NOW: real estate, p. 14 • lodging, p. 22 • coupons, p. 5 • plus dining, p. 7-10
oregon coast
FREE! October 24-30, 2014 ISSUE 22, VOL. 10
Setting the
BENCH MARK
Park it at Lincoln City’s Theatre West for laughs in “The Man with the Plastic Sandwich” • Page 6
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Vote YES for Libraries! Support Ballot Measure 21-156 to keep our local library services at current tax levels.
This measure does NOT increase your taxes. We don’t know what we would do without our libraries! Libraries are even more important in economic hard times. Today Lincoln County’s libraries are being challenged to do more with less...less money, less staff, and less time. The very services we value are at risk if libraries lose these funds.
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Renewing the local option tax of 9¢ per $1,000 assessed value on your property is only $18 for a $200,000 home. For less than the cost of one book, we have access to over a quarter of a million books, ebooks, movies, CDs, magazines, newspapers, 24-hour access to online databases, AND MORE.
Join library lovers throughout Lincoln County and vote YES to preserve library services. 42-14
patrick@oregoncoasttoday.com
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greg@oregoncoasttoday.com
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Manzanita
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Find us on facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday @octoday Optimized for your mobile device at oregoncoasttoday.com
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Mailing: PO Box 962, Lincoln City, OR 97367 Billing or business questions? 877-737-3690 )RXQGHG E\ 1LNL 'DYH 3ULFH 0D\ Copyright 2014 EO Media Group dba Oregon Coast TODAY
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Bay City
Ocean
Patrick Alexander, Editor & Publisher 541-921-0413
Pacific
oregon coast
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N 20 miles
5 99W
from the editor
Uncommon core
Y
ou know it’s been a great harvest when, while sitting at work one day, you receive a photograph of your son boldly attempting to eat an apple the size of his own head. Pick up a few goliath Patrick Alexander fruit and veg yourself Editor & Publisher with a visit to the Central Coast’s two year-round farmers markets — in Newport on Saturday and Lincoln City on Sunday.
See coast calendar, pages 12 & 13.
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014 • 3
on stage
The critics are raven The Oregon Coast Children’s Theatre will present its original production of “Children of the Raven” in Tillamook on Friday, Oct. 24, combining puppets, masked characters and multimedia to spellbinding effect. This will be one of the few chances that the general public has to see the show, which is normally performed for school groups. The show is one of the longest running productions from the theater, which has
performed all over the Western U.S. and in Europe and celebrates its 25th anniversary at the start of 2015 The Friday performance, a fund-raiser for the Fairview Grange, will start with a chili feed at 6 pm, followed by the show at 7 pm. There is a suggested donation of $5 at the door. The grange is located east of the Tillamook County Fairgrounds at 5520 3rd Street, Tillamook.
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One great day for theater
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If you’re longing to see some fresh ideas on stage, make sure and book your ticket for “One Day to Play!” in Newport this Saturday, where none of the five plays on offer will be more than 24 hours old. Presented by Newport’s Red Octopus Theatre Company, the 24-hour theater event will see five writers begin work on five brandnew plays at 9 pm on Friday, Oct. 24, based on suggestions submitted online by the public. Working through the night in the theater, all five must then emerge on Saturday morning with a complete play. Then, the actors, directors and technicians show up; and
4 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014
at 8 pm on Saturday, Oct 25, the five shows will take to the stage for their world premiers in front of a live theater audience. No one has any way of knowing what the five plays will be — comedy, drama, farce, tragedy … even a musical — but the writers will be asked to keep the pieces appropriate for people aged 13 and up. The theater company has set up its website, www. redoctopustheatre.org, to accept suggestions for elements that should appear in the plays, with five categories available: props, sound cues, settings, lines of dialogue and characters. On the night before the show, organizers will
draw one element from each category at random. While each play has to incorporate all five of the randomly chosen elements, organizers say 24-hour theater events tend to result in very varied work. “This has been proven by countless similar events throughout the years and across the country,” a Red Octopus press release said. “It’s not unusual to have a comedy, a drama, a musical … all created with the same five elements in place.” The plays will be performed from 8 to 10 pm on Saturday, Oct 25, at the Newport Performing Arts Center, 777 W. Olive Street Tickets, $13 apiece, are available by calling 541265-2787 or going to www. coastarts.org.
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themselves as serious artists for funding opportunities, shows or copy for websites; and get over their fears of writing to promote their art. The workshop will run from 2 to 4:30 pm at the visual arts center, 777 NW Beach Drive. The fee is $25, which includes a copy of the “ART WRITE” book; or $15 for participants who already have a copy. Coffee, tea and snacks provided To register, call 541265-6569 or email twebb@ coastarts.org.
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The dark nights return The Dark and Stormy Nights series at Lincoln City’s Driftwood Public Library will continue on Friday, Oct. 24, with a visit from mystery writer Warren C. Easley. A former research scientist and international business executive who now calls Oregon home, Easley has written two mysteries featuring former L.A. prosecutor Cal Claxton III, who fled to Oregon following the death of his wife. Easley’s most recent book is “Dead Float.” The series wraps up on Thursday, Oct. 30, with a visit from first-time mystery writer Lisa Alber. Alber has worked closely with novelist Elizabeth George; and her second published short story won a Pushcart Prize. Her first book, “Kilmoon,” takes place in Ireland and was published earlier this year. Both presentations, which are free and open to all, will begin at 4 pm in the library, on the second floor of the Lincoln Square Civic Complex, 801 SW Hwy. 101. For more information, contact Ken Hobson at 541-996-1242 or kenh@lincolncity.org.
