Source Weekly, July 9th 2015

Page 1

Like d Ben mer Sum ival fest e nsid i e d gui

Phish Phans, Trustafarians, Flower Children, We Salute You! feature

P. 12

Our Scratch-and-Sniff Hippie Board Game!

CULTURE

VOLUME 19 • ISSUE 28 •July 9, 2015 • “ You’re either on the bus or you’re off the bus” - Ken Kesey

Our

Scratch-AndSniff Issue!

P. 25

Quilts Everywhere!

OUTSIDE

P. 29

Sen. Wyden Visits Oregon’s Wonders


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THIS WEEK EDITOR Phil Busse ASSOCIATE EDITOR Erin Rook EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Hayley Murphy COPY EDITOR Lisa Seales FILM & THEATER CRITIC Jared Rasic BEER REVIEWER Kevin Gifford LITERARY CONNOISSEUR Christine Hinrichs INTREPID EXPLORER Kevin Sperl COLUMNISTS Amy Alkon, Rob Brezsney, Wm.™ Steven Humphrey, Roland Sweet, Matt Jones, EJ Pettinger, Pearl Stark, Josh Gross FREELANCERS Delano Lavigne, Eric Skelton, Erik Henriksen, Marjorie Skinner, Sara Jane Wiltermood, Leah Chatterjee, Anne Pick, Jim Anderson, Brennan Purtzer, Dave Gil De Rubio PRODUCTION MANAGER Annelie Kahn GRAPHIC DESIGNER Esther Gray ADVERTISING SALES DIRECTOR Amanda Klingman ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Ban Tat, Chris Larro, Kimberly Morse OFFICE/ACCOUNTS MANAGER Kayja Buhmann CIRCULATION MANAGER Kayja Buhmann CONTROLLER Angela Switzer PUBLISHER Aaron Switzer WILD CARD Paul Butler NATIONAL ADVERTISING Alternative Weekly Network 916-551-1770 Sales Deadline: 5 pm Mondays Editorial Deadline: 5 pm Mondays Calendar Deadline: 12 pm Fridays Classified Deadline: 4 pm Mondays Deadlines may shift for special/holiday issues.

The Source Weekly is published every Thursday. The contents of this issue are copyright ©2015 by Lay It Out Inc., and may not be reprinted in part or in whole without consent from the publisher. Cartoons printed in the Source Weekly are copyright ©2015 by their respective artists. The Source Weekly is available free of charge at over 350 locations, limited to one copy per reader. Additional copies of the Source Weekly may be purchased for $1.00, payable in advance. Anyone removing papers in bulk will be prosecuted on theft charges to the fullest extent of the law. Subscriptions are available: $125 for a full year. For back issues, send a $2.00 self-addressed, stamped envelope (9” x 12”). Writers’ Guidelines: Call first or send an email outlining your intention. We accept unsolicited manuscripts and comics.

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H

eld in 1970 about 20 miles outside of Portland, the Vortex Festival is one of the more fascinating moments in Oregon’s history. Planned by then-governor Tom McCall, it was purposely timed with a visit to Portland State from then-President Richard Nixon, who was campaigning in support of the Vietnam War—hardly a popular stance with counter-culture hippies. The idea for Vortex was to draw away protestors and give them a week-long music concert, and in the process, defuse violent clashes like those at Kent State earlier that year. It worked: The only state-sponsored rock concert ever, some 50,000 people attended the free concert and Nixon’s visit passed peacefully. At one point, Gov. McCall landed in a helicopter, and waded through the throngs of partially-clad hippies in his suit and tie; an image that shows stark cultural differences, but more importantly shows tolerance and understanding. Two weeks from now, Phish comes to Bend and there is a certain culture clash at stake: Les Schwab Amphitheater, in an effort to make sure that everyone has safe space, has asked fans to leave their hula hoops at home, which is like asking a stock broker not to wear a tie and cufflinks. All told, we are excited for the throngs of Phish fans arriving and thought it was a good excuse to celebrate hippies. Peace.

EDITOR’S CHOICE: Tour des Chutes preview, Page 30

JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 3

ABOUT THE COVER Cover Design By: Jennifer Hornstein

Mailbox

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My Why Now:

It’s close to COCC and close to the downtown area where they can easily commute by walking and biking to the jobs they will have as they continue their education. For our children, for our community, for our future economy, now is the time to make this happen. - Steve C.

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JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 5

OPINION LETTERS

Have something to say? Send your thoughts to editor@bendsource.com. Letters must be received by noon Friday for inclusion in the following week’s paper. Please limit letters to 250 words. Submission does not guarantee publication. Letter of the week receives $5 to Palate!

—Tim Sinniger “Bend is Bend.” Bend is “unique.” I hear this all the time. I have lived in large and small communities in four states and I have traveled to hundreds of communities across the country. And I guarantee you that Bend is NOT unique. It is, in fact, pretty typical of a tourist destination town. Sure, we may have different things than other destination towns. But that isn’t some special uniqueness. Until we get past this silly notion of Bend Exceptionalism we will continue to live up to the unofficial slogan that has been around for decades: Poverty with a View. That’s not unique either. But it does accurately reflect what Bend is today. —Mickey Finn Troy Field is a featureless patch of grass surrounded by a very tall, unattractive chain link fence that gives the impression the field is private and not to be trespassed upon. It is more a waste of water than it is an icon. That said, I’d rather see it turned into loft condos for local housing with retail on the bottom floor; a plan that would positively impact many Bend residents. High-end rentals seem like a plan showing no respect for established downtown hotels or homeowners, plus an entire property dedicated to high-end condos is a plan asking for bankruptcy. Thank you Bend-La Pine School District for proving again that you have no understanding of the community involvement part of the sustainable loop for your own survival. Families-housing-schools. Your decisions impact the viability of this community, yet you continually ignore your responsibility, as a major employer and landholder, to step up, do the right thing, and be benevolent thinkers and community leaders. Your small mindedness is a big loss for Bend. —OregonMade

Thanks Bend La Pine for thinking of us, the community, first. I’ll be sure to think of YOU next time a school bond vote comes up. I’ve voted for and paid taxes on all the school bonds that have been placed on the ballot for the last 40 years. I hope the offer you got from Condopalooza LLC exceeded the City’s offer by such a huge sum that you’ll never need to go to the voters again for money. I’m also hoping a kickback is coming my way from this golden egg windfall for all the years I kept you afloat during the lean times, but I’m not holding my breath. Looks like you won’t be needing voters’ money now that you are wheelin’ & dealin’ public land with the big dogs. —Hank Savage Bend and Eastern Oregon should secede from the State of Oregon. Then they would not need to have an urban growth boundary and high-density condos, both are required under the Oregon Growth Management Act. In this situation, every square inch of Bend will ultimately turn into expensive high rise condos for Californians, just like Boulder, Colorado. This field should be saved for the children to play. Perhaps the City residents could vote to increase sales taxes to purchase open space. That’s what Ashland, Truckee, and Scottsdale, Arizona have done. Thirty percent of land within the city limits of Scottsdale is Open Space. Smart growth, as required by the State of Oregon, is not green, since it ultimately leads to the loss of most downtown areas of open space. —Tom Lane IN REPLY TO “FREEDOM IS NOTHING LEFT TO LOSE” (7/1) This is insane! If it’s unacceptable in one part of town why would it be acceptable somewhere else? More poor leadership! Where is the due process? If someone decides to exercise their right for open carry will they be excluded from the zone? I only cite that because it will be some issue like that that will cross the constitutional line. Bend is run like an elite homeowners’ association—either something is a law and we enforce it or it’s not and we leave it alone. Is the behavior that is not acceptable inside the zone ok outside the zone? Really people, let’s let people be free, back off on the social engineering exercise, and enforce the law if it’s broken. Seems like our dependency on design guidelines, micro brew beers, and homeowners’ associations has leaked into the collective consciousness of our com-

LIGHTMETER

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munity when we were not looking. I choose freedom and fair representation. Someone put a collar on those city councilors before they do anymore damage. Happy Independence Day. —Fired Up! This decision reeks of elitism, and I question its constitutionality. If someone commits a crime, whether downtown or in any other part of Bend, arrest them and give them due process. Someone in this thread said it earlier—Bend is becoming like one big homeowners association in an elite gated community. Heaven forbid there should be anything remotely distasteful, heaven forbid we should let “those people” move freely in our picture-perfect town. I don’t like it at all. —Viki Wooster This law is ridiculous. A “solution” in search of a problem. Very surprising that the normally sharp Jim Clinton and Sally Russell voted in favor of it. What a shock it would be if Bend is increasingly perceived as a “community” of elitist whites. I’m so tired of business and property owners acting as judge and jury and blaming whomever they can, in this case ordinary citizens, for their lousy business plans, failed visions, and self-focus. If justice is served, these xenophobes will in time themselves be excluded from the mainstream. —Peter G

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IN REPLY TO “THIS USED TO BE MY PLAYGROUND” (7/1) To call Troy Park “iconic” is just hubris. It’s a patch of grass barely the size of a football field (if that). As the article states, public entities had plenty of opportunity to purchase this land. They didn’t. Iconic would more aptly describe Drake Park. As everyone seems to want to turn downtown Bend into an urban oasis, the only way to do that is infill. Well...welcome to infill.

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When we interviewed candidates for Bend Park & Recreation District (BPRD) Board in May, then-sitting Chair Dan Fishkin told us that he would support waiving “system development charges” (SDCs), a fee that housing developers pay toward Park District (and City) projects, if the rest of the Board approved the idea. At the time, the idea to waive these fees was being presented as a viable means to encourage developers to build more affordable housing units in Bend. Fishkin explained that his lukewarm support for waiving SDCs was not because he did not want to find a means to fund and support more affordable housing; quite the opposite, he did not believe waiving those fees would be enough incentive, and also would demand a hefty trade-off, like fewer parks and services for the very families it was trying to help find housing. “The shortages of available land and the high cost of land are the primary impediments to developers building affordable housing and SDCs represent a comparatively small component in the overall cost of construction,” Fishkin pointed out in a Q&A with the Source. He went on, “The problem of affordable housing is much larger than waiving a token amount of SDCs.” Fishkin did not win re-election and, in late June, at his final meeting as a member of the BPRD Board, they voted 3-2 to dismiss the idea. The next day, the daily newspaper ran with the above-the-fold headline, “Park board won’t drop SDCs to ease Bend housing crunch,” a statement that oversimplifies the issue and misleads the public discussion to believe that SDCs are the be-all, end-all solution. Repeatedly, we have pointed out that waiving SDCs are not a magic bullet to produce affordable housing in Bend—and the mentality that this small gesture is a full solution is myopic. At best, waiving SDCs are one piece to a larger puzzle. Moreover, we question whether BPRD is the best governmental body to be the point agency to support affordable housing. While BPRD waiving SDCs could encourage building of some affordable housing units, it also means that BPRD will have less revenue to provide much needed services for low-income families, like maintaining and building parks—which provide free public spaces for low-income families—and also would deplete the $1 million-plus Park & Rec spends annually for needs-based assistance for recreational programs. Yes, there is a massive housing crunch in Bend. Housing prices continue to climb while vacancy rates remain below one percent, making it increasingly difficult for low-income families to find affordable housing. And, we certainly do not advocate for inaction. Instead, we believe that BRPD Board took the right action by not giving a token gesture toward affordable housing—and, potentially, in the process, allowing supporters to crow that the affordable housing issue was solved. No, instead we hope that BPRD rejection of waiving SDCs sounds a three-alarm emergency, and inspires an all-hands-on-deck mentality that now is the time for big, active, and comprehensive plans to address this massive problem in Bend. It is a big problem. It needs a big solution.


JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 7

NEWS

SIDE NOTES

In Hot Water

Dead salmon discovered in warming lower Deschutes

BY ERIN ROOK

BY ERIN ROOK

Over the Fourth of July weekend, Steve Pribyl was hiking along the lower Deschutes River between Rattlesnake Rapid and Moody when a distressing sight caught his eye. The retired Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife fisheries biologist and Deschutes River Alliance board member found about 13 dead or distressed sockeye salmon in shallow waters, says DRA Board President Greg McMillan. The apparent cause of death: thermal stress. Pribyl pushed off in a kayak Tuesday morning to survey the river and look for other fish kills. With June temperatures reaching highs not normally seen until August, the waters of the Deschutes and other Oregon rivers are

Portland General Electric spokesman Steve Corson says that isn’t likely to happen. He confirms that Round Butte operators shifted the balance of water being drawn through its selective water withdrawal tower as an experiment “Nobody likes to see a situation where you have a fish kill, but we need to be careful not to respond in a manner that responds to the concern of this week but might limit our ability to respond to the needs of the future,” he explains. “There’s not an infinite supply of cold water at the bottom of the river.” Instead, the dam operators aim for something called “natural thermal potential,” essentially a scientific estimate of what the wa-

“I don’t talk directly to any deity, so there’s not a whole hell of a lot we can do about it.” Craig Banner, senior fish health specialist, ODFW

heating up, creating dangerous conditions for migratory fish, including an increase in deadly bacteria. “Normally we see these kinds of conditions later in the summer, not in late June and early July,” said ODFW Information and Education Division Administrator Rick Hargrave, in a recent release. “When streams get too warm, fish are stressed and as a result the fishing goes downhill fast.” Sockeye salmon in particular, McMillan explains, have a lower tolerance for warm temperatures than other types of salmon, making them the “canary in the coal mine.” And in this case, he says, there’s a possibility the fish are not just sensitive, but endangered. “One thing we would certainly like to know is if any of these fish are listed sockeye from Idaho. The timing is right,” McMillan says. “If these are endangered that would be huge.” Craig Banner, a senior fish health specialist for the ODFW, says he’s not aware of the recent fish kill, but points out they do happen from time to time. He adds that his lab in Corvallis has been analyzing a half-dozen spring Chinook salmon found under the falls near Oregon City, who all appear to have succumbed to a bacteria that thrives in warmer waters. The ODFW lab in Madras did not return a request for comment by press time. “The bottom line is we’ve had exceptionally warm waters,” Banner says, adding that while early exposure to warmer temperatures can cause fish loss, he isn’t aware of any major fish kill events so far this year. And either way, he figures there’s only so much that can be done. “I don’t talk directly to any deity,” he explains, “so there’s not a whole hell of a lot we can do about it.” But the Deschutes River Alliance is urging Portland General Electric and The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, who coown and operate the Pelton-Round Butte Dam Complex, to release more cool water into the lower Deschutes. “Last summer, 2014, the dam operators elected to lower discharge temperatures by using more water from the bottom of the reservoir. We think it’s time to do that once again,” McMillan wrote in a post on the DRA website.

ter temperature would have been in the river had the dam not been there. Currently, Corson says, they are pulling 25 percent of their water from the bottom of the reservoir and 75 percent from the top, resulting in an output of about 59 degrees at the facility. But, he explains, that temperature rises to about 73 degrees at the mouth of river, due to warm, sunny conditions as it passes through the canyon. “We are learning along the way, and we have made adjustments along the way. But when we do that we need to base that on the best science that’s available,” Corson says. “It’s not something where PGE can say, ‘It’s really hot, let’s lower the water.’” With temperatures in the canyon approaching or exceeding triple digits, he says that decreases in the water temperatures coming out of the dam would have little impact on temperatures at the mouth of the Deschutes. Still, Corson notes that outputs are likely to get cooler in the “relatively near future,” largely due to cooler days ahead, and the resulting reconfiguration of the natural thermal potential. “The bottom line for us, we appreciate the frustration of some of the river users who are naturally upset when there are conditions like we’re seeing on rivers in Oregon right now,” Corson says. “We care about the river and the health of the fish as well.” But DRA’s Greg McMillan is not convinced that pulling cooler water at the dam won’t impact the mouth of the Deschutes, or that it will hamper the facility’s ability to draw colder water later in the summer. “Last year they did an experiment, pulling 65 percent colder water on July 19 and their cold water supply lasted into September,” McMillan says, adding, “That could be seen all the way to the mouth through the temperature gauge at Moody.” In general, McMillan expresses distrust for PGE, explaining that the agency has been less than forthright with information in the past. “We tried to work with them collaboratively for over two years,” he says, “and mostly what we got was stonewalling, foot dragging, and obfuscation.”

The lengthy process to redefine the City’s boundaries just took another step forward. The Urban Growth Boundary Steering Committee recently approved three options for Bend’s future footprint to be evaluated in more detail. The proposed scenarios came out of research and deliberations by City staff, consultants, and the UGB Technical Advisory Committee. The steering committee will also look at other land identified as ripe for expansion, to see if they might better serve the project goals, which are: efficient use of land; orderly and economic provision of public facilities and services; comparative environmental, social, economic, and energy consequences; and compatibility of future urban use with nearby agricultural and forest activities outside the UGB. More information about the UGB expansion process is available on the City’s website at bendoregon.gov/bendugb. Stating the obvious, Gov. Kate Brown on Tuesday declared July “Water Awareness Month” in an effort to raise awareness about drought conditions across the state and encourage Oregonians to conserve water. There are now 20 counties with officially declared drought emergencies, meaning about 98 percent of the state is experiencing drought. Other dire signs include: the lowest statewide snowpack levels in recorded history, the third highest average January-May temperature in the past 121 years, and lower than average rainfall. What’s worse, some climate scientists are predicting that Oregon will lose most of its snowpack in the next 50 years. But it wasn’t all Debbie Downers from the Governor’s office. On Monday, Gov. Brown signed legislation that would allow women to buy birth control at pharmacies without a doctor’s prescription. The bill, introduced by Bend Rep. Knute Buehler, makes Oregon the second state to make contraception as easy to access for women as it is for men. California has passed similar legislation, but since it has not yet gone into effect, Oregon could be the first state to implement a change that is currently receiving national attention. The bill includes provisions for training pharmacists, offering a self-screening test for contraindications, and notifying the individual’s primary care provider of their purchase.


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JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 9

FEATURE

Smells Like Hippie Spirit The Source’s tie-dyed welcome mat to Phish Phans BY PHIL BUSSE

There is a certain amount of debate about how the word “hippie” came about, and who coined the term. But hey, who owns a word anyway? While working as a journalist in San Francisco, I was consistently told that long-time San Francisco Chronicle columnist Herb Caen had first penned the title in the mid60s for a group of long-haired, happy-go-lucky teens and twentysomethings who had begun to hang out the Victorian houses in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood. Allegedly, the word was a deviation from “hipster,” a term which has seen a new life lately, but was originally was assigned to the Beat Generation cool kids, poets, and wanderers—a group that

HOW TO SPOT

had its roots in New York City’s Greenwich Village, but also a strong foothold in the Italian neighborhood of North Beach in San Francisco. There certainly is some familiarity between the Beats and the hippies, like a little brother who is a bit more lighthearted and carefree, but the same DNA of tossing off the constraints about whatever is mainstream, and adopting new forms of music and dress (until, of course, Banana Republic, a San Francisco-based company itself, co-opts the look). The irony about hippies is that their counter-culture attitudes glom together in a similar mindset, one that often

is as uniform as the “squares” and normals they are rejecting. Yet, over the decades, hippies have scratch changed and evolved, adopting & sniff new music tastes (from the Dead patchou li to Phish to bluegrass), emphasizing one element of the original hippies (dirtiness for the wookies, leaving a small footprint for the metrohippies) over another, and branching off into sub-genres and classifications. It can be hard to keep track, as they spring up new cultures faster than bacteria in a petri dish. Here’s a starter course:

CREDO

GETTING AROUND

MUSIC

SPEECH PATTERNS

DRUG OF CHOICE

The Dead, The Weavers, later Beatles

“Groovy,” “man,” “I can dig it”

Mary Jane

FLOWER CHILD

By their smiles, and/or tie-dye

Peace & love

My two feet are my best carriage

WOOKIE

Dirty, bearded and bare-footed, often smelled before seen

None

Whoever will give them a ride

Wherever there’s a free ticket

Nah, brah, this is my bawl

Whatever they can bum from someone else

TRUSTAFARIAN

Near real hippies, but no dirt under their nails

As long as it doesn’t show up on my permanent record

Saab 900

Mumford & Son; Dead bootlegs

Slight Connecticut accent, filtered through Boulder

Nitrous oxide

PHISH PHAN

Jangling bracelets and hula hoops

Live and let live

Bike, with glow sticks in spokes

Um. . .

“You’re sooooo butte-tif-full”

Molly, LSD

METROHIPPIE

Probably tending chicken coop in knee-high rubber boots

Leave the world a better place

Prius, cruiser bike

Yonder Mountain String Band, Jenny Lewis

“Is that gluten free?” Or, “Never Bikram, only gentle flow”

Micro-brew, kombucha

OREGON COUNTRY FAIR 2015

THIS

WEEKEND

!

JULY 10, 11 & 12 ★ 11:00 AM TO 7:00 PM Tickets are available at all TicketsWest locations including most Safeway Stores Order online at: ticketswest.com Charge by phone: 800-992-8499

Friday $23 ★ Saturday $25 ★ Sunday $23 Save! 3-Day Ticket only $59

Day of event: Fri. $25 ★ Sat. $29 ★ Sun. $25 There will be a $1.25 TicketsWest service charge on all single day tickets sold. There will be a $3 Ticketswest Service charge on all three day tickets sold.

