Oregon Coast Today June 24, 2016

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oregon coast June 24, 2016 • ISSUE 1, VOL. 12

FEELING TRIPPY?

FLASH BACK TO THE ’60S WITH LINCOLN CITY’S WINDSTOCK KITE FESTIVAL See story, page 15

Beach Bacon "It's Better at the Beach!" •

Julyy 16,, 2016 • Admission $20 Noon to 6pm • Craft Beers & Ciders Food Samples • Live Music!

L i n c o l n C i t y, O r e g o n • 1 - 8 8 8 - C H I N O O K • c h i n o o k w i n d s c a s i n o . c o m


w w w .L esSchw a b.com P rices g ood throug h June 30,2016

LINCOLN CITY:

TOLEDO:

NEWPORT:

1025 Hwy 101 415 NW A St 1155 SW Coast Hwy Lincoln City OR 97367 Toledo, OR 97391 Newport OR 97365 541 994-3676 541 336-1611 541 265 6604

This week’s top five

1

LINCOLN CITY — We can think of a few reasons why people might struggle to remember the ’60s and the countercultural zenith that was the Woodstock music festival. But there’s no danger of forgetting this weekend’s tribute to the trippiest decade in history — Windstock, a kite festival that shows that sometimes, just sometimes, it is cool to get high. See page 15

2

GLENEDEN BEACH — After opening performances at the Lincoln City Cultural Center, plus free community concerts at Taft High and the Congregational Church, the Siletz Bay Music Festival will

set up at Salishan Spa and Golf Resort for treats including works by Bartók and Elgar as well as original compositions from pianist extraordinaire Dick Hyman. See coast calendar, pages 16 & 17

3

TILLAMOOK — If you’re looking for a big show in a small town, pull up a chair at the Tillamook June Dairy Festival and watch 122 floats of all shapes and sizes roll right pasteurize. See page 6

4

TOLEDO — If a plumber ever tells you that he needs to get his rat-rod, you should probably check into a hotel for a

from the editor few days until the whole thing blows over. But if you hear the same sentence from a garage owner, you are in for a treat of automotive ingenuity. See rat-rods, classics, project cars and much more this Saturday as the mill town’s classic car show returns to Main Street. See page 31

5

NEWPORT — This week is the last chance to see an exhibit of work by Newport Middle School students paying tribute to the life and work of renowned artist Rick Bartow. Showing maturity beyond their years, these young artists’ have created a show that is not to be missed. See page 21

2 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016

Assistant editor Quinn


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• 10% DISCOUNT: BUILD YOUR OWN FESTIVAL • Purchase 3 or more tickets from among the total of 8 performances at Lincoln City Cultural Center and/or Salishan. You will qualify for a 10% discount on these performances. Ticket purchases must be made at the same time in order to process the discount. Thurs June 30 • 7:30 PM

Sun June 26 • 4:00 PM

A NIGHT AT THE THEATRE

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016 • 3


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get out!

Dig the music at secret garden tour The Annual Samaritan House Secret Garden Tour will return this Sunday, June 26, oering tours of 11 unique coastal gardens in the community of Otter Rock, just north of Newport. The gardens have many special features, including ocean views, natural grasses, garden art, rock walls and a piece of a McCullough bridge. To complete the feast for the senses, musicians stationed at several of the gardens will provide a soundtrack to the afternoon. “The musicians make the gardens even more special,â€? said event organizer Pat Stern, “It just adds something magical to the whole experience.â€? As one of the event’s longstanding musicians, Sue Lick has volunteered her talents for more than 10 years, playing a mixture of folk, country, pop and classical on guitar some and keyboard. “I enjoy being out in the gardens and I see so many great people every year,â€? she said. “I’ve also been able to perform in some really marvelous places, sometimes looking out over the water or tucked away in a beautiful garden.â€? The roster for this year’s event includes Margot Fetrow playing the hammered dulcimer, Mark Mugnai on guitar and Robert Rubin on the accordion. Duos include vocal-guitar combos Fred and Cindy Town and Malarkey & Stiles. Brent Bunker will play the dulcimer and maybe another instrument or two while Red Rhody, featuring Gary Baker, will provide a little soft jazz. Returning again to the event is Taylor Johnson with the soft, melodic sounds of her ute.

4 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016

Malarkey & Stiles

Brent Bunker with his harp guitar

Meanwhile, Mark Beckwith will share the sounds of the Native American ute, bringing anywhere from 12 to 18 of the instruments to his garden venue. “Each ute is a dierent key and some are dierent pitches,â€? he said, “so I may change the ute with each song.â€? New of the tour this year, members of the Newport Youth Symphony of the Oregon Coast will bring their talents to one of the locations. The Secret Garden Tour will run from noon to 5 pm, oering light snacks and wine in addition to music at some

gardens. Tickets, $25, are available at JC Thriftway Market in Newport, Toledo Feed and Seed, Bear Valley Nursery and Landscaping in Lincoln City and at the Samaritan House oďŹƒce at 715 NW Bay Street in Newport. Tickets are also available online at brownpapertickets.com. Proceeds will help Newport’s Samaritan House shelter, educate and guide homeless families toward independent living. For more information, go to www.samfamshelter.org or call 541-574-8898.


get out!

Good, clean fun With summer in full swing, the Oregon Coast is in the early stages of a months-long party that attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. And like any good host, Oregonians are already planning for the post-party cleanup. The annual Beach & Riverside Cleanup sees hundreds of volunteers lend a hand in environmental restoration and cleanup efforts across Oregon from 10 am to 1 pm on Saturday, Sept. 24. Event organizers SOLVE are now accepting applications from volunteers interested in leading these community projects. Volunteer leaders receive assistance, including project planning support and training, event flyers and pre-event

Assistant editor Quinn doing his bit at a recent SOLV beach clean

publicity, online volunteer registration and cleanup project supplies. SOLVE also has a limited number of small grants of up to $100 for reimbursement of qualifying

project expenses. The deadline for project applications is Friday, July 1. For more information, go to solveoregon.org or call SOLVE at 503-844-9571.

GET IN MOTION AT THE OCEAN

Training for retirement? The Newport 60+ Activity Center is inviting people to step back in time on Thursday, July 3, with a trip aboard a historic steam locomotive out of Garibaldi. The 90-minute round-trip excursion on the Oregon Coast Line meanders by Tillamook Bay, the Pacific Ocean, Nehalem Bay and through the Nehalem River Valley, passing by many lakes and gorgeous panoramic views that can only be seen by rail. On the way to Garibaldi, the van will stop at the Blue Heron Cheese and Wine Company

in Tillamook, where passengers can enjoy a fantastic lunch at the deli. The cost for the trip is $37 per person, not including lunch. The 60+ Adventure Van will be leaving Newport at 8:30 am and returning around 5 pm. For more information, or to reserve a spot, drop by the center at 20 SE 2nd Street or call 541-265-9617. For a full list of trips, classes and events, go to www.newportoregon.gov/sc.

Registration is now open for the Ocean’s Edge 5K, which will see runners and walkers take to the Lincoln City beach on Saturday, July 9. The original all-beach running event on the Oregon Coast takes participants from Kyllo’s Restaurant north to Chinook Winds Casino Resort and back. Runners, walkers, families

and four-legged friends are welcome to participate. The overall male and female winners will receive commemorative glass floats, and ribbons will be awarded to the top three finishers in five-year age divisions. A drawing for restaurant gift certificates and other prizes will follow the race. Advance registration is available online at www. getmeregistered.com or in

person at the Lincoln City Community Center, 2150 NE Oar Place. Registration is $15, or $25 including race t-shirt, until Friday, July 8. Day-of-race registration is also available from 7:30 to 8:45 am on Saturday, July 9, for $20, or $30 including t-shirt. For more information, call 541-994-2131 or go to www. lincolncity.org.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016 • 5


get out!

THE CREAM OF THE CROP TILLAMOOK’S JUNE DAIRY FESTIVAL DOES NOT SKIM-P ON FUN By Patrick Alexander Oregon Coast TODAY

Measuring parades is a tricky business. Even if you can get an accurate count of the number of entries after all the last-minute signups and no-shows, you are left with the question of whether a fullscale marching band should count the same as a lone man on a unicycle. All of which makes it very tough to judge whether the parade at the heart of Tillamook’s June Dairy Festival really is, as some claim, the third largest in the state. What is certain beyond any doubt, however, is that with some 122 entries, the event is a certified whopper, set to fill the downtown core with color, noise and fun for a 59th year running this Saturday, June 25. Heading this year’s parade is Tammy Samagaio of the Tillamook Chamber of Commerce, who has also worked hard to organize a daylong street festival to keep visitors entertained long after the last float has passed. The theme for this year’s festival is “Dairyland Treasures,” summed up perfectly by the logo of a cow dressed up as a pirate with a treasure chest. “We will be handing out eye patches, earrings and tattoos so everyone can get into the theme of pirates,” Samagaio said. Help in creating a suitably buccaneering atmosphere will be at hand in the form of PDXYar, a traveling troupe of scurvy scallywags making the trip from Portland to show off their vessel in the parade. These “Swashbucklers of Stumptown” will also be the main attraction in the post-parade street party, showing off their cannon prowess in a booming “black powder” demonstration. Other floats to look out for include the Royal Rosarians, the Al Kader Shriners, Smokey the Bear, Tillamook’s three dance studios

and the men of the Model T Pig N’ Fords, who captivate audiences at the Tillamook County Fair every year by racing at breakneck speed while each juggling a good-sized sow. The Seattle Seafair float will also be making an appearance while enroute to the Portland Rose Festival, as will the Astoria Regatta float, complete with scale replicas of the town’s trolley car, the AstoriaMegler Bridge and the Astoria Column. After all 122 entries have filed past, PDXYar will fire up the cannons for their show on a closedoff area of Second Street. Other festival attractions will include face-painting, meet and greet with the dairy princess, live music, bouncy houses and a penny scramble. Samagaio said downtown merchants will add to the carnival atmosphere with special festival deals, while the Tillamook Farmers Market will also offer entertainment for people who decide to stick around and enjoy the day. And those who stay in town until the evening will get to experience another June tradition, the Tillamook County Rodeo, billed as the “biggest little show on the coast.” Starting at 6 pm on Saturday at the Tillamook County Fairgrounds, the rodeo will offer a host of events including bareback riding, steer wrestling, bull riding, team roping and barrel racing. Admission is $10 for adults and $5 for children aged six and older. At 9 pm, guests can enjoy a Country Western Dance with live music, a beer garden and food, with tickets $5 apiece. Sunday, June 26, is kids day at the rodeo, with stick pony races on offer and free entry for kids aged 12 and under accompanied by a paying adult. Doors open at 11 am on Sunday, with rodeo events beginning at 1 pm. For more information, call 503842-7525.