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and writes for Professional Artist Magazine. “I wrote ‘ART-WRITE’ because I believe in the power of words to enhance a visual statement,” Amorose said. “I think artists will be a little bolder, a little braver in their reach, once they’ve accomplished some artwriting. And this world needs more art.” By the end of the workshop, participants should be able to write a cohesive artist statement to enhance their visual work; describe their artwork in ways that connect with the audience; represent
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Artists can’t afford to be shy if they want to promote their work — just ask Vicki Krohn Amorose, whose book “ART-WRITE” shares the Oregon Coast TODAY’s philosophy when it comes to the unapologetic use of capital letters. And just in case capitals are not enough, Amorose will be giving a workshop on selfpromotion at the Newport Visual Arts Center on Saturday, Oct. 25, The workshop, which is appropriate for artists of all levels, art professionals, arts writers and gallery operators, offers generous encouragement and practical guidelines. Amorose developed her creative philosophy by drawing on her experience as an educational media writer, performance and voiceover artist, advertising copywriter, art instructor, museum docent and gallery manager. She studied art history at the University of Michigan and fine art at the Academy of Art University San Francisco. She now serves on the board of Watershed Arts Foundation
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014 • 5
Setting the benchmark Park it at Lincoln City’s Theatre West for laughs in “The Man with the Plastic Sandwich”
I
Story & photos by Patrick Alexander Oregon Coast TODAY
f “Forrest Gump” taught us anything, it’s that a person can learn a lot about life while sharing a snack on a park bench. And while that tale revolved around a box of chocolates, the latest offering from Theatre West chooses the humble brown-bagged sandwich as its vehicle for making sense of life’s strange journey. Set in the mid-’70s, “The Man with the Plastic Sandwich” tells the story of Walter Price, a rather stiff 40-something trying to plan his next move after being “phased out” of his job as a clinical engineer. As he ponders his options over a series of brown bag lunches in the park, Walter meets three strangers, each of whom shares their very different philosophies on life. “It’s character driven and I like plays that are character driven,” Director Wes Ryan said. “The lighting is minimal, the set is minimal. It really depends on the cast.” At the center of that cast is Theatre West veteran Matt Blakeman as Walter, who is on stage for the entire play as he deals with each of the three visitors in separate acts. “I read the play and I said ‘I’ve got to have Matt, period,’” Ryan said. “I needed an actor that could nuance a script from one end to the other.” Blakeman is joined on stage first by Karen Davis as Ellie, a free-spirited, yoga-practicing and completely uninhibited woman of the ’70s — a
Bryan Kirsh as Haley role Ryan said took Davis well which, paired with tonedoutside her comfort zone and down lighting and surroundproduced a fine performance. sound birdsong, helps draw the Next, Walter meets Haley, a audience’s focus to the dialog high-flying business executive unfolding between Walter and turned philosophical hobo, a each of his visitors. role Bryan Kirsch tackles with Ryan said part of what gusto. attracted him to the story Last but most certainly not was the way that Walter’s life least is Lenore, a down-to-earth paralleled his own, especially in call girl who stops by Walter’s terms of unhappy stints in sales bench to offer her own view of — hot tubs in Walter’s case and the world. Playing Lenore is none life insurance in Ryan’s. other than Blakeman’s wife, Tracy, “He’s a 40-year-old zit on the who Ryan said is relishing the world. And I know that feeling,” chance to play a very different he said. “You are at a certain age role — complete with bleach and you are just thinking ‘what blonde wig. am I doing here?’” “She’s absolutely having a blast with it,” he But with each visitor, Walter’s said. perspective on life shifts, allowing the “The Man with the Plastic Sandwich” is audience to see subtle changes in his Ryan’s third play at Theatre West since returning character as the play moves along. to the director’s chair after a near 20-year break. And there are plenty of laughs In all three plays since his return, Ryan has along the way, with Danielle worked alongside his daughter and assistant crediting the four-strong cast for director, Danielle, with whom he also shares his bringing the zinger-packed script day job at Ocean Terrace Condominiums. to life. “I was her manager and now she’s my “Sometime it’s a look or a gesture or manager,” Ryan said. “We work well together the way they say the line,” she said. and we have a lot of the same kinds of ideas.” “I’ve read this play I don’t know The pair collaborated how many times and now with closely on the play’s the cast we’ve been rehearing set — a minimal for four nights a week for a scene with a bench, month,” Ryan added. “We trash can and still giggle our asses off.” pathway,
Karen Davis as Ellie and Matt Blakeman as Walter
6 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014
on the cover The Man with the Plastic Sandwich “The Man with the Plastic Sandwich” runs through Nov. 8, with performances at 8 pm each Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Doors open at 7:30 pm In addition, the theater will present a 2 pm matinée on Sunday, Oct. 26, with doors opening at 1:30 pm. Tickets are $14 for adults, $12 for seniors and students; and $9 for children 12 and under. A special group discount is available at $10 per ticket for groups of 10 or more with a pre-paid reservation. Advance reservations for all performances are recommended and can be made by calling 541-994-5663. Leave a message and someone will call you back. Theatre West is located at 3536 SE Hwy. 101 in Lincoln City.
Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014 • 7
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541-764-2828 • thecafecestlavie.com
8 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014
Serving fresh, sweet and savory crepes, homemade soups and indulgent sandwiches! We feature local produce, Italian coffee and gelato, imported French wines, as well as a monthly feature of local art from oil paintings to mosaic works.
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Welcome to the Oregon coast’s European-inspired cafe!
Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide
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By Patrick Alexander Oregon Coast TODAY
Momiji translates from Japanese as “maple” or “red leaves,” bringing to mind the changing of the seasons and the cycle of rebirth as fall moves to spring. But Lincoln City food fans don’t have to wait ‘till spring to see their favorite Japanese and Chinese restaurant reborn. Momiji will open its doors on Thursday, Oct. 23, — some three months after the fire that caused the restaurant to close at the start of summer. John Zhen, a member of the family that owns Momiji, said all the family members have been approached every day since then by people anxious to know when the restaurant would be up and running again. “From day one, people were concerned,” he said. “Everyone cared about this place.” Zhen said the restaurant, located within the Tanger Outlet Center,
had been enjoying a great start to the summer when disaster struck in the early hours of July 14. Investigators said the fire started in a receipt printer and spread to the restaurant’s front counter. Zhen, who lives nearby, was woken by a call from the alarm company bearing the bad news. “I rushed down with my pajamas on,” he said. Zhen said that while the fire was extinguished fairly quickly, the real damage was caused by smoke, which destroyed much of the restaurant’s interior. Having just completed an extensive remodel a few months earlier, Zhen and family had to tear their restaurant apart again, replacing the ceiling, HVAC system, ductwork, insulation, light fixtures and wiring. All that work made for a long summer, during which Zhen and the rest of the Momiji crew could
only look on as visitors filled the bustling mall during one of the coast’s best seasons in recent memory. “It was a sad thing that we couldn’t serve,” he said. But serve they will starting Thursday, when the doors will open at 10 am, giving regulars their first chance in months to feast on Momiji’s sushi, teriyaki, tempura and its range of Chinese dishes. Those dishes are laid out on a smart new menu, which showcases a new addition — a range of sweet crepes for dessert. Choices range from a Chocolate Lovers Crepe made with almonds, Nutella and chocolate ice cream; to a Got Green? Crepe made with Japanese
green tea ice cream, kiwi, avocado and caramel syrup. Sushi still dominates the menu, with three pages of creations made with everything from salmon and scallops to barbecue eel and sea urchin. Zhen said that for customers who have never tried sushi before, he recommends the restaurant’s bestseller — the Salem Roll, which he created in 2004 while working in Salem. He said the dish, made with imitation crab, cream cheese and avocado, all of which is then deep fried tempura style, is Oregon’s answer to the famed California Roll, only much more flavorful. Zhen said people who like the
Salem Roll might want to move on to trying some pieces made with raw fish “Tuna and salmon are the easy textures and flavors,” he said. “You don’t want something too heavy.” Possibly the best time to experiment with a few new flavors is Sunday from 4 to 9 pm, when Momiji offers a special deal — two pieces of nigiri sushi for just $2.50. And while there might be a few new faces among the serving staff, sushi fans can rest assured that their rolls will be just as good as they remember, with the whole kitchen crew remaining unchanged. “Our staff just like our customers are being loyal to Momiji,” Zhen said. “None of the chefs left. They all stayed. Even the dish washer came back.” For people who simply don’t feel like sushi, the menu offers a host of other options, including a range of Japanese bento boxes containing teriyaki chicken, shrimp tempura, chicken katsu and other dishes served along with rice, salad and gyoza dumplings. Among the most popular Chinese entrées are the sizzling platters, which come to the table on a cast iron skillet; and the dinner combos, which include a choice of dishes such as sweet and sour chicken, pork chow mein, Mongolian beef and pork-fried rice. A full range of beverages includes top Japanese beers like Sapporo and Kirin alongside Tsing Tsao from China as well as several domestics and Oregon microbrews. Zhen is also planning to start offering flights of sake, giving patrons the chance to sample different flavors from the restaurant’s large selection. For details of this and other special offers, check Momiji’s Facebook page at www. facebook.com/momijiexpress. Momiji is located next to the main entrance of the Tanger Outlet Center, 1500 SE East Devils Lake Road, Lincoln City. It is open from 10 am to 9 pm Sunday through Thursday; and 10 am to 10 pm on Friday and Saturday. To place an order or make a reservation, call 541-996-8886.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014 • 9
Tide Tables | The TODAY’s Dining Guide
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Family-Friendly Dining 4649 SW HWY 101 • LINCOLN CITY
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10 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014
Local Favorites in nye beach • nw third & coast streets in newport nanasirishpub.com • 541-574-8787 43-14
in concert
The gang’s all here — again The Press Gang will return to Manzanita’s Hoffman Center for an encore performance of innovative music inspired by the Irish tradition on Thursday, Oct. 30. The trio fuses the talents of squeezebox player Christian “Junior” Stevens, fiddler Alden Robinson and guitarist Owen Marshall, who blend their skill and fluency in traditional Irish music with their curiosity and aptitude for other styles. The result is a unique sound; at once energetic and sensitive, innovative and reverent. Their debut album, released in the spring of 2010, has been described as a generous helping of Irish tunes spiced with Appalachian music and original compositions. Their upcoming new album “The Happy Days of Youth” promises to pick up where they left off and delve further into this very living and breathing tradition. Christian “Junior” Stevens has become an influential member of the Irish traditional music community in America; particularly in New England where he demonstrated great proficiency at such a young age on both concertina and accordion. Alden Robinson learned the fiddle as a child in coastal Maine and quickly became recognizable as a new voice in Irish-American fiddle music. He has become a staple of the
traditional music scene in New England, where he continues to inspire his peers and audiences alike at festivals and sessions. Multi-instrumentalist Owen Marshall is one of the most highly sought-after accompanists in the United States. With his unique sense of harmony and rhythm, he has traveled and performed all over the world with many of the top acts in traditional music. Thursday’s concert will begin at 7 pm at the center, 594 Laneda Avenue. Admission is $15.
