Oregon Coast Today August 7, 2015

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oregon coast August 7, 2015 • ISSUE 9, VOL. 11

KIND OF A PIG DEAL

22

The Tillamook County Fair brings home the bacon again

WINGING IT

LET’S FACE IT...

13

Nothing beats a day at Lincoln City’s sand castle contest

On the Coast

"It's Better at the Beach!"

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LINCOLN CITY: 1025 Hwy 101 Lincoln City OR 97367 • 541 994-3676

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NEWPORT: 1155 SW Coast Hwy Newport OR 97365 • 541 265 6604

TOLEDO: 415 NW A St Toledo, OR 97391 • 541 336-1611

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MHJLIVVR JVT VYLNVUJVHZ[[VKH` 2 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015


from the editor

This week’s top five

1

TILLAMOOK — You haven’t lived ’til you’ve seen a startled pig whiz by at 40 miles per hour on a vintage Model T Ford. On this front, as on all others, the Tillamook County Fair never disappoints.

See page 22

2

LINCOLN CITY — When the Taft Beach Sandcastle Contest gets underway on Saturday, the only limits are your imagination — and the fact that the tide will come in eventually.

See page 13

3

NEWPORT — You can come to the coast by car or by boat, but as TODAY contributor Nancy Steinberg found out, nothing beats seeing it biplane.

See page 20

Patrick Alexander Editor & Publisher SILETZ — You can dance if you want to, but don’t leave your friends behind. Take them along as the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians celebrate their annual Nesika Illahee Pow-Wow.

4

KennysIGA.com

See page 25

5

NEWPORT — Missing “Mad Men” since the series finale? Get your fix of the swinging ’60s with Neil Simon’s “Come Blow Your Horn,” entering its final weekend. See page 4

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015 • 3


on stage

Don’t blow your chance There is still time to catch “Come Blow Your Horn,” at the Newport Performing Arts Center as the Porthole Players production nears the end of its three-week run. The play, the first from popular playwright Neil Simon, is an uproarious show bordering on farce, described by The New York Times as “A slick, lively and funny comedy!” Set in 1961, the era of Mad Men and the Rat Pack, the play tells the story of Buddy who, fed up of living with his parents, moves in with his older brother Alan, a 30-ish swinging bachelor with time, money and women to spare. Alan welcomes his rebellious and eager younger brother into his den of iniquity. Buddy wants to be a writer but his father only wants him to take over the family business, the largest manufacturer of wax fruit on the East Coast. The mother only wants peace in the family even if it makes her nauseous. Meanwhile, Alan’s upstairs neighbor

Peggy has stars in her eyes, while his favorite girl Connie has a song in her heart. The play stars Mick Mugnai as Buddy and Hovey Grosvenor as Alan, with Eric Schindler as the father, Betsy Henderson as the mother, Jessica Moll as Peggy and Mandy Richman as Connie. The run will conclude with 7:30 pm performances on Friday, Aug. 7, and Saturday, Aug. 8, followed by a 2 pm matinée on Sunday, Aug. 9. All performances take place in the Black Box Theater at the Newport Performing Arts Center, 777 W. Olive Street. Tickets are $16 for general admission or $20 for front tables, which come with New York deli-style treats. General admission tickets are available by calling 541-265-2787, online at www.coastarts.org or dropping by the box office. Front table tickets are only available through the box office.

Dan Logue as Jonah and Cat Adamson as Sarah

Go overboard, for “Jonah” Mr. Baker (Eric Schindler) having a notquite-face-to-face talk with son Alan (Hovey Grosvenor)

Peggy (Jessica Moll) seems unsure about the attentions from Alan (Hovey Grosvenor)

4 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015

The choice of first play for a new theater company is always a tough one, but Waldport’s Morningstar Theater is hoping coastal audiences will swallow its tale of Jonah, the reluctant prophet who gets snapped up by a hungry whale. When Jonah’s betrothed barely escapes with her life from the evil city of Nineveh, his dislike of the people there reaches a new high. When God tells him to lovingly reach out to the people he despises, Jonah promptly flees in the opposite direction. After an intense storm at sea, he is swallowed by a whale and carried beneath the waves — only to make a dramatic re-appearance after three days and three nights. Dating from the 7th or 8th Century BC, the story has been given a new twist with contemporary music and a passionate script written by Waldport composer, minister and playwright Rich Peterson. The action takes place on a brand new stage with special effects including an Assyrian ship and a large whale with Jonah riding inside. The 10-member cast comes from all around the Central Coast region, and includes

actors ranging from 11 to 60 years old. They have been working on choreography and singing the nine original songs written for the play. Jonah is played by Dan Logue, who is making his live stage debut and having a blast doing it. “Living the story, while experiencing the energy of the cast and crew is amazing,” he said “I enjoyed writing the story in script form,” said playwright Rich Peterson. “As a kid growing up here in Oregon and seeing whales as a part of my childhood, I have always had a fascination with Jonah. Who doesn’t wonder what it would be like to be swallowed by a whale?” “Jonah - The Musical” will run every Thursday, Friday and Saturday night at 7:30 pm from Thursday, Aug. 6, to Saturday, Sept. 12, at the Waldport Assembly of God, 485 Cedar Street. Admission is free but an offering will be received at intermission, with suggested donations from $8 to $15. For more information and directions, go to www. morningstartheater.net or call 541-270-8948.


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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015 • 5


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cliff notes:

Train-ing day

The No. 6 speeder

I’ve ridden trains all over the world, on journeys over mountains and under tunnels, through the countryside and across the heart of the city. Next week, I’ll have the chance for a different kind of experience on the rails. One that will no doubt be the shortest of my life, and in a car unlike any other. Trains have always been a part of my life. I grew up in a house two blocks and a cornfield from the tracks. Every day, we’d hear the blast of the horn as the trains traveled through. I didn’t appreciate that sound until I moved away, then returned and heard the night train blazing through. To me, it was the loveliest of lullabies. Once as a kid, I tried to persuade my friend to climb into an empty boxcar. You know, just to see where we’d end up. Fortunately, she had a lot more sense than I. At 14, I took the train to Philly every weekend, and later, after a bad parting with a newspaper that nearly ended my career, I took the train from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, to Seattle, sharing the bar car with friendly strangers that included a nanny who carried her own flask and a young man who was returning from rehab. I hadn’t seen my husband in months so, outside of Seattle, I washed

my hair in the ladies’ room sink and pulled on a black halter dress and heels. The dining car was packed for breakfast and no one would let me share a table. I’m not sure what the other women thought I was up to, but they weren’t letting me near their hubs. Finally, a young family invited me to join them. I rode the Ski Train from Denver to Winter Park on a route that climbed 4,000 feet, crossing through 29 tunnels, including the 6.2-mile Moffat Tunnel. I first saw Europe by rail, traveling from Berlin to Dresden, Innsbruck, Munich, Rome and Venice. Later, as a travel writer, I had the good fortune to experience eastern Switzerland along a route that wound through tunnels and over bridges (whose height I really did not want to know), the Alps looming high above. And I like to think there are still more train rides ahead. I’d love to ride the Venice SimplonOrient-Express, or the Maharajas Express. But up next, is the short excursion courtesy of the the Yaquina Pacific Railroad Historical Society museum, which I never knew existed until this summer. Most people don’t, which is too bad, because it’s quite the little gem. Technically, the coming excursion is not a ride, but a demonstration, Tom Chandler, conductor of the Yaquina Pacific Railroad Historical Society, tells me. And it’s not a passenger car, but a motorcar or “speeder,” one of the little cars

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C O M M E N TA R Y • B Y L O R I T O B I A S used for various tasks, including the ferrying of loggers to their jobs outside of town. The demos take guests over a very short distance to give them a feel for the vintage car, along with some history about the railroad. This particular demo is set for August 15 and 16, which also happens to be the weekend of the Wooden Boat Show at the Port of Toledo — which, of course, you’ll want to visit as well. The railroad museum is on property adjoining the Port. The demos will likely be aboard motorcar number six, which in its day belonged to the Coos Bay Lumber Company. “This was a more economical way to handle the workforce than to build a logging camp in the woods with shelter, cook shack, dining hall, machine shop, etc.,” Chandler said. “This was a better bet to recruit married men as well, as they could live in a town, drive to the assembly point and “ride share” to their job.” Now, these are old cars, operated solely by volunteers on rails owned by someone else, so a glitch in the plans would not be unheard of. No matter. A visit to the museum, housed in a Railway Post Office car and the oldest restored caboose in the northwest, is a treat in itself. There you’ll learn about Thomas Hogg, who dreamed up the Oregon Pacific Railroad while waiting to hang in Alcatraz, about one of the last great railroad hold ups, and about Owney the U.S. Post Office canine mascot. And once you’re done, you might just want to find a cold one, sit back and dream of your own journey on the rails. Lori Tobias covered the coast for The Oregonian for nine years. She lives in Newport, where she freelances for a number of regional and national publications. Follow her at loritobias.com.

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015 • 7


lively

Big fair features mediums Psychics, mediums, artisans and more will be on offer in Newport this Saturday, Aug. 8, as the Body/Mind/Spirit Fair gets underway at the Center For God’s Living Heart. The fair features more than 30 speakers, healers, teachers, mystics and craft vendors, selling everything from crystals and oils to aura photography and sacred stone readings. Admission is free and each person attending will receive an event program including a coupon for one free crystal and a free aura clearing by Brenda Watts of Crystal Spirit Healing. There will be several door prize drawings at the end of the day and visitors need not be present to win. Each guest will also receive a gift certificate for $10 off a future 30-minute Reiki healing session with Rev. El’Anya NightingaleWarren. There will be several short seminars offered throughout the day and light refreshments will also be provided. The fair will run from 10 am to 5 pm at 324 SW Coast Hwy. The Center for God’s Living Heart is a spiritual wellness center offering private healing, spiritual growth sessions by appointment and ongoing classes, workshops, lectures and gatherings. For more information, call Rev. El’Anya NightingaleWarren at 541-264-5505 or go to www.godslivingheart. org.

Study a few albacore samples The third annual Great Albacore Tuna BBQ Challenge returns to Newport this Saturday, Aug. 8, with 20 culinary teams from all over the Northwest competing for $3,000 in prize money. From 11 am to 3 pm, professional and amateur teams will serve up their finest tuna creations, using fish caught by boats on Newport’s working bayfront. As well as watching the chefs at work, guests will get to sample as much as they like from the resulting dishes. Awards will be presented at 3 pm. The event will take place at Port of Newport property located at 2000 SE Marine Science Drive, across from the Hatfield Marine Science Center. At 1 pm, Tuna Tom Pfister, local tuna fishing legend and original member of the Oregon Albacore

Commission, will present a barbecue tuna demonstration with free samples included. Tuna recipes from the Oregon Albacore Commission will also be available free of charge. Pelican Brewery will have a special Ale Garden with

sampling of four of their beers included in the ticket price for guests aged 21 and over. There will be free Pepsi as well as a special anniversary cake celebrating the NOAA Pacific Fleet’s fourth year in Newport. As an added attraction,

Summer. Time to make jam. The Second Saturday Summer Celebration & Drum Jam returns to Newport’s Café Mundo on Saturday, Aug. 8, with the Newport Community Drum Circle setting the rhythm. As well as proving an atmosphere that is part street performance, part jam session, part block party, the group will be celebrating the beginning of its eighth year of bringing free, year-round, family-friendly rhythm events to the area. The Second Saturday event, now in its fifth year, is hosted by the Thunder & Lightness Duo, with the Drum Circle’s Chandler Davis on drums and Mary–Beth Nickel on Native American flutes. They are joined each month by scheduled musical guests and often by surprise guests, such as coastal

didgeridoo master Pamela Mortensen who showed up last month. This month’s guest lineup is expected to include two popular repeat guests, Native American flute player Terry Filer from McMinnville and local professional percussionist Rodney Turner. Also expected are regular local guest drummers Gus Willemin, Sara Heimlich, Skip Floraday and John Lee Harris.

