oregon coast
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July 15, 2016 • ISSUE 4, VOL. 12
FINDING
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The annual migration
E
ach summer, like a salmon returning to its native river to spawn, assistant editor Quinn feels an irresistible urge to make the 450-mile journey to the shores of Lake Trinity, California, to spend a week coating himself in mud. By the time you read these words our annual family houseboat trip will be well underway. While we always look forward to time spent with family and the beauty of the Trinity Alps, we are under no illusions that having a3-year-old on a houseboat will be any more relaxing than having a2-yearold on a houseboat. In addition to the everpresent prospect of “toddler overboard,� there’s the question of how to keep a little
soul busy from 5 am when the sun comes up to about 7 am when it becomes at least marginally acceptable to sneak downstairs and start the coee brewing. By the time you read these words, we will have discovered whether our strategy of having a fresh, individually wrapped toy for each morning on the boat has succeeded in buying us some much-needed time during those early morning starts. We generally try to avoid resorting to outright bribery as a child-rearing technique, but the memories of last year’s predawn trudges along the lakeshore in exile from a slumbering house have proved hard to shift.
And, in all honesty, Quinn’s current favorite cartoon, “The Octonauts,â€? has a line of toys that is hard for even two supposed grownups to resist. Centering on a team of animal scientists who explore, rescue and protect their way around the world’s oceans, the cartoon oers up a range of colorful mini submarines, designed by marketing geniuses to appeal to brains in the early stages of development. So it is entirely possible that Quinn will ďŹ nd his new toys hijacked by a pair of decompressing parents who spend the whole week regressing blissfully into childhood. In which case, there’s always the mud.
2 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016
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from the editor
Assistant editor Quinn with submarine, and not entirely ready for departure.
lively
Celebrate the second Saturday on the third The Nye Beach Second Saturday Summer Celebration in Newport takes place on the outdoor theater stage in the Courtyard at Café Mundo on second Saturdays from May through September. Except when it takes place on the third Saturday, This month’s edition of the free all-ages summerlong community block party sponsored annually by the Newport Community Drum Circle, takes place (for one month only) on Saturday, July 16, which according to the sundial in our state-of-theart office suite is the third Saturday in July. Drum Circle leader Chandler Davis said it’s all very simple: “We’ve been doing these shows for six years as a second Saturday event, but Café Mundo decided in 2013 to pack up the restaurant and carry it off to the woods outside Veneta for the Oregon Country Fair on the second weekend in July every year. “We considered other locations, just for July, but they didn’t have the same
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Chandler Davis
vibe, so I decided to keep the July show at Café Mundo, but to move it to the third Saturday and give our players the opportunity to go to the Oregon Country Fair too!” The free Nye Beach event, described as “part street performance, part jam session, and part neighborhood block party” features
traditional and indigenous World Beat rhythms and Native American flutes with Thunder & Lightness and the Ocean Thunder Percussion Ensemble, from noon to 3 p.m., rain or shine — on the third Saturday ( July only). Contact chandler@ chandlerdavis.com or 541272-4615.
No time to mill about Registration is now open for the parade that stands at the heart of the Toledo Summer Festival, which will take over the mill town from Thursday, July 21, through Sunday, July 24. Starting at noon on Saturday, July 23, the grand parade begins at Ace Hardware and runs to the end of Main Street. Application forms are available online at http://toledosummerfestival. com. The parade is free to enter for anyone who returns their application form by Friday, July 15. Applications postmarked after July 15 must be accompanied by a $20 registration fee in the form of a check made payable to Toledo Chamber of Commerce.
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Rockfish Rangoon
1 cup all purpose flour 1/2 teaspoon salt 1/2 teaspoon cracked black pepper 3 eggs, beaten 2 cups milk 1/2 cup butter, divided 4 (6 ounce each) rockfish fillets
4 Tablespoons fresh lime juice 1 cup diced strawberries 1/2 cup diced banana 1/2 cup diced honeydew 1/2 cup diced fresh pineapple 1/2 cup diced mango Fresh chopped parsley
Directions: In a shallow plate stir together flour, salt and pepper. Stir together eggs and milk in a separate shallow dish. Dip fish fillets into milk mixture, then dredge in flour completely covering all surfaces of the fish. Melt 2 Tbsp butter in a saute pan. Saute 2 pieces fish for a few minutes and then turn over. (The amount of time depends upon the thickness of the fish.) When cooked, remove from heat and keep warm. Wipe out pan and repeat by melting 2 Tbsp butter and sauteing the remaining fish. While the fish is sauteing, melt remaining 4 Tbsp butter in a saucepan over medium low heat. Add lime juice and fruit and cook stirring occasionally (and gently) until the fruit is heated through. The juices will thicken on their own. To serve, pour the juices over the fish and sprinkle with chopped parsley.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016 • 3
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3305 S.W. Hwy. 101 • Lincoln City • 541-996-2230 4 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016
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artsy
NYE THE TREND IS
New exhibit shows how Newport’s historic neighborhood became a coastal hotspot
T
he changing face of one of the Oregon Coast’s most historic areas is chronicled in the latest exhibit at the Newport Visual Arts Center. “Nye Beach Vernacular” by Marcus “Mar” Lehrman is a series of acrylic on canvas and wood paintings depicting scenes from Nye Beach, home to the Newport Visual Arts Center and the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts. Spilling out of the Nye Creek watershed for several blocks north, east and south of the sea-wall “turnaround,” Nye Beach is considered Newport’s historic beach community and one of Oregon’s quintessential urban beach neighborhoods. It has been a popular beach community and destination since the late 1800s, and more than 100 years’ of beach house and cottage design can be discerned in several historic buildings scattered throughout the neighborhood. Most paintings in the “Nye Beach Vernacular” series were created within the past year. Lehrman said the exhibit began with a few paintings of local street scenes and neighborhood views. “Individual buildings (and a few small groups of buildings) warranted closer attention,” he said. “Over time, a series of house ‘portraits’ began to unfold. When painting urban scenes and buildings, one feels compelled to render with a higher degree of fidelity. Architecture makes demands on
the artist. Architecture that has endured commands a measure of respect.” Nye Beach has been changing rapidly over the past two decades, with buildings rising higher on the area’s small lots to grab a precious ocean view. “More changes are coming that will continue to threaten the historic character of this urban beach neighborhood,” Lehrman said. “The ‘Nye Beach Vernacular exhibit is hyper-local and engaging,” said Visual Arts Center Director Tom Webb. “Summer visitors to Nye Beach can compare Mar’s creative expressions with their actual, first-person experience, by simply walking out the gallery doors and down the neighborhood streets.” Born in Ellensburg, Washington, Lehrman grew up in Washington as well as Montana and Oregon. He has studied painting, sculpture and ceramics at colleges and universities across the Pacific Northwest, including the Seattle Museum School, University of Oregon and Lane Community College. Lehrman received his BS in institutional administration from Skidmore College and his master’s in interdisciplinary studies from Western Oregon University. He has taught classes and workshops at Tillamook Community College, Sitka Center for Art & Ecology, Oregon Coast Community College and Lincoln County
“Blue Boat House” by Marcus Lehrman
schools. He previously owned and operated a wood-fired stoneware pottery studio, and has designed and built six traditional masonry garden houses in Mexico. Lehrman lives with his wife, Jody George, in a historic house that the couple rescued and moved to its present location on NW Coast Street in Nye Beach. Their “Shore Pine Barn” home (circa 1910) also houses Arago Surf Gallery, featuring Lehrman’s painting and sculpture. “Nye Beach Vernacular” is Lehrman’s first solo exhibition at the Newport Visual Arts Center. The show will be on display through Sept. 3, in the Upstairs Gallery of the Newport Visual Arts Center, 777 NW Beach Drive, available to view from noon to 4 pm, Tuesday to Saturday.
“High Street Skaters” by Marcus Lehrman
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016 • 5
artsy
AT THE
PEAK
OF THEIR TALENT
An icon with a Nikon
Photographer Scott Blackman offers the fruits of 50 years behind the lens Iconic and historic images of the Oregon Coast will be available to buy in a one-day sale from photographer Scott Blackman on Monday, July 18, in Newport. Blackman has been a visual historian of the Oregon Coast for the past five decades. He began photographing surfers in 1964, followed by images of artists, musicians, events, natural scenes, local icons and more. The one-day sale will offer wholesale prices on a wide variety of nature photography prints as well as framed images from two of his largest exhibits as the featured artists at the Oregon Coast Aquarium and the University of Oregon’s Law School. The sale will run from noon to 7 pm at the Canyon Way Restaurant and Bookstore, 1216 Canyon Way, Newport. In addition, Blackman and his wife, Sandy, will make available for the first time historic images of Newport and Nye Beach created in the the 1970s and ’80s after
Blackman was awarded a Comprehensive Employment and Training Act grant through President Jimmy Carter’s administration and worked with the Lincoln County Historical Society to document the area. The vintage photos feature musicians such as Rick Bartow, Paul Bogaard, Bill Stiffler, Tim Holbrook and Annie Shotwell Averre alongside artists including Drake Deknatel, Annie Miller and David Fish, plus performers Nancy Merkens, Mary Eastman, Deborah Zirin, Richard Cabral, Edward Van Aelstyn, Cel Crane and many others from the era. These historic images will be made available for a period of time until the couple donate them to the Lincoln County Historical Society. All of Blackman’s historical images will be sold as prints or as digital images online at scottblackmangallery.com, starting the day of the sale.
