons and Complaint/Motion to the Defendant at his/her known street or post office address. Date: 6-4-13 DAYO O. ONANUBOSI Judge CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT By: Deputy Clerk State of Idaho County of Canyon I hereby certify that the foregoing instrument is a true and correct copy of the original as the same appears in this office. DATED 6-4-13 CHRIS YAMAMOTO, Clerk of the District Court

By: Deputy Pub. June 12, 19, 26, July 3, 2013. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ADA In the Matter of ELIAS JOSHUA ENGLER, A Child Under the Age of Eighteen Years. CASE NO.: CVMB1309946 NOTICE OF PETITION AND HEARING (I.C. 15-5-207(c) OR 15-5-310) 1. Notice is hereby given that on May 28, 2013, BENJAMIN WARD and KATHLEEN WARD filed a Petition for Appointment of CoGuardians of a Minor. 2. A copy of the Petition is on file with the Clerk of the Court and may be reviewed upon request. 3. The Petition has been set for hearing in this Court at the Ada County Courthouse, located at 200 W. Front Street, Boise, Ada County, Idaho on July 16, 2013 at 9:30 o’clock a.m. DATED this 14th day of June, 2013.

QUICK LAW OFFICE Brenda H. Quick Attorney for Petitioners Pub. June 19, 26 & July 3, 2013. LEGAL NOTICE TO CREDITORS FOR PUBLICATION. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF, THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ADA, In the Matter of the Estate of: WILFORD T. BREEN, Deceased, M. SEAN BREEN, Personal Representative. Case No. CV-IE-2013-08473. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal representative of the above-named dece-

DRINK HERE

dent. All persons having claims against the decedent or the estate are required to present their claims within four months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or said claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented to the undersigned at the address indicated, and filed with the Clerk of the Court. DATED this 14th day of June, 2013. M. Sean Breen c/o Gary L. Davis, MANWEILER, BREEN, BALL & DAVIS, PLLC, P.O. Box 937, Boise, ID 83702, (208) 424-9100. Pub. June 19, 26 & July 3, 2013.

NYT CROSSWORD | QUESTION BOX BY MEL ROSEN / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ Note: When this puzzle is done, take the answers to the 10 starred clues and arrange them across and down in crossword fashion in the central 5x5 box. The resulting five-letter word spelled out diagonally by the circles will answer the question asked at 23-, 34-, 82- and 98-Across.

1

2

3

4

5

6

18 23

8

9

10

38 41

42

46

47

51

57

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49 53

62

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66

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72 76

82

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80 86 91

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99 103 107

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106

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59 61

88

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55

65

102

48

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60

87

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33

54 56

16

30

40

45

15

22 26

37

39

14 21

32

36

1 *Some boat covers 6 Exorbitant 10 Eye liner? 14 Climbed 18 “Climb onto Papa’s lap!” 19 Beau’s girl 20 A lot of the Beatles’ “She Loves You” 22 1960s TV boy 23 Start of a trivia question

13

29

31

50

12

25

28

35

11

20

24

27

34

7

19

ACROSS

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36 | JUNE 29 – JULY 2, 2013 | BOISEweekly C L A S S I F I E D S

96

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27 28 29 30

Patriots’ org. Wallops Wallops Constellation next to Gemini 31 Brooklyn athlete 32 Latin phrase at the end of a list 33 Three-part 34 Trivia question, Part 2 39 Joint czar with Peter I 40 Drink that’s stirred 41 “If only you could ___ now” 42 Maritime letters 45 Assess, with “up” 46 France’s Académie ___ Beaux-Arts 47 Grp. involved in backto-school night 49 Stitch 50 Rhyming honor 51 Ding, say 52 Symbol of remoteness 54 Vocal fanfare 55 Romeo and Juliet, e.g. 56 Insincere earnestness 59 Shul reading 60India’s ___ Coast 63 Garden 65 Rocky Mountain tribe 66 ___ cable (TV hookup) 67 Cause for plastic surgery, maybe 70 PC game sensation of the early 2000s, with “The” 71 Certain drive-thru convenience 73 Three-point line, e.g. 74 Complete loser 75 “___ boy!” 76 Tammany Hall problem 80 “N.B.A. on ___” 81 Like the earth and some apples 82 Trivia question, Part 3 87 Betrays 90 Razzers 91 Italian for 86-Down 92 Texas oil city 93 Company whose logo has a diagonal red arrow 94 Explorer or Escape, in brief