The party runs from noon to 3 pm in the outdoor courtyard at Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, in Newport’s Historic Oceanfront Nye Beach district. Audience participation is encouraged. All ages are welcome. The event continues every second Saturday through September. For more information, contact Davis at chandler@ chandlerdavis.com or 541-2724615.

8 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015

guests will get to admire an array of vintage vehicles on display in a classic car show presented by Newport’s Bay City Cruisers. Tickets are $15 for adults, $10 for students and $5 for kids, available in advance or at the gate.

A portion of the proceeds from the event will go to the Newport Food Pantry and Operation Snackpacks emergency food programs for families and children. For more information and tickets, go to www.tunabbq. com.

Looking for a healthy crop Artisans and gourmet food producers are invited to apply for a spot at the 2015 Crafts on the Coast Harvest & Holidays Arts & Crafts Festival, which will take place on Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 7 and 8, in Yachats. The juried event brings together nearly 70 of the best artisans from the Pacific Northwest, offering their handmade crafts, fine art and gourmet food in a warm, family-friendly holiday environment. The event features free tastings of gourmet food and provides a wonderful

opportunity for experiencing art up close and personal with a chance to meet the artisan and often see how the art is constructed with craft demonstrations. The festival is held inside Yachats Commons at 441 Hwy 101 N., with free admission and parking. Application forms are available by calling 541-5474738, with the deadline for jury consideration Sept. 13. Organizations using handmade crafts as a fundraiser are encouraged to apply for a small, free community booth.


lively

Lincoln City celebrates its routes In most towns, missing the parade is no big thing. Can’t get a float together in time? No problem; just sit this one out and come back with a vengeance next year. Not so in Lincoln City, where Main Street doubles as a state highway, meaning any closure quickly causes ripples that extend to Salem and beyond. As such, the Saturday, Sept. 19, parade to celebrate Lincoln City’s 50th birthday qualifies as a genuine once-in-alifetime event. The parade will see the east lanes of Highway 101 closed for a roughly one-mile stretch through the Oceanlake district to allow residents to show off their golden anniversary pride. Most traffic will be diverted along side streets while Highway 101 is closed from 8 am to 1 pm, although large trucks and busses will still be allowed to use the west lanes. The parade will start at 10 am outside the Lincoln City Cultural Center, located at Highway 101 and NE 6th street, and will proceed along the east side of the highway northward to NE 22nd Street, where it will end at the Lincoln City Community Center. Afterward, everyone is invited to head across the street for a community picnic at Kirtsis Park, featuring games, live music and free hotdogs. Spectators are advised to reserve their viewing spots early and check out the Oceanlake businesses while they wait for the parade to come through. To help keep kids occupied, the Bijou Theatre will be screening free cartoons from 8 am to 10 pm.

Make a New ToDo DiscoverNewport.com

The Mo’s float from a recent Gleneden Beach Fourth of July Parade

A tight on-highway timeframe means the parade is limited to no more than 100 entries. To book a space for your float, pick up a registration form at the Lincoln City Chamber of Commerce office at 4039 NW Logan Road. Forms are also available at www.lcchamber. com.

JUST THE TICKET People looking to get the most bang for their buck at this year’s Lincoln County Fair can save big by buying carnival tickets in advance of the event, which takes place from Friday, Aug. 14, to Sunday, Aug. 16, in Newport. Pre-sale carnival tickets, available at JC Market in Newport or the OSU Extension Office, allow fairgoers to save up to 47 percent off the cost of the rides and games on offer from Funtastic Shows, a Portlandbased company.

Tickets cost $16 for six games or rides, with no limit on how many can be pre-purchased. So get ready to spin around, turn your stomach upside down, toss some rings and win some stuffed animals. Admission to the fair and

all concerts is free. To purchase tickets, stop by JC Market’s service desk or visit the OSU Extension Office at 1211 SE Bay Blvd, Newport. For more information, go to www.TheLincolnCountyFair. com.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015 • 9


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Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide

THE ARRRRRT OF THE PASTRY Buccaneering bakers serve up gourmet grub in Taft

A

s Lincoln City fills up for this weekend’s Taft Beach Sandcastle Contest, budding beach architects will find artistry of a different sort on display at Captain Dan’s Pirate Pastry Shop. The lively shop, where sweet treats meet sardonic sensibilities, is crewed by Kathy Draper, who does the baking, and “Cap’n Dan” Draper, who brings the pirate flair. They like to amuse themselves, and their customers, while they sell a treasure chest full of cookies, pies, cakes and pastries with a pirate theme. Chief among the offerings is the shop’s undisputed bestseller — the shipwreck turnover. “It’s probably the only baked good on the seven seas that combines apples, cream cheese and caramel with the sweet bounty of BACON,” Dan said. “We called it a shipwreck because that’s what it looked like when we took it out of the oven.” Before embracing the pirate lifestyle, Kathy and Dan spent most of their careers in rather staid office environments, at the Portland Branch of the Federal Reserve Bank and in other financial institutions. Dan likes to say that when he was with the Fed, he couldn’t even see the box to think out of. Since they opened their pastry shop in February 2008, he has been a full-time pirate, wearing a leather tri-corner hat and

Some of Kathy Draper’s cookie creations

dispensing the pirate puns. Their cases are filled with freshly made turnovers, chewy chocolate-draped macaroons, and sweet, fruity muffin tops. They’re all old-fashioned recipes, stolen from Kathy’s little old pirate grandma. The Drapers have decorated their restaurant with nautical details, smart-aleck signs, driftwood mobiles and a mechanical parrot named Polly. In between the cookies, pies and cakes you’ll find maple cinnamon rolls, macaroons and Pirate Eyes (small tarts filled with jam). As Cap’n Dan loves to snarl, “It’s just another day in Pirate Eyes.” Kathy, who was a prizewinning baker long before they opened the shop, believes in old family recipes, like sticky bread and layer cakes, made with real butter

and shortening, real whipped cream and fresh eggs, and Northwest favorites like marionberries and hazelnuts. She prides herself on an extra-flaky pie crust and cookies that you can’t stop eating. The rolls and coffee go down easy with a cup of joe from the Pirate Coffee Company, an unaffiliated but equally arrr-dent roasting and retail shop in Depoe Bay. The Drapers grind each batch as they brew it, so the coffee is always fresh and flavorful. Customers are welcome to take their bounty and leave, but if they stay, Cap’n Dan and his first mate try to show them a good time. They provide coloring pages and books at a kid-level counter, open to children and adults alike, and give away lots of temporary pirate tattoos. The tables are laden

Captain Dan Draper makes pirate talk a piece of cake

with “Pirate” magazines, and the shelves are stocked with logo cups, T-shirts and Captain Dan’s Pirate Pastry Shop ball caps. The captain himself used to wear one of the latter, until a young critic stepped in. “This little kid, he was about 7 years old, he came

up and said, ‘Cap’n Dan, pirates don’t wear baseball caps.’ So I decided to wear this pirate’s hat instead,” Dan said. “A few minutes later, he looked at my feet and said, ‘Cap’n Dan, pirates don’t wear Crocs.’ I said, ‘Cap’n Dan does. Cap’n Dan’s feet hurt.’”

Captain Dan’s Pirate Pastry Shop, at the corner of SW 51st Street and Hwy. 101 in the Taft neighborhood of Lincoln City, is open from 9 am to 5 pm, every day except Tuesday. You’ll f ind menus on the web at www.piratepastry.com. For details or to order ahead, call 541-996-4600.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015 • 11


Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide „

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OUR SIGNATURE RESTAURANT ‘The Dining Room’ An intimate setting with spectacular views of the Siletz Bay and the Salishan Spit. Our Chefs create dishes using the finest regional ingredients featuring locally grown produce, fresh seafood, and Prime steaks.

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12 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015

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get out!

Enjoy a packed weekend Lincoln city beach fun starts with sand scultpting and continues with family games

With “The Lego Movie” dominating last summer’s box office and a Minecraft movie set to do likewise pretty soon, there can be no doubt that the art of building has suddenly become very cool indeed. And for some recreational architects who have grown up using these blocky systems, this weekend’s Taft Beach Sandcastle Contest might be the first time they get to build something with a rounded edge. The Saturday, Aug. 8, contest will run from 11 am to 5 pm and invites people of all ages and skill levels to let their imaginations run riot on the shores of Siletz Bay. Great prizes are also available, with competition categories including groups, pairs, individuals over 12 years old and kids aged 12 and under, with each category receiving its own area of the beach. Specialized categories such as Best Dog, Best Cat, Best Sandcastle, Best Mo’s Chowder Hat

and others will also be available. A $100 cash prize will be given for each category winner, and the kids’ category will have 1st-, 2nd- and 3rdplace winners with each taking home a “Beach Bucket Surprise.” As beach builders toil on their sandy creations, they can enjoy live music from local DJ Bret Lucich, who sets up his sound system on the Taft Dock. Judging will take place at 3:30 pm, with winners announced shortly after. The event is co-sponsored by the Bay Area Merchants Association (BAMA) and Mo’s Restaurant in Lincoln City. “We are happy to be hosting the Sandcastle Contest this August,” said BAMA President Alex Ward. “It is such a great tradition for families to participate in. This year, Mo’s is providing most of the logistical support and we are incredibly grateful for their support of the community.”

“Mo’s is super excited to be taking over the Sandcastle Contest this year,” said Theresa Engbretson, manager of Mo’s Lincoln City. “It is the 38th year for the contest, and we invite our visitors to come down to Taft Beach for a day of family fun.” Registration begins at 11 am on the dock next to Mo’s on SW 51st Street. All participants must register at the sign-up table before starting to build. There is a fee of one or more cans of food per entrant, which will be donated to the Lincoln City Food Pantry. Entries must be built using only sand, water, shells and other natural beach material found that day. Hand tools and forms of any sort may be used in the construction process but may not support the structure. Power tools are not allowed. This is an amateur competition; professional sand artists are disqualified from winning prizes. For more information, contact the Bay Area Merchants Association at 541-614-0771 or go to www. oregoncoast.org/sandcastle-contest.

