FREE!
oregon coast February 19, 2016 • ISSUE 35, VOL. 11
Tides • Dining • Theater Events Calendar • Live Music
T U O SH
A L SP
t r o l p a v w i e t s N e e F h e t n r i o ge 14 f W a p , s y r & t e d ee sto k S o c i o on t Seaf
Celebration of Salmon "It's Better at the Beach!"
Wednesday Nights 5 pm to 10 pm Wild Chinook Salmon $20
• L i n c o l n C i t y, O r e g o n
•
1-888-CHINOOK
•
chinookwindscasino.com
LINCOLN CITY: 1025 Hwy 101 Lincoln City OR 97367 • 541 994-3676
NEWPORT: 1155 SW Coast Hwy Newport OR 97365 • 541 265 6604
TOLEDO: 415 NW A St Toledo, OR 97391 • 541 336-1611
This week’s top five
1
NEWPORT — While they might not be golden, tickets for the Newport Seafood & Wine Festival are becoming as much of a big deal as Willie Wonka’s Chocolate Factory chits. With the celebration now attracting some 25,000 people over its four-day run, organizers have implemented an e-ticket-only policy for the festival’s biggest day, Saturday, Feb. 27, as well as locals’ night on Thursday, Feb. 25. While some standby tickets might be available after 1 pm on Saturday, anyone dead set on a
crab melt and a cheeky glass of red that weekend would be well advised to book now. See page 14
2
LINCOLN CITY — For most of us, attempts at photographing birds in flight normally result in blurry shots of half a wing or a set of tail feathers. See how the experts do it at a new exhibit of photos from members of the Audubon Society of Lincoln City, opening this Sunday at the Blackfish Café. See page 6
3
NEWPORT — If you want to see young people conducting themselves properly, Battle of the Batons II is for you. Young conductors will get seriously silly while leading the Newport Symphony Orchestra at this fund-raising face-off, emceed by David Ogden Stiers. See page 4
4
MANZANITA — Put this winter’s storms well and truly into context with a visit to the Manzanita Writers’ Series, where Ellen Urbani will read from her novel “Landfall,”
2 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016
from the editor which focuses on the plight of two women in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. See page 17
5
LINCOLN CITY — It might not have the glitz of the Oscars but the Super Auction sure has those Academy Awards beat for diversity. Where else can you pick up an air compressor, a set of luxury pillows and some kick boxing lessons — all while watching local “celebrities” make utter fools of themselves for a good cause? See coast calendar, pages 12 & 13
Assistant editor Quinn digs the beach
oregon coast 7H[YPJR (SL_HUKLY LKP[VYPHS WH[YPJR'VYLNVUJVHZ[[VKH` JVT 5L^Z KLHKSPUL WT -YPKH`Z
.YLN 9VILY[ZVU HK]LY[PZPUN NYLN'VYLNVUJVHZ[[VKH` JVT (K]LY[PZPUN KLHKSPUL HT 4VUKH`Z
-V\UKLK I` 5PRP +H]L 7YPJL ‹ 4H` *VW`YPNO[ ,6 4LKPH .YV\W KIH 6YLNVU *VHZ[ ;6+(@
HOUSE AND PET SITTING
D ana G rae K ane • L icen s ed • E xcellen t Referen ces • Co a s ta l • Po rtla n d • S a lem • Va n co u ver
(541)321-3515 d a n a .k a n e9 211@ gm a il.co m
A NEW CAR THIS YEAR? Tax Return? This Week’s Special Time To Upgrade? 2005 GMC ENVOY
$10,995 Stock # P90847
TEAM Over 800 cars in stock! Call Today!
Stacey
Bob
Jeff
541-996-2301
KennysIGA.com
Ready to eat
Canadian Organic
COOKED SHRIMP CHINOOK SALMON
7
$ 99
LOW S MILE
YOUR
541-994-3031
lb.
12
$
69 lb.
Prices good thru 2/23/16
Curried Shrimp
Serves 4
1 Tbsp......olive oil 1 clove. . . . .garlic, minced 1 ..............small onion, minced 1 lb...........peeled and deveined shrimp 2 Tbsp......curry powder 3/4.............cup dry white wine 2 cups......cooked white rice
Directions: Heat olive oil in large skillet over high heat. Add garlic and onion and sauté until soft. Add shrimp and curry powder and cook, stirring frequently until shrimp turn pink. Do not overcook. Add white wine and heat through. Serve over rice.
541-994-4556 www.powerford.com 1940 NE Hwy 101, Lincoln City, OR oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016 • 3
in concert
Your wellness is more than physical. What affects you?
This year’s Battle of the Batons combatants with NSO Associate Conductor David Ogden Stiers
BATTLE STATIONS!
Visit samhealth.org/TodayIAm
4741 SW Hwy 101 Ste. A, Lincoln City, OR 97367
1134 Main Ave, Tillamook, OR 97141
541-614-1442
503-842-9327
David Ogden Stiers will be master of ceremonies this Saturday, Feb. 20, when the Battle of Batons returns for a second year of putting Newport High School students through their paces. The event will see five brave students take to the podium, baton in hand, with the task of conducting the Newport Symphony Orchestra. Each combatant will take to the stage in a silly costume for the tongue-in-cheek event, which Stiers describes as “riotous, unpredictable, and alarmingly fun.” Bribery of the judges is actively encouraged, with kickbacks of all kinds joining proceeds from the event in benefitting the orchestra. The winner of the inaugural 2014 event, Phillip Hawkins, presented as Rocky Balboa and actually directed the orchestra in boxing gloves. Hawkins will be on hand to present the trophy to this year’s winner.
4 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016
Stiers gives each student special one-on-one coaching in preparation for the performance, but cautions that practice can only do so much. “You can rehearse the music,” he said, “but you can’t rehearse the evening.” This year’s five combatants are: • Kendra Hanna, 17, a drum major and athlete in her junior year at Newport High School. She sang the part of Princess Fiona in last year’s “Shrek: The Musical” from Coastal Act Productions. • Cooper Theodore, 16, a home-schooled student now in the Oregon Coast Community College’s Early College Program. His many music and theater credits include Porthole Players’ “Young Frankenstein” and Red Octopus Theatre’s “Taming of the Shrew.” • Isabel Solano, 16, a senior athlete at Newport High School and co-president of its National Honor Society.
She has played violin in the Newport Youth Symphony of the Oregon Coast since its inception and will join the professional NSO orchestra this summer for its annual patriotic concert on the Fourth of July. • Drake Simon, 16, a young actor and musician in his sophomore year at Newport High School who also plays in the Newport Youth Symphony of the Oregon Coast. • Sophie Goodwin-Rice, 16, an International Baccalaureate Diploma candidate and Broadway musical enthusiast in her junior year at Newport High School. She plays in Newport Youth Symphony of the Oregon Coast and the Oregon Coast Chamber Orchestra, among other ensembles. Battle of Batons II will start at 7 pm at the Newport Performing Arts Center, 777 W Olive Street. Admission is $25 or $10 for students.
cliff notes:
the coast, condensed
C O M M E N TA R Y • B Y L O R I T O B I A S
normal
The new W
ith its black and grey stripes, the new fish in the Oregon Coast Aquarium’s California Kelp Forest exhibit looks like a prison convict of old. And, in its way, the banded knifejaw is something of an escape artist or at least, perhaps, a stowaway. The handsome fish was found, along with a 20 yellowtail jacks, in the haul of a derelict boat spotted last spring in the water south of Newport. A second knifejaw was also relocated to the aquarium, this one found in a crab pot off of Port Orford. “Yellowtail jacks are found across the Pacific,” said aquarium spokeswoman Erin Paxton, “but knifejaws are only native to the western side of that ocean, hinting that the fish may have originated from the Tōhoku tsunami that inundated Japan in 2011. Genetic testing later confirmed that the yellowtail jacks also originated from the western population.” It’s hard to believe that March marks five years since the mega-quake devastated northeastern Japan, spawning the tsunami believed to have washed five million tons of debris into the sea. But the derelict boat those fish caught a ride on might be among the last of the items washed ashore to be classified as tsunami debris. From here on out, trash found on the beach will be designated as “marine” debris. The signs about debris will also change. The efforts to clean it up, hopefully, will not. And that’s something we can actually thank the tsunami for. “The first (debris) signs were put up to deal with a temporary emergency,” said Oregon Parks and Recreation Department spokesman Chris Havel, “but the new ones are more
permanent because this is the new normal, and we need your help to keep things clean.” The conversation about what to expect on our shores started within days of the 2011 natural disaster. What kind of debris would we see? Houses? Valuables? Cars? Cash? No one knew for sure. We would just have to wait and see. In June 2012, I journeyed to Seaside for a tour of the oceanfront with an Oregon park ranger whose task it was to show me the usual debris found on beaches. I remember lots of plastic, Styrofoam and, most graphically, the sea lion with the bullet through its skull. I drove home the next day thinking I was ready to write about whatever debris came our way. Of course, I had no idea that awaiting me that very afternoon right on our own Agate Beach was the 211-ton dock wretched free by the tsunami. I called it my summer of the dock. It seemed every other day I was writing about it, the visitors it attracted, its future, its past and eventually its removal. But aside from gawking at the massive thing June through August, mostly, we just waited for more. And it came. Pieces of a shrine, a property marker, a doll, boats, and no end of miscellaneous junk. Although it never really arrived in the masses we’d feared, it’s still coming and it will be for years, says Havel. While that may not be the best of news, never have we been more ready for it. “Five years later, how things have changed,” Havel said. “The debris hasn’t changed, but the way people respond has changed a lot. Trash has always been a problem. The number one source of debris on our shores is the U.S.;
Aquarium staff assess the boat hull before it was towed into Yaquina Bay last April • Photo by Oregon Coast Aquarium
people littering. From Alaska to California, we’re all allowing trash to go into the ocean. One estimate is that L.A. alone is putting thousands of pounds of trash in the ocean a day. Every little bit is from people being careless with a piece of trash to the shipping industry to the fishing industry. We’re all putting a little bit in. It’s us. But people are grateful there is a system now where they know they can help.” Of the $5 million Japan gave the U.S. to manage the debris, $250,000 came to Oregon. The money paid for clean ups, many organized by the Oregon Marine Debris team, a collection of non-profits. It was used to remove derelict boats, as well as for longer-
term programs, such as the purchase of small equipment to haul out medium-sized trash. And it was also used for what we’re seeing by our beaches today: better signs, bags and bag dispensers so people can pitch in themselves. “That sort of stuff will be used for many years,” Havel said. “Even though we’ve spent the money and the money is now gone, the systems and equipment will continue for many years.” 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.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016 • 5
artsy
From Our Pizza Oven, We bake our pizzas to order. Our fresh, local toppings may change on availability.
TOPPINGS Onion Pickled Onion Kale Tomato
Roasted Tomato Olive Artichoke Hearts Bell Pepper Pickled Jalapeno
Sauteed mushrooms Sage or Basil Chevre or Feta Bacon Fresh Bartwurst
Fresh Italian Sausage Dry Cured Salumi Ham Meatball Call in and take one home!
660 SE HWY 101 Lincoln City 541-614-0966 Open Tuesday-Saturday 11am-9pm Dine in or take out
“Osprey Family at Kirtsis Field” by Jack Doyle
)ORFN WR WKH %ODFN¿VK
O pen 7 D a ys • Cred itCa rd s O K • Lim iton e cou pon perord er. Cou pon expires 2/ 29/ 16
An exhibition of photographs by members of the Audubon Society of Lincoln City will open with a public reception on Sunday, Feb. 21, at the Blackfish Café in Lincoln City. “Capturing Birds In Flight” features more than 25 photographs from Audubon members Jack Doyle and Nagi Aboulenein, who have perfected the art of representing airborne beauty and grace in a single frame. Both will be available to chat with guests at the Champagne reception, which runs from 3 to 4:30 pm, at the Blackfish Café, 2733 NW Hwy. 101. The reception is free, but donations to the Audubon Society of Lincoln City are welcome. Photos in this exhibit were taken along the central coast of Oregon and in New Mexico. The framed works will be on display through March, with 100 percent of the proceeds going toward Audubon’s education and conservation projects, including the Wild About Birds outreach program for Lincoln and Tillamook
6 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016
Red-winged Blackbird” by Jack Doyle
County elementary students. The program supports a variety of language arts and science education goals by introducing students to bird diversity, building their bird observation skills and increasing their awareness of birds in their environment. Jack Doyle is best known in the area for his landscape photographs from Cascade Head, but his bird photos have won top awards at the annual Great Backyard Bird Count photography contest. He began photographing birds in 2005 as a way of building his bird identification
skills when he became one of the founding board members of the new Lincoln City Chapter of the Audubon Society. Nagi Aboulenein is a computer engineer with a longtime interest in photography, especially wildlife and underwater. Since taking up birding about four years ago, he has focused his photography efforts almost exclusively on birds. For details of upcoming local field trips as well as conservation volunteer and education opportunities, go to www.lincolncityaudubon.org.
Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide „
7BSJFUJFT PG #SFBLGBTU Served Any Time!
MAKE US YOUR DESTINATION! WINTER HOURS, WEDNESDAY-SUNDAY
QBODBLFT t TLJMMFUT t DIJDLFO GSJFE TUFBL t PNFMFUT t CJTDVJUT HSBWZ
1MVT TPVQ DIPXEFS TBMBET NPSF
HAPPY HOUR
Saturday, Feb 20
3-5:30 PM
Cedar Teeth D KEN WEE IALS! C SPE
0QFO 4VO 5IVST ". 1. t Fri.-Sat. 0 4 5I ". 6AM - 9PM 34-14
ROADHOUSE101.COM RUSTYTRUCKBREWING.COM
• Great Food • Great Drink • Coast’s BEST Live Music
/FXQPSU t 48 "MEFS t -JODPMO $JUZ t /& )XZ t
GRAB A GROWLER TO GO!
Family-Friendly Dining 4649 SW HWY 101 • Lincoln City 541-994-7729
More Pig’N Pancake locations to ser ve you: Astoria, Cannon Beach and Seaside
5 Y E A R S I N A ROW !
Cafe C’est La Vie C om e visitthe O reg on coast’s French inspired cafe! Serving break fastand lu nch w ith a w ide a variety ofsandw iches, crêpes,pastries and seasonaldishes.
Say “B on jou râ€? atthe door for a com plim en tary treat! O P E N 9A M T O 4P M • C L O SE D T U E S.& W E D .
L ocated 4 m iles N orth ofD epoe B ay ju st offH w y.101 at O cean V ie w St. Look for ou r sign! 5 41-7 64 -2828 • thecafecestlavie.com
Lincoln City’s best restaurant has another option...
The Bayside Lounge Great atmosphere, Fabulous Small-Plates Menu plus Neighbors to Neighbors • 3 Courses for $25, every day No deep-fat fryer, no microwave oven, no frozen food. forbes 3-s ta r ra ted • AAA 4-dia m ond ra ted | oregon’s la rges t w ine lis t w ednes da y through s unda y • lounge opens a t 5 p.m . • dinner s ervice begins a t 5:30 p.m .
46-14
5911 S O U TH W E S T H IG H W AY 101 • L IN C O L N C ITY 541-996-3222 • w w w . theba yhous e.org
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016 • 7
lively
Be part of Be Jeweled Turning baubles into breakfasts, legacies into lunch and diamonds into dinner is all in a day’s work for the folks behind Be Jeweled, the annual recycled jewelry sale set to return to Newport for its ninth year next month. And organizers are still accepting donations of all types of jewelry, regardless of condition, to include in this year’s event. A dedicated group of volunteers take the donated jewelry and transform it into the fabulous finds that make this sale so popular. Many hours are spent cleaning, repairing, polishing and displaying the jewelry so it is at its absolute best when the doors open for the sale. This year’s event runs from 9 am to 3 pm on
Drowning in pearls? Be Jeweled can help.
Saturday, March 12, at the Embarcadero Resort, 1000 SE Bay Blvd. This event is a fundraiser
for Food Share of Lincoln County, and proceeds are used to support programs for low-income individuals and families within its network of pantries and partner agencies in Lincoln County. All donations are tax deductible. Drop sites are located at the Food Share warehouse, Diamonds by the Sea, Nye Cottage Beads, Hair Love and the Newport 60+ Center — all in Newport; the Waldport, Toledo, Newport and Lincoln City chambers of commerce; the gift shop at the Lincoln City Cultural Center and all Oregon Coast and Columbia Banks. For more information, call 541-265-8578 or go to http:/www. foodsharelincolncounty.org.
Lids go to the tea party If you see seniors throughout Newport furiously checking their watches this week, it’s because the Mad Hatter Tea Party is back — and woe betide anyone who turns up late for this very important date. Returning for its fourth year, the Tuesday, Feb. 23, event promises two hours of fashion, fun and frivolity for all, at the Newport 60+ Activity Center. Mad Hatter models will showcase local store fashions, both practical and wild, from New 4 You. Meanwhile, guests can enjoy hot tea from fanciful pots and sample an array of festive finger foods. Festivities will conclude with a drawing for free door-mouse prizes. Guests are encouraged to come dressed in Mad Hattire — bright or mismatched clothes and crazy hats — with an award on offer for the
FROM TOP GUN
TO BIG CHEESE
Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie would be right at home at the Mad Hatter Tea Party
person who turns up in the most impressive lid. The event will run from 1 to 3 pm at the center, located at 20 SE 2nd Street, next to City
Hall. Admission is by a $5 suggested donation and guests should call 541-265-9617 to reserve a seat.
The Newport 60+ Adventure Van will be heading to Tillamook on Thursday, Feb. 25, for tours of the Tillamook Air Museum and the town’s two cheese factories. Located inside a massive wooden blimp hangar constructed by the US Navy in 1942, the Tillamook Air Museum currently houses more than 15 vintage aircraft, including a Spacelines Mini Guppy, a Grumman F-14A Tomcat and a Mig-17. The museum also features an exhibit hall with a large
8 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016
collection of rare historical wartime and aviationthemed artifacts, including pieces of the great German airship the Hindenburg. The Blue Heron French Cheese Company is an Oregon institution that has been in business for more than 30 years. Guests can sample the famous Blue Heron Brie, try gourmet foods, taste Oregon’s finest wines and check out the gift store. And just down the road, Adventure Van passengers will get to take a self-guided tour of the Tillamook
Cheese Factory, which produces more than 171,000 pounds of cheese each day. The cheese factory is a shopper’s paradise, with a fully stocked gourmet shop, ice cream counter, Creamery Café and fudge counter. Cost for this trip is $25. The Adventure Van will leave at 8 am from the Newport 60+ Activity Center at 20 SE 2nd Street, and return around 5 pm. For more information or reserve a spot, call 541265-9617, drop by the center or go to www. newportoregon.gov/sc.
Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide
Romantic
ocean-front DINING
Check Us Out!
Join Us For
Happy Hour
Sandwiches, Hot Soups, Salads, Paninis, Beverages, Beer & Wine Every Tuesday Senior Citizens 60 and older
15% Off food and non-alcohol beverages
15% discount off food & drink items (excluding beer & wine) to Active Military and Veterans every day.
Please show your military ID.
specials from 3pm-6pm 7 days a week Live Music Fridays and Saturdays from 5pm-8pm
Gluten Free Options Hours: Mon.-Sat. 8am - 3pm Closed Sundays 1509 NW Highway 101 Lincoln City 541 614 1300 facebook.com/deli101LC
M IST RESTAURAN T AN D LOUN GE 2945 NW Jetty Ave, Lincoln City, OR 541.994.3877
Enjoy Sunny days on our Patio! Traditional Irish Fare Homemade Soups & Desserts
LIVE MUSIC
FEBRUARY 20 8:3 0 -10:3 0 PM Open Daily Now Serving Beer & Wine • WiFi Available
W ild Ho g in the W o o d s W ild H og in the W oods is an O regon string band that plays a w ild m ix ofold-tim e, sw ing, sleaze-jazz, ragtim e, blues and tin-pan alley tunes w ith honest verve and gusto.Their m otto is “N obody leaves w ithout a grin.”
O p en 7 d a ysa w eek a t11a m
5150 Oyster Drive Bay City, OR 97107 503.377.2323
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016 • 9
get out!
RACK UP A WIN
AT THE LINCOLN CITY ELK STAMPEDE Story by Gretchen Ammerman Sometimes things just come together nicely. Take for example the Lincoln City Half-Marathon, which will be run this year on Sunday, March 6. After only two years of putting on the event, race director Gail Kimberling found herself on the horns of a dilemma when a landslide forced her to find a new start and finish location. She chose Wapiti Park, which was already close to the course and has ample parking and covered areas in case of inclement weather. Wapiti means elk in the Shawnee and Cree languages; the park was built in the late ’70s by members of the Lincoln City Elks Lodge; and, last year, a big herd of elk showed up right before the race was about to start. “People were still registering and lining up and suddenly there was this huge herd of elk right there,” Kimberling said. “It was magical. I don’t know if we’ll get that lucky two years in a row. They are still usually visible on the course, but to have them right there at the starting line was just so special.” What with all the elk-ing, it was only natural that this year Kimberling and her staff at the Lincoln City Community Center added “Elk Stampede” to the name of the race. And as welcome as the elk are athletes of all abilities, whether they choose to tackle the 13.2-mile half-marathon or the alternate, 10K route. “We have an early start for half-
marathon walkers so that they can finish around the same time as the runners,” Kimberling said. “We’ve had some spectacular runners in past years, but it’s also a really welcoming course to people who are new to running and walking.” Electronic chip timing will allow for real-time finish results, including splits, and runners with the best times can be assured of great prizes. “Because we’re the at the coast, the winners get a glass float,” Kimberling said, “but everyone gets a finishers’ metal and they look great this year.” Emulating one of the successful practices of the Newport Marathon, race organizers welcome local non-profits to staff aid stations in return for a share of the proceeds. Past organizations include the Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts, Kiwanis Club, the Oregon Coast Community College Student Nurse Association and several Taft High sports teams. “It’s a great way to give back to the community but it also helps us,” Kimberling said. “We’re still accepting more non-profits who want to get involved.” To get the full Elk Stampede experience, visitors and locals can camp before and after the race at Wapiti Park, a place that has come together quite nicely for a family with a long history in Lincoln City.
Inside the park, which the Lincoln City Elks Lodge owned and operated until last year, is a memorial plaque to Donald Geddes, a former Elks member who was instrumental in getting the park built. When circumstances left the park up for sale, Donald’s son, Roger Geddes, (along with a partner) jumped at the chance to acquire the property. Now, Roger’s son William and daughter-in-law Camy live on and manage the park. At about the same time as the park acquisition, the couple welcomed their son, Gunnar, the latest addition to the fourth generation of the Lincoln City Geddes clan.
10 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016
The family is determined to keep the spirit of the park alive, since they know they are not the only people emotionally invested in it. “There are a lot of families that grew up coming here and have even had weddings here so it was important to us to keep it open for them,” Roger said. “It needs some work but we want to change as little as we can get away with. We have a special discount for Elks members, especially because the ashes of many past Elks are here.” They include those of his father, Donald, who served as Exalted Ruler of the Oceanlake chapter as well as District Deputy Grand Exalted Ruler. All that history combined with the beauty of the course make the Lincoln City Elk Stampede a oneof-a-kind race experience. “Some people that come from out of town are a little disappointed that it’s not on the beach,” Kimberling said. “But once they do it they love it. It’s a little hilly but not too bad and it’s so beautiful that
Roger Geddes with granson Gunnar at the family’s Wapiti Park
time of year; things are starting to bloom and there’s lots of wildlife, especially, of course, the elk.” The Lincoln City Elk Stampede starts at 8 am for walkers and at 9 am for 10K and half-marathon runners on Sunday, March 6. Packet pick up is at the Lincoln City Community Center on Friday, March 5, or at Wapiti Park on race day. For more information about the event, go to www.lincolncity.org. For more information about Wapiti RV Park and Campground or to make a reservation, go to www. wapitirvpark.com.
get out!
Have the run of the festival If the impending indulgence of the Newport Seafood & Wine Festival has you nervously eyeing your scales, the Coast Hills Running Club has a solution. The Coast Festival Run will allow participants to burn off some of those deliciously acquired calories by tackling a five-kilometer paved route from the Newport Performing Arts Center through Nye Beach, down to the Yaquina Bay Bridge, through Yaquina Bay State Park and back to the center. The run will start at 9 am on the final day of the festival, Sunday, Feb. 28, with packet pickup and race-day registration at 8 am at the center, 777 W. Olive Street. After the race, an awards ceremony will take place at 10:15 am at the Performing Arts Center, with prizes for top overall male and female finishers; male and female masters; and age group awards by 5-year increments.
Advance registration is $20 for adults and $15 for students aged 19 and under. To register, go to https:// secure.getmeregistered.com and search for “Coast Festival Run.”
Own the Best Part of LuxuryVacation Living
Race-day registration is $30 for adults and $25 for students. For more information about Coast Hills Running Club, email run@newportmarathon. org.
Nurture some nature in Nehalem Alder Creek Farm Community Garden is gearing up for its 2016 season this month and is inviting community members who would like to join the team to a kick-off event on Saturday, Feb. 27. Now in its 10th year, the program is focused on teaching organic gardening in the coastal climate and growing food for use at the farm as well as sharing with the North County Food Bank. Garden members commit to three hours of volunteer work per week, pay a nominal fee, and learn techniques for growing fruit and vegetables on the Oregon Coast. The farm has a traditional row garden but also offers a permaculture application
No meetings. No maintenance. No worries. Your vacation begins the moment you arrive. The Shores @ The Ocean has designed, built, furnished, sold, and expertly managed true vacation homes on the Oregon Coast Since 2002. Each of our oceanfront homes are completed one at a time and sold in 1/7th fractions. Vacation time is always private, with each owner paying only for the selected portion of ownership they use.
