Oregon Coast Today November 16, 2012

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oregon coast

FREE! November 16, 2012 • ISSUE 26, VOL. 8 Tides • Dining • Hiking • Theater • Live Music

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contents Beach Reads ........................................p. 8 Coast Calendar ......................... p. 16 & 17

5

GET OUT! Join this group of eagleeyed birders when they set out for Yaquina Head on Saturday, Nov. 17.

Coast Culture .....................................p. 22 Crossword .........................................p. 27 Get Out! ..............................................p. 5 Holiday Bazaars .................................p. 29 Holiday Happenings ............................p. 7 In Concert .........................................p. 28 Lively .................................................p. 19

22

COAST CULTURE North Lincoln County Historical Museum hosts a discussion on Kennewick Man this Saturday, Nov. 17.

On Stage .............................................p. 9

14

ON THE COVER As our cover model could tell you, many coast residents and visitors have already settled on a main course for Thanksgiving. But, what of dessert? Thanks to Jesse Smith and Gretchen Ammerman-Smith for helping with this photo, shot last month on the beach at Taft. TODAY photo.

Potpourri ...........................................p. 21 SoundWaves Live Music ............ p. 30 & 31 Sudoku..............................................p. 27 Tide Tables .......................................p. 26

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4 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012


get out! Lending a fin to salmon starting out

Bird watching in November? Pure loon at sea.

Chinese philosopher Lao-Tzu once said a journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step — words that are doubtless being discussed feverishly in the baby salmon tank at the Tillamook Forest Center. That’s because the 500 juvenile spring Chinook salmon in the tank are days away from the start of their own epic journey, which will see them travel thousands of miles in the Pacific Ocean before returning to their native stream to spawn. The only part they need a little help with are those first few steps to get them from the tank into the stream. On Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 17 and 18, the center will welcome visitors to lend a hand by releasing the small fry into Jones Creek. The fish infusion, which the center has performed every spring and fall since 2008, bolsters the creek’s salmon population, increasing the chances of a strong run returning to spawn in later years. The center, a part of the Oregon Department of Forestry, raised the 500 baby salmon from eggs provided in October by the Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife’s hatchery on the Trask River. Since then, the small fry have been growing in full view of the center’s visitors, living in a tank in the lobby. On Saturday, Nov. 17, center staff will scoop half the salmon from the tank in preparation for the first release walk. Participants will receive a brief overview of the salmon life cycle before taking a roughly five-minute walk across the center’s suspension bridge to Jones Creek, where everyone will get the chance to release the young fish into the water. “They will stay in Jones Creek until they have eaten enough to be strong enough to begin their journey down the Wilson River,” Denise Berkshire, the center’s education specialist, said. “From there, they head to Tillamook Bay and then spend their adult life out in the ocean.” If the salmon survive, Berkshire said, they will make their way back to Jones Creek when it is time for them to spawn. A second salmon release walk on Sunday, Nov. 18, will see the remaining fish join their companions in the creek. Both walks are scheduled to begin at 1 pm, with visitors reminded to be prepared for rain. The Tillamook Forest Center is located at 45500 Wilson River Highway, Tillamook. For more information, call 503-815-6803 or go to www.tillamookforestcenter.org.

Some birds don’t take much spotting. Peacocks, penguins and ostriches in particular tend to stand out wherever they go. Fortunately for fans of bird watching, some species present more of a challenge. Tracking down some of these more subtle characters is the aim of the Saturday, Nov. 17, Birding Field Trip to Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area (YHONA). Led by Wayne Hoffman of Yaquina Birders & Naturalists, the field trip will start at 9 am, with participants meeting in the parking lot by the Yaquina Head Lighthouse. “YHONA is an excellent place to watch seabirds and the trip will start with a seawatch to look for loons, scoters, pelicans, shearwaters and more,” Hoffman said. “Afterwards the trip will continue on to the lower part of Yaquina Bay to search for grebes, a variety of ducks and birds of prey.” Participants should dress for variable weather as the field trip will last all morning. While this event is free and open to everyone, there is a charge for vehicles entering Yaquina Head without a pass such as the Oregon Pacific Coast Passport or America the Beautiful Passes honored by federal agencies. For more information call 541-961-1307.

The hunt is on in Lincoln City There is still time to register for this year’s new and improved version of “The Race”, organized Lincoln City Parks and Recreation Department — with the 2012 event taking the form of a scavenger hunt. “The Race: Scavenger Hunt Edition” will take place at noon on Saturday, Nov. 17, at the Lincoln City Community Center. The event is patterned after the popular television show, “The Amazing Race,” and aims to test participants’ skill and creativity as they comb the hidden corners of Lincoln City to complete challenges and find clues. The cost is $80 per four-person team, and there is no age limit. A minimum of four teams must be registered for the race to take place. Proceeds from the event will benefit the Lincoln City Parks and Recreation Youth Scholarship Fund and Recreation Sports Fund. Register today at the Lincoln City Community Center, 2150 NE Oar Place, or call Karl McShane, recreation supervisor, at 541-994-2131.

The holidays: a time to gather The holiday season presents plenty of opportunities to clear out your wallet and get rid of all that extra money that’s been cluttering up the house all year. But for people who believe the best things in life are free (or at least cheap), the season also offers the opportunity for folks to fill their homes with some festive cheer and the pine tree smell of a handmade holiday wreath. The first opportunity for guided wreath-making comes this Thanksgiving weekend at the Tillamook Forest Center, where visitors will be introduced to a variety of natural materials that can be used for home decoration during the winter holiday season. Wreath-making workshops will run at 11 am and 1:30 pm on Friday, Nov. 23, Saturday, Nov. 24 and Sunday, Nov. 25. Visitors can choose between making a wreath, at a cost of $12, or a cone bird feeder for $3. Registration is required. To reserve a spot in one of the sessions, call 1-866-930-4646, visit www.tillamookforestcenter.org or stop by the center at 45500 Wilson River Highway, Tillamook. In December, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will also be offering wreath-making workshops. Volunteer and experienced wreath-maker Lee Sliman will lead the workshops, at which fresh-cut greens, wires and ribbons will be provided at no charge. Attendees should bring special decorating materials to personalize their wreaths as well as any pruning shears and gloves they have and wear warm, comfortable clothing. The first workshop, from 10:30 am–1 pm on Saturday, Dec. 1, at Nestucca Bay National Wildlife Refuge, is free. The second workshop will be from 1-3:30 pm on Sunday, Dec. 2, at the Connie Hansen Garden, 1931 NW 33rd Street, Lincoln City, and requires a $5 donation. Registration is required due to limited supplies and space. Register by contacting Sliman at 503-812-6392.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012 • 5


7KLV %URRNV =HUR DUJXPHQW 3RUWKROH 3OD\HUV JLYH WKHLU WDNH RQ FRPHG\ FODVVLF µ7KH 3URGXFHUV¶ By Dan Haag for the TODAY

Turn on the lights, tune the orchestra, raise the curtain, and cue the singing…Nazis? You’ll never see a show like “The Producers,” a comical, musical farce from the mind of legendary director Mel Brooks. An award-winning film and Broadway musical, “The Producers” hits the small stage in Newport as the Porthole Players get set to sing, dance and make you cry with laughter. Set in the late 1960s “The Producers” tells the story of a bombasWhat: “The Producers” tic theater producer Max Bialystock When: Friday, Nov. 16, to who ropes mild-mannered acSunday, Dec. 9 countant Leo Bloom into a scheme Where: Newport to make a fortune by creating a Performing Arts Center, Broadway musical so terrible that 777 West Olive Street, it is sure to flop. After finding the Newport perfect candidate in the form of the Cost: $16 adults, $14 abominable “Springtime for Hitler,” students & seniors written by former Nazi soldier Franz Liebkind, the pair sign up a Tickets: Call 541-265-2787 legendarily bad director to take the reins and cast a reality-challenged hippie by the name of L.S.D. to play the role of Adolf Hitler. The pair plan to fleece investors by fleeing to Brazil with the remaining production cash as soon as the show finishes is doomed run. But, in a spectacular twist of fate, the show becomes a runaway success, leaving Bialystock and Bloom in deep trouble. “How could this happen?” Bialystock says in one of the show’s memorable lines, “I was so careful. I picked the wrong play, the wrong director, the wrong cast. Where did I go right?” Justin Atkins is in center surrounded (from right) by chorus girls Linda Curtis, Sandee Stufenbeil, Willow Kasner, and Jessica Moll. Originally released in 1968 “The Producers,” was written and directed by Mel Brooks, who won an Academy Award Vickie Steen said. for his screenplay. The film starred Zero Mostel as Max Porthole Players is a non-profit community theater group, established in 1972 and sponBialystock and Gene Wilder as Leo Bloom. sored in part by the City of Newport, the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts, and a host In a case of life imitating art, the show became a Broadway musical in 2001, enjoying so much success that stage stars Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick went on to star in a 2005 of dedicated volunteers. The Porthole Board of Directors is comprised of 12 directors, one youth member, and four officers that make up the executive committee. remake for the big screen. Porthole Players recommend “The Producers” for mature audiences only. Now, Newport’s own production company – Porthole Players – get set to tackle this classic In the words of Max Bialystock, “That’s it, baby, when you’ve got it, flaunt it, flaunt it!” comedic musical. Starring Justin Atkins as Leo Bloom, along with Linda Curtis, Sandee There will be ample opportunity to see Porthole Players flaunt it at the Newport Performing Stufenbiel, Willow Kasner, and Jessica Moll, “The Producers” is rife with local stage talArts Center. The show opens on Friday, Nov. 16, and runs four consecutive weekends to Dec. ent. Porthole Players, with more than 30 years of amateur theater under their belt, are no 9. Curtain is at 7:30 pm on Fridays and Saturdays, with 2 pm matinees on Sundays. General stranger to staging big-time productions. With titles such as “Jesus Christ Superstar,” “My admission is $16, with seniors and students $14. A percentage of the proceeds go to Relay Fair Lady,” and “Oliver!” to their credit, they are constantly looking to stretch their theatrical repertoire. “We are so excited to be staging this production for Newport,” Executive Producer For Life. Tickets can be purchased by calling 541-265-2787 (ARTS).

if you go

6 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012


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If it takes a village to raise a child, does it take a city to raise a Christmas tree, which is, after all, much heavier? Lincoln City is set to find out, with the Lincoln City Cultural Center, Kenny’s IGA, Noble Creek Tree Farm, Pacific Power and Let There Be Arts all pitching in to hold a community tree lighting party on Friday, Nov. 23. The event is a true team effort, with the Thompson family and Noble Creek Tree Farm donating the tree, which Pacific Power crews will install next to the new monument sign on the west lawn of the cultural center, 540 NE Hwy. 101 in Lincoln City. Meanwhile, students and teachers of Let There Be Arts have made the ornaments that will decorate the branches. The big event, filled with carols, refreshments and Christmas cheer, will begin at 5 pm at the center, with carols led by the Sweet Adelines. If weather permits, the group will gather around the tree on the lawn for the tree lighting at around 5:15 pm. Afterwards, the public will be invited back inside to enjoy complimentary fruits, cakes, cookies and other desserts, along with hot drinks, provided by Kenny’s IGA and the Morgan family. Santa Claus will be there, ready to greet children and hear wishes from 5:30 to 6:30 pm. Other family activities include a make-and-take ornament station (led by the artistic members of the center and the center gift shop), and a cake walk (with bakery treats provided by Kenny’s IGA). The gift shop will be open for business, featuring handmade and handcrafted merchandise. Niki Price, the center’s executive director said the tree lighting party is a gift, from center members and sponsoring businesses to the community. She asked that people attending the party give while they receive, by bringing a donation of canned or boxed food for the Lincoln City Food Pantry. “We’re all looking forward to this community event, and to making it an annual tradition. We’re so grateful to Kenny’s IGA and Noble Creek Tree Farm, and to Pacific Power, for making it possible,â€? Price said. “If you’d like to be a part of planning and throwing this party, just let us know. We’re now accepting donations of holiday dĂŠcor, outdoor lighting, garlands, and art supplies.â€? To volunteer or donate, call Price at 541-994-9994.