The next day

Normally on the day following a sand castle contest there is not much to see. The merciless tide wipes away all traces of masterpieces and follies alike, leaving the beach as if nothing had ever happened. But this year, the fun will continue after the tide has been and gone, with the Bay Area Merchants Association sponsoring two family events on Sunday, Aug. 9, in recognition of Lincoln City’s 50th birthday. The “Taft Beach Trials” will be run on the beach near Mo’s Restaurant, giving children of all ages the opportunity to compete in old-fashioned fun such as three-legged races, sack races, mummy wrap races, wheelbarrow races and others. There is no charge to enter. Contestants must register at the beach near Mo’s by 12:30 pm, with races scheduled to start at 1 pm. Prizes will be awarded to the fastest competitors in four different age categories. Meanwhile beachgoers are invited to scour the sands in search of colorful 50th Celebration floats hidden on the beach to the west of the Taft Dock. The hunt will start at 11:30 am and end at 5 pm. Searchers who find floats can present them at Eleanor’s Undertow Café at 869 SW 51st Street for additional prizes. For more information, go to taftbeach.com or email bama.secretary@gmail.com.

A Golden Anniversary float to celebrate Lincoln City’s 50th birthday

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015 • 13


artsy

The mother of all art shows and ink on wood. My inspiration is also found through the observation of the unfolding and sinuous patterns in nature. Within these patterns lies a universal language holding transcendent qualities.” Dedijer-Small’s art pieces are often displayed in groupings, which she calls “families.” She doesn’t consider a single piece complete until she finishes the family. One such family consisted of 70 pieces that communicated and blended together. “For me,” she said, “there’s something grounded in the wood, perhaps because wood is the material closest to nature. Being from the Northwest, perhaps it’s contextual.” Dedijer-Small grew up in Venice Beach, California, but her family moved north during her teenage years and she graduated from Waldport High School on the Oregon Coast. After graduating from San Jose University, she spent more than 10 years living in the Bay Area before returning to the Oregon Coast, where she spent several years before relocating to Portland. In Newport, Dedijer-Small opened and operated a vintage

C an’t beachcom b... Find Treasures H ere!

R ed B arn Flea M art

Open Daily 9 to 5 PM 33920 Hwy. 101 S. in Cloverdale

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clothing store. She and her husband, both surfers and outdoor adventurers, also completed a four-month sailing trip from Newport to New Zealand. The exhibit, hosted by the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts, will be on display through Sept. 5, available to view from noon to 4 pm, Tuesday through Saturday, in the Upstairs Gallery of the center at 777 NW Beach Drive.

NOW PLAYING

STARTIN G FRIDAY ,AUGUST 7TH M e r ylStre e p in

LINCOLN COUNTY AREA EVENTS

t Newport Performing Arts Center: PORTHOLE PLAYERS – “COME BLOW YOUR HORN,” OCCA SHAKESPEARE CAMP, NATIONAL THEATRE LONDON LIVE IN HD – “A VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE” & “THE HARD PROBLEM,” OREGON COAST SWEET ADELINES – “HARMONY CELEBRATION” t Theatre West, Lincoln City: AGATHA CHRISTIE’S “THE MOUSETRAP” t Sylvia Beach Hotel, Newport: DINNER WITH WILL (SHAKESPEARE) with Rod Molzahn t Newport Public Library: LITERARY FLICKS – “GOODBYE MR. CHIPS” t Morningstar Theatre, Waldport: “JONAH – THE MUSICAL”

RICK I an d th e FLASH

Sa t.,M o n .,Thu r.Au g 8,10,13 La te Sa tu rd a y Night 10:30 PM PG13

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BIJOU THEATRE

OREGON COAST COUNCIL FOR THE ARTS

More online at coastarts.org

14 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015

SUM M ER M ORN IN G M ATIN EES!

M ON TY PY THON ’S M EAN IN G OF LIFE 11:00AM $2

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1624 NE HWY 101, LINCOLN CITY 541-994-8255 • cinemalovers.com

Make a Fused-Glass Project and SAVE! Starting at $30 & up Create beautiful plates, platters, bowls, coasters, sconces, window pieces, etc. Gift Certificates Available

GLASS FUSING STUDIO

4933 SW Hwy. 101 • 541-994-2427 • Lincoln City • morart.net

46-14

A new exhibit at the Newport Visual Arts Center explores motherhood, introspection and patterns in nature — all through the medium of gouache and ink on wood. “Mooka,” by Yasmina DedijerSmall, opens with a public reception from 5 to 7 pm on Friday, Aug. 7, including a talk from the artist at 6:30 pm. “Mooka” is the third solo exhibition for Dedijer-Small, who currently lives and works in Portland. She received a Bachelor of Fine Art from San Jose University and has exhibited in the US and abroad. Her work has been published several times in Japan’s Blue magazine, The Surfer’s Journal, Salted and Foam Symmetry. Dedijer-Small said the works in “Mooka” focus on the daily activities associated with motherhood — including feeding, changing, dressing and nurturing. “My new body of work is an exploration of these daily patterns of devotion … and the relationship art has with introspection,” she said. “Both influences inform my art-making process which involves hours of repetitive detail using gouache


Northwest Author Fair *

Each summer we host the Northwest Author Fair, a FREE event with dozens of authors signing, including best sellers and award winners from fantasy, mystery, history, scifi, YA, kid’s books, and more. The event takes place Saturday, August 15th, 11am-3pm in the plaza right next to Bob’s Beach Books at 1747 NW Hwy 101 in Lincoln City.

T here’ s som ething for everyone so don’ t m issit!

LincolnCityOutlets.com hwy at milepost ﹒

*REST "RELAXATION"&"RETAIL Summer is the perfect time to rest, relax and enjoy some great shopping. So, head to the coast and save big on all the new summer styles with everyday discounts, sales and rewards. Leave the heat and crowds behind — and discover the fun and relaxing pace of Lincoln City Outlets on the Oregon Coast.

www.bobsbeachbooks.net 541-994-4467

shop at

Ya c h a t s Farmers Market Fine Fi ine Food, Fooodd, Fresh Produce, Produce Beeaauti Beautif Beautiful uttif iffu fuull A Art rt aand nd Cr Crafts C raf afts ftts t

american eagle chico’s • gap nike • coach hollister & co﹒ the north face columbia sportswear eddie bauer pendleton old navy • levi’s under armour and much more! “Like” us on facebook

join our free Rewards on the Coast™ • points • prizes • privileges •

Mid-May through October Sundays 9 am- 2 pm Hwy 101 & 4th St in Yachats www.YachatsFarmersMarket.webs.com yachatsfarmersmarket@live.com

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015 • 15


Friday, Aug. 7

Coast Calendar

Tillamook County Fair

“Mooka”

Tillamook County Fairgrounds • Tillamook From kids’ activities and carnival rides to live grandstand music shows and the world-famous Pig-N-Ford races, this year’s fair aims to please guests of all ages. 10 am-10 pm, 4603 3rd Street. $10 for adults; $6 for kids. FMI, go to www. tillamookfair.com.

Newport Visual Arts Center An opening reception for this exhibit of Yasmina Dedijer-Small’s artwork, exploring motherhood, introspection and patterns in nature through the medium of gouache and ink on wood. 5-7 pm, 777 NW Beach Drive, including a talk from the artist at 6:30 pm.

Nesika Illahee Pow-Wow

Friday Night Clay

Pauline Ricks Memorial Grounds • Siletz Join the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians for this celebration of American Indian culture, with a Royalty Crowing at 6 pm and a Grand Entry at 7 pm, followed by dancing for all. Free shuttle picks up from various sites in Siletz. Continues Saturday and Sunday.

Lincoln City Cultural Center Get creative with clay and learn the basics of handbuilding in this one-night, all-levels course. $20 includes materials and instruction. Ages 12 and up. 7-9 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI or to register, contact Caroline at 575-621-2634 or mail@lincolncityclay.com.

Newport Visual Arts Center An opening reception for this traveling exhibit of Oregon photographs taken by Dorothea Lange in 1939 while working for the Farm Security Administration. 5-7 pm, 777 NW Beach Drive, followed by a presentation from Oregon Cultural Heritage Commission Director David Milholland.

The Yaquina Head Lighthouse • Photo by Nancy Steinberg

Saturday, Aug. 8 cont. at this fair, featuring vendors of everything from crystals and oils to aura photography and sacred stone readings. Free admission. 10 am to 5 pm, 324 SW Coast Hwy. FMI, call 541-264-5505 or go to www. godslivingheart.org.

Second Saturday Summer Celebration Café Mundo • Newport The Newport Community Drum Circle presents this summer-long, family-friendly all-ages community celebration, hosted by the Thunder & Lightness flute and percussion duo and special musical guests. Noon-3 pm, rain or shine, 209 NW Coast Street. FMI, contact Chandler Davis at chandler@chandlerdavis. com or 541-272-4615.

Tillamook Farmers Market

Sandcastle Contest Beachside State Park • Waldport Free family fun with prizes on offer for the best creations. 10 am-1 pm, 5960 SW Pacific Coast Hwy.

Free Beach Yoga Roads End • Lincoln City Bring a towel, water and a smile for this free beach yoga session led by Britt Canese. All levels welcome. 11 amnoon, 64th street and Logan Road. Check the Humble Warrior Facebook page for rain cancellations.

Depoe Bay Craft Fair South of the bridge • Depoe Bay 9 am-4 pm, 474 SE Hwy. 101.

Waldport Farmers Market

Downtown Tillamook 9 am-2 pm, 2nd and Laurel. FMI, call 503-812-9326.

Waldport Community Center 10 am-4:30 pm, 265 Alsea Hwy.

Neskowin Farmers Market

Birding walk

Neskowin Beach Wayside 9 am to 1 pm, right off Highway 101. Newport Farmers Market Highway 101 & Angle 9 am to 1 pm, across from Newport City Hall.

Nesika Illahee Pow-Wow

“Come Blow Your Horn”

Pauline Ricks Memorial Grounds • Siletz Join the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians for this celebration of American Indian culture, Grand Entry at noon followed by dancing for all. Free shuttle picks up from various sites in Siletz.

Newport Performing Arts Center 2 pm. See Friday listing for details.

Float hunt Taft Beach • Lincoln City Scour the sands in search of colorful glass floats celebrating Lincoln City’s 50th birthday. 11:30 am to 5 pm on the beach to the west of the Taft Dock. Searchers who find floats can present them at Eleanor’s Undertow Café at 869 SW 51st Street for additional prizes. FMI, go to taftbeach.com or email bama.secretary@gmail.com.

Theatre West • Lincoln City 1:30 pm. See Friday listing for details.

Taft Beach Trials Taft Beach • Lincoln City Kids of all ages can vie for prizes in old-fashioned favorites such as three-legged races, sack races, mummy wrap races, wheelbarrow races and more. Free. 12:30 pm on the beach near Mo’s Restaurant. FMI, go to taftbeach.com or email bama.secretary@gmail.com.

Birthday Bash SLOT TOURNAMENT

August 15th, sign-ups at 1pm "It's Better at the Beach!" "It

Theatre West • Lincoln City When a murderer strikes at a snowed-in boarding house, all the guests become suspects in this

Newport Performing Arts Center An uproarious Neil Simon comedy is set in the era of Mad Men and the Rat Pack. Bored would-be writer Buddy goes to live with his bachelor brother in the big city, leading to all manner of shenanigans. 7:30 pm, 777 W. Olive Street. $16 for general admission or $20 for front tables with deli snacks. FMI, call 541-265-2787 or go to www.coastarts.org.