WE INVITE YOU TO JOIN US FOR AN UNFORGETTABLE

ADVENTURE

No tickets are sold on-site. You must have an admission ticket to enter the parking lot or gain access to the Fair site. Parking $8 advance / $10 on-site. Ride LTD to the Fair for FREE from two Eugene locations. For more information check out: oregoncountryfair.org


10 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM /JULY 9, 2015

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JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 11

FEATURE

A Flower Childhood On being raised by hippies BY ERIN ROOK

The term “hippie” often brings to mind an image of flowing blonde locks adorned with flowers, VW buses adorned with flowers, and polyester bellbottoms adorned with, yes, more flowers. But for Alice Finer, who grew up in an urban hippie commune in the 1970s, the hippie generation is defined by an earnest desire to create social change. She talked to the Source about her childhood and the legacy of her mother’s generation. Source Weekly: What was it like to grow up on a hippie And being that my brother and I were the only children in the household, the conversations around the dinner table commune? How did you come to live there? Alice Finer: My mother, a young British physician, made weren’t dumbed down for us. If we wanted to participate, her way to Chicago in 1960 right after medical school. She we had to keep up. I’m grateful for that became involved with a group called the Medical Committee for Human Rights and spent the ’60s intensely politically active. She treated Martin Luther King, Jr., for a sore throat in the medical tent during a march, rallied at countless anti-Vietnam War protests and marches on Washington, [worked the] medical tent at Woodstock (mostly bad acid trips and dehydration apparently)— you get the idea. She had lived communally before becoming a single mother of two (very much by design) in Brooklyn and wanted me and my older brother to grow up with the experience of cooperative living and a variety of adult influences. In the mid-70s she got a group together, mostly young activFAR LEFT, ALICE FINER ists she met through the local food co-op. In my 4-year-old mind they were all social workers. There SW: What does “hippie” mean to you? Is it specific to was a rotation of housemates, some who lived with us brief- a time/place or can someone born in the 1990s be a hiply and some for years, until we stopped living communally pie? right around when I started high school, though the “comAF: I think it comes back to earnestness. In my experimunal” nature of the group—shared cooking, shopping, ence, the movement came out of a sincere passion for social chores and the like—became less and less in the later years. change, environmental issues, gender and racial equality, SW: What aspects of your hippie upbringing do you ending the Vietnam War—and a willingness to do somecarry with you, and which do/did you rebel against? thing about it. You can find that passion in people from evAF: It’s no surprise that the hippie generation begot Gen ery generation. The style/lifestyle/culture/counterculture X. I was all irony and eye rolls. Earnestness is still a chal- that came along with my mother’s generation of activists lenge for me. You grow up with no meat, sugar, or salt and was definitely co-opted by many who were far less motivatyou can imagine the kinds of foods you crave. That said, ed at the time and in subsequent generations. I’ve come full circle on a lot of things. I sometimes eat tofu. SW: Are there different types of hippies? Sometimes, I even make it. AF: Again, it’s style versus substance. Some might say SW: How did that experience shape your view of the that the “hippies” for whom it’s all style shouldn’t be deworld? scribed as such. AF: I think any one would benefit from being raised SW: Do “real” hippies use that word to describe around passionate, socially and politically aware people.

scra tch & sn iff sku n

k we ed

themselves, or is self-identification as a hippie a sure sign of a poser? AF: I’m immediately suspicious of anyone who self-identifies as something so nebulous. As for the members of the commune, I do not recall the word being used much around the house, not that they would have been offended being referred to as such. SW: What do you think are the most common misconceptions about hippies? Should we, as a culture, take them more seriously? AF: Probably that it was all sex, drugs, and rock-and-roll. It was certainly an important part of the movement, but all of that came out of real social revolution on many fronts that were deeply felt to be desperate at the time. SW: As the original hippies are getting older, do you think hippie culture is dying out? Or is it simply transforming? AF: I think there are hippie equivalents, in the spirit that the movement formed, in many corners. But as a cohesive culture I think it’s very fragmented if not entirely dead. In it’s modern representation, it’s become more of a caricature. SW: What is the opposite of a hippie? AF: A hipster. All self-conscious, self-motivated, and self-promoting. Or a hedge fund manager. SW: Would you consider living on a commune again? AF: I cherish having my own space and I think I’m too specific (read: intolerant) a person to make the compromises that it takes to live that way. However, I would love to have a lot of very close friends as neighbors in some sort of Melrose Place-like complex. SW: Have you read The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test? AF: Yes, but I was probably too young to fully understand it. SW: How do you feel about patchouli? AF: I do not feel good about it. SW: How do you feel about the Grateful Dead performing their final show? AF: They’re still playing?


12 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM /JULY 9, 2015

FEATURE DIRECTIONS: Different than The Man's game of “Go Fish,” “Go To Phish” is <

A GIRL WITH BEAUTIFUL

your board game. Play however you want, man. Dig it?

EYES ASKS YOU TO

JOIN HER AT COUNTRY FAIR.

FIR ST CAR TRY YOU TO H I T PIC CHH KS IKE YOU KIN , DNE UP. SS. AHE MO AD VE AS F AR YOU AS WA NT.

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UD CLO ECIDE TH E AR ET S OP OO PR ES FO SIV RE VE E, R. AH MO EA V DE IGH E SP AC T ES .

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BOO

TLE GO DEA F D SH (COR OW NEL L, 19 LEFT 77!) IN T HE R AND AIN RUIN BAC E D. K TO STA RT.


JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 13

T R A T S FR YO IEN D U G A W BA IVE EE S HE D. S G O FO R TA F UR E F Y TU OR RN S.

S D GIVE N E I R F A E MIRACL YOU A ! TICKET AIGHT GO STR B. SCHWA TO LES

scra tch & sn iff sa ndal wo

od

ING AMP NO C BLE? AILA V A S R. SITE MME U B L T. TOTA STAR O T BACK

MONKEY MAN RD SECURITY GUA ’ WON T TAKE A HUG INSTEAD AN, OH M LLY TOTA VW D OUT E H S P, SE YOU U S K C I IN VAN P TO JO U O Y ES INVIT W. GO O H S AT THEM TO IGHT STRA HOW! THE S

OF A TICKET. T. BACK TO STAR

FINISH PHISH SHOW! MECCA!


14 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM /JULY 9, 2015

PRESENTS

NORTHWEST CROSSING

SATURDAY FARMERS MARKET SATURDAYS 10 AM- 2 PM NORTHWEST CROSSING NEIGHBORHOOD

Saturdays, June 20 - September 19 Organic Produce Healthy Living Fresh Foods Arts and Crafts Petting Zoo and Pony Rides Live Music

ARTWORK BY KATHY DEGGENDORFER

FEATURING

Performance by

Student Loan String Band

Market Spotlight Presentations

WWW.NWXFARMERSMARKET.COM

we a

re open

s a e e h t n o

e d i ts

t, s a f k a e r b !

lunch an d

di n ner seven

w ee a s day

k


JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 15

OUR PICKS friday 10

saturday 11

A Light in the Wilderness

Mt. Bachelor Mountain Clean Up

WORDS—It’s easy to look down on Confederate flag-wavers, but Oregon’s hands aren’t clean when it comes to race. Central Oregon author Jane Kirkpatrick’s novel draws inspiration from the true story of a free African-American woman who sees Oregon as a slavery-free utopia, until she learns about a law excluding blacks from moving there. 4:30 pm. Paulina Springs Books, 252 W Hood Ave., Sisters. Free.

CIVIC DUTY—A lost annual tradition is revived, with a free lift ride up Pine Marten chairlift. At the top, you are handed a trash bag and asked to help clean up our beloved mountain as you hike back down. 9 am. Mt. Bachelor West Village, 13000 SW Century Dr. First 400 participants paid with a free day ski lift ticket.

friday 10 - saturday 11

saturday 11

MUSIC—There’s no need to travel out of the area for a multi-day, multi-genre outdoor music festival. Bonus: Crawfest (which, for the record, has nothing to do with crawfish) has a swimming hole, games, and other family-friendly fun. And did we mention the headliners? Matt Borden and the MFB on Friday and Larry and His Flask on Saturday. Noon-late. 16065 SW Alfalfa Rd., Powell Butte. $20 weekend pass, $15 per day.

RUN OR WALK—Now in its second year, this non-competitive run/walk benefits a new Central Oregon non-profit, the Pediatric Foundation, which provides financial support for families of children who have to travel to receive cancer treatment. A pretty great reason to get out there and move! 8 am. High Lakes Elementary, 2500 NW High Lakes Lp. $35 adult, $10 youth.

Tour des Chutes 5K

Crawfest Music Festival

tuesday 14

saturday 11

The Veterans Ranch Benefit

Sir Mix-A-Lot

HIP-HOP—This influential Seattle-based emcee was singing the praises of a big booty long before Big Sean, Beyonce, and Juvenile. But thanks to Nicki Minaj’s “Anaconda,” which samples heavily from “Baby Got Back,” Sir Mix-A-Lot is back in the spotlight. And that’s a good thing. 9:30 pm. Bend Summer Fest, Downtown Bend. Free.

MUSIC—PTSD is a miserable hangover from war and one that is increasingly being recognized—and, at wonderful spaces like the Veteran Ranch, treated, through farming, shepherding, and just settling back in a normal life. Tonight’s benefit is a threeband concert—Stu Goes North, Just Us, and Soul Revival. 7 pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $10.

saturday 11

wednesday 15

Star Party

Raft ‘n Brew

ASTRONOMY—Ralph Waldo Emerson once quipped that if the stars only appeared in the night sky every 1000 years or so, how people would rejoice at their miracle. Well, this is that party! Deschutes Land Trust hosts a star gazing event with powerful telescopes and guides. 8 – 11 pm. Rimrock Ranch (outside Sisters). Registration required, event@deschuteslandtrust. org; free.

BEER & BOATING—While the Marine Board may not agree, we think that beer and water sports are a great pairing! Sun Country Tours couples good brews with a Deschutes River rafting trip, and it pays forward the proceeds to a local charity. This week’s beer is GoodLife Brewing and proceeds go to Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation. 4:30 pm departure. Sun Country Tours, 531 SW 13th St. $53.

saturday 11

wednesday 15thursday 16

A Long Hot Summer Night

Oregon High Desert Classic

BURLESQUE—A number of burlesque troupes have come through town but there’s nothing better than supporting local talent. Bend Burlesque presents a sexy and fun burlesque show with live music by Company Grand who are accompanying them. If it’s even possible, things are about to get a whole lot hotter here in Bend. 6 & 9 pm performances. 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave. $15 and $20.

HORSES—Olympic level riders show off their stuff at this “AA” rated hunter/jumper competition with a $25,000 purse. After enjoy a Grand Prix Dinner and help raise funds for J Bar J Youth Services, a nonprofit organization that offers programs specializing in prevention, intervention, treatment, and education. 8 am-5pm. J Bar J Ranch, 62895 Hamby Rd. Free for spectators.

Tickets & Info: 541-317-0700 TowerTheatre.org TheTowerTheatre @towertheatrebnd TheTowerTheatre

Worthy Wednesday July 15

Blue Lotus July 21

Sunriver Festival Aug. 15

Avenue Q

Sept. 11-19


16 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM /JULY 9, 2015

SOUND

THE SOURCE

SUGGESTS...

A Joan Didion Soundtrack

BY ANNE PICK

From city to country, Cracker tells musical stories BY DAVE GIL DE RUBIO

The geographic distance between Berkeley and Bakersfield, California is 276.4 miles. For David Lowery, it’s also a stretch of land influential enough to the sound of his band that Cracker recently released a two-CD set entitled Berkeley to Bakersfield. The first CD crackles with guitar-driven alt-rock like the jangly “Beautiful” and the stomper “Life In the Big City.” Move on to disc two and out comes the pedal steel and fiddle, whether it’s on the twangy “Almond Grove” or the honky-tonk shuffle “King of Bakersfield.” And while this combination may seem odd, that combination of roots-rock and country riffing has been a hallmark dating back to the band’s 1992 self-titled debut, when Lowery’s guitar-playing creative partner Johnny Hickman juiced up songs like the defiant “Can I Take My Gun to Heaven” and the anthemic “I See the Light” with riffs that pulsed with the influence of Bakersfield legends Buck Owens and Don Rich. “The country thing is something that’s been around throughout our whole career,” Lowery explained in a recent interview. “So in 2004 we put out [the album] “Countrysides” as a way paying homage to our roots in that way. In 2013, we thought it was time to touch on that again, so I started writing these songs that were largely sort of country-based, which was sort of the idea for the next Cracker record. It was going to be a sort of Americana record.” Around this time, the Texas native had also been working with drummer Michael Urbano, who not only played with Lowery in his other band, Camper Van Beethoven, but also an earlier Cracker lineup. Joined by bassist Davey Faragher, the trio recorded nine songs of original material that were distinctly different from the nine songs Lowery had started recording earlier for this project. It proved to be an interesting conundrum according to Lowery. “[Berkeley] was this sort of three-day, songwriting demo session with me, Davey [Faragher] and Michael that’s not exactly perfect,” he recalled. “When we listened to it back and compared these two batches of songs, they seemed different enough that they were two different albums. So that’s what we did…It sort of explains who our rock and country roots are.”

John Mayall Band The English blues singer, guitarist, organist, and songwriter’s career spans more than 50 years. His last release, John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers—Live in 1967, features a familiar lineup in his band The Bluesbreakers—Peter Green, John McVie, and Mick Fleetwood; all founding members of Fleetwood Mac. While the Bluesbreakers didn’t last long, Mayall’s career continues onward to this day. Having worked with everyone from Eric Clapton to Paul McCartney, Mayall has created a blues rock sound often imitated, but never duplicated. 7 pm. Monday, July 13. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. Reserved seating $23.50, $40.50, $51.75.

CRACKER, 7/9.

While Lowery has been pulling double-duty spearheading Cracker and Camper Van Beethoven, dating back to the latter’s regrouping in the late ’90s, he’s also developed an interest in using the geography of his adopted state of California to drive his most current wave of songwriting. More recently, it came via the most recent CVB albums, 2014’s El Camino Real, which draws its inspiration from southern California, and 2013’s La Costa Perdida, which is more about the northern part of the Golden State. But for Lowery, who currently teaches a course on the economics of finance in the music business at the University of Georgia and is working on his long-delayed mathematics doctorate, his geographically-driven creative urges were stoked by authors Joan Didion and William Vollman. “I’ve become fascinated with writers like Joan Didion,” Lowery said. “[She] wrote this wonderful book made up of essays on

the grimy part of California called Slouching Towards Bethlehem about the end of an empire. And then I got fascinated by William Vollman who is a really hard-to-describe author. He’ll write a 1,300-page book that’s really a loose collection of long and elegant essays that spans 400 years that’s about the Imperial Valley of California, which is both in California and Mexico.” “So I wound up being fascinated by this writing style and I started out doing that with the Camper records,” he said. “I looked at it as being our Didion phase. I haven’t taken this geography thing that far, but it’s definitely part of something that I’ve been thinking about for the last four or five years. The songs aren’t really about the geography. They are just excuses to tell other stories.” Cracker 5:30 pm, Thursday July 9 Drake Park Free (part of the Munch & Music series)

Non-Country America Songs BY JOSH GROSS

Sure, you’re proud to be an American where at least you know you’re free. But, Toby Keith, occasionally there is the need to discuss these United States of ours without the use of country music. So we put together a mixtape of non-country “America,” songs, including artists like Jimmy Eat World, Fall Out Boy, Yelawolf, and more. And, just for old time’s sake, we threw in one by Toby Keith. SCAN THE QR CODE

The Kitchen Dwellers Featuring a traditional bluegrass lineup of banjo, mandolin, fiddle, guitar, and bass, but without a traditional sound. Runners up in both NW String Summit and Telluride Band Competitions, The Kitchen Dwellers are a stringed force to be reckoned with. Combining bluegrass with blues, psychedelic rock, intergalactic space travel sounds, and picking, the Kitchen Dwellers have a sound all their own. Listeners may be familiar with the Bozeman, Montana-based band as they have open for bluegrass heavyweights Greensky Bluegrass, Railroad Earth, Head for the Hills and many more. 9 pm. Tuesday, July 14. GoodLife Brewing, 70 SW Century Dr.

Melissa Ruth & The Likely Stories A music teacher from Eugene, Melissa Ruth has some musical chops. Together with The Likely Stories, the band plays what they call “doo-wop twang,” which features a bluesy feel mixed with country and gritty rock and roll. Ruth herself wrote, produced, and arranged the band’s latest album Riding Mercury, making her a whirlwind of talent both on stage and behind the scenes. 8 pm. Wed, July 15. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $5.


JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 17

ON DECK

BY SARA JANE WILTERMOOD

Wildwood Music Festival

Providing private, compassionate euthanasia services for your cats & dogs in the privacy of your pet’s home.

BY SARA JANE WILTERMOOD

541-647-6810

www.MobileCatandDogVet.com Libby Hays, DVM DrLibby@MobileCatandDogVet.com

WILDWOOD: YOUR OWN PERSONAL FESTIVAL, 7/17 - 7/19.

Looking at the impressive lineup for the Wildwood Music Festival and Campout July 1719, you might think, those who don’t have facial hair, need not apply. That, and: That’s some mean roots, folk, and blues. Festival organizer Katie Kendall says that this year will be their biggest yet, and it has grown every year since their humble start five summers ago. “We had this idea to have an outdoor event, myself and Kim Hamblin, who owns the property,” recalls Kendall. “That first summer Charlie Parr said he would play for us as long as it wasn’t a public event. We put a couple of pallets together with some plywood to make a stage and by word-of-mouth invited 100 people or so. We put a jar out for donations and people gave exactly what was needed. That put the wind in our sails. The following year, the first year we had the official festival, nearly 400 people came, and we thought, this could be a thing.” If “a thing” means growing to 1,000 people last year and already surpassing that number in ticket sales this year, then yes, a thing it is. Though Kendall says they want to keep their loyal following and have new folks enjoy it, without overtaxing the land. (And porta-potties.) In other words, get your tickets quick, though camping space is plentiful. With more than 40 acres to camp on, this festival won’t feel too crowded when it comes time to bed down for the night. “Usually when you go to these festivals, you get your 10-by-10 spot, but here you can find your own space and not be too close to people,” says Kendall. But back to the bearded musicians: “Our main thing is always keeping a nice variety,” says Kendall. “There is a pretty wide range in there, with quite a few people coming back from other years. Jeff Norton—I cannot get enough of. We are going to have a few bands from the region. The Banditos are getting a lot of national attention right now, and they just signed with Bloodshot Records right after we booked them. They have southern rock sounds with a soulful, female singer with that Janis Joplin passion in her delivery. Jacob Miller and the Bridge City Crooners from Portland, they just look like they are from the ’20s; they are super entertaining. [Reverend] Deadeye from Denver is theatrical and growly. I’m also excited about our headliners on Friday,” she says, finally acknowledging, “run on sentence!” (Check out wildwoodmusicfest.com for the full lineup and all the beards in all their glory.) Or, for a change in facial-hair pace, the group out of Bellingham, Washington, Wild Rabbit, is actually clean-shaven. “This is a band I have found that has a different sound in that bluegrassy vein,” says Kendall. But back to the roots: Kendall was born and raised in Willamina (population 2,025), five miles down the road a piece from Sheridan (population 6,011), where the festival is being held. She and her sister owned and operated a restaurant in McMinnville for more than a decade, and decided to sell their successful café and head back to make it in their hometown. They now own and run the Wildwood Hotel, which houses weary travelers and hosts live music every other weekend. Though that type of a move has been uncommon in recent decades, Kendall says it is coming back in style. scra tch “When you are 20-something,” she says, “you want to get & sn out of your area. It is a harder row to hoe, but it is getting back iff nag to be a thing again culturally, to try and make it where you came cham from. People only have so much energy to put into things, so it pa is important that some go back to make our own legacy.” Wildwood Music Festival and Campout 3 pm, Friday, July 17 through 3 pm, Sunday, July 19 Roshambo Artfarm, 32380 W. Valley Hwy, Sheridan $85. Friday only, $35. Saturday only, $59. Kids 12 and under, free. Camping for each person over 12, $10.

AN EVENING OF EVIDENTIAL MESSAGES AND CONNECTIONS FROM THE OTHER SIDE

Come and join me for this Mediumship Demonstration, as I bring forth Messages and Connections of Love and Hope from The Other Side (your family and friends in Spirit)

VISIT CARLSEAVER.COM FOR MORE DETAILS EVENT LOCATION

The Lotus Building 300 SE Reed Market Rd. Bend, OR 97701

ADMISSION

$20 pre-paid $25 at the door

DATE & TIME

Saturday, July 18, 2015 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm

Aesthetics and facial plastic surgery

Informational Evening at Cascade Faces July 23, 2015 ~ 5:30 in the evening

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Question and Answer Session with Dr. Villano Michael E. Villano MD, FACS CASCADE FACES 431 NE Revere Ave #110

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541-312-3223


18 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM /JULY 9, 2015

CLUBS

Together,

: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM

wednesday 8

Hand &

Astro Lounge Los Colognes & Allison Bencar Their album Working Together reflects the simple but straight-on lyricism of John Prine, the unhurried grooves of Cale, with a touch Mark Knopfler’s mid‘80s Dire Straits’ polish. 10 pm. No cover. redlightpro. com/concerts/#/loscolognesandallison-becnar.