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Tillamook Forest Center find yourself in the forest

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outdoor family fun movie exhibits

trails

Sat. & Sun., Nov. 17 & 18

gift shop

1pm – Salmon Release Walk

Friday, Saturday & Sunday, Nov. 23-25

11am & 1:30pm – Holiday wreath-making. Registration required. Fall Hours: Open Wed-Sun, 10am to 4 pm

Fantasy forest foreshadows phenomenal festive fund-raiser A range of uniquely designed Christmas trees will be on display at the “Fantasy of Trees� later this month in the run up to Angels Anonymous’ annual fund-raiser ball on Dec. 1. The Song of the Angels Holiday Ball will take place at 5:30 pm at the convention center of Chinook Winds Casino Resort. In the four days running up to the ball, the public will have the chance to view the trees and wreaths on show in the “Fantasy of Trees,� all of which are created and sponsored by local businesses. “Fantasy of Trees� will be open Nov. 28, 29, and 30 from noon to 8 pm. On Saturday, Dec. 1, viewing will be from 10 am to 4pm, with the trees being auctioned off at the ball that night. The ball will start with passed hors

d’oeuvres followed by a formal dinner with choices of This year, Angels Anonymous is putting together grilled salmon a “Taste of North Lincoln County� basket for a and shrimp, special auction item at the Angels Ball. Anyone grilled fillet of who can offer a dinner for two, a hotel stay or beef or stuffed other item for inclusion in the basket should portobello contact Jim Davis at 541-921-0700 or mushrooms, Julie McBee at 541-992-2010. followed by dancing. Entertainment will be provided by Blackbird, a Beatles tribute band, who will also be playing an assortment of ‘70s and ‘80s tunes. Tickets for the Song of the Angels Holiday Ball are $75 per person or $600 for a table of eight and are now available at the Lincoln City Chamber of Commerce 541-944-3070. Angles Anonymous accepts cash, check or credit for tickets for the ball. Each year, Angels Anonymous gives thousands of dollars to help residents of North Lincoln County with immediate and basic needs. The program gives one-time-only assistance those who have exhausted every other avenue of help.

basket case

22 miles east of Tillamook on Highway 6

(866) 930-4646 (toll free) www.tillamookforestcenter.org Donations welcomed

Follow us on Facebook! /tillamookforestcenteroregon

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012 • 7


beach reads You’ll have to hurry to catch this squid Once upon a time, squid would have had reason to be distrustful of writers, having seen one too many of their species squeezed for ink to fill their busy quills. But now, the Manzanita literary community is much more interested in what they can squeeze into their squid than what they can squeeze out of it. Established in 2011, the North Coast Squid is an annual literary magazine that showcases the work of writers and artists who live on the north coast or have a strong connection to the area. Now, the squid is reaching out its tentacles, seeking submissions for its second issue, which will be published in February 2013. Writing will be accepted in three categories: poetry, fiction and narrative non-fiction, which includes memoir. The deadline for submissions is Nov. 30. Writing will be selected by outside judges, with Erica Baumeister, author of “The School of Essential Ingredients” and “Joy for Beginners” judging fiction entries. Matt Love, author of “Gimme Refuge: The Education of a Caretaker” and “Sometimes a Great Movie: Paul Newman, Ken Kesey and the Filming of the Great Oregon Novel” among others, will judge nonfiction. David Beispiel, poet, poetry columnist for The Oregonian, and founder of the Attic Institute in Portland, will judge poetry. Writers can submit one piece in each prose category and three pieces for the poetry category. But the squid is not solely for the written word. Artists can submit three images each for the color cover art, black and white photos or line drawings (scanned and in jpg form.) For the full submission guidelines go to hoffmanblog.org and click on Squid in the Blog Categories list. The first Squid is still available for sale in many coastal stores. 50 percent of the $2 cover price goes to the Hoffman Center to help with operational costs that provide programs like the Manzanita Writers’ Series. For more information on the Hoffman Center, go to http://hoffmanblog.org.

Voices in the morning, faces in the evening

Jen Violi

The author of a book about disguising the faces of others will lead a workshop aimed at helping writers find their own voices in Manzanita on Saturday, Nov. 17. Jen Violi, author of “Putting Makeup on Dead People,” will lead the workshop, called ‘Find Your Voice,’ from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Hoffman Center. Violi said that while some people try to sound like their favorite novelists or poets, the best strategy for aspiring writers is to sound like themselves and tell the stories they were born to share. Violi, of Portland, is a book and writing coach, and also adjunct faculty for the Transformative Leadership Program at Tai Sophia Institute. She has her MFA in creative writing from University of New Orleans, an MA in theological studies and her undergraduate degree in English and communications with a theater concentration. Over the past twenty years, Violi has created and facilitated hundreds of workshops, retreats, and experiences for people seeking to know themselves, their own stories and

their creative potential on a deeper level. The workshop is open to new and established writers, all of whom Violi advises to “come with a willingness to listen to and honor your singular voice, and leave with playful and practical tools to cultivate it.” Students should bring paper or a journal and their favorite writing utensil. Tuition is $50. Later the same evening and also at the Hoffman Center, Violi will read from her book for the Manzanita Writers’ Series. “Putting Makeup on Dead People” was a finalist for the Oregon Book Award’s Leslie Bradshaw Award for Young Adult Literature, taking the reader inside the world of morticians, funeral parlors and ritual and telling the story of how one girl learns to grieve and say good-bye, turn loss into a gift and let herself be exceptional. After Violi’s reading and Q&A, up to nine local writers will get the chance to read five minutes of their original work in an open mic session. Admission for the evening is $7. The Hoffman Center is located across from the Manzanita Library at 594 Laneda Avenue. Further information and a registration form is available at hoffmanblog.org or contact Tela Skinner at mactela@nehalemtel.net.

Writers on the Edge to host memoirist Writers on the Edge will host award-winning journalist Jennifer Lauck, author of the New York Times Bestseller, “Blackbird: A Childhood Lost and Found” at the Newport Visual Arts Center on Saturday, Nov. 17. “Blackbird” was written in the voice of a little girl who attempts to make sense of a world where parents die and children fall through the cracks and are left homeless. Lauck has followed up with sequel memoirs, “Still Waters” and “Found,” with the latter written in the voice of a confident woman determined to find inner peace, lasting happiness and a sense of the familiar. It chronicles the search and reunion with her birth mother. “Blackbird” was featured on The Oprah Show, and is used as Jennifer Lauck a source reference by foster parenting organizations nationwide, providing caregivers with inspiration and insight about taking in parentless children. Lauck has been in collaboration with Yale professors and partners in the Post Traumatic Stress Center in New Haven, Connecticut. Their center routinely gives out copies of “Blackbird” and “Still Waters” to patients working to heal childhood trauma. The Times of London wrote: “Lauck has constructed a riveting narrative from the awful mess of her life. That she has managed to do so fills me with an admiration for which I cannot find words. The best I can do is to suggest that you read this book.” The program begins at 7 pm, with an open mic for local writers following the presentation. General admission is $6; students are admitted free. For more information, visit www.writersontheedge.org.

Prose poetry: learn from a pro The Willamette Writers Coast Branch will continue its free Writers-on-Writing workshops on Tuesday, Nov. 20, with Steve Jones leading a workshop on reading and writing prose poetry at the Newport Public Library. Attendees can look forward to reading several pithy prose poems and trying their hand at playfully writing one or two. “We’ll look at several letter poems, exploring the ground where prose and poetry overlap,” Jones said, “and we’ll briefly play with fractured Valentines in preparation for the February V-day.” Jones is the founding co-director of the Oregon Writing Project at Willamette University and has directed the four-week intensive Summer Institute for twenty kindergarten through college teachers for fifteen years. He is mostly retired from years of teaching college essay writing and has had free verse, prose poems, short-short fiction, and one-sentence stories published in numerous magazines and anthologies. He husbands a 30-acre wood south of Philomath and winters over in Mexico with his lover of forty years, Ana Maria. The free workshop will run from 7-8:30 pm in the McEntee Room of the Newport Public Library, 35 NW Nye Street, Newport. All are welcome. The Oregon Coast chapter of Willamette Writers offers its Writers-on-Writing workshops on the third Tuesday of each month.

8 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012


on stage

Expressly written for the holidays The Tillamook Association for the Performing Arts is gearing up for a winter of wordplay with its holiday show, “The Christmas Express” Set in the town of Holly, which is sorely in need of some Christmas spirit, the comedy is full of puns, oneliners, funny situations and nutty characters, as a stranger comes to town bringing surprises, and ultimately, hope to one and all. The cast includes, Brittany Durrer, Samantha Swindler, Barbi Fox, Deb Cherry, Joni Sauer-Folger, Richard Coon, Rob Buckingham, Robert Kratz and Mark Johnson. “The Christmas Express” is directed by Becki Wilhelm and produced by Debbie Coon. Performance dates are Dec. 7, 8, 14, 15, 21 and 22 at 7 pm and Dec. 9 and 16 at 2 pm. All performances are at The Barn Community Playhouse at 12th and Ivy in Tillamook. Tickets can be purchased in advance at Diamond Art Jewelers, 309 Main Ave. Tillamook, 503-842-7940.

Tellin’ lies in Pacific City A tale inspired by interviews with Pacific City dory men and women will take to the stage at the town’s Kiawanda Community Center on Saturday, Nov. 17. “Kickin’ Sand and Tellin’ Lies” is a fictional tale inspired by stories collected through a Linfield College project aimed at preserving the stories, voices and images of dory fishermen. The play, performed by Linfield students, follows a young fisherman as he gradually learns respect for the ocean, the dory fleet and fellow anglers. Set in Pacific City, the play opens with the Blessing of the Fleet, an annual event that kicks off the fishing season, and it references local landmarks such as Haystack Rock and the former Sunset West Restaurant and Bar. The production touches on environmental regulations, fishery management practices, gender issues and tensions between loggers and fishermen. The play was co-authored by Christopher Forrer, a senior theatre major at Linfield College and Linfield Professor Jackson Miller, who made use of more than 80 interviews gathered throughout two years. “We had so much great material from all the interviews,” Forrer said. “People who fish always have great stories. This is an intriguing piece of Oregon culture. Thirty or 40 years ago Pacific City was one of the top fishing ports on the West Coast. They’re out there catching so many fish that when they run the boat into the sand it just sinks because it’s so heavy.” Miller said the process of gathering the material gave them a vivid and intimate picture of life in Pacific City and in the dory community. “As a playwright, it’s been a unique opportunity,” he said. “It struck me how much fishing has impacted the people and how deeply personal some of their

experiences are. “Being a dory fisherman is no easy task,” he added. “They’ve all had experiences where they felt fearful for their lives. Almost everyone has a story about a big storm or mechanical problem or even seeing a shark, and they’re mindful of the risk when they go out to sea. We heard one story about fishermen who went out in their dory and spread the ashes of a friend who had died the season before. When you hear those kinds of stories it’s impossible not to be moved by them.” The play is sponsored by the Pacific City Arts Association and Pacific City Dorymen’s Association, and also supported by an Arts Build Communities grant from the Oregon Arts Commission. Linfield College students make up the cast, and the production is directed by Linfield Theatre Arts Professor Janet Gupton. The Pacific City showing is free and scheduled to begin at 7 pm at Kiawanda Community Center, 34600 Cape Kiwanda Drive, Pacific City. For ticket information for the McMinnville performances, including prices, visit www. linfield.edu/culture or call 503-883-2292. To see photographs and hear stories gathered during the Linfield project, go to http://digitalcommons.linfield.edu/dory.