“Mountain Top” by Solveig Leslie
Portrait of Rick Bartow • By Scott Blackman
6 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016
The latest Spotlight Show from Newport’s Yaquina Art Association features works by two of the group’s oldest members, including one who is still painting at the age of 96. Solveig Leslie continues to paint in spite of macular degeneration, which allows her to see mostly black and white and shades of gray. Despite her failing sight, she continues to inspire all those around her by turning out paintings full of color. Leslie’s works will be on display alongside those of friend and fellow artist Luella Hartwell, who enjoys painting
portraits of the ocean. She does her own photography from which to paint and spends time just observing the ocean, with all its nuances and moods. For some of her ocean works, she forgoes the brush in favor of a gloved hand, giving her the freedom to express the movement of the sea, and the delight felt from connecting the earth with art. The show will be on display through Friday, July 22, at the Yaquina Art Association Gallery, 789 NW Beach Drive in Newport, and is open daily from 11 am to 5 pm.
one man’s beach C O M M E N TA R Y • B Y M A T T L O V E
I
Grieving for Sonny
was utterly lost how to handle my grief after Sonny the husky passed away. Almost 17 years rambling Oregon’s publicly-owned beaches together is not something lightly transitioned. I hate the word “transition,” by the way; I much prefer “change.” There I was, early morning on a low tide, walking for miles down the beach at the wrack line. My mind contained not a single clarifying thought. Was I expecting an epiphany? Was I was a fool for expecting anything from the ocean. The ocean is not a commodity to me, as it is to others. But I like to think the ocean has provided for me during sad or unknown times in my two decades of living on the Oregon Coast. To my right, in the distance, the ocean seemed listless. Clammers clammed in too much haste. A dog hurled itself into the water. Two girls did little jigs on the sand. A man was inexplicably rowing a row boat out into the surf. Four $60,000 trucks lined up end to end, gleaming in the sunlight. I looked to my left and saw two massive logs and an ample supply of driftwood scattered north and south of my position. I veered toward the logs. They were ancient bleached beauties and interlocked and enclosing in such a way to form an asymmetrical triangle with small entrances at two corners. The whole natural architecture screamed in a language older
than words for an immediate driftwood fort! If only someone would build it. Sonny used to help me build driftwoods forts. Then when I completed one, which is never, she would invariably find her way inside and take up the role as Sentinel of the Fort. I’ve got about a thousand photographs of this pose. The great Swiss psychiatrist and psychotherapist Carl Jung once wrote: “Enchantment is the oldest form of medicine.” I would build the fort for Sonny. I would enchant myself in the process because building a driftwood fort to me is a supremely satisfying act of enchantment. And I needed old medicine because I had never felt sadder in my life than that morning. My tattered V-neck sweater came off. I rolled up my sleeves and went to work with no preconceived plan. The unconscious mind would guide me. I spent 90 minutes building the fort, although it could have been three hours, too. It was a unique construction, but then again, no two driftwood forts are ever alike. If they were, I wouldn’t participate. I’m a fort builder in threadbare corduroys, not a developer in pressed pants. My mind felt empty. It seemed time to leave the beach, but not before a final scavenge here and there for the special
flourishes meant to enchant anyone who would encounter the fort. Most likely, they would be curious people and they’d probably be walking. I decorated the fort with shells, crab legs, sand dollars, rocks, feathers, spires and what I like to think is my signature touch, beaver sticks arranged in Druidic fashion, whatever that is. I stepped away and admired my handiwork. Something was missing, though. I hunted around for a stick the appropriate size and came across a crooked marvel, alone, with
no other flotsam and jetsam around. I found an undisturbed drift near the front entrance, went to my knees, and then with the stick, wrote “Fort Sonny” in the sand. I got up and kept walking, which way, I had no idea. Matt Love is the author/editor of 14 books, including two where Sonny is a featured character, “Of Walking in Rain” and “The Great Birthright.” His books are available at coastal bookstores or his web site, nestuccaspitpress.com
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016 • 7
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The new Coastal Adventure Club in Lincoln City will feature wild forays to pristine local beaches and towering headlands, and deep into nearby forests to focus on botany, ecology, fish and wildlife, and more. The family-friendly program opens Friday, July 15, and continues every Friday through Aug. 19. The Coastal Adventure Club is open to children age 6 and up (children ages 6-9 must have a parent or guardian in attendance).
The cost of the program is $10 per session per child, or $50 for all six sessions. Adults are free with a paying child. The club is co-sponsored by the Lincoln City Recreation Department and the Lincoln City Open Space Coordinator. Participants will learn a variety of survival skills including plant identification, using a GPS, navigating without instruments, preparing for emergencies, and how to not only survive, but to thrive in almost all
unexpected situations. Participants meet at 9 a.m. at the Lincoln City Community Center, 2150 N.E. Oar Place, for transportation and/ or carpooling for the day’s outing. The programs are from 9:30 a.m. to noon. For more information call the Lincoln City Community Center, 541-994-2131, see www.lincolncity.org or see the Lincoln City Community Center Facebook page. Register today, as space is limited.
The world is your oyster, with Explore Nature A free tour will offer a behind-the-scenes look at Tillamook County’s oyster industry this Sunday, July 17, with stops at an oyster hatchery and processing plant. The tour is part of the Explore Nature series of outings, aimed at highlighting the unique beauty of Tillamook County and the work being done to preserve and conserve the area’s natural resources and natural resource-based economy. A free shuttle bus provided by Tillamook EcoAdventures will take participants for up-
8 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016
Netarts Bay
close looks at JAndy Oyster Company and Whiskey Creek Shellfish Hatchery, both on Netarts Bay. A number of the sites visited on this tour are not normally open to the public and the tours are a rare
opportunity to learn about these facilities, the state-ofthe-art scientific research going on at the hatchery, and the issues faced by the shellfish industries and wild shellfish in the Pacific Northwest. Participants should expect to get muddy feet and dress accordingly, with closed-toe shoes or boots and no sandals or flip flops. This event will run from 9:30 am to 2 pm. For more information and to register, go to www.tbnep. org/Explore-Nature.php.
get out!
BECOME
FISH-CALLY LITERATE Shop the Dock returns for another summer of harbor haggling in Newport By Nancy Steinberg For the TODAY
SHOP THE DOCK — SAVE THE DATE Friday, July 15, 22 & 29 Friday, Aug. 5, 12 & 19 Tours will stat at 10 am, 10:30 am, 11 am and 11:30 am at Port Dock 5 on the bayfront. Tours are free. For more information, call Kaety Jacobson at 541-574-6534 Ext: 57427.
Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime. Ah, but teach a person to buy a fish right from the fishing boat that caught it and they will get the freshest product at the best price, and help support the local fishing industry as well. Everybody wins! Visitors to Newport, and even many locals, might not be aware that they can purchase delicious, fresh, locally-caught seafood directly off some of the fishing boats on Newport’s bayfront when they are in port. If you feel a little unsure about how to walk the docks and shop for fish, you are not alone: a survey conducted by the Oregon State University Sea Grant Extension Service a few years ago found that the number-one reason people did not buy fish from the docks was that they felt intimidated by the process. To surmount this obstacle, OSU Sea Grant Extension Service of Lincoln County is offering its third year of free “Shop at the Dock” walking tours that take customers to the port docks, teach participants how to buy fish there, and introduce some of the local fishermen who land the catches that end up on our plates. Participants will be shown the ropes: where to go on the docks, which boats participate in direct sales, how to choose the best fish, how to pay and more. “People feel intimidated about walking on the working docks,” said Ruby Moon, who led tours for the first two years of the program as a fisheries agent with the extension service. “They wonder if the docks are private or off-limits, which they’re not. They also have questions about how to tell if the fish is fresh and whether they’re getting a good deal. We will address all of these questions on the tours.” Tours will go where the fish is, but will focus on the three commercial Port Docks
(Port Docks 3, 5 and 7) where the Newport commercial fishing fleet ties up. Boats need a special license from the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife to sell directly to the public and there are lots of other regulations they follow as well. For example, they are required to have a scale at the site of sale, the accuracy of which is monitored by the Oregon Department of Agriculture. Tips covered on the tour will range from identifying the freshest fish to what to bring to the dock with you (cash — the only form of payment accepted by most boats — and maybe ice and a cooler if you’re not going right home). Consumers need to know a few things up front, Moon said. First, by law, the minimum unit that can be sold at the dock is a whole fish, so buyers need to be ready to preserve what they don’t want to eat right away, or split a fish with a buddy. Another point to keep in mind is that many boats offer to clean the fish for a small fee, well worth it if you’re not an expert fish filetter yourself. The tours will focus on albacore tuna, which will likely be available for all tours, but other species will be available throughout the summer as well, including halibut, salmon, lingcod and crab. Moon said meeting the person who caught your dinner ties into the growing interest consumers have in knowing about where their food comes from. She said that the best part of the tours is chatting with the fishermen, who are happy to answer any and all questions about their industry. “Fishermen are the last of the wild hunters,” Moon said. “They have lots of stories to tell and they love to tell them.” “We are so lucky here to have this infrastructure to purchase gorgeous fish right from the people who caught it,” she added. “These tours are about making people comfortable and welcome at the docks.” And about eating some great meals, as well.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016 • 9
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10 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016
5 Y E A R S I N A ROW !
lively
BRINGING HOME THE BACON
BEACH, BACON AND BREWFEST RETURNS TO CHINOOK WINDS IN LINCOLN CITY When Muhammad Ali knocked down George Foreman in Kinshasa to reclaim the world heavyweight champion title, people across the globe went crazy. Similar scenes unfolded in competitive eating circles this July 4, when Joey “The Jaws” Chestnut reclaimed the Mustard Yellow International Belt by scarfing down 70 hotdogs plus buns in just 10 minutes at the Nathan’s Famous eating contest on Coney Island. And people will get the chance to see this digestive daredevil in person when the Beach, Bacon and Brewfest returns to Chinook Winds Casino Resort for its second year this Saturday, July 16. Chestnut is one of the celebrity judges at the event, which will see charity cooking teams serving up bacon bites alongside a host of craft brews and ciders, all against a backdrop of live music. Charities will be using meat provided by Sunnyvalley Bacon to create tasty morsels in a bid to be named best bacon booth at the event. Guests can sample the bacon creations for a dollar a time, with each nonprofit getting to keep the money they raise. There will be no shortage of options for washing the bacon down, with some Big Foot Beverages assembling some 20 breweries that will give out samples of beer and cider throughout the day as part of the ticket price. In addition to the bacon recipe competition, food vendors will be on site offering a range of menu items. The live music line up includes blues star Ty Curtis performing from noon to 1:30 pm, Country Wide taking to the stage from 2 to 3:30 pm, followed by bombastic rock from the Mike Branch Band from 4 to 5:30 pm. The 21-and-over event runs from noon to 6 pm at 1777 NW 44th Street. Admission is $20 per person, which includes $5 in free slot play, beer tastings and live music. All proceeds from the event go to charity. Tickets are available at the Chinook Winds Casino Resort Box Office or online at www. chinookwindscasino.com. • On Sunday, July 17, Chinook Winds Golf Resort will offer 18 holes of brews, golf and prizes at the Brewer’s Classic Golf Tournament, a fun, four-person fund-raising scramble. Breweries will be out on the course for players’ sampling pleasure and there will be tournament prizes aplenty. For more information, go to www.chinookwindscasino.com.
BREWERIES
North Coast Brewery Base Camp Brewery Ninkasi Brewing Goodlife Brewing Atlas Cider Claim 52 Brewery Ace Cider McKenzie Brewing Pelican Brewery Portland Cider Mazama Brewery Ecliptic Brewery Three Creeks Brewery
Joey Chestnut is a Lincoln City fan favorite from years of winning the coveted Smokin’ at the Ocean Rib Eating contest. He will be at Beach, Bacon and Brews from noon to 6 pm judging, signing autographs and posing for photos.