95 J.F.K.’s historic ___ Flight Center 98 End of the trivia question 102 Journalist/writer Herbert 103 Ryan of “The Beverly Hillbillies” 104 Info for airport greeters 105 Maine-to-Florida rte. 106 Captain ___ 107 They’re tapped 108 Some deli buys 109 *Cruise stops

DOWN 1 Flimsy, as an excuse 2 British fop 3 Gemstone for most Libras 4 Lap-dog breed 5 Channel starting in 2003 6 Tennis great Tommy 7 Espionage agcy. with a leader played by Tom Cruise 8 Present need? 9 Nashville-based variety show, 1969-92 10 With lots of room to spare 11 Breathe 12 Lugs 13 “Doctor ___” 14 Big around the middle 15 *Works 16 French lord 17 Wee 21 Kama ___ 24 Horror director Eli 25 Polynesian entertainments 26 Game stopper 31 Protected goose 32 Biblical son begat by a 105-year-old father 33 Sleeping sickness carrier 34 Protein-rich soup 35 Poet banished in A.D. 8 36 Level 37 *End of ___ 38 Official in a mask 42 One taking applications

43 Kelly of “The West Wing” 44 *What’s in store 46 June honoree 48 Be moribund, say 49 *Move, as a plant 51 Black ___ 53 Wrinkle remover 54 *Sandy spots, maybe 56 *Chart-topper 57 Novelist Puzo 58 Dollar rival 61 It’s said when a light bulb goes on 62 Cheap booze 63 *Auto shop inventory 64 Jean-___ Picard of “Star Trek: T.N.G.” 67 Lord’s worker 68 ___ 51 (conspiracy theory subject) 69 Mercury and Saturn 72 Dr.’s order 73 Literary olios 74 “Les Trois Villes” novelist 77 At it 78 Features of some cowboy shirts 79 QB Tim 80 Guttural

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81 Partition into multiple bits 82 ___-Babylonian (ancient Semitic language) 83 Major-leaguer with three 60+ home run seasons 84 Sort of 85 Ogling type 86 Part of a day 87 Type type 88 Cliché, often 89 *Late office opening, say 93 “Pursuit of the Graf ___” (1956 war film) 94 Lip 95 Old satellite-launching rocket 96 Gave out 97 Motion carriers 99 Shul fixture 100 ___ kwon do 101 General on Chinese menus Go to www.boiseweekly. com and look under extras for the answers to this week’s puzzle. Don't think of it as cheating. Think of it more as simply double-checking your answers.

W E E K ’ S

A N S W E R S

J A N I T O R

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A M E N R O K L I N L E S E D S H I S O D T A M E E N E B E T S R E T A S R E F E R I L T O P I C R T H E S S S S A U S O S M E A E A R

C R E N N A U H H U H

A S A Y V O E U R S T A R I A D Y S J D I I V P E L O W M A A G

A T A C K C H I L L E H I R L E Y I E T A T R D I V A P O M E R S A U E R Q T R A U E S P P A C C I O T R O M S B U R P S W A D D L E O N E S E S O S E S W A P R H O R S E S O R E S T N B A E R D I T T O A C H S

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LEGAL NOTICE TO CREDITORS FOR PUBLICATION. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF, THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ADA, In the Matter of the Estate of: JERRY ODELL DAVIS, Deceased, Douglas O. Davis, Personal Representative. Case No. CV-IE-2013-05988. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal representative of the above-named decedent. All persons having claims against the decedent or the estate are required to present their claims within four months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or said claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented to the undersigned at the address indicated, and filed with the Clerk of the Court. DATED this 14th day of June, 2013. Douglas O. Davis c/o M. Sean Breen, MANWEILER, BREEN, BALL & DAVIS, PLLC, P.O. Box 937, Boise, ID 83702, (208) 424-9100. Pub. June 19, 26 & July 3, 2013. IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT FOR THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ADA IN RE: CRYSTAL BROOKE NELSEN Case No. CV NC 1308560 A Petition to change the name of CRYSTAL BROOKE NELSEN, now residing in the City of Meridian, State of Idaho, had been filed in the District Court in Ada County, Idaho. The name will change to CRYSTAL BROOKE SCHUMACHER. The reason for the change in name is: Petitioner is no longer married and wishes to return to her former name. A hearing on the petition is scheduled for 11:00 o’clock a.m. on (date) July 25, 2013 at the Ada County Courthouse. Objections may be filed by any person who can show the court a good reason