Yachats show aims to help Maine-tain youth program A tale of love and loss in a mythical small town is set to grace the stage in Yachats, with the opening of “Almost, Maine” on Friday, Nov. 16. “Delightful. Imaginative,” said The Capital Times of Madison, Wis., of the play, written by John Cariani. “Sparkles with slivers of magic.” Performed by One of Us Productions at the Yachats Commons, “Almost, Maine” is a fund-raiser for Yachats Youth & Family Activities Program, Inc. The Nov. 16 opening night will feature hors d’oeuvres, wine and musical entertainment from Patty and Brian Egan before the play. Tickets for the fundraiser are $35. Call 541-547-4599 for reservations. Subsequent performances will take place on Nov. 17, 18, 23, 24, 25 and 30 as well as Dec. 1 and 2, with curtain going up at 7:30 pm on Fridays and Saturdays and 2 pm for Sunday matinees. Tickets are available at Touchstone Gallery, Toad Hall, Waldport Videos, Newport Performing Arts Center and at the door.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012 • 9


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10 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012


Tide Tables | Mo’s Restaurant | Lincoln City Q

5W¼[ UISM[ Q\ MI[a \W »KPQX QV¼ +WWSQM[ UISM PWTQLIa OQ^QVO M^MV UWZM [I\Q[NaQVO by Gretchen Ammerman FOR THE TODAY People flock to the six Mo’s restaurants along the Oregon Coast for their famous clam chowder, but that’s not the only way to try it. Mo’s gives away so much chowder that you can pretty much show up to any coastal event throughout the year to get a bowlful. “I love working for a company that not only encourages us to be good community stewards, but expects it,” said James Slentz, manager of the Lincoln City branch. Examples of Mo’s community spirit include the annual Fish & Chips for Firefighters, during which a dollar from the price of any dish containing cod, including Mo’s very popular fish tacos, is donated to local volunteer fire departments. The Mo’s kitchen even donates about six gallons of soup to the food bank every week. “It’s not the usual chowder,” said Slentz, “Chowder can’t be frozen, so we make a special soup just for them.” The biggest project of the year, however, is the annual North Lincoln Fire & Rescue District toy drive, with the restaurant’s involvement spearheaded by Kitchen Manager Lew Hartwell. “I got the idea for this right after my mom died,” he said. “She was always very involved with the community and had written a couple of kids books, so I thought we should be doing something for the kids in her honor. We were looking at the age group of four and up, because everybody buys for babies. We stayed away from

battery-operated toys and tried to go for more educational options, not just give them something to destroy.” Hartwell, who started at Mo’s as a dishwasher almost 15 years ago, said they have a great time with all parts of the drive, but especially the part where they get to shop for toys. “Picture a bunch of over-40year-olds let loose in a toy store with hundreds of dollars to spend, and you’ll get the idea,” he said. The first year of the drive, they raised $180 for their spending spree and the amount grew for many years. “Our best year we raised $1,800.” said Hartwell. “Then the economy started slowing down and people had less to give. Since we had less money to work with, and KB Toys, who always gave us great deals, had closed, we started buying bicycles to get the best bang for our buck. Last year we bought six bikes; two with training wheels for the smaller kids, and on up to road bikes for the 12 or 13 year olds.” He also hits up the Mo’s vendors throughout the year for gifts for the kids. This year’s donations include a home theatre system and a four-person tent. “Those are some great gifts for the older kids,” he said. It should be noted that helmets are provided for kids that get bikes, skateboards, or scooters since they are aiming to spread kindness, not concussions. In an effort to diversify their fundraising efforts and raise more dough, the Mo’s kitchen staff have started making great big chocolate chip cookies, which are sold at the counter for a dollar. “That’s kinda how we started this whole thing,” Hartwell said “I just started hitting people up for a dollar, now we’re still getting that dollar, but people are getting a fresh baked cookie in return.” Since Mo’s donates all the ingredients, it’s pure profit for the toy drive. “If the timing is right, you can get a cookie when it comes fresh from the oven and get a warm feeling in your heart and your stomach.”

Mo’s offers plenty of other ways to warm the stomach, especially during the winter months when you can enjoy the panoramic ocean views at almost every Mo’s restaurant on the coast without the possibility of frostbite. “Some of our signature dishes besides the chowder include our Boulliabaisse, our fish tacos and our calamari,” said Slentz. “We also have the freshest oysters around, since we get a delivery of Yaquina Bay oysters from Oregon Oyster Farms in Newport three times a week.” The Bouillabaisse is made with Oregon bay shrimp, salmon, cod, oysters, clams, and crab legs, simmered in a light tomato broth and served with garlic cheese bread. The fish taco meal is three corn tortillas filled with grilled cod and spicy cilantro cabbage. Most meals are served with a choice of Mo’s chowder, cabbage salad, coleslaw with shrimp, or shrimp dinner salad, and a choice of French fries, rice pilaf, or garlic mashed potatoes. But Mo’s clam chowder is still the hot ticket that people are even willing to travel for. “We had a couple from Montana who had spent their honeymoon on the Oregon Coast,” said Slentz. “They decided to spend an anniversary here so that they could visit us again, saying the drive from Montana wasn’t too far to go for a bowl of our chowder.” The Lincoln City Mo’s Restaurant, 860 SW 51st St. overlooking Siletz Bay, is one of six Mo’s on the north-central Oregon Coast. It’s open daily at 11 a.m. For more information, call 541-996-2535 or head to moschowder.com.

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012 • 11


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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012 • 13


on the cover

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Depoe Baykery’s Debi Degele

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At Thanksgiving, the turkey reigns supreme — dominating both the dining table and the minds of the cooks, who will often spend days basting, stuffing and otherwise furiously preparing for the grand bird’s entrance. But, when it comes to dessert, the Thanksgiving chef is more prepared to swallow their pride, dust the flour from their dialing finger and call in the professionals. “After the time they spent on the turkey and the stuffing and everything else they have to do, usually baking a pie is probably the last thing they want to do,” said Carl Obermeier of Bayfront Bakery & Deli in Garibaldi. Obermeier bakes traditional fruit pies as well as Thanksgiving favorites pumpkin and mincemeat to order and also keeps a few of the hot sellers in stock just in case any would-be home-bakers have a lastminute catastrophe. While there is no displacing the pumpkin pie as the go-to dessert for post-turkey indulgence, Oregon Coast bakers have a range of more adventurous options. Among the more unusual offerings are shoofly pie, a Pennsylvania Dutch treat made with molasses and custard, available at Lincoln ‘Artful Pies,’ at Bread & Roses City’s Rockfish Café. In Manzanita, the Bread and Ocean Bakery will fix you a pumpkin mousse parfait — ginger cookies layered with a pumpkin mousse and mascarpone whipping cream — while Depoe Baykery in Depoe Bay has a roasted sweet potato cheesecake that owner Ray Degele said takes just one taste to win taste buds. “People were kind of hesitant towards that one but, once they tried it, they were pleasantly surprised,” he said, adding that whether its chocolate mousse cake or chocolate peanut butter pie he and his wife, Debi, like to experiment with

their recipes. “We like to play around,” he said. “Have some fun with it.” Julie Barker of Bread and Ocean Bakery also likes to add a twist to traditional ingredients, whipping up pumpkin cheesecake, cranberry upside down cake and apple pie with a cheddar crust. “I’ll make traditional if someone requests it,’ she said, “but my tendency would be to try and switch it up a little bit.” Barker said it can be nice for stressed-out Thanksgiving cooks to have someone take on the sometimes-daunting task of fixing dessert. “Pies have always been intimidating to me before I started making them,” she said. Meanwhile, in Yachats, Blythe Collins of Bread & Roses said trying to keep an eye on different kitchen projects can be tricky, even for the professional. “If I try to do bread and pastry on the same day, I often end up with disaster,” she said. On her pastry days, Collins creates “artful pies,” intricately decorated desserts sold in small sizes at the bakery and available in larger sizes in the Thanksgiving flavors of pumpkin, apple and mincemeat. “People are already doing a lot of cooking in their oven at home,” said Kate Brown of Newport’s La Maison, which offers a range of traditional Thanksgiving desserts. “I think it’s just easier for them just to order a dessert, rather than cook that as well.” Perhaps the area’s most famous pie house, the Otis Café northeast of Lincoln City, adds Thanksgiving favorites pumpkin, mincemeat and pecan to its stable during the holiday period. For those in search of something different, the café offers a pumpkin roll — a flat sheet of pumpkin

14 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012

bread rolled to surround a cream cheese filling. Nicole Harrison of the Grateful Bread Bakery in Pacific City, whose offerings include Rustic peach blueberry pie and cinnamon roll bread pudding, said many cooks will pick up the phone rather than the mixer in order to be assured of a quality product. For the Rockfish Bakery’s Danelle Lochrie, quality starts with the ingredients. The Rockfish has sourced the apples for this year’s apple pies from an orchard in McMinnville and Lochrie is roasting the pumpkins for the bakery’s pumpkin pies herself. Local pie legend Betty Taunton of Depoe Bay’s Spouting Horn, also touts the importance of ingredients, like the mincemeat pie filling that she has been hand making for the past 30 or 40 years to an old Scottish recipe that calls for real beef and suet — along with healthy measures of brandy and sherry. Also offering a real-meat mincemeat is Captain


Eight pieces, coming up – at Captain Dan’s.