BACON BOOTHS
The following charities and nonprofits will be serving up their creations for a dollar a time at the event: My Sisters’ Place Angels Anonymous Taft High Boosters Lincoln City Chamber of Commerce Newport Chamber of Commerce Family Promise of Lincoln County Habitat for Humanity Depoe Bay Food Pantry Newport Mouse Factory Neighbors for Kids The American Legion Post 116 Eddyville Charter School Boosters An entry from last year’s Beach, Bacon & Brewfest
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016 • 11
Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide
Romantic
Mist Restaurant and Lounge Open Daily From 7am-10pm
ocean-front DINING
Happy Hour Specials from 3pm-6pm Live Music Steve Sloan July 15 & 16 M IST RESTAURAN T AN D LOUN GE 2945 NW Jetty Ave, Lincoln City, OR 541.994.3877
Open Daily Now Serving Beer & Wine • WiFi Available
5150 Oyster Drive Bay City, OR 97107 503.377.2323
$ 1 Any Order!
OFF Hurry!
OfferExpires 6/01/17
• Coney Dogs • Shakes • Burgers • Fish & Chips • Salads & More Around the corner from Grocery Outlet In Lincoln City’s Lighthouse Square
4157 N. Hwy. 101 • 541-996-6898
12 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016
Enjoy Sunny days on our Patio! Traditional Irish Fare Homemade Soups & Desserts
O p en 7 d a ys a w eek a t 11a m
tide tables
LINCOLN CITY
Lincoln City • (Located in Lighthouse Square) Corner of Logan Rd and Hwy 101 (541) 996-5500
FARMERS & CRAFTERS MARKET
Outdoor Market Open Sundays All Summer 9 am - 3 pm
Bernard Farms Walker Farms Guerrero Farms Misty Hills Farm Farm Fresh Eggs
Tillamook Bay, Garibaldi Date
Thurs., July 14 Fri., July 15 Sat., July 16 Sun., July 17 Mon., July 18 Tues., July 19 Wed., July 20 Thurs., July 21
3:30 am 4:23 am 5:09 am 5:52 am 6:33 am 7:12 am 7:50 am 8:29 am
Siletz Bay, Lincoln City Date
Thurs., July 14 Fri., July 15 Sat., July 16 Sun., July 17 Mon., July 18 Tues., July 19 Wed., July 20 Thurs., July 21
4:01 am 4:51 am 5:34 am 6:14 am 6:51 am 7:28 am 8:04 am 8:41 am
Yaquina Bay, Newport Date
Thurs., July 14 Fri., July 15 Sat., July 16 Sun., July 17 Mon., July 18 Tues., July 19 Wed., July 20 Thurs., July 21
3:23 am 4:13 am 4:56 am 5:36 am 6:13 am 6:50 am 7:26 am 8:03 am
Alsea Bay, Waldport Date
Thurs., July 14 Fri., July 15 Sat., July 16 Sun., July 17 Mon., July 18 Tues., July 19 Wed., July 20 Thurs., July 21
3:41 am 4:35 am 5:24 am 6:08 am 6:51 am 7:31 am 8:11 am 8:50 am
0''
BOZ 1VSDIBTF PG PS .PSF &YDMVEFT (JGU $BSET
Purchase Excludes Gift Cards. Limit one per customer per visit. Valid only at participating US locations. Price excludes tax. Valid in store only. Not valid for online purchases. No cash value. Not valid with other offersor fundraisers or if copied, sold, auctioned, exchanged for payment or where prohibited by law. 16.5536_© 2016 Kahala Franchising, L.L.C. COLD STONE CREAMERY is a registered trademark of Kahala Franchising, L.L.C.
Expires 9/30/16 PLU # 19
Everything’s Batter With Chocolate™
0''
BOZ 1VSDIBTF PG PS .PSF &YDMVEFT (JGU $BSET
Rainbow Cookie Batter™
Lincoln City • (Located in Lighthouse Square) Corner of Logan Rd and Hwy 101 (541) 996-5500
16.5536_© 2016 Kahala Franchising, L.L.C. The COLD STONE CREAMERY design is a registered trademarkof Kahala Franchising, L.L.C. All other marks are trademarks of Kahala Franchising, L.L.C.
Lincoln City • Corner of Logan Rd and Hwy 101 • (541) 996-5500
Located at the Lincoln City Cultural Center
SUGAR COOKIE BATTER ICE CREAM™ • FUDGE BROWNIE BATTER ICE CREAM™
Purchase Excludes Gift Cards. Limit one per customer per visit. Valid only at participating US locations. Price excludes tax. Valid in store only. Not valid for online purchases. No cash value. Not valid with other offers or fundraisers or if copied, sold, auctioned, exchanged for payment or where prohibited by law.16.5536_© 2016 Kahala Franchising, L.L.C. COLD STONE CREAMERY is a registered trademark of Kahala Franchising, L.L.C.
Expires 9/30/16 PLU # 20
540 NE Hwy. 101 lincolncityfarmersmarket.org
Low Tides
1.3 0.8 0.2 -0.3 -0.7 -1.1 -1.3 -1.4
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1.3 0.8 0.3 -0.1 -0.5 -0.9 -1.1 -1.1
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1.2 0.7 0.2 -0.2 -0.5 -0.7 -0.9 -1.0
High Tides
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High Tides
9:12 pm 9:56 pm 10:38 pm 11:19 pm 11:59 pm --2:15 pm 2:51 pm
High Tides
2:31 pm 3:27 pm 4:18 pm 5:05 pm 5:49 pm 6:32 pm 7:16 pm 8:01 pm
3.1 3.3 3.3 3.3 3.1 3.0 2.8 2.6
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5.3 5.6 5.9 6.3 6.6 6.9 8.9 8.9
3:11 pm 4:07 pm 5:00 pm 5:50 pm 6:38 pm 7:24 pm 8:09 pm 8:55 pm
2.6 2.7 2.7 2.6 2.5 2.3 2.1 1.9
9:41 am 10:44 am 11:39 am 12:27 pm 1:11 pm 12:27 am 1:09 am 1:51 am
4.6 4.8 5.1 5.4 5.7 7.6 7.6 7.6
9:03 pm 9:47 pm 10:29 pm 11:10 pm 11:50 pm --2:06 pm 2:42 pm
High Tides
9:28 pm 10:15 pm 11:00 pm 11:44 pm --1:52 pm 2:31 pm 3:10 pm
7.5 7.7 8.0 8.2 -6.8 7.1 7.3
6.0 6.2 6.4 6.6 6.8 -5.5 5.7 O pen 7 D a ys • Cred itCa rd s O K • Lim iton e cou pon perord er. Cou pon expires 7/ 31/ 16
7.8 8.1 8.3 8.6 8.8 -7.2 7.5
NEWPORT FARMERS MARKET SATURDAYS 9am - 1pm
6.9 7.1 7.3 7.5 -5.9 6.1 6.3
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.
Summer Location Hwy 101 and SW Lee Rain or h S ine!
Plenty of Parking at the County Courthouse parking lot at NW 2nd and Nye St New Large sit down Food Court area
LOCALLY GROWN FOR ALL SEASONS
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016 • 13
Friday, July 15
Coast Calendar
Dory Days Festival
Pacific City The perfect little beach town comes alive with the tradition of Dory Fishermen at this festival, featuring vendor booths, family activities, a large display of Dory boats and the Artisan Fair. FMI, go to www. theoregoncoast.info/PacificCity/DoryDays.html.
Manzanita Farmers Market
Laneda Avenue • Manzanita Start the weekend off right with farm-fresh produce, prepared foods, crafts and a rotating winery booth. 5-8 pm, 5th and Laneda. FMI, call 503-939-5416.
“Ocean Wave” by Luella Hartwell.
Shop the Dock
Saturday, July 16 Raise the Roof Festival
St. Augustine Catholic Church • Lincoln City This family festival features food, games, plant sales, arts and crafts, and a big raffle. 11 am to 7 pm, 1139 NW Highway 101. FMI, call 541-994-2216.
Beach, Bacon and Brews
Port Dock 5 • Newport Get schooled in the art of buying fish direct from the boat in these free sessions from OSU Fishery Extension agents. Bring an ice chest with ice, cash for purchases and plenty of questions. 10 am, 10:30 am, 11 am and 11:30 am. FMI, call 541-574-6534 Ext: 57427.
Chinook Winds Casino Resort • Lincoln City Charity cooking teams will be competing and serving up bacon bites for guests to enjoy alongside some of the best craft brews in the Pacific Northwest. All the money raised goes to charity. 21 and over. $20 admission, which includes $5 in free slot play plus beer tastings. Noon to 6 pm, 1777 NW 44th St.
Community BBQ
Summer Celebration
Panther Creek Community Center • Otis Enjoy a burger bar, hot dogs, salad and dessert for just $6 a head. 2-6 pm, follow signs on Wayside Loop. Continues Saturday.
Theatre West • Lincoln City Prepare to die laughing at this Roger Karshner comedy, showing how a wealthy entrepreneur’s family descends into acrimony over the division of his property. 7:30 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. $14 for adults, $12 for seniors students, and $9 for children 12 and under. Reservations, call 541-994-5663.
Spotlight Show
Yaquina Art Association Gallery • Lincoln City A show featuring the colorful works of Solveig Leslie alongside ocean portraits by Luella Hartwell, some of which are painted with a gloved hand. Show runs through Friday, July 22, 11 am-5 pm, 789 NW Beach Drive.
Hoffman Center for the Arts • Manzanita “Call Me Home” author Megan Kruse present this writing workshop, aimed at showing how to use object potential and transcendent details to create work that resonates deeply with the reader. $30. 1 to 3:30 pm, 594 Laneda Avenue. Register at hoffmanblog.org.
Dory Days Festival
Pacific City The festival kicks into high gear, with a parade at 11 a.m. and fish fry from noon to 6 pm, alongside vendor booths, family activities, a large display of Dory boats and the Artisan Fair.
Free Beach Yoga
Roads End • Lincoln City Bring a towel, water and a smile for this free beach yoga session led by Britt Canese. All levels welcome. 11 am-noon, 64th street and Logan Road. Check the Humble Warrior Facebook page for rain cancellations.
“Where There’s A Will There’s A Relative”
Orphan Plant Sale
Connie Hansen Garden • Lincoln City Find surplus plants at amazing low prices. 10 am-2 pm, 1931 NW 33rd Street. FMI, call 541-994-6338.
Newport Farmers Market
Cafe Mundo Courtyard • Newport The Nye Beach Summer Celebration takes place on the third Saturday of the month for July only. Enjoy this jam session and block party with live music on the outdoor theater stage. Free, noon to 3 pm rain or shine, 209 NW Coast St. FMI, call 541-2724615.
“Where There’s A Will There’s A Relative”
“Crafting Emotion”
Highway 101 & Lee Buy local at this outdoor market, featuring locally made handcrafts, art, specialty foods and fresh fruits, vegetables and farm products from Lincoln County farms and growers from surrounding areas. 9 am to 1 pm, southwest of city hall.