Paw, Changing

Checker’s Pub Open Mic/Jam Night Come bring your ears to listen to the sounds of Denny Bales. Or bring your instruments and “plug in” to play. If you feel like singing this is for you as well. 6-9 pm. checkerspub.com.

Lives All 36 dogs from the neglect case found new loving homes.

HSCO.ORG ~ 541.382.3537 61170 SE 27th St Bend OR 97702

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke With your favorite host Maryoke! 9 pm. No cover. facebook.com/hubcityredmond. M&J Tavern Open Mic Night 21+. 6:30 pm. Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Country Karaoke Pick from 1000s of songs and let’r rip! 7 pm. No cover. maverickscountrybar.com. McMenamins Old St. Francis School McDougall With no more hands or feet than given to the rest of us, McDougall manages to play more instruments than one human humanly should be able to—and creates a beautiful booming and clanging cacophony. But really, all that is background for spinning his yarns. 7 pm. No cover. mcmenamins.com/OldStFrancis. Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic With Derek Michael Marc. 6-9 pm. northsidebarfun.com. Old Mill District Alive After Five: Quarterflash Although the Portland-based Quarterflash is best known for their 1981 saxophone and bass-drum heavy smash hit “Harden My Heart,” their new songs have softened, but yes, retain that melancholy of break-up. But still, I’d imagine they will dust off their early ‘80s hits for Alive After 5’s kickoff. Right? 5-8 pm. No cover. Seven Nightclub Hump Day Karaoke 8 pm. facebook.com/sevenbend.

Best Venue for live music, dancing, food and libations

Live Music 5 Days a Week every year since we opened!

Thu 7/9

Coyote Willow (Hilst and Coffey 7:30 to 10:30 Fri 7/10

Out of the Blue 8:30 to 12 Sat 7/11

Out of the Blue 8:30 to 12 Sun 7/12

Game Day Mon 7/13

Karaoke with DJ Chris 7 to 9

541.385.RIBS 2670 N Hwy 20 Near Safeway

Redmond:

950 SW Veteran’s Hwy Near Fred Meyer

541.923.BBQ1 www.baldysbbq.com

Tue 7/14

The Cutmen 6 to 9

Wed 7/15

Acoustic Open Mic

with Derek Michael Marc 6 to 9

Saturday and Sunday Breakfast 62860 Boyd Acres Rd in Bend

(541) 383-0889

www.NorthsideBarFun.com

Facebook.com/NorthsideBarAndGrill

Soba Asian Bistro Karaoke Under The Stars On the patio hosted by A Fine Note Karaoke Too. 8 pm. No cover. facebook.com/afinenotekaraoketoo. The Lot Open Mic at The Lot Young budding performers or seasoned professionals. Timid yet courageous or confident and commanding. Open mic is for one and all…step up to the open mic! Local favorite performer/artist MOsley WOtta hosts this fun night showcasing local talent. 6 pm. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub Dirty Bourbon River Show Deftly melding sounds that range from hard-edged blues to Lisztian piano driven ballads to New Orleans brass into a result that is truly a blast of new energy into the musical landscape. 9 pm. $5. volcanictheatrepub.com.

thursday 9 Astro Lounge Cutz & Crater With DJ Harlow Weekly cocktail event hosted by DJ Harlow. Classy lounge electronica and Crater Lake products on special all night long. 9 pm-midnight. astroloungebend.com. Brookswood Meadow Plaza Buck ‘n the Diggs Outdoor, family-friendly, bicycle-festival, and active healthy transportation celebration. Featuring live music by Buck ‘n the Diggs. 5-7 pm. No cover. brookswoodmeadowplaza.com. Drake Park Munch & Music—Cracker Enjoying its 25th anniversary, the Drake Park Munch & Music free concert series continues to be a summertime favorite. Cracker, rock, and a little bit of country too, with Jaime Wyatt. 5:30 pm. No cover. Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards and Events Derek Michael Marc Join us for this three-piece power trio high-energy blues, rock, soul-styled band. Performing a mixture of ear-pleasing original songs, accompanied by classic covers. 6-9 pm. $5. fhcwinery. com. Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Bobby Lindstrom Lunchtime blues. Playing authentic and original blues, acoustic and resonator. Noon-2 pm. No cover. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com. Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise & Karaoke Classic rock and oldies with Tim Cruise. Plus karaoke at 9 pm with your favorite host Maryoke! 6-9 pm. Free. facebook.com/hubcityredmond. Les Schwab Amphitheater Death Cab for Cutie with Built To Spill An American alternative rock band, Death Cab for Cutie formed in Bellingham, WA in 1997. Their music has been labeled as indie rock, indie pop, emo, and alternative rock, and is noted for its use of unconventional instrumentation, as well as lead singer Ben Gibbard’s distinctive voice and unique

lyrical style. 6:30 pm. $37. bendconcerts.com/detail. html?event_id=168. Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free Country Swing Dance Lessons Every Thursday night, learn how to country swing. No partner needed. 8 pm. No cover. maverickscountrybar.com. Northside Bar & Grill Coyote Willow Unique and creative arrangements define this duo. Katherine Hilst (cello, vocals), Tim Coffey (guitar, vocals). 7:30 pm. northsidebarfun.com. Rat Hole Brewpub Junior Harris & Robert Lee Old school blues, R&B, and jazz. With an ear for the groove, this act offers a rich blend of blues and jazz classics with flair for roots R&B. 7-9 pm. ratholebrewpub.com. Seven Nightclub Latin Dance Social Hosted by the Latin Dance Academy of Bend. 8-9:45 pm. facebook. com/sevenbend. Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open Mic with Hal Worcester Local singer-songwriters perform original songs. 6 pm. No cover. strictlyorganic.com. The Lot Jeff Ibach Relatively new to the Bend music scene, come check out this transplant from Hawaii grove on his guitar. 6-8 pm. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub Samuel Touring after just finishing his 3rd album, titled Wishing Well. The album features a core group of his musical inspirations and peer mentors and features different soloists and vocalists. 8 pm. $5. volcanictheatrepub.com.

friday 10 Astro Lounge The Boom, Theclectik, The HardChords, N8, & Mystic A summer night oozing with crunchy beats, boogie down darkness, electronics, instruments, and live MCs. 10 pm-2 am. astroloungebend.com. Checker’s Pub Derek Michael Marc & Double AA Dishin out non-stop blues and rock with a twist of soul. 8-11:30 pm. No cover. checkerspub.com. Country Catering Party On The Patio All you can eat BBQ with free live music. Family-friendly. Music starts at 6 pm. Visit our website for this week’s band. 4:30-8 pm. $11.95 per person with purchase of a beverage. Kids 5 and under eat free. bendcatering.com/PartyOn-The-Patio. Crawfest Music Festival Crawfest Music Festival There’s no need to travel out of the area for a multi-day, multi-genre outdoor music festival. Bonus: Crawfest (which, for the record, has nothing to do with crawfish) has a swimming hole, games, and other family-friendly fun. Matt Borden and the MFB headlining on Friday. $20 weekend pass, $15 per day. Crux Fermentation Project Gbots & the Journeyman A rock and funk band to get your summer dance party started. 5-8 pm. cruxfermentation.com. Downtown Bend Bend Summer Festival Festival features fine artists and craftspeople, artisans and performers, and three stages of free live music. 5:30 pm, Boxcar String Band, 7:30 pm, Redwood Son, and 9:15 pm, Larry and His Flask. 5:30-10 pm. No cover. Downtown Bend Larry and His Flask High energy, five-piece carnival of a band that incorporate rock, folk, bluegrass, soul, brass band, punk, and alt-country into their own unique sound. Part of Bend Summer Festival. 9:15 pm. No cover. Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards and Events The Klassixs Ayre Band Let the Klassixs Ayre Band entertain you all night! Enjoy the ‘50s and ‘60s tunes while dancing along and singing along! 6-9 pm. $5. fhcwinery.com. Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Bobby Lindstrom Lunchtime blues. Playing authentic and original blues, acoustic and resonator. Noon-2 pm. No cover. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com. Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise & Karaoke Classic rock and oldies with Tim Cruise. Plus karaoke at 9 pm with your favorite host Maryoke! 6-9 pm. Free. facebook.com/hubcityredmond. Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar The River Pigs Great food and spirits and The Pigs’ stellar musical performance encourages dancing. 8:30-11 pm. No cover. kellyds. com. Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free Friday Dance Lessons 21+. 8 pm. No cover. maverickscountrybar. com. Northside Bar & Grill Out of the Blue Bend’s favorite dance band brings you the best covers. 8:30 pm. northsidebarfun.com.


JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 19

CLUBS Powell Butte Community Center Oregon Old Time Fiddlers Second Sunday jam. All ages welcome, non smoking, alcohol free, come listen, and dance. 1-4 pm. Free, donations accepted. pb-center.com. SHARC Turf Tunes—The Strange Tones Seven Sundays of free concerts on the lawn at SHARC’s John Gray amphitheater. Crime-a-billy, blues, surf band from Portland. 5-7 pm. No cover. sunriversharc.com. Strictly Organic Coffee - Old Mill Paul Eddy Country, folk. All ages. Every other Sunday, 3 pm. No cover. strictlyorganic.com/old-mill-coffee-bar. Volcanic Theatre Pub The Haymarket Squares & Small Leaks Sink Ships Armed with tight vocal harmonies, bluegrass instruments, and a heaping dose of righteous anger, The Haymarket Squares are Arizona’s premier purveyors of punkgrass. 9 pm. $5. volcanictheatrepub.com.

monday 13 Northside Bar & Grill Karaoke With DJ Chris! 7-9 pm. northsidefire.com.

EXPERIENCE THE PUNKGRASS BAND, THE HAYMARKET SQUARES, HAILING FROM ARIZONA, AT VOLCANIC THEATRE PUB, 7/12. PHOTO BY DANNY UPSHAW Seven Nightclub Bachata & Latin Night 21+. Second Friday of every month, 7:30 pm. sevenbend.com. The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele 21+. 9 pm. No cover. summitsaloon.com. Twisted River Tavern Friends of Lenny Danceable rock and blues covers. Introducing Adri, our newest Friend with an awesome voice. 9:15 pm. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub Milk and Honeys Cabaret ‘90s Palooza A group of instructors from Vega Dance+Lab, performing cabaret style dance shows in the Pacific Northwest. 9 pm. $10 adv., $12 door. volcanictheatrepub.com.

saturday 11 2nd Street Theater A Long Hot Summer Night—Burlesque A number of burlesque troupes have come through town but there’s nothing better than supporting local talent. Bend Burlesque presents a sexy and fun burlesque show with live music by Company Grand whose accompanying them. 6 & 9 pm. $15 or $20. facebook.com/bendburlesqueco. Anker Farm Bill & Mike Keale You’ll be spirited away to the islands by the voices of Mike Keale and his brother Bill Keale, accompanied by the soothing sounds of slack key guitar and ukulele. A rare opportunity to see the brothers perform together in a very special evening. Wear your aloha shirts! 6-9 pm. $15 per adult. ankerfarm.com/#!simpl-e-schedule/c80m. Astro Lounge Keegan Smith & the Family Get ready to move your feet! Pop, reggae, funk from Portland. 9 pm. astroloungebend.com. Astro Lounge Stone Soul Combining elements of soul, funk, hip-hop, rock, and electronica with modern experimentation, Stone Soul develops a timeless sound that incorporates 21st century techniques into an overall raw old-school sound. 10:30 pm. $5. redlightpro.com/concerts/#/stonesoul. Bend Brewing Company The Brothers Reed Vocally powerful duo from Ashland. The Brothers Reed have created an absorbing collection of Americana about life, love, and the diversity of the human experience. From dark ballads and bluegrass numbers, to laid back alt-country, and punk-infused indie pop. 7-9:30 pm. bendbrewingco.com. Checker’s Pub Derek Michael Marc & Double AA Dishin’ out non-stop blues and rock with a twist of soul. 8-11:30 pm. No cover. checkerspub.com. CHOW Paul Eddy With a voice smoother than a velvet Elvis, artist Paul Eddy sings originals and forgotten

gems. 10 am-1 pm. chowbend.com. Crawfest Music Festival Crawfest Music Festival There’s no need to travel out of the area for a multi-day, multi-genre outdoor music festival. Bonus: Crawfest (which, for the record, has nothing to do with crawfish) has a swimming hole, games, and other family-friendly fun. Larry and His Flask headlinging on Saturday. $20 weekend pass, $15 per day. Dogwood Cocktail Cabin Sorski A night of funk, soul, and hip-hop. All vinyl, all night! 9 pm. facebook.com/ events/682644985181973. Downtown Bend Bend Summer Festival Festival features fine artists and craftspeople, artisans and performers, and three stages of free live music. 11 am, Wil Kinky Trio, 1 pm, Device Grips, 3 pm, Student Loan, 5 pm Cooper & The Jam, 7 pm, Dirty Revival, and 9:30 pm, Sir Mix-A-Lot. 11 am-10 pm. No cover. Elk Lake Resort Downhill Ryder Come enjoy honest roots-rock originals lake-side! 5-8 pm. No cover. elklakeresort.net/events.html. Hardtails Bar & Grill Live Music Saturdays Bands, duos, solo artists all summer long on our outdoor stage! 1-4 pm. Free. hardtailsoregon.com. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke With your favorite host Maryoke! 9 pm. No cover. facebook.com/hubcityredmond. Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Karaoke 21+. 8 pm. No cover. kellyds.com. Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free Dance Lessons Come learn the popular line dances to your favorite country songs every Saturday! 9 pm. No cover. maverickscountrybar.com. Northside Bar & Grill Out of the Blue Bend’s favorite dance band brings you the best covers. 8:30 pm. northsidebarfun.com. Silver Moon Brewing The Peter Sky Fundraiser This fundraiser is to benefit our dear friend Peter Sky’s family, those he left behind when passed away on the mountain a few short months ago. There will be a raffle and donations accepted at the door. Three bands will be playing, Tentariegn, LAMP, and Drunk Pilot. Lets remember Peter with the music he loved and the people that will carry on his memory. Free, donations accepted. 8 pm. No cover. silvermoonbrewing.com.

sunday 12 Broken Top Bottle Shop Holus Bolus Referrred to as the “one-man-psychedelic-acoustic-loop” artist, HoBo is a modern one-man-band. Rock, blues, jam, funk. 7 pm. No cover. btbsbend.com. Dawg House ll Open Mic & Jam Session Hosted by Dave and Melody Hill. Singer-songwriters and musicians, come on out and show us your stuff! From beginners to professionals, from barbershop to Nirvana, and everything between. 3:30-6:30 pm. Free. dawghouseredmond.com. Dogwood Cocktail Cabin Cin City (Cabin Industry Night) Drink and food specials for local service industry workers, plus board games and DJ DMP (Indie, R&B, hip-hop, and electronica). 9 pm. facebook.com/ events/251594801699292. Downtown Bend Bend Summer Festival Festival features fine artists and craftspeople, artisans and performers, and three stages of free live music. 11 am, Earth Wind & Fire Tribute Band, 1 pm, Sarah Billings, 3 pm, Keegan Smith & The Fam. 11 am-5 pm. No cover. House Concerts in the Glen Chris Kokesh & LJ Booth A musician, singer-songwriter husband and wife duo. Chris’ voice, harmonies, and fiddle are well known from Misty River days. LJ’s storytelling lyrics are covered by many folk singers; his guitar playing complements their songs beautifully. Potluck starts at 6 pm. 7-9:15 pm. Suggested donation $15-$20. houseconcertsintheglen.com. Jackalope Grill Lisa Dae & AJ Cohen Come join us in the courtyard for a great evening of music. Jazz. 6:30-9 pm. Reservations recommended. reverbnation. com/lisadae.

The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele 21+. 9 pm. No cover. summitsaloon.com.

Les Schwab Amphitheater Lyle Lovett and His Large Band Coupled with his gift for storytelling, the Texas-based musician fuses elements of country, swing, jazz, folk, gospel, and blues in a convention-defying manner that breaks down barriers. 6:30 pm. $37-$79. bendconcerts.com/detail.html?event_ id=169.

Twisted River Tavern Friends of Lenny Danceable rock and blues covers. Introducing Adri, our newest Friend with an awesome voice. 9:15 pm-1 am. No cover.

The Pig And Pound Allan Byer All original Americana music featuring Jimmy Jo McKue on lead electric guitar and Santiago on drums. 5-9 pm. No cover. allanbyer.com.

Featured Event July 16, 2015 UNCLE LUCIUS

Volcanic Theatre Pub Iya Terra, This Side Up, Valley Green Iya Terra takes an abrasive step towards roots inspired reggae, delivering a powerful sound from the heart with ebullient live performance able to uplift the mind, body, and spirit. Roots, rock, reggae. 9 pm. $8 adv., $10 door. volcanictheatrepub.com.

W/ REVEREND DEADEYE

Tower Theatre John Mayall Band An English blues singer, guitarist, organist, and songwriter, whose musical career spans over fifty years. 7 pm. Res. seating $23.50, $40.50, $51.75. towertheatre.org.

tuesday 14 Astro Lounge Trivia Tuesdays Bring your team or join one! Usually six categories of various themes. 8 pm. No cover. astroloungebend.com. Bamboo Room DJ Shane Drink specials, good food, and great music! 7 pm. No cover. Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Bobby Lindstrom Lunchtime blues. Playing authentic and original blues, acoustic and resonator. Noon-2 pm. No cover. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com. GoodLife Brewing The Kitchen Dwellers Runners up in both NW String Summit and Telluride Band Competitions. Bluegrass. 7-9 pm. goodlifebrewing.com. Jersey Boys Pizza Paul Eddy Sings originals and forgotten gems on his made-in-Bend Bedell guitar. 5:45-8 pm. Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Ukulele Jam All ages. 6:30 pm. No cover. kellyds.com. Northside Bar & Grill The Cutmen An innovative and contemporary jazz group, The Cutmen excel at making your feet happy. 6 pm. northsidebarfun.com. Rat Hole Brewpub Stronghold Andy Armor, Richard Taelour, and Jeff Ingram. Classic rock. 7-9 pm. No cover. ratholebrewpub.com. Seven Nightclub Ruby Tuesday Karaoke 8 pm. facebook.com/sevenbend. Volcanic Theatre Pub The Veterans Ranch Benefit Concert PTSD is a miserable hangover from war and one that is increasingly being recognized— and, at wonderful spaces like the Veteran Ranch, treated, through farming, shepherding, and just settling back into a normal life. Tonight’s benefit is a three-band concert—Stu Goes North, Just Us, and Soul Revival. 7 pm. $10 suggested donation. volcanictheatrepub.com.

wednesday 15 Checker’s Pub Open Mic/Jam Night Come bring your ears to listen to the sounds of Denny Bales. Or bring your instruments and “plug in” to play. If you feel like singing this is for you as well. 6-9 pm. checkerspub.com. Flatbread Community Oven Buck n’ the Diggs Come by for great food, spirits, and an excellent dinner soundtrack. Two sets! 6-9 pm. No cover. flatbreadcommunityoven.com. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke With your favorite host Maryoke! 9 pm. No cover. facebook.com/hubcityredmond.

July 9

July 10

Samuel CD Release

Milk & Honeys Cabaret 90's Palooza

July 11

July 16

Bend Burlesque Company

MACBETH by William Shakespeare

The Volcanic Theatre Pub Presents

2nd Street Theater Presents

Presents “A Long Hot Summer Night”

The Volcanic Theatre Pub Presents

Deschutes Historical Society and Museum Presents

(Mack on the Move)


20 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM /JULY 9, 2015

CONCERT * BBQ * SILENT AUCTION

CLUBS

: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM

Fundraiser Benefiting Better Life Children’s Home PRESENTING WINDHAM HILL RECORDING ARTIST

Scott Cossu with Lonnie Mardis

DEATH CAB FOR CUTIE PLUS BUILT TO SPILL PERFORM THEIR DISTINCTIVE SOUNDS AT LES SCHWAB AMPHITHEATER, 7/9. PHOTO COURTESY OF DEATH CAB FOR CUTIE. M&J Tavern Open Mic Night 21+. 6:30 pm. Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Country Karaoke Pick from 1000s of songs and let’r rip! 7 pm. No cover. maverickscountrybar.com. McMenamins Old St. Francis School The Kitchen Dwellers Altogether, the Kitchen Dwellers bring their acoustical picking and songwriting to the stage with electrically manipulated textures guaranteed to impress. Bluegrass. 7 pm. No cover. mcmenamins. com/OldStFrancis. Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic With Derek Michael Marc. 6-9 pm. northsidebarfun.com. Old Mill District Alive After 5—Heart By Heart “When it comes to Heart By Heart, expect some very skilled dedicated musicians, including original HEART members Mike Derosier and Steve Fossen, who love, respect, and honor the songs and historical significance of the music of HEART.”—Heart By Heart 5-8 pm. No cover. Seven Nightclub Hump Day Karaoke 8 pm. facebook.com/sevenbend.