Newport Performing Arts Center The National Theatre Live series continues with a screening of this dark and passionate production from London’s Young Vic Theatre, which sees the great Arthur Miller confront the American Dream. 7 to 10 pm, 777 W. Olive Street. Tickets, $15.50 for adults, $12.50 for seniors and $10.50 for students, available at www.coastarts.org, at the PAC box office or by calling 541-265-ARTS (2787).

“Jonah - The Musical” Waldport Assembly of God 7:30 pm. See Thursday listing for details.

Sunday, Aug. 9

“The Mousetrap”

Bayocean Spit • Tillamook Join the Audubon Society of Lincoln City for a stroll in search of migrating shorebirds stopping over at Tillamook Bay. Meet at 9 am in the parking lot. FMI and directions, call 541-994-9720.

Laneda Avenue • Manzanita This evening market features farm-fresh produce, prepared foods, crafts and a rotating winery booth. 5-8 pm, 5th and Laneda. FMI, call 503-939-5416.

“The Mousetrap”

“Come Blow Your Horn”

“A View from the Bridge”

Manzanita Farmers Market

“Dorothea Lange in Oregon”

classic whodunit from Agatha Christie. 8 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. $14 for adults, $12 for seniors and students and $9 for children 12 and under. For tickets, call 541-994-5663 and leave a message.

Spotlight Show Yaquina Art Association Gallery • Newport An exhibit featuring work from local photographers Laren Woolley and Donna McCoy, both of whom find their inspiration in the natural world. Show runs through Friday, Aug. 21, available to view daily from 11 am to 5 pm at 789 NW Beach Drive.

Yachats Plant Clinic Yachats Demo Garden This Master Gardener Week event features demonstrations on grafting, composting and plant propagation with cuttings, along with a demo of the newly installed drip irrigation system, plus tours of the garden. 11 am-1 pm, E. 7th Street. FMI, call 541-574-6534 or email liz. olsen@oregonstate.edu.

Lincoln City Farmers Market Lincoln City Cultural Center Set up on the center’s front lawn, the market’s vendors offer homegrown, home-baked and handcrafted treats. 9 am-3 pm, 540 NE

Quilts by the Sea

Taft Beach Sandcastle Contest

Newport Recreation Center The Oregon Coastal Quilters Guild celebrates 25 years with more than 300 quilts, a variety of vendors, demonstrations, antique quilts, a boutique, children’s activity corner, and small quilt auction for charity. 10 am-6 pm, 225 SE Avery Street. $6 for adults; free for kids 12 and under. FMI, go to www.OregonCoastalQuilters.org. Continues Saturday.

SW 51st Street • Lincoln City Let your imagination run riot in this fun family contest, with great prizes on offer for the most outstanding specimens in a range of categories. 11 am-5 pm, register at the Taft Dock next to Mo’s Restaurant.

“How Oceanography Saved the World” Hatfield Marine Science Center • Newport That’s a bold title for a talk. Come along and see if Rick Spinrad, chief scientist for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, can do it justice. 3 pm, 2030 SE Marine Science Drive.

50th celebration Hatfield Marine Science Center • Newport Mark the center’s half century of service to the coast with guest speakers, displays and a historical slide show at 4:30 pm, followed by a reception from 5:30 to 7 pm, 2030 SE Marine Science Drive. FMI, go to hmsc.oregonstate.edu/50th or contact Maryann Bozza at 541-867-0234 or maryann.bozza@ oregonstate.edu.

Tillamook County Fair Tillamook County Fairgrounds • Tillamook From kids’ activities and carnival rides to live grandstand music shows and the world-famous Pig-N-Ford races, this year’s fair aims to please guests of all ages. 10 am-10 pm, 4603 3rd Street. $10 for adults; $6 for kids. FMI, go to www.tillamookfair.com.

Glass art demo Jennifer Sears Glass Art Studio Seattle artist Nao Yamamoto will show how she creates art inspired by the simple beauty of glass and the vibrant force of life. Guests can enjoy wine, cheese and gummy bears. 7-9 pm, 4821 SW Hwy. 101.

Guided paddle Siletz Bay National Wildlife Refuge • Lincoln City Explore the sinuous channels and tidal sloughs

Monday, Aug. 10

Hwy. 101. From 11 am to 1 pm, have your say on Lincoln City’s proposed transportation system plan, a longterm road map for City transportation investments in the coming 20 years. FMI, call 541-994-9994 or go to www. lincolncityfarmersmarket.org.

Yachats Farmers Market Yachats Commons 9 am-2 pm, 441 Hwy. 101 N.

Pacific City Farmers Market Library • Pacific City It’s Hello Kitty day at the market, with United Paws offering some beautiful kitties for adoption. Pacific City’s own Mark Hemens will play from the American Songbook on piano. 10 am-2 pm at Brooten Road and Camp Street.

Second Sunday Open Mic South Beach Community Center • Newport You’ve got the mic for 10 minutes; what will you do? Sing a song, read a poem, tell a story, lead a jam? Anything goes in this supportive atmosphere. Mere listeners welcome. 5-7 pm, 3024 Ferry Slip Road. FMI, call 541-563-7285.

Saturday, Aug. 8 of these salt marshes, home to abundant wildlife. Bring your own canoe or kayak. Other equipment available to borrow. 9-11 am. For reservations, email peter_pearsall@fws.gov or call 541-270-0610.

a beer garden and a classic car show. 11 am-3 pm, SE Marine Science Drive, just south of the Yaquina Bay Bridge. Tickets, $15 for adults, $10 for students and $5 for kids, available at www. tunabbq.com or at the gate.

Tico Marimba

Quilts by the Sea

Nehalem Bay State Park • Manzanita Never has an all-xylophone group been so much fun. Come see why at this free evening performance. 7:30 pm, just south of Manzanita. FMI, call 503-368-5943.

Newport Recreation Center 9 am-4 pm. See Friday listing for details.

Pauline Ricks Memorial Grounds • Siletz Join the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians for this celebration of American Indian culture, with a parade at 10 am, followed by a Grand Entry at 1 pm and dancing all afternoon and evening. Free shuttle picks up from various sites in Siletz. Continues Sunday.

Great Albacore Tuna BBQ Challenge Port of Newport Watch professional and amateur teams cook up their finest tuna creations — and then help eat the results at this fun event, which also features

• On the beach in Lincoln City • 1-888-CHINOOK • chinookwindscasino.com

16 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015

“Jonah - The Musical” Waldport Assembly of God 7:30 pm. See Thursday listing for details.

Tuesday, Aug. 11 Into the Woods

Bucket list

Artists Studio Association • Lincoln City This class from local artist Krista Eddy offers kids the chance to follow in the footsteps of the world’s most famous artists, unlocking their own inspiration along the way. 1 to 2:30 pm, 620 NE Hwy. 101. $5. To register, call Eddy at 541-992-4292.

Lincoln City Cultural Center This four-session course will see kids using the themes of plants and animals to add texture and fun to animal bowls, sculptures and more. Ages 10-16. $60 (includes all materials). 2-3:30 pm each Tuesday in August, 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI or to register, go to www.lincolncityclay.com or contact Caroline at 575-621-2634 or mail@ lincolncityclay.com.

Sustainable Living Research Center • Lincoln City Cut down your food waste by signing up for a Bokashi Bucket to transform table scraps into a nutrient-rich mush that is perfect for kickstarting a compost bin. Buckets available 2:30 to 6:30 pm every Wednesday, 6349 S Hwy.

“Walk with a Ranger”

Master Gardener Week

Cape Perpetua Scenic Area • Yachats Join retired chief park ranger Michael Noack for a guided, 30- to 60-minute hike along easy-to-moderate trails. Free, but a day-use fee or recreation pass is required. Noon, three miles south of Yachats on Highway 101. FMI, call 541-547-3289.

Oregon Coast Community College • Newport Head to the South Beach Demo Garden for a presentation on greenhouse and cloche growing conditions and maintenance. 10:30 am to noon, 400 SE College Way. FMI, call 541-574-6534 or email liz.olsen@ oregonstate.edu.

“Monty Python’s The Meaning of Life”

Book Sale

Bijou Theatre • Lincoln City The mints might be wafer-thin but the laughs are full-bellied in this R-rated, 1983 comedy classic. $2. 11 am, 1624 NE Hwy. 101. Also screening Saturday and Thursday.

Driftwood Public Library • Lincoln City 10 am to 2 pm, second floor, 801 SW Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-557-9400.

Sylvia Beach Hotel • Newport Shakespeare scholar Rod Molzahn plays the part of Big Will himself at this fund-raising dinner. $40 per person. 6 pm, 267 NW Cliff Street. Reservations required; call 541-265-2787.

Led Zepagain L

August Au A u 28 & 29, 8pm $10 TTickets Ti i

"It's Better at the Beach!" • On

Tillamook Tales Tillamook Forestry Center Berries are the subject of this month’s story time, featuring songs and activities geared for kids aged 2 to 5 and their caregivers. 11:30 am, 22 miles east of Tillamook on Hwy. 6. FMI, call 866-930-4646.

Body/Mind/Spirit Fair Center For God’s Living Heart • Newport Find psychics, mediums, artisans and more

101. FMI, go to www.sustainablelivingcenteroregon.com.

Waldport Wednesday Market Waldport Community Center The place to shop for flowers, potted plants, jewelry, flowers, tie dyes, glass art and more. 10 am-4:30 pm, 265 Alsea Hwy.

Thursday, Aug. 13 “The Taming of the Shrew” Newport Performing Arts Center SeeShakespeareCampstudentsperformanabridged productionoftheclassiccomedy.directedandcostumedby ShakespearescholarRodMolzahn.2pmandagainat6pm,777 W.OliveStreet.Forregistration,contactJanat541-265-2787.

presentation based on her book, “Exploring the Oregon Coast Trail,” full of advice on how to enjoy the 400-mile trek as well as trivia on the sights along the way. 6:30 pm, 441 Hwy. 101 N. $5 suggested donation. FMI, go to YachatsAcademy.org or call 541-961-6695.

Gleneden Harvest Market “Jonah - The Musical” Garden tour

Dinner With Will

Lincoln City Cultural Center, A free demonstration of this traditional Japanese firing process, plus the chance to buy a pot and try it yourself. 11 am-3 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call Caroline Brooks at 575-621-2634.

Wednesday, Aug. 12

Art Smart

Yaquina Bay Lighthouse Garden • Newport Get the scoop on a second-grade success story on a guided tour of this long-running school garden project from Lincoln County Master Gardeners. Free. Noon to 2 pm, 740 SW Government Street.

Born in August? Happy Birthday! As a special gift, we invite you to join us for a chance to win a share of 2,500 $and Dollars!

Theatre West • Lincoln City 8 pm. See Friday listing for details.

“Monty Python’s The Meaning of Life”

Raku on the lawn

Lincoln City Cultural Center See the classic tale brought to life by the Missoula Children’s Theatre. 3 pm and again at 7 pm, 540 NE Highway 101. Tickets, $10 reserved, $5 general and free for youth 12 and under, available at lincolncityculturalcenter.org or by calling 541-9949994.

“The Mousetrap”

Newport Performing Arts Center 7:30 pm. See Friday listing for details.