Manzanita Writers’ Series
Hoffman Center for the Arts • Manzanita Get an inside view of the publisher-author relationship in this conversation between Megan Kruse, author of “Call Me Home,” and Rhonda Hughes of Hawthorne Books. $7. 7 pm, 594 Laneda Avenue.
Theatre West • Lincoln City Prepare to die laughing at this Roger Karshner comedy, showing how a wealthy entrepreneur’s family descends into acrimony over the division of his property. 7:30 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. $14 for adults, $12 for seniors students, and $9 for children 12 and under. For reservations, call 541-994-5663.
Community BBQ
Panther Creek Community Center • Otis Enjoy a burger bar, hot dogs, salad and dessert for just $6 a head. Noon-5 pm, follow signs on Wayside Loop.
Tango Beginner Class South Beach Community Center • Newport Learn the Argentine Tango, or Milonga, with a free class from 7 to 7:30 pm and a free dance from 7:30 to 10 pm. 3024 S.E. Ferry Slip Road. Donations accepted. FMI, go to newport oregontango. com or call 541-3518457.
“A Walk Back in Time”
North Lincoln County Historical Museum • Lincoln City Join museum president John Blaine for this 90-minute walking tour of Taft and Siletz Bay, showing how the area developed from a 1904 hamlet to a thriving tourist destination. 1 pm, 4907 SW Hwy. 101. Free, but registration required. To reserve a spot, call 541-996-6614.
The Nye Beach Turnaround by Scott Blackman. • Photo sale Monday, July 18 in Newport
Saturday, July 16 cont. Tillamook Farmers Market
Downtown Tillamook Lew Jones plays live today at the market, which offers onestop shopping in the heart of Tillamook. Milk it! 9 am-2 pm, 2nd and Laurel. FMI, call 503-812-9326. Audio Tattoo Plays Live! Garibaldi Maritime Museum will be at the Community Table.
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.
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.
Blues Benefit
Lincoln City Cultural Center Grammy-nominated singer Randy McAllister will raise money for
the nonprofit Lincoln City Cultural Center. $25 adults, $10 ages 13-18, $5 kids. Dinner barbecue served at 6:30 pm, music starts at 7 pm, 540 N.E. Hwy. 101. Buy tickets at lincolncity-culturalcenter. org or 541-994-9994.
Neskowin Farmers Market
Neskowin Beach Wayside A fun, friendly, vibrant market with a great assortment of fresh local produce as well as baked goods, fresh dory-caught fish, pasture-raised meat, cheese, granola, hand-crafted items and much more. SNAP accepted. 9 am to 1 pm, right off Highway 101.
“The Sandlot”
The Bijou • Lincoln City The summer matinée series continues with this 1993 tale about a neighborhood baseball team whose members fear the Beast that lurks beyond the outfield fence. $2. 11 am, 1624 NE Hwy. 101. Repeats on Monday and Thursday.
The Wheelmobile
Chinook Winds Casino Resort • Lincoln City Try out for a game on the traveling version of Wheel of Fortune and a chance to win special show-themed prizes. Applications are drawn at random throughout the shows, which start at noon, 1:30 pm and 3 pm, 1777 NW 44th Street. 18 and over. Repeated Sunday.
Sunday, July 17 Milo Graamans
“A Walk Back in Time”
Newport Performing Arts Center The coast’s homegrown piano star performs pieces by a range of classical composers, accompanied by guest pianist Carlyn Jefferson. Admission by donation. Proceeds will be donated to the OCCA Shakespeare Camp scholarships. 2 pm, 777 W Olive Street.
North Lincoln County Historical Museum • Lincoln City Join museum president John Blaine for this 90-minute walking tour of Taft and Siletz Bay, showing how the area developed from a 1904 hamlet to a thriving tourist destination. 1 pm, 4907 SW Hwy. 101. Free, but registration required. To reserve, call 541-996-6614.
Yachats Talk
The Wheelmobile
Yachats Commons Author Joanne Kittel will speak about the Native Americans who first lived in the Yachats area. Commissioner Bill Hall will follow up with Yachats’ history to the present day. Free admission, $5 donations accepted, 2 pm, 441 U.S. 101. FMI, call 541-961-6695.
Chinook Winds Casino Resort • Lincoln City Try out for a game on the traveling version of Wheel of Fortune and a chance to win special show-themed prizes. Applications are drawn at random throughout the shows, which start at noon, 1:30 pm and 3 pm, 1777 NW 44th Street. 18 and over.
Brewer’s Classic Golf Tournament
Chinook Winds Golf Resort • Lincoln City A fun, four-person scramble offering 18 holes of brews, golf and prizes. Breweries will be out on the course for your sampling pleasure and tournament prizes will be up for grabs. FMI, go to www.chinookwindscasino.com
Pacific City Farmers Market
Dory Days Festival
“Where There’s A Will There’s A Relative”
Pacific City Library It’s Dory Dancing Day at the market, with shows from Middle Earth Tribal Bellydance Troupe at 11 am and 12:30 pm. Market runs 10 am to 2 pm at Brooten Road and Camp Street.
Pacific City The perfect little beach town comes alive with the tradition of Dory Fishermen July 15-17. Come to the heart of town and enjoy the parade, fabulous fish fry, vendor booths, family activities, a large display of Dory boats and the Artisan Fair.
Theatre West • Lincoln City Prepare to die laughing at this Roger Karshner comedy, showing how a wealthy entrepreneur’s family descends into acrimony over the division of his property. 2 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. $14 for adults, $12 for seniors & students, $9 for children 12 and under.
For reservations, call 541-994-5663. Repeats Thursday.
“The Man Who Knew Infinity”
Newport Performing Arts Center Dev Patel and Jeremy Irons star in this movie, inspired by the true story of Ramanujan, a poor East Indian man overcomes discrimination to become a pioneer in math at Cambridge University. PG-13. $7.50 for adults, $7 for seniors and students.7 pm, 777 W. Olive St. Repeats Monday.
"It's Better at the Beach!"
• Lincoln City, Oregon • 1-888-CHINOOK • chinookwindscasino.com
14 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016
Photo sale
“Get It While You Can”
Newport Public Library Portland musician and author Nick Jaina will give a live music performance with a reading from his debut memoir, described as “late-night ode to the pursuit of sanity.” Free. 2 pm, 35 NW Nye Street.
Call 541-994-4166 by 11 am Monday to book a spot.
Canyon Way Restaurant and Bookstore • Newport A one-day-only chance to grab a shot or two from photographer and visual historian Scott Blackman, who is offering a wide variety of wide variety of nature photography prints as well as historical images of Nye Beach from the 1970s and ’80s. Noon-7 pm, 1216 Canyon Way. FMI, go to scottblackmangallery.com.
Oregon Coast Community College • Lincoln City Enjoy lunch in a casual, round-table setting while picking the brain of Isaac Ersoff of Andrews, Ersoff & Zantello law firm. $5 admission covers your burger and soda. Noon-1 pm, 3788 SE High School Drive.
Netarts Bay Get a behind-the-scenes look at Tillamook County’s oyster industry on this free tour, including stops at an oyster hatchery and processing plant. 9:30 am-2 pm. FMI or to register, go to www.tbnep.org/Explore-Nature.php.
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. 10 am to 2 pm, second floor, 801 SW Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-557-9400.
Lincoln City Farmers Market
Cape Perpetua Scenic Area • Yachats Join retired chief park ranger Michael Noack for a guided, 60- to 75-minute hike along easy-tomoderate trails. Free, but a day-use fee or recreation pass is required. Noon, three miles south of Yachats on Highway 101. FMI, call 541-547-3289.
Tuesday, July 19
Lincoln City Cultural Center Set up on the center’s front lawn, vendors offer homegrown, home-baked and handcrafted treats. 9 am-3 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101.
“Just Hang Up!”
Newport 60+ Activity Center Ellen Klem from the Oregon Department of Justice presents tips on how to hang up with confidence if you suspect imposter scams or a fraudulent phone call. 1:30-2:30 pm, 20 SE Second St.
Yachats Farmers Market
Yachats Commons Find local produce, fresh-cut flowers and plants, food, art and crafts at this buzzing market. 9 am-2 pm, 441 Hwy. 101 N.
Wednesday, July 20
Siletz Farmers Market
Siletz Valley Grange Find farm-fresh produce, dried herbs, fruits, veggies, farm fresh eggs, kettle corn, coffee, street tacos, tortas, salsa, hand-crafted gift items and more, all in one place. 2 to 6 pm, at the corner of Gaither Street and Logsden Road.
10:45-11:45 am, 20 SE Second St.
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.
“Walk with a Ranger”
Lunch and Learn
Oyster tour
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Monday, July 18
Waldport Farmers Market Waldport Community Center The place to shop for flowers, potted plants, jewelry, tie dyes, glass art and more. 10 am-6:30 pm, 265 Alsea Hwy.
Thursday, July 21 Sidewalk Chalk Contest
Main Street • Toledo Warm up for the Toledo Summer Festival by grabbing some chalk from Bank of the West and decorating the sidewalks on Main Street from 10 am to 3 pm.
Lincoln Pops Big Band
Gleneden Beach Community Club Show your moves at the band’s monthly dance in a smoke- and alcohol-free environment. Adults, $6; students, $3; children under six swing for free. 7:30-10 pm, 110 Azalea Street. FMI, call 541-272-9597.
Gleneden Harvest Market
Side Door Café • Gleneden Beach Find granola, berries, fresh meats, produce and more at this new farmers market. 1-6 pm, 6675 Gleneden Beach Loop.
Toledo Street Market
Main Street • Toledo Choose from a variety of fresh produce, products, food, drink, artisan and hand crafted items. 10 am-3 pm.
Wednesdays in July from 10am-6pm, when you play a slot machine with your W Winners Circle card inserted, you could win a turn at the CASH BOARD! Watch as your chips fall through the pegs to determine your CASH WINNINGS! Two winners will be chosen every hour! 0(0%(5
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"It's Better at the Beach!"