Call now to tour one of our beautiful luxury vacation homes. that can be integrated into a home landscape for an ornamental and edible approach to gardening. Volunteers should be able to bend, stretch and occasionally lift 25 pounds, but lighter duties are also
available. The kick-off event will run from 10 am to 1 pm at the farm on Underhill Lane, just north of Nehalem For more information, go to www.nehalemtrust.org or email karen@nehalemtrust.org.
www.theshores.info
(541) 994-3061 (1-866-800-0076)
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016 • 11
Friday, Feb. 19
Coast Calendar
Saturday, Feb. 20
Super Auction Preview Party
Super Auction II
Aces Bar & Grill • Lincoln City Get a sneak preview of the items up for grabs in tomorrow’s marathon fund-raising auction for the Lincoln City Chamber of Commerce while enjoying appetizers and a no-host bar. 5:30 to 8 pm, 3245 NE 50th Street.
Aces Bar & Grill • Lincoln City Based at Aces but viewable via livestream from anywhere on Earth, this marathon fund-raising auction offers everything from artwork to professional services to gift certificates galore — all to the highest bidder. Proceeds benefit the Lincoln City Chamber of Commerce. The hammer goes down at 9 am and the bidding does not stop until 10 pm, 3245 NE 50th Street. Go to www.lcchamber.com to see the event streaming online.
“Jane Eyre” Newport Performing Arts Center Screening in HD, this National Theatre Live production of Charlotte Brontë’s classic tells the dynamic story of one woman’s fight for freedom and fulfillment on her own terms. 7 pm, 777 W. Olive Street. Tickets, $16 for adults, $13 for seniors and $11 for students, available at the box office, online at www.coastarts.org or by calling 541-265-ARTS (2787).
Iyengar Yoga workshop David Ogden Stiers
Nesko-Women’s Club Kiawanda Community Center • Pacific City Guest speaker Andrew Teitelman will talk about estate planning. 11:45 am, 34600 Cape Kiwanda Drive. To reserve a $6 lunch at noon, call Julie at 503-863-9307. FMI, contact Joani at 503-965-3681.
Birding trip The Battle of Batons II Newport Performing Arts Center See five talented youth musicians duke it out by conducting the Newport Symphony Orchestra in a riotous evening of musical mayhem, featuring skits, silly costumes and more, emceed by David Ogden Stiers. 7 pm, 777 W Olive Street. $25 or $10 for students.
My Word! Newport Public Library The library’s free computer classes continue with, at 9 am, “Beginning Word,” followed at 10 am by “Intermediate Word.” Registration required. FMI, call 541-265-2153 or go to www. newportlibrary.org.
Newport Seafood & Wine Festival • Opens Thursday, Feb. 25
New Moon Yoga • Lincoln City Nina Pileggi, founder and director of Sunset Yoga Center in Portland, leads this class, focusing first on standing poses and later on restorative poses and breath practices. $45; or $30 for part one and $20 for part two. 1 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. To register, call 971-3039646 or email info@newmoonyoga.org.
Saturday, Feb. 20 cont. Manzanita Writers’ Series Hoffman Center for the Arts • Manzanita Ellen Urbani reads from her novel “Landfall,” a work of historical fiction set in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, focusing on the plight of two women — one black, one white. $7. 7 pm, 594 Laneda Avenue, followed by a Q&A and an Open Mic.
Silver Sneakers Circuit Class Newport 60+ Activity Center Beginners are welcome at this free class, which alternates low-impact aerobics with upper body strength work for active seniors aged 60 and above. No registration required 10-11 am, 20 SE 2nd Street. Enter by steps on the south side of the building.
“Aging Ain’t for Wimps!” Hillside Place Senior Living • Lincoln City A fun, free and informative event featuring professional advice on how to plan for the
Driftwood Public Library • Lincoln City Tucked away at the library’s south end, this book lover’s paradise offers a huge selection and unbelievably low prices. Hosted by Friends of Driftwood Library, with all proceeds benefiting library programs and needs. 10 am to 2 pm, second floor, 801 SW Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-557-9400.
Waldport Community Center Join Oregon Coast poet Shirley Plummer as she celebrates the release of her first collection of poems, “A Task of Falling Rain.” Free, 2 pm, 265 Hemlock Street.
Newport Farmers Market Lincoln County Fairgrounds • Newport Snug in the fairgrounds exhibition hall, this market features locally made handcrafts, art, specialty foods and fresh fruits, vegetables and farm products from Lincoln County farms and growers from surrounding areas. 10 am to 2 pm, 633 NE 3rd Street.
American Cetacean Society Newport Public Library Amanda Holdman of OSU Hatfield Marine Science Center will give a presentation on the various species of porpoise and dolphin found in Oregon’s near shore waters. Free. 10 am, 35 NW Nye Street. FMI, contact Joy Primrose at marine_lover4ever@yahoo.com or 541-517-8754.
Monday, Feb. 22
Nye Beach Writers’ Series
Twisted Snout Brewery • Toledo Order from the after-hours menu while enjoying a free show from this nationally known comedian, accompanied by special guest Gabrielle Antonita Jesus. 21 and over. 8-9:30 pm, 300 S. Main Street. FMI, go to www. twistedsnout. com or call 541336-1833.
Newport Visual Arts Center Eugene author and immersive journalist Lauren Kessler reads from her latest book, “Raising the Barre,” an account of the middle-aged writer revisiting her childhood dream of becoming a ballerina. 7 pm, 777 NW Beach Drive, followed by an open mic for local writers. $8; students get in free. FMI, go to www.writersontheedge.org.
Tuesday, Feb. 23
Wednesday, Feb. 24
Oscar-nominated shorts
Mad Hatter Tea Party
Runquist exhibit
Bay City Arts Center Sit down to all-you-can-eat pancakes along with sausage, veggie sausage and Charlie’s famous baked beans at this family-friendly feed. $5 or $4 for members. 8 am-noon, 5680 A Street.
Newport Performing Arts Center The Bijou’s Winter Film Series presents this year’s Academy Award-nominated live action short subject films, including “Ave Maria” from Palestine and others from the UK, Kosovo, USA and Germany. 107 min. 7 pm, 777 Olive Street. $7.50 general, $7 for students and seniors. 7 pm, 777 Olive Street. $7.50 general, $7 for students and seniors.
Newport 60+ Activity Center Enjoy two hours of fashion, fun and frivolity for all, with hot tea, finger foods, a fashion show and a best hat contest. $5 suggested donation. 1 to 3 pm, 20 SE 2nd Street. Call 541-265-9617 to reserve a seat.
Bay City Arts Center A collection featuring many never-before-seen works by Depression-era painters Albert and Arthur Runquist. Free. 9 am-4:30 pm, 5680 A Street. Show runs though March 10.
Prairie charrette
Coffee Concert Lincoln City Cultural Center A casual Sunday matinée concert from local musicians, with complimentary pastries and java from Cape Foulweather Coffee. Admission by donation, with all proceeds going to the cultural center. 3 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101.
Wi-Ne-Ma Hall • Cloverdale Have your say on the methods and locations for restoration of coastal prairies at this gathering, organized the Salmon Drift Creek Watershed Council and the Siuslaw National Forest. Attendees will receive a print of the Oregon Spotted Butterfly. 1-5 pm, 5195 Wi Ne Ma Road. FMI, call Graham Klaag at 541-996-3161.
“Capturing Birds In Flight”
By Jack Doyle
Blackfish Café • Lincoln City An opening reception for this exhibit of photographs by Audubon Society of Lincoln City members Jack Doyle and Nagi Aboulenein. Enjoy Champagne and a chance to chat with the artists. Free but donations accepted. 3-4:30 pm, 2733 NW Hwy. 101. Show runs through March.
CROOKED
BETH WILLIS ROCK DUO
FEBRUARY 19 & 20
FEBRUARY 26 & 27
• On the beach in Lincoln City • 1-888-CHINOOK • chinookwindscasino.com
12 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016
Book Sale
Poetry launch party
Alex Elkin
Pancake Breakfast
Siletz Public Library Browse high-quality items including collectibles and furniture as well as hundreds of books priced from 50 cents to $2 apiece at this fund-raiser for Siletz Valley Friends of the Library. Enjoy free cake and take home some delicious homemade treats from the bake sale. Noon to 4 pm, 255 SW Gaither Street. FMI, call Sally at 541-444-2687.
9PM-1AM • FREE COVER
South Beach Community Center • Newport Learn how to do the Tango, also known as Milonga, to traditional
Bay City Arts Center Helen Hill will read from and sign copies of her new illustrated children’s book, “How Ouzel Found Her Song.” After the reading, Hill will lead a workshop on how to write and illustrate a children’s book of your own. Free. All ages welcome. 3-5 pm, 5680 A Street.
Red Lotus Music Store • Newport Luciana Proaño leads this class on how to play the Afro-Peruvian style box drum, focusing on essential beats and rhythms found in traditional Peruvian music. The class includes a brief body warm up and a historical introduction. $15 per person for a group lesson; $30 for private. 10 am, 425 SW Coast Hwy. To sign up, contact Alex Llumiquinga at chayag2@yahoo.com or 541-961-5186.
Newport Performing Arts Center The Bijou’s Winter Film Series presents this year’s Academy Awardnominated animated shorts, including “Bear Story” from Chile and nominees from the UK, USA, Russia. 91 min. 7 pm, 777 Olive Street. $7.50 general, $7 for students and seniors.
Rummage, Book & Bake Sale
chinook’s seafood grill
Tango Beginner Class
Author reading
Cajón Workshop
Oscar-nominated shorts
costs of long-term care, elder law, estates, trusts, power of attorney and much more. Refreshments will be served. 2 pm, 1400 SE 19th Street. FMI, call 541-994-8028.
LIVE MUSIC "It's Better at the Beach!"
Sunday, Feb. 21
Dairy Queen • Toledo Join the Yaquina Birders & Naturalists for this free, two-hour trip to the freshwater sloughs and shrubby woodlands of Toledo, searching for wintering waterfowl including hooded merganser, wood duck, northern pintail and green-winged teal. Meet at 9 am in the parking lot on Hwy. 20. FMI, call 541-961-1307.
Argentine tango music. Free, but donations appreciated. Class starts at 7 pm, dancing from 7:30-10 pm, 3024 SE Ferry Slip Road. FMI, go to newportoregontango.com or call 541-351-8457.
Time bank talk Nestucca Fire and Rescue Community Hall • Hebo A chance to learn how to trade your skills for those of others through the Lower Columbia Time Bank. The presentation will feature a screening of “Time as Money,” followed by a Q&A and a chance to sign up. Free. 6 to 8 pm, 30710 Hwy. 101. FMI, call Linda Werner at 503-398-5223.
Spaghetti Dinner Big Wave Cafe • Manzanita Support the North County Food Bank while feasting on perfect pasta at this fund-raising dinner. $15. 4:30 pm, 822 Laneda Avenue. FMI, call Betty at 503-368-4080.
Top Gun to big cheese Newport 60+ Activity Center Climb aboard the Adventure Van for tours of the Tillamook Air Museum and the town’s two cheese factories. $25. Van leaves at 8 am from 20 SE 2nd Street, returns around 5 pm. FMI or reserve a spot, call 541-265-9617, drop by the center or go to www.newportoregon.gov/sc.
Book Sale Driftwood Public Library • Lincoln City Tucked away at the library’s south end, this book lover’s paradise offers a huge selection and unbelievably low prices. Hosted by Friends of Driftwood Library, with all proceeds benefiting library programs and needs. 10 am to 2 pm, second floor, 801 SW Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-557-9400.
Thursday, Feb. 25
Chile’s Straits of Magellan
Oregon Coast Learning Institute Salishan Spa & Golf Resort • Gleneden Beach The institute’s winter semester continues with, at 10 am, “What do you Guys Do Back There?” W. Gregory Berton’s irreverent presentation the life of a symphonic bassist. At 1 pm, Mick McLean will give an account of his travels on Chile’s Valdivia River, hiking high mountain glacier lakes, and ferrying across the Straits of Magellan to Penguin Island. At 2 pm, Mary Kimball will present “Finding Traction: A Personal Story of Endurance and Spirit.” $50 for the semester. Guests can try one session free. 7760 Hwy. 101. FMI, go to www.ocli.us.
Newport Seafood & Wine Festival South Beach • Newport Sshhh! Widely regarded as locals’ day, today offers smaller crowds and a lot of familiar faces in addition to the 85 wineries, culinary marvels and vendors galore. 5 pm to 9 pm. Entry by advance e-ticket only; $15, available from www. seafoodandwine.com.