Meet some fund-raising folk Manzanita’s Awtrey House Bed and Breakfast will host a fund-raising house concert on Sunday, Nov. 2, with proceeds benefiting the Hoffman Center. Starting at 4 pm, the
concert will see Sherrie Wolf and Hester Carr revive folk and ’60s classics from Bob Dylan to Laura Nyro, with vocals and guitar accompaniment. A $20 donation is suggested.
The event is limited to 20 individuals and guests must RSVP by emailing hoffmancenter@nehalemtel.net. Light refreshments will be served and a short presentation on the Hoffman Center’s future plans will be held prior to the concert.
Photo by Linda Cook
The great room of Awtrey House
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014 • 11
Coast Calendar
Friday, Oct. 24 “The Man with the Plastic Sandwich”
Creatures of the Night
Pumpkin carving
Theatre West • Lincoln City A thought-provoking comedy about a man who, fired after 20 years, meets three characters who re-shape his view of life. Doors at 7:30 pm; curtain at 8 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. $14 for adults; $12 for seniors and students; $9 for children 12 and under.
Oregon Coast Aquarium • Newport Get your zombie fix in time for Halloween as the flesh-eating terrors take over the aquarium. Not suitable for kids under eight. $5; or $2 plus two cans of non-perishable people or pet food. 6:30 to 8:30 pm, 2820 S.E. Ferry Slip Road. FMI, go to www.aquarium. org or call 541-867-3474.
Nestucca Bay National Wildlife Refuge. A chance for kids from six to 15 to pick an animal found on the refuge and carve a Jack O’ Lantern in its honor, with help from volunteer Lee Sliman. Each child will take home a finished pumpkin. Free. 1 pm. Children must be accompanied by an adult and pre-registration is required. FMI, call Sliman at 503-812-6392.
Dark and Stormy Nights Driftwood Public Library • Lincoln City The celebration of the murderous, mysterious and the macabre continues with a visit from Warren C. Easley, whose mysteries star a former L.A. prosecutor who flees to Oregon following the death of his wife. Free. 4 pm, second floor, 801 Hwy. 101. FMI, contact Ken Hobson at 541-996-1242 or kenh@lincolncity.org.
Friday Night Flicks The Hoffman Center • Manzanita The film series continues with “The Great Northwest,” an experimental documentary based on the re-creation of a 3,200-mile road-trip made in 1958 by four Seattle women who thoroughly documented their journey in an elaborate scrapbook of photos, postcards and brochures. $5. 7:30 pm, 594 Laneda Avenue.
Clamming Clinics Harborview Inn & RV Park • Garibaldi Let the staff show you the ropes in these after-dark classes. Come prepared with headlamps, flashlights, lanterns and a sense of adventure. 302 S. 7th Street. Pre-registration required. FMI, call 503-322-3251. Continues Saturday.
Siletz Bay • Lincoln City
Saturday, Oct. 25 cont. Youth Halloween party
Kids’ Pumpkin Carving Party
Rockaway Beach Community Center 6 to 7:30 pm, 2310 Hwy. 101 N. FMI, call 503-355-2291.
Rosenberg Builders Supply • Tillamook Free pumpkins for carving along with juice and snacks make this a great way for kids to enjoy fall. 10 am–1 pm, 2 N. Main Street. FMI, call 503-842-4434
Corn Maze & Pumpkin Patch Kilchis River Road • Tillamook Try your luck in the five-acre corn maze, pick a pumpkin, take a hay ride or whip out your iphone for smartphone games. $5 maze entrance fee. Noon to 9 pm, 9455 Kilchis River Road, just past milepost 2. FMI, call 503-815-3762. Continues Sunday.
Illuminated Journaling Workshop The Hoffman Center • Manzanita Learn to combine images, color, drawings and words in this class from Susan Long, suitable for beginners and accomplished artists alike. 10 am to 3 pm, 594 Laneda Avenue. $50 tuition includes a large spiral journal and all art supplies, plus an optional follow-up session on Saturday, Nov. 15. Register by email to Tela Skinner at mactela@nehalemtel.net.
Prepare Together in 2014
Free beach yoga
Roads End • Lincoln City and a e and bring a mat or towel Leave your money at hom ds. All levels san the on t righ ion sess a smile to this free yog et. Logan Road and 64th Stre welcome. 11 am, meet at
Lincoln County Fairgrounds • Newport Learn how to prepare yourself, your family and your business for catastrophic natural events such as an earthquake or tsunami at this fair, organized by coastal public safety and community volunteer agencies. 11 am to 2 pm, 622 NE 3rd Street. FMI, go to www. lincolncountysheriff.net.
“The Truths We Hold” Tillamook County Pioneer Museum • Tillamook An Oregon Humanities presentation from poet and
essayist Wendy Willis on the role of the Declaration of Independence in modern America. Free. 1 pm, 2106 Second Street. FMI, contact Carla Albright at 503-842-4553.
ART-WRITE Newport Visual Arts Center A chance for artists to learn how to promote their work through the written word from “ART-WRITE” author Vicki Krohn Amorose. 2 to 4:30 pm, 777 NW Beach Drive. $25, includes a copy of the book. To register, call 541-265-6569 or email twebb@coastarts.org.
Clamming Clinics Harborview Inn & RV Park • Garibaldi Let the staff show you the ropes in these after-dark classes. Come prepared with headlamps, flashlights, lanterns and a sense of adventure. 302 S. 7th Street. Pre-registration required. FMI, call 503-322-3251.
804 Trail Ivy Pull Overleaf Lodge & Spa • Yachats Earn yourself a day pass to the spa by putting in a morning’s work clearing ivy at this 7th annual event. Meet at 9 am in the parking lot, 280 Overleaf Lodge Lane. Bring work gloves and weeding tools if possible. At about noon, volunteers will get to enjoy a barbecue before receiving their spa pass.
“The Man with the Plastic Sandwich”
“Making Waves”
Pacific Maritime & Heritage Center • New port An opening reception for this new exhib it, detailing the history of Oregon Coast surfing, surfer culture and the pioneers who made it happen. 5 pm, 333 SE Bay Blvd. $5. Free for Lincoln County Historical Society members. FMI, call 541-265-7509.