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• Lincoln City • 1-888-CHINOOK • chinookwindscasino.com
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016 • 15
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Ocean front, cute condo! MLS 16-2075 $
Two separate living areas! MLS 16-1276
129,900
Beachy coastal bliss! MLS 15-1297
230,000
319,500
$
$
At the Beach Real Estate 541.994.1156
AttheBeachOnline.com
Relax near the Beach! MLS 16-1856
389,000
$
Berkshire Hathaway Home Services Northwest Real Estate Netarts Bay, OR
Pam Zielinski Mobile
503.880.8034
Principal Broker
ONE OF A KIND
www.PamZielinski.com
Want Results? Call MARK SCHULTS! OCEANFRONT. Rare opportunity to purchase this one owner grand beauty designed with all essential rooms accessible on ground floor. Care qtrs on lower level. Garages are car collector’s dream. Oceanside MLS 15-311 $1,500,000
ULTIMATE IN SECLUDED LUXURY. Utterly isolated on 5/8 mi Little Nestucca frontage, 1/8 mi of South Fork frontage, & McKnight Creek on property. Natural steelhead/trout/salmon... no hatchery fish here! Cloverdale MLS 14-60 $925,000
SUMPTUOUS REMODEL & upgrade Inside&Out 2014, oceanfront luxury, quiet Twin Rocks upscale neighborhood inRockaway Beach. Deck off every bdrm. Vacation Rent OK. MLS 16-123 $879,900 CHARMING OCEAN FRONT! This is the perfect little 2 bedroom 1 bath get-a-way that is on an ideal lot less than a block to the beach access. Amazing view! $489,900
LUXURY LODGE-like home 2.5 blocks to Nedonna Beach & stone’s throw to world class salmon fishing. Double lot affords privacy with hot tub, river rock fire pit & great boat parking. Rockaway Beach MLS 16-443 $675,000
PERFECTIONIST PRIDE: gorgeous, stately, meticulously built. Top builder, extensive engineering. Fabulous EZ care yard. 6 patios. Backs to wooded area. Rockaway Beach MLS 16-157 $519,000
DRAMATIC OCEAN VIEW from charming triplex with 3 intimate and efficient flats, each offering view, fireplace, private deck. Perfect for vacation rental or full time occupancy. Sold Turn-key! Oceanside. MLS 16438126 $450,000
QUIET CONDO in a great location overlooking Salishan golf course. There are 2 beds and 2 full baths, large kitchen and dining areas and a gas fireplace in the living room. $225,000
16 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016
SPACIOUS ONE LEVEL, barrier free home in the award winning gated community of Little Whale Cove. $369,900
541-994-3577 800-357-7653
markschults@gmail.com www.MarkSchults.com GREAT OCEAN VIEW from this lot that is less than a block to the beach! Quiet dead end street with all utilities available. Excellent lot to build your dream home. $179,000
3691 NW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, OR
Say it with color
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artsy
Think you know
Bartow?
Untitled work by Rick Bartow
Community exhibition shows all sides of Newport’s favorite son Works by renowned Newport artist Rick Bartow will be on display throughout summer in a retrospective exhibition hosted by the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts, opening this Friday. “Rick Bartow: A Community Collection,” was developed through an open call to Bartow’s friends, supporters and fellow artists, encouraging them to loan pieces to the exhibit as a testament to the creative talent of the Newport icon, who died in April. Born in Newport in 1946, Bartow was a member of the Wiyot tribe from Northern California. His family developed close ties with the Siletz Indian community of the Central Oregon Coast and Native American transformation myths remained at the heart of his work throughout his lifetime. While Bartow went on to garner national and international attention as a leading contemporary Native American artist, Newport and the Oregon Coast continued to ground his personal life. He earned a Bachelor of Arts in art education from Western Oregon State University in 1969 and then served in the Vietnam War for 13 months as a teletype officer and musician in a military hospital. He returned to his art-making several years after his service in the military, still suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. Bartow was offered a solo exhibit in 1985 by Portland gallerist William Jamison of Jamison/ Thomas Gallery, after which his arts career and prolific creative works grabbed the attention of the broader art world. “I drew myself straight,” Bartow told Oregon Public Broadcasting’s “Art Beat” in 2004, referring to how his creative work allowed him to overcome personal challenges such as PTSD and the loss of his wife to cancer. Working in mediums ranging from graphite and mixed-media drawings and prints to acrylic paintings, drypoint etchings, wood sculpture and monotypes, Bartow populated his work with hawks, ravens, eagles and coyotes. Bartow’s life as a visual artist reached various pinnacles of recognition, not the least of
which is his monumental cedar sculpture, “We Were Always Here,” commissioned by the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian to sit on the museum’s grounds overlooking the National Mall in Washington D.C. Work spanning his 35-year artistic career can be found in museums throughout the country and internationally, “To Go On including the Brooklyn Museum in New York, the After the Loss” by Peabody Essex Museum in Rick Bartow Massachusetts, the Hallie Ford Museum of Art in Salem, the Portland Art Museum and the German Collection of Native American Art, among many others. His carving “The Cedar Mill Pole” was displayed on the Jacqueline Kennedy Garden at the White House in 1997 and is considered one of most highly regarded Native American public sculptures in the country. As Bartow’s reputation as a visual artist continued to grow, he maintained his Newport roots, also engaging local audiences as a skilled guitar player and songwriter for the band Bartow and the Backseat Drivers. “I’m gathered with incredible people who have broken hearts and strong spirits,” wrote Charles Froelick, Bartow’s longtime gallerist, shortly after the artist and friend passed away. “His poetry and genius will live on.” A major retrospective of Bartow’s work, “Things You Know but Cannot Explain,” opened in April 2015 at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art at the University of Oregon and will continue to travel nationally through 2019. “While the national Bartow retrospective makes its way around the country, the Newport Visual Arts Center is pleased to host a parallel Bartow exhibit,” said Visual Arts Center
Director Tom Webb, “drawing out his creative work held by locals and the vast community that Bartow built and was inspired by.” Bartow was bestowed a “Community Legend” award by the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts (OCCA) in 2013. “Rick was a child of the region and grew into a national treasure,” said Catherine Rickbone, OCCA’s executive director and chair of the
18 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016
Newport Public Art Committee. “We intend to honor his work and spirit for years to come.” A complete Bartow exhibition history and biography is available at www.froelickgallery. com. The Newport exhibit will run until September 4, available to view from 11 am to 6 pm, Tuesday to Sunday at 777 NE Beach Drive.
urchins Author hopes to pack them in shake the feeling that he had failed at life. So the critically acclaimed singer-songwriter checked himself into a 10-day silent retreat. As those silent days unfolded, he attempted to rewire his own brain in a burst of unpredictable digressions and unsent love letters, musings on the miracles of science and the fallen heroes of popular music. “Get It While You Can” is a late-night ode to the pursuit of sanity. Jaina has composed music for ballet and modern dance, released albums on Hush
Records and Fluff and Gravy Records, and composed music for film. The soundtrack for “Cement Suitcase” is his first for a feature-length film. He is also a co-founder and musical director of the Satellite Ballet and Collective in New York City. Jaina’s performance will begin at 2 pm at the library, 35 NW Nye Street. Copies of “Get It While You Can” will be available for purchase and signing. Thanks to support from the Newport Library Foundation, the event is free and open to the public.
arts and crafts, home-baked pastries and breads, and a country store with collectibles will be featured. Homemade tacos, enchiladas and tamales will be served, in addition to hot dogs, hamburgers, drinks, snacks, cotton candy and popcorn. Game booths will include activities for all ages.. Visitors and residents can stock up on garden fresh vegetables and fruits, including tomatoes apples,
bananas, nectarines and watermelons. The country store will offer home baked goodies, arts and crafts, toys and collectible items. O’Brien said that another big raffle will also be held. Last year’s offerings included vacation packages, restaurant meals for two, local goods, products, services, arts and crafts. For information, call St. Augustine’s rectory at 541994-2216.
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Will you be going? It is a testament to their talent that Lincoln City’s Theatre West players can find laughs in a funeral parlor. So prepare to die laughing as Director Karen Davis presents “Where There’s A Will There’s A Relative,” which begins its eight-week run this Thursday, July 14. Written by Roger Karshner, the comedy opens in a townhouse where the body of recently deceased Sam Price, a wealthy entrepreneur, has been laid out in the bedroom. Meanwhile, his immediate family — sister, brother, nephew and niece — have gathered to discuss their inheritance, a meeting that descends into acrimony over the division of property. The cast includes Rich Emery as Jerry, Terri
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Help raise the roof at St. Augustine St. Augustine Catholic Church in Lincoln City hosts the daylong second annual Raise the Roof Fun Festival from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, July 16. The family festival will be held on church grounds at 1139 N.W. Highway 101. “This year the festival promises to be even bigger and better,” said Celeste O’Brien, the event coordinator. Food, games, entertainment, a garden and plant market,
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Portland musician and author Nick Jaina will give a live music performance with a reading from his debut memoir, “Get It While You Can,” this Sunday, July 17, at the Newport Public Library. The memoir, which was a finalist for the 2016 Oregon Book Awards, was inspired by a difficult period in Jaina’s life. When his beloved guitar was stolen, Jaina found himself untethered from the dream he had pursued since he was 16. No matter how many albums he had released or tours he had led, Jaina still couldn’t
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King as Zelda, Sadie Bindl as Sally, David Sears as Rudy, Charles Herndon as Tony and Melissa Webb as Mildred. Stina Seeger-Gibson serves as assistant director, with Jason Burke as stage manager. The play will run through Aug. 27, with 7:30 pm performances every Thursday, Friday and Saturday, plus 2 pm matinées on Sunday, July 17, and Aug 14, at 3536 SE Hwy. 10 Tickets are $14 for adults, $12 for seniors students, and $9 for children 12 and under. Advance reservations for all performances are strongly recommended and can be made by calling 541-994-5663. Leave a message and someone will call you back.
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016 • 19
By Dave Green ACROSS 1 Ones
hanging around a deli? 8 One face in the crowd? 13 Poison also called white arsenic 14 French siege site of 1597 16 Children’s song about avian anatomy 17 Lot 18 Barrel holder 19 Something held at arm’s length 21 Neighbor of Windsor Castle 23 Priceline possibilities 24 I have, to Henri 25 Converts to pastureland, say 29 Nature 30 Equal: Prefix 31 Post-stunt provocation
34 37 38 39 40 41
46 47 49 50 55 56 57 59
60 61
62
Ill-fated, oldstyle Aims After the fact Grub for a grub Zebu feature One might start working on Black Friday Debatable ability Really go up Aye’s opposite, poetically “Hear me out” Whacking tool Way cool, in modern lingo Like lingerie James who edited the O.E.D. Bare-bones Bobby who co-founded the Black Panthers Like some unions
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE N E B U L A E
E M A N A T E
O P T I C A L
P E T T Y T Y R E S T A B O R N O M I T N E R I H E A C O M P S W E E
E T S C R O R P A L E O F T E I N L I Z A I N E P E R R S A G E T E B E E T A B B Y R O T U R B O R Y O U K O U N D S T P E A
A L H I R T G A L A
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N O E N G E
C U S E D A T I N E S E X E S K I M S B R I E W O O E R A I N S T R L E W E S R A S P M I S O O A T E N C K I N G T E N C E O R G E S
DOWN 1 Toast,
e.g.