Dan’s Pirate Pastry in Lincoln City, with Kathy and Dan Draper again throwing a dash of brandy into the mix. Brandy also features prominently in the couple’s signature whipping cream, served with the deluxe versions of their pumkin and pecan pies. “Because we are pirates, we like to put booze in them,� Kathy Draper said. Draper said Thanksgiving is one of the bakery’s busiest times of year, with pies occupying a special place in the hearts of those who come to the coast for the holidays. “Pies are such comfort food,� she said, “People just get real warm and fuzzy and really want comfort food and want family and friends around.� Along with her fellow coastal bakers, Draper is ready to give Thanksgiving visitors a holiday to remember, with treats like Grandma’s pirate apple pie, which sees handmade caramel sauce poured over a lattice pastry lid. “Pies are our favorite thing to make,� she said, “so I’m a happy camper.�

Secrets of the squash With everyone’s favorite orange gourd topping the list of Thanksgiving dessert requests at just about every bakery on the coast, the TODAY asked bakers to share their secrets for making the perfect pumpkin pie. “There’s probably as many different ways to make a pumpkin pie as there are people,� said Carl Obermeier of Garibaldi’s Bayfront Bakery & Deli. Obermeier said his trick is to use non-fat evaporated milk for the pie filling, something he said keeps the pie

Flour power, at the RockďŹ sh Bakery.

from cracking when cooked. Ray Degele of Depoe Baykery in Depoe Bay said the trick to keep your pie from cracking is to avoid overcooking, keeping the filling creamy when the pie comes out of the oven. Kathy Draper of Captain Dan’s Pirate Pastry in Lincoln City said she lets the pie innards sit for a few days in the fridge to allow the flavors to meld together before adding them to the shell. In Yachats, Blythe Collins of Bread & Roses said aspiring pie-makers should pay attention to their spice cabinets. “Spices make a real difference and too much clove is a mistake,� she said. “You can double up on cinnamon, but be careful on the cloves.� For Danelle Lochrie of Lincoln City’s Rockfish Bakery, the journey toward a perfect pie starts with great gourds. “The best pumpkin you can get will make the best pie,� she said. Julie Barker of Bread and Ocean in Manzanita agreed, saying she uses only organic pumpkins for her recipes. Barker said bakers also need to keep an eye on their spice balance to make sure no one flavor overpowers the pie. Kate Brown of La Maison in Newport said it comes down to crust. “If you don’t have a good crust then no matter what your pie is, it’s probably not going to be the best pie you’ve ever had,� Crust also topped the list for Nicole Harrison of Grateful Bread in Pacific City, who said a perfect pie shell requires two things. “Love,� she said, “and butter.�

Create your own

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Thanksgiving comes on the earliest possible date this year, with the fourth Thursday in falling on Nov. 22 — all the more reason to order your pies early. Here’s how much notice some of the coast’s bakers need to keep you sweet this holiday season Bread and Ocean, Manzanita, need about a week – 503-368-5823 Bayfront Bakery & Deli, Garibaldi, like at least two days, but will have some pies in stock —503-322-3787 Grateful Bread, PaciďŹ c City, like orders by Sunday, Nov. 18 — 503-965-7337 The Otis CafĂŠ, Otis, can do 24 hours’ notice but the sooner the better — 541-994-2813 RockďŹ sh Bakery, Lincoln City, taking orders up to Sunday, Nov. 18, for pick up on Wednesday, Nov. 21, — 541996-1006 Captain Dan’s Pirate Pastry, Lincoln City, will take orders up to Tuesday, Nov. 20 — 541-996-4600 Depoe Baykery, Depoe Bay, like a couple or three days but have an assortment of pies in stock — 541-961-6405 Spouting Horn, Depoe Bay, need about a week — 541-765-2261 La Maison, Newport, need 24 hours’ notice — 541-265-8812 Bread & Roses, Yachats, needs orders “darn soonâ€? — 541-547-4454

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012 • 15


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Beach Bark auction

Yachats Commons Opening night of “Almost, Maine�, by One of Us Productions; a play about love and loss in a mythical small town. There will be hors d’oeuvres, wine and musical entertainment from Patty and Brian Egan before the play. A fundraiser for Yachats Youth & Family Activities Program. 6:30 pm at 441 Hwy. 101, Yachats. Tickets $35. Call 541-547-4599 to reserve your spot.

The Eventuary • Lincoln City What do you get if you combine a community’s love of dogs with a desire to clear out its collective garage? The Beach Bark auction, that’s what. Bring an item, buy an item, with all proceeds going toward the care of indigent pets in North Lincoln County. Starting at Noon and running all day, Hwy. 101 and SW Fleet Street. For more information, call 541-996-3810. Restoration Pow-Wow Chinook Winds Casino Resort • Lincoln City Join the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians as members celebrate the 35th anniversary of the restoration of Tribal status. The Siletz Tribe was terminated from federal recognition in August 1954 and not restored until 1977. This free event begins with a grand entry and features American Indian vendors with jewelry, beadwork and other items for sale throughout the day. 6 pm at 1777 NW 44th Street, Lincoln City.

Oregon Coast Chamber Orchestra Yachats Community Presbyterian Church Songs from “Brigadoon� and two originals by Charles Perkins will highlight the orchestra’s fall concert. $10. 7 pm at Hwy. 101 between 6th and 7th streets, 541-997-6770.

“The Producers�

Williams & Ree

Chinook Winds Casino Resort Billed as “The Indian and the White Guy,� Bruce Williams and Terry Ree have packed casinos, clubs and arenas from Niagara Falls to Las Vegas for the past 40 years with their Contrib fast-paced act that intersperses comedy with songs. u glass art ted photo of Tickets $5 to $15. 8 pm at 1777 NW 44th Street, Lincoln a See listi produced by piece of Linc City. Call 1-800-CHINOOK for more information. ng, Nov MorArt oln City . . 17.

Native nursery work day Camp Westwind • Cascade Head Help Westwind Stewardship Group create a plant nursery to provide native species for local habitat restoration projects. Volunteers will be asked to help with installation of fencing to protect plants, construction of planting beds and distribution of mulch material. 9 am-3 pm at the Westwind Stewardship Group site, turn west off Highway 101 on to North Fraser Road.

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Lincoln City Community Center Patterned after the popular television show, “The Amazing Race,� this fundraising event will test your skill and creativity as you comb the hidden corners of Lincoln City to complete challenges and find clues. $80 per four-person team, and there is no age limit. Register at the community center, 2150 NE Oar Place, or call Karl McShane, recreation supervisor, at 541-994-2131.

The Met: Live in HD

Lincoln City beaches Those stealthy float fairies will be working overtime this weekend, dropping 100 hand-crafted glass art pieces along the beaches from Roads End to Cutler City. Keep your eyes peeled for glass floats as well as sand dollars or crabs hidden above the high tide line. For more information, call 1-800-452-2151 or go to www.oregoncoast.org.

“Kickin’ Sand and Tellin’ Lies�

Kiawanda Community Center • Pacific City Students from Linfield College stage a free performance of a play inspired by stories from dory men and women in Pacific City. The tale, based on some 80 interview collected throughout two years, tells the story of a young man who learns respect for the ocean and his fellow fishermen. 7 pm at 34600 Cape Kiwanda Drive, Pacific City.

Salmon Release Walk Tillamook Forest Center • Tillamook Help tip the scales in the salmon’s favor by joining Forestry Department staff in releasing 500 baby salmon into Jones Creek. The 5-minute walk takes place rain or shine and is preceded by a short talk on the life cycle of Oregon’s iconic fish. 1 pm, 45500 Wilson River Highway, Tillamook. For more information, call 503-815-6803 or go to www.tillamookforestcenter.org.

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Things Rich & Strange • Newport Violet Young promises a pathway to inner knowing using stones, crystals and animal fetishes. Participants are asked to focus on an idea or question while choosing from a bag of 50 such items. At the end of the session each client receives a small amulet bag holding chips of stone that match their choices. $35. Noon-7 pm, 255 NW Coast Street, Nye Beach. For appointments, call 541-265-3600.

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Spotlight on John Bradley

Turkey Trot

Community Christmas tree lighting

Salishan Spa & Golf Resort • Gleneden Beach In the 10 am presentation at the Oregon Coast Learning Institute, Jerry Higley will present an investigation of the dual nature of Mark Twain’s life and fictions, with emphasis on some of the lesser known pieces that fill in the darker side of his vision and experience. In the 1 pm presentation “Are the Oceans Out of Balance?â€? Oregon Coast Aquarium aquarist Evonne Mochon-Collura will discuss claims of jellyfish invasions as a response to changing ocean chemistry and how these changes might affect our coastal waters. Annual membership is $75, but guests are always welcome to visit. For more information, go to www.ocli.us or call 541-764-2444 or 541-764-2214.

Yaquina Art Association Gallery • Newport The association spotlights the work of 91-year-old Bradley, who took up watercolors in his mid-60s and recently won the Watercolor Society of Oregon’s gold award. Bradley’s work will be highlighted from Nov. 17 to Nov. 30. 11 am to 4 pm, 789 NW Beach Drive in the Nye Beach Turnaround in Newport.

Port of Newport Marina Work up an appetite for Thanksgiving dinner with a 5k or 10k run (or walk). Little turkeys can take part in the kids’ run. All proceeds go toward the Newport Food Pantry. Check the event’s Facebook page for more details. 9 am, RV Park Activities Room, 2120 SE Marine Drive, Newport.

Lincoln City Cultural Center Carols, games and Christmas treats will accompany the lighting of the tree on the front lawn of the cultural center. 5 pm, 540 N.E. Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-9994.

Bay City Arts Center It’s a well known fact that nothing goes better with pancakes than skullduggery. Enjoy both at this all-you-can eat event, which will be followed by preparations for a secret entry into the Festival of Trees contest. $5 for nonmembers, $4 for members, children under 12 half price. 8 am-noon, 5680 A Street, Bay City, 503 377 9620.

Salmon Release Walk

Tillamook Forest Center • Tillamook See Nov. 17 listing.

Beltaine

Writers-on-Writing workshop

Newport Public Library Steve Jones, founding co-director of the Oregon Writing Project at Wil- TODAY photo of Evonne lamette University, will lead a workshop on reading and writing prose Mochon-Collura. See Nov. 20. poetry at the Newport Public Library. Attendees can look forward to reading several pithy prose poems and trying their hand at playfully writing one or two. 7-8:30 pm in the McEntee Room, 35 NW Nye Street, Newport.

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6$785'$< 129 30 “It’s Better at the Beachâ€? Aces Bar & Grill • 3245 NE 50th Street • Lincoln City • (541) 994-8232 16 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012

Wreath-making workshop Tillamook Forestry Center Make your own holiday wreath using natural materials from the forest. Visitors can choose between making a wreath, at a cost of $12, or a cone bird feeder for $3. 11 am and 1:30 pm on Friday, Nov. 23, Saturday, Nov. 24, and Sunday, Nov. 25, 45500 Wilson River Highway, Tillamook. Registration is required. Call 1-866-930-4646, visit www.tillamookforestcenter.org or stop by the center.

Get listed! Do you know what we’re thankful for? Your calendar submissions! Email them to news@oregoncoasttoday.com, or use our online submission form, from the calendar page at oregoncoasttoday.com.

OUT on the Oregon Coast

Green Salmon • Yachats All LGBT Women are invited to meet for coffee and informal discussion. 9 am at 220 Hwy. 101.

Beach cleanup

North Lincoln County Historical Museum • Lincoln City The remains of Kennewick Man, found on the banks of the Columbia River in 1996 are estimated to be some 9,000 years old. If it is true that these human remains are thousands of years old, and are not Native American, then who was Kennewick Man? Learn more in this free presentation by Portland State University Professor Cynthia-Lou Coleman, PhD. 1 pm at 4907 SW Hwy. 101 in Lincoln City. Call Anne Hall at 541-996-6614 for more information.

Mark Twain meets jellyfish

Pancake breakfast

Newport Visual Arts Center Writers on the Edge presents the award-winning journalist and author of the New York Times Bestseller, “Blackbird: A Childhood Lost and Found.� Open mic following the presentation. 7 pm, 777 Beach Drive, Newport. General admission $6. Students are admitted free. For more details go to www.writersontheedge.org.

Kennewick Man

Newport Visual Arts Center Photographer Donna McCoy will be giving a presentation on how to create close-up floral images without the need for specialized equipment. 7 pm in the upstairs classroom of the Newport Visual Art Center, 777 NW Beach Drive, Newport. St. Steven’s Episcopal Church • Newport A documentary by renowned Guatemalan filmmaker Luis Argueta, telling the story of the 2008 immigration raid of Agriprocessors, the largest kosher meat-processing plant in the nation, which led to defendants being tried in groups of 10. Screened by the Immigration Information Response Team. 7 pm, 9th and Hurbert in Newport.