Rec center open house North County Recreation District • Nehalem Enjoy free facility usage, sample classes, presentations, a bounce house and much more. 11 am to 2 pm, 36155 9th Street. FMI, call 503-368-7008.
Theatre West • Lincoln City A thought-provoking comedy about a man who, fired after 20 years, meets three characters who re-shape his view of life. Doors at 7:30 pm; curtain at 8 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. $14 for adults; $12 for seniors and students; $9 for children 12 and under.
Anniversary party Pelican Brewery & Tap Room • Tillamook Join the fun at this first anniversary bash, with live music, beer specials and giveaways. 6 pm, at the corner of First and Stillwell.
“Children of the Raven” Fairview Grange • Tillamook A rare chance for the general public to see this Oregon Coast Children’s Theatre production, which combines puppets, masked characters and multimedia to spellbinding effect. Chilli feed at 6 pm, followed by the show at 7 pm, 5520 3rd Street. Suggested donation of $5, benefits the Grange.
Sunday, Oct. 26
One Day to Play! Newport Performing Arts Center See five plays dreamt up from scratch within the past 24 hours in this test of creative powers hosted by the Red Octopus Theatre Company. 8-10 pm, 777 W. Olive Street. Tickets, $13 apiece, available by calling 541265-2787 or going to www.coastarts.org.
Trail workday Friends of Wildwoods Open Space • Lincoln City Help spruce up the city’s open spaces by removing trash and spreading mulch. Come for an hour or spend all day. 10 am-4 pm, NE West Devils Lake Road near
Monday, Oct. 27
the hospital. FMI, or to sign up, contact Ian Keene at 541-996-1224, ikeene@lincolncity.org.
“Shake, Rattle & Roll” Embarcadero Resort • Newport Break out your favorite Halloween costume and join the Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce for this party, offering beer and wine, a buffet, dancing, door prizes and musical entertainment. $30. 6 pm, 1000 SE Bay Blvd. FMI, call 541-265-8801.
Sacred Stone Readings Things Rich & Strange • Newport In these readings, the client chooses from 50 healing stones, crystals and animal fetishes prompting an exploration of why the client and the stones chose each other. $35. Noon-5 pm, 255 NW Coast Street. FMI, call 541-265-3600.
Halloween Celebration Yaquina Bay Lighthouse • Newport Creaking timbers, howling winds — nothing is quite as spooky as a lighthouse. Join storyteller Doug Force as he spins scary tales from 12:30-3:30 pm, Yaquina Bay State Recreation site, just north of Yaquina Bay Bridge.
Tuesday, Oct. 28
Newport Farmers Market Newport City Hall Buy local at this outdoor market, featuring locally made handcrafts, art, specialty foods and fresh fruits, vegetables and farm products from Lincoln County farms and growers from surrounding areas. 9 am to 1 pm, 169 SW Coast Hwy. Look for the Red Rooster signs pointing the way.
Trick or Treat, Monster Feet Rogue Brewery • Newport Win a prize for best costume and stock up on Halloween candy at this pair of runs — a threequarter-mile kids’ fun run and a 5K. 10:30 am, 2122 SE Marine Science Drive. 5K registration $40 or $35 for students, includes plus race t-shirt. Kids’ fun run, $10 or $15 with t-shirt. Proceeds benefit the Rotary Club The Cli nton Street Cabaret pla of Newport. FMI, call 541-265-8801. yers
Community Halloween Party Swiss Hall • Tillamook The Marie Mills Center hosts this 28th annual bash, which is open to all. Family friendly with food, music, dancing and prizes for the best costumes. 6–9 pm, Brookfield Road, behind the fairgrounds. Cost of admission is two cans of food for the Tillamook County Food Bank. FMI, call 503-842-2539.
“The Rocky Horror Pictu
re Show” Bijou Theatre • Lincoln City Fishnets and corsets are opt ional but a sense of fun is a must for this annual spectac ular, which sees the movie accompanied by a simulta neous live show, where acto rs perform each scene in fron t of the big screen. Rated R. Midnight, 1624 NE Hwy. 101 . Tickets $8 in advance, $10 on the door, plus a can of food for the Lincoln City Foo d Pantry. FMI, call 541-994-8 255.
Wed., Oct. 29
Thursday, Oct. 30
Celebration of Women
Lincoln City Farmers Market
Spooky Swim
War, then flowers
Bookish Costume Party
Celebrity Server night
Newport Performing Arts Center An afternoon of theatre, art, literature, politics and — most importantly of all — wine and chocolate. Organized by the Central Oregon Coast Chapter of the National Organization for Women. Free admission. 2 to 4 pm, 777 W. Olive Street. FMI, email centraloregoncoastnow@gmail.com or call 541-614-4677.
Lincoln City Cultural Center Snug inside the center’s auditorium, the farmers and crafters offer homegrown, homebaked and handcrafted treats. 10 am-3 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101. FMI, call 541-994-9994 or go to www.lincolncityfarmersmarket.org.
Newport Recreation Center Get treats and watch out for tricks at this annual Halloween celebration. Dive for eyeballs, play deck games and eat treats. $5 per person. No passes. Swimmers six and younger must be accompanied by an adult in the water. 7 -8:30 pm, 225 SE Avery Street. FMI, call 541-265-7770.
Salishan Spa & Golf Resort • Gleneden Beach The Oregon Coast Learning Institute’s fall semester continues with, at 10 am, “Civil War: Women’s Stories” by John Ohm; followed at 11 am by “Dear Companion: Civil War: Letters” by Gail Willet. At 1 pm, Fred Bowen will present “Our Beautiful Pacific NW Flowers.” FMI, go to www.ocli.us or call a member at 503-392-3297 or 541-265-8023.
Driftwood Public Library • Lincoln City Come along for family night costume party. Dress up as a favorite book character and bring a little snack to share. Be prepared for fun festivities, photo ops and free book giveaways. 6 pm, second floor, 801 SW Hwy. 101.
The Eventuary • Lincoln City Help raise funds for Family Promise of Lincoln City while enjoying a gourmet pasta dinner. Servers Dave and Niki Price and Joey and Lori Arce-Torres will be doing whatever it takes to drum up big tips. Dinners $10 to $13 a head. 6-7:30 pm, 560 SW Fleet Avenue. Reservations are required. Call 541-992-5628.
“The Man with the Plastic Sandwich” Theatre West • Lincoln City A thought-provoking comedy about a man who, fired after 20 years, meets three characters who re-shape his view of life. Doors at 1:30 pm; curtain at 2 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. $14 for adults; $12 for seniors and students; $9 for children 12 and under.
Corn Maze & Pumpkin Patch Kilchis River Road • Tillamook Try your luck in the five-acre corn maze, pick a pumpkin, take a hay ride or whip out your iphone for smartphone games. $5 maze entrance fee. Noon to 5 pm, 9455 Kilchis River Road, just past milepost 2. FMI, call 503-815-3762.
Getting here and around
Auditions
Pine Grove Community House • Manzanita The Nehalem Valley Historical Society continues its local history series with a talk on the area’s trails, roads, jetties, railroad and airstrip. 4-5:30 pm, 225 Laneda Avenue. $10. FMI and membership rates, contact Mark Beach at mbeach@nehalemtel.net.
North County Recreation District • Nehalem Try out for a role in “Take a Number, Darling,” the upcoming production from Riverbend Players. This contemporary farce by Jack Sharkey calls for three women and three men; and includes crazy and comical confusion all the way. Running for three weekends in February. 6:30 pm, 36155 Ninth Street. FMI, call Linda Makohon at 503-368-5764. Repeated Thursday.
Happy trails Driftwood Public Library • Lincoln City A chance to give the state feedback on issues, needs and development opportunities associated with motorized, snowmobile, non-motorized and water trails. 6-8 pm, second floor, 801 SW Hwy. 101.