2 Untold
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
No. 0611 8
13
14
16
17
9
10
11
15
2
8
3 Where
Shaq won the Adolph Rupp Trophy
18
19
21
20
22
23
24
4 Two
of them are worth a sawbuck
5 Winning
25
26
multiple states: Abbr. 7 Deem
appropriate 8 Stir 9 Off
28
29
30
move
6 Involving
27
34
35
31
36
38
39
40
41
46
47
50
42
51
52 57
11
Home brewing vessel
59
60
12
About 2% of the Hope Diamond
One of the Leewards
20
Establish gradually
22
Tropicana label specification
61
53
54
7 5 3 6
55 58
5 6
PUZZLE BY ANDREW KINGSLEY
32
33 34
Third-ever Best Actor Oscar winner
51
43
Nix
52
44
Source of resentment in the Colonies in the 1770s
“Annette Sings ___” (1960 pop album)
53
Couple
45
Soviet co-op 54
Elephantine Island is in it
Student taking Civil Procedure, most likely
42
Some car wash grps. “The vice of a few intelligent people,” per Voltaire
Hardly seen, to Seneca
35
Alternative to quinoa
47
Monkshood flower’s “hood”
27
Way back then, way back when
36
Sancho Panza, to Don Quixote
48
Baroque window
29
45
62
26
28
44
49
56
15
43
48
Tilt
Was spitting nails
33
37
10
13
32
Dunn formerly of “S.N.L.”
Difficulty Level
puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).
Fatsis who credit card, 1-800-814-5554. (Or, just wait for next week’s TODAY.) wrote the best- Read about and comment on each puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords tips: nytimes.com/puzzleforum. Crosswords for young. selling “Word Share Freak” solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
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: TV THEME SONGS Identify the TV show by its theme song. (e.g., “The Ballad of Jed Clampett.” Answer: “The Beverly Hillbillies.”) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. “Those Were the Days” 2. “Where Everybody Knows Your Name” 3. “Welcome Back” GRADUATE LEVEL 4. “Movin’ on Up” 5. “Making Our Dreams Come True” 6. “Rock Around the Clock” (original seasons 1974 and 1975)
PH.D. LEVEL 7. “Woke Up This Morning” 8. “Suicide Is Painless” 9. “Best Friend” ANSWERS: 1. “All in the Family.” 2. “Cheers.” 3. “Welcome Back Kotter.” 4. “The Jeffersons.” 5. “Laverne & Shirley.” 6. “Happy Days.” 7. “The Sopranos.” 8. “M*A*S*H.” 9. “Courtship of Eddie’s Father.” 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.
20 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016
7
4 6 5 9
8 4 5 9 3
8 2 5 9 6 7 7/14
SUDOKU is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. King Features
58 Mayo, for one Certain Internet Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 7,000 past diagram For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.20 per minute; or, with
SUPER QUIZ
1
2
12
2016 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Edited by Will Shortz
Crossword
Last Week’s Answers:
get out!
HEAD TO
MUSSEL
BEACH Hungry? Grab a shellfish license and hit the rocks
No heaving the crab pots out of the water. No searching for tiny air bubbles in the sand, followed by frantic, messy digging as you search for the retreating gaper. No bait, no hook, no boat. Welcome to mussel beach, the lazy seafood lovers’ paradise. With a small hand tool or even just a pair of heavy gloves, you can harvest your fill of these intertidal bivalves within a few minutes. Thrown into a pasta sauce, sautéed with a bit of butter and white wine, or steamed plain, the mussel can be every bit as good as its more popular shellfish cousins, with a great deal less effort. “I love mussels because I don’t like to do a lot of work,” said John Kallas, nutritionist and owner of Wild Food Adventures, a Portland-based company that offers workshops and field trips on foraging. “But I love the flavor of mussels. They’re certainly comparable to any clam, although they have a different flavor, and they’re much less hassle in terms of cleaning.” We know. We had you at “no bait,” but there are plenty of reasons try harvesting and preparing your own mussels. Flex your mussels with these guidelines.
1. GET LEGAL
Purchase a shellfish license from the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, available at most sporting goods and grocery stores. The annual license is $7 for residents, $20.50 for non-residents. Non-residents can also get a three-day license for $11.50. The rules are simple: 72 mussels of any size per person, per day. But grab an updated copy of the state regulations pamphlet anyway, because the Marine Zone section contains maps of the designated marine gardens and habitat reserves that are closed to mussel harvesting. [More about licenses.]
2. CALL THE HOTLINE
Mussels, bless their little filters, feed by sucking up anything that is suspended in the waters surrounding them. From time to time, their watery food source carries bacteria that can be paralytic or even fatal to humans, who ingest these toxins along with shellfish. To help you out, the state tests regularly for these elements and closes areas where the levels are too high. Curious about the safety of your intended beach? Call the shellfish hotline, 800-448-2474.
3. FIND YOUR HUNTING GROUNDS Oregon’s edible mussels, mostly Mytilus edulis and
some Mytilus Californianus, adhere themselves to rocky outcroppings of basalt, which dot the beaches through the central coast, and become more common as you head southward toward California. Designated marine garden areas at Cape Kiwanda, Otter Rock, Yaquina Head and Yachats are off limits, but rocks to the north and south of these areas are usually productive. In Lincoln City, intertidal zones in the Nelscott neighborhood and north Roads End have good reputations; Mitch Vance, shellfish project leader for the ODFW Marine Resources Program Office in Newport, suggests Seal Rock and the beach south of the Yachats Marine Garden.
4. FIND A LOW TIDE
Fortunately, it doesn’t have to be extremely low. “Mussels will be exposed at almost any low tide. At really low tides, the water is way below where the mussels stop,” Kallas said. Get a tide table, usually free where you buy your license, and find a low tide during daylight hours
5. ASSEMBLE YOUR IMPLEMENTS
What to take on a mussel hunting trip? Kallas, who leads wild food field trips to the coast through his company, Wild Food Adventures, has seen many tools in his 14 years on the job. “Some people use a crowbar, or one of those weeders with a handle and a notched end, used for dandelions. Or, you could just bring thick leather gloves, like woodworkers use,” he said. Other mussel-loaders pull the shell up with one hand, exposing the byssal threads that the mussel uses to adhere to the rock, and cut the threads with a pair of old scissors. He does not recommend harvesting them by hand, without protection, as the attached barnacles have sharp edges. You’ll also need a container to keep them in, but it doesn’t need to hold water.
6. DRESS TO IMPRESS (THE BARNACLES)
For best results, wear old, weather-appropriate clothing and shoes that completely cover and protect your feet. Kallas recommends old tennis shoes, which can withstand the sharp
barnacles while still offering some traction. No sandals or open-toed shoes allowed.
7. START PICKING
There are no state restrictions on the legal size for harvestable mussels. But does it make a difference in taste? Vance, from the ODFW, suggests picking shells that are 2 to 4 inches in length. “The very large ones are not palatable. They can be quite chewy,” Vance said. To Kallas, on the other hand, size doesn’t matter. “I really don’t find (the smaller size) any more tender or better flavored. I love the big ones, too. They’re all delcious and tender.” But it pays to respect the mussel colonies by taking just what you’ll eat, and limiting the amount of damage you wreak on the surrounding wildlife. Mussels require 2 to 5 years to grow to edible size, and marine environments can take many years to recover.
8. HOMEWARD BOUND
Like other shellfish, fresh mussels are a perishable product that should be eaten right away. When you get them to the kitchen, clean them with cold running water and a stiff brush, removing as much sand and grit as you can. Discard any with open shells or excessive sand. The byssus, a clump of black, threadlike material that held the shell to the rock, can be removed before cooking, or more easily, afterwards.
9. ON THE PLATE
The mussel is cultivated and prized all over the world, so the recipe possibilities are endless, from baked to bisque and chowder to salad. Both the sources used here prefer their fresh mussels prepared simply. Vance steams them in a shallow layer of water until they pop open, between 10 and 15 minutes, removes and cleans them, then tosses them with pasta in a butter or red sauce. “I start a big pot of water and steam or boil them. As soon as they start opening up, I take them out and eat them, just like that,” Kallas said. “I love the way they taste, just the way they are. I don’t even add salt.”
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016 • 21
on the cover
FINDING DORIES
PACIFIC CITY HONORS ITS FLEET AT DORY DAYS FESTIVAL Story and Photo By Gretchen Ammerman For the TODAY
Tests abound to prove how truly Oregonian you are. Can you properly pronounce Yachats? Or for that matter Oregon? Have you attended a Blazers game? Special points
awarded if you did so while enjoying a microbrew. The Oregon Parks & Recreation Department is adding more ways to show how Oreganic you are with the Oregon Heritage Traditions, a short list of events that has just grown by one with this year’s addition
of the annual Dory Days Parade and Festival in Pacific City, floating in this year from Friday, July 15, to Sunday, July 17. At the four-way stop on Friday at 5 pm, representatives from the Oregon Heritage Foundation will be making the official designation on
a stage made, appropriately, from the Kiawanda Kipper, a dory boat owned by former Oregon State Representative Paul Hanneman. “We are going to be the official 13th event,” said dory fisherman Paul Larkins. “To get in is kind of an extensive process. The event has to have been continuing for 50 years, be uniquely Oregon, and be something that benefits the state. Paul talked about doing this while we were fishing together but he didn’t have the time. I listen close to him because he’s a smart man; he brought it up and I just took it and ran with it. His library of archives had all the info I needed for the application. But I couldn’t have done it without the Board of Directors of the Dorymen’s Association and my wife, who did all the typing” Dory Days started in the ’50s as the “Dory Derby Flying Fish Fry.” Though
22 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016
many things have changed, the fry has continued almost every year since, although last year it was cancelled due to lack of fish. “This year we will have the fish fry again,” Larkins said. “It is all dory-caught fish, and is one of the big draws of the event.” The fish will hit the pan at the Kiawanda Community Center on Saturday from noon to 6 pm. The biggest addition to the original event is the parade, where dory boats are prettied up and portaged through town. The boats and other parade favorites like the Dory Days princesses, will start rolling from the Bob Straub State Park on Saturday at 11 am and end at Chester’s Market on Brooten Road. The four-way stop will also be host to an Artisan Fair that starts on Friday at 10 am and ends Sunday at 4 pm, and a display of Dory Boats on Saturday and Sunday from 9 am to 4 pm. Every year, Dory Days has a theme, and to honor the new heritage designation, this year’s theme is “Rockin’ our Heritage.” Larkin said the event, a fundraiser for the Dorymen’s Association and the Pacific City Nestucca Valley Chamber of Commerce, is also meant as an awareness raiser. “With all the different user groups that are down here now using the beach, the best way to protect our future is to preserve our heritage,” he said. “We don’t want the dory to be lost in the shuffle. Pacific City had always been known as the home of the dory fleet, and
to me it always will be, but everyone else is welcome.” Larkins started dory fishing with his big brother in 1971. Though he left to join the Coast Guard in 1976 and did not return to Pacific City or dory fishing until 2005, he remembers well what it was like back then. “In the ’70s there would be three rows of trailers on the beach on any given day,” he said. “Sometimes there were so many boats there was nowhere to park, and it was almost all commercial. At one point, Pacific City was the largest producer of fish on the Oregon Coast. Now the fleet is pretty much sport fishermen. On a busy weekend you will see 80 to 100 boats at most, and a very small percentage are commercial.” The Pacific City dory fleet certainly passes the test of being truly Oregon. “This is the only place in North America where the boats launch right from the beach into the open ocean and there are this many people doing it,” Larkin said. “A lot of technology used for small boats came from here, like trailer and boat designs.” Dory fishermen will be on hand at the event to talk more about the past and present of dory fishing, so come enjoy some fresh caught fish, watch an old fashioned parade, and be secure in the knowledge that for at least while you are at this sanctioned event, you can enjoy a truly Oregonian event without having to know the right way to say “Couch Street.”