OPENER

Downhill Ryder What does your support do? • Help us provide a safe and loving home for orphans, partial orphans and poor children who attend community schools in Kibwezi, Kenya through Better Life Children’s Home. They also receive healthcare, nutrition, mentoring and counseling. • Provide sanitary supplies to girls who would otherwise not be allowed to attend school through the Roju Project. • Provide assistance to needy families and individuals in outlying villagers suffering from drought, famine and illness through the Neighbor to Neighbor Project.

For more information go to: www.abridgetopeace.org

Soba Asian Bistro Karaoke Under The Stars On the patio hosted by A Fine Note Karaoke Too. 8 pm. No cover. facebook.com/afinenotekaraoketoo. The Lot Open Mic at The Lot Young budding performers or seasoned professionals. Timid yet courageous or confident and commanding. Open mic is for one and all…step up to the open mic! Local favorite performer/artist MOsley WOtta hosts this fun night showcasing local talent. 6 pm. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub Melissa Ruth & The Likely Stories Melissa Ruth plays doo-wop twang. The space of blues, the teeth of country, and the grit of rock ‘n roll. 8 pm. $5. volcanictheatrepub.com.

thursday 16

pop, often with poignant lyrics and complex harmonies. 5:30 pm. No cover. Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards and Events Appaloosa High Desert Americana. They write much of their own music but also cover heroes from country, folk, and blues genres. 6-9 pm. $5. fhcwinery.com. Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Bobby Lindstrom Lunchtime blues. Playing authentic and original blues, acoustic and resonator. Noon-2 pm. No cover. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com. Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise & Karaoke Classic rock and oldies with Tim Cruise. Plus karaoke at 9 pm with your favorite host Maryoke! 6-9 pm. Free. facebook.com/hubcityredmond. Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free Country Swing Dance Lessons Every Thursday night, learn how to country swing. No partner needed. 8 pm. No cover. maverickscountrybar.com. Northside Bar & Grill JuJu Eyeball Beatles tribute band with local musicians. 7 pm. northsidebarfun. com. Rat Hole Brewpub Junior Harris & Robert Lee Old school blues, R&B, and jazz. With an ear for the groove, this act offers a rich blend of blues and jazz classics with flair for roots R&B. 7-9 pm. ratholebrewpub.com. Revolvr Menswear Third Thursday Social Hour Live music, cocktails, and good company! We’re hosting social hour downtown. 5-7 pm. No cover. facebook. com/RevolvrMenswearBend. Seven Nightclub Latin Dance Social Hosted by the Latin Dance Academy of Bend. 8-9:45 pm. facebook. com/sevenbend. Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open Mic with Hal Worcester Local singer-songwriters perform original songs. 6 pm. No cover. strictlyorganic.com.

Astro Lounge Cutz & Crater With DJ Harlow Weekly cocktail event hosted by DJ Harlow. Classy lounge electronica and Crater Lake products on special all night long. 9 pm-midnight. astroloungebend.com.

The Lot Rand Berke Singer-songwriter who writes a diversity of songs ranging from soft reflections to thought provoking, soul rattlers. He sings with conviction. 6-8 pm. No cover.

Drake Park Munch & Music—Jonatha Brooke Folk rock singer-songwriter and guitarist from Massachusetts. Her music merges elements of folk, rock, and

Volcanic Theatre Pub Uncle Lucius Americana roots rock. Reverend Deadeye also performing. 8 pm. $8 adv., $10 door. volcanictheatrepub.com.

Find us on Facebook at Peace Bridges Inc.

Saturday, July 25th 5 pm to 7 pm Dinner and Silent Auction 7:30 pm Scott Cossu Concert with Guest Guitar Player Lonnie Mardis Admission $38.00

Authentic Vietnamese Cuisine

Free Ice Tea! w/ Any Purchase Limited Time Offer

Old Stone Church 157 NW Franklin Ave., Bend Sponsored by:

Tickets available at bendticket.com & Ranch Records 117 NW Oregon Ave, Downtown Bend

541..382.0772 | 915 NW Wall St. Bend SweetSaigon.com

541.382.2929 • 1326 NE 3rd St. Bend PhoVietAndCafe.com


JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 21

EVENTS

: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM

WE WANT YOU!

CELEBRATE THE RELEASE OF SAMUEL’S THIRD ALBUM, WISHING WELL, AT VOLCANIC THEATRE PUB, 7/9. PHOTO BY AUSTIN STRAND.

Music Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band Practice A traditional bagpipe and drum band with members from the Central Oregon area. Experienced pipers and drummers are welcome to attend, along with those who are interested in taking up piping or drumming and would like to find out what it would take to learn and eventually join our group. Wednesdays. City of Bend Fire Department West Station, 1212 SW Simpson Ave. 541-633-3225. Free. Chris Kokesh & LJ Booth A musician, singer-songwriter husband and wife duo. Chris’ voice, harmonies, and fiddle are well known from Misty River days. LJ’s storytelling lyrics are covered by many folk singers; his guitar playing complements their songs beautifully. Community potluck starts at 6 pm. July 12, 7-9:15pm. House Concerts in the Glen, 1019 NW Stannium Rd. 541-480-8830. Suggested donation $15-$20. Community Orchestra of Central Oregon Rehearsals The orchestra [COCO] welcomes all musicians who enjoy playing music with others. Auditions are not necessary, but there are monthly dues. For more information call 541-306-6768 or email cocomusicmakers@gmail.com. Tuesdays, 6:45-9pm. Cascade Middle School, 19619 SW Mountaineer Way.

Dance 8 Count Lindy Hop Great for beginners and also those who took the 6 count Lindy Hop course. Tuesdays, 6:30-7:30pm. Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Dr. Suite 3. 541-233-6490. $40, $70, or $90. Argentine Tango Class & Práctica Beginning tango class 6:30-7:30 pm followed by two hours of practice. Individualized attention for beginner dancers in a friendly and supportive environment. No partner needed! Wednesdays, 6:30-9:30pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd. $5. Beginner Salsa Classes This class focuses on the fundamentals of the dance, making it ideal for first timers and those looking to add a solid foundation to their exciting salsa dance skills. Progressive four-class series starting on the first Thursday of each month. Thursdays, 6:30-7:30pm. Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Dr. Suite 3. 541-325-6676. $40 month (4 classes) or $12 drop-in. Beginners Waltz Waltz is the best dance to begin when learning partner dancing. It has music unique to itself and will get you moving confidently around the dance floor! Wednesdays, 7:30-8:30pm. Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Dr. Suite 3. 541-2336490. $40, $70, or $90. Conscious Ecstatic Dance Celebrate the joy of free-form, expressive dance. Discover the power of movement for alchemical personal transformation. Dancing freely is the best practice for healing and liberating your body, mind, and spirit. Sponsored by PULSE: The Alchemy of Movement. Wednesdays, 7-8:30pm. 360-870-6093. $10. El Sol de Verano Seattle-based Flamenco dancer Savannah Fuentes brings her latest show, El Sol de Verano to Bend. Savannah will be joined by one of Southern Spain’s singing prodigies, Jose Manuel Perez, “El Pechuguita.” Savannah and Jose will be joined by guitarist Bobby de Sofia. July 9, 8-9:30pm. 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave. 206-409-2161. $23,

VIP seating $35, student/low-income $15, child $8. Fun Salsa Patterns Dance Classes Learn Salsa pattern combinations in this friendly and encouraging class in which you will learn to put together salsa dance pattern sequences including some fun turns. Thursdays, 7:30-8:30pm. Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Dr. Suite 3. 541-325-6676. $40 month or $12 drop-in. Group Class & Ballroom Dance Class topic changes weekly. No experience or partner necessary. Ages 16-plus. All proceeds donated to Bend’s Community Center. Fridays, 7pm. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. 541-314-4398. $5. Latin Dance Social Hosted by the Latin Dance Academy of Bend. Thursdays, 8-9:45pm. Seven Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St. 541-760-9412. Night Club Two Step Add some style to patterns you may already know and learn new patterns with variations. This is an intermediate level course. Wednesdays, 6:30-7:30pm. Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Dr. Suite 3. 541-233-6490. $40, $70, or $90. Scottish Country Dance Weekly Class No experience or Scottish heritage necessary. Include beginner & advanced dances. Mondays, 7-9pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd. First class free, future classes $5. Sunday Soma Circle—Conscious Dance You are invited to dance your own dance, in your own way, to celebrate the gift of life. Follow your own authentic movement instincts into embodied prayer and sacred communion with yourself and others. 11am-12:30pm. Armature, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 2. 541-610-7967. $10. West African Dance Class Every class taught to live drumming by Fe Fanyi Drum Troupe. Mondays, 7:15pm. Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd. 818-6362465. $10 drop-in.

Local Arts Art & Wine, Oh My! In a relaxed, social setting, our local artists will guide you through replicating the evening’s featured painting. Tuesdays, 6:30-8:30pm. Level 2, 360 SW Powerhouse Dr. Suite 210. 541-2138083. $35-$45. Artventure with Judy Artist led painting event! Fee includes canvas and supplies, food and beverages may be ordered from the Summit. Tuesdays, 6-9pm. The Summit Saloon & Stage, 115 NW Oregon Ave. $25 pre-paid. Book SmART (2) Art and literacy—a winning combination! Books will be read aloud and linked to each art project for skill development in both visual and literary arts. Explore painting, drawing, and/or hand-building skills in clay while building important social skills. Projects vary each session. July 10, 9am-noon. Art Station, 313 SW Shevlin Hixon Dr. 541-617-1317. Member, $21.25, non-member $25. Clay Open Studio Fridays (2) Pursue your studio practice at a comfortable pace. Limited to students, hobbyists, and artists who are independent in their studio work. Bring your own tools, or purchase at the studio. Fridays, 10am-3pm. Art Station, 313 SW Shevlin Hixon Dr. 541-617-1317. Members $106.25, non-member $125.

Going By Bike An exhibit of bike-inspired prints by local artists, juried by COCC’s Bill Cravis, an Assistant Professor of Visual Arts and a biking enthusiast. Saturdays, 10am-7pm, Sundays, noon-5pm, and Mondays-Fridays, 9:30am-7pm. A6, 389 SW Scalehouse Ct. Suite 120. 541-330-8759. Free.

H

ea

ures await ! l t h y A d vent

URGENT CARE Open 7 days

Hybrid Human Forms: Prints by Yuji Hiratsuka A solo exhibit of by OSU faculty member Yuji Hiratsuka. An award-winning contemporary printmaker, Hiratsuka blends Japanese influences and modern imagery to create colorful intaglio prints with chine collé. Saturdays, 10am-6pm, Sundays, noon-5pm, and Mondays-Fridays, 9:30am-7pm. A6, 389 SW Scalehouse Ct. Suite 120. 541-330-8759. Free.

541-382-0741

In The Extreme Featured at Sisters Library Community Room for July, “In The Extreme,” quilts by MIX (Material In Xtreme) Group from Portland. MIX artists developed a series of new works examining the extreme concept through use of a single theme or technique. Each piece is rendered at 18-inches squared. Tuesdays-Saturdays, 10am-6pm. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. Free.

BendVeterinaryClinic.com

Oregon Summer Quilt Expo Featuring over 60 quilt, knit, and stitch related vendors in the Merchants Mall. National quilt exhibits with quilts, dolls, clothing, and accessories. Short format workshops that are designed to let the visitor learn about new techniques and products. Thurs, July 9 through Sat, July 11, 10am5pm. Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond. $10. Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show The 40th Anniversary of the annual outdoor quilt show in the heart of downtown Sisters. Over 1000 quilts are displayed by quilting guilds and individual quilters from around the country and around the world. July 11, 9am-4pm. Sisters, Sisters. Free. SOQS Around the Block Quilt Walk A self-guided tour of quilts hanging throughout businesses in Sisters and July 3-19 at the Old Mill District in Bend and downtown Sisters. 10am. Downtown Sisters, Hood Avenue. 541-549-0989. Free.

Presentations The Female Runner Ellie Lallaman of Rebound PT will cover the following topics pertaining to the female runner: 1. Musculoskeletal differences in female runners and what women need to do for injury prevention. 2. Running through pregnancy. 3. Running into your adult life. July 13, 7-8pm. FootZone, 845 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free, but please RSVP. The Many Lives of Klondike Kate Kathleen Rockwell, aka “Klondike Kate,” danced her way to wealth and fame during the Klondike Gold Rush in the Yukon Territory before living in Central Oregon for many years. In a life filled with many dramatic twists and turns, Kate exemplified the uniquely American capacity for reinvention. July 9, 6-7pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. Free.

Theater B.I.G. Improv The great thing about the off-the-cuff style of theater popularized by “Whose Line is it Anyway” is that it’s never the same show twice. And, more often than not, like standup comedy, improv often plays off the audience, creating an interactive, personalized experience. Fri, July 10, 8-10pm.

Dr. Byron Maas Dr. Lauren Stayer Dr. Erin Miller Dr. Alan Kelley


22 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM /JULY 9, 2015

EVENTS

: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM

2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave. 541-3129626. $8 adv., $10 door.

Fresh new look, same great service!

Macbeth “Mack on the Move” combines two of Bend’s favorite commodities, culture and the beautiful outdoors. This classic Shakespearean production utilizes the original language of the bard but is set in today’s business world. Featuring all local talent. Festival-style seating, patrons are encouraged to bring their own seating arrangements. Thurs, July 16, 7:30pm. Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave. $10.

Family owned since 1972

Your Local expert

On Plumbing, Electrical & Irrigation!

Words A Light in the Wilderness Central Oregon author Jane Kirkpatrick presents her newest historical novel, A Light in the Wilderness. Letitia Carson is a freed African-American woman eager to reach Oregon territory, where there’s no such thing as slavery. Little does she know that Oregon will soon pass a law excluding free blacks from moving there. Based on a true story, this novel illuminates a little-known part of Oregon history. July 10, 4:30-5:30pm. Paulina Springs Books-Sisters, 252 W Hood Ave. 541-549-0866. Free. Second Sunday with Carl Adamshick Debut collection of poetry, Curses and Wishes, was selected by Marvin Bell for the 2010 Walt Whitman Award. His work has been published in Harvard Review, American Poetry Review, The Missouri Review, and Narrative. He’s received an Oregon Literary Fellowship from Literary Arts and is a cofounder of Tavern Books in Portland. July 12, 2-3pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. Free.

1259 NE 2nd Street, Bend

In the Heart of Bend’s Makers District

541-389-4618

Monday - Friday 7:30am - 6:00pm Saturday 8:00am - 5:00pm

to transport veterans to the Bend VA Clinic and Portland VA Hospital. Must have clean driving record and be able to pass VA-provided physical and screening. Transportation vehicle is VA-provided 10-passenger van. Call John at 541-309-9804 or Paul at 541-6472363 for more details. Warehouse Sorting and Pricing The Brightside Thrift Store in Redmond is looking for volunteers to receive donations, sort, and price items. The Brightside Thrift Store’s success is critical to the operations of our high-save shelter and our volunteers at the thrift store contribute directly to the care of our animals by making sure that all of our donations are processed and ready to purchase. Brightside Animal Thrift Store, 838 NW 5th St. 541-504-0101.

Classes Paint it Forward Fundraiser Art & Wine, Oh My! we will be holding this special public class where $20 of every ticket sold will assist Bethany in her efforts to serve in Swaziland this summer. Everyone will be painting Tumalo Falls to raise funds for Bethany to participate in The Orphan For a Day Curriculum Development! July 16, 6-8:30pm. Art and Wine Oh My! Painting Parlor, 1065 SE Paiute Way. 541-2138083. $50. The Art of Henna With origins in Egypt, Henna is a plant-based dye that is used to create temporary body art. Practice basic techniques of mixing your henna, composition, and applying simple designs. July 11, 10am-2pm. Art Station, 313 SW Shevlin Hixon Dr. 541617-1317. Member $42.50, non-member $50.

Speak, Memory: Beginning Your Memoir What’s your story? Have you written it down yet? Beginning with warm-up exercises that help people access important memories, this workshop leads participants in writing and editing their own short memoir. July 11, 1-5pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. 541-312-1032. Free.

Bee School 2015 We are very excited to bee working with Naomi Price and Richard Nichols (The Hive Man) of the Prineville Honey Bee Mentoring Partnership for a year of promoting a healthier ecosystem through organic beekeeping. Every other Saturday, 11am-1pm. Through Oct. 17. SmudgieGoose Farm, 19221 NE O’Neil Hwy. 541-215-0357.

Story Structure for Writers Editor and author Kelly Schaub will outline the basics of story structure at the Central Oregon Writers Guild meeting. Writers of all disciplines and ability levels are welcome. Kelly will show how sticking to structure doesn’t mean the death of creativity in the writing process. July 16, 6:30-8:30pm. Aspen Ridge Retirement, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd. 541-548-4138. Free.

Business Start-Up in Prineville Do you have a great idea that you think could be a successful business, but just don’t know how to get started? Cover the basics in this two-hour class and decide if running a business is for you. July 14, 11am-1pm. COCC Crook County Open Campus, 510 SE Lynn Blvd. 541-383-7290. $29.

Call For Volunteers Call for Volunteers & Cultural Ambassadors The Latino Community Association is seeking Central Oregon residents who would like to represent their cultural heritage at our 9th Annual Festival of Cultures on September 26th from 10am-5pm in Redmond. Host a booth with information about your heritage to educate our community. $20 event food voucher offered in exchange for your participation. Latino Community Association, 412 SW 8th St. 541-382-4366. Gatekeeper Program You would help us train community business staff and volunteers who may come into contact with seniors and adults with disabilities, to recognize warning signs that can indicate abuse, neglect, or an increased need for services or care. 1-3pm. Central Oregon Council on Aging, 373 NE Greenwood Ave. 541-678-5483, Ext. 116. Mileage reimbursement at .56 a mile. Mentor We are in need of caring adults who are willing to dedicate four hours each month to providing additional support and being positive role models to young people, helping them transform their lives and become successful members of society. For more information or to become a mentor, contact Susie at 541-526-1380. Heart of Oregon YouthBuild, 68797 George Cyrus Rd. 541-526-1380. Tech Expert for Short-Term Sharepoint Project Heart of Oregon Corps is seeking a Microsoft SharePoint savvy individual who would be willing to volunteer their time to help us set up, utilize, and maintain a SharePoint Team Site. 8am-3pm. Heart of Oregon Corps, PO Box 279. 541-633-7834. Volunteer The Salvation Army has a wide variety of volunteer opportunities for almost every age. We have an emergency food pantry, we visit residents of assisted living centers, and we make up gifts for veterans and homeless. First Monday-Friday of every month, 8am-4pm. Bend, RSVP for address. 541-389-8888. Volunteer—Advisory Board Partners in Service Advisory organization members are concerned men and women who voluntarily use their professional skills and knowledge of the community to make a practical difference for their neighbors, strengthening The Salvation Army’s ability to serve. Mondays-Sundays, 1-2pm. Bend, RSVP for address. 541-389-8888. Volunteer Drivers Needed Volunteer drivers needed

Capoeira Students will learn elements of martial arts, rhythmic music, song, acrobatics, and Brazilian culture to develop their own game of capoeira. Ages 5 and up, families welcome at a discount. First taster class free. Visit ucabend.com for monthly specials, drop-in and punch card options with Capoeira Malandragem in Bend. Tuesdays, 6-7:30pm. Armature, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 2. 514-678-3460. $45 per month, $15 drop in. Clay Open Studio Sundays (2) Pursue your studio practice at a comfortable pace. Limited to students, hobbyists, and artists who are independent in their studio work. Bring your own tools, or purchase at the studio. Sundays, 11am-2pm. Art Station, 313 SW Shevlin Hixon Dr. Member $63.75, non-member $75. Contractors CCB Test Prep course Take this live class to prepare for the state-mandated test (not included) to become a licensed construction contractor in Oregon. July 10, 8:30am-6pm. Redmond COCC Campus Technology Education Center, 2324 NE College Loop. 541-383-7290. $359. Figure Drawing Drop-In Salon Develop your skills at our live model figure drawing salon hosted by Workhouse studio members Christian Brown and Abney Wallace. The salon is open to all levels. Participants are encouraged to bring their own easel and materials. Tuesdays, 8-10pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. 347-564-9080. $15. FIRST Lego League (Lego Robotics) Intro Workshops for Coaches A series of four free workshops for adults interested in coaching or mentoring a FIRST Lego League (FLL) robotics team. Workshop one is the introduction, workshop two focuses on coaching, workshop three focuses on the robot, and workshop four covers some advanced programming techniques. Space is very limited. Register online and select the Bend location. Tues, July 14, 6-9pm. Mt. View High School, 2755 NE 27th St. 541-788-3564. Free. Found Objects Workshop Students will create wearable art while using limited tools, needle and thread, scissors, and tape. No torch, no electrical tools, etc. With limitations students learn a different way to create. No experience necessary. July 10, 6-10pm. Armature, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 2. 541-390-7666. $60. German Conversation Group With a tutor to learn conversational German. Mondays, 7-8pm. In Sisters, various locations. 541-595-0318. Cost is variable depending upon number of students. Good Grief & Recovery with Evelyn Doherty For many of us in recovery, our addiction may have been


JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 23

EVENTS

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KIDS EVENTS KIDS EVENTS 2nd Annual Get Pop-Cultured Special events, exclusive content, giveaways, and more! Time Travel weekend July 3-5 with Doctor Who, Magic Tree House, and Outlander. DC Comics begins July 8 and Harper Lee celebration July 13-14. Minions Fun on July 17 and Star Wars Saturday is July 18. Open to all ages. Call for details or check our website: bn.com. Barnes and Noble, 2690 NE Hwy 20. Free. Bend Boy’s Choir Boys ages 7-12. We will sing music from Bach to the Beatles and more. Call or go online for more info or to sign up. Tuesdays, 5:306:45pm. Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. $85 for summer session. The Clarion Call Come meet other students earnestly striving to become their “inner performer.” All instructors are encouraged to bring their students down for lunch and an engaging experience they will certainly enjoy. July 11, noon-2pm. Kelly D’s Banquet Room, 1012 SE Cleveland Ave. Free. The Invisible Tracker This week, Wildheart Nature School will share how to walk like an invisible fox, the science of bird language, and the art of being undetected while tracking in nature. Ages 5-10 with parent or guardian. July 9, 11am-noon. Harvest Park, 63240 Lavacrest St. 541-383-5592. Free.