Bijou Theatre • Lincoln City 11 am. See Monday listing for details.

“Sleeping Beauty”

Nesika Illahee Pow-Wow

“Come Blow Your Horn”

Lynyrd L y Skynyrd

September Se S e 11 & 12, 8pm Tickets $61 - $91 Ti

Waldport Assembly of God Go overboard for Morningstar Theater’s take on the reluctant prophet who gets snapped up by a hungry whale. 7:30 pm, 485 Cedar Street. Suggested donation $8 to 15. FMI, go to www. morningstartheater.net or call 541-270-8948.

Tips for the trail Yachats Commons Avid Oregon Coast explorer Connie Soper gives a

George Thorogood G & special guest

Los Lobos L

October Oc O c 2 & 3, 8pm $40 - $55 TTickets Ti i

Side Door Café • Gleneden Beach 1-6 pm , 6675 Gleneden Beach Loop.

Toledo Street Market Main Street • Toledo 10 am to 3 pm.

“Monty Python’s The Meaning of Life” Bijou Theatre • Lincoln City 11 am. See Monday listing for details.

SEE THE STARS SHINE!

the beach in Lincoln City • 1-888-MAIN ACT • chinookwindscasino.com

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015 • 17


Come stay with us

Look good on paper? The Oregon Coast Council for the Arts is looking for artists to lead workshops at the Newport Paper & Book Arts Festival XXI, which will take place in April 2016. Previous workshops have included various methods of papermaking, paper casting and bookbinding as well as techniques including suminigashi (paper marbling), orizomegami and itajime (folded paper resist dyeing.) Organizers welcome new and innovative techniques as well as traditional processes and encourage applicants to submit multiple workshops for consideration. Classes take place at the Newport Visual Arts Center, where classrooms can accommodate between eight and 16 students. Instructors are paid based on how many students

actually attend the class, receiving $325 for six to 10 students and $350 for 11 students or more. All workshops are full day, running from 9:30 am to 12:30 pm and 1:30 pm to 4:30 pm, with an hour break for lunch from 12:30 to 1:30 pm. Travel and lodging reimbursements are also available along with several other benefits. Full details and application materials are available at www. coastarts.org. Look under “Events” or search for “XXI” The deadline for proposals is Sept. 30, and organizers will mail out acceptance

confirmations in October or early November. For workshop questions, contact Tom Webb at 541265-6569 or twebb@coastarts. org. For registration questions, contact Khlo Brateng at npaf@coastarts.org. Photo courtesy of Japanexperterna.se

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18 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015


get out!

BIRDING ON THE BAY

Go fish, in Garibaldi The annual Tuna Classic will launch from the fishing village of Garibaldi on Friday and Saturday, Aug. 21 and 22. The competition, the largest outdoor charity tournament event in the Pacific Northwest, draws more than 300 fishing participants and 600 guests. Last year, the teams hooked 15,000 pounds of tuna, which was donated to food banks on the Northern and Central Oregon Coast. Although not required to do so, anglers often donate their ‘five biggest tuna catch’ competition winnings to the food banks; in 2014 alone, food banks received $45,000. The event starts Friday, Aug. 21, with early fishing fun and social

The Audubon Society of Lincoln City birders are heading north this Saturday, Aug. 8, and are inviting everyone to come along for a trip to Bayocean Spit on Tillamook Bay. The group, led by Jack

Hurt and Mark Elliot, will be hoping to see a variety of migrating shorebirds as they stop over in Tillamook Bay as well as bird residents of the spit, dunes and forest. No prior birding experience is required and binoculars and

guidebooks will be provided. The group will meet at 9 am in the parking lot at the base of the spit. From Highway 101 in Tillamook, turn west on 3rd Street/Three Capes Scenic Loop and go three miles to Bayocean

Spit. Turn right and follow the gravel road. For more information, call 541-9949720. For descriptions of upcoming field trips, go to http://lincolncityaudubon. org/calendar.html.

events. Saturday is the main fishing competition, and in the evening a barbecue and awards dinner. “Over its 11-year history, the organization has donated more than $1 million dollars to charities on the Oregon coast,” said event director Del Stephens. “In addition, participants and visitors spend each year more than $350,000 in the host community during the two-day event.” The Tuna Classic is also a qualifying event for the Offshore World Fishing Championships in Costa Rica, so it attracts avid anglers from all over the U.S. For more information or to register, go to www. oregontunaclassic.org.

Help out at the Head The Nature Conservancy is inviting people interested in preserving Cascade Head to participate in a volunteer work party taking place on Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 22 and 23. Located near Lincoln City, Cascade Head is a coastal promontory overlooking the Pacific Ocean that provides critical habitat for native prairie grasses, rare wildflowers, the threatened Oregon Silverspot butterfly and the Cascade Head catchfly. On Saturday, volunteers will work a full day, helping remove Queen Anne’s lace on the pinnacle. On Sunday morning, the group will

perform trail work. The work party includes a four- to five-mile roundtrip hike with elevation gain and might require volunteers to hike off trail and stand on uneven ground while working. Participants should bring hiking shoes, a daypack, lunch and snacks, a full water bottle, layers of clothing to be prepared for any weather, a hat and sunscreen. Bring gloves if possible; if not, some will be available to borrow. For more information or to register, contact 503-8028100, orvolunteers@tnc.org or the alternate contact, Debbie Pickering at 541-994-5564.

Least sandpipers • Photo by Jack Doyle

An excuse to ’yak all day long Experienced kayakers and firsttimers alike are invited to join the Newport 60+ Activity Center for an easy outing at Ona Beach State Park on Friday, Aug. 21. The Newport Adventure Van will be leaving the center at 7:30 am and heading to the Beaver Creek Welcome

Center where participants will meet up with their guide. Kayaks, life preservers and paddles will be provided. Located eight miles south of Newport, Ona Beach State Park is a fine, forested ocean flat, now developed for extensive daytime shore use. The park has easy access for

beachcombing and is great for large picnic gatherings. The outing will run from 7:30 am to 3 pm and costs $30 per person. Participants should pack a sack lunch and some snacks. For more information, call 541-2659617.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015 • 19


get up!

WINGING IT Get some perspective with a vintage biplane ride over Newport Story & photos by Nancy Steinberg For the TODAY

A

s I gathered my writer’s research tools for my latest assignment — camera, notebook, pencil, coffee — on a recent gorgeous Monday morning, I was disappointed that I could not find my bomber jacket and white silk scarf. But I did practice shaking my fist and shouting to the heavens, “Curse you, Red Baron!” Feeling ready, I headed to the Newport Municipal Airport to meet up with pilot Dana Anderson and take a ride in his 1930s-era biplane. The lovingly restored black and orange Travel Air B4000 plane was fueled up and ready to go. I had one fleeting moment of nervousness when I saw the open cockpit, but I figured, if Snoopy can do it, I can do it. I climbed into the leathertrimmed front cockpit and buckled up. Anderson provided me with a classic aviator’s hoodlike helmet and headset so we could communicate during the flight. While the plane warmed up, Anderson, a pilot with 30 years’ experience, explained that the 1929 plane had originally been owned and operated by the U.S. Department of Commerce, possibly for prohibition control. It passed into private hands in 1933, and continued to haul passengers until 1937. The plane saw a number of other owners, and had deteriorated into little more than a pile of parts when Anderson bought it in the late 1990s from a collector in Vancouver, BC. It took him about two years to restore the craft to its former

Looking over South Beach and the Yaquina Bay Bridge

The author aloft (sans white silk scarf)

glory. Where do you get parts for an airplane built in 1929? “I had to make a lot of them myself,” Anderson said. Designed to take off from gravel air strips rather than modern paved runways, the biplane did not need much time or runway length to lift into the air. We were soon airborne, and climbed to about 1,000 feet. The flight was smooth, easy, and comfortable, not scary or turbulent in the least. We ranged in altitude between 1,000 and 1,500 feet, at a comfortable cruising speed. Anderson headed north, and Yaquina Bay soon came into view. For visitors, Anderson narrates the trip, pointing out the fishing fleet, the aquarium, Nye Beach, Yaquina Head and other landmarks. I had never seen Newport from the air before. It is simply magnificent — the ocean is a brilliant greenish blue, the sun glints off the sand, and the perspective from the air makes the dunes, the bridge, and our iconic buildings all stand out in stark relief. Anderson dipped a wing toward the Hatfield

Marine Science Center where my husband toiled away, unaware that I was flying right over him. The aerial view of the exquisite angles and arches of the Yaquina Bay Bridge was a highlight of the flight. It occurred to me that the bridge and the biplane are products of the same era, when things were made to be as beautiful as they are functional. The dredge Yaquina was hard at work clearing the channel coming into the bay and fishing boats were coming and going. We continued north along Nye Beach — no whales to be seen, but Anderson says they often see whales further north, near Otter Rock. We flew as far as Yaquina Head and my jaw dropped at just how amazing that landmark is from the air. The contrast of the white lighthouse against the black basalt of the headland is dramatic, and the headland is so much more rugged-looking from the air than it is from ground level. We turned back south,

Dana Anderson with his 1929 biplane

passing over Newport again. We flew by the bay and the bridge from the west this time; I loved seeing the heart of town spread out before me in one panoramic view. I noted how remote Newport seems from the air – surrounding our little coastal town was nothing but green, as far as I could see, with the coastal range in the distance. All too soon the Newport Municipal Airport came into view and we touched

20 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015

down in a smooth and easy landing. Anderson is warm and personable, a terrific ambassador for early aviation and a knowledgeable tour guide. He admits that he is not flying the biplane to make money — only to pay its bills. He gets to meet all kinds of happy people in the bargain. The plane will be available for flights during the summer months, weather permitting

(and it seems to be permitting an awful lot, this year). Anderson can take two passengers at a time, as long as their combined weight is under 400 pounds. Flights range from $150 for a 12-minute flight to $499 for an hour. Come see Anderson at the Newport airport, or give him a call at 503-701-7590 to set up a flight. Don’t forget your camera, but the silk scarf, it turns out, is optional.


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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015 • 21


on the cover

IT’S KIND OF A PIG DEAL

TILLAMOOK COUNTY FAIR BRINGS HOME THE BACON AGAIN

T

he heart of a pig, as any cardiologist will tell you, is very similar to that of a human — a fact that accounts for its wide use in research and testing around the world. It also gives some insight into how these porcine pumps will react when their owners are stuffed into a farmer’s armpit and whirled around a racetrack at high speed. Returning for their 91st year at the Tillamook County Fair, the world-famous Pig-N-Ford races are sure to

The world-famous Pig-N-Ford races

quicken the heart rates of the pigs, the drivers and everyone in the crowd. Races are set for all four days of the fair, which runs from Wednesday, Aug. 5, through Saturday, Aug. 8, starting at 5:30 pm and culminating in the World Championships on Saturday evening. Each race begins with the men of the Model T Pig-NFord Association lining up their stripped-down, crankstarted vintage motors at the starting line and taking

up position at one side of the track. Upon hearing the starting pistol, they race to grab a juvenile pig from a holding pen on the opposite side of the track. With the pig under their arm, the racers have to crank up their cars before hopping into the driving seat. The first contestant to complete three laps is the winner. For those who prefer their races with a little less squealing, the fair will also offer horse racing every day, starting at 1 pm in the grandstands. This year’s event will see jockeys vying for a share of $77,000 in purse money. Aside from the action on the track, the Tillamook County Fairgrounds will be abuzz with activity, with livestock and animal exhibits, roaming entertainers and a carnival on offer every day. Evening entertainment kicks off at 8 pm on Wednesday, Aug. 5, with a performance from American country music band Parmalee. On Thursday, Aug. 6, homegrown favorites Chad and Rachel Hamar, aka: Cloverdayle, will take to the stage at 7:30 pm opening for Jana Kramer. Named “New Female Vocalist of the Year” by the Academy of Country Music in 2013, Kramer has been captivating country music lovers with songs like “I Hope It Rains” and “Love.” Legendary music icons Three Dog Night will bring the stage entertainment to a close at 8 pm on Friday, Aug. 7, showing why they have been a household name for four decades, with hits including “Mama Told Me (Not To Come),” “Joy To The World” and “Black and White.”