s o u n dwave s Friday, July 15
Wednesday, July 20
ZUHG — Original funk and reggae. 9 pm-1 am,
LOZELLE JENNINGS — Swing by for this “front
Chinook’s Seafood Grill, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-2446665. STEVE SLOAN — Acoustic. 6-9 pm, The Mist @ Surftides, 2945 NW Jetty Ave., Lincoln City, 541-994-2191. SCHWING —The best of ’90s rock and pop. 9 pm, Rusty Truck Brewery, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 8-11 pm in the Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, 7760 Hwy. 101, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. ORIGINAL FACE — Original jazz. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-5748134. WINTERLINGS — Seattle duo Wolff Bowden and Amanda Birdsall are both songwriters and multi-instrumentalists, taking turns singing lead and harmony vocals. Featuring guitar, ukulele, violin, banjitar, percussion and more. 6-8 pm, Club 1216, located inside Canyon Way Restaurant and Bookstore, 1216 SW Canyon Way, Newport, 541 265 8319. THEY WENT THATAWAY — Acoustic American roots. Covers and originals with elements of folk, blues and alt-country. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
porch thang,” with Jedi-Jim Hobbs on guitar, lots of original blues, Cajun, swampytonk and American roots tunes, plus tall tales, outright lies, and talented local sit-ins. Family friendly. 5-8 pm, O’Downey’s Irish Pub and Restaurant, 10 Bay Street, Depoe Bay. STEVE COOK — ‘60s-’70s classics, standards, blues and ballads. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Thursday, July 21 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. TU TU KANE — Hawaiian style. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N, Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Friday, July 22
Saturday, July 16 THE JUNEBUGS — A high-energy pop-folk trio who are ready to rock and/or roll until the cows come home. $5. 9 pm, The San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita, 503-368-5080. ZUHG — Original funk and reggae. 9 pm-1 am, Chinook’s Seafood Grill, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-2446665. STEVE SLOAN — Acoustic. 6-9 pm, The Mist @ Surftides, 2945 NW Jetty Ave., Lincoln City, 541-994-2191. RETROACTIVE GAMMA RAYS — A night of high-energy surf music from these local favorites makes for a must-see beach music show. 9 pm, Nauti Mermaid Bar & Bistro, 1343 NW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1001. HANK SHREVE BAND — Hank began playing harmonica at the age of 8 and has established himself as a major talent on the blues scene in the Pacific Northwest. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. JIMMY BIVENS — Rockin’ the house with Western swing. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. NICK JAINA — The Portland author will give a musical book reading from 5 to 6 pm, followed by original and traditional music from Barb and Gib from 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. THE RONNIE JAY DUO — These guys will put a smile on your face, get your fingers snappin’ and your toes a-tappin’. “Jump ‘n’ Swing with a Zing!” Ronnie Jay Pirrello on vocals, guitar and harp with Richard Robitaille on vocals and skins. 5-7pm, at
Winterlings • Friday, July 15, in Newport Bayfront Tasting Room, 146 SW Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-272-5222. SHY SHY & GARY — Oregon Coast locals playing folk, blues and originals. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477. DAVE & CRATE — A magical mystery musical tour of ‘50s to ‘80s classic rock, played on the outdoor stage if the weather co-operates. 1-3:30 pm, Luna Sea Fish House. 153 Hwy. 101. Yachats, 541-547-4794.
Sunday, July 17 OREGON COAST JAM SOCIETY — 4 pm, Old Oregon Tavern, 1604 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-8515. JAM SESSION — Pair those German ales with some lively tunes: No glockenspiel required. 7 pm, Autobahn 101, 1512 SE Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1811. THE LARRY BLAKE MEDICINE SHOW—
From old-timey songs to hippie anthems to jazz favorites, the Medicine Show band keeps them rolling. Guitar, congas, vocals, washboard and a sense of humor are all they need for a real variety show. 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. PAST FORWARD — Music worth repeating; classics from the Great American Songbook. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Monday, July 18 RICHARD SHARPLESS — Retired from his days of playing in Nashville, Richard plays guitar and sings his own tunes plus an eclectic mix of favorites. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Tuesday, July 19 OPEN JAM — Hosted by One Way Out. 8:30 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. 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. RICHARD SILEN & DEANE BRISTOW —
Singer-songwriter Silen plays an eclectic and engaging mix of everything from American songbook standards to blues to originals; accompanied by Bristow on harmonica. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
TRIPLE EDGE — Classic Rawk, with a ‘w’. 9 pm, Chinook’s Seafood Grill, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-244-6665. BRYAN NICHOLS — A pared-down acoustic show from the ZuhG band leader. 6-9 pm, The Mist @ Surftides, 2945 NW Jetty Ave., Lincoln City, 541-9942191. THE RICH CORPORATION — Inspired by the Strokes, Franz Ferdinand, Arctic Monkeys and The Black Keys, this band, like the smell of money, is sweet. 9 pm, Nauti Mermaid Bar & Bistro, 1343 NW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1001. THE OCEAN — Enjoy ’60s and ’70s rock and roll from this coastal three-piece. 9 pm, Rusty Truck Brewery, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. BETH WILLIS DUO — What’s better than hearing beautiful music in the comfort of the Attic Lounge? Calling the set list. Come out and pick your favorites. 8-11 pm, Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. THE RONNIE JAY DUO — These guys will put a smile on your face, get your fingers snappin’ and your toes a-tappin’. “Jump ‘n’ Swing with a Zing!” Ronnie Jay Pirrello on vocals, guitar and harp with Richard Robitaille on vocals and skins. 7-10 pm, Cafe Mundo. 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. BARBARA LEE TURRILL & GIB BERNHARDT — Local singer-songwriter Turrill combines dynamic
vocals, great guitar work and award-winning lyrics, accompanied by Bernhardt on bass. 6-8 pm, Club 1216, located inside Canyon Way Restaurant and Bookstore, 1216 SW Canyon Way, Newport, 541 265 8319. RICHIE G & MA BEAT — Americana, folk/folk rock, bossa nova, instrumental contemporary and originals. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Saturday, July 23 ULTRONZ — An evening of “Astro-Surf-Sound,”
combining elements of rock, ska, power-pop and reggae. $5. 9 pm, The San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita, 503-368-5080.
TRIPLE EDGE — Classic Rawk, with a ‘w’. 9 pm, Chinook’s Seafood Grill, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-244-6665. BRYAN NICHOLS — A pared-down acoustic show from the ZuhG band leader. 6-9 pm, The Mist @ Surftides, 2945 NW Jetty Ave., Lincoln City, 541-9942191. THE RICH CORPORATION — Inspired by the Strokes, Franz Ferdinand, Arctic Monkeys and The Black Keys, this band, like the smell of money, is sweet. 9 pm, Nauti Mermaid Bar & Bistro, 1343 NW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1001. RHYTHM CULTURE — Combining influences of the Caribbean and the Americas with a roots reggae foundation, this band infuses blues and jazz into their music, guaranteed to get even the most reluctant of dancers out of their chairs. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. REVOLVING DOOR — Classic rock is back, with diva Lisha Rose on vocals, coast music scene veterans Will Kang and Bill Wallace on guitars, Jay Arce on drums, and Marvin Selfridge on bass. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. BETH WILLIS ROCK DUO — The duo comes from Portland to rock the coastline. You head to Salishan to call out their playlist. Good combination. 8-11 pm, Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. BARB AND GIB — Original and traditional music. 7-10 pm, Cafe Mundo. 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. RICHIE G, TU TU KANE & MA BEAT —
Hawaiian style. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477. DAVE & CRATE — A magical mystery musical tour of ‘50s to ‘80s classic rock, played on the outdoor stage if the weather co-operates. 1-3:30 pm, Luna Sea Fish House. 153 Hwy. 101. Yachats, 541-547-4794.
Sunday, July 24 OREGON COAST JAM SOCIETY — 4 pm, Old
Oregon Tavern, 1604 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-9948515. THE RICH CORPORATION — Inspired by the Strokes, Franz Ferdinand, Arctic Monkeys and The Black Keys, this band, like the smell of money, is sweet. 9 pm, Nauti Mermaid Beach House, 220 SE Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1001. JAM SESSION — Pair those German ales with some lively tunes: No glockenspiel required. 7 pm, Autobahn 101, 1512 SE Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1811. THE JUNE RUSHING BAND — June and her sidekick Joren on guitar are a winning combination, playing originals and classic rock and ballads. 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. ERIC LEADBETTER — Folk-Americana. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477. DON’T SEE YOUR FAVORITE BAND? EMAIL THE TIME, DATE AND VENUE TO US AT NEWS@OREGONCOASTTODAY. COM.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016 • 23
NOW PLAYING LINCOLN COUNTY AREA EVENTS
91.7 FM
t Newport Performing Arts Center: “FROM THE OUTSIDE LOOKING IN” SKATE FILM, MILO GRAAMANS & FRIENDS IN CONCERT, SUMMER FILM SERIES – “THE MAN WHO KNEW INFINITY,” AND “THE BRAND NEW TESTAMENT,” NATIONAL THEATRE LONDON LIVE IN HD – “HANGMEN” t Theatre West, Lincoln City: “WHERE THERE’S A WILL, THERE’S A RELATIVE” t Newport Public Library: STORYTELLING WORKSHOP, AUTHOR NICK JAINA t Lincoln City Cultural Center: RANDY MCALLISTER t Don Davis Park, Newport: NEWPORT COMMUNITY DRUM CIRCLE
Lincoln County’s only Public Radio Station Streaming live at KYAQ.org Featuring locally produced music programs: Oregon Music Connection w/ M Frazier: Fri 9pm, Sat 2pm Sunday Brunch w/ Dave Huntington: Sun 9am, Thu 10pm Sonic Cafe w/ Scott Clark: Mon 10pm, Sun 8pm KYAQ Music Hour w/ Bill Dalbey Sat 8pm, Wed 11pm Train to Skaville w/Brian Tomsic Sat 10pm, Tue 10pm
OREGON COAST COUNCIL FOR THE ARTS
541-635-0034
More online at coastarts.org
Find
Harmony
Duck Fan? Beaver Fan? Lincoln County High School Fan?