FAMILY FUN ALL WEEKEND LONG AT BEND SUMMER FESTIVAL, 7/10-7/12. PHOTO COURTESY OF BEND PARK & RECREATION DISTRICT. our ever present and available friend, comforter, escape, or quick fix. Beyond a physical withdrawal, we might experience the restlessness, longing, and pain of grief. In this community discussion, we’ll be talking about and sharing various tools we can use for healing and growth. Register at goodgriefguidance@gmail. com. July 11, 2-4pm. Center for Compassionate Living, 339 SW Century Dr. Suite 203. 541-647-7915. Free. Home Buying Class Redfin Agent Jeff Lindikoff will walk you through the home-buying process in the Bend area, covering topics such as market conditions, new construction, and home financing. July 14, 6:30pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. Free. Homebuyer Education Workshop Our trained housing coaches help prospective homeowners understand the home-buying process, access safe mortgage loans, and prepare for the responsibilities of homeownership. Sat, July 11, 9am-5pm. NeighborImpact Office, 20310 Empire Ave., Suite 110. 541-3236567. $45 per household. Japanese Group Lessons We offer group lessons for all ages, both beginners and advanced students. Reservations required. Mondays-Fridays, 3-5pm. Custom Built Computers Of Redmond, 439 SW 6th St. 541-848-1255. $20 lesson or $80 for five lessons. Japanese Group Lesson For beginners and advanced students. Wednesdays, 5-6pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St. $10, plus $5 material fee. Kind Listening & Plain Speaking This is an introduction to compassionate communication, to bring kindness and honesty to situations that are often tense and difficult. Mon, July 13, 6-8:30pm. Center for Compassionate Living, 339 SW Century Dr. Suite 203. 530-867-3198. Donation $10-$20. Learn Something New At The Library Discover how the library can help you learn a new skill or hobby. July 13, 5-6pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-617-7089. Free. Open Computer Lab Practice computer skills, problem-solve with staff, find answers to your e-reader questions! Use a library laptop or bring your own. No registration required. Tuesdays, 1:30-3pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1055. Free. Oriental Palm Reading Class Discover how the brain, nerves, and lines connect in palmistry. Wednesdays, 6-7pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St. $10. Recycle in Style: Scrap Metal Jewelry Making Explore the endless possibilities of repurposing scrap metal by learning techniques of cutting, sculpting, and refining metal from a plethora of found objects. Before you leave class you will have a pair of one-of-a-kind earrings! July 16, 6-9pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. 347-564-9080. $60. Relationships with Heart & Soul These educational classes, led by reputable Relationship Coach, Jane Meyers Hiatt, will help you to better understand and love yourself, as well as, acquire the skills and attitudes you need to find the love you are seeking. Pre-registration is required. Second Sunday of every month, 12:30-2pm. Unity Community of Central Oregon, 62855 Powell Butte Hwy. 541-390-8244. $120

for series. Flexible payments $15/class. Open Gym Bring your aerial skills, acro ninja moves, juggling clubs, hoops, and more! We have lots of props to use, tumbling mats, and aerial equipment (experienced only) to play with and on. Mondays, 7:30pm. Bend Circus Center, 911 SE Armour Rd. $5. West African Drum Class David Visiko teaches rhythms from Guinea, Mali, and Cote’ de Ivory. Sundays, 3:30-5pm. Joy of Being Studio, 155 NW Hawthorne Ave. (behind address). $15 per class. Wildflower Photography Workshop Join wildflower photographer Susan Berger in the field and try your hand at photographing wildflowers. Susan will provide tips and tricks for capturing beautiful photos of flowers and will lead you in an exploration of the natural flora at Todd Lake! Class will consist of instruction and in-the-field, hands-on photography exercises. July 11, 9:30am-4pm. Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245 River Rd., Sunriver. 541-593-4394. $60.

Events 2015 ADGA National Show American Dairy Goat Association. Sun, July 12 through Thurs, July 16, 8am5pm. Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond. Action Figure Mash-Up Teens ages 12-17 can construct a unique villainous or heroic action figure from spare parts. July 14, 1:30-3pm. Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Ln. 541-312-1090. Free. Paint it Forward Fundraiser Art and Wine Oh My! Paint Tumalo Falls for local resident Bethany McMurray to raise funds to participate in The Orphan for a Day Curriculum Development! July 16, 6-8:30pm. Art and Wine Oh My! Painting Parlor, 1065 SE Paiute Way. 541-213-8083. $50. Bend Summer Festival Free concerts on three stages, fine artist promenade, conscious living showcase, kids street of fun, over 30 food vendors, gourmet food, wine, and jazz! Fri, July 10, 5-11pm, Sat, July 11, 11am-11pm, and Sun, July 12, 11am-5pm. Downtown Bend. Free.

What’s All the Buzz About Meet and greet the local buzzing, burrowing, crawling, and creeping bugs of our forests and parks through hands-on science activities, stories, and games. Ages 5-10 with parent or guardian. July 16, 11am-noon. Hollinshead Park, 1235 NE Jones Rd. 541-383-5592. Free. East Bend Super Animals Ages 6-11. Look! In the library! It’s super animals! Create your own comic book through drawings, words, and websites. July 16, 1:30pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. 541-330-3760. Free. East Bend Unsung Heroes All ages. Meet a gopher snake from the High Desert Museum and learn how it benefits our environment. July 8, 1:30pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. Free. Fun Hang Out Days A safe and fun place to drop off your kids this summer while you work, run errands, or have a fun day on your own. Kids will have opportunities for arts, crafts, music, science experiments, academic and social activities, games, and just have some fun! 3-7 years old and 8-13 years. Mondays-Fridays, 12:30-5:30pm. Samara Learning Center, 1735 SW Chandler Ave. 541-419-3324. $18. Kids’ Meadow Marvels We’ll explore the meadow and its different kinds of plants from dry sage and juniper. Hear meadow stories and make a memory with a leaf pounding. Kids ages 6-12 with a grown-up in tow. Registration is required. July 11, 10am-noon. Indian Ford Meadow, outside Sisters. 541-330-0017. Free. La Pine LEGO® Block Party All ages. Read! Build! Play! Join other builders and a gazillion LEGO® pieces. Thurs, July 16, 1:30pm. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. 541-312-1090. Free. La Pine Super Animals Ages 6-11. Look! In the library! It’s super animals! Create your own comic book. July 15, 10:30am. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. Free. La Pine Unsung Heroes All ages. Meet a gopher snake from the High Desert Museum and learn how it benefits our environment. July 8, 10:30am. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. Free. Meet a Real Hero All ages. Meet and learn from real heroes who don’t wear capes but can teach a

lot about courage, safety, and health. July 9, Cop Dog. August 3, Olympic gymnast. 10:30am. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. July 15, Search & Rescue K9. Wed, 1:30pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. Free. MoMuLa Songs for kids of all ages, especially 3-7 years. By two mamas with ukuleles, one with a trumpet! Music to inspire movement and laughter created and performed by mothers who love to sing and dance. July 11, 3-3:45pm. Sunny Yoga Kitchen, 2748 NW Crossing Dr. Donations welcome. Music, Movement & Stories Ages 3-5. Encourage fun with music and develop skills. Space is limited. Thurs, July 16, 10:30am. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7097. Free. Pajama Party Ages 0-5. Evening storytime with songs, rhymes, and crafts. Wear your PJs! Wed, July 8, 6:45pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. . Wed, July 15, 6:30pm. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. Free. Redmond LEGO® Block Party All ages. Read! Build! Play! Join other builders and a gazillion LEGO® pieces. Sat, July 11, 10:30am. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Free. Redmond Meet a Real Hero All ages. Meet and learn from real heroes who don’t wear capes but can teach a lot about courage, safety, health. Search & Rescue K9. Mon, July 13, 10:30am. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Free. Redmond Super Animals Ages 6-11. Look! In the library! It’s super animals! Create your own comic book through drawings, words, and websites. July 14, 10:30am. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1050. Free. Self Portrait Block Printing for Kids In this intro course, offered to kids age 10-14, participants will learn the basic principles of block printing—drawing, carving, and printing by creating their own unique self-portrait. All materials and tools will be provided. Students will receive four finished prints and keep their hand carved block. July 11, 1-3:30pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. $55. Sisters Super Animals Ages 6-11. Look! In the library! It’s super animals! Create your own comic book. July 14, 1:30pm. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. 541-312-1070. Free. Story Time Second Friday of every month, 11am. Barnes and Noble, 2690 NE Hwy 20. Free. Sunriver Meet a Real Hero All ages. Meet and learn from real heroes who don’t wear capes but can teach a lot about courage, safety, and health. July 8 Search & Rescue K9 at Three Rivers School, 56900 Enterprise Dr. and July 22 Olympic gymnast. Wed, July 8, 1:30pm. Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Ln. 541-312-1080. Free. Sunriver Super Animals Ages 6-11. Look! In the library! It’s super animals! Create your own comic book through drawings, words, and websites. July 15, 1:30pm. Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Ln. 541-312-1080. Free. Teen Paddle Camp Campers will explore local waterways in kayaks and stand up paddleboards, and finish the camp with a full day whitewater raft trip on the McKenzie. Camp is inclusive and open to any teen ages 12 and up with or without a disability. Adaptive instruction and equipment will be utilized as needed by campers. July 13-15, 9am. Oregon Adaptive Sports, 63025 O.B. Riley Rd. Suite 12. 541306-4774. $125.

Brookswood Bicycle Fest & Active Healthy Transportation Celebration Free bike and helmet safety checks, safety course, group ride, bike registrations, and more! Cool bike contest, CET bus, fire truck. Music by Buck ‘n the Digs from 5-7 pm! Walk, bike, bus to the event and receive discounts and specials from Brookswood Plaza businesses! July 9, 4-7pm. Brookswood Meadow Plaza, 19530 Amber Meadow Dr. 541-323-3370. Free. Community Bingo Open to the public. Concessions available. Second Saturday of every month, noon4pm. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. 541-312-2069. $15 bingo packets. CROP Tours The Crooked River Open Pastures (C.R.O.P) A dedicated group of farmers and community members in Crook County are offering these farm tours and rotating Farmer’s Market throughout the summer. Each farm host will have vendors and will offer free tours and other family-friendly activities. Second Saturday of every month, 10am-2pm. Mary Louis, 19900 NW Butler Rd. 603-831-3148. Free.

Proudly Serving

Stumptown & Coava Coffee.

Come enjoy a beverage on our beautiful patio! We also have a great selection of beer.

643 NW Colorado Ave

/

M-F 6 AM-5PM / S-S 6:30 AM-5 PM


24 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM /JULY 9, 2015

EVENTS

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ENJOY ALL THAT BEND HAS TO OFFER AND COMBINE WHITEWATER RAFTING WITH BEER TASTING DURING SUN COUNTRY TOURS RAFT N’ BREW, 7/8 & 7/15. PHOTO COURTESY OF SUN COUNTRY TOURS. Get Tricky with the Bend Circus Center Explore juggling, hooping, tumbling, and poi spinning with the fun crew from the Bend Circus Center. Open to ages 12-17. July 9, 1:30-3:30pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-617-7079. July 10, 1:30-2:30pm. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. 541-617-7079. July 11, 2-3:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7079. Free. Grassroots Cribbage Club Newcomers welcome. For info contact Sue at 541-382-6281. Mondays, 6-9pm. Bend Elks Lodge, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd. $1 to $13. Oregon High Desert Classics Join us at the 26th Annual Oregon High Desert Classics, the annual fundraiser for all J Bar J Youth Services Programs. This is a “AA” rated hunter/jumper competition with Olympic level riders that you won’t want miss! Join us for the Grand Prix Dinner, a delicious meal and front row seats for the Grand Prix, or join our tailgater section to watch the best riders compete for a $25,000 purse. Wed, July 15, 8am-5pm and Thurs, July 16, 8am-5pm. J Bar J Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road. 541-389-1409. Free for spectators. Preventative Walk-in Pet Wellness Clinic First come, first served. Vaccines, microchips, toenail trims, and de-worming available. Service fees can be found at bendsnip.org. Saturdays, 10am. Bend Spay and Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. Suite B-1. Public Bingo Every Thursday, doors open at 4:30 pm. Food and beverages available. Thursdays, 6pm. Bend Elks Lodge #1371, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd. Starter pack $21 (27 games), $10 minimum buy-in. Roots of Wisdom: Native Knowledge, Shared Science Local ecosystems around the world face serious environmental challenges. Native Americans have found innovative solutions by combining traditional knowledge, passed down through generations, with modern science. Roots of Wisdom: Native Knowledge, Shared Science, a new exhibition developed by The Oregon Museum of Science and Industry (OMSI). 9am-5pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. Summer Repair Cafe Join the Rethink Waste Project for our Summer Repair Cafe. There will be volunteer fixers on hand to repair your items! Items to bring include: small appliances, items needing sewing repair, including clothes and outdoor gear (no alterations please), metal items that can be repaired through welding, light jewelry repair, small furniture, and household items. July 14, 5:30-7:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE 9th St. 541-385-6908. Free. United Senior Citizens of Bend Bingo Second Saturday of every month, noon-4pm. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. Vintage Flea Market Fun and funky, shabby chic to antique, upcycled, fixed-up or found, hand-picked vendors set up in the gardens at Pomegranate for a day of excellent flea market hunting. Sat, July 11, 10am-4pm. Pomegranate Home and Garden, 120 NE River Mall Ave. Free admission. WAAAM Traffic Jam - A Car Show and Swap Meet Friday registered participants “cruise the gut” and end the day with food and a drive-in movie. Saturday is the Car Show and Swap Meet with judging and prizes for entrants and drawings for visitors. July 11, 8am-5pm. Western Antique Aeroplane and Automobile Museum, 1600 Air Museum Rd. 541-308-1600. $5-$10.

Meetings Adelines’ Showcase Chorus Practice For more information call Diane at 541-447-4756 or showcasechorus.org. Mondays, 6:30-9pm. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave. Al-Anon Family Groups 12-step group for friends and families of alcoholics. Check afginfo.org or call 541-728-3707 for times and locations. Various locations. BendUbs Car Club Monthly Meet Owners of all makes, models, and vintages of European cars are welcome to join our community of enthusiasts. The club’s Monthly Meets are held at Cascade Lakes Lodge on the second Sunday of every month. Second Sunday of every month, 7-9pm. Cascade Lakes Lodge, 1441 SW Chandler Ave. 541-325-2114. Free. Central Oregon Infertility Support Group Peer-led support group for women (and occasionally couples) struggling with infertility. Meetings will be an open discussion format among peers. Second Tuesday of every month, 6:30pm. St. Charles Medical Center, 2500 NE Neff Rd. 541-604-0861. Free. City Club of Central Oregon It is a lunch discussion, but don’t expect this City Club forum to turn into a food fight. They are way too civil for that. But if information and insights are what you want, there’s no better place for lunch today. Third Thursday of every month, 11:30am. St. Charles Center for Health and Learning, 2500 NE Neff Rd. 541-633-7163. $20/$35. Communicators Plus Toastmasters Thursdays, 6:30-7:45pm. DEQ Office, 475 NE Bellevue Dr., Suite 110. 541-388-6146. Cool Cars and Coffee All makes, models welcome. Saturdays, 8am. C.E. Lovejoy’s Brookswood Market, 19530 Amber Meadow Dr. Grief Support Group When someone you love dies it can be a challenging time. Take time to take care of yourself, to meet with others, and find that you are not alone. Sponsored by St. Charles Hospice. Second Thursday of every month, 2:30-4pm. St. Charles Medical Center, 2500 NE Neff Rd. 541-706-6700. Free. Lyme Disease Group of Central Oregon The group is for anyone fighting or supporting those with Lyme Disease. Share stories and learn from others including Lyme literate doctor recommendations, diet, lifestyle, and thriving in a life with Lyme Disease. There will be demonstrations and speakers. Second Sunday of every month, 3:30-5pm. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. 541-330-0334. Free. NAMI Depression & Bipolar Disorder Support Group Mondays, 7-9pm. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 541-480-8269. Free. Overeaters Anonymous Meeting Mondays-noon, Saturdays-9:30am, and Thursdays-noon. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 541-306-6844. Free. Plant Spirit Medicine Book Discussion Please join Jessica De la O on a journey into Plant Spirit Medicine, a book that has opened thousands of people to the deep healing available from the natural world. We generally meet on the first Wednesday of each month and read the book aloud to generate discussion and inspiration. We’ll read Chapter 3 “Spirit” and pause for deep sharing. July 8, 7-9pm. Sacred Fire Community Hearth, 2801 NE Lapointe Ct. 541-610-7142.


CULTURE

Feasting on Fiber

JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 25

ART WATCH BY PHIL BUSSE

Sisters’ Outdoor Quilt Show celebrates 40 years BY PHIL BUSSE

THE QUILT FESTIVAL IS HOT IN JULY, 7/11.

It started inconspicuously in 1975: Jean Wells Keenan simply hung a dozen quilts made by her students outside her shop on one Saturday in July. Over the years, though, a few more quilters showed up, and then a few more, and so on, until nearly every square inch of the small town of Sisters was covered in quilts during the second Saturday of July. There are traditional quilts with starbursts of color and elegant patterns, and quilts that behave more like a canvas, showing off portraits of sunflowers and cactus. Four decades after its start, and staying steady through a few major economic twists and turns, the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Festival has become as much a calling card for summer in Central Oregon as floats down the Deschutes River or outdoor concerts—although it is, perhaps, ironic to celebrate blankets in the hottest time of the year. “It is amazing,” says Jeanette Pilak, executive director of the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show, “that one woman [founder Jean Wells Keenan] and an army of quilters could sustain the economic ups-and-downs over 40 years, still keep the show free and open to the public, get world-wide recognition, and build community support is astounding in today’s terms.” “It is everyone’s bucket list quilt show to attend,” explains Pilak. Pilak goes on to say that she believes a lot of the appeal is its populist, come-all openness. “It is a non-juried show,” she points out. “Anyone from beginner to master may show their quilt, and visitors come from all 50 states and 17 different countries.” It is also a surprisingly party-like atmosphere. In an interview earlier this summer, the organizers of the rodeo quipped that the quilt festival consumes far more alcohol than their event—a point that Pilak confirmed, “The owners of the Gallimaufry [a hodgepodge general store],” says Pilak, “note that they have more sales quilt show week than in rodeo and folk festival combined.” But she hastens to temper that image of guzzling grandmas, “That includes the gift items in their store…not just spirits!” she says. Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show 9 am-4 pm, Saturday, July 11 Cascade Avenue, Sisters

One of the best smorgasbords of art in Central Oregon is hosted this weekend at Bank of the Cascades’ Summer Festival, with 150 booths and artists. There are wood carvings, water colors, and fine outdoor wildlife photography, like Dan Ester’s collection of crisp photos of osprey with fish in their talons set against the blue sky, and raccoons with each whisker in sharp focus. Kirk Casey with Terrasteel is bringing a collection of furniture—rich woods set against stark solid metal structures—and there are surreal paintings, like those from last year’s Best Of Jury: Joni Olsen, who worked for more than a quarter-century as a marketing and membership director for Bend Golf & Country Club, and now creates fine art, like a collage of images set in a buffalo’s outline. There is traditional, elegant pottery from David Scott and less traditional, like Beth Yoe, who picks up rocks and twigs and bits of trains—what she calls “remnants of a disappearing time”— from Eastern Oregon to fashion jewelry. Her work is described as “looking beyond the literal to where things meet or don’t meet…to the edges…and shape, to where things get out of their skins and become form, like the tenuous connection between sky and earth.” This year’s Best of Jury was awarded to Ping Zhang from Bellingham, Washington. An embroidery artist, she learned from her grandparents and creates images that are delicate yet also look like slightly blurred and surreal photographs.

For those looking to become artists, Nathan Sowa will teach a plein air class focused on capturing natural light and regional landscapes. Born in Guam, Sowa came to Oregon as a student at Oregon State; his final year he spent on exchange in France and later enrolled at the Academy of Art in Florence, Italy. (11 am–1 pm, Saturday) Summer Festival Fine Art Promenade 11 am–7 pm, Saturday & Sunday. Wall Street, between NW Oregon and NW Franklin avenues.