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against the name change. Date: May 20, 2013 CHRISTOPHER D. RICH CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT By: Deirdre Price Deputy Clerk Pub. June 19, 26, July 3, 10, 2013. LEGAL NOTICE TO CREDITORS FOR PUBLICATION. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF, THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ADA In the Matter of the Estate of: DOUGLAS LELAND HERNDON, Deceased, LAUREL HERNDON, Personal Representative. Case No. CV-IE-2013-10717. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal representative of the above-named decedent. All persons having claims against the decedent or the estate are required to present their claims within four months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or said claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented to the undersigned at the address indicated, and filed with the Clerk of the Court. DATED this 18th day of June, 2013. Laurel Herndon c/o Gary L. Davis MANWEILER, BREEN, BALL & DAVIS, PLLC P.O. Box 937 Boise, ID 83702 (208) 424-9100 Pub. June 26, July 3 & 10, 2013.

TRANSPORTATION BW 4 WHEELS CASH FOR CARS: Any Car/ Truck. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Call For Instant Offer: 1-888-420-3808 www.cash4car.com

2011 GMC SIERRA 2500 HD Denali, AWD, Duramax Diesel, automatic, lifted, 28800 miles, black, leather, navigation, excellent condition, warranty, $18900, sobe@netscape.com

BW ADULT

BW RECREATION

If you have a family member or friend who is trying, there are things they can & must do to help their cause. Contact Maloney Law on our 24 hr. line 208-392-5366 for a free consultation. Assistance available in parole & probation violations also.

SURFBOISE.COM Paddle & surf boards on the river at 35th & Boise River, Garden City.

BW AUTO SERVICES FRIENDLY FAIR REPAIR Visit 27th Street Automotive. Cleanest most comprehensive service in the area. People you can trust. Call 890-8739. South on 27th at State St.

ADULT BW CHAT LINES FUN LOCAL SINGLES Browse & Reply FREE! 208-3458855. Use FREE Code 7887, 18+. MEET GAY & BI SINGLES Listen to Ads & Reply FREE! 208472-2200. Use FREE Code 5988, 18+. REAL DISCREET, LOCAL CONNECTIONS Call FREE! 208-287-0343 or 800210-1010. www.livelinks.com 18+. WILD LOCAL CHATLINE Send Messages FREE! Straight 208-345-8855. Gay/Bi 208-4722200. Use FREE Code 7886, 18+.

GETTING PAROLE IN IDAHO IS NOT EASY

BW KISSES Mi Narita, Bienvenido a casa! Has estado fuera durante muchos años, ya sabes. Te he extrañado mucho. Eres la mejor persona que conozco! Es bueno tenerte de vuelta. Amor, tu Narito PROFESS YOUR LOVES/LIKES/JOYS ...in Boise Weekly Kisses. Free to someone you love this Summer, print space permitting. Email: Classifieds@BoiseWeekly.com WE ARE OUT Engagement~Wedding~ Anniversary Announcements for everyone! Boise Weekly welcomes all and does not discriminate against gay or straight couples. Call 3442055 for a price quote!