Ice Cream Social Panther Creek Community Center • Otis Help raise money for the center’s new disabled access ramp by wrapping yourself around an ice cream sundae served with fresh Ole Bolens (Dutch donuts). $3. 1-4 pm, 665 Wayside Loop. FMI, call 541-994-8222.
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12 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014
Saturday, Oct. 25
Kim Stafford
Manzanita Library A free talk from the poet, author and er literary executor of the estate of form ord. Oregon Poet Laureate William Staff da 1:30 pm and again at 5 pm, 571 Lane Avenue. FMI, call 503-368-6665.
Free Intro to Yoga class New Moon Yoga • Lincoln City Britt Canese teaches this free, one-hour class for anyone interested in finding out what yoga has to offer. Wear a smile and clothes that are easy to move in. No pressure, no judgment just yoga fun. 9 am, 3979 NE West Devils Lake Road. FMI, go to NewMoonYoga.org or call 971-303-9646.
Dark and Stormy Night Driftwood Public Library • Lincoln City The celebration of the murderous, mysterious and the macabre concludes with a visit from firsttime mystery writer Lisa Alber, whose debut novel, “Kilmoon,” was published earlier this year. Free. 4 pm, second floor, 801 Hwy. 101. FMI, contact Ken Hobson at 541-996-1242 or kenh@lincolncity. org.
The Press Gang The Hoffman Center • Manzanita A second chance to see this high-octane trio performing Celtic music with a bold new sound. $15. 7 pm, 594 Laneda Avenue.
“The Man with the Plastic Sandwich” Theatre West • Lincoln City A thought-provoking comedy about a man who, fired after 20 years, meets three characters who reshape his view of life. Doors at 7:30 pm; curtain at 8 pm, 3536 SE Hwy. 101. $14 for adults; $12 for seniors and students; $9 for children 12 and under.
Selling the seashore Pine Grove Community House • Manzanita The Nehalem Valley Historical Society continues its local history series with a talk on developers, boosters, tourists and state parks. 4-5:30 pm, 225 Laneda Avenue. $10. FMI and membership rates, contact Mark Beach at mbeach@nehalemtel.net.
Auditions North County Recreation District • Nehalem Try out for a role in “Take a Number, Darling,” the upcoming production from Riverbend Players. This contemporary farce by Jack Sharkey calls for three women and three men; and includes crazy and comical confusion all the way. Running for three weekends in February. 6:30 pm, 36155 Ninth Street. FMI, call Linda Makohon at 503-368-5764.
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014 • 13
Call these | Dreaming of a beach house beach brokers
COZY HOMES with CHARACTER in Tillamook County
AN OCEANSIDE TREASURE Z[LWZ [V ILHJO X\HPU[ ]PSSHNL YLZ[H\YHU[Z 6YPNPUHS JOHYHJ[LY THPU[HPULK ILH\[PM\S \WNYHKLZ PUJS VWLU RP[JOLU ^P[O PZSHUK 4PSNHYK ;\ZJHU` ^PUKV^Z SHYNL UL^LY ]PL^ KLJR MV\UKH[PVU ÄUPZOLK ZSLLWPUN WVYJO HKKLK I[O V\[ZPKL ZOV^LY MLS 14-908 $299,999
FAIRYTALE COTTAGE, OCEANVIEW, SECRET GARDEN with hot tub, ocean view incl Cape Lookout. Artist’s OVTL )HTIVV ÅVVYZ IYPNO[ VWLU SP]PUN HYLH YVTHU[PJ [\YYL[ 3HYNL RP[JOLU ^ ^VVK JHIPUL[Z HKQVPUZ NYLH[YVVT (J[P]L popular vacation rental. Quiet, WYP]H[L ZL[[PUN SHYNL KLJRZ V]LYSVVR ILH\[PM\S NHYKLUZ 2 lots. MLS 14-816 $385,000
CUTEST COTTAGE STYLE WHYR TVKLS PU]P[PUN MYVU[ WVYJO ZL[ HTVUN [OL [YLLZ VU H IPN WHYR SPRL SV[ SHYNL KLJRZ :HSL PUJS\KLZ ZLWHYH[L HKQVPUPUN [H_ SV[Z HUK H Z[VYHNL I\PSKPUN 6WLU RP[JOLU HKQVPUZ ZWHJPV\Z NYLH[YVVT HUK ILKYVVT >OH[ TVYL KV `V\ ULLK MVY H NL[H^H` VU [OL ILH\[PM\S 6YLNVU *VHZ[& MLS 14-730 $139,000
2 LOTS! Well maintained manufactured home in Westwood Village with large covered deck, boat dock and a 4-car detached garage (1,152 sq. ft built in 1999). Large great room that opens onto a very large deck. Lots of built-in storage space in garage and home. Home is on one lot and garage and dock are on the other. Each lot has a septic. MLS 14-2534 $189,000
www.PamZielinski.com
<;;,93@ */(9405. JV[[HNL VU V]LY HJYL VJLHUMYVU[ OHZ KPYLJ[ ILHJO HJJLZZ VJLHU VY SHRL ]PL^ MYVT L]LY` room! Vacation rental with YL[\YU N\LZ[Z ,UQV` [OL ÄYL VJLHU]PL^ ZPT\S[HULV\ZS` 6JLHU]PL^ KLJR SHRL ]PL^ PU IHJR`HYK L_[YH YVVT IH[O PU NHYHNL 9= WHYRPUN 14-156 $479,000
ctabasko@peak.org http://www.waldportrealty.com Office: 541-563-3233
Charlie Tabasko, GRI/Broker Corner of Hwy 101 & Willow St. Waldport, OR 97394
541-961-5758
ALL NEW LISTINGS! PROFITABLE OCEAN VIEW MOTEL on the north side of Lincoln City. 18 guest rooms with additional 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath manager’s unit and double car garage. Great investment with over 300 feet of 101 frontage and the casino within walking distance. MLS 14-844 $699,000
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Netarts Bay, OR
Serving the Central Coast Since 1949
Mobile 503.880.8034
WANT RESULTS?