Memoirist Jennifer Lauck

South Beach State Park • Newport Dress for the weather to take part in this cleanup sponsored by the Oregon Coast Community College Student Council & the Newport chapter of the Surfrider Foundation. 10 am to 1 pm. Meet at the park’s day use area, off Highway 101, just south of Newport.

Up close and floral

Film Screening: AbUSed

Senior Social

Hoffman Center • Manzanita If the prospect of filling the page leaves you speechless, help is at hand in the form of this workshop from Jen Violi, aimed at helping both new and established writers unleash their truest writing. Violi also speaks at 7 pm. $50. 10 am-3 pm, 594 Laneda Avenue.

Newport Public Library Charlie Plybon, Oregon field manager of the Surfrider Foundation, will give a presentation on marine debris and pollution. The focus will be the effects on cetaceans (whales, dolphins, porpoises) and their ecosystem as well as “What can I do?� 1 p.m. 35 NW Nye, Newport. For more information, contact Joy Primrose, American Cetacean Society Oregon Chapter President 541-5178754, marine_lover4ever@yahoo.com.

Tillamook High School The North Oregon Coast Symphony will open its 2012-2013 Season with the concert “Overture Oeuvresâ€? including works by Mozart, Beethoven, Rossini, Wagner, von SuppĂŠ and Sibelius. 3 pm, at the high school auditorium, 2605 12th Street, Tillamook.

Lincoln City Cultural Center An afternoon of Celtic and traditional music, featuring dual hammered dulcimers, guitar, flute and marimbula. Want to hear a sample before you go? Go to www.beltainemusic.com. Tickets are $10 in advance $12 at the door. Call 541-994-9994 to reserve. 2 pm, at 540 NE Hwy. 101.

Yaquina Head Lighthouse • Newport Join Wayne Hoffman of Yaquina Birders & Naturalists for a field trip on the Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area, looking out for loons, scoters, pelicans, shearwaters, grebes, ducks and birds of prey. 9 am, meeting in the parking lot by the lighthouse. For more information call 541-961-1307.

“Find your voice�

Marine debris: what can I do?

An overture to Tillamook

Celtic music by Beltaine

Birding Field Trip to Yaquina Head

Lincoln City Senior Center In this first ever Senior Social, the Community Center Lunchroom will be filled with the music of Andy Williams. Dancing is encouraged, but don’t spill your punch or drop your snacks. Be sure to get your ticket for the door prize when you arrive. Free, but donations accepted. 6-8 pm, 2150 NE Oar Place, Lincoln City.

Newport Performing Arts Center The Oregon Coast Council for the Arts presents the Metropolitan Opera’s performance of Verdi’s Otello via High Definition satellite broadcast from the Metropolitan Opera in New York. Admission $20 adult/$17 senior/$10 TODAY photo student. 10 am - 1:30 pm. 777 West Olive of tsunami debris. Street, Newport.

Special glass drop

Newport Performing Arts Center The Porthole Players present Mel Books’ madcap tale of a Broadway production where everything goes catastrophically right. Admission $16 adult/$14 senior & students. 7 pm, 777 West Olive Street, Newport.

TODAY photo

“The Race: Scavenger Hunt Edition�

Sacred Stone Intuitive Readings

VDW ‡ QRYHPEHU “The Tempestâ€? by AdĂŠs Newport Performing Arts Center The Oregon Coast Council for the Arts presents this English-language opera based on Shakespeare’s final play via High Definition satellite broadcast from the Metropolitan Opera in New York. 10am, 777 W. Olive Street, Newport. $20 for adults, $17 for seniors and $10 for students. Tickets are available at the Performing Arts Center Box Office or by calling 541-265-2787, Monday to Friday, 9 am–5 pm.

Newport Drum Circle Don Davis Park • Newport Free and family friendly; all ages and skill levels welcome. Bring a drum or borrow one from the group. 2-4 pm in the gazebo at Don Davis Park, at the foot of Olive Street, in Newport.

The Four Freshman

VXQ ‡ QRY The Four Freshmen Tillamook High School Performing for 60 years and still going strong? What is this, the Rolling Stones? Well, not quite. Since the Freshmen notched their first hit in 1952, the group has seen a continual rotation of members, keeping the sound fresh. The current foursome, relative whippersnappers compared to Jagger and co., have been together for 10 years. 7:30 p.m. Don Whitney Auditorium, 2605 12th Street. Advance tickets $25 for adults and $20 for students. On the door, $30 for adults and $25 for students. Call 503-8422078.

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#/!34 s DISCOVERNEWPORT COM 18 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012


lively

The definition of culture

Think you have to choose between your sandals and your tux? Think again. By Patrick Alexander Oregon Coast TODAY

Real estate agents have sometimes been known to put the most positive possible spin on the properties they have for sale, but if some charming character says they can find you a home within walking distance of both the Pacific Ocean and The Metropolitan Opera in New York, they might want to think twice before filing a complaint. Sounds like a great deal, but basic geography tells us either that we are in for one long walk or that one of these things is going to have to move. And while the Pacific Ocean is marvelous, majestic and aweinspiring it’s also rather tricky to shift, meaning it’s the Met that’s going to have to move to make this salesman’s claim ring true. And move the Met does, using satellites to broadcast live, high-definition footage of selected operas to cinemas and other venues across the U.S. and around the world. Now in its sixth year, “The Met: Live in HD” reaches some 1,700 venues in 54 counties. Among those, and one of just seven in Oregon is the Newport Performing Arts Center, or PAC, making it possible to grab a dose of world-class opera right after a morning stroll on the beach. Rather than seeing singers walking the stage, the audience watches on a massive cinema screen, custom made to fit the proscenium arch that separates the stage from the auditorium in the PAC’s Silverman Theater. The action on the screen comes courtesy of 10 cameras at the Metropolitan Opera House in Lincoln Center, which capture the performance live from a variety of angles, with close ups and wide shots. The signal is then beamed via satellite to receiving dish at the PAC. “If someone takes a face plant on stage you get to see it in Newport, Oregon” PAC Manager Jan Eastman said. The 2012-13 season marks the third year of the PAC’s status as a Met opera venue, something Eastman said was made possible by a donation from local Opera fan Jeannette B. Hofer. “We were very, very fortunate that we had a donor who decided that they really wanted that technology here in the building,” she said. As well as the custom-made screen, that technology includes a host of electronic equipment as From ‘The Tempest’

well as two satellite dishes to ensure a continuous signal in the event that one malfunctions. “The Met is very particular,” she said. “You can’t just go out to some place and buy a couple of satellite dishes and a little projection machine and do it.” “They work very hard at their end to make sure that what you are getting is as close as possible to what people in New York are getting,” she added. While the experience might be close to the real thing, the ticket prices are anything but – with seats priced at $20 for adults, $17 for seniors and $10 for students. By comparison, getting seated front and center at the Metropolitan Opera House will set you back somewhere in the region of $400. In the Big Apple, $20 might just get you a discounted seat in the nosebleeds. From ‘O The PAC is the only tello’ Met opera venue on the Oregon Coast, with the others being located in Springfield, Medford and the Portland area, which boasts three. Eastman said it draws people from along the coast as well as visitors from inland, who want to pair their cultural getaway with a trip to the beach. The PAC’s Silverman Theater has a seating capacity just shy of 400 and Eastman said a good crowd for an opera performance is between 150 and 200, with people generally choosing seats in the back section of the auditorium to get the best view of the screen. For big-name operas, however, the venue has been known to sell out and sometimes has enough demand to justify a repeat performance of the live recording. Eastman said most of the venues for the HD broadcasts are movie theaters that are glad to have something to show on Saturday mornings and are always able to show the performances live. In contrast, community theater rehearsals sometimes mean the PAC’s auditorium is unavailable when the curtain goes up in New York City, meaning the venue will show the

live-taped performance at a later date. Such is the case with the PAC’s next offering, Verdi’s “Otello,” the live performance of which clashed with another event in October. For the Oregon Coast, the curtain will rise at 10 am on Saturday, Nov. 17. The next week, coastal viewers will be able to join audiences in New York City and around the world to take in “The Tempest,” by British composer Thomas Adès, live. This event is sponsored in part by the Jeannette B. Hofer Fund of the Oregon Community Foundation, Anonymous, the City of Newport, the Oregon Coast Council for the Arts, Oregon Arts Commission, and the National Endowment for the Arts. In New York the Metropolitan Opera Live in HD series is made possible by a grant from the Neubauer Family Foundation, Bloomberg, and Toll Brothers. Tickets are available at the Performing Arts Center Box Office or by calling 541-265-2787, Monday through Friday, 9 am to 5 pm.

Verdi’s “Otello” Nov. 17 at 10 am Verdi’s Shakespearean masterpiece is back at the Met, starring a “chilling and touching” Johan Botha in the title role. Renée Fleming as Desdemona is “sublime” and “knows exactly how to spin the gentle lines of the ‘Willow Song’ and ‘Ave Maria’ so that they softly fill the hall”. Falk Struckmann is “excellent throughout as Iago…blessed with a luxuriant baritone that commands attention”. Semyon Bychkov conducts. Approximate run time 3:27.

“The Tempest” by Adès Nov. 24 at 10 am British composer Thomas Adès conducts the Met premiere of his contemporary masterpiece The Tempest, an Englishlanguage opera based on Shakespeare’s final play. In the Met’s fantastical new production by Robert Lepage, Simon Keenlyside leads the cast as the exiled magician Prospero, a role he created at the opera’s 2004 world premiere. The opera also stars Isabel Leonard as Prospero’s daughter, Miranda; Alek Shrader as the shipwrecked prince, Ferdinand; Alan Oke as the monstrous island native Caliban; and Audrey Luna in the stratospheric coloratura role of the air spirit Ariel. Soprano Deborah Voigt hosts the transmission and conducts backstage interviews with the stars. Approximate run time 3:00. For a full list of the 2012-13 HD season, go to http://www. metoperafamily.org.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012 • 19