IF YOU GO TILLAMOOK JUNE DAIRY FESTIVAL WHERE: Main Street, Tillamook WHEN: 11 am, Saturday, June 25 COST: Free

TILLAMOOK COUNTY RODEO WHERE: Tillamook County Fairgrounds, Tillamook, 4603 Third Street. WHEN: 6 pm, Saturday, June 25; 1 pm Sunday, June 26 COST: $10 for adults, $5 for kids. Children 5 and under free on Saturday; 12 and under free on Sunday CALL: 503-842-7525

The Tillamook County Rodeo offers fun for all ages

6 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016


coast culture

Family Gifts at Family Prices

Liais-on the big screen The Oregon Coast Council for the Arts will be steaming up the big screen at the Newport Performing Arts Center this Friday, June 24, with a showing of the Donmar Warehouse’s highly anticipated new production of “Dangerous Liaisons (Les Liaisons Dangereuses).� Broadcast in HD by London’s National Theatre, the play is directed by Josie Rourke and stars Elaine Cassidy, Janet McTeer and Dominic West. In 1782, Choderlos de Laclos’ novel of sex, intrigue and betrayal in pre-revolutionary France scandalized the world. Two centuries later, Christopher Hampton’s irresistible adaptation swept the board, winning the Olivier and Evening Standard awards for best play. Rourke’s revival now marks the play’s 30-year anniversary. Former lovers, the Marquise de Merteuil

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Janet McTeer, Dominic West and Elaine Cassidy

and Vicomte de Valmont now compete in games of seduction and revenge. Merteuil incites Valmont to corrupt the innocent Cecile de Volanges before her wedding night but Valmont has targeted the peerlessly virtuous and beautiful Madame de Tourvel. While these merciless aristocrats toy with others’ hearts and

reputations, their own may prove more fragile than they supposed. The screening will begin at 7 pm, 777 W. Olive Street. Tickets, $16 for adults, $13 for seniors and $11 for students, are available at www.coastarts.org or by calling 541-265-ARTS (2787).

every day

Loans sought for Bartow show The Oregon Coast Council for the Arts is appealing to anyone who owns artwork by Newport artist Rick Bartow to consider loaning it for summer exhibit at the Newport Visual Arts Center. Entitled “Rick Bartow: A Community Collection,â€? the exhibit will run from July 8 to Aug. 28, celebrating the life of the nationally renowned painter and sculptor, who died in April. Organizers are seeking Bartow works from collectors, friends and community members for display in the secure and insured conďŹ nes of the center’s Runyan Gallery. Inquiries can be directed to Director Tom Webb at

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

“Coyote and the Myth� by Rick Bartow

541-265-6569 or twebb@ coastarts.org. Pre-submission

consultation is encouraged but not required. Ready-to-hang art works should be delivered to the center at 777 NW Coast Drive, Newport, on June 30, July 1, July 5 or July 6, between noon to 6 pm. No work can be accepted after July 6. Contributors to the exhibition can ďŹ nd exhibit item forms at www.coastarts. org/events/2016/07/rickbartow-a-communitycollection. Exhibition advisors include artists Michael Gibbons and Karen Murphy, and the project enjoys the support of the Bartow estate and the Froelick Gallery in Portland.

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016 • 7


urchins

4-H fun for all The problem: your kids have their hearts set on one of the summer day camps offered by 4-H in Tillamook but are not 4-H members. The solution: simple — sign them up for a 4-H membership at the same time, meaning they get all the fun of the camp, plus the priceless opportunity to learn a club motto that will become etched upon their memory forever. The day camps run for three to five days each and cost $45. 4-H enrollment is an extra $25 for 4th to 12th graders or $2 for kids from K through 3rd grade. The Cloverbud Jungle Adventure Day Camp, which runs from June 27 through 30, is for kids that have completed K-2nd grade and includes crafts, activities, snacks and stories about the jungle. The camp will run from 9 am to noon each day at the OSU Extension Service office, 2204 Fourth Street, Tillamook The Dishin’ Up the Dirt Gardening Day Camp, O pen 7 D a ys • Cred itCa rd s O K • Lim iton e cou pon perord er. Cou pon expires 6/ 30/ 16

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8 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016

runs from July 5 though 8 and is for kids that have completed 2nd grade and above. Participants will plant a veggie container, make a miniature garden, do garden crafts, cook foods from the garden and have fun. The camp will run from 1 to 5 pm each day, at the Tillamook County Fairgrounds, 4603 3rd Street. The Photography Basics Day Camp, will run from July 11 to 15 and is for kids that have completed 3rd grade or higher. Students will learn about operating film and digital cameras, storing digital files, printing techniques and composing images. There will be hands-on activities in the classroom and outside. Participants must bring their own digital camera. The camp will run from 9 am to noon at the OSU Extension Service office. Additional camps on offer for kids who have completed 4th grade or above include Sew Much Fun - Beginning Sewing; Becoming a Food Hero - Cooking & Nutrition;

Totem Art - clay sculpting; Air Rifle Safety and Handling; and Art Around the World. All camp fees include equipment, supplies and activities. Participants in many of the day camps will complete at least one project that can be exhibited in 4-H at the Tillamook County Fair. To register go to http:// bit.ly/TillamookDayCamp. Pre-registration is encouraged one week prior to the day camp as each camp has limited enrollment and those with low enrollment one week prior to the starting date might be canceled. Financial need scholarships are available. For more information, drop by the OSU Extension Office, 2204 Fourth Street, Tillamook, call 503-842-3433 or go to http://extension. oregonstate.edu/tillamook.

That 4-H motto in full

I pledge my head to clearer thinking, My heart to greater loyalty, My hands to larger service, and my health to better living, for my club, my community, my country, and my world.


learn a little

A little spawnsored content A pair of fishery experts will visit Lincoln City on Monday, June 27, to share their findings in a presentation entitled “Is salmon population decline reversible?” For many years, Dr. Dan Bottom and Dr. Kim Jones have lead research efforts in the Salmon and Columbia Rivers to understand what is behind the changes in salmon populations and the impacts of human efforts to reverse declines in salmon populations. They will be

sharing what they have learned, including the results of their most recent work to understand the impact of coho hatchery program suspension. Dan Bottom served as a fishery research biologist and project leader in state and federal government for 38 years, including 22 years with the ODFW Research Section in Corvallis and 16 years with NOAA’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Newport. Kim Jones was a research fish ecologist with

Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife for 31 years and the program leader for the Aquatic Inventories Program since 1989. The pair recently retired from government service but continue to be involved as volunteer technical advisors on fisheries research and restoration projects. The evening will begin with a social at 5:30 pm and the presentation starting at 6 pm at Aces Sports Bar & Grill, 3245 NE 50th Street. Food and drinks are available for purchase from the menu.

For more information, contact Paul Katen at pckaten@gmail.com or 541994-9682. The presentation is hosted by the Salmon Drift Creek Watershed Council as part of its mission to promote the protection or restoration of healthy fish and wildlife resources, water quality, water quantity, and overall watershed health in the North Lincoln County area. For more information on the group, go to www.salmondrift. org.

Justice William O. Douglas

A case of natural justice The role of a Supreme Court Justice in preserving one of the West Coast’s natural gems will be laid out in Yachats this Saturday, June 25, in a presentation from John Concillo of the Oregon Cultural Heritage Commission. Entitled “Liberty and Wilderness,” Concillo’s presentation details the efforts of Justice William O. Douglas to quash a 1958 plan to run a portion of Highway 101 through the Olympic Peninsula and part of the Olympic National Park. Douglas, an avid fisherman who enjoyed annual expeditions to the Olympic Peninsula, got word of the plan and used his energy and office to defeat it. Douglas described the wilderness not merely as an escape, but as a nurturing

environment and source of strength, an affirmation of independence that empowers individuals and offers spiritual and physical salvation. “As a sitting Supreme Court Justice, no one in the nation brought such a high profile to these issues,” Concillo said. “His life stands as a record of courage to hold fast against forces that would exploit or erode these cherished American ideals.” Concillo’s presentation, hosted by the Yachats Academy of Arts and Sciences, will start at 6:30 pm at the Yachats Commons, 441 Hwy. 101 N. There is no admission charge but a $5 donation helps cover publicity expenses. For more information, go to www.GoYachats.com or call 541-961-6695.

A chance to sharpen your skills The Newport 60+ Activity Center is now accepting signups for a six-week beginners’ course in colored pencil art that will meet from 10 to 11:30 am each Tuesday from July 5 to Aug. 9. Instructor Shirley Steinhauer has been teaching at the center for more

than eight years and has a combined art background of 30 years. Students will learn by demonstration, completing a picture each week using all of the techniques they have learned from prior sessions. All supplies are provided by

community partners, the Yaquina Bay Art Association and Friends of the Newport Senior Center. The class is limited to just seven students. To reserve a spot, drop by the center at 20 SE 2nd Street in Newport, or call 541-265-9617. For a complete listing of trips, events, presentations and classes go to www. newportoregon.gov/sc.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016 • 9


cliff notes:

the coast, condensed

C O M M E N TA R Y • B Y L O R I T O B I A S

T

Tipping the scales

he hubs came home last week with seven rock fish, a healthy-sized ling cod and a half a dozen Dungy crabs. It was a nice haul for a morning out with friends on the Tacklebuster and I was pleased of course for the nice stash of seafood for our freezer. But the truth is, I am a tough one to impress with fish, and especially fish stories. I have fished maybe a handful of times in my life. Only one of those times was remotely close to memorable. I was newly married and the two of us were invited out with his Uncle Wayne to fish Kachemack Bay. Wayne set me up with a rod, and then we waited, which I fully expected was what I’d be doing the whole day. And then I felt it, a tug. “You’ve got one,” Wayne yelled. He checked things out and decided I had about a 35-pound King Salmon on line. For the next few minutes, he guided me on what to do, and I, who had never even hooked a fish, much less caught one, was suddenly giddy with excitement. I had a fish. A fairly big fish. And then, I felt it. Or, more accurately, didn’t feel it. “Oh,” Wayne said. “It’s gone.” “What do you mean it’s gone? I asked. “How can that be?” “He cut the line on the boat,” he said. I could not believe how much I had wanted that fish nor how disappointed I was when I lost it. I never fished again. But I do have a whopper of a fish tale — the one that nearly got away. May 1985, I was working my first journalism job at a little radio station on Alaska’s Kenai Peninsula, and my Kachemack Bay experience was yet to come. The newsroom phone lit up and I answered. “Lori, it’s Will,” he said. Will was one of our salesmen. “I just heard that someone caught a nearly 100-pound King Salmon on the mouth of the Kenai. To which I, a city girl longing to be back in Anchorage, responded, “Oh yeah, so what’s that mean? Fishing season started?” “That’s a pretty big fish,” Will said. “You ought to check it out.” He gave me the name of the place the fishermen, Les Anderson, had taken the fish to be weighed and I dutifully wrote it down. An hour later, I finished my newscast, looked down and spotted the yellow stick ‘em and realized I’d completely forgotten about the big fish. So I dialed the number, but as it turned out the scale hadn’t been certified

Lori’s husband, Chan, with his prize ling cod

yet that year and Anderson went on to the next shop. I called that one. Same thing. He’d moved on yet again. Finally, I caught up with him. I couldn’t think of much to ask about a fish. And I didn’t even run a tape, something you always did in radio. I said I’d heard he’d caught a pretty big fish and he said that was true, it was a big fish: 97.4 pounds. “So, is this like a local record or something?” I asked. “Honey,” he said, “this is a world record.” “Oh,” I said, but try as I might, I still couldn’t think of much to ask. Moments later, I thanked him and hung up.