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EXCELLENT COMMERCIAL BUILDING on the north end of Lincoln City right in the hub of the shopping area. Currently rented month to month. Two units with entrances from 2 streets. Priced to sell. MLS 14-923 $319,000
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Home Services
Northwest Real Estate
Waldport Realty Company
Pam Zielinski 42-14
Berkshire Hathaway
541-994-3577 800-357-7653
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mschults@wcn.net GREAT COMMERCIAL BUILDING www.MarkSchults.com right in the heart of Newport. The three bot- 3691 NW Hwy. 101 tom units are fully rented, there are 6 office Lincoln City, OR space units upstairs. MLS 14-1148 $449,000
Kiwanda Coastal Properties Oregon Coast Real Estate Sales
Outstanding Agents Outstanding Results®
Unobstructed view of 3 Arch Rocks and the Cape Lookout coastline. Extra large lot with house plans and geo report. MLS 14-246 $379,000
Nestucca River Frontage Affordable River Fisherman’s dream. River front home on 4 acres with Frontage - Close large shop. Country setting to Lincoln City and lots of great fishing and hunting. Just in time for fishing season! MLS 13-451 $289,000
Here’s your chance. River front mfr home with detached garage. Great price! MLS 14-586 $168,000
Stephanie Schriber
Real Estate Broker RE/MAX HomeSource Beautiful custom built home with attention to deCell 503-801-5758 tails. High quality finishes include granite in kitchen FAX 503-842-4660 and bathrooms and vertical grain fir window and stephanieschriber@gmail.com door trims. Big, comfortable rooms. Close to boat launches and beaches! MLS 14-286 $425,000 www.OregonCoastPropertyOnline.com
Nehalem Bay River Views
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$575,000 - Fantastic beach home in gated community of Kiwanda Shores in Pacific City. Perfect set up for multi-family vacation rental with an excellent income history. Two master suites, fun, big loft space and additional Captain’s Nest lookout room. Amazing ocean views and direct beach access just steps away. Well maintained and many upgrades throughout! It is being sold furnished. MLS #14-1916
Nicole Twigg
$109,900 - 35105 4th Street. Centrally located beach cottage in heart of Pacific City. Two bedrooms, one bath and a new pellet stove. Fenced back yard with covered patio/ deck. Walk to fishing chinook salmon off big Nestucca River bank. Also airport, shopping, beach, and restaurants nearby. MLS 14-594
Sophie Nelson
503-816-9516
503-801-5767
twiggnicole@yahoo.com
neskonelson@gmail.com
Local Oregon Coast Real Estate Experts. Call today for more info on any local listings
14 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014
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Amazing Views! Oceanside, OR
35005 Cape Kiwanda Dr., Pacific City kiwandacoastalproperties.com
one man’s beach C O M M E N TA R Y • B Y M A T T L O V E
Protecting Cascade Head O
regon marks a very important 40th anniversary later this year, and it’s worth celebrating but not for nostalgia. On December 22, 1974, a bill passed by a Democratic Congress and signed into law by Republican President Gerald Ford established the 9,670-acre Cascade Head Scenic Research Area. Part of the land covered by that bipartisan action was Hart’s Cove. I know something about that magical place. I know a lot about magical natural places on the Oregon Coast that state and federal politicians from both political parties protected years ago when I was a kid growing up in Oregon City. Later as an adult, I discovered these places and they revolutionized my soul and helped me become a writer. By the way, I never paid a cent to use any of them. At the time, the law was a unique legislative creation and one that easily qualified for the pantheon of great American conservation notions. Remember some of them? A national park system. Wilderness areas. Clean air and water initiatives. Marine Mammal, Migratory Bird and Endangered Species Acts. Earth Day. These initiatives, most of them unprecedented in world history when they were enacted, seem now like they belong more to Tolkien’s Middle Earth saga than modern American political consciousness. We clearly have little legislative ability to think of the near or distant future when it comes to the environment, despite imminent calamities staring us in the face. Many Oregonians, particular coastal ones, helped provide the necessary political education and pressure to make this particular Cascade Head designation possible (there have been others dating back to 1934). U.S. Senator Bob Packwood (Republican-Oregon) was among them. That’s right, Bob Packwood. Remember him? He was the longterm senator who 20 years later resigned in disgrace over reports of serial sexual shenanigans. I’ll never forget seeing a stunning photograph taken by Salem photographer Gerry Lewin of an umbrella-free Packwood on Cascade Head in a driving rainstorm that was presumably taken at the dedication ceremony. Yes, Republican U.S. senators from Oregon did that sort of thing in the 1960, 70s and 80s. You can also thank Republican Senator Mark Hatfield for his crucial role in saving Yaquina Head from becoming a rock quarry. If truth be told, it was Oregon Republicans like Bob Packwood, Tom McCall, Mark Hatfield, Sydney Bazett and Clay Meyers, to name a few, who were in the vanguard of that protection. Where is that type of Oregon Republican now? A state turns its lonely eyes to you, and I say that as a Democrat.
In or around 1975, the Forest Service produced a 20-page-black and white booklet titled “Cascade Head: Land For Learning,” and distributed it along the North and Central Oregon Coasts. It is an astonishing little publication that bordered on counterculture four decades ago, and feels positively revolutionary today. I doubt anyone currently employed by the Forest Service gets to write prose for a public audience quite like this: Look about you, there is life here. Yours, and that of thousands of other living things — plants and animals. Your own heart is beating in time with the natural rhythms of this place. There is the motion of the wind and the waves and fall of tides; the beginning and end of days and of seasons. There is death, the cycle of living and dying, of growing and becoming. All that nature is or will be is written on this landscape. Let me just add that “Written on this landscape” precisely because people decided to save this area from rapine, development and filthy lucre. “Cascade Head: Land For Learning” fails to mention that story. How did Packwood and friends pull it off? Some writer needs to discover the reasons, covert or otherwise, and herald the means. There are still many more places along the Oregon Coast in dire need of protection. As I said, Hart’s Cove named after a teacher who lived on Cascade Head in the early 1900s, was part of the acreage protected by the law. I rate it as one of the spectacular unspoiled coastal places in the country. As long time readers of this column know, I hope one day to end my sentient life there by
returning to the roiling azure waters of the cove. I’ve hiked the Hart’s Cove trail about a dozen times, and once with a hearty group of students from Newport High School in 2011 who will never forget that December day. (The Hart’s Cove trail closes January 1 and won’t reopen until July 15.) That rare sunny afternoon in winter, we pledged our honor, fealty and sacred fortunes to always enjoy and protect these Oregon places. Believe me, I also told them the inspiring political story that made our experience possible, what little I knew of it. The point of the instruction was: get involved, save nature like someone did for you, vote at the bare minimum, politics matter, just look around. Speaking of politics, an election for U.S. Senate in Oregon looms. We might all do well to ask which candidate possesses the foresight and courage today to protect something as-of-yet unprotected in Oregon as beautiful and ecologically significant and largely unprotected as Cascade Head was 40 years ago. We might even ask the candidates if they’ve ever hiked a trail on Cascade Head. Depending on how they answer, that might tell us everything we need to know about whom we should send to Washington. Matt Love is author/editor of 12 books about Oregon. His new book is “Rose City Heist: A True Crime Portland Tale of Sex, Gravy, Jewelry and Almost Rock and Roll.” It is available at all coastal bookstores or through www.nestuccaspitpress.com. Love can be reached at nestuccaspitpress@gmail.com.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014 • 15
The Lincoln City Chamber of Commerce is promising an evening of revelry and devilment at The Eventuary event center on Friday, Oct. 31, when its Young Professionals will host a Chamber of Horrors Halloween party. The evening will feature live music by local favorite The Ocean; a costume contest with prizes; a roaming magician; and celebrity fortune tellers including Mayor Dick Anderson, Niki Price of the Cultural Center, Eric Smileuske and Heather Hatton of Chinook Winds Casino Resort and Chamber Director Nonni Augustine. The 21-and-over party will run from 8 to 11 pm at 560 SW Fleet Avenue. Admission is $15 at the door. For more information, call 541994-3070, email info@lcchamber. com or go to www.lcchamber.com.
Night of the
F
orget rats, these days it seems you are never more than 10 feet away from a zombie. And, on Saturday, Oct. 25, chances are you will get a whole lot closer than that if you take a trip to the Oregon Coast Aquarium in Newport, where the flesh-eating terrors will take over the building for Creatures of the Night. The annual Halloween celebration will deliver flight and delight in equal measure as guests make their way through the four-acre passage of nightmares from 6:30 to 8:30 pm. Due to the frightening nature of this event, parents are strongly discouraged from bringing children under the age of eight, or older children with sensitive natures. Strollers and flash photography are prohibited. Those that dare to brave Creatures of the Night may gain entry with $2 and two cans of non-perishable people or pet food for donation to Food Share of Lincoln County and the Lincoln County Animal Shelter. Admission is $5 without donated food items. Entry for aquarium members is free, but they are still encouraged to donate items. The aquarium, located at 2820 S.E. Ferry Slip Road, will close at 4 pm on Saturday in preparation for the event. For more information, go to www.aquarium.org or call 541-867-3474.