26 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM /JULY 9, 2015

SUNRIVER OWNERS ASSOCIATION PRESENTS

DOWN BY THE RIVERSIDE FEATURING

The Blind Boys of Alabama July 27 Dirty Dozen Brass Band

SHARC’s John Gray Amphitheater 7 PM

Tickets at bendticket.com Information: 541-585-3147


CHOW

Noodle Reboot

Popular Soba noodles returns to downtown BY PHIL BUSSE

JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 27

FOOD & DRINK EVENTS Food Events

Beer Events

Artisan Cheese Making Workshop This workshop will focus on the basics of cheese making for beginners, as well as hands-on experience making fresh ricotta and mozzarella. All ingredients and recipes are included in workshop price. Registration required. July 11, 9am. Cascade Culinary Institute Grandview Building, 2600 NW College Way. $59.

2015 Summer Beer Gardens Featuring local breweries, live music, open mic, and karaoke. Food provided by Lovejoy’s Kitchen, La Rosa Mexican Restaurant, and Local Slice Pizza. Activities for kids during duration of Beer Garden. Come out and enjoy this completely local event. Thursdays, 4-7pm. C.E. Lovejoy’s Brookswood Market, 19530 Amber Meadow Dr. 541-388-1188.

Chefs on Tour The event will again feature ​eight local chefs hosted in e​ ight n ​ ew homes featured on The COBA Tour of Homes. Your tickets guide you to your destination in the order you should go and this year we’ll have a map to help guide you to each site based off the ticket you were issued. Featuring Broken Top Bottle Shop, 10 Barrel Brewing Company, Bleu Bite Catering, Tetherow, 900 Wall, Jackalope Grill, and Bowtie Catering Co. July 14, 4:30-7:30pm. Various locations. $35. Cork & Barrel Winemakers’ Dinners Offers five multi-course winemaker dinners planned at various locations around town. Seating for each dinner is limited to 40 guests. The 2015 winemaker dinner lineup includes great chefs from Central Oregon and beyond. July 9, 6-10pm. Various locations. 541-6474907. $125 per person, fully inclusive. Finn River Cider Tasting & Cheese Pairing The fine folks from the Olympic Peninsula are bringing some great, and hard to get (at least in this neck of the woods) ciders down our way. And the fine folks at Newport Avenue Market will be helping us with cheese pairings. It’s gonna be a great evening! July 16, 5pm. Crow’s Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St. $20.

SOBA IS BRINGING BACK THE NOODLES. PHOTO BY COLE DAVIS.

About two years ago, the popular downtown noodle shop Soba closed its doors. There were rumors that the place would reopen again, sometime. And then, with little fanfare, that “sometime” arrived earlier this summer as Soba reopened in a downtown storefront a few doors down and across the street from its previous location, the space is as narrow and long as two box cars; a low-key, warm atmosphere with exposed brick walls and a high ceiling painted with clouds and blue skies, carrying through the animation that abounds on the walls. The recently rebooted noodle shop employs Japanese kitsch to create a lighthearted and family-friendly space. At the entrance is a large cutout of a bus painted with the popular cartoon character Totoro that serves as a divider between the counter and the dining area, and begs for photos taken with heads poking out the “bus” windows. One of our group quipped that the restaurant seems like the perfect place that families should hit up before or after visiting the quippy downtown toy store Wabi Sabi. The menu is nearly as playful, including a variety of Asian noodle dishes, rice bowls, and salads. The dishes are simple and straightforward, appealing to diners familiar with the basic (American) staples of Thai, Chinese, and Japanese cuisine. This is not precise Asian food from a specific country or cuisine, but instead middle-of-the-road lunchtime fare with a general catch-all sensibility. The pad Thai is minimalist, with just tofu, broccoli, and a garnish of green onion atop a bed of lightly seasoned rice noodles, and the popular Singapore noodles were nothing like what I ate when I lived in Singapore, but tasty and satisfying none-the-less, spicy rich flavors tinged with sharp green onions that, all told, got a few beads of sweat going. The generous servings made for a meal that could easily stretch to two (or, more like 1.5), giving an added boost to already reasonable prices. Service wasn’t lickety-split, and while geared as a downtown lunch spot, the leisurely service didn’t quite fit that bill. Even so, while we were not blown away, Soba provides a welcome alternative to sandwiches, burgers, and pizza for the downtown lunchtime crowd, and a fun option for families. Bonus: There’s a bar in the back for grown-up times. Soba 932 NW Bond St. Monday-Saturday 11 am-9 pm Bar open till midnight Sunday-Thursday, till 1 am Friday & Saturday

Geeks Who Drink Pub Trivia Play in teams of up to six or by yourself if you’re some kind of savant. If you want to play but don’t have a team, come anyway. We can usually get single players recruited onto an existing team. Prizes for winning teams! Wednesdays, 7-9pm. The Summit Saloon & Stage, 115 NW Oregon Ave. 541-419-0111. Free. Happy Hour in the Garden Enjoy local beer, cider, or lemonade while volunteering in The Environmental Center’s Kansas Avenue Learning Garden. Stop by to lend a hand and have a drink. Tasks vary each week. Family-friendly. Tuesdays, 4-6pm. Through Aug. 18. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. 541-385-6908. Free. The Mill Quarter Block Party Join us at the Mill Quarter Block Party for live music, cider, beer, food carts, pool, and an arcade. Fri, July 10, 6:30-8:30pm. Dan Mccoy, 550 SW Industrial Way. No cover. Pints & Politics Join OLCV and fellow community members who care about protecting Oregon’s natural legacy for Pints and Politics. Third Thursday of every month, 7pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. Free.

Guest Chef Dinner Series Our first in a series of Guest Chef Dinners. The menu for this first event is blackened tilapia with a shrimp and crawfish cream sauce, red beans and rice, and a tomato, cucumber, onion salad. Reservations suggested. 21+. July 11, 6-9pm. Bandits Cafe, 3113 S Hwy 97, Suite 105. 541504-7485. $13.95 per person.

Raft n’ Brew Raft n’ Brew combines two iconic Bend experiences: whitewater rafting on the Deschutes and beer tasting. Raft n’ Brew features a different local craft brewery every Wednesday with 50% of proceeds going to a local charity. July 8, 4:30pm, benefits Tour des Chutes. July 15, 4:30pm, benefits MBSEF. Sun Country Tours, 531 SW 13th St. 541-382-6277. $53.

A Sip of Cork & Barrel Guests will enjoy Napa Valley wine tasting paired with small bite cuisine at the beautiful Tetherow Golf Club. July 10, 5-8:30pm. Tetherow Golf Club, 61240 Skyline Ranch Rd. 541647-4907. $75.

Worthy Wednesdays Tasting during the Farmer’s Market with free popcorn and tours of the historic theatre. Wed, July 8, 3:30-6pm and Wed, July 15, 3:30-6pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. Free.


28 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM /JULY 9, 2015

MICRO REVIEW

It’s Hot, Let’s Drink

Summer beers to keep you alive ’til September BY KEVIN GIFFORD

SAVE THE DATE! JULY 24-26TH

Don’t miss these great events and more! Night Glow Children’s Festival

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Balloons Over Sunriver Balloon Blast

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SAVE THE DATE! JULY 24-26TH

SEASONAL BREWS HELP SUMMER SCORCHERS GO DOWN EASY.

July may be Oregon Craft Beer Month, but given the painfully hot weather around the region lately, Bendites can be forgiven for wishing this month passes as quickly as possible. But, like it does for many of life’s other annoyances, beer provides a solution. Summer seasonals are all over the bars and shelves right now, offering light, breezy beers that—to borrow a certain hackneyed ad slogan—won’t fill you up and never let you down. Some of the Oregon-made highlights: Prowell Springs Pre-Prohibition Lager (Crux) First brewed in 2013, Prowell Springs gets its name from Roger Prowell, Bend’s former water-quality supervisor and the man Crux brewer Larry Sidor credits for the City’s world-beating tap supply. Now it’s become a summer regular at the bar, and nothing can beat it when the temp nears 100. Corn takes up 15 percent of the malt bill, but don’t expect Old German-style adjunct tepidness—this is a crisp lager that offers a sweet aftertaste and just enough hoppiness to remind you where you are. Grab a glass before they run out. ISA (Oblivion) Depending on who you ask at Oblivion’s Galveston Avenue taproom, ISA stands for either “India session ale” or “Indian summer ale.” Both terms work for this four-percenter, mixing approachability with a distinctively bitter kick. Try it out side-by-side with Reciprocal, the double IPA they brewed with Bend Brewing Co., and you’ll taste for yourself how versatile northwest hops can be. (And while you’re on Galveston, walk over to 10 Barrel and try their Negro Cerveza for a dark, but very sessionable summer beer.) Steady as She Gose (Worthy) It’s been a while since a local brewery’s tried their hand at a gose, a traditional German style noted for its tartness and saltiness. Worthy’s take on the genre is scarily addictive, thanks in part to the tamarind puree they added to the mix, contributing an oddly tropical tinge to its flavor profile. Nonstop Hef Hop (Hopworks) The Portland-based Hopworks Urban Brewery just debuted this new year-round beer in 16-ounce cans, perfect for stashing in your bicycle’s cup holder. They call it a “session wheat beer,” and that summarizes it pretty well, actually—there are some light citrus flavors, but the highlight is the red spring wheat, grown on Hopworks’ farm on San Juan Island. All this and only 3.9% ABV, too!

HOURS: Mon - Sat 9a - 9p Sun 10a - 7p PH: 541-318-2977


JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 29

Sen. Ron Wyden hears concerns at Oregon’s seven wonders BY PHIL BUSSE

OREGON’S EIGHTH WONDER? SEN. WYDEN! PHOTOS BY ANNELIE KAHN (LEFT) AND SUBMITTED BY SEN. RON WYDEN’S OFFICE.

Although the pounding forces of nature forged the Oregon Coast thousands of years ago and volcanic explosions—and implosions— left their distinct marks on the landscape with a series of mountain ranges (and craters and lava tubes) throughout the state, over the course of just one single year seven spots in Oregon have been singled out as the state’s “seven wonders.” To be specific: Crater Lake, Mount Hood, the Wallowa Mountains, as well as the entire Oregon Coast and the full scope of the Columbia Gorge, and, in Central Oregon, the Painted Hills and Smith Rock. Nope, these seven wonders are not some God-appointed list or even the result of a Facebook survey, but instead are the work of Portland-based Weiden + Kennedy, the same company that has designed the globally successful Nike campaigns over the decades. Launched last summer for Travel Oregon, the campaign has quickly worked its way into Oregon’s established lore. To a large degree, the campaign has been successful because it was quickly picked up by media outlets like Portland Monthly and the Oregonian—and now, they have been further knighted over the past week or so as Sen. Ron Wyden has traveled to each site and conducted a series of “listening sessions” about the state’s recreation economy. The sites are truly breathtaking, from the barren, but magically colorful landscape of the Painted Hills to the sweeping vistas of the coast—and, moreover, these areas have increasingly become pillars of the state’s economy. State officials estimate that travel and tourism exceeds $10 billion in its overall impact on Oregon’s economy, and supports roughly 100,000 jobs. All told, one-quarter of visitors to Oregon are drawn here precisely because of the outdoor recreation and sights—a number that doubles the nation’s average. Kicking off his tour, Sen. Wyden proclaimed, “You can’t spell great recreation without the letters O-r-e-g-o-n.” Just a week earlier, Sen. Wyden co-introduced with Sen. Jeff Merkley a bill to protect some 200,000 acres of wildlands in the state. In the late afternoon heat of July 1, Wyden’s caravan pulled into Smith Rock State Park and the following morning, he hosted another listening session at Painted Hills State Park. After his sessions, the Source caught up with the senator’s press secretary Hank Stern to hear thoughts and reflections. Source Weekly: How did the idea for these listening sessions come about? Hank Stern: Oregon’s recreation and tourism economy has grown to the point that it’s become a huge economic engine in every corner of our state. That growth didn’t happen by accident. Travel

Oregon and its Seven Wonders campaign account for a huge part of that increase. That work has brought travel and tourism throughout Oregon to a place where it now supports an estimated 101,000 jobs—to put that number in context, it’s bigger than the entire city of Bend. Sen. Wyden thought that the week heading into Fourth of July weekend would be a great time to meet with the local businesses at each of the Wonders and hear directly from them about how we can build on what’s already been accomplished through their sweat equity and Travel Oregon’s hard work. SW: At the two Central Oregon stops, was there a primary theme that emerged from comments? HS: One theme Sen. Wyden heard is that the little things add up— in other words, there are common-sense actions that can help the recreation and tourism businesses continue to flourish. An example of that was heard at Smith Rock, the Painted Hills, and pretty much every stop on his weeklong trip—how permitting in some instances should be simplified. Another theme that emerged was the need to make sure recreation is always accessible to low-income and middle-income families so that every child in Oregon and in the country can experience the health benefits of getting outdoors. A third theme he heard is that the recreation and tourism businesses have room to keep growing. As but just one example is the growth with recreation businesses outside Smith Rock—that meeting was at Terrebonne Depot where business is up 17 percent. SW: There is obviously a balance to strike between preservation and use. Are there concerns that encouraging a “recreation economy” encourages overuse? HS: There is obviously a balance to be struck, and we definitely heard that we don’t want our special places “loved to death.” What Sen. Wyden heard at the listening sessions is that people recognize each treasure needs to be preserved and protected so that everybody can continue to enjoy Oregon’s natural icons and in some places we need to make sure the infrastructure is adequate for the people who are visiting. SW: What happens from the listening sessions? Is there a plan for what actions will emerge from the comments? Any programs or legislation? HS: Senator Wyden’s hope going into these listening sessions was to hear from people on the ground about what actions we could take that will create the economic climate for them to continue doing what they do well—providing an unmatched experience for tourists and creating jobs in every part of our state. That hope was clearly met with all the fantastic feedback we gathered. We will take all that feedback and work in the months ahead on legislation, or other actions, that incorporates all the good suggestions we heard.

PLEDGE TO STICK IT WHERE THE SUN SHINES.

Listening and Wondering

Solar panels, that is. Sign up for a free solar estimate of your home at bendenergychallenge.org.

OUTSIDE


30 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM /JULY 9, 2015

OUTSIDE

Twelve Years Strong

Gary Bonacker turns Tour des Chutes into a tour de force for fundraising BY KEVIN SPERL

Gary Bonacker prefers the term “cancer thriver” to “cancer survivor.” “The second you are diagnosed with cancer you are a survivor until the day you die,” says Bonacker, who, along with his wife Sue, owns Sunnyside Sports. “A lot of people think being a survivor means you have beaten cancer.” Diagnosed with brain cancer in 2003, Bonacker has indeed thrived, as has his cancer awareness and fundraising event, the Tour Des Chutes, which celebrates its 11th year on Saturday. Bonacker jokingly relates the term “survivor” with the ’60s sitcom “Gilligan’s Island.” “People survive shipwrecks,” he laughs. “But there are enough people that use the word that I can’t find fault with it.” As much an advocate for a cure as Bonacker is, he remains realistic about the impact he can have on the disease. “We don’t raise money to cure cancer, as the funds we collect are a drop in the bucket compared to the millions raised by much larger organizations,” he admitted, referring to the Tour des Chutes’ efforts. “But, we can certainly make a difference in people’s lives here in Central Oregon.” Having raised well over $700,000 since the first tour in 2004, Bonacker is proud to have added a pediatric foundation to his network. Bonacker admits that he set out to raise funds for adults dealing with cancer until he began to think about the kids—allocating $40,000 of last year’s $185,000 raised for pediatric care. “There are no pediatric cancer centers in Central Oregon,” he said. “Families in this community are faced with traveling to Doernbecher Children’s Hospital in Portland.” With most families relying on two incomes, Bonacker realized that managing the life of a child with cancer almost always means financial hardship. “You can’t send a kid on a bus or have them drive themselves for treatment,” noted Bonacker. “One of the parents typically has to leave their job.” To help out, the Tour’s pediatric foundation earmarks funds to help families with gas, lodging, and food cards. If needed, money is also allocated to help with utility bills or new car tires for driving over the pass in winter. “How can we say ‘no’ to a kid?” asks Bonacker. “Kids are the future, they are going to take care of us when we get old

PHOTO BY JILL ROSELL PHOTOGRAPHY

and run our government. These are the important people in our lives.” Bonacker knows his name is synonymous with the Tour des Chutes, but is quick to note that the event could not happen without tremendous community support. “We are helping a lot of people and I feel good about that,” he says. “But, I do not want to be put up on a soap box. I would simply like my legacy to be that I helped some people out.” While Bonacker strives to thrive while living with cancer, he is honest to admit it isn’t always easy. “There are times when I am less than pleasant about my cancer,” he says. “Then I see my beautiful wife and our

daughter Frankie, and remind myself that I have a lot going for me. I should focus on those things instead.” As much as he loves the Tour, he remains hopeful that, someday, it wont be needed. “I can wish all I want but the reality is that people with cancer need our help,” he says. “We can at least say that we help from age zero for as long as they live.” Tour des Chutes Saturday, July 11 Rides range from seven miles to a century, leaving from High Lakes Elementary School in Northwest Crossing. There is also a 5k run/walk.

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OUTSIDE EVENTS Sports Adaptive Golf Clinic Provides one-on-one instruction on putting green and driving range skills under the instruction of a golf professional and trained volunteers. Open to people with a physical or cognitive disability age 10 and up. A great way to learn the game of golf or get back into the sport after an injury or debilitating illness. Pre-registration is required. Fri, July 10, 5-6pm. Awbrey Glen Golf Club, 2500 NW Awbrey Glen Dr. Free. Crooked River Roundup Horse Races The sport of kings! Jam packed horse racing four nights in a row with parimutuel betting! Wed, July 15, 6pm and Thurs, July 16. Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S Main St., Prineville. $5. FootZone’s Float Run We’re meeting at FootZone, running two miles and floating down the river to Tumalo Creek Kayak and Canoe where we’ll have root beer floats and raffle off tons of prizes, including running shoes from Saucony! July 15, 5:30pm. FootZone, 845 NW Wall St. $5. Mt. Bachelor XC Race Series New to the Mt. Bachelor Bike Park this summer is our Cross-Country Race Series! This will be a great opportunity for local or visiting mountain bike enthusiasts to put their skills and endurance to the test in a fun and competitive environment. Races start at 6 pm, so make sure to get there early for a little warm up! Every other Wednesday, 5-7:30pm. Through Aug. 12. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 Century Dr. 541-6930996. $15 event or $40 for all three. Oregon 12/24 Hour Mountain Bike Race One amazing time with old and new friends under the stars in Bend at 5000 ft! Spend the night with Pine Mountain Sports, Lights & Motion, and Mudslinger Events as you ride, race, and relay on an amazing 10.5 mile loop. July 11, 10am and July 12. Wanoga Sno Park, Cascade Lakes Highway. $90-$480. Oregon High Desert Classics Olympic-level riders show off their stuff at this “AA” rated hunter/jumper competition with a $25,000 purse. After watching the horses and riders, stick around for a Grand Prix Dinner and help raise funds for J Bar J Youth Services, a nonprofit organization that offers programs specializing in prevention, intervention, treatment, and education. Wed, July 15, 8am-5pm and Thurs, July 16, 8am-5pm. J Bar J Ranch, 62895 Hamby Rd. Summer Vacation Saturdays On The Trail This is a non-supported, non-coached group run so bring your hydration packs, nutrition, and get ready for an adventure. An email will be sent with the location, time, and date of each run. Visit fleetfeetbend.com to sign up to receive these notifications. Saturdays, 8-9:45am. Free. Tour des Chutes A fundraising event to raise funds for cancer survivorship programs for children and adults in Central Oregon. Cycle 7-100 miles on some of the most beautiful roads in Central Oregon. July 11, 6am-3pm. High Lakes Elementary, 2500 NW High Lakes Lp. 541-400-0341. $25 for run/walk, $50 for cycling. Tour des Chutes 5K Run/Walk Now in its second year, this non-competitive run/walk benefits a new Central Oregon non-profit, the Pediatric Foundation, which provides financial support for families of children who have to travel to receive cancer treatment. A pretty great reason to get out there and move! July 11, 8am. High Lakes Elementary, 2500 NW High Lakes Lp. $35 adult, $10 youth.

Outdoors Cascades Mountaineers Meeting Promoting outings, enhancing training and experience, and expanding a sense of community among Central Oregon mountaineering enthusiasts is the goal of Cascades Mountaineers. Join monthly meetings to discuss recent outings and plan new outings. Second Wednesday of every month, 7-9pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. Free. Fire + Ice Hike We’ll start at the Metolius Preserve and make our way via the Lake Creek Trail to Suttle Lake and then on to Blue Lake. Stops along the way will explore how fiery volcanoes and glacial ice have shaped the Cascades. Registration is required. July 10, 8am-4pm. Metolius Preserve, near Camp Sherman. 541-330-0017. Free. FootZone Noon Run Order a Taco Stand burrito when you leave and we’ll have it when you return. Meet at FootZone for a 3 to 5 mile run. Wednesdays-noon. FootZone, 845 NW Wall St. 541-3173568. Free.

Free Bird Walk You will spot and learn to recognize more birds coming out with Tom Lawler than you could on your own! The Nature Center, with the nearby meadow and Lake Aspen, is a birder’s paradise, and this is an excellent opportunity to learn and observe! Registration is required. Saturdays, 8:30-10:30am. Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245 River Rd., Sunriver. 541-5934394. Free.