New Growlers! Take your favorite draft beer to go! Choose from 28 taps!
“ It ’s B e t t er at th e B e a c h” • Ac e s B a r & Gr i l l • 3 2 4 5 N E 5 0 th Str e e t • L i n c o l n C i t y • ( 5 4 1 ) 9 9 4 - 8 2 3 2 • c h i n o o kw i n d s c a s i n o . c o m
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016 • 13
SPLASH OUT
on tickets for the Newport Seafood & Wine Festival By Barbara B. Covell
experiences, a green screen photo booth will feature a variety of fun and colorful backgrounds. This year’s slogan says it all. The Newport Price said she thinks this year’s Seafood & Wine Festival is “kind of a big deal.” festival will be the best ever. The annual celebration draws thousands of eager “Over 25,000 people attended last foodies, wine lovers, artists and connoisseurs of year,” she said. “Every year we learn how coastal cuisine to the Oregon Coast each February. to orchestrate the setup, handle parking, It is the only event that brings together the Port of and design conveniences for our guests. Newport, the local hospitality industry, Washington This year we are selling the Saturday and Oregon wineries, fresh seasonally harvested tickets online only. It is the day that seafood, and artisans of multiple mediums in a draws the largest crowds, so people who four-day extravaganza. purchase e-tickets on our website have This year’s festival kicks off on Thursday, Feb. priority access until 1 pm; then general 25, with a locals’ night and continues admission, provided there is ample through three more days of grapespace in the facility.” infused revelry until Sunday, Feb. 28. This year there were 171 entries in THURSDAY, FEB. The festival is held in a massive tent the commercial wine competition, with 25: 5-9 pm, $16 set up to the east of Rogue Brewery Rivers Edge Winery from Elkton, e-ticket only in South Beach. There are free shuttle taking the Best of Show award for their buses that provide pick-up and dropPinot Noir 2012. In total, 97 medals FRIDAY, FEB. 26: Noon-9 pm, $16 off services at most local hotels. A were awarded — 25 gold, 37 silver and Saturday late night shuttle services Nye SATURDAY, FEB. 35 bronze. Judges are selected on the Beach and the Newport Bayfront. basis of wine knowledge, experience in 27: 10 am-6 pm, $21 Upon entering the vast tent, guests wine judging, and a general familiarity e-ticket only can check their coats and peruse the of the Northwest wine region. SUNDAY, FEB. 28: hundreds of wine, craft and food Now in its 39th year, the festival 10 am-4 pm, $8 booths to find their favorite. And enjoys widespread support from the 21 and over only. ID vendors have a great incentive to coastal community, with 72 Lincoln required. For tickets, go put on a show. Sunday’s People’s County businesses participating as to go to www.seafood Choice Award will see the most sponsors. For the fifth year running, andwine.com popular vendor rewarded with a full Chinook Winds Casino Resort is the spa package at Salishan Spa & Golf event’s presenting sponsor. Resort. As well as providing an economic “This year’s festival is designed to appeal to new boom to the coast during the winter season, the customers, as well as those prior year enthusiasts,” festival also benefits more than 20 area non-profits, said Festival Coordinator Bobbi Price, of the whose members raise fund by doing food service, Newport Chamber of Commerce. “We have wine pouring, parking management, security and a total of 155 vendors offering many varietals cleanup. of commercial wines, in addition to amateur For more information, go to www. winemakers showcasing their products.” seafoodandwine.com or download the festival Meanwhile, 39 food vendors will offer local app, available from seafood delicacies from fish tacos and clam Google Play or the chowder to crab cocktails, lobster gumbo and Apple Store and packed seafood lasagna. Other food selections include with information, savory and sweet crepes, Yakasoba noodles, cured maps, frequently asked meats, local fudge, candies, jellies and jams, local questions and a list of cheeses, stuffed olives and an array of nuts. Beer vendors. lovers can enjoy ales, pilsners, IPAs, and stouts — all crafted by Newport’s own Rogue Ales. Barbara B. Covell is Guests can also browse a wide array of booths a contributing journalist hosted by Northwest artisans, featuring pottery, with 10 years experience clothing, jewelry, copper repoussé, up-cycled art, in Oregon newspapers glass art, bead work, etched, fused and painted glass, and regional magazines. hats and repurposed clothing. Feel free to contact her at For those wishing to commemorate their festival bbcovell@me.com. For the TODAY
IF YOU GO
14 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016
on the cover
coast culture
Get some fresh Eyre
Berks hire Ha tha w a y Hom e S ervices Northw es tR ea l Es ta te Netarts Bay, O R
i nci pa l P a m Z i el i n skiPr B ro ker M ob ile
5 03 .880.803 4
O N E O F A K IN D
P R AC TIC ALLY ON TH E BEAC H !T in y p a rk m o d el, fa b u lo u s lo ca tio n s tep s fro m Ba yo cea n ’s 5 m ile lo n g s a n d y b ea ch. s u p rem e geta w a y,s o a ffo rd a b le. 10x12 s hed , tin y vin ta ge s ho p & 14x20 view d eck. No s ep tic M L S 15-779 $15 2,000
S TYLIS H N EW C ON S TR UC TION , s leek m o d ern lo o k in s id e. E n try level m a s ter s u ite! T o p n o tch lo ca l b u ild er: Ba u m ga rt. Va c Ren ta l OK . HOA $50/yr M L S 15-903 $295 ,000
w w w.Pa
m Zielin ski.co m
OC EAN VIEW C ON TEM P OR AR Y w ith m a p le flo o r & s o a rin g ceilin gs o p en grea tro o m , 2 la rge d ecks p lu s la rge p o rch/d eck. Very p riva te b a ckya rd . M L S 15-911 $285 ,000
ON E OF A KIN D N W C R AFTS M AN M AS TER P IEC E o n high o cea n fro n tb a n k, s w eep in g view fro m Ca p e L o o ko u tto 3Arch Ro cks . E xq u is ite n a tu ra l NW fin is hes thro u gho u t. S la te p a tio s , rich s o lid Aca cia , iro n w o o d , clea r gra in ha rd w o o d s , thick s la b gra n ite, m a rb le, Co lu m b ia s to n e co ver every fin ely cra fted s u rfa ce. E n try L evel M a s ter S te. L a rge s a u n a , w in e ro o m .Drea m d en a b o ve trip le ga ra ge w / s o lid ha rd w o o d flo o r M L S 15636379 $2,925 ,000
An acclaimed re-imagining of Charlotte Brontë’s masterpiece “Jane Eyre,” will storm on to the big screen in Newport this Friday, Feb. 19, as the latest offering from National Theatre Live in HD. Almost 170 years after it was written, Brontë’s story of the trailblazing Jane is as inspiring as ever. This bold and dynamic production uncovers one woman’s fight for freedom and fulfillment on her own terms. From her beginnings as a destitute orphan, Eyre faces life’s obstacles headon, surviving poverty, injustice and the discovery of bitter betrayal before taking the ultimate decision to follow her heart. The screening, hosted by the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts, will begin at 7 pm at the Newport Performing Arts Center, 777 W. Olive Street. Tickets, $16 for adults, $13 for seniors and $11 for students, are available at the box office, online at www.coastarts.org or by calling 541265-ARTS (2787).
Felix Hayes and Madeleine Worrall in “Jane Eyre” • Photo by Manuel Harlan
W a n t Re s ults ? C a ll M ARK S C HUL T S ! EX CEL L EN T va ca tio n ho m e. 2 b ed s a n d o n e fu ll b a th, fen ced in ya rd , n ew er ro o f, firep la ce! Nice s ho p a n d a s in gle ga ra ge. M L S 15-2423 $135,000
N EW ER b u iltho m e 3 b ed ro o m s a n d 2 fu ll b a ths , T his s o la r a ll electric ho m e is chea p to ru n b eca u s e the s u n help s p a y the b ills . Bro ker Ow n ed . M L S 16-218 $179 ,000
OV ER S IZED lo tw ith a s m a ll creek b o rd erin g the p ro p erty. Plen ty o fro o m fo r a la rge m a n u fa ctu red ho m e T his is o n e o fthe b igger lo ts in Pa n ther Creek. M L S 15-3104 $46 ,000
L ARGE m a n u fa ctu red ho m e o n a b ea u tifu l p iece o f p ro p erty. 3 b ed s a n d 2 fu ll b a ths . F en ced b a ck ya rd , d eta ched d o u b le ga ra ge M L S 16-230 $159 ,000
Beachy, bright & beautiful! MLS 15-2797
339,000
$
541- 994- 3577 800- 357- 7653
m a rkschu lts@ gm a il.co m w w w .M a rkS chu lts.co m
541-764-7550 715 0 G lened en B each Loop P.O .B ox 620 G lened en B each,O R 97388 (1/2 m ile Sou th ofthe Shops at Salishan) em ail:crystalw izard@ centu rytel.net
$
219,900
541.994.1156
AttheBeachOnline.com
Bryan Cranston & Helen Mirren
TRUM BO
over $100.00
expires 2/29/16
Psychic Readings • Jewelry • Crystals • The Metaphysical
349,000
$
R
And by separate admission Brie Larson for ted E
ina TUR Nom T PIC S BE
ROOM
Retreat near the beach! MLS 15-1833
149,999
$
SATURDAY M ORN IN G
N OW PLAY IN G TW O OSCAR N OM IN ATED FILM S!
10% OFF BOOK PURCHASES
Room to roam, inside & out! MLS 15-2028
At the Beach Real Estate
36 9 1 N W Hw y 101, L in co ln City, OR
The Crystal Wizard H O U RS W ed nesd ay -Su nd ay 10am -5 pm C losed M ond ay & Tu esd ay
Roomy, relaxing & comfortable! MLS 15-2370
R
CIN EM A
Sa tu rd a y,Feb.20 G in g er Ro g ersin
TOM ,DICK ,AN D HARRY (194 1)
Frid a y & Sa tu rd a y 5:15 Frid a y & Sa tu rd a y 2:00 & 8:15 Su n d a y & M o n d a y 2:00 & 7:30 Su n d a y & M o n d a y 4:45 Tu esd a y--Thu rsd a y 4:45 11:00AM $2 Tu esd a y--Thu rsd a y 7:30 1624 NE HWY 101, LINCOLN CITY 541-994-8255 • cinemalovers.com
BIJOU THEATRE
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016 • 15
coast culture
No short-age of options The end of this month will see golden statues handed out left, right and center as the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences honors the most spellbinding performances and astounding technological accomplishments of 2015. And while it’s hard to avoid images of a freshly mauled Leonardo DiCaprio from this season’s hot ticket “The Revenant,â€? some other Oscar contenders are a little harder to come across. But thanks to the Bijou Theatre, Oregon Coast audiences will be the hippest in the nation when the spotlight turns to the Oscarnominated short subject ďŹ lms. The animated and live action short ďŹ lm nominees will be the stars of the show at the Bijou’s Winter Film Series on Sunday and Monday, Feb. 21 and 22. Both screenings start at 7 pm in the Newport Performing Arts Center, 777 Olive Street. Admission is $7.50 general and $7 for students, seniors and members of the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts.
Sunday, Feb. 21 Sunday, Feb. 21 Live action nominees
“Ave Mariaâ€? Palestine/France/Germany The silent routine of ďŹ ve Palestinian nuns living in the West Bank wilderness is disturbed when an Israeli settler family breaks down right outside the convent just as the Sabbath comes into eect. 15 minutes. “Day Oneâ€? USA On her ďŹ rst day accompanying a US Army unit as it searches for a local terrorist, a translator quickly discovers her job will bring up brutal complexities. 25 minutes. “Alles Wird Gutâ€? (“Everything Will be Okayâ€?) Germany/Austria A divorced father picks up his eight-year-old daughter Lea every second weekend. But, after a while, she can‘t help feeling that something isn’t right. So begins a fateful journey. 30 minutes. “Shokâ€? (“Friendâ€?) Kosovo/UK The friendship of two boys is tested to its limits as they battle for survival during the Kosovo war. 21 minutes.
“Stuttererâ€? UK/Ireland Apart from his ageing father, Greenwood has only one connection to the external world in the form of an online relationship with Ellie. On the eve of their six-month anniversary, Ellie asks if he would like to take things “oineâ€? and meet in person for the ďŹ rst time. 12 minutes.
Mondy, Feb. 22 Monday, Feb. 22 Animation nominees
“Historia de un Oso� (“Bear story�) Chile An old, lonesome bear tells the story of his life through a mechanical diorama. 11 minutes. “Prologue� UK A close look at an incident in the SpartanAthenian wars of 2,400 years ago. In it, a small girl bears witness as warriors battle to death. The dialogfree project utilizes natural sounds to complement the intense animation. 6 minutes.