NEWPORT FARMERS MARKET SATURDAYS 9am to 1:00pm Thru October
Weave your own wool rug A one-day experience. It’s washable! $60: Includes all materials!
Pick your own colors! Class size limited to four people at $60 each. Rug size approx. to 2-1/2 x 4-1/2
Reservations: 541-764-3997 • Just 3 Miles N. of Depoe Bay
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Invoking the commerce claws
halloween
at Newport City Hall Hwy. 101 and Angle St. Rain or Shine! LOCALLY GROWN FOR ALL SEASONS
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16 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014
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lively
{Insert gratuities pun here} Celebrity couples face off in battle for charity tips Head to The Eventuary for dinner this Thursday and you might find your server being particularly attentive, laughing extra loud at your jokes and maybe even batting their eyelashes. That’s because it’s Celebrity Server night, where four familiar faces will be taking orders and drumming up tips in aid of Family Promise of Lincoln City. Dave and Niki Price and Joey and Lori Arce-Torres will be completing to see which couple can raise the most to benefit the charity, which helps provide shelter, meals and long-term support for families with children. Family Promise Executive Director Julie Buck said both couples are very well-connected, which should make for an entertaining contest. “Does Dave Price have an advantage after helping at several events at the Eventuary previously?” she said. “Will the Arce-Torres team break ahead with donations from some of the teams that Joey coaches, combined with
Lori’s clients coming to stack up the funds? Or will it be Niki with many contacts from the Lincoln City Cultural Center who will put her team over the top?” The menu features the famed pasta dishes of Kip Ward from the Historic Anchor Inn, with choices including spaghetti or penne pasta with vegetarian red sauce; meaty red sauce made with pork sausage; a white clam sauce; or even the bi-sensual special — your choice of two sauces combined. Kip will also be offering a vegetarian lasagna as a special entrée. Dinners are priced at between $10 and $13 and include a pasta main dish, Caesar salad, garlic French bread and dessert. Bar service is also available. The Thursday, Oct. 30, event will run from 6 to 7:30 pm at 560 SW Fleet Avenue. Reservations are required and can be made by calling 541-992-5628. For more information, call Heather Hatton at 541921-1599.
Dave and Niki Price with Joey and Lori Arce-Torres
Wine, women and … chocolate? Art, theater and politics will intersect on Sunday, Oct. 26, when the Central Oregon Coast Chapter of the National Organization for Women (NOW) holds its Celebration of Women “Wine and Chocolate” event. The afternoon gala aims to highlight how Newport is rich in talent, organizations and businesses that support women; and also to raise funds for NOW programs that help women and girls achieve their full potential. Entertainment will include “Brava! Women in Theater,” three vignettes coordinated by Akia Woods, directed by Mary Eastman, hosted by Cindy McConnell and starring Khlo Brateng, Bonnie Ross, Nikki Atkins and Barbara Berge. Local women authors will be on hand to sell and sign their works, while women candidates for local
If you go WHAT: Celebration of Women WHERE: Newport Performing Arts Center, 777 W. Olive Street WHEN: 2 pm, Sunday, Oct. 26 CALL: 541-614-4677 or email centraloregoncoastnow@gmail.com
elected offices will be present so that guests can get to know them. In addition to NOW; Altrusa, American Association of University Women and League of Women Voters will have information available about their local organizations. As well as wine and chocolate, light hors d’oeuvres will be available for purchase. There will be a silent auction with items including artwork by local artists, restaurant certificates,
handcrafted jewelry, gift baskets, an excursion and a variety of gift certificates. One of the premier auction offerings is the painting “Ocean Cliffs-Lost Creek” by internationally known artist and Newport Mayor Sandy Roumagoux. It is the only still-available piece from a series of six paintings, one of which sold for $2,000. The work shows the fragility of the cliffs from sea waves and wind erosion on the Oregon Coast. The painting is currently available for viewing in the lobby of the Newport Performing Arts Center. It has an opening bid of $250. The Celebration of Women will run from 2 to 4 pm at the Newport Performing Arts Center, 777 W. Olive Street. For more information, email centraloregoncoastnow@gmail.com or call 541-614-4677.
Prepare for a pearls’ night out Tickets are now on sale for the 14th annual Oyster Cloyster, which will take place on Saturday, Nov. 1, at the Oregon Coast Aquarium in Newport. Presented by Chinook Winds Casino Resort and Pacific Seafood, the event sees Oregon-based chefs serve up their own take on the oyster, competing for the attention and votes of professional judges and party goers. Guests will savor delectable foods from the land and sea, Oregon wines and craft beer from Rogue Ales as they explore the aquarium’s serene exhibit galleries after-hours. Entertainment will include behind-the-scenes tours, live music and no-stakes casino games run by Chinook Winds dealers. Tickets are $75 apiece, or $65 for aquarium members, with proceeds benefiting both the aquarium and Oregon Coast Community College’s Aquarium Science Program. Prices include all food. Wine sampling and glasses of wine are available for menu price. For more information or to buy tickets, go to OysterCloyster.org.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014 • 17
s o u n d wa v e s Friday, Oct. 24
SUNDAY JAM — Hosted by Guilty Tendencies. Open to all styles. 3-6 pm, Bay Haven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd, Newport, 541265-7271. TIM TRAUTMAN — Piano-playing singer-songwriter. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
BETH WILLIS DUO — What’s better than hearing beautiful
music in the comfort of the Attic Lounge? Calling the set list. Come out and pick your favorites. 8-11 pm, Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm. Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. RONNIE JAY — Hailing from San Francisco, Jay will be performing acoustic American music, singing and playing guitar and harmonica on songs by Muddy, Mose, Duke, Chuck and other American artists. 7:30-9:30 pm, Cecil’s Dirty Apron, 912 N. Coast Hwy., Newport, 541-264-8360. BARTOW AND THE BACKSEAT DRIVERS — Rick Bartow, Barbara Lee Turrill and Gib Bernhardt playing Americana plus some threadbare stories of myth and mayhem. 6-8 pm, Club 1216, located inside Canyon Way Restaurant and Bookstore, 1216 SW Canyon Way, Newport, 541-265-8319. CRESCENDO — A must-see band from Eugene, playing originals and more. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. BRET LUCICH SHOW — The local favorite, singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician plays the Waterfront Grille with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 7-10 pm, Embarcadero Resort 1000 SE Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-8521. IAN, STACY & WHALE — Acoustic American roots. Covers and originals with elements of folk, blues and alt-country. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Saturday, Oct. 25 RAMBLE ON — Make sure you come in through the out door to
hear this Led Zeppelin tribute band. $5. 9 pm, The San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita, 503-368-5080. THE ROCKHOUNDS — Classic rock and blues, served up hot by your favorite purveyors of tone. Sportsmans Pub and Grub, 34975 Brooten Road, Pacific City, 503-965-9991. THE FLEXTONES — Eclectic, accomplished and bodacious, this band has been rockin’ it in the Mid-Valley since 1996. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. TED VAUGHN BLUES BAND — Get ready for a raucous, high-energy performance from these five blues pros. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976. LARRY BLAKE MEDICINE SHOW BAND — A crazy bunch of reprobate musicians who play their heart out and sing like birds (crows?) They have never made up their minds about what music they don’t like; so you might hear a Grateful Dead tune followed by Frank Sinatra, followed by some old jug band tune from the
Monday, Oct. 27 RICHARD SHARPLESS — ‘Retired’ from his days playing in
Nashville, Richard plays guitar and sings his own tunes plus an eclectic mix of favorites. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Tuesday, Oct. 28 ROCK’N TACOS OPEN JAM — Jam hosts Argosy Instone
mostly play rock and blues but will “try almost anything with anyone.” Pair that with 50-cent tacos and you have yourself one fine evening. 7-10 pm, Uptown Pub, 636 SW Hurbert Street, Newport, 541-265-3369. JOHN BRINGETTO — Jazz standards. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Wednesday, Oct. 29 PHIL PAIGE — Paige has a clear and distinctive voice, thoughtful
Yur Daddy • Friday, Oct. 31 in Nehalem 1920s. You never know what you’re going to get, except fun. 8-11 pm, Salishack Tavern, 6725 Gleneden Beach Loop, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2434. BETH WILLIS — Beatles? Sure. Weezer? Absolutely. Etta James? Yes. Rihanna? Why not?! If you can think of it, they can play it. Come out and see. 8-11 pm, Attic Lounge, Salishan Spa & Golf Resort, Gleneden Beach, 541-764-2371. MICHAEL DANE — The famous Michael on piano and guitar, playing modern classics with Hawaiian style. 6-10 pm, Gracie’s Sea Hag, 58 SE Hwy. 101, Depoe Bay, 541-765-2734. RIC DIBLASI — Another show from the crooner piano man. 6:30-8:30 pm, The Lodge at Otter Crest, 310 Otter Crest Drive, Otter Rock, 541-765-2111. JUNE AND JOREN RUSHING — Local favorite husbandand-wife team, playing your favorite songs. 8:30-11:30 pm, Nana’s Irish Pub, 613 NW 3rd Street, Newport, 541-574-8787. RICK BARTOW AND THE BACKSEAT DRIVERS — Local legend Rick and the Drivers always deliver the goods. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. THE OCEAN — Rock and roll classics. 7-10 pm, Embarcadero Resort 1000 SE Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-8521.