GO HERE!

Beat the Heat KEVIN SPERL

There are plenty of better ways to get out of the sweltering temperatures than the air-conditioned cineplex. (Although Ant Man does look pretty good.) James Jaggard, general manager of Wanderlust Tours, has some suggestions for absorbing knowledge instead of UV rays. No sunblock is required!

Kiteboarding 4 Cancer Part endurance race, part festival, part fundraiser, Kiteboarding 4 Cancer (KB4C) features something for everyone, including live music, a pop-up art studio, local food carts, a beer garden hosted by Full Sail Brewing Company, and of course, lots of eye-catching kiteboarders showing off their best moves. Fri, July 10 through Sun, July 12. Hood River Event Site, Portway Ave. Free for spectators. $500 fundraising goal. Lady Crows Road Ride Sunday is fun-day. Come early for a coffee/tea and a snack. July 12, 9am. Crow’s Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St. Moms Running Group Rain or shine, FootZone hosts runs from 3 to 4.5 miles every Thursday meeting at FootZone. Thursdays, 9:30am. FootZone, 845 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free. Move it Mondays First and third Monday of the month will be a trail run. We will meet at FootZone and then carpool to the location. Second and fourth Mondays runs start and end at FootZone. 3-5 miles and paces between 7 and 12-minute miles can be accommodated. Mondays, 5:30pm. FootZone, 845 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free. Mt. Bachelor Mountain Clean Up Join us as we bring back the tradition from years past for an all-mountain trash pick-up day. We’ll provide the trash bags and offer all participants a free ride up the Pine Marten chairlift. From there, you will be assigned an area to hike back down to West Village while collecting litter along the way. To thank volunteers for their effort, we’ll offer a free one day lift ticket, valid during the 2015-2016 winter ski and snowboard season, to the first 400 participants. July 11, 9am. Mount Bachelor Ski Resort, 13000 SW Century Dr. Smith Rock Youth Climbing Camp Join our coaches for four days of fun and climbing at Smith Rock State Park. This day camp is geared towards the novice to intermediate climber ages 12-16 years of age that have had some previous exposure to rock climbing. Participants will be introduced to proper belay techniques, belay commands, knots, and basic climbing technique and movements. July 7-July 10, 9am-4pm. Bend Endurance Academy, 500 SW Bond St. Suite 142. 541-419-5071. $350. Smith Rock Youth Climbing Camp 2 This day camp is geared towards the novice to intermediate climber ages 12-16 years of age that have had some previous exposure to rock climbing. Participants will be introduced to proper belay techniques, belay commands, knots, and basic climbing technique and movements. July 14-17, 9am-4pm. Bend Endurance Academy, 500 SW Bond St. Suite 142. 541-419-5071. .$350. Star Party Join the Deschutes Land Trust and Jim Hammond for an exploration of the summer night sky at protected Rimrock Ranch. Jim and friends will set up powerful telescopes and help folks identify constellations, planets, and far-away galaxies. Explore astronomy and get a rare chance to enjoy the dark skies of this privately-owned ranch. Registration is required. July 11, 8-11pm. Rimrock Ranch, outside Sisters. 541-330-0017. Free. Three Creek Butte Hike This hike (similar to Pilot Butte in Bend) is in the western corner of Skyline Forest and provides outstanding scenic views and an opportunity to see the path of recent fires. Learn more about fire ecology and forest health while watching for a variety of native wildflowers. Registration is required. July 8, 9am-3pm. Skyline Forest, Bull Springs Tree Farm. 541-330-0017. Free. Wednesday Night Group Runs Join us Wednesday nights for our 3-5 mile group runs, all paces welcome! This is a great way to get exercise, fresh air, and meet fellow fitnatics! Wednesdays, 6-7:30pm. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. 541389-1601. Free. Wildcrafting Medicinal Herbs In class you will explore basic plant identification, ethical wildcrafting, overview of local medicinal plants, and traditional uses. The second class will be a hike up Lookout Mountain in the Ochoco National Forest. Wed, July 15, 6-8pm. COCC Bend Campus, 2600 NW College Way. 541-408-4558. $69.

CANOE AND KAYAK TOURS ON THE LAKE. COURTESY OF WANDERLUST TOURS

Cave Tours The number one suggestion from Jaggard is to go underground into lava caves where the year-round temperature is a steady 45 to 48 degrees. “As soon as our tour-goers get into a cave they are feeling pretty good,” says Jaggard. “It is nature’s air conditioning at its best!” The best-known and most heavily attended cave may be Newberry National Volcanic Monument’s Lava River Cave, but Jaggard’s tours take people to what he terms “caves off the beaten path”; some open to the general public, others private and licensed to tour companies to protect their fragile environment. “We invite people to have an awesome time with a naturalist guide,” says Jaggard. “We will enjoy mother nature’s air conditioning while exploring the geological wonders here in Central Oregon.” Wear sturdy shoes and bring a jacket. Canoe and Kayak Tours Wait out the heat doing something indoors and, as the sun begins to set, head out in a canoe or kayak to view the evening sky. The same high-pressure system that delivers heat provides for clear nighttime star-gazing. Wanderlust heads out every night to view the full moon or the constellations of the Western sky from the waters of Elk, Hosmer, or Paulina Lakes. “Right now is a special time as Jupiter and Venus have converged and are both visible,” explains Jaggard. “Along with the encyclopedic knowledge offered by our tour guide, these excursions are spectacular and beautiful.” Local Brew Tours If the heat leaves you more thirsty than energetic, hop on one of Wanderlust’s air-conditioned vans for a daytime tour of local breweries, wineries, and distilleries. “We keep people under cover and in the air conditioning the entire time,” explains Jaggard. Each tour includes four stops with tastings, cold water, light appetizers, and a chance to, as Jaggard puts it, “to nerd out” about the science of fermentation. “We go behind the scenes at a few breweries to see how beer is actually made,” noted Jaggrd. “The tour is a great way to learn about the brewing process.”

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32 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM /JULY 9, 2015

FILM SHORTS

BY JARED RASIC

ALOHA It’s the new Cameron Crowe film! You know what that means? Outsized emotions will clash with a script that wears its heart on its sleeve and a soundtrack made from the most popular tunes of the ‘70s and ‘80s. Aloha stars Bradley Cooper as a military contractor who climbs smack dab in the middle of a love triangle between Rachel McAdams and Emma Stone. Poor bastard. St.Francis Theater HOT PURSUIT Reese Witherspoon and Sofia Veraga star in this female-centric homage to films like Midnight Run and Running Scared. Since this is from the director of 27 Dresses and Step Up, it is hard to know whether this will be an action-filled, crowd-pleasing comedy, or a vapid attempt to cash in on a genre that has not seen a successful odd couple pairing in years. St.Francis Theater INSIDE OUT Much better than the marketing would have you believe, Inside Out follows a young girl and each of her emotions as they navigate an unwanted move to a new city and school. With the likes of Amy Poehler, Bill Hader, Lewis Black, and Mindy Kaling voicing the emotions, expect this to be a fun and vibrant flick for the kiddos and a moving and hilarious experience for the parents. Inside Out is Pixar’s return to form after several years of sequels teach us lessons in diminishing returns. Old

Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Theatre, Sisters Movie House

JURASSIC WORLD If there’s anyone who can face down a theme park full of rampaging dinosaurs, Chris Pratt seems like just the person to do it. With his winning charm and a roguish twinkle in his eyes, he will speak reason the the hearts of velociraptors who will see him and go “Hey, other dinosaurs, if humanity is like this guy, maybe they’re not so bad after all. Let’s eat tofurkey instead!” Or they’ll eat him and Bryce Dallas Howard and be on with their day. Either way, shut up and take my money. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Theatre, Sisters Movie House

吀爀愀瘀攀氀 䄀氀漀渀最 眀椀琀栀 一攀眀猀䌀栀愀渀渀攀氀 ㈀㄀ 琀漀

䴀漀渀搀愀礀                                吀栀甀爀猀搀愀礀 䌀爀愀琀攀爀 䰀愀欀攀                   倀愀椀渀琀攀搀 䠀椀氀氀猀 䀀 㐀Ⰰ 㔀Ⰰ 㘀Ⰰ ㄀  ☀ ㄀㄀瀀洀

LOVE & MERCY The story of Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys set in two different time periods. One where he attempted to craft Pet Sounds while also losing his mind, and then 15 years later, when he was seeing a shrink and trying to get it back. Starring the likes of John Cusack, Elizabeth Banks, Paul Dano, Paul Giamatti, and Dee Wallace, Love and Mercy looks like a bio-pic worth watching. Old Mill Stadium

16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House

MAD MAX: FURY ROAD Guaranteed to be THE movie of the summer, the entirety of Fury Road is an extended chase boasting some of the finest cinematography, filmmaking, and action sequences ever put to film. Tom Hardy replaces Mel Gibson as Max, who teams up with Charlize Theron to save some young women from a massively insane warlord. If you only go to one film this summer, this is the one. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX MAGIC MIKE XXL Now with twice as much dong but 100% less Steven Soderbergh. Channing Tatum returns as magic Mike, the hard luck male stripper who carves his own destiny one pocketful of greasy dollar bills at a time. While the first film had a sense of lightning in a bottle that made it entertaining watch, the missing creative team makes it HARD to get excited for this one. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX,

Redmond Theatre, Sisters Movie House

ME AND EARL AND THE DYING GIRL Me and Earl and the Dying Girl desperately wants to be this year’s breakout indie sensation like Juno or Little Miss Sunshine, but the film’s DNA leans a bit closer to The Fault in Our Stars than those pop goofballs. Filled with amazing supporting performances by Nick Offerman, Connie Britton, and Molly Shannon, the film plays like a hybrid of the styles, nestling

somewhere slightly new and slightly used, with a refreshing honesty most films don’t even bother with nowadays. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Sisters Movie House

MINIONS The spin-off of the Despicable Me franchise boasts one pretty bizarre thing going forward: lead characters that speak in some weird hybrid of gibberish and gobbledygook. The minions themselves are cute enough and escape death regularly with enough panache to be entertaining just on their own without Steve Carell’s Gru getting in the way. Expect this to be the #1 grossing animated film of the year. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond

Theatre

THE OVERNIGHT One of the most disturbingly hilarious films of the year. When two couples meet at one of their palatial estates so their kids can have a playdate, everything is nice and normal until the kids fall asleep and shit gets...weird. Lets not just say weird but maybe the perfect combination of sex-crazed shenanigans with head-shaking debauchery. Tin Pan Theater

SAN ANDREAS While the trailers for San Andreas don’t do much to set it apart from other disaster flicks like 2012 or The Day After Tomorrow, the biggest distinguishing feature it has is a 280lb Samoan badass named The Rock. America is ready for a movie where The Rock has to save the world and can’t use punches to do it. Will he use his beastly strength to grab both sides of the fault and pull it closed, or will he fly everyone to safety, proving once and for all he’s the superman we all know he secretly is? Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX SLOW WEST A young man and a bounty hunter travel through 1800’s Colorado searching for a beautiful lass. Definitely one of the strangest and most surreal films of the year that is anchored by another phenomenal performance by Michael Fassbender. Is it safe to call him a national treasure yet? Tin Pan Theater

SPY Melissa McCarthy has been on a bit of a cold streak lately, but the trailer for Spy looks like she’s back playing relatable characters instead of loathsome identity thieves and angry cops. With Jason Statham in his first American comedic role, Spy looks like it could be another huge hit from the writer/director of Bridesmaids. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX SUNSHINE SUPERMAN A heart pounding documentary about Carl Boenish, the founder/inventor of base jumping. The film is top-heavy with some of the most impressive free-falling footage ever caught on film. The air of melancholy infusing the film only adds to the powerful tone present in every frame. Tin Pan Theater

TED 2 Everybody’s favorite racist, homophobic, xenophobic, sexist, and definitely anti-semitic stuffed bear is back to probably show us his nuts some more, or at least say something offensive. Which is fine, I like my stuffed animals like I like my ladies: old, racist, and missing some buttons. Look! I can do it too, Seth MacFarlane. You’re not special. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

TERMINATOR GENISYS A reboot/sequel to Schwarzenegger’s most popular franchise that is suffering from extremely negative critical word of mouth and some very underwhelming trailers that seem to spill the entire plot of the film. Daenerys Targaryen plays Sarah Conner, but due to a new timeline, is now a warrior instead of a victim. With the T-800 and Kyle Reese, she must stop the perpetually happening Judgement Day...again. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Theatre

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JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 33

I ♥ TELEVISION

Breaking: The Sun is Hot

celebrates The

BY WM.™ STEVEN HUMPHREY

WEDNESDAY 8

10 PM COM KEY & PEELE Season premiere! The hilarious comic duo return with a sketch about President Obama meeting Hillary Clinton. 10 PM USA MR. ROBOT Hacker Elliott decides he’s going to lead a normal life—until his new life gets hacked!

THURSDAY 9

9 PM CW DATES Debut! A Brit comedy about effed-up couples and the joys of online dating. 10 PM SPIKE LIP SYNC BATTLE Season premiere! Tonight’s fun lip synch matchup: It’s the adorable Alison Brie vs. the charming Will Arnett!

FRIDAY 10

9 PM DSC SHARKS OF THE SHADOWLANDS In this Shark Week entry, divers try to tag aggressive sharks without losing their buttholes in the process.

SATURDAY 11

10 PM HBO 7 DAYS IN HELL A loudmouth American and a prissy Brit go head to head in a hellish (and fake) weeklong tennis match.

“Mr. Robot” (USA, Weds., 10 pm). This is clearly the STUPIDEST name for a sci-fi show since “Manimal”—however! This stupidly named show is actually an engrossing cyber thriller about a socially stunted hacker who finds himself embroiled in a worldwide techno conspiracy. It makes some keen observations about the world we live in, it’s got the creepy flair of the great British show “Black Mirror”, and other than the fact it’s on the USA network and co-stars Christian Slater, it is HOT. Not 27 million degrees hot…but hot. “7 Days in Hell” (HBO, Sat., July 11, 10 pm). Speaking of hot, Hell is hot—and former “SNL” member Andy Samberg and “Game of Thrones’” Kit Harington are going through seven days of it in this HBO sports mockumentary about two fictional Wimbledon players playing an interminable week-long tennis match. And speaking of interminable, I’m hot, and the sun doesn’t give a shit. “Masters of Sex” (Showtime, Sun., July 12, 10 pm). This horny dramatization of real life sex researchers Masters and Johnson returns for a third season, and while their on-again, off-again affair is heating up, so are the sex lives of their spurned spouses! (FYI, when I have sex, I heat up to 27 million and ONE degrees. Suck it, Sun!)

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10 PM FX THE STRAIN Season premiere! Eph and Nora think a biological weapon might murder the vampires. (Yeah, and so will a stake!) 10 PM SHO MASTERS OF SEX Season premiere! Masters and Johnson are forced to use visual aids (old-timey porn!) to explain their research.

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Dear Sun: I didn’t sign up for this. When you said you were gonna be “hot” this summer, I assumed that meant you were going to be as warm as your previous 4.567 billion years of existence. But apparently, that isn’t the case! You are waaaaay hotter this year, which made me look you up on the internet to see just exactly how hot you are. And guess what I found out? That, at your core, your temperature is 27 million degrees farenheit. WHAAAAAT THAAAA FAAAAAAAACKK?????? Since when do you suddenly get to decide you’re gonna turn the heat up to 27 million degrees? If you’re cold, PUT ON A GODDAMN SWEATER! There is NO REASON to make the rest of us suffer because your nips are sticking up! You’re feeling a bit chilly? Well, let me tell you about MY situation. Currently, my home feels like a windowless metal box in the middle of Death Valley, with 27 hair dryers pointed directly at it. In fact, I am SO HOT, my body can no longer maintain its physical shape and has literally melted into a viscous puddle on the floor, comprised of 89 percent sweat, two percent water, and nine percent Mike’s Hard Lemonade. Luckily for YOU, Sun, I have a television to distract me from your sweltering torture, and can recommend the following shows to any of my fellow earthlings who find themselves in a similar state of scorching solar persecution. BEHOLD…

With more dog parks than you can throw a stick at, Bend sure does love their four-legged friends. The Source shows our loyalty to the canine with The Dog Days of Summer. From health tips to dog-friendly activities, we’ve got you and Fido covered!

Presented by The Source Weekly & Hayden Homes

CELEBRATING

25

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MONDAY 13

12:15 PM TOON YOUR PRETTY FACE IS GOING TO HELL Season premiere! Kind of like if Satan owned Best Buy, and his employees were the absolute worst.

TUESDAY 14

9 PM CBS ZOO A senator visits the zoo’s lion cage to see if the rumors about animal attacks are true. BAD IDEA, SENATOR. 9 PM PBS BLACK OUT: AMERICAN EXPERIENCE Documenting the 1977 NYC blackout when seven million people lost power, and NON-hilarity ensued.

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34 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM /JULY 9, 2015

ASTROLOGY

WELLNESS DIRECTORY

CANCER (June 21-July 22): When novelist John Irving begins a new book, his first task is to write the last line of the last page. Then he writes the second-to-last line. He continues to work backwards for a while until he has a clear understanding of the way his story will end. Right now, Cancerian, as you hatch your next big phase of development, I invite you to borrow Irving’s approach. Visualize in detail the blossoms that will eventually come from the seeds you’re planting. Create a vivid picture of the life you will be living when your plans have fully ripened.

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LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You have cosmic permission to lose your train of thought, forget about what was so seriously important, and be weirdly amused by interesting nonsense. If stress-addicts nag you to be more responsible, tell them that your astrologer has authorized 1.) Move Expanded OTC and Gift www.bendacupuncture.com you to ignore the pressing issues and wander off Section to last Bullet point as it in has the direction of nowhere in particular. Does that sound like a good plan? It does to me. For nothing to do with Compounded now, it’s your sovereign right to be a wise and medications. innocent explorer with nothing much to do but I strongly believe wonder and daydream and play around. 2.) Move Skincare/ant-aging under in each person’s

ability to discover Pain Management their full health VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Even the most 3.) Capitalize potential. the "U" in Us provocative meme cannot literally cause the 4.) As for the drop shadows around Internet to collapse from overuse. It’s true that photos of Kim Kardashian’s oiled-up butt Effective Health Carenumber, CallGentle, us and the telephone spawned a biblical flood of agitated responses Acupuncture • Herbs • Massage let's move the right and down. on social media. So did the cover shot of CaitQigong • Addictions lyn Jenner in Vanity Fair and the YouTube vid5.) Change Located in Brookswood Steven Foster-Wexler, LAc eo of a tiny hamster noshing tiny burritos and Meadow Plaza to Located just 5the season-five finale of the TV show “Game 541-330-8283 of Thrones”. But none of these starbursts unmin.628 South of the NW York Dr., Old SuiteMill. 104

leashed so much traffic that the Web was in danger of crashing. It’s too vast and robust for that to ever happen. Or is it? I’m wondering if Virgos’ current propensities for high adventure and rollicking melodrama could generate phenomena that would actually, not just metaphorically, break the Internet. To be safe, I suggest you enjoy yourself to the utmost, but not more than the utmost.

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LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): The coming weeks

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will be a favorable time for you to acquire a new title. It’s quite possible that a person in authority will confer it upon you, and that it will signify a raise in status, an increase in responsibility, or an expansion of your clout. If for some reason this upgrade doesn’t occur naturally, take matters into your own hands. Tell people to refer to you as “Your Excellency” or “Your Majesty.” Wear a nametag that says “Deputy Director of Puzzle-Solving” or “Executive Vice-President of Fanatical Balance and Insane Poise.” For once in your life, it’s OK to risk becoming a legend in your own mind. P.S. It wouldn’t be a bad time to demand a promotion—diplomatically, of course, in the Libran spirit.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Between now and July 22, your password and mantra and battle cry is “serendipity.” To make sure you are clear about its meaning, meditate on these definitions: a knack for uncovering surprising benefits by accident; a talent for stumbling upon timely help or useful resources without searching for them. Got that? Now I’ll provide clues that should help you get the most out of your lucky breaks and blessed twists: 1. Be curious and receptive, not lackadaisical and entitled. 2. Expect the unexpected. Vow to thrive on surprises. 3. Your desires are more likely to come true if you are unattached to them coming true. But you should formulate those desires clearly and precisely. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): On behalf of the Strange Angels in Charge of Uproarious Beauty and Tricky Truths, I am pleased to present you with the award for Most Catalytic Fun-Seeker and Intriguing Game-Changer of the Zodiac. What are your specific superpowers? You’re capable of transforming rot into splendor. You have a knack for discovering secrets that have been hidden. I also suspect that your presence can generate magic laughter and activate higher expectations and wake everyone up to the interesting truths they’ve been ignoring. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): “Who is

that can tell me who I am?” asks King Lear in

the Shakespeare play named after him. It’s a painful moment. The old boy is confused and alarmed when he speaks those words. But I’d like to borrow his question and transplant it into a very different context: your life right now. I think that you can engender inspirational results by making it an ongoing meditation. There are people in a good position to provide you with useful insights into who you are.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): What’s hard

but important for you to do? What are the challenging tasks you know you should undertake because they would improve your life? The coming days will be a favorable time to make headway on these labors. You will have more power than usual to move what has been nearly impossible to move. You may be surprised by your ability to change situations that have resisted and outfoxed you in the past. I’m not saying that any of this will be smooth and easy. But I bet you will be able to summon unprecedented amounts of willpower and perseverance.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Franz Kafka

produced three novels, a play, four short fiction collections, and many other stories. And yet some of his fellow writers thought he was uncomfortable in expressing himself. Bertolt Brecht said Kafka seemed perpetually afraid, as if he were being monitored by the cops for illicit thoughts. Milena Jesenská observed that Kafka often wrote like he was sitting naked in the midst of fully-clothed people. Your assignment in the coming weeks is to shed such limitations and inhibitions from your own creative expression. What would you need to do to free your imagination? To get started, visualize five pleasurable scenarios in which you feel joyful, autonomous, generous, and expansive.