CLEARANCE RACK CLEARANCE SALE! 36‘�‡3‹�3ƒ�†3Š‡Ž’3—•3…Ž‡ƒ”3‘ˆˆ3 3–Š‡3•ƒŽ‡3”ƒ…�•Ǩ 36‘�‡3˜‹•‹–3 Š‡3 ‡†36‘…�36”ƒˆ–•�ƒ�3 3 —–Ž‡–3‹�3 ‹�…‘Ž�36‹–› 343 –‘”‡3Ž‹�‡3�‘3‘–Š‡”Ǩ3
The Red Cock Craftsmen’s Outlet
39—ŽŽ3‘ˆ3 ƒ–—”ƒŽ39‹„”‡36Ž‘–Š‹Â?‰3Čˆ3 ‘…ƒŽ3ƒÂ?†3 Â?–‡”Â?ƒ–‹‘Â?ƒŽ34”–‹•ƒÂ?3 ƒÂ?†‹…”ƒˆ–• 3 ˜‡”3͜͞3ƒ™‡•‘Â?‡3‰‹ˆ–•3—Â?†‡”3͊͜͞ 3Č?37‘Â?ǯ–3ˆ‘”‰‡–3 ‹ˆ–36‡”–‹ˆ‹…ƒ–‡•Ǩ3
1221 A NE HWY. 101 • LINCOLN CITY (south of Birkenstock)
541-994-2518
16 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016
Family Gifts at Family Prices
“Sanjay’s Super Teamâ€? USA This new short ďŹ lm from Pixar Animation Studios tells the story of a young, ďŹ rst-generation Indian-American boy whose love for western pop-culture comes into conict with his father’s traditions. Tedium and reluctance quickly turn into an awe-inspiring adventure as the boy embarks on a journey he never imagined. 7 minutes. “We Can’t Live Without Cosmosâ€? Russia Two cosmonauts, friends, try to do their best in their everyday training life to make their common dream a reality. But this story is not only about the dream. 16 minutes. “World of Tomorrowâ€? USA A little girl is taken on a mind-bending tour of her distant future. 17 minutes.
Urgent Care For you and your loved ones in Lincoln City, Tillamook and Manzanita. Manzanita Urgent, Primary & Specialty Care 10445 Neahkahnie Creek Rd., Manzanita 503-368-2292
Tillamook Medical Plaza 1100 Third St., Tillamook 503-815-2292
Bayshore Medical—Lincoln City 1105 SE Jetty Ave., Lincoln City 541-614-0482 adventisthealth.org/trmc For significant pain, injury or difficulty breathing, always dial 9-1-1 for emergency care.
beach reads
MAKE LANDFALL IN MANZANITA
Falling into place Oregon Coast poet Shirley Plummer will hold a release party for her first published collection of poetry on Saturday, Feb. 20, in Waldport. “A Task of Falling Rain” is the culmination of an effort that began in earnest in 2011, when Plummer wrote in her notebook: “I am a poet and this is my year.” Editors soon began accepting her work. Her writing has won high praise from seasoned poets, including Oregon Poet Laureate Emerita Paulann Petersen. “In her first full-length collection, Shirley Plummer honors the complex, mutable beauty of the Oregon coastal terrain she loves,” Petersen said. “Her marvelous names for rain — lavish rain, lullaby rain, tattoo and gravid and spendthrift rain — could just as aptly convey some of the overall range and depth she achieves in her work. In the task of falling rain, Plummer’s poems take on an admirable endeavor: to embrace her home’s flora and fauna, to celebrate whatever rain
touches and feeds.” Drew Myron, author of “Thin Skin: Poems & Photos” was also moved by Plummer’s work. “Plummer carefully examines life with a microscopic eye, revealing the power of the natural world,” she said. “The sea, she writes in this long-awaited debut collection, is always in my senses. And now, too, with this book, it is in ours.” An Oregon native, born, raised and schooled in Salem, Plummer spent many summer holidays in the Cascades, where she found a “home” in the forest. Later she felt an exile, and decades of moving house and traveling did not lessen her wish to return. The painful death of her beloved freed her to do so. She now lives on the Central Oregon Coast between the Siuslaw National Forest and the Pacific Ocean, near her three children. Saturday’s launch party will start at 2 pm at the Waldport Community Center, 265 Hemlock Street.
The Manzanita Writers’ Series will continue on Saturday, Feb. 20, with a visit from Ellen Urbani, reading from her novel “Landfall.” A work of historical fiction set in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, “Landfall” focuses on the plight of two women — one black, one white. The book received rave reviews from many, including Pat Conroy, author of the bestselling “The Prince of Tides” “It’s a hell of a book,” he said, “and worthy of the storm and times it describes.” As a former mental health specialist for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and advisory board member at the Annenberg Center for Health Science Research, Urbani focused on addressing the emotional repercussions of disease and disaster that followed in Katrina’s wake. This therapeutic perspective informs her characterization of the victims, allowing for a nuanced fictional interpretation of historic events. Urbani’s first book was a memoir, “When I Was Elena,” documenting her life in Guatemala during the final years of that country’s civil war. Her autobiographical essays and short stories have appeared in a variety of bestselling pop culture anthologies as well as the New York Times. Urbani has a Bachelor of Arts in writing and design and a Master of Arts in art therapy, specializing in oncological illness and trauma survival. Her Saturday reading will begin at 7 pm at the Hoffman Center for the Arts at 594 Laneda Avenue, and will be followed by a Q&A and an Open Mic, where up to nine local or visiting writers will read five minutes of their original work. The suggested theme for the evening’s Open Mic is “disaster.” Admission for the evening is $7. For more information, go to hoffmanblog.org or contact Kathie Hightower at kathiejhightower@ gmail.com.
Ellen Urbani
WRITING WORKSHOPS
During the day on Saturday, Feb. 20, the Writers’ Series is hosting two writing workshops, one on craft and one on the business of books. From 9 am to noon, longtime literary agent Chip MacGregor will present “Crafting a Strong Book Proposal,” a fun and information-packed workshop on how writers can craft the perfect proposal when approaching a publisher. MacGregor will look at the big picture as well as the small details that can help make a fiction or nonfiction proposal stand out from the crowd. From 1 to 3:30 pm, Ellen Urbani will lead a writing workshop on how to write a personal essay. Participants will work on the fundamentals of writing short-form personal narratives and essays with a focus on attention-getting openers, truth-telling, brevity and “kick-ass summations.” The fee for each workshop is $30. To register, go to http://hoffmanblog.org and follow links for “Ongoing-classes” and “Register for workshops.” Chip MacGregor
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016 • 17
s o u n dwave s Friday, Feb. 19 CROOKED — Enjoy an evening of “Northwest acoustic reggae”
from this Siletz musical trio, with Brett Lane on guitar and vocals, Casee Case on bass guitar and Dakota Burgins providing percussion. 9 pm-1 am, Chinook’s Seafood Grill, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-244-6665. BETH WILLIS ROCK DUO — Wanna chill out, or rock hard? Either one is just a request away! Join the duo in the beautiful Attic Lounge. 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. CHAYAG — Original sounds from the Andes. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. KARL SMILEY — Blues and Americana. 6-8 pm, Club 1216, located inside Canyon Way Restaurant and Bookstore, 1216 SW Canyon Way, Newport, 541-265-8319. THE NEW FOLKSTERS — ’60s vintage folk on guitar, banjo, ukulele and kazoo. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Saturday, Feb. 20 COUNTRYSIDE RIDE — Let your hair down for an evening of
Make a Fused-Glass Project and SAVE! 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
NOW PLAYING LINCOLN COUNTY AREA EVENTS
t Newport Performing Arts Center: NATIONAL THEATRE LONDON – “JANE EYRE,” WINTER FILM SERIES – 2016 OSCAR SHORTS, BATTLE OF THE BATONS II, NEW VISIONS ARTS – “FESTIVAL – THE SHOW” t Newport Visual Arts Center: YOUTH ART FRIDAYS, NYE BEACH WRITERS SERIES – LAUREN KESSLER t Lincoln City Cultural Center: CABALLITO NEGRO “SONGLINES” TOUR t Lincoln County Fairgrounds: FRIENDS OF YAQUINA LIGHTHOUSES – “COUNTRY LIGHTS” CONCERT & DANCE FEATURING LIVE MUSIC BY BORDER PATROL
OREGON COAST COUNCIL FOR THE ARTS
% OFF 20 R ed B arn Storew ide Sale
Flea M art
46-14
Starting at $30 & up
good ole honkytonk, hard-core country & western, hillbilly and Western swing. 9 pm, The San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita, 503-368-5080. YUR DADDY — Rock, funk and party tunes of the type fueled by cheap whiskey and endless pints. 9 pm, Manzanita Lighthouse Pub & Grub, 36450 Hwy. 101, Nehalem, 503-368-4990. CROOKED — Enjoy an evening of “Northwest acoustic reggae” from this Siletz musical trio, with Brett Lane on guitar and vocals, Casee Case on bass guitar and Dakota Burgins providing percussion. 9 pm-1 am, Chinook’s Seafood Grill, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-244-6665. CEDAR TEETH — Hailing from the Cascade foothills of Colton, this five-piece rock band combines driving and melodic bass lines, distinct leads and visceral yet vulnerable vocals. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. BLUE EVOLUTION — Darwin himself would tell you that the only reason we emerged from the primordial ooze and developed thumbs was so we could play bass. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. BETH WILLIS ROCK DUO — If you can think of a song, chances are they can play it. Come test the theory. See you at Salishan. 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.
Store hours 9:30am-4:30pm Wed-Mon 33920 Hwy. 101 S. in Cloverdale
More online at coastarts.org
Between Cloverdale & Hebo
Hidden Treasures & Fabulous Bargains!
$
200 OFF
Your purchase of $10 or more with this ad
Hurry! Expires 2/25/16 On the county Fairgrounds in Newport, NE Third St. between Eads & Harney
Open Tues-Sat 10-4 Sunday Noon-4
541-574-1861 www.folcas.com
Cedar Teeth • Saturday, Feb. 20, in Lincoln City
18 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016
WILD HOG IN THE WOODS — This Oregon stringband plays a wild mix of old-time, swing, sleaze-jazz, ragtime, blues and tin-pan alley tunes with honest verve and gusto. 8:30-11 pm, Nana’s Irish Pub, 613 NW 3rd Street, Newport, 541-574-8787. RICK BARTOW AND THE BACKSEAT DRIVERS — Classic folk and original ballads. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. THE RONNIE JAY DUO — From the San Francisco Bay Area, these two swarthy Mediterranean swing kings will put a smile on your face, get your fingers snappin’ and your toes a-tappin’. Ronnie Jay Pirrello on vocals, guitar and blues harp with Richard Robitaille on percussion and vocals. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Sunday, Feb. 21 HOWLY SLIM — Trains, tramps, tree-planters, small towns, big
cities, roads, boulevards, hobo jungles, skid row streets, loneliness, happiness, madness, longing, waitresses, good love, bad love, love gone wrong, corny, liberal, redneck, heartache. Songs of all this and more. 5 pm, Manzanita Lighthouse Pub & Grub, 36480 N. Hwy. 101, Nehalem. OREGON COAST JAM SOCIETY — 4 pm, Old Oregon Tavern, 1604 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-8515. JUNE RUSHING & FRIENDS — With a rotating line up, this group pulls from a wide variety of influences and styles to present one of the Pacific Northwest’s best-known folk rock sounds. 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. DAVE COWDEN — Top-40 classic rock from the ’50s to the ’80s. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Monday, Feb. 22 THE RONNIE JAY DUO — From the San Francisco Bay Area, these two swarthy Mediterranean swing kings will put a smile on your face, get your fingers snappin’ and your toes a tappin’. Ronnie Jay Pirrello on vocals, guitar and blues harp with Richard Robitaille on percussion and vocals. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Tuesday, Feb. 23 OPEN JAM — Hosted by One Way Out. 8:30 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976.