22 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015

Cloverdayle, playing Thursday night

Along with the nightly entertainment on the main stage, the fair will feature courtyard and roaming acts, including hypnotist Tammy Barton, juggler and comedian Curtis Carlyle, local dance groups, Brad’s World Reptiles and the popular ice cream tasting contest. As well as viewing animals ranging from guinea pigs to livestock raised by 4-H and FFA members, guests can see some of the animals go up for sale at 6 pm on Friday when the Junior Livestock Auction gets underway. The popular and longstanding Huckleberry Health Fair will be back for its 37th year, setting up shop on Wednesday and Thursday. Seniors can get discount admission of $6 on Thursday to attend the health fair.

And health fair visitors who get told they need more protein in their diet can move right over to the Tillamook Dairy Done Right Lounge hosted by the Tillamook County Creamery Association on Thursday and Friday starting at 4 pm at the skating rink. This year also sees Mother Goose return to perform in Fair Acres, a children’s area that focuses on agricultural and educational exhibits. The fair entertainment will wrap up on Saturday, Aug. 8, with the Demolition Derby, starting at 7:30 pm. Admission to the fair is $10 per day for adults or $30 for a four-day pass. Admission for children aged 6 to 11 is $6 per day. For more information, go to www.tillamookfair.com.


learn a little

Tips for the trail Avid Oregon Coast explorer Connie Soper will give a presentation on her new book, “Exploring the Oregon Coast Trail,” when she appears at the Thursday, Aug. 13, meeting of the Yachats Academy of Arts and Sciences. Soper first visited Oregon’s beaches when living as a child in Coos Bay, and has loved them ever since. She has twice hiked the Oregon Coast Trail in its entirety with friends and family. The trail spans nearly 400 miles, more than half of which are on Oregon’s public beaches. Those walking the trail are certain to better appreciate the open access to Oregon’s shores, a privilege not available in most other coastal states. Soper’s presentation will focus on the trail itself and how to hike it. In addition, she will feature stories about places passed through along the way. Who was Matt Kramer? Which lighthouse became the columbarium? How did the Hollering Place get its name? Her presentation weaves together a unique hiking experience with a better understanding of the history, personalities and places that make the Oregon Coast so special. The presentation will start at 6:30 pm in the Yachats Commons, 441 Hwy. 101 N. There is no admission charge but a $5 donation will help cover publicity expenses. For more information, go to YachatsAcademy.org or go to 541-961-6695.

Make sure you catch one

OCEAN YOU A HAPPY BIRTHDAY Newport’s Hatfield Marine Science Center will commemorate a halfcentury of serving the coast with a public celebration and reception on Friday, Aug. 7. Fifty years ago this summer, the Oregon State University facility opened its doors as a fledgling research and education facility envisioned to help revive the depressed economy of the Central Oregon Coast. Today it stands as one of the most important and unique marine science facilities in the country, bringing together scientists from different agencies to tackle some of the most pressing issues facing the world’s oceans, educating a new generation of students about these issues, and reaching out to inform the public about their impacts.

“This is an opportunity to look at the past and honor the people and events that have made the Hatfield Marine Science Center such a special place,” said center director Bob Cowen. “It’s also a time to celebrate the future, as OSU is launching its Marine Studies Initiative and working on plans to expand the center and its capacity.” The celebration will begin at 4:30 pm just outside the center, located south of Newport’s Yaquina Bay Bridge. The celebration will feature speakers, displays, a historical slide show and a video featuring faculty, student and community perspectives on the center’s future plans. A reception will follow from 5:30 to 7 pm. All the events are free and open to the public. Earlier in the day, Rick Spinrad,

chief scientist for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, will give a special presentation in the Visitor Center Auditorium. His talk, “How Oceanography Saved the World,” which begins at 3 pm, is part of the 50th Anniversary Alumni Speaker Series. Spinrad is former vice president for research at OSU and a former graduate student at the center. Other speakers include former Oregon State University President John Byrne, a former NOAA administrator. Event information and links to archives, historic photos, video and a timeline of landmarks for the Hatfield Marine Science Center can be found at: http://hmsc.oregonstate. edu/50th.

Fish fans who want to make their summer catch last all year can get tips on canning and smoking at a pair of workshops offered by the Lincoln County Extension Office in Newport Fisheries extension agent Ruby Moon will lead a fishsmoking workshop from 9 am to noon on Friday, Sept. 4, at the Extension Office, 29 SE 2nd Street. The class fee is $20 and all participants must register by Monday, Aug. 31. On Friday, Sept. 11, Moon will lead a tuna-canning workshop from 10 am to 2 pm. All participants must register by Monday, Sept. 7. The class fee is $40, which includes a seafood lunch. To register for either workshop or for more information, contact Moon at 541-574-6534 ext 57418 or Ruby.Moon@ oregonstate.edu.

Oregon rocks A few short years ago, Oregon’s sesquicentennial celebrations had Oregonians’

hearts bursting with pride and their hands desperately searching for a dictionary. And while 150 years is a grand old age for a wonderful state, the land that makes up Oregon is much older than that. And this geological history is the subject of a touring exhibit currently on show at the North Lincoln County Historical Museum in Lincoln City. Entitled “Oregon: 150 Years of Statehood; 150 Million Years in the Making,” the exhibit illustrates how geology crafted Oregon’s landscape and natural resources and continues to shape the land and lives of its citizens. The most iconic of Oregon’s landscapes: Crater Lake, Multnomah Falls, Newberry Crater, Steens Mountain, the Painted Hills and so much more, display Oregon’s geologic splendor. The exhibit, on loan f rom the Oregon Historical Society, will remain on display until Sept. 30, available to view f rom 11 am to 5 pm Wednesday through Sunday at 4907 SW Hwy. 101. Admission is f ree, thanks to a grant f rom the Lincoln City Visitor & Convention Bureau.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015 • 23


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coast culture

DANCE THE NIGHT AWAY The annual Nesika Illahee Pow-Wow will see dancers and dignitaries from many Tribal nations descend upon the Pauline Ricks Memorial Pow-Wow Grounds in Siletz from Friday, Aug. 7, to Sunday, Aug. 9. “I invite the surrounding communities to experience our pow-wow and learn about American Indian culture and dance,” said Buddy Lane, Tribal cultural education director and pow-wow coordinator. “Come join us at our annual celebration.” The celebration, organized by the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians, will start at 6 pm on Friday with the crowning of this year’s Siletz Royalty, followed by the first Grand Entry at 7pm, which will see all dance styles enter the arena. After the Grand Entry, the public can join in the non-competitive dancing. On Saturday, starting at 10 am, a parade will wind through downtown

Pow-Wow Schedule Friday, Aug. 7 6 pm – Royalty Crowning 7 pm – Grand Entry Saturday, Aug. 8 10 am – Parade 1 and 7 pm – Grand Entry Sunday, Aug. 9 Noon – Grand Entry

Siletz, featuring Tribal royalty, drummers, dancers, equestrian units, vintage cars and floats. Parade registration forms are available on the Tribe’s website, ctsi.nsn.us, the Tribal administration building at

201 SE Swan Avenue in Siletz, or by contacting Lane at 541-444-8230. Participants can also register on the morning of the parade at 8 am at the Tribal administration building. People who

register after 9 am can still participate in the parade but cannot take part in the judging. The parade will lead up to a Grand Entry at the pow-wow grounds at 1 pm, followed by an afternoon

of competition dancing for youth and teens. Competition dancing will continue after the 7 pm Grand Entry with Golden Age and adult categories and the finals for youth and teens. On Sunday, Aug. 9, the final day of the pow-wow, a Grand Entry will take place at noon. This session will end with awards for the Golden Age, adult, teen and youth category winners. Prizes range from $25 to $500. A variety of food and

Native arts and crafts and jewelry will be offered for sale by more than 50 vendors on the pow-wow grounds. “We encourage everyone to come and see the variety of vendors at our annual summer pow-wow,” Lane said. “Many facets of indigenous America are represented both in craft and food. There’s something for everyone here.” A free shuttle will be available from various parking lots in Siletz to the pow-wow on Government Hill. Signs will be posted. Parking is extremely limited at the powwow grounds, so the shuttle is the best way to get there. This alcohol- and drugfree event is free. Guests should listen carefully to the pow-wow announcer, who will tell people when it is ok to take photos. The announcer will also explain the significance of the events taking place in the dance arena throughout the powwow.

It’s Miller time The National Theatre Live series will continue on Friday, Aug. 7, when the Newport Performing Arts Center hosts a screening of the Young Vic’s production “A View from the Bridge.” This dark and passionate tale sees the great Arthur Miller confront the American Dream. In Brooklyn, longshoreman Eddie Carbone welcomes his Sicilian cousins to the land of freedom. But when one of them falls for his beautiful niece, they discover that freedom comes at a price. Eddie’s jealous mistrust

exposes a deep, unspeakable secret — one that drives him to commit the ultimate betrayal. Named a 2014 top theatre pick by the Evening Standard, The Guardian and The Independent, “A View from the Bridge” boasts a stellar cast led by Mark Strong. The visionary Ivo van Hove directs this stunning production of Miller’s tragic masterpiece, broadcast from London’s West End by National Theatre Live. National Theatre Live is an initiative by the

UK’s National Theatre to broadcast live performances onto cinema screens around the world. Since its first season, which began in June 2009, over 750,000 people have now experienced the National’s work on movie screens worldwide. The screening will run from 7 to 10 pm at the Newport Performing Arts Center, 777 W. Olive Street. Tickets, $15.50 for adults, $12.50 for seniors and $10.50 for students, are available at www.coastarts.org, at the PAC box office or by calling 541-265-ARTS (2787).