BW KICKS ARE YOU A HATER? Have something you can’t say but needs to be said? Try Boise Weekly Kicks. Free this Summer when print space is availalble. Email: classifieds@boiseweekly. com

BW PEN PALS Pen Pals complimentary ads for our incarcerated friends are run on a space-available basis and may be edited for content. Readers are encouraged to use caution and discretion when communicating with Pen Pals, whose backgrounds are not checked prior to publication. Boise Weekly accepts no responsibility for any relationships that may arise from contacting these inmates. SWM, 40’s, 5’9”, 200 lbs., physically fit and lonely. Seeking friends and pen pals to write to. Paul Evans #86356 SICI MCU C 08 PO Box 8509 Boise, ID 83707. Singe, 25 yrs. old. Just looking for friends to write or maybe even more depends where it all goes. Amanda Hernandez, c/o Gem CJ, 410 E. First St, Emmett, ID 83617. GWM, 37 y/o, Looking for someone to get to know and see where it goes from there. Someone between 30 & 50 to help pass the lonely time. Write to Christopher Deike, #83606, ISCI Unit 14C-6A, P.O. Box 14, Boise, ID, 83707. SWF, 37 y/o. Blonde hair, hazel eyes. Seeking men or women to write and get to know. Country girl with a wild side. Sara McArthur, #69532, c/o Bonneville Co. Jail, 605 N. Capitol Ave., Idaho Falls, ID 83402. F, 38 y/o. Looking for someone to correspond with . I love to draw & write poems. I also love to get my hands dirty. I really enjoy bad boys & fast cards & bikes. If interested please write. Shauna Brumfield, # 63410, PWCC Unit 1, 1451 Fore Road, Pocatello, Id 83204. My name is Susan. I am 33. I love everything that has to do with the outdoors. I am looking for a pen pal. Susan Smith, #75705, PWCC Unit 1, 1451 Fore Road, Pocatello, ID 83204.

ADULT

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BOISEweekly C L A S S I F I E D S | JUNE 29 – JULY 2, 2013 | 37


BW

FREE WILL ASTROLOGY

MUSIC BW MUSICAL INSTRUCTION PIANO & VOICE LESSONS IN BOISE Harmony Road Music studio is offering music lessons for ages 2 to adults. Please call at 409-6868 or visit our website at www.HarmonyRoad.org

COMMUNITY - ANNOUNCEMENTS

ARIES (March 21-April 19): “To know when to stop is of the same importance as to know when to begin,” said the painter Paul Klee. Take that to heart, Aries. You are pretty adept at getting things launched, but you’ve got more to learn about the art of stopping. Sometimes you finish prematurely. Other times you sort of disappear without officially bringing things to a close. Now would be an excellent time to refine your skills. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): “The problem with quotes on the Internet is that it’s hard to determine whether or not they are genuine.” So said Joan of Arc back in 1429, right before she helped lead French troops in the battle of Patay. Just kidding! I was trying to make a point that will be useful for you to keep in mind, Taurus, which is: Be skeptical of both wild claims and mild claims. Stay alert for seemingly interesting leads that are really time-wasting half-truths. Be wary for unreliable gossip that would cause an unnecessary ruckus. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): French impressionist painter Claude Monet loved to paint water lilies, and he did so over and over again for many years. Eventually he created about 250 canvases that portrayed these floating flowers. Should we conclude that he repeated himself too much? Should we declare that he was boringly repetitive? Or might we wonder if he kept finding new delights in his comfortable subject? Would we have enough patience to notice that each of the 250 paintings shows the water lilies in a different kind of light, depending on the weather and the season and the time of day? I vote for the latter view and suggest that you adopt a similar approach to the familiar things in your life during the coming weeks. CANCER (June 21-July 22): “In order to swim one takes off all one’s clothes,” said 19th century Danish philosopher Soren Kierkegaard. “In order to aspire to the truth one must undress in a far more inward sense, divest oneself of all one’s inward clothes, of thoughts, conceptions, selfishness, etc., before one is sufficiently naked.” Your assignment in the coming week, Cancerian, is to get au naturel like that. It’s time for you to make yourself available for as much of the raw, pure, wild truth as you can stand. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Gertrude Stein was an innovative writer. Many illustrious artists were her friends. But she had an overly elevated conception of her own worth. “Think of the Bible and Homer,” she said, “think of Shakespeare and think of me.” On another occasion, she proclaimed, “Einstein was the creative philosophic mind of the