Continued on Pg. 19
s o u n dwave s
Find
Continued from Pg. 18 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. BRINGETTO JAZZ DUO — Classic jazz favorites. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Harmony
Wednesday, Feb. 24 LOZELLE JENNINGS — Swing by for this front porch-style
solo, packed with stories, outright lies and lots of laughs. 5-8 pm, O’Downey’s Irish Pub and Restaurant, 10 Bay Street, Depoe Bay. IAN SMITH — Folk, originals and covers. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Thursday, Feb. 25
Friday, Feb. 26 BETH WILLIS ROCK DUO — Come for the tasty beverages. Stay
to hear your favorite songs played by the celebrated duo. Requests and booze. Yum. 9 pm-1 am, Chinook’s Seafood Grill, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-244-6665. THE RONNIE JAY DUO — From the San Francisco Bay Area, these two swarthy Mediterranean swing kings will put a smile on your face, get your fingers snappin’ and your toes a tappin’. Ronnie Jay Pirrello on vocals, guitar and blues harp with Richard Robitaille on percussion and vocals. 5-9 pm, The Mist @ Surftides, 2945 NW Jetty Ave., Lincoln City, 541-994-2191. BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 8-10 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. ORIGINAL FACE FEATURING JOE ARMENIO — Original electronic jazz. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. AGAINST THE RAGING TIDE — A four-strong group of local hard rockers, shaped by the salt air of Newport. 10 pm, Uptown Pub, 636 SW Herbert Street, Newport, 541-265-3369. PAUL BOGAARD AND FRIENDS — 6-8 pm, Club 1216, located inside Canyon Way Restaurant and Bookstore, 1216 SW Canyon Way, Newport, 541-265-8319. KENNY, BOB & ROB — An entertaining trio from Bandon that plays folk music with a country flavor. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Saturday, Feb. 27 HEARTS OF OAK — Spruce up your evening with a little Americana and alt-country. 9 pm, San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita, 503-368-5080. BETH WILLIS ROCK DUO — She soothes, he shreds, the result is magic. Come hear your favorites, by request. 9 pm-1 am, Chinook’s Seafood Grill, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-244-6665. THE RONNIE JAY DUO — From the San Francisco Bay Area, these two swarthy Mediterranean swing kings will put a smile on your face, get your fingers snappin’ and your toes a tappin’. Ronnie Jay Pirrello on vocals, guitar and blues harp with Richard Robitaille on
Duck Fan? Beaver Fan? Lincoln County High School Fan? Countryside Ride • Saturday, Feb. 20, in Manzanita percussion and vocals. 5-9 pm, The Mist @ Surftides, 2945 NW Jetty Ave., Lincoln City, 541-994-2191. UNDRTOW — Island beats with an extra dose of salt from Lincoln County’s homegrown reggae band. 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. BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 8-10 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. BARBARA TURRILL AND GIB BERNHARDT — Classic folk and original ballads. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. AGAINST THE RAGING TIDE — A four-strong group of local hard rockers, shaped by the salt air of Newport. 10 pm, Uptown Pub, 636 SW Herbert Street, Newport, 541-265-3369. RICHARD SILEN & DEANE BRISTOW — Singer-songwriter Silen is a long way from Texas, now keeping time with the lapping of the Pacific, and Bristow’s harmonica. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
To hear all the highlights of your favorite team keep your radio tuned to AM 1310 AM KNPT or 1400 AM KBCH.
Plus, Lincoln County’s high school sports action! Keep our stations on your presets, and tune in during power outages for news updates!
knpt • 1310am • newport
|
kbch • 1400am • lincoln city
Weave your own wool rug A one-day experience. It’s washable!
Sunday, Feb. 28
$60: Includes all materials!
OREGON COAST JAM SOCIETY — 4 pm, Old Oregon Tavern,
1604 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-8515. 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. IAN SMITH — Folk, originals and covers. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
DON’T SEE YOUR FAVORITE BAND? SCRIBBLE THE TIME, DATE AND VENUE ON TO THE LABEL OF A CHEEKY ZINFANDEL AND COURIER IT TO US AT MID CITY PLAZA. THINK WE’VE HAD ENOUGH? JUST EMAIL THE DETAILS TO NEWS@OREGONCOASTTODAY.COM.
Pick your own colors! Class size limited to four people at $60 each. Rug size approx. to 2-1/2 x 4-1/2
Reservations: 541-764-3997 • Just 3 Miles N. of Depoe Bay
541-994-4453 3412 SE Hwy. 101 in Lincoln City Across from Christmas Cottage
2GARDENING 0% OFF BOOKS
Happy 50th Birthday Lincoln City! CASH O R CH E CK O N LY • E X P IRE S 2/26/16
46-14
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. 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. OPEN MIKE NIGHT — Hosted by Amy Pattison. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. RICHARD SHARPLESS — Retired from his days of playing in Nashville, Richard plays guitar and sings his own tunes plus an eclectic mix of favorites. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
541-994-4467 1747 NW Hwy. 101 in Lincoln City • North of Maxwell’s
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016 • 19
22 Bit of vaquero gear 23 Product boasting “a unique blend of 23 flavors”
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE S T R I P S R O A R D O W
N E O C O N
A P T O L L O N L E O S HE A T E R T T E E R D U P HE A B A N C A L L N I C E A D O P HE L I U E A D S P K D T I E S O L
C O O P
HE N C E
D R I L L
R E S A I T E E L O I N E P R O T T
R E M O T HE E O
T R E E T T H O O N N E S T U N N O I N S O
A M P L O X A C T S T HE A M B I R I A L I S T S T HE A S H A M S I C O N A HE R O T F A R S O L E U R E D
DOWN 1 Full of sauce 2 The Ainapo Trail is on its slope 3 Rattled 4 Entrees from the frozen food department 5 Lisa of “The Cosby Show” 6 Selene’s Roman counterpart 7 Relative of “Without a doubt” in a Magic 8 Ball 8 Powerful foe of the Man of Steel 9 Watt-second fraction 10 Battery container? 11 Come to terms with 12 They often follow showers 13 Shortest-serving U.S. vice president (31 days)
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: GEOGRAPHY: V Each answer is a geographic location starting with “V.” (e.g., City known for its canals. Answer: Venice.)
10
15
17
11
12
18 21
22
23
25
5 6 4
2
1 4
19
20
6 7
8 6 1
13
16
24
26
27
28
29
30
31
36
37
2 9 6
40
41
42
43
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
21 Tart flavor 24 Primp 26 Vehicle that’s loaded in a Harry Belafonte hit 28 Highlight for some hockey fans 30 For-profit university with dozens of U.S. campuses
37 Groups of power brokers
31 What a reverse stock split increases
Difficulty Level
38 Change
32 Like much of northern Siberia
40 Embarrassing sound in a lecture hall
34 Prestigious Pasadena institution 35 A rut often leads to it
43 Start for seas or seasons
36 Delaware Valley tribe
45 Atlanta-based media inits.
Online subscriptions:call Today’s puzzle and more past For answers, 1-900-285-5656, $1.20than per7,000 minute; or, with 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. Share tips: nytimes.com/puzzleforum. Crosswords for young. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
PH.D. LEVEL 7. Romeo and Juliet’s city. 8. The largest Russian port on the Paci¿c Ocean. 9. The easternmost country on the Indochina Peninsula. ANSWERS: 1. Venezuela. 2. Vatican City. 3. Venus. 4. Mount Vesuvius. 5. Vancouver. 6. Versailles. 7. Verona. 8. Vladivostok. 9. Vietnam. 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? Super Quiz is a registered trademark of K. Fisher Enterprises Ltd. (c) 2016 Ken Fisher North America Syndicate Inc.
2 4 9 2/21
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.
39 Oktoberfest fare
33 Chair pair
2 7
1 7 3
PUZZLE BY DAVID PHILLIPS
18 Interjection of dejection
5
8
33
38
39
44
32
35
2016 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
GRADUATE LEVEL 4. Pompeii was destroyed by this volcano. 5. The largest city in British Columbia. 6. The palace of Louis XIV.
9
34
SUPER QUIZ
FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. A country in South America. 2. The pope’s domain. 3. Planet between Mercury and Earth.
8
2/21
21 Really get to
7
9 2 8 4 3 1 7 6 5
20 Request at a ticket window
14
6
1 4 5 6 9 7 2 3 8
19 Heat meas. that also names a major L.A. TV station
5
6 7 3 2 5 8 9 4 1
17 Taking some heat?
4
4 5 7 8 1 6 3 2 9
16 Like many flu sufferers
3
3 9 2 7 4 5 1 8 6
15 Peripheral
2
8 1 6 9 2 3 4 5 7
14 Little opening?
1
2 6 9 1 8 4 5 7 3
10 Throw
44 Going ___ 45 Possible purse pooches 46 Provide design details for 47 Comparatively corrupt 48 Send packing 49 “One World” musician John 50 Mancala playing piece 51 Fiddle (with)
5 8 4 3 7 9 6 1 2
5 2008 R&B Grammy winner for “Growing Pains”
25 Dungeons & Dragons race 26 University of Cincinnati squad 27 Replies from con men? 28 Norman who wrote “A River Runs Through It” 29 Smidge 30 Resident 31 Ed promoter 34 Green-glazed Chinese porcelain 35 Attorney general under Bush 41 36 Not fit for Passover 38 “Miss Julie” composer 39 Like literati 40 Networking aid 41 Opposite of division 42 It’s similar to pale lager
No. 0129
Difficulty Level
ACROSS 1 Shout when there’s no cause for alarm?
Edited by Will Shortz
7 3 1 5 6 2 8 9 4
Crossword
2016 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
By Dave Green
20 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016
Last Week’s Answers:
beach reads
tide tables
It’s never tutu late The challenges of rekindling a childhood dream will be on full display in Newport this Saturday, Feb. 20, when author and immersive journalist Lauren Kessler appears at the Nye Beach Writers’ Series to read from her latest book. “Raising the Barre: Big Dreams, False Starts and My Midlife Quest to Dance The Nutcracker,” is a poignant tongue-in-cheek story about what happens when a middle-aged woman decides to revisit her childhood dream of becoming a ballerina. Kessler, who lives in Eugene, is the author of nine works of narrative nonfiction, including the Washington Post bestseller “Clever Girl” and the Los Angeles Times bestseller “The Happy Bottom Riding Club.” Her journalism has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Los Angeles Times Magazine, O magazine, salon.com, Utne Reader, The Nation, newsweek.com, Prevention, Ladies Home Journal and other publications. “I am fascinated by true stories — real people, real events,” Kessler said. “I love research, whether it’s becoming part of a world I write about, as in ‘Dancing with Rose,’ or tooling around the Mojave tracking down and interviewing desert rats, as I did for ‘Happy Bottom Riding Club’ or hunching over FBI documents in the J. Edgar Hoover Building in Washington, D.C., as I did for ‘Clever Girl.’” Kessler is an international speaker, workshop leader and the creator of two graduate programs in
LINCOLN CITY FARMERS & CRAFTERS MARKET
Returning Sunday March 6th at 10 AM! Lincoln City Farmers and Crafters Market
Bernard Farms Greenbridge Farms Natural Meat Farm Fresh Eggs
at the Lincoln City Cultural Center
540 NE Hwy. 101 lincolncityfarmersmarket.org
Tillamook Bay, Garibaldi Date
Thurs., Feb. 18 Fri., Feb. 19 Sat., Feb. 20 Sun., Feb. 21 Mon., Feb. 22 Tues., Feb. 23 Wed., Feb. 24 Thurs., Feb. 25
2:39 am 3:44 am 4:40 am 5:28 am 6:12 am 6:52 am 7:31 am 8:09 am
Siletz Bay, Lincoln City Date
Thurs., Feb. 18 Fri., Feb. 19 Sat., Feb. 20 Sun., Feb. 21 Mon., Feb. 22 Tues., Feb. 23 Wed., Feb. 24 Thurs., Feb. 25
2:56 am 4:02 am 4:56 am 5:43 am 6:25 am 7:04 am 7:42 am 8:20 am
Yaquina Bay, Newport Date
Thurs., Feb. 18 Fri., Feb. 19 Sat., Feb. 20 Sun., Feb. 21 Mon., Feb. 22 Tues., Feb. 23 Wed., Feb. 24 Thurs., Feb. 25
narrative journalism. She blogs at www. counterclockwisebook.com about health, wellness and living an engaged life. Saturday’s reading will start at 7 pm at the Newport Visual Arts Center, 777 NW Beach Drive, followed by an open mic for local writers. General admission is $8; students get in free. For more information, go to www.writersontheedge. org.