Phoebe Fox (Catherine), Mark Strong (Eddie) and Nicola Walker (Beatrice) • Photo by Jan Versweyveld

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015 • 25


Free Placement Testing, Throughout August! Know someone considering heading back to school this Fall? OCCC is offering FREE placement tests all month long! Follow up your test with a meeting with one of our experienced, helpful advising specialists, and you’re on your way!

s o u n dwave s Friday, Aug. 7 FRANKIE STONES — Stones busts out live hip hop at this album-release party, featuring special performances by Travis Champ and Josh Uithof. 21 and over. 9 pm, Manzanita Lighthouse Pub & Grub, 36480 Hwy. 101 N., Nehalem, 503-368-4990. GARIBALDI JAM — Hear 10 to 15 bluegrass musicians play country western ditties, favorites from the ’40s and more. Admission by donation. 6-8 pm, Garibaldi Library, 107 6th Street, Garibaldi. THREE DOG NIGHT — The legendary band will rock the Tillamook County Fair, showing why they have been a household name for the past four decades, with hits including “Mamma Told Me (Not To Come)” and “Joy To The World.” $10 fair admission. 8 pm, Tillamook County Fairgrounds, 4603 3rd Street, Tillamook. RAE GORDON BAND — This Oregon City group brings a signature sound that runs from danceable, get-up-and-groove to a haunting slide tone that will make you want to find a back porch and sit a spell. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. BETH WILLIS ROCK DUO — The duo comes from Portland to rock the coastline. You head to Salishan to call out their playlist. Good combination. 8-11 pm, Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. BARBARA LEE TURRILL — Original folk songs, with Barbara on vocals, guitar and banjo, accompanied by Gib Bernhardt on bass. 6-8 pm, Club 1216, located inside Canyon Way Restaurant and Bookstore, 1216 SW Canyon Way, Newport, 541-265-8319. ORIGINAL FACE FEATURING JOE ARMENIO — Original jazz, composed and improvised. 7 to 10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. KENNY, BOB & ROB — An entertaining trio from Bandon that plays folk music with a country flavor. Kenny Croes (guitar and vocals), Bob Shaffar (Dobro, fiddle and vocals) and

Rob Hamilton (bass and vocals) come from diverse musical backgrounds, but together perform a unique blend of original and well-known songs. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Saturday, Aug. 8 EROTIC CITY — It’s berry season in Oregon. Raspberry Be-

ret season. Gather yourself up and come see this Prince tribute act. $5. 9 pm, San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita, 503-368-5080. SONYA KAZEN & FRED BASSETT — Acoustic duo. 6-8 pm, Stimulus Espresso Café, 33105 Cape Kiwanda Drive, Pacific City, 503-965-4661. SONNY HESS — Blues. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. MANIC MECHANICS — Wrench yourself away from the TV and come out for an evening of blues action. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-9964976. BETH WILLIS ROCK DUO — They play everything, and they want you to narrow it down. Come request your favorites from Portland’s favorites. 8-11 pm, Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. HIGH FIDELITY— Blues. 9-11 pm, Nana’s Irish Pub, 613 NW 3rd Street, Newport, 541-574-8787. AUDIO TATTOO — This Otis-based acoustic-electric duo perform new and used original tunes and uncommon covers. These guys are great entertainment. 7 to 10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. LISHA ROSE & WILL KANG — Prepare for waves, ‘cause this local duo will rock the waterfront. 7-10 pm, Embarcadero Resort, 1000 SE Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-8521. SHASTA RAY — Entertaining down-home music. Bluegrass, gospel, jazz, mixed instruments and singing. 6:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477. RICHARD SILEN AND DEANE BRISTOW — A friendly mix of Silen’s originals, ballads and blues standards and a lot of fun stuff that shows how great American music is. All done with Bristow’s harmonica adding some spice to the rue. 6-8:30 pm, Alder Bistro & The Dispensary Lounge, 160 W 2nd St, Yachats, 541-547-3420.

Sunday, Aug. 9

Full Details @ oregoncoastcc.org • Or, call 541-867-8501

THE FERRET FAMILY — An eclectic mix of classic tunes with Michael Maginnis, Gary Seelig, Cliff Tuttle, Mickey Wagner and others as the spirit moves them. 1-2 pm, Hoffman Gardens at 595 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita. OREGON COAST JAM SOCIETY — 4 pm, Old Oregon Tavern, 1604 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-8515. STEVE SLOAN — Acoustic. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. SUNDAY JAM — Newport’s longest-running live music jam. All musicians welcome. Free pool all day and happy hour while the music plays. 3-6 pm, Bay Haven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-7271. LOZELLE JENNINGS AND THE PURPLE CATS —

present The Pentacoastal Blues Jam. Adults only. 4-7 pm, Moby Dick’s Seafood and Spirits, 448 SW Coast Hwy., Newport, 541-265-7847. TIM TRAUTMAN — Piano-playing singer-songwriter. 6:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

So Comfortable, You’ll Never Count These Guys Again. ™

Monday, Aug. 10

OPEN 7 DAYS!

RICHARD SHARPLESS — Retired from his days of playing

in Nashville, Sharpless plays guitar and sings his own tunes

LINCOLN CITY - 790 SE HWY 101 - 541-418-4256 • NEWPORT - 350 OLIVE ST. (CARPET ONE BLDG) 541-265-3530

www.americasmattress.com

Erotic City • Saturday, Aug. 8, in Manzanita

26 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015

Continued on page 27


s o u n dwave s Continued from page 26

wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 8-11 pm in the Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, 7760 Hwy. 101, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. LINCOLN COUNTY FAIR — Featuring acoustic tunes from Hannah Wood at 3 pm, various genres from Stella Blue and Friends at 4:30 pm and bluegrass from the Bad Weeds at 6 pm. Free admission to fair. Lincoln County Fairgrounds, 633 NE 3rd Street, Newport. BILL DALBEY — Performing blues and folk accompanied by his wife, Frankie Trujillo. 6-8 pm, Club 1216, located inside Canyon Way Restaurant and Bookstore, 1216 SW Canyon Way, Newport, 541-265-8319. THE JUNE RUSHING BAND — Newport’s favorite songbird and her dynamite backup band give you the best in ballads and classic rock. 7 to 10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. THE PHAETONS — Good-time music and rockabilly, well worth tonight’s $5 cover charge. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

plus an eclectic mix of favorites. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Tuesday, Aug. 11 OPEN JAM — Hosted by One Way Out. 8:30 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-9964976. ROCK’N TACOS OPEN JAM — JRC and Friends host this weekly jam, paired with 50-cent tacos for one fine evening. 7-10 pm, Uptown Pub, 636 SW Hurbert Street, Newport, 541-265-3369. DAVE & CREIGHT — Easy listening rock and pop from the ’50s to the ’90s to make you remember, smile, laugh and sing along. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Wednesday, Aug. 12 STELLA BLUE — A musical jam session with a variety of players to help you get over the hump. 6-9 pm, Bay Haven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-7271. TU TU KANE — Hawaiian style. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Saturday, Aug. 15

Thursday, Aug. 13 BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember

from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 7-10 pm in the Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, 7760 Hwy. 101, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2371. RIC DIBLASI — Another show from the crooner piano man. 6 pm to close, The Lodge at Otter Crest, 310 Otter Crest Drive, Otter Rock, 541-765-2111. OPEN MIKE NIGHT — Hosted by Amy Pattison. All welcome. 7 to 10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. RUSS & RON — With Ron on guitar and Russ on fiddle, this pair play a little of everything: classic country, pop, swing, folk, bluegrass, standards, fifties and hoedowns. 6:309 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Friday, Aug. 14 GARIBALDI JAM — Hear 10 to 15 bluegrass musicians

play country western ditties, favorites from the ’40s and more.

The Phaetons • Friday, Aug. 14, in Yachats Admission by donation. 6-8 pm, Garibaldi Library, 107 6th Street, Garibaldi. ERIC SAPPINGTON — Coastal acoustic performer. 6-8 pm, Stimulus Espresso Café, 33105 Cape Kiwanda Drive, Pacific City, 503-965-4661. RICH LAYTON AND THE TROUBLEMAKERS — The house band at the crossroads of twang and tremolo, this Texas-born and Portland-raised group promises high-octane honky tonk, harmonica-fueled and swampified. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a

MCDOUGALL — Get ready for a foot-stompin’ storytime from this acoustic folk performer. $5. 9 pm, San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita, 503-368-5080. TOMMY HOGAN BAND — Blazing guitar, booming soulful vocals, wailing harmonica and a driving rhythm section that includes professional drums and deep grooving bass. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. TED VAUGHN BLUES BAND — Get ready for a raucous, high-energy performance from these five blues pros. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. RICHARD SILEN AND DEANE BRISTOW — A friendly mix of Silen’s originals, ballads and blues standards and a lot of fun stuff that shows how great American music is. All done with Bristow’s harmonica adding some spice to the rue. 6:30 to 9:30 pm, The Bay House, 5911 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City. BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 8-11 pm in the Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, 7760 Hwy. 101, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm,

Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. LINCOLN COUNTY FAIR — Featuring the Thunder & Lightness drum and flute duo at 1 pm, reggae and ska-pop from Jaskamon at 4 pm, southern rock, blues and country from the Unlikely Saints at 5:30 pm, swing classics from Past Forward at 7 pm and, at 8:30 pm, Jimmy Ray & Cyndi’s “Black Train” a salute to America and Johnny Cash. Free admission to fair. Lincoln County Fairgrounds, 633 NE 3rd Street, Newport. RICKIE G, TU TU KANE & MA BEAT — Hawaiian style, times three. 6:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Sunday, Aug. 16 FINE LINE — Playing mandolin, cello, electric and acoustic

guitar and bass, this band performs a variety of material including folk, blues and rock as well as some eclectic and popular songs. 1-2 pm, Hoffman Gardens at 595 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita. OREGON COAST JAM SOCIETY — 4 pm, Old Oregon Tavern, 1604 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-8515. RICHARD AND DEANE — Well-known local singer and guitarist Richard Silen plays an eclectic and engaging mix of everything from American songbook standards to blues to originals, accompanied by sidekick Deane Bristow on harmonica. 8:30 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. SUNDAY JAM — Newport’s longest-running live music jam. All musicians welcome. Free pool all day and happy hour while the music plays. 3-6 pm, Bay Haven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-7271. LOZELLE JENNINGS AND THE PURPLE CATS —

present The Pentacoastal Blues Jam. Adults only. 4-7 pm, Moby Dick’s Seafood and Spirits, 448 SW Coast Hwy., Newport, 541-265-7847. RICHWOOD — Americana meets indy folk rock with a ruckus backbeat of driving rhythms, intertwined harmonies, and soulful leads. 6:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477. DON’T SEE YOUR FAVORITE BAND? SIT YOUR MOST TRUSTED PIG IN THE DRIVER SEAT OF YOUR MODEL T WITH A NOTE OF THE TIME, DATE AND VENUE AND POINT IT TOWARD MID CITY PLAZA. THOUGHT MAKE YOUR TAIL CURL? JUST EMAIL THE DETAILS TO NEWS@OREGONCOASTTODAY.COM.

8/30/15

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015 • 27


By Dave Green

23 24 25 27

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SUPER QUIZ

Take this Super Quiz to a Ph.D. Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level. Subject: WATERWAYS (e.g., Which two lakes are joined by the Welland Canal? Answer: Lake Ontario and Lake Erie.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. James Bay is a southern extension of this larger bay. 2. What (a) city and (b) country has a famous Grand Canal? 3. The Bay of Bengal is an inlet of this ocean.

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4 8/07

SUDOKU is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. King Features Syndicate, 2014.