Then I wrote a short piece, all I could write, and called the Associated Press. Back then, you called the AP with breaking news and every month someone got the prize for the best breaking story and the most breaking stories. As a very young and new journalist, it was my one measure of success. But you never knew if they’d find the story worthy. And often as not they declined. But on that day they were thrilled to have the story. Soon, it printed out over the wire with my name and our call letters at the top, and in no time, the newsroom phone was ringing itself silly with calls from journalists from all over the country. It seemed Anderson

10 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016

was no longer taking calls and now they all wanted to know just one thing: “Do you have any tape?” I, of course, did not. But I did win best breaking story of the month and I do get to share the tale of the time I broke the news of the world record rodand-reel caught King Salmon. A record that stands to this day. The one I almost let get away. Lori Tobias covered the coast for The Oregonian for nine years. She lives in Newport, where she freelances for a number of regional and national publications. Follow her at loritobias.com.


Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide „

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016 • 11


Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide „ Come check out our new Lounge Menu

Enjoy Sunny days on our Patio!

Happy Hour specials daily from 3pm-6pm

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Live Music June 24 & 25 from 6pm-9pm

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12 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016


tide tables

LINCOLN CITY

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4157 N. Hwy. 101 • 541-996-6898

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Tillamook Bay, Garibaldi Date

Thurs., June 23 Fri., June 24 Sat., June 25 Sun., June 26 Mon., June 27 Tues., June 28 Wed., June 29 Thurs., June 30

9:29 am 10:10 am 10:53 am 11:41 am 12:28 am 1:37 am 2:46 am 3:49 am

Siletz Bay, Lincoln City Date

Thurs., June 23 Fri., June 24 Sat., June 25 Sun., June 26 Mon., June 27 Tues., June 28 Wed., June 29 Thurs., June 30

9:42 am 10:23 am 11:05 am 11:52 am 12:47 am 1:59 am 3:08 am 4:11 am

Yaquina Bay, Newport Date

Thurs., June 23 Fri., June 24 Sat., June 25 Sun., June 26 Mon., June 27 Tues., June 28 Wed., June 29 Thurs., June 30

9:04 am 9:45 am 10:27 am 11:14 am 12:09 am 1:21 am 2:30 am 3:33 am

Alsea Bay, Waldport Date

Thurs., June 23 Fri., June 24 Sat., June 25 Sun., June 26 Mon., June 27 Tues., June 28 Wed., June 29 Thurs., June 30

9:53 am 10:34 am 11:17 am 12:03 pm 12:48 am 1:55 am 3:02 am 4:06 am

Low Tides

-1.2 -1.0 -0.6 -0.1 2.2 1.6 1.0 0.1

9:35 pm 10:26 pm 11:23 pm --12:34 pm 1:32 pm 2:33 pm 3:35 pm

2.7 2.6 2.5 -0.5 1.1 1.6 1.9

2:53 am 3:35 am 4:23 am 5:18 am 6:22 am 7:37 am 8:55 am 10:12 am

Low Tides

-0.7 -0.6 -0.3 0.0 1.6 1.2 0.7 0.1

4:25 pm 5:06 pm 5:50 pm 6:37 pm 7:28 pm 8:21 pm 9:15 pm 10:08 pm

7.1 7.1 7.2 7.4 7.7 8.0 8.4 8.7

High Tides

2.0 2.0 1.8 -0.4 0.8 1.2 1.5

2:16 am 3:00 am 3:49 am 4:47 am 5:56 am 7:16 am 8:40 am 9:59 am

6.4 6.2 5.8 5.4 4.9 4.6 4.5 4.6

9:05 pm 9:59 pm 11:00 pm --12:04 pm 12:59 pm 1:59 pm 3:01 pm

3.0 2.9 2.7 -0.6 1.2 1.8 2.2

2:07 am 2:51 am 3:40 am 4:38 am 5:47 am 7:07 am 8:31 am 9:50 am

8.3 8.0 7.5 7.0 6.4 6.0 5.8 6.0

2 OFF

9:58 pm 10:48 pm 11:45 pm --12:54 pm 1:51 pm 2:51 pm 3:52 pm

2.4 2.3 2.1 -0.6 1.1 1.6 1.9

2:48 am 3:32 am 4:21 am 5:19 am 6:25 am 7:39 am 8:55 am 10:09 am

7.3 7.0 6.7 6.2 5.8 5.4 5.2 5.3

4:03 pm 4:45 pm 5:30 pm 6:16 pm 7:05 pm 7:56 pm 8:47 pm 9:39 pm

5.4 5.5 5.7 5.9 6.2 6.5 6.8 7.1

any Purchase of $10 or More (Excludes Gift Cards)

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4157 N. Highway 101 Ste #138 Lincoln City, OR 97367 • (541) 996-5500 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. 16.5533_© 2016 Kahala Franchising, L.L.C. COLD STONE CREAMERY and the MEDALLION design are registered trademarks of Kahala Franchising, L.L.C.

Expires 7/5/16

PLU # 6

Located in Lighthouse Square Corner of Logan Rd and Hwy 101 Lincoln City, OR • (541) 996-5500

High Tides

Low Tides

-0.8 -0.6 -0.3 0.1 1.9 1.4 0.8 0.1

8.1 7.8 7.4 6.9 6.4 5.9 5.8 5.9

9:43 pm 10:37 pm 11:38 pm --12:42 pm 1:37 pm 2:37 pm 3:39 pm

Low Tides

-1.1 -0.8 -0.5 0.0 2.3 1.7 1.0 0.2

$

High Tides

3:54 pm 4:36 pm 5:21 pm 6:07 pm 6:56 pm 7:47 pm 8:38 pm 9:30 pm

7.0 7.2 7.4 7.7 8.0 8.4 8.8 9.2

16.5533_© 2016 Kahala Franchising, L.L.C. COLD STONE CREAMERY is a registered trademark of Kahala Franchising, L.L.C. All trademarks referenced in this communication are the property of their respective owners.

Depoe Baykery

High Tides

4:20 pm 5:02 pm 5:46 pm 6:33 pm 7:23 pm 8:14 pm 9:07 pm 10:00 pm

6.1 6.2 6.4 6.6 6.8 7.2 7.5 7.9

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.

Taste and Aroma Therapy Wed - Sun 7am - 3pm • Mon 7am - 12pm Tues - Closed

(541) 764-3553 3830 N Hwy 101, Depoe Bay, OR 97341

DepoeBaykery.com depoebaykery@Gmail.com

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016 • 13


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^^Void where prohibited. No purchase necessary. Offer subject to change. To enter you must be 18 years or older and a legal resident of the U.S. or Canada. Winner randomly selected. Odds of winning are one in 9,500. Retail value of approximately $14,465. Prize is non-transferrable and has no cash equivalent. No substitution of prize is offered. Winner responsible for license, title, insurance, registration, and applicable taxes. Enter to win by 12/31/16. ^While supplies last. Pictures for illustration purposes only. **Offer available from OCCU on all new and 2012 and newer used RVs for Tier One borrowers up to an 84-month loan term. Payment example: RV financed at 2.99% APR for 84-month term is $13.21 per $1,000 financed. APR will increase 0.25% without enrolling in OCCU eStatements and increase 0.25% without enrolling in monthly autopay from an OCCU checking account or monthly ACH payment from another financial institution. Other exclusions, conditions and/or restrictions and membership requirements apply. See dealer for details. $115 title and/or registration processing fees not included in sale price. Units subject to prior sale. Offer expires 06/26/16.

Summer Camp is now underway at Kids Zone in Depoe Bay, offering 11 weeks of everything from science and reading to arts, sports and music for locals and visitors alike. Running through Sept. 2, each week of camp is arranged around a different theme, such as Something Fishy, Surf Meets Turf, The Legend of the Lighthouses and Shark Week. All summer long, students will get to immerse themselves in enrichment activities such as visual arts, games, gardening, cooking, outdoor education, project-based learning, the rowing club and field trips. Activities run from 8 am to 5:30 pm Monday through Friday on a drop-in basis, so children can attend as many days or weeks as desired.

Neighbors For Kids is also a sponsor of the USDA Summer Food Service Program and the Kids Zone’s open site provides free lunch for all children from the community aged one to 18. Everyone will be served a healthy and delicious lunch from 12:30 to 1:30 pm during the summer schedule. Full-day summer camp participants will also receive a continental breakfast and a nutritious afternoon meal, giving them the fuel they need to play hard and learn well. The full-day cost is $20 per child and $8 for the 8 am to noon session or $12 for the noon to 5:30 pm session. Additional information and registration forms can be found on NFK’s website at www.neighborsforkids.org.

Pull a few strings this summer Young musicians have until June 30 to sign up for the Summer Music Daycamp operated by the Newport Symphony Orchestra, which offers five days of instruction followed by a public concert. Running from July 11 through 15 at the Newport First Presbyterian Church, the camp is aimed at musicians between the ages of eight and 18. From 9 am to 3 pm each day, the camp will feature chamber ensemble coaching, large group rehearsals, fun rhythm and theory sessions, music composition, sight-reading exercises and music games. Kathy Follett and Barbara Wilcox run the camp, with the assistance of several other symphony members. At the end of the five days, students will perform

Students at last year’s camp experimenting with tone

in a free concert for the public, featuring camper compositions, chamber music, rhythm ensembles and a full ensemble. Summer Music Camp is open to youth musicians who have at least one year experience playing a string, wind, brass or percussion instrument. In addition, up

to two piano students may participate. The fee for the fiveday camp is $135. Partial scholarships are available by contacting the NSO office at 541-574-0614. To download an application form, go to http://newportsymphony. org/education.

(Good) book your spot now Registration is now open for Vacation Bible School at St. Peter the Fisherman Lutheran Church in Lincoln City. Aimed at kids aged four to 12, the school will offer Bible stories, music, games and more

14 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016

from July 11 through 15. Classes will run from 9 am to noon at the church, SW 14th & Hwy. 101. For registration information, call 541-9948793.


get out!