2:18 am 3:24 am 4:18 am 5:05 am 5:47 am 6:26 am 7:04 am 7:42 am
Alsea Bay, Waldport Date
Thurs., Feb. 18 Fri., Feb. 19 Sat., Feb. 20 Sun., Feb. 21 Mon., Feb. 22 Tues., Feb. 23 Wed., Feb. 24 Thurs., Feb. 25
2:45 am 3:51 am 4:51 am 5:43 am 6:30 am 7:12 am 7:52 am 8:32 am
Low Tides
3.5 3.3 3.0 2.6 2.2 2.0 1.8 1.6
High Tides
3:46 pm 0.3 4:38 pm 0.0 5:22 pm -0.2 6:02 pm -0.2 6:39 pm -0.1 7:13 pm 0.1 7:47 pm 0.4 8:19 pm 0.9
9:03 am 10:02 am 10:54 am 12:13 am 12:48 am 1:21 am 1:52 am 2:22 am
8.6 8.7 8.7 7.6 7.9 8.0 8.1 8.1
4:12 pm 5:01 pm 5:43 pm 6:21 pm 6:56 pm 7:28 pm 7:59 pm 8:30 pm
0.0 -0.2 -0.2 -0.2 -0.1 0.1 0.4 0.7
8:38 am 9:36 am 10:27 am 11:12 am 12:24 am 12:56 am 1:26 am 1:55 am
6.8 6.8 6.9 6.8 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.2
3:34 pm 4:23 pm 5:05 pm 5:43 pm 6:18 pm 6:50 pm 7:21 pm 7:52 pm
0.0 -0.2 -0.3 -0.3 -0.1 0.2 0.5 1.0
8:29 am 9:27 am 10:18 am 11:03 am 12:15 am 12:47 am 1:17 am 1:46 am
8.8 8.9 8.9 8.9 7.8 8.0 8.0 8.1
4:01 pm 4:55 pm 5:42 pm 6:23 pm 7:00 pm 7:36 pm 8:10 pm 8:42 pm
0.6 0.4 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.4 0.6 1.0
8:46 am 9:47 am 10:43 am 12:11 am 12:49 am 1:23 am 1:55 am 2:25 am
7.7 7.7 7.7 6.7 6.9 7.1 7.2 7.3
Low Tides
2.3 2.2 2.0 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.3 1.2
10:25 pm 11:11 pm 11:49 pm --11:54 am 12:34 pm 1:12 pm 1:51 pm
5.4 5.7 5.9 -6.7 6.6 6.3 6.0
High Tides
Low Tides
3.4 3.3 3.1 2.8 2.5 2.2 1.9 1.8
6.9 7.3 -8.7 8.6 8.4 8.2 7.8
High Tides
Low Tides
3.5 3.3 3.0 2.6 2.3 2.1 1.9 1.8
10:44 pm 11:33 pm --11:41 am 12:23 pm 1:03 pm 1:41 pm 2:19 pm
10:16 pm 11:02 pm 11:40 pm --11:45 pm 12:25 pm 1:03 pm 1:42 pm
7.0 7.3 7.6 -8.7 8.5 8.2 7.7
High Tides
10:30 pm 11:26 pm --11:33 am 12:18 pm 1:01 pm 1:42 pm 2:22 pm
6.1 6.4 -7.6 7.6 7.5 7.3 7.1
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 • february 19, 2016 • 21
learn a little
whale-size super savings every day!
It ticks a lot of boxes
All of Your Favorite Brands: Nike, American Eagle, PacSun, Coach, Under Armour, Gap, Chico’s, The North Face, Levi’s, Columbia Sportswear, Jockey, Hollister, Reebok, Eddie Bauer, Lo , Bass, Old Navy and more!
Whether it’s mowing the lawn, pulling weeds or changing the oil, there’s always some task just waiting to drain away funds from the household budget. But what if you could trade the skills you do have in exchange for those you don’t? The Lower Columbia Time Bank makes this possible, allowing members to barter hours of their time and get all the jobs done without so much as a nickel changing hands. All the ‘banking’ is done online at http://locotimebank. org. On Thursday, Feb. 25, the time bank will host a screening of “Time as Money,” followed by a Q&A and a chance to sign up. The event will run from 6 to 8 pm, at the Nestucca Fire and Rescue Community Hall, 30710 Hwy. 101, Hebo. For more information, call Linda Werner at 503-398-5223.
lincolncityoutlets.com
Hwy 101 at Milepost 115.6 Stores Open Every Day at 10am
NEWPORT FARMERS MARKET SATURDAYS 10am to 2pm Rain or h S ine!
Indoors at the Lincoln County Fairgrounds!
LOCALLY GROWN FOR ALL SEASONS
22 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016
Jackie B. Peterson
Going solo — twice Registration is now open for a pair of Oregon Coast Community College presentations on how artists and creative professionals can be successful as “solopreneurs.” Hosted by the Small Business Development Center, the March 8 sessions will feature Jackie B. Peterson, author of “Better, Smarter, Richer.” Artists typically operate alone — forced to master not only their own artwork, but also marketing, shipping, accounting and more. Peterson has made a career of helping such solo-preneurs manage the myriad tasks of operating their businesses as well as helping them price their work in a way that’s fair
to them and representative of their efforts and talents. Peterson’s presentation, entitled “Learn How to Price for Prosperity,” will outline the four kinds of costs artists must include in their pricing models. She will show artists how to overcome the fear of quoting the right price; how to articulate the value of their product; and teach them two elements that will help them increase prices. The March 8 presentation will run from 9 am to noon at the college’s Lincoln City campus, 3788 SE High School Drive; and from 2-5 pm at the Newport campus, 400 SE College Way. To register, call 541-9944166 for Lincoln City or 541994-4166 for Newport.
Blessed are the piece makers Washington ceramicist Jane Perrigo will visit Manzanita later this month to lead a workshop on how to create fun and whimsical mosaic pieces out of broken ceramics and found items. The Saturday, Feb. 27, workshop will run from 10 am to 3 pm at The Hoffman Center for the Arts. Tuition for the class will be $45 with a $30 materials fee. The materials fee will cover
cutters, prepared mirrors, some ceramics, glue and demonstration grout. Students will be asked to bring gloves, dishes and found objects to be used for projects. Perrigo, of Tonasket, Washington, has been teaching for 20 years. She shows at the Astoria market and has been featured in galleries throughout the northwest, including Nehalem.
LCCC Presents
Caballito Negro in
Concert Saturday, Feb 27 • 7pm Flutist Tessa Brinckman and percussionist Terry Longshore perform intercultural work, in a fearless, ecstatic blend of modern and traditional aesthetics. Inspired by Federico García Lorca’s poem, “Canción de Jinete (1860)”, the duo collaborates with many prominent, innovative artists, creating contemporary music that pushes the flute and percussion repertoire to new heights, and always in the spirit of duende.
Tickets $16 adv/$18 door
Coffee Concert Sunday, Feb. 21 at 3 pm
540 NE Hwy. 101, inside the historic Delake School
TICKETS & INFO: www.lincolncityculturalcenter.org 541-994-9994
Enjoy a casual matinee concert with local musicians Doreen Thorusen (violin), Mark Irmscher (clarinet), Carol Wolfe (piano) plus impresaria Rita Warton and her students. Complimentary pastries and yummy Cape Foulweather Coffee. Admission by donation, with all proceeds going to the LCCC.
$1 Off
any purchase of $10 or more please present this coupon • limit one per customer
Oregon’s Oldest Year-’Round Christmas Store!
• We Personalize Your Ornaments Free • Free Gift Wrapping of Purchases
3305 S.W. Hwy. 101 • Lincoln City • 541-996-2230 oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016 • 23
ACES CHICKEN FETTUCCINE
America
THURSDAYS 4PM-10PM
March 4 & 5, 8pm Tickets $25 - $40
Served with garlic bread and side salad
$9.50
$100,000
GUARANTEED MAIN EVENT FEBRUAR RY 20
- 28, 20 016
chinookwindscasino.com
3245 NE 50th Street • 541-994-8232
Charley Pride April 8 & 9, 8pm Tickets $30- $45
The Jacksons May 20 & 21, 8pm Tickets $50- $65 On Sale February 20 For tickets call 1-888-MAIN ACT ((1-888-624-6228)) or purchase p online at chinookwindscasino.com. available for Winners Circle Members. chi hino hinoo nookwin ndsccas casin no.com m.. Discount Dissco Di D co ou un ntt av vaililaable va ble fo or W Win in ers inn er Ci C rcle Mem rc mber mb eers rs.
chinookwindscasino.com • Lincoln City • 1-888-CHINOOK 24 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016
LINCOLN CITY
SUPER THE AUCTION II SEQUEL It’s a little bid special Whether you are in the market for an air compressor, a decadent wine collection or a luxury vacation package, the Lincoln City Chamber of Commerce has the perfect item for you at this weekend’s Super Auction II. The marathon auction helps fund the chamber’s many civic programs by offering everything from artwork to professional services to gift cards galore — all to the highest bidder. Bidding will begin at 9 am on Saturday, Feb. 20, with local celebrities and chamber members taking shifts behind the auction block all the way through to 10 pm. The public can experience the auction live at Chinook
Chamber President Heather Hatton shows off Chinook Winds show tickets and the $869 diamond earrings from Diamonds by the Sea — up for grabs for anyone who buys an item at full value.
Winds’ Aces Bar and Grill, located at 3245 NE 50th Street, or log on to www. lcchamber.com to see the event streaming live. People watching from home can call in their bids over the phone, but should
be prepared for a roughly 12-second lag. Anyone who buys an item for full price or above will be entered into one of 13 hourly drawings to win a pair of show tickets from Chinook Winds Casino
Resort. They will also be entered into an end-of-evening grand prize draw for an $869 pair of diamond earrings donated by Diamonds at the Sea. For those who want to scope out what’s on offer ahead of time, the Friday, Feb. 19, Preview Party gives people the chance to take a free, up-close look at auction items while enjoying appetizers and a no-host bar. The party runs from 5:30 to 8 pm at Aces Bar & Grill. Chamber Executive Director Nonni Augustine said she is looking forward to a great time. “This event is totally community oriented,” she said. “All our donations are from friends and local businesses. Our cameras and webcasting
TO BID, CALL : 541-557 2045 equipment comes from Taft High and David Dahle of Lincoln City TV.com; all our camera operators, phone handlers, board attendants are volunteers from the community. They volunteer because it is so much fun.” Listings for this dynamic event can change by the minute. For the most upto date list of items, go to www.lcchamber.com, call the chamber office at 541994-3070 or look up “Super Auction II” on Facebook. Volunteers and donations are still welcome.