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potpourri

The Beach Bark: No fleas at this market

That antique lamp in the corner, the one you inherited from Great Aunt is here, and there’s no better way to fight off the damp chill than with that warm and Myrtle? It may not illuminate the room the way you’d like it to but it fuzzy feeling that comes from donating to a cause as fundamentally awesome as helping could light up the life of an Oregon Coast pet in need. otherwise helpless animals,” Hansen said. “Our volunteer team is ready to head out and The Beach Bark, Lincoln City’s annual celebration of all things canine, pick up items that businesses might want to donate for the auction — whether they’re What: Beach Bark Auction & Party is back. This year, the event is in the form of a charity auction, scheduled gift certificates, toys, tools, appliances, automobiles, home furnishings — or anything for Saturday, Nov. 17. As with every Beach Bark, the goal is to raise funds in-between.” Why: A fundraiser for vet to pay for emergency veterinary care for pets in need. Donations are half of the equation for a successful auction. The other half ? Purchases. care for pets in need The event kicks off at noon on Saturday. There will be a hot dog and “We hope everyone will join us for the auction itself,” Kip said. “We’ll start at noon with When: Saturday, Nov. 17 nacho bar running throughout the day. The proceeds of food sales will be the silent auction, and some silent auction items will close at different points during the from noon ‘til it’s gone donated to the Beach Bark Fund. By 1 pm, auctioneers Col. Bob Duby afternoon, so bidders won’t need Where: The Eventuary, SW and Roger Robertson will be working the floor at the Eventuary, the to come back late at night to score Fleet & Hwy. 101, Lincoln charming new event center that once was home to Pacific View Memothat perfect item. And, as with City rial Chapel. The auction will run throughout the day, “or until everything’s every Beach Bark event, pets are FMI: 541-996-3810 gone,” said organizer Kip Ward. welcome any time.” “The Beach Bark raised about $15,000 last year,” said Katrica Hansen, If you can’t deliver your donaone of the founders of the ‘Bark and co-owner of Lincoln City’s Historic tions to the Anchor, have no Anchor Inn and the Eventuary. “But the fund is already running low, and it’s critical that we rally fear. Beach Bark volunteers stand ready the support of this wonderful community yet again, to help ensure no North Lincoln County pet to pick up your donations and prep them suffers needlessly simply due to their owner’s inability to pay for critical veterinary care.” for the auction for you. To schedule a Past Beach Barks have featured a beach walk as the primary fundraiser, but to ensure against pickup, call the Anchor at 541-996weather-related problems, this year’s event is built around an all-day auction at the Eventuary, 3810. To learn more about the auction, located just north of Lincoln City’s city hall complex, on Hwy. 101. Silent and oral auctions will visit the Beach Bark on Facebook. be running all day for antiques and collectibles as well as new items of all sorts, donated by generThe Beach Bark auction and party ous local merchants. kicks off at noon Saturday, Nov. 16, at “We’re hoping area residents – as well as businesses of all shapes and sizes – will step up to the Eventuary, located at SW Fleet help out in this fun and worthwhile event,” said Ward, Katrica’s husband and another Beach Bark along Hwy. 101 in Lincoln City, next founder. to Space Age Fuels. Parking is availIndividuals with antiques or collectibles to donate can bring them to the Historic Anchor Inn able at US Bank. For more informain Lincoln City any time between now and the morning of Nov. 17, the day of the auction. “Fall tion, call 541-996-3810.

if you go

Yaquina artists honor late bloomer Award-winning artist, John Bradley will be the spotlight artist for the Yaquina Art Association Gallery from Nov. 17-30 Bradley was born in France, the son of an American soldier and moved to the U.S. when he was 10 years old. A dentist by profession, he didn’t begin watercolors until after retiring in his mid 60s. Now 91, he recently received the Gold Award in the Watercolor Society of Oregon. Bradley, who moved to Waldport 30 years ago, has also won international photography awards and taken and enjoyed sculpture classes. He takes turns teaching classes in the Monday Morning Watercolor class offered through the Yaquina Art Association from 9-11 am. The gallery is located at 789 NW Beach Drive in the Nye Beach Turnaround in Newport and is open from 11 am to 4 pm.

A lesson for budding photographers Georgia O’Keeffe was famous for her larger-than-life paintings of flower blossoms and, in honor of the 125th anniversary of her birth, photographer Donna McCoy will be giving a presentation on how to create close-up floral images with a camera. “Contained in a single flower are hundreds of interesting images to be made,” she said. “All it takes is the time to look and discover.” Along with a close-up photography demonstration, McCoy will share some inspiration and quotes from O’Keeffe. Hosted by the Yaquina Art Association Photographers, the meeting and demonstration will be held at 7 pm Monday, Nov. 19, in the upstairs classroom of the Newport Visual Art Center, 777 NW Beach Drive, Newport.

Symphony hoping to clean up with home tour For many people, holidays signal one thing — a frantic scramble of dusting, vacuuming and scrubbing aimed at getting the house halfway presentable before the in-laws arrive. If the arrival of Aunt Beryl is causing that much stress for most of us, imagine what Newport Symphony Orchestra supporters are going through as they prepare to present their abodes for public inspection in the Holiday Home Tour.

The fundraising event will see four homes open their doors, inviting people to view their holiday decorations, hear music fitting the occasion and indulge in flavors of the season at the tour’s bake sale. The tour will feature homes perched on the Beverly Beach Bluffs, peering at the ocean from Agate Beach, and overlooking Newport’s Yaquina Bay. The Beverly Beach home will have a decorative theme combining traditional elegance with a touch of whimsy. A 12-foot flocked tree with large red and white floral and crystal accents will be the centerpiece. Meanwhile, the Beach Cottage Home built in 1936 has been expanded and updated by the owners to include a third story “tower” that affords a spectacular ocean view of Agate Beach. Decorated by Shannon Rackowski of ReDo Designs, this home will display an eclectic Santa theme. Next door is the Ernest Bloch House — now named Sea Krest Lodge by its current owner, the Salem First Baptist Church — which was once home to renowned Swiss-American composer Ernest Bloch. Large fir trees surround the house with its stunning view of Agate Beach and the Pacific Ocean. Decorator Betty Stier will create a musical theme with red and gold accents as a tribute to the Newport Symphony. Special wreaths created by Charisma Gifts of Nye Beach will also adorn the house. Lastly, the bay view home with its panoramic view of Yaquina Bay will be decorated with a nautical theme of shimmering blues, greens, and silver befitting the holiday season. The tour will take place from 10 am-4 pm on Saturday, Dec. 8, and from noon- 4pm on Sunday, Dec. 9. Singers and musicians will provide entertainment both days and visitors will be able to buy holiday treats from a bake sale as well as the limited edition wine created by Flying Dutchman. Tickets are $18 per person in advance and $20 the days of the tour, with all proceeds benefiting the Newport Symphony Orchestra. Tickets will go on sale Nov. 1 at JC Markets in Newport and Toledo and at the Newport Performing Arts Center box office. Tickets will be available at the Ernest Bloch House located at the south end of the Roby’s parking area on Hwy. 101 the days of the tour. For details, call 541-574-0899 or email sealavrakas@yahoo.com.

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012 • 21


coast culture Restoration Pow-Wow celebrates Tribe’s achievements The Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians will celebrate the 35th anniversary of its return to federally recognized Tribal status with its annual Restoration Pow-Wow on Nov. 17 at Chinook Winds Casino Resort. This free event begins with a grand entry at 6 pm. American Indian vendors will be available throughout the day, selling jewelry, beadwork and other items. The Siletz Tribe was terminated from federal recognition in 1954 but, by the late 1960s, it became apparent that the only way to preserve and revitalize Siletz Tribal sovereignty, community and culture was for the Tribe to regain its Tribal status with the United States. In November 1977, after years of intense lobbying, Congress and President Jimmy Carter approved Public Law 95-195, which reinstated recognition of the Siletz as a federal Indian Tribe. The Siletz Tribe was the second in the nation – and the first in Oregon – to achieve restoration. Since restoration the Tribe has opened a health clinic, a childcare center, a fitness center and a recreation center as well as building more than 100 homes for Tribal members. The Tribe also operates a number of businesses, most notably Chinook Winds Casino Resort, which, together with its Tribal positions has allowed the Siletz Tribe to become the largest employer in Lincoln County. The Tribe also played a lead role in opening Siletz Valley School and the Siletz Valley Early College and has distributed more than $10.1 million through the Siletz Tribal Charitable Contribution Fund and other Tribal resources.

The controversy of Kennewick Man A mystery that goes to the heart of the concepts of race and the peopling of America will be laid out at the North Lincoln County Historical Museum on Saturday, Nov. 17. The controversy of Kennewick Man began with the discovery of human remains along the banks of the Columbia River in Kennewick,

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Wash., more than a decade ago. An independent archaeologist, working on contract to the local coroner, decided the bones were ancient but might not be Native American. He described them as “Caucasoid� and sent a piece of bone to a laboratory to be dated. The final date indicated an age of 9,000 years, making Kennewick Man one of the oldest and most complete skeletons found in the Americas. If it is true that these human remains are thousands of years old, and are not Native American, then who was Kennewick Man? What can his remains tell us about modern concepts of “race� and the story of the peopling of America? How does the question of “race� affect the claims by Native Americans for repatriation and reburial of the remains? Addressing these questions is Portland State University Professor Cynthia-Lou Coleman, PhD, who has held Cynthia-Lou Coleman fellowships with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian. Her areas of inquiry focus on the social construction of science in mainstream discourse and the effects of framing on bio-political policies that impact American Indian communities. This free, public program will examine the discourse surrounding these questions as well as providing insight into the Native American point of view. The event will begin at 1 pm, at the museum, 4907 SW Hwy. 101 in Lincoln City. Call Anne Hall at 541-996-6614 for more information.

Saturday Morning Cinema Saturday, Nov. 17 ȌȾɆɀȚɂȚ Č?ȽȚɈɆȽȡȟ Č– ČžÉ Č˝É€ ȣȾɂɂȽɂȝɇ

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LIVE MUSIC '6-- #"3 t 100- t -055&3: 1343 NW Hwy. 101 -JODPMO $JUZ r 22 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012 • 23


Lincoln City: The RACE

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Test your skill and creativity as you comb the hidden corners of Lincoln City to complete challenges and ďŹ nd clues! $80/four-person team, and there is no age limit. Register today at the Lincoln City Community Center, 2150 NE Oar Place, or call Karl McShane, recreation supervisor, at 541-994-2131.

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24 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012


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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012 • 25


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6:55 a.m. 7:45 a.m. 8:37 a.m. 9:35 a.m. 10:42 a.m. 11:55 a.m. 12:07 a.m. 1:04 a.m.

Siletz Bay, Lincoln City Thurs., Nov. 15 Fri., Nov. 16 Sat., Nov. 17 Sun., Nov. 18 Mon., Nov. 19 Tues., Nov. 20 Wed., Nov. 21 Thurs., Nov. 22

6:53 a.m. 7:45 a.m. 8:42 a.m. 9:46 a.m. 10:59 a.m. --12:25 a.m. 1:23 a.m.

Yaquina Bay, Newport Thurs., Nov. 15 Fri., Nov. 16 Sat., Nov. 17 Sun., Nov. 18 Mon., Nov. 19 Tues., Nov. 20 Wed., Nov. 21 Thurs., Nov. 22

6:25 a.m. 7:16 a.m. 8:10 a.m. 9:10 a.m. 10:18 a.m. 11:35 a.m. --12:45 a.m.

Alsea Bay, Waldport Thurs. Nov. 15 Fri., Nov. 16 Sat., Nov 17 Sun., Nov. 18 Mon., Nov. 19 Tues., Nov. 20 Wed., Nov. 21 Thurs., Nov. 22

6:44 a.m. 7:37 a.m. 8:31 a.m. 9:32 a.m. 10:42 a.m. 11:59 a.m. 12:09 a.m. 1:08 a.m.

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1.9 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.1 -0.6 1.0

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Low Tides

2.7 2.8 3.0 3.2 3.3 3.1 -1.7

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Bold = Minus Tides. Tide tables are for recreational use. If you’re piloting the “Costa Concordia IIâ€? in front of your college roommate’s oceanfront bungalow at Otter Crest of 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 seal pups or other marine mammals. Japanese Tsunami Debris Info: Information on signiďŹ cant marine debris sightings on the coast can be reported to the NOAA Marine Debris Program at DisasterDebris@noaa.gov.