GET HIGH IN

LINCOLN CITY Windstock kite festival celebrates the sounds of the ’60s What do you get if you cross a windsock kite with a hefty dose of psychedelic tunes straight out of the Woodstock festival of 1969? The answer: Windstock, the theme of this year’s Lincoln City Summer Kite Festival, which will fill the skies above the D River Wayside this weekend. Professional kite fliers will demonstrate their latest stunts to tunes from the 1960s against a backdrop of big show kites of all shapes and colors. “Since the theme of the festival this year is Windstock, we will be displaying our collection of windsocks as well as some of our favorite show kites,” said featured flier Rod Thrall. “We have two 40-foot teddy bears that will come out to play, and some 18-foot ice cream cones and 12-foot Crayons.” Rod and his wife, Cindy, will display their colorful big show kites all weekend for the festival, and encourage visitors to interact with the fliers. “There is nothing more enjoyable than having someone walk up and tell you how much they enjoy your kites,” he said. “For Cindy and I, it’s all about spreading our passion for kite flying to people.” Thrall wants all spectators to have fun at the festival, but also be safe.

Festival schedule

10 am-12:30 pm: Performance by featured fliers. 10 am-2 pm: Free kids kite-making workshop. 12:30-1 pm: Running of the Bols. Test your speed on the sands while strapped to a parachute-shaped kite. 1-4 pm: Performance by featured fliers. 2-2:30 pm: Kids and kites parade on the beach. 4 pm: Festival closes.

“The flying field has boundaries for a reason,” he said. “The boundaries are up for safety. If you have a question or just want to meet us, we can escort you onto the field. You never know…we might just put a kite line in your hands.” The festival takes place in the heart of Lincoln City at the D River Wayside State Park, with many spectators bringing folding chairs to line the wayside while others set up on the beach itself for a day of fun on the sands. Activities include kids kite making, kite demonstrations and the Running of the Bols, which is a footrace across the beach with each participant harnessed to parachute kites. On both days, kids of all ages can learn how to make their own

paper kite and afterwards show off their colorful creations in the kids’ parade. All kids attending the festival will receive a free passport that entitles them to great prizes when filled with autographs from featured fliers. Prizes will also be up for grabs in an all-day raffle, with tickets a dollar apiece or six for $5. Prizes will include Lincoln City’s signature glass floats, gift certificates, kites and more. And guests can score a free raffle ticket by bringing a bag of beach trash to the Event Tent. The festival runs from 10 am to 4 pm on Saturday and Sunday, June 25 and 26. For more information, call 800-452-2151 or go to www. oregoncoast.org.

The running of the bols

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016 • 15


Saturday, June 25

Friday, June 24 Music is Instrumental

Taft High School • Lincoln City A free concert from the Siletz Bay Music Festival chamber musicians, with an opening performance by the high school jazz band. 7 pm, 3780 SE Galley Court.

“Dangerous Liaisons”

Coast Calendar

Mei-Ting Sun is among the performers at the Siletz Bay Music Festival

Saturday, June 25 cont. “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.

Rock’n the Coast

National Guard Armory • Newport Dealers from throughout the Pacific Northwest will show their wares at this gem and mineral show. 10 am-6 pm, 541 SW Hwy. 101. $2. Free for under 12s and active service personnel in uniform. FMI, go to www. coastagates.org.

“Stuart Little”

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

Knoll limits

Villages at Cascade Head • Lincoln City Join the Audubon Society of Lincoln City for this 2.5-mile forest hike to the knoll, offering Sweeping vistas of Lincoln City as well as the chance to see various species. 9 am, at the locked gate on NE West Devils Lake Blvd., just north of the junction with Highway 101. FMI, call 541-992-9720.

INHOUSE Jazz

Private home The series of afternoon house concerts returns, with guitar-trombone duo Christopher Woitach and John Moak performing in a comfortable, intimate setting. 2:30-5:30 pm. For reservations and directions, contact Annie Averre at 360-606-7136 or aaverre@hotmail. com. Suggested donation of $15 to $30. FMI, go to www.inhousejazz.org.

Pacific City Farmers Market

Pacific City Library Joe Wrabek returns with his uniquely offbeat story songs, sharing the stage with the Gospel Trio amid fresh, local food and artisan crafts. 10 am to 2 pm at Brooten Road and Camp Street.

Tillamook County Rodeo

Tillamook County Fairgrounds • Tillamook 1 pm. See Saturday listing for details. Free admission for kids aged 12 and under accompanied by a paying adult.

Coastal Gatherings

The Eventuary • Lincoln City This LGBTQ-friendly meet-up offers the chance to make connections, make friends and

LIVE MUSIC chinook’s seafood grill 9PM-1AM • FREE COVER "It's Better at the Beach!"

make plans. Free admission. Drinks and food available for purchase. 6 pm, 560 SW Fleet Avenue. FMI, email coastalgatherings@gmail. com or call 503-330-7752.

Windstock

D River Wayside • Lincoln City 10 am-4 pm. See Saturday listing for details.

Newport Performing Arts Center See every arched eyebrow and calculating sneer in high definition at this screening of this classic of seduction and betrayal. 7 pm, 777 W. Olive Street. Tickets, $16 for adults, $13 for seniors and $11 for students, available at www.coastarts.org or by calling 541-265-ARTS (2787).

Native American Flute Concert

Our Savior Lutheran Church • Waldport Catch performances from some of the best-known flautists from around the Pacific Northwest. Free, but donations accepted for Lincoln County Food Share. 7-9 pm, 38 North Bayview Road.

Manzanita Farmers Market

Laneda Avenue • Manzanita Start the weekend off right with farm-fresh

Lincoln City Farmers Market

Lincoln City Cultural Center Set up on the center’s front lawn, the market’s vendors offer homegrown, home-baked and handcrafted treats. 9 am-3 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-994-9994 or go to www. lincolncityfarmersmarket.org.

Yachats Farmers Market “Vanya & Sonia & Masha & Spike”

Barn Community Playhouse • Tillamook 2 pm. See Friday listing for details.

Oregon Coast Recorder Society

Newport Visual Arts Center A varied program of music, ranging from a motet by J. S. Bach to a Quaker hymn sing-a-long. Free. 3 pm, second floor, 777 NW Beach Drive. FMI, call 541-961-1228, or go to www.coastrecorder.org.

Sunday Solo Senior Social

Best Western • Newport Relax and share the sunset with new friends in the Starfish Grill, which offers tasty menu choices and the chance to mingle with fellow seniors. 6-8 pm, 3019 Hwy. 101.

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

Open Mic

North County Recreation District • Nehalem Step on stage and share your art at this open community forum. Free, but donations welcome. 7 pm, 36155 9th Street.

Rock’n the Coast

National Guard Armory • Newport 10 am-4:30 pm. See Saturday listing for details.

“A Walk Back in Time”

North Lincoln County Historical Museum • Lincoln City 1 pm. See Saturday listing for details.

STEVE SLOAN BAND JUNE 24 & 25

“Things We Know But Cannot Explain”

Newport Visual Arts Center An exhibit of artwork by Newport Middle School students inspired by Newport artist Rick Bartow. Show runs through July 2, available to view noon-4 pm, Tuesday through Saturday, 777 NW Beach Drive.

Newport Marina Bring your own supplies and set up to this outdoor painting session, offering a view of the bridge and the Coast Guard Station. Hosted by the Yaquina Art Association. 2 pm, 2128 SE Marine Science Drive.

D River Wayside • Lincoln City The Lincoln City Summer Kite Festival pays tribute to the trippiest of decades, with professional kite fliers demonstrating their latest stunts to tunes from the 1960s against a backdrop of big show kites of all shapes and colors. 10 am-4 pm, right in the center of town. Continues Sunday.

“Vanya & Sonia & Masha & Spike”

June Dairy Festival

Downtown Rockaway Beach This three-day festival of pillaging, dancing and walking the plank begins with a fire dancing display at dusk. FMI, call 503-3558108. Continues Saturday and Sunday.

Barn Community Playhouse • Tillamook Christopher Durang’s Tony Award-winning play tells the story of middle-aged siblings Vanya and Sonia, whose humdrum life is turned upside down by the arrival of moviestar sister, Masha, and her new boy toy, Spike. 7 pm, on the corner of 12th and Ivy. Tickets, $15 or $10 for children 12 and under, available by calling 503-842-7940.

Crabbing clinic

“A Morning Light”

Rockaway Beach Pirate Festival

Taft Turnaround • Lincoln City A free class on how to catch the freshest crab in town, right from the shore of Siletz Bay. Shellfish license required for all participants aged 14 and over. 9:30 am, at the pavilion at the end of SW 51st Street. FMI, call 800452-2151.

Rockaway Beach Pirate Festival Downtown Rockaway Beach Enjoy music, performances, vendors, scavenger hunts, treasure hunts, canon demonstrations and much more. FMI, call 503-355-8108.

Art reception

Yaquina Art Association Gallery • Newport A reception for association scholarship recipient Heather Marie March, who just graduated from OSU with a BFA in Applied Visual Arts with an option in Photography. 5-7 pm, 789 NW Beach Drive in Newport. Show runs through July 31.

Guided paddle

Nestucca Bay National Wildlife Refuge • Pacific City Explore the Little Nestucca River through refuge wetlands into Nestucca Bay and the mudflats surrounding the Two Rivers Peninsula. Bring your own canoe or kayak. Other equipment available to borrow. 5:30-7:30 pm. For reservations, email Elena Smith at elena_smith@fws.gov or 541-270-0610.

tour of 11 unique coastal gardens. Noon-5 pm. $25, with proceeds supporting Newport’s Samaritan House shelter. FMI, call 541-574-8898.

Windstock

Plein Air painting

Hoffman Center for the Arts • Manzanita The Manzanita Film Series continues with this 2015 sci-fi thriller about a couple who begin to sense a strange presence has embedded itself in the forest around them. $5. 7:30 pm, 594 Laneda Avenue.

Sunday, June 26

Piano Recital

Main Street • Tillamook This year’s festival takes on a pirate theme, with free eye patches, earrings and tattoos for folks watching the massive parade make its way through town. Afterward, a street party will feature a cannon performance from Portland’s piratical PDXYar as well as festival fun. Free. 11 am in downtown Tillamook.

Tillamook County Rodeo

Tillamook County Fairgrounds • Tillamook See bareback riding, steer wrestling, bull riding, barrel racing and more, along with live music, vendors and a beer garden. $10 for adults; $5 for kids aged six and older. 6 pm, 4603 Third Street. FMI, go to tillamookrodeo.com. Continues Sunday.

Secret Garden Tour

Otter Rock Enjoy wine, light refreshments and live music on this

Lincoln City Cultural Center The Siletz Bay Music Festival continues with a return performance from pianist MeiTing Sun, playing his own arrangements of works by Strauss, Stravinsky and Ravel. $25. 7:30 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101.

“Vanya & Sonia & Masha & Spike” Barn Community Playhouse • Tillamook 7 pm. See Friday listing for details.