38 | JUNE 29 – JULY 2, 2013 | BOISEweekly C L A S S I F I E D S

century, and I have been the creative literary mind of the century.” Do you know anyone like Stein, Leo? Here’s the truth, in my opinion: To some degree, we are all like Stein. Every one of us has at least one inflated idea about ourselves—a conceited self-conception that doesn’t match reality. It was my turn to confront my egotistical delusions a few weeks ago. Now would be an excellent time for you to deal with yours. Don’t be too hard on yourself, though. Just recognize the inflation, laugh about it and move on.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “The only thing that we learn from history,” said the German philosopher Georg Hegel, “is that we never learn anything from history.” I’m urging you to refute that statement in the coming weeks, Sagittarius. I’m pleading with you to search your memory for every possible clue that might help you be brilliant in dealing with your immediate future. What have you done in the past that you shouldn’t do now? What haven’t you done in the past that you should do now?

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): When I close my eyes, I get a psychic vision of you as a kid playing outside on a warm summer day. You’re with friends, immersed in a game that commands your full attention. Suddenly, you hear a jingling tune wafting your way from a distance. It’s the ice cream truck. You stop what you’re doing and run inside your home to beg your mom for some money. A few minutes later, you’re in a state of bliss, communing with your Fudgsicle or ice cream cone or strawberry-lime fruit bar. I have a feeling that you will soon experience an adult version of this scene, Virgo. Metaphorically speaking, either the ice cream man or the ice cream woman will be coming to your neighborhood.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): According to my analysis of the astrological omens, now would be a pretty good time to talk about things that are hard to talk about. I don’t necessarily mean that you’ll find it easy to do. But I suspect it would be relatively free of pain and karmic repercussions. There may even be a touch of pleasure once the catharsis kicks in. So try it if you dare, Capricorn. Summon the courage to express truths that have previously been hard to pin down. Articulate feelings that have been murky or hidden. For best results, encourage those you trust to do the same.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): During the past 10 months, you have been unusually adventurous. The last time you summoned so much courage and expansiveness may have been 2001. Please accept my respect and appreciation. You’ve had a sixth sense about knowing when it’s wise to push beyond your limitations and boundaries. You have also had a seventh sense about intuiting when to be crafty and cautious as you wander through the frontiers. Now here’s one of your assignments for the next 12 months: Distill all you’ve learned out there in the borderlands and decide how you will use your wisdom to build an unshakable power spot back here in the heart of the action. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Michael Faraday (1791-1867) was one of the most influential scientists in history. He produced major breakthroughs in both chemistry and physics. Have you ever used devices that run on electricity? You can thank him for playing a major role in developing that wonderful convenience. And yet unlike most scientists, he had only the most elementary grasp of mathematics. In fact, his formal education was negligible. I propose that we name him your role model of the week. He’s a striking example of the fact that you can arrive at your chosen goal by many different paths. Keep that in mind if you’re ever tempted to believe that there’s just one right way to fulfill your dreams.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Are you familiar with Quidditch? It’s a rough sport played by wizards in the fictional world of Harry Potter. All seven books in the series mention it, so it’s an important element. Author J.K. Rowling says she dreamed up the sport after having a quarrel with her boyfriend. “In my deepest, darkest soul,” she reports, “I would quite like to see him hit by a bludger.” (In Quidditch, a bludger is a big black ball made of iron.) I bring this up, Aquarius, because I suspect that you, too, are in position to use anger in a creative and constructive way. Take advantage of your raw emotion to make a lasting improvement in your life. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): In his erotic poem “Your Sex,” Joe Bolton exults: “My heart simplified, I touch the bud of happiness—it’s in season. And whatever grief I might have felt before simply dies inside me.” You might want to write that down on a slip of paper and carry it around with you this week, Pisces. According to my understanding of the astrological omens, the bud of happiness is now in season for you. You have good reason to shed the undertones of sadness and fear you carry around with you. I’ll tell you the last lines of Bolton’s poem, because they also apply: “Sometimes I think it’s best just to take pleasure wherever we want and can. Look: the twilight is alive with wild honey.”

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BOISEweekly C L A S S I F I E D S | JUNE 29 – JULY 2, 2013 | 39



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