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Tillamook Bay, Garibaldi

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26 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012


Edited by Will Shortz ACROSS

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20

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23

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26

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24 27

28

32

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29

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33 38

39

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43

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48 52

53

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50 55

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32 Attempt 34 Girl Scout offering 35 Best 36 Old-hat 38 Tyrant Amin 39 Animation collectible 43 Silver screen swashbuckler

44 Verdi opera set in Aragon

53 Soap actress Sofer

46 ___ ball

54 Muffin ingredient

47 Certain gasket 49 Draw a bead on

55 Not finalized, at law

51 N.C.A.A. football 58 Profs’ aides champs of ’09 and ’11 59 Metal in 60-Across’s 52 Citation motto shortener

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012 • 27


in concert Brigadoon leads the charge in Yachats

Beltaine out some Celtic tunes In a world where everyone seems to play guitar, violins are old hat and pianos ten a penny, there’s only one instrument that will make you stand out from the crowd — a dual-hammered dulcimer. Looking like the offspring of a xylophone and a harp, the dulcimer consists of a board with strings stretched across it, which are coaxed into life by a player wielding two small hammers. This weekend, the sound of the dulcimer will ring out at Nana’s Irish Pub in Newport (Saturday, Nov. 17) and the Lincoln City Cultural Center (Sunday, Nov. 18) along with that of the guitar, flute and marimbula, played by the Celtic ensemble Beltaine. The Newport concert, free to customers inside the Pub, begins at 8:30 pm, while the Lincoln City performance begins Sunday at 2 pm. The members of Beltaine bring decades of experience in folk, rock and jazz to their interpretation of traditional and original songs. John Keys started playing music in elementary school, first on the piano, and then performing with the balalaika. In sixth grade he started playing the saxophone, and later added the flute. In 2000, he picked up the hammered dulcimer (or tiompan, if you are Irish) and began studying with Portland dulcimer pro Mick Doherty. The mandolin is his latest pursuit. Brian Baker, who spent his early career in rock and blues, first met Keys when they played for a dinner theatre at Bethel Lutheran Church. Keys asked Baker to record guitar and vocals for a Beltaine album, and he’s been part of the band ever since. Kris Chase began with the guitar, learning Beatles songs in junior high, and playing for folk masses at church. She stopped playing music when her daughter was born, but returned when the baby grew up and left home. Chase went back to school, took some music theory and history, and taught herself to play the hammered dulcimer. A few years later, she added the mountain dulcimer and the marimbula, which she describes as “a giant thumb piano with a great sound.” Tickets to the Lincoln City performance are $10 in advance, $12 at the door. To reserve, call 541-994-9994.

According to Scottish folklore, Brigadoon is a magical village that appears for just one day every hundred years thanks to a spell aimed at protecting its traditions from the outide world. Fortunately, although songs from the musical “Brigadoon” are on the playlist for Oregon Coast Chamber Orchestra’s fall concert, music lovers get three chances each year to see the orchestra at work — with winter and spring concerts also in the works. Also unlike the mysterious highland village, the orchestra is anything but frozen in time, with a wide array of selections from classical to pops being the pattern for the coming season. The fall concert begins with the spirited “dance of the Tumblers,” by Rimsky-korsakov and ends with Bizet’s “Farandole” from “L’Arlesienne Suite.” Associate Conductor John monks will direct the orchestra for this program, with Barbara Wilcox serving as concertmaster. The Yachats program, now in its 12th year, will be presented at 7 pm on Friday, Nov. 16, at the Yachats Community Presbyterian Church, located just off Hwy. 101 between 6th and 7th streets. Tickets at $10 each are now on sale at Mari’s Books in Yachats and the Newport Performing Arts Center. They can also be purchased at the door on the evening of the program. For more information go to www.occo.ws, or call 541997-6770.

Symphony opens in Tillamook Musicians from a 100-mile span of the North Oregon Coast and Southwest Washington Coast will converge on Tillamook High School on Sunday, Nov. 18, to open the 2012-2013 Season of the North Oregon Coast Symphony. The “Overture Oeuvres” program includes works by Mozart, Beethoven, Rossini, Wagner, von Suppé, Sibelius and the contemporary composer, Matt Doran of Hazel Dell, Wash., who will attend the performances. The concert finale will be the Northwest Premier performance of the “Comic Overture” by northwest resident Dr. Matt Doran. The Tillamook concert comes two days after the symphony’s Friday, Nov. 16, performance at the Clatsop Community College Performing Arts Center in Astoria. The symphony’s 2012-13 season sees Cory Pederson of Astoria take on the role of associate conductor Pederson is a graduate of Portland State University in and is working on his master’s degree in music education. He is the music teacher in the Jewell School District and an instructor at the Astoria Conservatory of Music. The Tillamook performance is scheduled to begin at 3 pm, at the high school auditorium, 2605 12th Street, Tillamook.

28 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012

For more information on the all-volunteer North Oregon Coast Symphony, go to www.northoregoncoastsymphony. org.

Still fresh after 60 years The Four Freshmen, the longest running vocal group in American show business, are coming to Tillamook for a Thanksgiving weekend holiday concert Sunday, Nov. 25, at 7:30 pm. The performance — the first of four in the Monday Musical Club of Tillamook’s 2012-2013 concert series — will take place in the Don Whitney Auditorium at Tillamook High School, 2605 12th Street. The Freshmen have remained one of the country’s top vocal groups for more than 60 years, ever since their first hit single, “It’s a Blue World,” was released in 1952. There have been 24 Freshmen in all over the years, but the current crew — Brian Eichenberger, Curtis Calderon, Vince Johnson and Bob Ferriera — have been together for 10 years, longer than any of the previous groups. And they maintain the original blend of tight, inventive harmonies and musicianship that made the group famous so many years ago. Season subscribers pay only $80 for each adult and $55 for each student for reserved, center section seating at all four concerts. Advance tickets for individual events are $25 each for adults and $20 for students. Tickets at the door are priced at $30 for adults and $25 for students. To order season or advance tickets, send a check payable to the Monday Musical Club of Tillamook to 6415 Westwood Court, Tillamook, OR, 97141. Tickets are also sold at the offices of TLC Federal Credit Union and the Tillamook Chamber of Commerce. To order advance tickets with reserved seating, call 503842-2078. No advance tickets will be sold the day of an event.

Joy to Rockaway Beach Rockaway Community Church and Tillamook County General Hospital will present “Joy to the World,” a benefit concert by the Canby Alliance Worship Team on Sunday, Dec. 2, at the Rockaway Community Church. A musical celebration of the Christmas season, “Joy to the World” is an uplifting concert that offers a vibrant mix of musical styles. The musicians and singers of the Canby Alliance Worship team have volunteered their talents to benefit the community-wide ministry of Faith in Action. There is no charge to attend the concert, which begins at 3 pm. Donations will be accepted and music CDs by the group will be available for sale. Rockaway Community Church is located at 400 S. Third Street in Rockaway Beach. For more information about the church, go to www.RockawayChurch.com or call 503-3552581. For more information about this event or the ministry of Faith in Action, go to www.TCGH.com/faithinaction or call 503-815-2272.


how bazaar! The fair will feature hand-crafted gifts baked goods, quilts, ornaments, lotions, hats, scarves and lots more. Al this plus free coffee, cider and hot chocolate to take the chill off. For information call 503-965-7001.

Holiday bazaars TILLAMOOK

Anna’s Falls presents the Big & Better Bazaar for the first time at the Tillamook County Fairgrounds from 10 am to 6 pm, Dec. 1-2. The bazaar features local, national and international vendors along with door prizes, food and music. On Saturday from 2-4 pm, get a photo of you and your pet with Santa for $10. For more information, call 503-701-6904. The fairgrounds are located at 4603 3rd Street, Tillamook.

LINCOLN CITY

Anna’s Falls presents the 4th Annual Big & Better Bazaar from 10 am to 5 pm, Nov. 2425 at the Lincoln City Cultural Center, 540 N.E. Hwy 101, Lincoln City. The bazaar features local, national and international vendors along with door prizes, food and music. On Saturday from 2-4 pm, get a photo of you and your pet with Santa for $10. For more information, call 503-701-6904.

GLENEDEN BEACH

Tillamook’s 2nd Street Public Market will hold its first in-house Christmas bazaar, from 9 am to 6 pm on Dec. 8. Vendors interested in renting space should call Elissha or Cynthia at 503-842-9797. The cost is $25 for a table no larger than 6 feet. The market is located at 2003 Second St., Tillamook, For more information go to www. secondstreetpublicmarket.com

Wildwoman Creations and the Creative Tuesday Group present their annual Holiday Show & Sale, 10 am to 5 pm Friday, Nov. 23, at the Gleneden Beach Community Center, 110 Azalea Street, Gleneden Beach The sale features the work of local artisans and craftsmen including: hats, scarves, handbags, clothing, decor created from fibers and fabrics, woven rugs, jewelry, soaps, whimsical fused glass, pottery, baked goods, handmade specialty soups and dips. For more information, call Rosie at 541-921-0759.

CLOVERDALE

St Joseph’s Church in Cloverdale will hold its 52nd Annual Old-Fashioned Christmas Bazaar on Saturday, Dec. 1 from 9am to 4 pm. Hand-crafted gifts, ornaments, and decorations will be available, along with cookies, cakes, breads, and candy all homemade to special recipes. The church’s famous hot cinnamon rolls and secret recipe sauerkraut and polish dogs will be served St. Joseph’s, at 34560 Parkway Drive, is easy to find in Cloverdale. Just look for the little white church with the tall steeple one block off Hwy. 101.

PACIFIC CITY

The Your Little Beach Town Christmas Craft Fair will run from Dec. 1 to Dec. 2 in the lobby at the Inn at Cape Kiwanda from 9 am-4 pm both days.

Look for it, inside the nov. 23 edition of the todAY.

ADVERTISING DEADLINES: For the Friday, Nov. 23 edition of the TODAY, ad reservations are due by 5 pm Friday, Nov. 16. Call 541-992-1920 or 541-921-2306 to make sure you make the most of this big kickoff week to the holiday sales season!

845 1st street • 541-765-2365

The 32nd annual Holiday House Christmas Craft Show will take place at the Yaquina Bay Yacht Club from 9 am-6 pm Friday, Nov. 30, and Saturday, Dec. 1, and from 9 am-3 pm on Sunday, Dec. 2. With more than 30 consignees taking part in the juried show, the event promises everything you need for Christmas gifts.

WALDPORT

The Waldport Holiday Craft Market promises gift ideas you won’t find anywhere else, all created by local artisans. The market, runs every Saturday until Dec. 22 at the Waldport community center, 265, E. Hwy 34, Waldport. For more information, contact Louis Piette at louispiette@yahoo.com.

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Holiday • Santa • Whale ’s coast calendar • Hiking Watch Week Cascade Head & m ore!

The Gallery at Otter Rock

NEWPORT

Entertaining visitors on the Coast this holiday season?

You could say we wrote the book.

ROBERT NEATHERY

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Family - Affordable

GIFTS & WEAR Not Just For Tourists

Beautiful Glass Floats! Take Home a True Oregon Coast Souvenir

Just across from the D River Wayside In Central Lincoln City 4& )XZ r

‘wild beret’

Wildwoman Creations Bold, bright, original, handmade fashion accessories from jewelry, to hats, to scarves to infinity and beyond created with a variety of mixed media techniques which will delight and amaze you.