South Lincoln Resources • Waldport Rows of tables display a wealth of treasures, from kitchenware and knick-knacks to memorabilia and household items. Proceeds benefit local charities. 10 am to 3 pm, 3710 Crestline, one block south of Dahl Drive. FMI, call 541-563-2388.

Classic Car Show

Main Street • Toledo See vintage vehicles from every decade of automotive history while enjoying a free concert from The Unlikely

Monday, June 27 “Aladdin” auditions

Salishan Spa and Golf Resort • Gleneden Beach The Siletz Bay Music Festival continues with this concert of contrasting compositions by Elgar, Bartók, Charles Creasy and Benny Goodman. $35. 7:30 pm, 7760 Hwy. 101.

Driftwood Public Library • Lincoln City Join shellfish expert Bill Lackner for this free, hands-on class, staring with a 45-minute talk at the library before moving on to dig in the sand of Siletz Bay. 12:45 pm, second floor, 801 SW Hwy. 101. FMI, call 800-452-2151.

Congregational Church of Lincoln City A ree community concert from the Siletz Bay Music Festival, featuring works from Schubert, Shostakovich and Mozart. 7:30 pm, 1760 NW 25th Street.

Downtown Rockaway Beach Enjoy music, performances, vendors, scavenger hunts, treasure hunts, canon demonstrations and much more. FMI, call 503-355-8108. Continues Sunday.

Newport Farmers Market

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. Look for the Red Rooster signs pointing the way.

Downtown Tillamook Enjoy live music from Groupo Condor, a booth from Tulip USA and one-stop shopping in the heart of Tillamook. 9 am-2 pm, 2nd and Laurel. FMI, call 503-812-9326.

Neskowin Farmers Market Neskowin Beach Wayside 9 am to 1 pm, right off Highway 101.

“Liberty and Wilderness”

Yachats Commons John Concillo of the Oregon Cultural Heritage

Siletz Farmers Market

Siletz Valley Grange 2 to 6 pm, at the corner of Gaither Street and Logsden Road.

Cascadia talk

Clamming clinic

Simple Gifts

Rockaway Beach Pirate Festival

Commission details the efforts of Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas to quash a 1958 plan to run a highway through the Olympic National Park. $5 donation suggested. 6:30 pm, 441 Hwy. 101 N. FMI, call 541-961-6695.

Community Science Day

Otter Rock Marine Reserve Featuring tide pool exploration throughout the morning, presentations on sea star wasting and marine debris at 9

Tuesday, June 28 Contrasts

Lincoln City Cultural Center A chance for kids in grades 1 through 12 to try out for one of 60 roles in this latest production from the Missoula Children’s Theatre. Doors open at 9:30 am, auditions start at 10 am, 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-994-9994.

Saints, a beer garden and a host of food vendors. Come decked out in vintage clothing to add to the fun. 8 am-4 pm, with awards announced at 3:30 pm. FMI, call 541-336-3183.

Tillamook Farmers Market

The Unexpected Elephant

Siletz Library A presentation on the earthquake and tsunami risks posed by a Cascadia event, complete with tips for individual, family or business emergency plans and kits. 6-7:30 pm, 255 S. Gaither Street.

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.

Pendleton Men’s Chorus

Newport Performing Arts Center Hear the 40-plus-member group perform everything from Gregorian chants to Disney tunes at this fund-raising concert for the “Entertain the Future!” campaign to renovate the center. Suggested donation $10. 7:30 pm, 777 W Olive Street.

Light

Chapel by the Sea • Lincoln City A free concert from this group of California Baptist University students, who share their faith through music. 7 pm, 2125 SE Lee Avenue. FMI, call 541-996-2070.

“Dear Liar”

Salishan Spa and Golf Resort • Gleneden Beach The Siletz Bay Music Festival veers into theatrical territory with this dramatized reading of the 40year correspondence between playwright George Bernard Shaw and actress Mrs. Patrick Campbell. $25. 7:30 pm, 7760 Hwy. 101.

“Stuart Little”

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

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

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

Sitka Art Circles

Aces Sports Bar & Grill • Lincoln City Fisheries experts Dr. Dan Bottom and Dr. Kim Jones share their findings in a presentation entitled “Is salmon population decline reversible?” Free. 5:30 pm, 3245 NE 50th Street. FMI, contact Paul Katen at pckaten@gmail.com or 541-994-9682.

Book Sale

am; a discussion on beached birds at 10:30 am; hotdogs and s’mores at noon and a guided wrack walk at 1 pm.

Thursday, June 30

Fishing for answers

Wednesday, June 29 “On Wings of Shakespeare” “Stuart Little”

Bijou Theatre • Lincoln City The Summer Matinée Series kicks off with this 1999 crowd-pleaser, featuring the voice of Michael J. Fox. The Little family adopt a charming young mouse named Stuart but the family cat wants rid of him. $2. 11 am, 1624 NE Hwy. 101. Repeated Thursday.

Salishan Spa and Golf Resort • Gleneden Beach Pianist extraordinaire Dick Hyman performs his compositions inspired by the Bard’s most famous works at this Siletz Bay Music Festival concert. $35. 7:30 pm, 7760 Hwy. 101.

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. 10:45-11:45 am, 20 SE 2nd Street.

Waldport Farmers Market Waldport Community Center 10 am-6:30 pm, 265 Alsea Hwy.

Silver Sneakers Circuit Class Newport 60+ Activity Center

Sitka Center for Art and Ecology • Neskowin Krista Eddy leads this casual workshop, where participants will create a fairy door to another world with popsicle sticks and natural building materials. $25. 10 am-2 pm; bring a lunch. To register, go to www.sitkacenter.com/ classes/recordlist.lasso.

Wednesdays, 5pm-10pm

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Return of a rock star Registration is now open for this year’s CoastWatch Shoreline Science Workshop, which will run from July 8 to 10 in Depoe Bay. Open to anyone curious about the natural history of the Oregon Coast, the workshop will be led by ecologist Stewart Schultz, author of “The Northwest Coast: A Natural History.” Over three full days, students will cover rocky shore, beach and estuarine habitats in depth, and touch on forests, the nearshore ocean, marine mammals, tides, oceanography and many other topics. Each session will include indoor presentations, laboratory experiences and field trips — weather permitting. Schultz grew up playing on the shore near Gearhart and went on to Reed College and obtained his doctorate in botany from the University of British Columbia. He worked on the Oregon Coast for the Nature Conservancy, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, gaining extensive field experience, before pursuing an academic career as a professor at the University of Miami, and now the University of Zadar in Croatia. During the academic year he studies marine ecology, as well as his specialty of plant evolution and genetics, but every summer he returns to the Oregon coast to teach shoreline science. Schultz will be assisted by Fawn Custer, CoastWatch’s volunteer coordinator and herself an experienced marine educator. CoastWatch is the volunteer program of the Oregon Shores

18 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016

Stewart Schultz

Conservation Coalition, through which participants adopt one-mile segments of shoreline and monitor them for natural changes and human impacts. These annual workshops were originally developed as intensive training sessions for CoastWatch volunteers, but they are also open to members of the general public. Teachers and other professionals can obtain professional development units by attending the

workshop. The July workshop will take place at Depoe Bay Community Hall, 220 SE Bay Street. Tuition is $145, reduced to $95 for members of CoastWatch or Oregon Shores and to $75 for people who belong to both organizations. To register, go to https:// oregonshores.givezooks. com or contact Fawn Custer at 541-270-0027 or fawn@ oregonshores.org.


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Genie-ous production Whether it’s Bernie Sanders, a Hollywood blockbuster or world-famous chowder at the Oregon Coast, there are some things that people are willing to stand in line for. And on Monday, June 27, parents will be lining the halls of the Lincoln City Cultural Center to sign their kids up for “Aladdin,” the latest production from the Missoula Children’s Theatre. Auditions are open to kids entering grades 1 through 12 and begin at 10 am sharp. Those auditioning should arrive by 9:45 am and plan to stay until noon. Some of the cast members will be asked to stay for a rehearsal immediately following the audition. No advance preparation is necessary. Among the 60 roles on offer are Aladdin and his Mother, the Princess Dory and her father the Sultan along with his adviser the Grand Vizier. The character list also includes the keeper of the Book of Answers, Dinazade,

and her sister Scheherazade, along with The Mysterious One and some mischievous Genies, a stubborn Donkey and spunky Goat, scheming Cassim and Ali Baba, Sinbad and his Sailors, wise-cracking Palm Trees and fleet footed Camels, A Cave of Wonders, Vagabonds and even a pack of lost Penguins. Assistant directors will also be cast to aid in rehearsals throughout the week and to take on essential backstage responsibilities. Thanks to local sponsors, participation is absolutely free for all children who attend school or are homeschooled in Depoe Bay, Gleneden Beach, Lincoln City, Otis and Neskowin. Aspiring performers who attend school outside of the north Lincoln County area are welcome to participate for a $50 registration fee. All those children who are cast, and their parents and guardians, must agree to attend rehearsals throughout the

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The “Aladdin” directors will also offer additional theatre workshops on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at 3 pm, after rehearsals are over. Workshop signups will be posted in the lobby during auditions. Admission to these additional workshops is by suggested donation of $5 to $10.

Harmony

week, and to perform in two shows on Saturday, July 2. Directors Kayla Elizabeth and Carlysle Garland will conduct rehearsals throughout the week, from Monday, June 27, through Friday, July 1, from 10 am to 2:30 pm each day. “Aladdin” will be presented twice, at 3 pm and 7 pm Saturday, July 2, in the cultural center auditorium. Seats in the first five rows are $10 for both adults and children. General admission is $5 for adults and free for kids aged 12 and younger. To purchase, go to lincolncity-culturalcenter.org click “Buy Tickets.” For more information, call 541-994-9994. • The cultural center will host a second week of Missoula Children’s Theatre later in the summer, with “Rumpelstiltskin” running from Aug. 8 to 13.

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John Moak

Northwest. He has also played with many nationally and internationally known artists, including Bernadette Peters, Rich Little, Hank Roberts, Bob Mover, Tony Monaco, Mel Brown and John Stowell. Sunday’s concert will run from 2:30 to 5:30 pm. For reservations and directions, contact Averre at 360-6067136 or aaverre@hotmail.com. There is no charge for the concerts, but a suggested donation of $15 to $30 covers concert costs. All concert profits are donated locally in support of music education.

Christopher Woitach

Audience members are also encouraged to bring their own beverages and a potluck dish to share. For more information, go to www.inhousejazz.org.

Grab life by the horns

Starting at $30 & up Create beautiful plates, platters, bowls, coasters, sconces, window pieces, etc.