Hourby-hour listings HOUR ONE:
9-10
AM
Oregon Coast Community College Certificate for $200 worth of college classes, plus OCCC coffee mug and sweatshirt. value: $200+ item# 5106
Nancy Leffelbein Cui Fit workout cookbook and apron. value: $55 item# 115
Sapphire Center Amethyst necklace. value: $129
item# 117
Sherman Smith, author Three autographed paperback copies of his historical fiction books; published by Elementa: “Poets Can’t Sing,”“The Honeysuckle Rose Hotel” and “Golden City on Fire.” value: $70 item# 133
Continued on Pg. B2
The Lincoln City Chamber of Commerce would like to thank Prehistoric for sponsoring the 2016 Lincoln City Chamber of Commerce Super Auction Listings! oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016 • B1
HOUR THREE:
Continued from Pg. B1
Edward Jones Ice River rolling cooler with roll-up blanket. value: $42 item# 138
Robert’s Bookshop Three books on World War II and a $10 gift certificate. value: $60 item# 141
11
AM-NOON
Christmas Cottage German Steinbach decorative statue, “Geppeto”. value: $47 item# 103
Olivia Beach Cottage Rentals
Liberty Inn
Full zip hoodie, size large. value: $45
Gift certificates and gift basket totalling $500. value: $500 item# 548
Bob’s Beach Books
The News Guard Gift certificate for $500 advertising package, valid through Dec. 31, 2016. value: $500 item# 529
Granny’s Attic Two $10 gift certificates. value: $20
item# 520
Little Antique Mall One $25 gift certificate. value: $25
item# 5104
AM
One $100 gift card. value $100
Jennifer Sears Glass
Java Depot
Taft Athletic Club
Taft Athletic Club
2-Month Children’s Martial Arts Self-Defense membership. Includes: enrollment, orientation class and two months’ tuition. value $237 item# 540
2-Month Children’s Martial Arts Self-Defense membership. Includes: enrollment, orientation class and two months’ tuition. value $237 item# 541
Handcrafted glass float. value: $65
item# 120
Gift basket. value: $50
item# 152
Economic Development Alliance
Converge
Gift bag containing a bottle of red wine, chocolate truffles by Nye Beach Sweets and four Newport Seafood & Wine festival tickets — valid for Sunday only. value: $52 item# 151
$50 gift certificate to Converge in Depoe Bay, a women’s apparel shop. Expires Dec. 31, 2016. value: $50 item# 532
item# 102
Taft Athletic Club
Two certificates for admission for two to any regular performance. Subject to availability. Advance reservations required. Not valid New Year’s Eve or
Six bottles of wine, professional corkscrew kit including foil cutter, two extra screws, pourer, bottle stopper and eight wine glasses. value: $200 item# 126
$100 Samaritan Cosmetic Services gift certificate plus bottle of Flying Dutchman Syrah and bottle of Spindrift Pinot Gris. value: $206 item# 156
item# 503
Oregon Coast TODAY Gift certificate redeemable for one full-color, sixth-of-a-page ad in the Oregon Coast’s premier arts and entertainment weekly. value: $97 item# 517
Subway Certificate for a Subway platter. value: $36 item# 552
Taft Athletic Club 2-Month Adult Kickboxing Fitness membership. Includes: enrollment, orientation class, two months’ tuition and full access to fitness center and locker rooms. value: $257 item# 538
Hurley Landscape Management Windsor Vineyards, Paso Robles 2004 Cabernet Sauvignon. On label: “Thank You For Being My Friend Papa Harold”. value: $25 item# 134
HOUR FIVE:
Barnacle Bill’s
1-2
item# 500
The Eventuary Let this professional events team make your special occasion one to remember with event services valued at $500, including rental of a truly unique venue in one of Lincoln City’s most architecturally significant buildings. value: $500 item# 515
Electronic Superstore Gift Certificate for one admission to NRA instructor Robert Portwood’s firearms safety course. value: $25 item# 545
opening night galas. Expires April 1, 2017. value: $56 item# 526
PM
Lincoln City Outlets
Waddell & Reed
Gift bag with decorative candle and glass float. value: $75 item# 105
One $325 gift certfificate for Rejuvenation Massage & Spa. value: $325 item# 547
Chamber Ambassadors & Pacific Grind Café
HOUR FOUR:
NOON- 1
PM
Lincoln City Cultural Center A full complement of LCCC soaps, including unscented, lemongrass, eucalyptus mint and honey oatmeal — created by Jill Keck of Calise Soapworks. Plus, two complimentary tickets to an LCCC-sponsored performance of your choice. value: $56 item# 104
Looking Glass Inn Gift certificate for one night’s stay. value: $125 item# 549
Humble Pie Pizzeria One $25 gift certificate. value: $25
item# 504
Cape Foulweather Coffee 12oz beans Fairweather Blend, long sleeve 50th anniversary shirt, two collectible 50th anniversary mugs and a Finders Keepers poster. value: $75 item# 1121
Siletz Bay Lodge One night stay in a room with one king or two queen beds. value: $100 item# 518
Taft Athletic Club 2-Month Children’s Martial Arts Self-Defense membership. Includes: enrollment, orientation class and two months’ tuition. value: $237 item# 539
HOUR SIX:
2-3
PM
Mill’s Ace Hardware Craftsman air compressor, 10-gallon. value $170 item# 106
Northwest Winds Kites and Toys 11-foot Shazam Delta kite. value $90 item# 110
Julie McBee Shrink-wrapped Finders Keepers poster from the first year of program, 2000. value $75 item# 122
Isham & Sprague Pulsar men’s watch. value $100
item# 139
Rock Your World
Pacific West Ambulance
A necklace featuring labradorite intricately set in brass and copper. Handcrafted by Laura Joki. value $165 item# 147
Five-day, 64-piece survival backpack, containing food, water, first aid supplies and blankets. value: $70 item# 136
Certificate for dinner for two. value $20 item# 519
Enrique’s Mexican Food
B2 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016
4-5
PM
North Lincoln Sanitary Service
Mills Ace Hardware
NLSS sweatshirt and hand puppet. Sweatshirt can be exchanged for other colors or sizes. Gift certificate for two dumps of a 1.5-yard temporary container. value $120 item# 109
DeWalt impact driver kit. value $100
Three books on cooking and a $10 gift certificate. value $60 item# 140
Inn at Spanish Head One $54 gift certificate. value: $54
HOUR EIGHT: Made in Oregon gift basket. value $75
PM
Robert’s Bookshop
Goodie basket including Champagne, a glass float and $100 gift certificate. value: $200 item# 119
Gift certificate for one night in a Romance Suite. value: $249 item# 514
HOUR SEVEN:
Granny’s Attic
Samaritan North Lincoln Hospital
Certificate for rock wall or hot tub party. value $75 item# 506
BBSI
Quality Printing Service
Theatre West
Sea Horse Oceanfront Lodging
Two whale watching cruises. value $70 item# 550
Aubergine-sliver flared glass bowl made in Turkey. value $75 item# 123
Mo’s
Friends of Lincoln County Animal Shelter
item# 505
Gift Certificate for lube and oil service. value: $38 item# 501
Collingwood hand-crafted blended whiskey. value: $40 item# 118
Taft Liquor Store
Lincoln City Community Center
Tradewinds
3-4
Lincoln City Liquor Outlet
2-Month Adult Kickboxing Fitness membership. Includes: enrollment, orientation class, two months’ tuition and full access to fitness center and locker rooms. value: $257 item# 537
One $25 gift certificate. value: $25
Kyllo’s Seafood Grill
Napa wine kit with two wine glasses, holder, opener, bottle of wine and roll-up blanket. value: $46 item# 137
Ares Ethos FPV Ready-to-fly QuadCopter. Includes Aegis six-axis flight stabilization system and a camera that films 720Hd video at 60 frames per second. Replacement parts available at Hobbytown stores. value: $330 item# 135
Printing of 500 business cards. value: $78 item# 516
Cap’n Gull’s Handblown glass float. value: $45
Canvas book bag with four books and lizard bookends. value: $196 item# 132
Edward Jones
Gerber Tire & Service Center
HOUR TWO:
10-11
item# 111
Penman Productions Set of five Thomas Martindale thrillers from Oregon Coast author Ron Lovell. value: $75 item# 114
Carousel by the Beach
item# 101
item# 108
Granny’s Attic “Love the Beach” memory locket. Silver chain and locket with beach charms inside. value $30 item# 124
Candyland Candy! value $100
item# 149
Gallucci’s One hoody, one crew neck, two $50 gift certificates and one birthday party package for 10 people. value $228 item# 155
TO BID, CALL: 541-5572045
Converge $50 gift certificate to Converge in Depoe Bay, a women’s apparel shop. Expires Dec. 31, 2016. value $50 item# 533
A Tammaro Home glass bowl handmade in Italy in the Gruppo Ti Spa area. The bowl was made according to Murano masters’ techniques in the Italian tradition. value $75 item# 148
One $50 gift certificate. value $50
Ryan Gallery
Station 3 Promotional Graphics
Two-piece wall art bamboo design in copper sculpture. value $250 item# 154
Chinook Winds Casino Resort Certificates for two tickets for a headline show, 18-hole golf with cart, Rogue River Steakhouse, two tickets to Comedy on the Coast, Aces Sports Bar & Grill dining and Chinook’s Seafood Grill dining. value $420 item# 535
Garage Door Sales Gift certificate for a Genie 1/2 HP garage door opener installed with two remotes for 7-foot door. Expires Feb. 28, 2017. value $375 item# 521
Gerber Tire & Service Center Gift Certificate for four-wheel alignment. value $81 item# 502
Oil Can Henry’s item# 508
3-by-5-foot banner; includes hemming, grommets and design. Expires Feb. 28, 2017. value $75 item# 522
Taft Athletic Club Fitness membership. Includes: enrollment, fitness evaluation, two personal training sessions and two-month membership. value $197 item# 542
HOUR NINE:
5-6
PM
Paul M Jensen, DMD Philips Sonicare Diamond Clean electric toothbrush. value $105 item# 112
Coast Clock 31-day movement “Waltham” wall clock, with a light chime on the hour and half hour. 15” wide, 27” tall and 5.5” deep. value $120 item# 127
State Farm Insurance Heavy-duty steel shelving by Muscle Rack 5500 Series, 5-shelf, adjustable, 72” high, 48” wide and 24” deep. value $85 item# 145
Bryan P Fitzsimmons, CPA Beautiful, gourmet food basket. value $200 item# 150
Continued on Pg. B3
Continued from Pg. B2
Buy Local
North Lincoln Hospital Foundation One ticket to Corks & Cuisine and a bottle of Spindrift Pinot Blanc 2012 Willamette Valley. value $145 item# 157
Oregon Coast TODAY Gift Certificate redeemable for one full-color, sixth-of-a-page ad in the Oregon Coast’s premier arts and entertainment weekly. value $97 item# 510
Snap Fitness Healthy Start certificate for one month free Snap Fitness membership, free enrollment and two free personal training sessions. value $199 item# 523
Subway Certificate for a Subway platter. value $36 item# 551
Taft Athletic Club Fitness membership. Includes: enrollment, fitness evaluation, two personal training sessions and two-month membership. value $197 item# 543
HOUR TEN:
6-7
PM
Shearwater Inn Certificate for one night’s stay. Restrictions apply. value $175 item# 5105
A gift basket packed with wine, glass art, chocolate apples and more. value $400 item# 161
HOUR ELEVEN:
7-8
PM
Set of five Thomas Martindale thrillers from Oregon Coast author Ron Lovell. value $75 item# 113
Margaret Miller Pendleton 100-percent pure virgin wool throw blanket, 68” x 52”. value $85 item# 128
Granny’s Attic Small amethyst from Aurangabad area and a $10 gift certificate. value $35 item# 144
One $25 gift certificate. value $25
item# 5101
Granny’s Attic Duck Dynasty book: “The Women of Duck Commander,” two Duck Dynasty tumblers and a $10 gift certificate. value $46 item# 143
Mills Ace Hardware Six-drawer Craftsman tool chest. value $100 item# 107
Margaret Miller Lynda Corneille signed character collectible featuring Clancey the Cat with sunglasses. value $30 item# 129
Bob’s Beach Books Celtic laser-cut cards, Shoot for the Moon journal and a $25 gift certificate good at Bob’s Beach Books and Robert’s Bookshop. value $48 item# 146
Chinook Winds Casino Resort Certificates for two tickets for headline show, 18-hole golf with cart, Rogue River Steakhouse, two tickets to Comedy on the Coast, Aces Sports Bar & Grill dining and Chinook’s Seafood Grill dining. value $420 item# 534
Pig N Pancake
Gift certificate for one admission to NRA instructor Robert Portwood’s firearms safety course. value $25 item# 544
Ten $10 gift certificates. value $100 item# 525
Ester Lee Motel
Printing of 500 business cards. value $78 item# 512
Power Ford One $150 gift certificate. value $150
item# 511
Surftides Gift certificate for a Jacuzzi suite with rose petals and wine in the room upon arrival and dining in the Mist Restaurant. value $330 item# 528
PM One $25 gift
certificate. value $25
item# 5103
Family birthdays board. value $40
Electronic Superstore
One night’s stay in a motel-style room with one queen bed. Not valid June 12 through Sept. 30, weekends, holidays, school holidays or special events. value $100 item# 524
8-9
Little Antique Mall Chamber Anonymous
Little Antique Mall
Penman Productions
HOUR TWELVE:
Quality Printing Service
Sitka Center for Art & Ecology Gift certificate for $50 individual membership and $100 toward workshop tuition fee. value $150 item# 530
Pelican Shore Certificate for one night’s stay. Restrictions apply. value $150 item# 5102
item# 116
Margaret Miller
TO BID, CALL : 541-557 2045
Northpoint Home Collection Saville throw blanket, 50” x 60”. 100-percent acrylic. value $20 item# 130
Robert’s Bookshop Three coffee table books and a $10 gift certificate. value $60 item# 142
All Ways Traveling $100 gift certificate good toward any travel. value $100 item# 527
Ken Martin’s Carpet Co. Certificate for $100 towards carpet purchase. value $100 item# 546
HOUR THIRTEEN:
9-10
PM
Lincoln City TV.com
$50 gift certificate to The Wildflower Grill. value $50 item# 531
Social Media 2016 Tune Up for your business or organization. value $500 item# 507
Sea Horse Oceanfront Lodging
Bayshore Dental Images
Retirement Funding Solutions
Certificate for one night in Deluxe King room. value $159 item# 513
Gift basket with whitening trays, dental exam, X-rays and assorted goodies. value $510 item# 100
Snap Fitness Healthy Start Certificate. One month free Snap Fitness membership, free enrollment and two free personal training sessions. value $199 item# 526
Sears Three-gallon Craftsman air compressor. value $160 item# 160
America’s Mattress
Chinook Winds Casino Resort
Two 100-percent natural Talalay latex king size pillows, a king size bamboo sheet set and reversible, two-in-one mattress protector. value $546 item# 131
Certificate for a four-night stay at Eagle Crest Resort in the Redmond area. value $1,000 item# 536
Roby’s Furniture & Appliance
Daily sponsorship of rotating news/weather on each of their six radio stations, 15-second live read ad that would run at least three times per day for three months on a rotating schedule on KNPT/KBCH/KWDP/KYTE/KCRF and U92. value $750 item# 509
Lazy Boy recliner/rocker in marine blue. value $600 item# 153
NW Natural Gas patio heater. value $158
item# 158
Oregon Coast Broadcast Center
ADD SOME
SPARKLE
Buy any item at full value or above and you will be entered into two drawings for great prizes. At the end of each hour’s bidding, all full-value buyers from that hour will be in the running for one of 13 pairs of show tickets from Chinook Winds Casino Resort. And, at the end of the evening, every single full-value buyer will be entered into a drawing for the night’s grand prize — a pair of 14-karat, two-tone fashion earrings with 024Tw round diamonds, donated by Diamonds by the Sea and valued at $869.
DONATIONS ARE ACCEPTED RIGHT UP TO THE DAY OF THE AUCTION. FOR THE MOST UP-TODATE DETAILS OF NEW ITEMS, FIND “SUPER AUCTION II, THE SEQUEL” ON FACEBOOK. oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016 • B3
www.prehistoricoregon.com
1425 NW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, OR 97367 Phone: (541) 614-1294 prehistoricor@gmail.com
B4 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • february 19, 2016