Two locations to serve you: Wildwoman Creations • 4030 NE Hwy. 101 3 mi north of Depoe Bay Thurs-Fri-Sat 11-5 Contact Rosie at 541-921-0759 Pacific Artists Alliance Co-op • 620 NE Hwy 101 Lincoln City Just no of Cultural Center Open daily 10-5

wildwomancreations.com

oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012 • 29


s o u n d wa v e s Friday, Nov. 16

Saturday, Nov. 17

WILLIAMS & REE — Billed as “The Indian and the White Guy,� Bruce Williams and Terry Ree have packed casinos, clubs and arenas from Niagara Falls to Las Vegas for the past 40 years with their fast-paced act that intersperses comedy with songs. TICKETS $5 TO $15. 8 pm. CHINOOK WINDS CASINO RESORT 1777 NW 44th STREET, LINCOLN CITY, 1-800-CHINOOK.

THE BRET LUCICH SHOW — Bret offers impersonations, comedy and songs you can sing along to. 8-11 pm. SURFTIDES, 2945 NW JETTY AVE., LINCOLN CITY, 800-452-2159.

THE BRET LUCICH SHOW — Bret offers impersonations, comedy and songs you can sing along to. 8-11 pm. SURFTIDES, 2945 NW JETTY AVE., LINCOLN CITY, 800-452-2159.

EDDIE STCLAIRE BAND — 9 pm. SNUG HARBOR, 5001 SW HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-996-4976.

BUCKETLIST — 9 PM. THE NAUTI MERMAID BAR & BISTRO, 1343 NW HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-614-1001.

PHAMOUS PHACES – 9 pm. ROADHOUSE 101, 4649 SW HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-994-7729.

RENEE HILL BAND – 9 pm. ROADHOUSE 101, 4649 SW HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-994-7729. TOM O. — with special guests “Kaska and the Babyâ€? invite you to ďŹ nd out what’s old, what’s new, jazzy and blue. 6 pm, THE BAY HOUSE RESTAURANT, 5911 HWY. 101 LINCOLN CITY. BETH WILLIS — 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. Listings are free. Venues and music makers in Lincoln or Tillamook counties are invited to submit concerts, photos and corrections in writing. Email them to news@oregoncoasttoday. com. Listings are organized from north to south, and the descriptions are generally provided by the venue. Entrance is free unless otherwise indicated.

ELIZABETH CABLE — The red-haired songstress playing original songs on guitar. 6-8pm. THE SAVORY CAFE AND PIZZERIA, 526 NW COAST STREET, NEWPORT.

TERRY SHUMAKER — 11 string guitarist. Everything from Bach to Rock. 6:30-9 pm THE DRIFT INN, 124 HWY. 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

Monday, Nov. 19 RICHARD SHARPLESS — Folk, guitar and vocals, originals and covers. 6:30-9 pm THE DRIFT INN, 124 HWY. 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

Tuesday, Nov. 20 OPEN JAM HOSTED BY ONE WAY OUT – 8:30 pm. SNUG HARBOR BAR & GRILL, 5001 SW HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-996-4976.

BETH WILLIS — 8-11 pm ATTIC LOUNGE, SALISHAN RESORT, 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.

BRINGETTO CAMERON JAZZ ORCHESTRA — 6:30-9 pm. THE DRIFT INN, 124 HWY. 101 N., YACHATS, 541547-4477. PHAMOUS PHACES • SEE NOV. 17

BELTAINE — Brian, Jamie, and John showcase the best of acoustic Celtic Fusion, blending folk, rock and jazz music to their interpretations of traditional and original tunes. Their new compositions and a unique collection of traditional music bring together the best of old and new. NANA’S IRISH PUB, 613 NW THIRD ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-8787. RICK BARTOW AND THE BACKSEAT DRIVERS – an ensemble of musicians on instruments including guitar, bass, horns, piano, drums and vocals performing original, rockin’ coastal blues. 7 pm. CAFÉ MUNDO, 209 NW COAST ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-8134. UNDERTOW WITH RODNEY TURNER – The second of two back-to-back encore performances for the Central Coast’s new homegrown reggae dance band at the same two clubs that introduced it to packed houses during its October debut. Turner, who toured for 15 years with such bands as Ziggy Marley and Burning Spear, is joined by Steve Sloan on lead guitar and Norman Austin on keyboards. 8-11 pm, BAY HAVEN INN, 608 SW BAY BLVD., 541-265-7271, NEWPORT.

Wednesday, Nov. 21 THE BRET LUCICH SHOW – Bret offers impersonations, comedy and songs you can sing along to. 7-9 pm. ATTIC LOUNGE, SALISHAN SPA & GOLF RESORT, GLENEDEN BEACH, 541-764-2371. LOZELLE JENNINGS — 5:30-7:30 pm. GREEN GABLES ITALIAN CAFE, 156 SW COAST STREET, NEWPORT, 541-574-0986. TONY KALTENBURG – A powerful voice for the mystical guitar tradition, with roots extending back through the innovative works of Fahey, Kottke and Hedges. 6:30-9 pm THE DRIFT INN, 124 HWY. 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

Thursday, Nov. 22 THE BRET LUCICH SHOW — Bret offers impersonations, comedy and songs you can sing along to. 6-9 pm. SURFTIDES, 2945 NW JETTY AVE., LINCOLN CITY, 800-452-2159.

RITCHIE G & TU TU KANE — Hawaiian style. 6:30-9 pm THE DRIFT INN, 124 HWY. 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

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, 541765-2734.

Sunday, Nov. 18

OPEN MIKE NIGHT – The cafe’s weekly performance art venue. 7 pm. CAFÉ MUNDO, 209 NW COAST ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-8134.

UNDERTOW WITH RODNEY TURNER – The Central Coast’s new homegrown reggae dance band is back in Newport for a double encore Friday and Saturday at the two clubs that introduced it to packed houses during its October debut. Turner, who toured for 15 years with such bands as Ziggy Marley and Burning Spear, is joined by Steve Sloan on lead guitar and Norman Austin on keyboards. 7-10 pm, CECIL’S DIRTY APRON, 912 N COAST HWY, 541-264-8360, NEWPORT.

SLOAN & FRIENDS — 8:30 pm. SNUG HARBOR BAR & GRILL, 5001 SW HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-996-4976.

GOLDEN GATE TRIO — A pleasing rhythmic meld of acoustic Americana-folk-rock with a slight bluesy streak and dead-ish psychedelic roots. Original music with a familiar, energetic feel and covers that harken to the heyday of the Haight. 6:30-9 pm THE DRIFT INN, 124 HWY. 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

UNSTABLE ATMOSPHERES — Gabriel Surley, Kevin Kovalchik, and Raven Crowe present a mellow and soulful ambient presence. All-original music performed with grace and passion. 7pm. CAFÉ MUNDO, 209 NW COAST ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-8134.

LOZELLE JENNINGS PRESENTS PENTECOASTAL BLUES JAM — 4-7 pm. — CECIL’S DIRTY APRON, 912 NE HWY. 101, NEWPORT.

CLEAN SLATE DUO — 6-8:30 p.m, GREEN GABLES ITALIAN CAFE, 156 SW COAST STREET, NEWPORT. USE THE 2ND STREET CAFE ENTRANCE. 541-574-0986.

TENT CITY — 6:30-9 pm THE DRIFT INN, 124 HWY. 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

The

Largest Builder

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, 541765-2734.

JUNE RUSHING AND FRIENDS — The band has a rotating line up, but centers around Rushing and her singer/songwriter husband, Joren Rushing. Called “a marvelâ€? and a “revelationâ€? by songwriter Robert Hunter, the June Rushing Band pulls from a wide variety of inuences and styles to present one of the PaciďŹ c Northwest’s best known folk rock sounds 12:30 pm. CAFÉ MUNDO, 209 NW COAST ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-8134.

EVENTS IN THE LINCOLN COUNTY AREA

on the

Oregon Coast

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30 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012

Friday, Nov. 23 THE BRET LUCICH SHOW — Bret offers impersonations, comedy and songs you can sing along to. 8-11 pm. SURFTIDES, 2945 NW JETTY AVE., LINCOLN CITY, 800-452-2159. 4 TREES, DJ TRUE JUSTICE AND FRIENDS — 9 pm. THE NAUTI MERMAID BAR & BISTRO, 1343 NW HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-614-1001. JOYBOX – 9 pm. ROADHOUSE 101, 4649 SW HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-994-7729.

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SONNY HESS — 8-11 pm ATTIC LOUNGE, SALISHAN SPA & GOLF RESORT, GLENEDEN BEACH, 541-764-2371.

SONNY HESS — 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.

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.

ELIZABETH CABLE — The red-haired songstress playing original songs on guitar. 6-8pm. THE SAVORY CAFE AND PIZZERIA, 526 NW COAST STREET, NEWPORT.

RICK BARTOW AND THE BACKSEAT DRIVERS – an ensemble of musicians on instruments including guitar, bass, horns, piano, drums and vocals performing original, rockin’ coastal blues. 7 pm. CAFÉ MUNDO, 209 NW COAST ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-8134.

CLEAN SLATE DUO — 6-8:30 p.m, GREEN GABLES ITALIAN CAFE, 156 SW COAST STREET, NEWPORT. USE THE 2ND STREET CAFE ENTRANCE. 541-574-0986. JUNE RUSHING AND FRIENDS — The band has a rotating line up, but centers around Rushing and her singer/songwriter husband, Joren Rushing. Called “a marvelâ€? and a “revelationâ€? by songwriter Robert Hunter, the June Rushing Band pulls from a wide variety of inuences and styles to present one of the PaciďŹ c Northwest’s best known folk rock sounds. 7pm. CAFÉ MUNDO, 209 NW COAST ST., NEWPORT, 541-574-8134. UNSTABLE ATMOSPHERES — 6:30-9 pm THE DRIFT INN, 124 HWY. 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

THE BRET LUCICH SHOW — Bret offers impersonations, comedy and songs you can sing along to. 8-11 pm. SURFTIDES, 2945 NW JETTY, LINCOLN CITY, 800-452-2159.

THE TOMMY HOGAN BAND – 9 pm. ROADHOUSE 101, 4649 SW HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-994-7729.

Sunday, Nov. 25 ELIZABETH CABLE — The red-haired songstress playing original songs on guitar. 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.

Saturday, Nov. 24 STEVE SLOAN BAND — 9 pm. SNUG HARBOR BAR & GRILL, 5001 SW HWY. 101, LINCOLN CITY, 541-996-4976.

DOUG WARNER — 6:30, DRIFT INN, 124 HWY. 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

LOZELLE JENNINGS PRESENTS PENTECOASTAL BLUES JAM — 4-7 pm. — CECIL’S DIRTY APRON, 912 NE HWY. 101, NEWPORT. VAN MEYERS JAZZ — Exploratory improv jazz. 6:30-9 pm THE DRIFT INN, 124 HWY. 101 N., YACHATS, 541-547-4477.

You know how Uncle Bob goes on and on about his famous oyster stufďŹ ng? That’s kinda like our online music listings. Listings roll on (and on, and on) online, at oregoncoasttoday.com.

SONNY HESS • SEE NOV. 24 TODAY PHOTO

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LARRY C. GARRISON Real Estate Broker (541) 764-3323 (541) 992-3732 Cell lgarrison@windermere.com www.larrycgarrison.com

Not all backyards

DUH FUHDWHG HTXDO To schedule a personal viewing please call our Newport Real Estate agent, Janis Neigebauer, at 541-270-2992.

ShorelineRidge.com

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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012 • 31


32 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • november 16, 2012


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