Top-notch music will be on offer in an informal setting on Sunday, June 26, when the INHOUSE Jazz series returns with a performance from guitar-trombone duo Christopher Woitach and John Moak. Hosted by vocalist Annie Averre, the series of afternoon house concerts invites small audiences to relax and listen to music in comfortable setting, without the noise associated with a restaurant or bar. By age 18 “Jazzy” John Moak was playing trombone with Ella Fitzgerald. His musical résumé includes gigs with such musical notables as Dave Brubeck, Branford Marsalis, Rosemary Clooney and Aretha Franklin. Growing up in Oklahoma, Moak studied jazz in junior high, high school and beyond, graduating from the University of Central Oklahoma. In 2005 he made the move to Portland and has since become a well-respected member of the thriving northwest jazz scene. Jazz guitarist and composer Christopher Woitach is also active on the Portland jazz scene and performs regularly throughout the Pacific

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The clarion call of the gemshorn will fill the Newport Visual Arts Center on Sunday, June 26, as the Oregon Coast Recorder Society presents a program of music from early to contemporary times. After the opening gemshorn fanfare, audiences will be treated to a program of popular songs, instrumental pieces, a motet by J.S. Bach, folk songs, a Quaker hymn sing-a-long and an original composition by the society’s night-owl leader

20 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016

Corlu Collier, entitled “4 am.” In addition to gemshorns and recorders of various sizes, the group will be playing viola da gamba, guitar, violin, cello and accordion. There will be an opportunity after the concert to take a closer look at the instruments, talk with the players and enjoy refreshments. The concert, which is free and open to all, will start at 3 pm at 777 NW Beach Drive, on the

Nye Beach turnaround. For more information, call 541-961-1228 or go to www. coastrecorder. org.


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The latest Artisan Spotlight Show at Newport’s Yaquina Art Association Gallery features a range of work from Colombian-born artist Diana Perez-Moya. Perez-Moya grew up in Bogota, Colombia, and moved to Oregon in 1999, bringing with her the strong and explosive colors of the tropics. When she was 13, PerezMoya discovered her love for color and art while taking oil classes with the well-known Spanish painter Pepe Garcia. She studied different art mediums at the Universidad de los Andes, Casa Fabricato and Arturo

Tejada Cano School in Bogota. Soon after arriving in Newport, she continued her learning path by taking classes with ceramic artist Janet Wallace and drawing classes at the Yaquina Art Association. She is interested in upcycling and giving old things a new purpose, as shown in her collages and painted oyster shells. The show also includes oils, acrylics and glossies. The show runs through Friday, July 1, available to view from 11 am to 5 pm daily at the gallery, 789 NW Beach Drive.

This week offers art lovers one last chance to see an exhibit of paintings inspired by the life and work of renowned Newport artist Rick Bartow, created by students at Newport Middle School. Under the direction of teaching artist Erin Price, students analyzed Bartow’s diverse body of work and were inspired by stories of his resilience and triumphs over life’s hurdles. The finished show, named in tribute to Bartow’s traveling exhibit “Things You Know But Cannot Explain,” is called “Things We Know But Cannot Explain,” and is on display through Saturday, July 2, at the Newport Performing Arts Center. Price said she had wanted to find a way to connect students with Bartow’s work since she moved to Newport a few years ago. She opportunity finally arose last fall, when she had the chance to take a group of students to see Bartow’s print exhibit at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum in conjunction with the kickoff of the school’s own printmaking unit. Price said Bartow’s rich body of work could inspire students to go deeper with their own art, and began to make plans for him to visit the class. Bartow’s failing health meant that visit never came to pass. But in the wake of his death on April 2, Price’s students set about studying his life and work, analyzing his style and reflecting on the symbolism and themes of transformation as well as the shifts in his style over the course of his life. Classroom visits from Bartow’s friend Karen Murphy helped the students relate to the renowned figure as both artist and person. “Watching my students learn about themselves, their community, and society

— from personal struggles to native heritage and the Vietnam War — through this unit has been a privilege and an inspiration,” Price said. “The most incredible part was how students connected with themes, one of the most

important being learning to react in healthy, positive ways to the hurdles life brings. Students were empowered by stories of Rick’s triumph over grief, loss and addiction — a message I hope continues to translate to inspiration for

triumphs in their own lives.” “Things We Know But Cannot Explain” runs through Saturday, April 2, available to view from noon to 4 pm, Tuesday through Saturday at the Newport Visual Arts Center, 777 NW Beach Drive.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016 • 21


artsy

MAKE SOME A-DOOR-ABLE ART Newcomers and seasoned artists alike are being invited to try their hand at art projects in a new series of casual workshops at the Sitka Center for Art and Ecology just north of Lincoln City. Running from June through September, the Sitka Art Circles are aimed less at creating masterpieces and more at enlivening the creative spirit though lightly facilitated projects. The series will kick off on Thursday, June 30, with a workshop on how to make fairy doors, taught by Lincoln City art instructor Krista Eddy. Eddy, who has a bachelor’s degree in Illustration, has taught many children’s art classes at venues such as the Artists’ Studio Association in Lincoln City. Her teaching style focuses on energy, fun and creativity. Participants will get to let their imaginations go wild and create a doorway to another world with popsicle sticks and all sorts of natural building materials. Every student will leave with a fairy door ready to install in a backyard, local park or fairy garden. On Friday, July 29, Eddy will teach “Play Picasso,” a workshop that gives students the chance to play with cubism, learn a bit about Pablo Picasso and have some fun with line and color. Eddy’s trio of classes will conclude on Monday, Aug. 29, with “Printed Landscape Collage” a workshop where participants will handprint components of a landscape onto a variety of colored papers and then collage it into a charming scene. On Friday, Sept. 9,

“Early Morning at Seal Rock” by John Williams One of Eddy’s fairy doors

The art of a happy marriage

Joanne Daschel

ceramicist Joanne Daschel will lead a workshop entitled “Mosaic Nightlight,” where students will create their own nightlight to learn the basics of glass-on-glass mosaic. Daschel creates mosaics with traditional materials and techniques in her studio at Lincoln City Cultural Center. She teaches at Artists’ Studio Association, and her work is

exhibited at the Artists’ Co-op Gallery in Lincoln City. Sitka Art Circles run from 10 am to 2 pm and participants should bring a lunch to enjoy during a midday break. Tuition for each class is $25 per person. For more information or to register, go to www.sitkacenter.com/ classes/recordlist.lasso.

Husband and wife John and Alana Williams will share the spotlight in the latest show from Newport’s Yaquina Art Association Gallery, which opens on Saturday, June 25. The couple have been residents of Oregon for 27 years and have very diversified artistic talents. Alana started her artistic expression with a career in decorative painting, becoming proficient enough to open her own studio and store in Albany in 1980. She now does paintings in acrylics and watercolors as well as creating unique three-dimensional multi-media pieces that she calls “wood quilts.” Alana also crochets and knits hats, headbands and scarves as well as creating

22 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016

“Water Lily” by Alana Williams

three-dimensional wall hangings with finds from local beaches. John has been interested in photography since boyhood when he began

taking photographs with his Kodak Brownie. He later upgraded to 35mm cameras and began processing his own films. After more camera updates and the conversion to digital processing he now concentrates primarily on landscapes, birds and animals. He controls the total process from taking the photo through digital processing and finally printing and mounting. John has also been an avid woodturner for more than 30 years, and many of his turnings are on display in the crafts section of the gallery The joint Spotlight Show will run through Friday, July 8, available to view from 11 am to 5 pm daily at the gallery, 789 NW Beach Drive.


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If you’ve got it, flaut it. Some of the best-known flautists from around the Pacific Northwest will blow into Waldport this Friday, June 24, for the town’s third annual Native American Flute Concert. Organized by flute maker and player Don Butler, the event will feature return performances from Tim Field Lardie, aka: Waonze, of Washington; Kiamichi of Lebanon; Terry Filer of McMinnville; MaryBeth Nickel of Siletz; and Newport’s Mark Beckwith, with accompaniment on the hand drums from Chandler Davis of the Newport Drum Circle. Guests can expect solo performances in a wide variety of styles combined with the traditional and indigenous World Beat rhythms of Newport’s Thunder &

Terry Filer and Mary-Beth Nickel

Lightness flute and percussion ensemble. The concert will run from 7 to 9 pm at Our Savior Lutheran Church, 38 North Bayview Road, just north of the Alsea Bay Bridge. Admission is free but donations are gratefully accepted toward Lincoln County Food Share.

There will be light refreshments and a silent auction for a hand-carved wooden flute and other items, with proceeds also benefiting Lincoln County Food Share. For more information, contact Don Butler at skipperdrb@gmail.com or Chandler Davis at 541-2724615.

Man, that sounds good If you need proof that music brings people together, look no further than Newport on Saturday, June 25, when a group made up of teachers, engineers, doctors and dentists — plus a pastor and a Coast Guard helicopter pilot — will belt out everything from Gregorian chants to Disney tunes. The Pendleton Men’s Chorus will be presenting a benefit concert at the Newport Performing Arts Center to raise funds for the center’s ongoing renovation campaign. Over the course of the season, the choir has prepared an eclectic program that ranges from a Gregorian Chant, JS Bach and Gershwin to a Zulu piece and a song from “The Lion King.”The creative presentation highlights the entire group of more than 40 singers along with solos and quartets. The choir was founded

24 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016

in 2008, after a staging of the musical “1776” by the College-Community Theatre of Pendleton left several of the male cast members with a desire to keep on singing. Beginning with 22 men, the group has since grown to 49 members. The only requirement to become a member of the non-auditioned, all-volunteer group is a love of singing. The group’s members range from high school age to their mid80s. Many are retired, but most are still working. The chorus is

directed by retired Pendleton High School music teacher Bill Mayclin and is accompanied by Sue Nelson. Saturday’s concert, which marks the first time the chorus has performed outside the Pendleton area, will start at 7:30 pm at 777 W Olive Street. Admission is by suggested donation of $10, with proceeds going toward expansion of the center’s restrooms and renovation of the lobby as part of the “Entertain the Future!” campaign.


s o u n dwave s MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar,

Friday, June 24

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. 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.

STEVE SLOAN BAND — Acoustic. 9 pm-1 am, Chinook’s

Seafood Grill, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-244-6665. BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 5-8 pm, Mist @ Surftides, 2945 NW Jetty Avenue, Lincoln City, 541-994-2191. ISLAND JOY — Music that jumps, overflows and connects with honesty. Funk reggae with a twist. 9 pm, Nauti Mermaid Bar & Bistro, 1343 NW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1001. DANCEHALL DAYS — This six-piece variety band features female and male vocals, guitar, keyboards, drums, bass, trumpet and percussion; and promises to have everyone on the dance floor. 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. BARBARA TURRILL & GIB BERNHARDT — Classic folk and original ballads. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. PAST FORWARD — Music worth repeating; classics from the Great American Songbook. 6-8 pm, Club 1216, located inside Canyon Way Restaurant and Bookstore, 1216 SW Canyon Way, Newport, 541 265 8319. DAVID RODGERS — This classical crossover guitarist plays Spanish music, up-tempo Latin and original settings of Leonard Cohen, Rolling Stones and Roxy music songs, as well as music by the Beatles, J.S. Bach and original compositions. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Saturday, June 25 PROLLYLOTTA — Sunny Oregon vibes. $5. 9 pm, San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita, 503-368-5080. STEVE SLOAN BAND — Acoustic. 9 pm-1 am, Chinook’s Seafood Grill, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, 1777 NW 44th Street. Lincoln City, 888-244-6665. BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 5-8 pm, Mist @ Surftides, 2945 NW Jetty Avenue, Lincoln City, 541-994-2191. ISLAND JOY — Music that jumps, overflows and connects with honesty. Funk reggae with a twist. 9 pm, Nauti Mermaid Bar & Bistro, 1343 NW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1001.