Put your best foot forward The sixth annual Amazing Race kicks off at 9 a.m. Saturday, July 30. The Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce’s Young Professionals has designed a series of seven top-secret challenges that will be both mental and physical. Modeled after the television show, the Amazing Race will have two-person teams solving clues and racing to the finish line. Participants must be 15 years of age or older. A $100 cash prize will be awarded to the team that finishes first from each category. At the conclusion of the race, Rogue Ales provides complimentary food and beverages to all participants, volunteers and sponsors.
The Amazing Race registration and starting point is at the Rogue Ales Public House on Newport’s historic Bayfront. Check-in begins at 8 a.m. Preregistration is online at newportchamber. org or by contact Bobbi at the Newport Chamber of Commerce office, 541-265-8801 or bobbi@newportchamber.org. The preregistration fee is $40 per team and includes raffle prizes, food and beverages. Official race T-shirts are an additional $7 and must be ordered in advance. After July 21, the registration fee is $50 Only 40 team slots are available so early registration is advised.
Build a boat of your own Registration is open boatbuilding events at the Port of Toledo’s 12th annual Wooden Boat Show. This is your family’s chance to become a boat owner … one that you build. Families will build a 15-foot sea kayak under the guidance of local shipwright Rick Johnson. With the help of local boat builders, the project kicks off on Friday, Aug. 19, through the launching event
on Sunday, Aug. 21. The plans, building materials, and instruction are all included for $400 registration cost. The youth boat building project is an opportunity for youth ages 10-18 to build their very own 8-foot “Elegant Punt.” The punt is built from a kit, under the direction of Joe Novello and volunteers, using simple hand tools. Registration costs $200. This is a two-day boat
building activity, where youth with help from a friend or family member will learn basic construction techniques. Space is limited for both opportunities. Registration forms are available online at www.portoftoledo.org or call the Port Office at 541-3365207 for more information. Don’t miss the fun at the Port of Toledo’s Wooden Boat Show, Aug. 20-21 at Toledo’s Waterfront Park and Marina
Adopt an orphan plant, discover water gardens
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
lively
|
kbch • 1400am • lincoln city
From 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, July 16, Connie Hansen Garden will hold the annual Orphan Plant Sale. This is an opportunity for gardeners to find quality plant material at reasonable prices. The “orphans” are plants that need new homes, perhaps because there is no room for them in the garden, maybe too many were started, or because they got planted too late for the big spring sale and are now ready to find a new home. Many have been marked down from
24 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016
their normal bench price to make them more attractive for filling empty spaces somewhere else. At 1 p.m., Rick and Janet Anderson will present “Water Gardens: From Pumps to Plants to Fish.” They’ll present
information on managing a water garden, illustrated with slides from the successful pond in their yard. In addition to covering site location, construction and maintenance, plants and fish, the Andersons are inviting class participants to tour their garden and observe their pond after the talk. Books on water gardening will also be for sale. Both events are at Connie Hansen Garden, 1931 NW 33rd S. in Lincoln City. Admission is free.
in concert High hair and humor on tap at Cultural Center benefit Heartbreak, humor, high hair and tall Texas tales will be coming to dinner on Saturday, July 16, at the inaugural, all-ages blues benefit for the Lincoln City Cultural Center. Grammynominated singer, songwriter and bluesman Randy McAllister and his four-piece band are raising money for the nonprofit center. The Blues Benefit will also include a barbecue dinner, made on-site in the cultural center’s kitchen, along with a prize raffle. Dinner, included in the ticket price, is served at 6:30 p.m., with the music starting at 7, in the auditorium at 540 N.E. Hwy. 101, inside the historic Delake School. Randy McAllister has been flying in the face of convention his whole career. No smoke, no mirrors, no choreography, no industry machines — just driving drums and harmonica. “If Mark Twain had envisioned a 21st-century roots musician, he might have created a character like Randy McAllister, with an easygoing persona and a wry, and an observant wit. McAllister weaves material in the singer/ songwriter tradition, with nods to a variety of styles. He is one of those rare artists who is able to meld genres such as gospel,
Randy McAllister
blues, country, Tex-Mex, rock and zydeco together and come away with something that is uniquely him,” said one critic. Raised in the small Texas town of Novice, McAllister is a fifth-generation Texan, whose father was both a fireman and musician. Randy began as a drummer, but found the harmonica in his early 20s while stationed in Massachusetts as a member of the U.S. Air Force. Taking cues from blues legend “Earring George” Mayweather, a Boston resident and harmonica master, McAllister moved back to Texas in 1992, a strong, skillful harp player who was establishing his vocal and songwriting skills. McAllister has released 13 albums, beginning with his
debut “Diggin’ for Sofa Change” and followed by “Grease, Grit, Dirt and Spit,” the much heralded “Double Rectified Bust Head,” and the 2002 Grammynominated “Givers and Takers.” His much-anticipated compilation CD, “Flying High While Staying Low Down” was released in late 2006, “Dope Slap Soup” in June of 2007, “Ain’t Like the Movies” in 2009 and “Be Like Water” in 2011. Tickets for the benefit on Saturday are $25 for adults, $10 for youth ages 13 to 18, and $5 for kids 12 and younger. Admission includes a barbecue dinner with beef brisket, beans and potato salad plus peach cobbler for dessert. There will be a no-host bar, with Northwest beers by the bottle and wines by the glass. All proceeds from the 2016 Blues Benefit will go to the operations of the nonprofit Lincoln City Cultural Center, a nonprofit center for creativity and community in the heart of Lincoln City. Tickets are sold online via the center’s website, lincolncity-culturalcenter.org (click “buy tickets”), by calling the center at 541-994-9994. Or, buy them in person at the Info Center, inside the LCCC at 540 N.E. Hwy. 101.
866-994-7026
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016 • 25
learn a little
Celebrate Yachats anniversaries Yachats is both 50 and 100 this year, and in celebration of those anniversaries, the Yachats Academy of Arts and Sciences has invited Commissioner Bill Hall and author Joanne Kittel to speak at 2 p.m. Sunday, July 17, at the Yachats Commons. July 2016 is the 100th Anniversary of Oceanview changing its name to Yachats. It is also the 50th Anniversary of when Yachats was incorporated. Kittel will speak about the
Native Americans who frequented this area for centuries. Living oďŹ&#x20AC; the abundance of the land, rivers and ocean, the Yaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Xaik peoples, a
southern branch of the Alsea Peoples, were able to survive and thrive. When this area was opened up for homesteading, the Coos,
Lower Umpqua and Alsea Peoples were incarcerated at the Alsea SubAgency in what became Yachats. He will speak about the changes that took place when homesteaders and settlers started moving into the area. Hall will follow Yachats history to present day. There is no charge but a $5 suggested donation at the door will go to cover expenses.For more information, go to YachatsAcademy. org or GoYachats.com or call 541961-6695
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26 â&#x20AC;˘ oregoncoastTODAY.com â&#x20AC;˘ facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday â&#x20AC;˘ july 15, 2016
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Ć&#x2030;Ä&#x201A;Ĺ?ĹśĆ&#x161;Ĺ?ĹśĹ?Ć? Ä&#x161;Ć&#x152;Ä&#x201A;Ç Ĺ?ĹśĹ?Ć? Ć&#x2030;Ĺ&#x161;Ĺ˝Ć&#x161;Ĺ˝Ć? Ć&#x152;ĆľĹ?Ć? Ä?Ä&#x17E;Ć&#x152;Ä&#x201A;ĹľĹ?Ä?Ć? Î&#x2DC; Ä?ĹŻÄ&#x201A;Ç&#x2021; Ĺ?ĹŻÄ&#x201A;Ć?Ć? ĹŠÄ&#x17E;Ç Ä&#x17E;ĹŻĆ&#x152;Ç&#x2021; Ć&#x2039;ĆľĹ?ĹŻĆ&#x161;Ć? ĹŻÄ&#x17E;Ä&#x201A;Ć&#x161;Ĺ&#x161;Ä&#x17E;Ć&#x152; Ĺ?ŽŽÄ&#x161;Ć? Ć&#x2030;Ć&#x152;Ĺ?ĹśĆ&#x161;Ć? Ä?Ä&#x201A;Ć&#x152;Ä&#x161;Ć? Ć?Ä?ƾůĆ&#x2030;Ć&#x161;ĆľĆ&#x152;Ä&#x17E;Ć? ĹľĹ?Ç&#x2020;Ä&#x17E;Ä&#x161; ĹľÄ&#x17E;Ä&#x161;Ĺ?Ä&#x201A; Î&#x2DC; žŽĆ&#x152;Ä&#x17E; (an appetizer to their 24th annual fest in Pacific City on Aug 27-28)
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August 6th - 26th, 2016 Russell Michael JACQUES et JACQUES Saturday August 6th Sunday August 7th
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Meet these two internationally known brothers and watch them create art before your eyes!
Reception Saturday, August 6th 2-5pm 6119 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, OR 97367 info@freedgallery.com 541-994-5600 www.freedgallery.com
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016 • 27
Beach B each B Bacon acon
July 16, 2016 • Noon-6pm Do on’t mis ss you ur cha ance to audiitio on for Whe eel of Forrtune e!
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CHINOOK WINDS CASINO RESORT
The Wheelmobile is a 36-foot Winnebago that tours nationwide in search of contestants for television’s #1 game show. The Wheelmobile team is coming to Chinook Winds Casino Resort to find contestants in the Pacific Northwest! See Win nnerss Cirrclle for com mple ete ru ule es and de etaiilss.
Collect entries weekly starting July 1 DRAWINGS JULY 31 at 4pm Five semi-finalists will win their choice of $1000 CASH or 1000 $and Dollars. One finalist will win their choice of a new Nissan 370Z coupe or a Mazda MX-3 crossover! Complete rules at Winners Circle Actual vehicles may vary from illustration.
A contestant audition does not guarantee a spot on the th show show. The applicant understands that Wheel of Fortune is under no obligation to use him/her as a FRQWHVWDQW 6HOHFWLRQ RI FRQWHVWDQWV LV DW WKH SURGXFHUV· VROH GLVFUHWLRQ Califon Productions, Inc. Wheel of Fortune is a registered trademark of Califon Productions, Inc. rights Produc Pro ductio tions ns,, In Inc c. All ri right g s rese ght rreserved. eserve rved d.
chinookwindscasino.com • Lincoln City • 1-888-CHINOOK 28 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • july 15, 2016