ARIES (March 21-April 19): How can you fulfill

your potential as an Aries? What strategies will help you become the best Aries you can possibly be? Now is an excellent time to meditate on these riddles. One of my Aries readers, Mickki Langston, has some stellar tips to inspire you: 1. One of your greatest assets is your relentless sense of purpose. Treasure it. Stay connected to it. Draw on it daily. 2. Love what you love with pure conviction, because there is no escaping it. 3. Other people may believe in you, but only sometimes. That’s why you should unfailingly believe in yourself. 4. It’s your duty and your destiny to continually learn more about how to be a leader. 5. Don’t be confused by other people’s confusion. 6. Your best friend is the Fool, who will guide you to laughter and humility when you need it most, which is pretty much all of the time.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): While making a

long trek through the desert on a camel, British author Somerset Maugham passed the time by reading Marcel Proust’s novel In Search of Lost Time. After finishing each page, Maugham ripped it out and cast it away. The book weighed less and less as his journey progressed. I suggest that you consider a similar approach in the coming weeks, Taurus. As you weave your way toward your next destination, shed the accessories and attachments you don’t absolutely need. Keep lightening your load.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): “I have gathered about me people who understand how to translate fear into possibility,” writes John Keene in his story “Acrobatique.” I’d love to see you do the same, Gemini. From an astrological perspective, now is a favorable time to put your worries and trepidations to work for you. You have an extraordinary capacity to use your doubt and dread to generate opportunities. Even if you go it alone, you can accomplish minor miracles, but why not dare to think even bigger? Team up with brave and resourceful allies who want to translate fear into possibility, too.

Homework What’s your secret beauty -- the great thing about you that no one knows about? FreeWillAstrology.com. © Copyright 2015 Rob Brezsny


JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 35

ADVICE GODDESS

WELLNESS DIRECTORY

Emotion Sickness

To a man, an irate woman’s sharing of her emotional drama can be a bit like her sharing her Drano-tini. Relationships researcher John Gottman explains that men can become physiologically overwhelmed from stressful conversation alone, getting “flooded” with stress hormones and feeling physically ill and desperate to withdraw. The problem here wasn’t that she needed to calm down, but that you did. So when you laid that on her, she probably heard, “I’m not just going to ignore your feelings; I’m going to dismiss them.” (This always goes over so well with women.) Explaining the sex differences in emotion processing might help you both keep in mind that a man isn’t just a woman with a different set of fun-parts. For example, for her, venting her feelings may simply be a way of managing them. Chances are, she just needs you to be listening (or at least appear to be while playing “Minecraft” in your head). The next time she’s worked up about something, take some deep breaths and remind yourself that you aren’t under attack; you’re just somebody’s boyfriend. Should you start feeling emotionally swamped, take Gottman’s advice: “Let your [partner] know that you’re feeling flooded and need to take a break. The break should last at least 20 minutes, since it will be that long before your body calms down.” Going for a run wouldn’t be a bad idea. However, in the spirit of better male/female communication, you need to tell your girlfriend your plan. (c)2015, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved. Got a problem? Write Amy Alkon, 171 Pier Ave, #280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or e-mail AdviceAmy@aol.com (advicegoddess.com).

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Yin Yoga Immersion II Deepen your understanding and teaching of Yin Yoga in this full day workshop with Luanne Barrett. Open to those who have attended Immersion I and Yoga Teachers with some Yin background. Yin focuses on the toning the body’s deep connective tissues, rather than muscles, to improve our physical well-being, and functional range of motion. July 12, 9:30am4:30pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. $75 ($10 discount if registered by 7/5).

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Wednesdays on the Green You are invited to sample the services of many of Central Oregon’s talented healers. Services range from intuitive reading to reiki healing. We are collecting donations of nonperishable food items for NeighborImpact. Wednesdays, 10am-5pm. Through Aug. 24. The Cosmic Depot, 342 NE Clay Ave. 541-385-7478. Free.

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Tuesday Performance Group Maximize your time with focused, intense efforts. All ages and ability levels welcome. Sessions led by Max King, one of the most accomplished trail runners in the country. Email Max for weekly details and locations: max@ footzonebend.com. Tuesdays, 5:30pm. FootZone, 845 NW Wall St. Free.

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Saturday Morning Group Runs Join us Saturday mornings for our group runs, all paces welcome! We meet at the store and run a combination of road and trail routes. A great way to get exercise, fresh air and meet fellow fitnatics! Saturdays, 8-9:30am. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. 541389-1601.

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Roller Yoga A new “twist” on yoga. The focus is on proper use and techniques of foam rollers with yoga inspired stretches. Wednesdays, 6:30pm. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. 541-389-1601. Free.

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your recovery and enhance your life. The format is organic and will evolve with the students and teachers involved. This gathering is not limited to drug and alcohol dependence, as we are all on the road to recovery from something! Thursdays, 7-8pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. By donation.

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Recovery Yoga Wherever you are on the road of recovery, this yoga class offers a safe and confidential place to explore how meditation, pranayama (breath work), journaling, and yoga can aid in

An intimate cottage offering creative food and fun libations. Serving casual breakfast and lunch. Stop by with friends after a hike, bike or other adventure or just start your day with a great meal.

BMX

Path with Heart, Refuge Recovery Meditation Classes & Dharma Inquiry With Senior Dharma leader Valeta Bruce. Friendly and open to all experience. Mondays, 7-8:45pm. Bend Community Healing Center, 155 SW Century Drive Suite 133. 541-389-9449. Free, donations accepted.

The Drum and Guitar Shop

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Laughter Yoga Come Laugh with us on your Tuesday lunch hour: Just a half hour of simple movements that facilitate laughter and child like playfulness. It’s fun, energizing, and healing! Tuesdays, 12:30-1pm. Center for Compassionate Living, 339 SW Century Dr. Suite 203. 541-382-7543. Donation Basis.

Offering Full Detox Retreats

PEDA

Fit Camp Meet at Pilot Butte on Monday, Fitness 1440 South on Wednesday and Friday. Get fit and get healthy. Mondays-Wednesdays-Fridays, 6-7pm. GOT CHI, 365 NE Greenwood Ave. 541-639-2699. Free.

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Essential Oils 101 Discover a more natural and proactive approach to your baby and child’s health. Using essential oils can be a safe natural option to protect and maintain you and your family’s health. Maintain health and find natural solutions for colds, cough, flu, sunburn and more. RSVP: 541-4205730. Second Wednesday of every month, 1-2pm. Spirit of Pilates, 61419 Elder Ridge St. Free.

805-218-3169

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Healing Flow Yoga class Everyone is welcome to this donation-based Healing Flow class. A gentle flow yoga that everyone can follow and enjoy. All proceeds from donations are given to a local charity. Come meet and enjoy the other people in your community! Fridays, 4-5:15pm. Through Aug. 28. Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Dr. Suite 113. 541-322-9642. Free. Donations given to local charities.

BOBBYE ROTELLO, CNC, CCT, CMT Owner of Digestive Wellness 22 years - I-Act Advanced

7am - 3pm Wed-Sun

WELLNESS CLASSES Community Healing Flow to Benefit ONDA Come join this gentle flow class and meet others in our yoga community. The class is by donation and all proceeds will benefit ONDA, the Oregon Natural Desert Association, a great local non-profit doing wonderful work to restore Oregon’s wild landscape (onda.org). Fridays, 4-5:15pm. Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Dr. Suite 113. 541-3229642. Donation.

Hydrate • Cleanse • RESTORE

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AMY ALKON

Last week, my girlfriend was all annoyed about something (something relatively unimportant). I’m normally not a bad listener, but I was getting stressed out just hearing about this. I blurted out, “Calm down!” and she really flipped, yelling, “DON’T TELL ME TO CALM DOWN!” It took me forever (and lots of “I’m sorrrreeee”s) to get her to mellow out. I mentioned this incident to a friend, and he said, “Man, don’t you know? You never say that to a woman!” Please explain. —Mr. Doghouse

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36 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM /JULY 9, 2015

NEWS QUIRKS CURSES, FOILED AGAIN

Police arrested gunman Christopher Trail for holding six people hostage at a pharmacy in Red Bay, Ala. He let five of them go but kept pharmacist Donna Weatherford, who said he forced her to supply him with drugs. After an hour, he asked for a recliner. Told there was none, he pulled some chairs together and dozed off. Weatherford picked up the shotgun and fled to safety. (AL. com) Pizza delivery driver Richard Dennany, 43, pleaded guilty to drunk driving in Murphysboro, Ill., after he delivered a pizza to the county courthouse while visibly intoxicated. He was found to be three times over the legal limit. (Illinois’s Carbondale Times)

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Swiss police arrested a robot that bought 10 ecstasy pills on the Internet. The drugs were included in a shopping list given to it by the art group that designed it: !Mediengruppe Bitnik. The robot, part of the group’s exhibit in St. Gallen, was allowed a weekly budget of $100 in bitcoins to order merchandise randomly online and also purchased fake Diesel jeans, a baseball cap with a hidden camera, a stash can, Nike trainers, 200 Chesterfield cigarettes, a set of fire-department master keys, a fake Louis Vuitton handbag and Lord of the Rings ebooks. Police released the robot after determining that Bitnik never intended selling or consuming the ecstasy. (Britain’s The Guardian)

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When a tornado warning prompted ground crews at Oklahoma City’s Will Rogers World Airport to seek shelter underground, passengers on Delta Air Lines flights from Minneapolis and Salt Lake City were left stranded on the tarmac. Airport official Karen Carney blamed a miscommunication and insisted the passengers “were never in any imminent danger.” Ground crews returned after about 15 minutes to help passengers disembark. (Minneapolis Star Tribune)

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Toronto has scheduled an accessible orgy for disabled people, with space for 20 wheelchairs, an interpreter for the deaf, and free admission for caretakers. The Aug. 14 event is the brainchild of Stella Palikarova, 35, who is in a wheelchair because of spinal muscular atrophy but declared nothing is wrong with her libido and is tired of people assuming there must be. “The naysayers are just subconsciously hating the fact that people in wheelchairs are having great sex, better sex than a lot of people are having,” she explained. Fellow organizer Andrew Morrison-Gurza, 31, agreed, declaring, “A wheelchair can become just a big sex toy.” Palikarova noted the “Deliciously Disabled” sex night coincides with the Parapan Am Games and hoped some of the competitors will attend her event to unwind. (Toronto Sun)

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After police arrested Luis A. Cruz, 46, on heroin distribution charges in Springfield, Ill., his court-appointed attorney, Anna Levine, asked the judge to release her client on personal recognizance, pointing out his history of making court appearances for past offenses. Judge William Boyle responded by holding up a copy of the defendant’s arrest record in Florida, noting that it’s 52 pages long, and asked Levine to review it. She did but pointed out none of the charges was for failing to appear for court hearings. “It’s a 52page record for showing up,” she told the judge, who nevertheless set bail at $10,000. (Springfield’s The Republican)

LITIGATION NATION

Anna Goldshmidt and Elan Stratiyevsky demanded that New York’s Waldorf Astoria hotel return the money they paid for their wedding there or risk a lawsuit. The couple contends the hotel cut short the event because a guest at the reception accidentally fired a gun, grazing a woman in the

head. Lawyer Benjamin Brafman said the couple is also considering suing the guest. A hotel official said the reception was canceled immediately after the shooting due to safety concerns. (Associated Press) Gregory Reddick, 54, said he’s suing New York City for arresting him after he charged two tourists $400 for a ride on the landmark Staten Island Ferry. The ferry has been free since 1997. Reddick, who police said has “at least five aliases, six Social Security numbers” and a history of burglary and credit-card fraud convictions, acknowledged his rap sheet is real but insisted that selling tickets is legal and has turned his life around. “It’s better than McDonald’s money,” he said. “It’s better than Burger King money.” (New York Post and The Gothamist) A Colorado judge ordered the parents of Aurora shooting victim Jessica Ghawi to pay $220,000 to the companies that sold ammo and body armor to gunman James Holmes. Sandy and Lonnie Phillips sued the four online businesses but lost. Under state law, plaintiffs who sue gun makers or dealers and lose have to pay the defendants’ legal fees. (The Huffington Post)

NARCISSISM FOLLIES

Russian authorities reported that a 21-year-old woman was in “serious condition” at Moscow’s Sklifosovsky hospital after she shot herself in the temple while posing for a selfie. Police said the victim was holding the 9 mm handgun and pulled the trigger instead of clicking the camera shutter. (Agence France-Presse)

SLIGHTEST PROVOCATION

Deputies arrested Kristin Howard, 31, for attacking her 50-year-old mother at her home in Bunnell, Fla., during an argument over who was entitled to a plate of chicken and biscuits. Deputies reported Howard punched her mother in the face and threw tea on her. (The Daytona Beach News-Journal) Police arrested Orlando Thompson, 26, in Panama City, Fla., after they said he killed a co-worker at a seafood restaurant during an argument over the amount of spice to put in gumbo. The victim, Caleb Joshua Halley, had formerly portrayed the Florida State University mascot Osceola. (Tallahassee Democrat)

HALLELUJAH!

The Internal Revenue Service notified Bill Levin, founder of the First Church of Cannabis in Indianapolis, that it has recognized the church as a tax-exempt religious organization. More than 600 members have paid between $4.20 and $1,000 to join the church, whose mission, Levin said, is to “proselytize the wonderfulness of the gift that this plant is to our human nature.” (Newsweek)

THAT SINKING FEELING

The United States fell from 12th to 23rd in the Gallup-Healthways Global Well-Being Index. The survey of 145 countries takes into account what makes citizens of various countries feel accomplished and fulfilled. Panama leads the ranking for the second straight year, followed by Costa Rica, Puerto Rico, Switzerland, Belize, Chile, Denmark, Guatemala, Austria, and Mexico. Tunisia, Togo, Cameroon, Bhutan, and Afghanistan are the least thriving countries. Although the United States dropped 11 positions, it remains ahead of Canada. (Healthways)

Compiled from mainstream news sources by Roland Sweet. Authentication on demand.


JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 37

CANNABIS CORNER

SMOKE SIGNALS Fire Up May Mean Firing

Now that recreational weed is legal in Oregon, one major concern is whether employees can be fired from their jobs for cannabis use. Just last month the Colorado Supreme Court cleared things up with its opinion in the Coats vs. Dish Network case. Coats sued Dish Network for firing him on the basis of his medical use of cannabis in his home. Despite the fact that Coats was found to never have used on the job, nor to have been under the influence on the job, the Colorado Supreme Court ruled in favor of Dish Network, saying in its opinion: “The supreme court holds that under the plain language of…Colorado’s “lawful activities statute,” the term “lawful” refers only to those activities that are lawful under both state and federal law. Therefore, employees who engage in an activity such as medical marijuana use that is permitted by state law but unlawful under federal law are not protected by the statute.”

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At the Bend Town Hall meeting on Measure 91, local Bend attorney Kurt Barker said, “The legal landscape for the workplace, it’s pretty well defined here, and Measure 91 does not change that.” He explained that under federal law employers were free to set their own tolerance policies concerning cannabis use. While cannabis users have much to celebrate with the new recreational law going into effect, they should also be aware that their employers retain the right to uphold the federal law. Weed thought you’d like to know.

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38 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM /JULY 9, 2015

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JULY 9, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 39

THE REC ROOM

CROSSWORD

PEARL’S PUZZLE

“Enter the Dragon”--I sea what you did there. Matt Jones

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The highlighted letters read left to right and top to bottom will complete the quote:

“I consider conversations with people to be mind exercises, but I don’t want to pull a muscle, so I stretch a lot. That’s why I’m constantly either ____ing my ____ or ____ing.” - Jarod Kintz ANSWER TO LAST WEEK’S PUZZLE:

ANSWERS AT BENDSOURCE.COM Across 1 “Hey, sailor!” 5 Ambien amount, e.g. 9 Wear away 14 Command represented by an outdated floppy disk 15 Milky gem 16 Radio tube gas 17 Dairy product used to fill a pastry? 20 Car ad fig. 21 Abbey recess 22 “2001” hardware 23 Gold amount 25 Agrologist’s study 27 Round figure? 30 One, in Verdun 31 Not as vigorous 33 Sweet statue of Sean Combs in the late ‘90s? 37 It may be Photoshopped out in school photos 38 17th Greek letter 39 Strap on a stallion 40 Part of the theme song for Blossom, Bubbles, or Buttercup? 45 Like reserved seats 46 Whence farm fresh eggs 47 Name in “Talks” 48 Goes pfft 50 In a class by ___ 54 Improve, in the wine cellar 55 Brick in the organics section 57 He played Jim in “The Doors” 58 Frivolous article in the middle of the page? 63 Previous conviction, informally 64 Peas, for a pea shooter 65 “Desperate Housewives” character Van de Kamp 66 Lots of paper 67 Like 7-Eleven, right now 68 1990s puzzle game set in an island world

Down 1 Arts acronym 2 Curly-haired Marx brother 3 Hardly in hiding 4 “I approve the motion!” 5 Aural “shift” named for physicist Christian 6 ___ Dei (“The Da Vinci Code” group) 7 Strongboxes 8 North Pole laborer 9 Let it out 10 Film spool 11 “___ Crazy Summer” (Cusack/Moore romcom) 12 MS-___ 13 Reverse of WSW 18 Hawaii’s ___ Kea 19 Boss 24 Hip-hop trio with Lauryn Hill 26 “Get ___ My Cloud” (Rolling Stones hit) 27 Like some siblings 28 Changed the decor of 29 ___ Mawr, PA 32 Empire builders 33 Make a point 34 Without a hitch? 35 “Oooh, you said a swear!” type 36 “Weird Al” Yankovic cult movie 37 Calendar entry, for short 41 Hammerstein’s musical collaborator 42 Practitioner, as of a trade 43 Sheer fabric 44 In a riled state 49 Ask a tough trivia question 51 Not just some 52 They hold kicks together 53 Armada 54 Lepton’s locale 56 “You want a piece ___?” 58 EMT’s special skill 59 Palindromic poetry preposition 60 “Boyz N the Hood” actress Long 61 Kung ___ shrimp 62 Watson’s creator

©2014 JONESIN’ CROSSWORDS (EDITOR@JONESINCROSSWORDS.COM)

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“Most new books are forgotten within a year, especially by those who borrow them.” -Evan Esar

We’re Local! Questions, comments or suggestions for our local puzzle guru? Email Pearl Stark at pearl@bendsource.com © Pearl Stark


40 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM /JULY 9, 2015

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$300 cash prize. July 21st and 22nd. Judging from 2pm-3pm. The Shack, Sand Volleyball Court, Old Mill, Bend, OR. www.gig15.com. Winner each day gets $300.

CYCLING CLOTHING SALE!

New, brand name jerseys, shorts & more. May 15 & 16 at 8am at Mother’s Juice Caf√©, 1255 NW Galveston. Credit cards welcome. 760-518-4085

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The Final Gogapalooooza. www.gig15.com. RAP BATTLES. Tuesday and Wednesday July 21st and 22nd, 2015. The Shack, Sand Volleyball Counrts Old Mill. Bend, OR USA. www.gig15.com. All acts perform. Free. Open to the public. This will also be a celebration of legal marijuana. Battles begin at 4:20 and the winner is announced before sundown. After that round two. WWW.GIG15.com. This event will be hosted by MC Hop Man. No drugs or alcohol. Tuesday and Wednesday July 21st and 22nd. GIGAPALOOOOZA #1 AH YEAH.

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Bend 97701 Division St.

CannaCopiaCollective.com

1 oz $115 1/2 oz $58 1/4 oz $29 1/8 oz $15

The Connoisseurs Choice

Look for Weekly Specials on Leafly

541-678-5199

DIRECT WHOLESALE PRICING:

) &%

Healthy and Vibrant clones.

Check out our beautiful shop at 923 SE 3rd St. Bend

strains at the following:

Fresh Corn Tortillas Daily

Daily specials and VIP cards.

Taste all our flavors at the vapor tasting bar.

NE Revere Ave

541.241.6058 highmountainmist.com

Now helping patients qualify for medical cannabis in Bend

THCF Medical Clinics: Helping Medical Marijuana Patients Since 1999 The Oldest, Largest and The Best Multiple State Permits – OR, WA, CA more

541.550.5354 • 1351 NE 3rd St. Suite 100 Bend

1.800.723.0188 • www.thc-foundation.org


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