Monday, June 27 IAN SMITH — An evening of original tunes from a local legend.

6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Tuesday, June 28 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. JOHN BRINGETTO — Classic jazz stylings from years past. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.

Wednesday, June 29 Dancehall Days • Friday, June 24, in Lincoln City SONNY HESS &VICKI STEVENS — The Portland and Seattle powerhouses have joined forces. Once you have heard these two women perform together you will feel the magnetism. Chocolate and vanilla never tasted so good. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. LET IT ROLL — Rock. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. BETH WILLIS — Beatles? Sure. Weezer? Absolutely. Etta James? Yes. Rihanna? Why not?! If you can think of it, they can play it. Come out and see. 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 DALBEY GANG —Wanted, for providing a raucous good time, packed with country blues and original roots sounds. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. UNPLUGGED — Steve Mason of Bucket List and Bruce Moore of Bi-Polar Rodeo bring their two-man acoustic classic rock sound to

LOZELLE JENNINGS — Swing by for this “front porch

the Waterfront Grill. 7-10 pm, The Embarcadero Resort, 1000 SE Bay Blvd, Newport. FIDDLIN’ BIG SUE — 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, June 26 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. HANNAH & FRED — Acoustic. 8:30 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976.

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. 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.

Thursday, June 30 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, 541764-2371. 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.

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s o u n dwave s Continued from Pg. 25 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. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N, Yachats, 541-547-4477.

The Bayhaven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd. Newport, 541-265-7271. 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. 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.

Friday, July 1

Sunday, July 3

OPEN MIKE NIGHT — Hosted by Amy Pattison. 7-10 pm, Café

FRED BASSETT & SONYA KAZEN — These troubadours perform original acoustic tunes and tell tales of their life and times. 5-8 pm, Blue Heron Cafe, Hwy. 101, Tillamook. 800-275-0639. PIRACY CONSPIRACY — an authentic roots-reggae/dance hall/hip hop/cumbia/dub band hailing from San Diego. 9 pm, Nauti Mermaid Bar & Bistro, 1343 NW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1001. BEACH FACE — What happens when you set loose a few of the boys from the Salmon River Band? Come along and find out. 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, 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 JUNE RUSHING BAND — June and her sidekick Joren on guitar are a winning combination, playing originals and classic rock and ballads. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. PAUL VANDENBOGAARD — Paul, on vocals and guitar, is usually joined by several musically gifted friends on percussion, bass and maybe mandolin. 6-8 pm, Club 1216, located inside Canyon Way Restaurant and Bookstore, 1216 SW Canyon Way, Newport, 541 265 8319. THE NEW FOLKSTERS — ’60s vintage folk played on guitar, banjo, uke and kazoo. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541547-4477. 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 style. Ronnie Jay Pirrello on vocals, guitar and harp with Richard Robitaille on vocals and skins. 5:30-8pm, Luna Sea Fish House. 153 Hwy. 101. Yachats, 541-547-4794.

Saturday, July 2 KARAOKE FROM HELL — Is it still karaoke when you have

the backing of a full professional band? Debate the technicalities and then forget the whole thing and bust out your best Sinatra impres-

Past Forward • Friday, June 24, in Yachats

sion. $5. 9 pm, The San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita, 503-368-5080. CROOKED — An evening of uniquely Oregon-themed music from this Siletz-based band, who describe their sound as “Northwest acoustic reggae.” 9 pm, Nauti Mermaid Bar & Bistro, 1343 NW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-614-1001. ROBBI LAWS — Blues. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. STEVE SLOAN BAND — Acoustic. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976.

BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 8-11 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. COIN OF THE REALM — Gypsy jazz and classical tunes from the old country. They’ll have you on your feet before the night is over. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-5748134. LUV GUNN — Swede and the Boyz will be serving up their brand of Hard Country/Blues/Rock in their inimitable style. 8:30 pm-close,

BRET LUCICH SHOW — An experience to remember from this singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician, with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 4-7 pm, Neskowin Creek RV Park, 50500 Hwy. 101, Neskowin, 866-685-9706. 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. MEGAN JAMES BAND — Rock, funk and soul. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. DANNY SANDOCK — Songs that are entertaining and fun, painting musical vignettes that explore the everyday idiosyncrasies of life. 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. UNPLUGGED — Join Steve Mason of Bucket List and Bruce Moore of BiPolar Rodeo for a great evening of classic rock and country in the run up to Waldport’s fireworks show. 4:30-7:30 pm, Waldport Moose Lodge, 250 NW John Street, Waldport, 541-5634498. COIN OF THE REALM — Ukrainian and eastern European folk songs on violin, guitar, trombone and accordion. 6:30-9 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477. DON’T SEE YOUR FAVORITE BAND? PAINT THE TIME, DATE AND VENUE ON A SHOW KITE AND TIE THE STRINGS TO MID CITY PLAZA. KNOT INTERESTED? JUST EMAIL THE DETAILS TO NEWS@OREGONCOASTTODAY.COM.

Dockside Whale Watching and Fishing Charters at the Harbor in Depoe Bay

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Start & finish on the beach behind Kyllo’s Restaurant Register at www.getmeregistered.com or the Lincoln City Community Center, 2150 NE Oar Place 541.-994-.2131

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Deadline for pre-registration is July 8 Cost before July 9: $15 (race only) or $25 (with shirt) Cost day of race: $20 (race only) or $30 (with shirt)

26 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016

Clean comfortable fishing boats for the best Deep Sea Fishing Adventure NO STAIRS TO CLIMB

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n a t u r a l i s t ’s c a l e n d a r

Birders with knoll limits Nature fans will have the chance to get a little perspective this Saturday, June 25, when the Audubon Society of Lincoln City birders leads a trip to the Knoll in Lincoln City. Sweeping vistas of Lincoln City will be just one of the rewards on offer from this latest Open Space walk, which will see participants hike their way up from the Villages at Cascade Head at the north end of town. This recent addition to Lincoln City Open Spaces provides second-growth cedar, spruce and fir forest, forest edge and upland meadow habitat for year round residents such as woodpeckers,

Pacific wren and song sparrow as well as nesting habitat for summer visitors like warblers and flycatchers. This hike will be longer and more difficult than other recent Open Space bird walks, with uneven ground and elevation gain, so hiking boots and sticks are suggested. The complete loop hike is about two and a half miles with no facilities or water. The group will meet at 9 am at the locked gate on NE West Devils Lake Blvd., just north of the junction with Highway 101. For more information, call 541-9929720.

Red Shouldered Hawk • Photo by Jack Doyle

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• Golfing • Fishing

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Find the rental home that works for you! Call us today at 503-392-4355 or toll-free at 1-888-720-2154 www.neskowinbeachvacations.com oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016 • 27


editor

Sew, what are you waiting for? show will be Gems of the Ocean. “One of the goals of the show is to introduce art quilting to both locals and visitors to the area”, said Polly Plumb board member Ruth Bass. “We thought the ocean theme would allow artists to explore the beauty of this area and make interpretations based on their own whimsy.” Quilt entries will be

accepted between December 15 and January 15, and will be decided by February 1. Final judging will be made by a five-person panel of artists and dignitaries during the show. All selected entries will be on display during show, which will run from March 10 to 12 at the Yachats Commons. For more details, go to http://oceanartistrycall.com.

NOW PLAYING

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LINCOLN COUNTY AREA EVENTS

t Newport Performing Arts Center: NATIONAL THEATRE LONDON – “DANGEROUS LIAISONS,” TUALATIN VALLEY COMMUNITY BAND, PENDLETON MEN’S CHORUS, RED OCTOPUS THEATRE CO. – “ONE DAY TO PLAY” t Newport Visual Arts Center: OREGON COAST RECORDER SOCIETY t Lincoln City: SILETZ BAY MUSIC FESTIVAL t Newport School of Dance, 541-265-8004: SUMMER DANCE 2016 t Driftwood Public Library: MARI GAYATRI STEIN t Private Home, 360-606-7136: INHOUSE JAZZ – WOITACH/MOAK

OREGON COAST COUNCIL FOR THE ARTS

More online at coastarts.org

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Quilters are being invited to start stitching in preparation for the first annual Ocean Artistry Art Quilt Show, which will be held at the Yachats Commons in March 2017. The juried show, organized by the nonprofit Polly Plumb Productions, will accept art pieces from local, regional and international art quilters. The theme of this inaugural

6 miles

Auto Parts Rusty Cow Antiques Katie’s Korner Café & Ice Cream

Center Market Full Grocery

Medical Dispensary Meds and Accessories

Burkhardt Gallery Candelaria’s Taqueria South County Motors LINCOLN CITY 22 miles

Upcoming EVENTS:

Co nc entra tes , to pic a ls a nd ed ib les a re a va ila b le fo reveryo ne Ju ne 2 nd !

CLOVER’S DAY Sat July 2 parade music vendor fair more!

MON-THURS 10AM-7PM • FRI-SAT 10AM-8PM • CLOSED SUNDAY

CRUISE-IN Cloverdale Aug 24 5pm

1745 SW Highway 101 • Lincoln City, OR 97367 • 541-614-0682

cloverdalenews.org

28 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016


By Dave Green

P H O N E

JACK

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5 Archivist’s supply 7 Who sings “As Time Goes By” in “Casablanca” 8 Thunderous noise 9 End of many a farm name 10 Execrable 11 2000s retro Chrysler 12 Kind of steel 14 Building bar with one flange

SUPER QUIZ

Take this Super Quiz to a Ph.D. Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level. Subject: THE HUMAN BODY (e.g., How many teeth do most adults have? Answer: 32.)

GRADUATE LEVEL 4. The color of a human’s skin is determined by the level of this pigment that the body produces. 5. About 20 percent of total sleep time is REM sleep. For what is

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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

Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 7,000 past For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.20 per minute; or, with puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). credit card, 1-800-814-5554. (Or, just wait for next week’s TODAY.) Read about and comment on each puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay. Share tips: nytimes.com/puzzleforum. Crosswords for young. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

REM an acronym? 6. What is the smallest bone found in the human body? PH.D. LEVEL 7. Where in the body do red blood cells develop? 8. What is the only ³Àoating´ bone (not connected to other bones) in our body? 9. What is the scienti¿c name for your big toe? ANSWERS: 1. Cerebrum. 2. Pupil. 3. Brain. 4. Melanin. 5. Rapid eye movement. 6. Staples (or stirrup) bone (middle ear). 7. Bone marrow. 8. Hyoid bone (middle of the neck). 9. Hallux. 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?