Online subscriptions: call Today’s puzzle and more than pastor, with For answers, 1-900-285-5656, $1.20 per7,000 minute; puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). credit card, 1-800-814-5554. (Or, just wait for next week’s TODAY.) Read about and comment on each puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords . Share tips: nytimes.com/puzzleforum. Crosswords for young

solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

6. Its two cataracts are divided by Goat Island. PH.D. LEVEL 7. The Gulf of Aqaba is an arm of what sea? 8. In which national park is Ribbon Fall, North America’s longest single-drop waterfall? 9. Which Canadian bay is noted for having the highest tidal range? ANSWERS: 1. Hudson Bay. 2. (a) Venice, (b) China. 3. Indian Ocean. 4. Zambezi River. 5. Love Canal. 6. Niagara Falls. 7. Red Sea. 8. Yosemite National Park. 9. Bay of Fundy. SCORING: 18 points -- congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points -- honors graduate; 10 to 14 points -- you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4 to 9 points -- you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3 points -- enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points -- who reads the questions to you?

1 4 9 6

PUZZLE BY PAOLO PASCO

2015 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

GRADUATE LEVEL 4. Victoria Falls is on what river? 5. What “canal” in Niagara Falls, N.Y., was the site of an environmental disaster?

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2015 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Edited by Will Shortz

Crossword

28 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015

Last Week’s Answers:


tide tables

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Fresh Fish Natural Meats Farm Fresh Eggs and Produce

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Tillamook Bay, Garibaldi Date

10445 Neahkahnie Creek Road, d, on Hwy. 101 in Manzanita (503) 368-2292

Thurs., Aug. 6 Fri., Aug. 7 Sat., Aug. 8 Sun., Aug. 9 Mon., Aug. 10 Tues., Aug. 11 Wed., Aug. 12 Thurs., Aug. 13

ϭϬϭ

11:51 am 12:57 am 2:06 am 3:14 am 4:16 am 5:10 am 5:56 am 6:38 am

Tillamook Medical Plaza

Siletz Bay, Lincoln City

1100 Third Street, next to the hospital in Tillamook ok (503) 815-2292

Thurs., Aug. 6 Fri., Aug. 7 Sat., Aug. 8 Sun., Aug. 9 Mon., Aug. 10 Tues., Aug. 11 Wed., Aug. 12 Thurs., Aug. 13

Bayshore Medical Lincoln City

Date

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1105 SE Jetty Avenue, on Hwy 101 across from Tanger Mall in Lincoln City ty (541) 614-0482

12:11 am 1:22 am 2:34 am 3:43 am 4:44 am 5:36 am 6:21 am 7:00 am

Yaquina Bay, Newport Date

Thurs., Aug. 6 Fri., Aug. 7 Sat., Aug. 8 Sun., Aug. 9 Mon., Aug. 10 Tues., Aug. 11 Wed., Aug. 12 Thurs., Aug. 13

ϮϮ

11:22 am 12:44 am 1:56 am 3:05 am 4:06 am 4:58 am 5:43 am 6:22 am

Alsea Bay, Waldport Date

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For significant pain, injury or difficulty breathing, always dial 9-1-1 for emergency care.

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Thurs., Aug. 6 Fri., Aug. 7 Sat., Aug. 8 Sun., Aug. 9 Mon., Aug. 10 Tues., Aug. 11 Wed., Aug. 12 Thurs., Aug. 13

12:11 am 1:16 am 2:24 am 3:22 am 4:34 am 5:28 am 6:14 am 6:55 am

at the Lincoln City Cultural Center

540 NE Hwy. 101 lincolncityfarmersmarket.org

Low Tides

1.1 0.6 0.5 0.3 0.0 -0.3 -0.5 -0.6

High Tides

--12:49 pm 1:54 pm 3:02 pm 4:07 pm 5:05 pm 5:56 pm 6:41 pm

-1.9 2.5 2.8 2.8 2.6 2.4 2.1

6:06 am 7:16 am 8:34 am 9:55 am 11:07 am 12:03 pm 12:48 pm 12:09 am

6.5 6.0 5.7 5.7 6.0 6.4 6.7 8.2

12:00 pm 12:59 pm 2:06 pm 3:18 pm 4:25 pm 5:23 pm 6:12 pm 6:56 pm

1.0 1.5 1.9 2.1 2.1 2.0 1.9 1.7

5:46 am 7:05 am 8:31 am 9:51 am 10:55 am 11:47 am 12:29 pm 1:05 pm

5.2 4.7 4.6 4.7 5.0 5.2 5.4 5.6

--12:21 pm 1:28 pm 2:40 pm 3:47 pm 4:45 pm 5:34 pm 6:18 pm

-2.3 2.8 3.1 3.1 3.0 2.8 2.5

5:37 am 6:56 am 8:22 am 9:42 am 10:46 am 11:38 am 12:20 pm 12:56 pm

6.7 6.2 6.0 6.1 6.4 6.8 7.0 7.3

12:08 pm 1:05 pm 2:08 pm 3:15 pm 4:19 pm 5:17 pm 6:09 pm 6:55 pm

1.2 1.8 2.3 2.6 2.6 2.5 2.3 2.1

6:07 am 7:17 am 8:34 am 9:50 am 10:59 am 11:55 am 12:41 pm 1:20 pm

5.7 5.3 5.1 5.2 5.4 5.7 6.0 6.2

Low Tides

0.7 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 -0.2 -0.3 -0.3

6:07 pm 7:05 pm 8:06 pm 9:08 pm 10:06 pm 10:57 pm 11:44 pm ---

6.7 6.7 6.6 6.6 6.6 6.7 6.7 --

High Tides

Low Tides

0.6 0.6 0.5 0.2 0.0 -0.3 -0.4 -0.5

8.2 8.1 8.1 8.1 8.1 8.2 -6.9

High Tides

Low Tides

1.5 0.8 0.6 0.3 0.0 -0.3 -0.4 -0.4

6:34 pm 7:30 pm 8:30 pm 9:31 pm 10:29 pm 11:22 pm --1:26 pm

5:58 pm 6:56 pm 7:57 pm 8:59 pm 9:57 pm 10:48 pm 11:35 pm ---

8.7 8.6 8.6 8.6 8.6 8.7 8.7 --

High Tides

6:27 pm 7:23 pm 8:22 pm 9:22 pm 10:19 pm 11:11 pm 11:59 pm ---

7.5 7.4 7.3 7.3 7.3 7.3 7.2 --

Bold = Minus Tides. Tide tables are for recreational use. If you’re piloting the “Costa Concordia II” in front of your college roommate’s oceanfront bungalow at Otter Crest or Cape Lookout, talk to a harbormaster. Tide info courtesy tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov. If you discover a seal pup or other stranded marine animal on the beach, do not approach, touch, or pour water on the animal. Instead, call 800-452-7888. Keep dogs leashed and far from all marine mammals. Japanese Tsunami Debris Info: Information on significant marine debris sightings on the coast can be reported to the NOAA Marine Debris Program at DisasterDebris@noaa.gov.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015 • 29


artsy

Newport hosts Lange exhibit Images of Depression-era Oregon will be on show in Newport as the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts hosts an exhibit of work by renowned photographer Dorothea Lange. The touring exhibit features photographs Lange took during 1939 for the Farm Security Administration (FSA) a New Deal agency. Entitled “Dorothea Lange in Oregon,” the exhibit was developed by the Oregon Cultural Heritage Commission and will be on show at the Newport Visual Arts Center from Aug. 7 to Sept. 12. Commission Director David Milholland will lead a public discussion and media presentation after a Friday, Aug. 7, opening reception that runs from 5 to 7 pm. Lange has long been recognized as an artist of conscience and humanist values. Her Oregon images capture the plight and prospects of many people, some long-time Oregon

Young migrant mother has just finished washing. Merrill FSA (Farm Security Administration) camp, Klamath County, Oregon

residents and many others just swept in from the Dust Bowl misery across the U.S. heartland. Her charge included the portrayal of federal agencies’ good works in a period of crushing economic hardship.

Intent on demonstrating the survival of traditional values and the persistence of social cohesion among rural Americans, FSA director Roy Stryker instructed his photographers never to ridicule their subjects. The

Sign at service station, U.S. 99, Josephine County, Oregon. Hop pickers are wanted for four big growers of the area three weeks before opening season. They also advertise in newspapers including San Francisco newspapers, 450 miles away, “but they don’t say what they pay,” a picker said.

effort ultimately generated some 270,000 images, “the largest photographic project of a people ever undertaken,” according to the FDR Presidential Library. Terminated from the

FSA for the third time in 1939, partially for budgetary reasons but also due to feuds with the bureaucracy, Lange did not see her unpublished Oregon photographs until 25 years later. Several years

ago, Portland historian Mike Munk urged the Oregon Cultural Heritage Commission to mount an exhibit of the work, available online through the Library of Congress. With financial backing from individual supporters and three small grants, the commission contracted with Portland photographer Rick Regan and Technical Imaging Services to print enlarged editions of 48 digitized negatives. Appropriate captions from Lange’s field notes are matched with each photograph. As a visual sociologist, Lange sought to put words and images together by quoting her subjects and attaching extended captions and notations to her pictures. She believed a photograph should be “a promoter of consequences.” The exhibit will remain on display through Sept. 12, available to view from 11 am to 6 pm Tuesday through Sunday in the Runyan Gallery of the center at 777 NW Beach Drive.

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See sprouts’ success in garden tour A second-grade success story will be on show in Newport on Tuesday, Aug. 11, as Lincoln County Master Gardeners offer guided tours of the Yaquina Bay Lighthouse Garden. Celebrating its 20th year this summer, the garden is a cooperative educational project of the Lincoln County Master Gardeners and Sam Case Elementary School, which helps feed needy families in the area. Each spring, the students start their seeds in a greenhouse behind the school before transplanting them into the Lighthouse Garden in June. When the children have harvested the produce, it is delivered to the Food Share Pantry. Last year’s offering totaled more than 226 pounds. Because of the school calendar, each garden year occurs in reverse, with each fall’s incoming second graders harvesting the produce that was planted by the previous year’s second graders. In the following spring, they plant seeds for the summer growing season that will be harvested by next year’s class. Debbie Gwynn remembers teaching a split class of first and second graders, which allowed the first graders to participate in the program for two years.. “The younger students were so excited to harvest their own vegetables as second graders!” she said. The garden, located behind the historical Yaquina Bay Lighthouse, began in 1995 as an Eagle Scout project. It had a major renovation in 2011 with the installation of raised beds and a drip irrigation system. The garden is pesticidefree and showcases coastal

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vegetables, herbs and edible flowers that attract beneficial pollinators as well as families and tourists. Under the guidance of OSU Extension staff as well as Master Gardener volunteers, students get the chance to learn plant science, horticultural skills, how to observe and record analog and digital temperature and how to measure in both metric and inches. “This garden is a cultural gem,” said volunteer Liz

Olsen, “an educational gardening experience for all and a model of the importance and value of a school garden that has been sustainable for twenty years.” Master Gardeners will be at the Lighthouse Garden to answer questions and give guided tours from noon to 2 pm on Tuesday, Aug. 11. The garden, along with the lighthouse itself, is open 11 am to 4 pm every day for self guided tours.

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015 • 31


32 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • august 7, 2015


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