2016 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. What is the name for the largest part of the human brain? 2. This central opening of your eye changes size depending on the amount of light. 3. What organ uses over a quarter of the oxygen used by the human body?

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JACK P O T S

C H E E S E

59 Put one’s foot down, in a way

2

3 2 8 5 1 9 7 6 4

S A S S

R A B L E

M A J A R A S I C K O N I R U N E T L E B L I T L E H A L E B E L O Y E X E N

57 Creative classroom

1

8 5 2 1 4 7 6 3 9

F R O S T

A A T T V E M U I W A N O L E R S E A S S O T P K A L I A T U R Y M A A B L A T E V O R A P JACK

55 Harebrained

6 Slummy

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE JACK A S S

53 Bowls are seen in them

7 6 4 9 5 3 1 8 2

27 7-Eleven, e.g. 29 Steven Van Zandt’s role on “The Sopranos,” informally 30 Constantly adjusting one’s glasses, e.g. 32 Back on track? 34 Who said “There is nothing more deceptive than an obvious fact” 38 Wing man? 39 1977 reggae classic 40 So-so 41 Concert stage effect 42 Polemologists study them 44 Wiriness 48 Same-sex household? 50 “I deny all that!” 52 Artist Thomas ___, founder of the Hudson River School

No. 0603

1 9 3 6 8 2 4 7 5

ACROSS 1 Singer with the 1977 hit “Lido Shuffle” 7 Things with roots 13 House of Tybalt and Juliet 15 “Under the Lilacs” writer, 1878 16 Eastern border of Manhattan’s Tompkins Square Park 17 Staple of Caribbean music 18 Car mentioned in “Hotel California,” informally 20 Eponymous bacteriologist Julius 21 Nickname for Francisco 22 The so-called “sunny side” 24 Cold-shoulder 25 Many a circus feat

Edited by Will Shortz

Difficulty Level

Crossword

Last Week’s Answers:

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016 • 29


lively

ENTER A PERIOD OF MORNING LINCOLN CITY’S BIJOU THEATRE HAS MATINÉE TREATS IN STORE THIS SUMMER From rampaging dinosaurs and a talkative mouse to a fresh-faced Macaulay Culkin and David Bowie rocking the world’s most stylish mullet, the Bijou Theatre’s sixth annual summer matinée series has something to stir a memory from every childhood. The Lincoln City cinema will charm audiences all summer long with 11 am screenings for just $2 every Saturday, Monday and Thursday. All the films are sponsored by local businesses, some of which will be giving out goody bags, such as the Prehistoric store’s little gift bag of fossils for audiences enjoying “Jurassic Park.” And in honor of that other great summer tradition, kids aged 12 and under who turn up wearing their Lincoln City Youth Baseball League uniform get in free of charge. The Bijou Theatre is located at 1624 NE Hwy. 101.

June 25, 27 & 30

“Stuart Little (1999) The Little family adopt a charming young mouse named Stuart, voiced by Michael J. Fox, but the family cat wants rid of him.

joins a neighborhood baseball team whose members fear the Beast that lurks beyond the outfield fence.

July 23, 25 & 28

“Top Gun” (1986) Tom Cruise stars in this rousing tale of young students at the US Navy elite fighter pilot school competing to be the best. Also screening in 3D at a special, 10:30 pm show on Saturday, July 23.

July 30, Aug 1 & 4

“Space Jam” (1996) Bugs Bunny convinces Michael Jordan to help the Looney Tunes win their freedom by beating aliens in a game of basketball.

Aug. 6, 8 & 11

“The Wizard of Oz” (1939) The classic story of Dorothy trying to make her way back to Kansas with the help of the scarecrow, the tin man and the cowardly lion.

Aug. 13, 15 & 18

“Labyrinth” (1986) When Sara’s baby brother is stolen she has just 13 hours to get to the labyrinth and save him from the castle of the Goblin King (David Bowie). Also screening at 10:30 pm on Saturday, Aug. 13.

David Bowie in “Labyrinth”

Aug. 20, 22 & 25

“Jumanji” (1995) Robin Williams stars in this energetic tale of two siblings who find and play a magical game, leading to adventure and peril.

Aug. 27, 29 & Sept. 1

“Jurassic Park” (1993) Two kids are invited to the theme

park of the future in the dinosaur movie that started it all.

Sept. 3 & 4

“Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory” (1971) The original movie based on Roald Dahl’s fantasy about Charlie, who wins a golden ticket to visit the mysterious chocolate factory. Oompa loompas included.

July 2, 4 & 7

“Home Alone” (1990) Eight-year-old Kevin must protect his home when his family accidentally goes on vacation without him.

July 9, 11 & 14

“Hook” (1991) When a grownup Peter Pan (Robin Williams) returns to Neverland to save his children from the dastardly Captain Hook (Dustin Hoffman).

July 16, 18 & 21

“The Sandlot” (1993) Scotty is a new kid in town who

“Jurassic Park”

30 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016

“Stuart Little”


Arrr you going? Sharpen your cutlass, load your musket and take all necessary steps to protect your booty — the Rockaway Beach Pirate Festival will return for three days of swashbuckling mayhem starting this Friday, June 24. The festival draws people from miles around to the Ocean’s Edge Wayside in the center of town for events including a treasure hunt for adults, a scavenger hunt for kids and live music performances. Once again, Portland’s most piratical troupe of scallywags, PDXYar, will bring their own brand of living history to town, recreating the life of a pirate with performances including black powder cannon demonstrations, fire dancing and pirate fights. Guests can sign up to join the pirate crew or challenge the scallywags to a game of Liar’s

Dice. The three-day festival will kick off at dusk on Friday with a fire dancing performance. On Saturday, June 25, guests can enjoy a kids scavenger hunt at 11 am, followed by a 2 pm by a family scavenger hunt. At 4 pm, PDXYar will be on deck for a black powder cannon

lively Visit Tillamook Coast is running a contest to find the finest photographs from the Pirate Festival, giving away a 2-night stay at the Silver Sands Resort in Rockaway Beach as a grand prize. Anyone capturing an image of a dashing swashbuckler should upload their pictures to Instagram using the hashtag #tillamookcoastpirates.

demonstration, followed at dusk by more fire dancing. Sunday, June 26, is costume day, when guests will be invited to put on their most convincing pirate face and channel their inner Errol Flynn — or Johnny Depp, if they prefer. Throughout the weekend, guests will find pirate music, pirate-themed food and drink, carnival rides, street vendors and swashbuckling sword fighting, along with festival rides and games. Roving pirates will be on hand to keep folks on their toes and entertain with their mischief.

Toledo’s Classic Car Show is back in town Vintage cars, trucks, vans, motorcycles and more will line Toledo’s Main Street this Saturday, June 25, as the town’s Classic Car Show returns for the 24th year running In addition to vintage vehicles, this year’s event features a free concert from local band The Unlikely Saints, a beer garden courtesy of the Holy Toledo Tavern and a host of food vendors. Another special attraction will be an appearance from Rat Rod Magazine’s two-time build-off challenge winner and magazine cover car, built by Gary Fisher of Resurrected Rust Garage. Fisher will be bringing his 1933 Panel Delivery Rat Rod all the way from Hood River for the occasion. Guests are encouraged to dress in vintage clothing of their favorite era to go along with the

awards that will be presented in the following categories: Best in Show, Distance Traveled, Presenter’s Choice, “You are Special”, Best: 1920s, ’30s, ’40s, ’50s, ’60s, ’70s or newer, Best Corvette, Chevy, Mopar, Ford, Best Foreign (non-US), Best Frankenstein, Best Pain, Best Engine, Best Interior and — new this year — Best Rat Rod. Winners will be announced at 3:30 pm. The event, hosted by the

Missoula Children’s Theatre presents:

Smile for the camera

Toledo Chamber of Commerce and the Toledo Downtown Association will run from 8 am to 4 pm on Main Street. For more information, e-mail Director@ToledoOregon.org, call the Toledo Chamber office at 541-336-3183, or register online www.toledooregon.org. Don’t forget the garage Adding to Saturday’s carnival atmosphere, Toledo’s CityWide Garage Sale will give visitors the chance to search for treasures all over town from 9 am to 2 pm. Lists of sale sites are available at the car show, from the chamber of commerce office at 311 NE 1st Street and at Ace Hardware, 620 Hwy. 20 as well as online at www.toledooregon. org/city-wide-garage-sale.html. For more information, call the chamber office at 541-3363183.

“Aladdin” June 27-July 2 A weeklong performance experience is open to all local kids entering grades 1-12. The fun begins with a mandatory audition at 10 AM Monday, June 27 (sharp!). Participants will return for rehearsals and workshops throughout the week, and Thursday, perform the show twice on Saturday, July 2. This experience, made possible by the Behrens Foundation, the Studio to School Project and the Ankeny Foundation, is free for kids in north Lincoln County, and just $50 for everyone else.

540 NE Hwy. 101, inside the historic Delake School

TICKETS & INFO: www.lincolncityculturalcenter.org 541-994-9994

July 7 at 7 pm

LCCC Presents:

Ben Cosgrove Pianist and composer with performances that are “electric and exhilarating”. Tickets $14 advance/$16 door.

4741 SW Hwy 101 Ste. A, Lincoln City, OR 97367

1134 Main Ave, Tillamook, OR 97141

541-614-1442

503-842-9327

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016 • 31


along \comes a Styx July 22&23, 8pm Tickets $45 - $60

Every week in June, one winner takes it all!

Tanya Tucker August 12 & 13, 8pm Tickets $20-$35

Starting June 1, collect FREE ENTRIES WEEKLY with your Winners Circle Card and gather even more when you play in the Casino! ^ *

Friday June 3,10,17, 24 at 10pm, we’ll draw for

$10,000 CASH! Thursday, June 30 at 7pm, we’ll draw for

$15,000 CASH! Complete rules at Winners Circle.

The Monkees

Win a new Can-Am Spyder RS-S Special Series 5-speed Semi-Automatic from Power Motorsports! Collect entries June 13 - July 9 Grand Finale Drawing July 9 at 6pm! Rules available in the Pit.

September 23 & 24, 8pm Tickets $36- $51

Michael McDonald October 21 & 22, 8pm Tickets $40-$55 On Sale July 21

For tickets call 1-888-MAIN ACT (1-888-624-6228) or purchase online at chinookwindscasino.com. Discount available for Winners Circle Members.

mooK l/v\v CASINO RESORT

chinookwindscasino.com • Lincoln City* 1-888-CHINOOK

32 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • june 24, 2016


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