RITCHIE G & TU TU KANE — Hawaiian style. 6-8:30 pm, The
Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
STELLA BLUE — 6-8 pm, The Yachats Farmstore & Brewery, 348
Hwy. 101, Yachats, 541-547-3884.
Sunday, Oct. 26 OREGON COAST JAM SOCIETY — 4 pm, Old Oregon Tavern, 1604 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-8515. KIRBY — 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. LOZELLE JENNINGS — presents The Pentacoastal Blues Jam. 4-7 pm, Cecil’s Dirty Apron, 912 N. Coast Hwy., Newport, 541-2648360. BEVERLY RITZ — This master of solo piano jazz performs jazz classics and elegant original jazz and blues over Sunday brunch. 12:30-2:30 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541574-8134.
and emotional songwriting, clever lyrics and melodic harmonies. His guitar style shows influences of country, jazz, bluegrass, finger-picking folk, blues and pop. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Thursday, Oct. 30 BRET LUCICH SHOW — A local favorite singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 7-9 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. RIC DIBLASI — The crooner piano man takes to the stage. 6:308:30 pm, The Lodge at Otter Crest, 310 Otter Crest Drive, Otter Rock, 541-765-2111. OPEN JAM — Hosted by Argosy Instone. 8-11 pm, Siletz Road House & Brewery, 267 N Gaither Street, Siletz, 541-444-7012. STELLA BLUE & FRIENDS — 7 pm, Cecil’s Dirty Apron, 912 N. Coast Hwy., Newport, 541-264-8360.
Continued on Pg. 19
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Closed Tuesdays until next summer.
33920 Hwy. 101 S. in Cloverdale
18 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014
3305 S.W. Hwy. 101 • Lincoln City • 541-996-2230
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s o u n d wa v e s Continued from Pg. 18
Thursday, Oct. 30 CONTINUED
Gorgeous Jewelry Women’s & Men’s Accessories for You & Your Home
OPEN MIC — Hosted by Roland Woodcock. 6 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. RICHARD SILEN — The well-known local singer and guitarist plays an eclectic and engaging mix of everything from American songbook standards to blues to originals; accompanied by sidekick Deane Bristow on harmonica. 7 pm, Bay 839, 839 Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-2839. IAN, STACY & WHALE — Acoustic American roots. Covers and originals with elements of folk, blues and alt-country. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Friday, Oct. 31
Saturday, Nov. 1 LINCOLN POPS BIG BAND — Swing to music from the
golden era with this professional big band. $10 in advance; $12 at the door. 7-10 pm, 540 NE Hwy. 101, Lincoln City Cultural Center, 541-994-9994. ROCK N ROLL COWBOYS — Sometimes, the name says it all… 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. WATER BROTHERS — Blues and rock. 9 pm, Snug Harbor Bar & Grill, 5001 SW Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-996-4976.
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.
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THE WAY DOWNS — A Halloween party hosted by this retro
band in the digital age. 9 pm, The San Dune Pub, 127 Laneda Avenue, Manzanita, 503-368-5080. YUR DADDY — ‘Yur’ invited to this Halloween bash, hosted by these rock, funk and party masters, with special guests The Hill Dogs. 9 pm, Manzanita Lighthouse Pub & Grub, 36450 Hwy. 101, Nehalem, 503-368-4990. RETROACTIVE GAMMA RAYS — The Lincoln City band reunites for this, their first show in more than two years. Surf music along with classic Halloween tunes from DJ Benjamoney, a costume contest and dance party — with prizes. 9 pm, Nauti Mermaid, NW 13th and Highway 101, Lincoln City. TYKL STYQ — A hard-hitting, aggressive rock band that is not afraid of more cowbell. 9 pm, Roadhouse 101, 4649 SW Hwy 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-7729. 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. BRET LUCICH BAND — The band hosts this Halloween party and costume contest, with dancing and more. Wear your scariest costume and win great prizes. Judging starts at 10 pm. 7-10 pm, Embarcadero Resort 1000 SE Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-8521. THE BAD WEEDS — Local band with bluegrass and Celtic influences. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477.
Local, Regional & Exotic Items & Clothes
(south of Birkenstock)
541-994-2518
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NOW PLAYING
Beth Willis • Friday & Saturday, Oct 24 & 25 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. RIC DIBLASI — Another show from the crooner piano man. 6:30-8:30 pm, The Lodge at Otter Crest, 310 Otter Crest Drive, Otter Rock, 541-765-2111. WILD HOG IN THE WOODS — Old timey stringband music. 8:30-11:30 pm, Nana’s Irish Pub, 613 NW 3rd Street, Newport, 541-574-8787. RICK BARTOW AND THE BACKSEAT DRIVERS —Local legend Rick and the Drivers always deliver the goods. 7-10 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541-574-8134. BRET LUCICH SHOW — The local favorite, singer-songwriter, entertainer and musician plays the Waterfront Grille with a wide variety of music for listening and dancing. 7-10 pm, Embarcadero Resort 1000 SE Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-265-8521.
Sunday, Nov. 2 OREGON COAST JAM SOCIETY — 4 pm, Old Oregon
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Tavern, 1604 Hwy. 101, Lincoln City, 541-994-8515. STEVE SLOAN — Acoustic. 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. LOZELLE JENNINGS — presents The Pentacoastal Blues Jam. 4-7 pm, Cecil’s Dirty Apron, 912 N. Coast Hwy., Newport, 541-2648360. BEVERLY RITZ — This master of solo piano jazz performs jazz classics and elegant original jazz and blues over Sunday brunch. 12:30-2:30 pm, Café Mundo, 209 NW Coast Street, Newport, 541574-8134. SUNDAY JAM — Hosted by Guilty Tendencies. Open to all styles. 3-6 pm, Bay Haven Inn, 608 SW Bay Blvd, Newport, 541-2657271. COPPER & CONGRESS — This desert-born, female-fronted three piece creates folk overtones, hypnotic R&B grooves and ethereal jazz atmospheres to act as a canvas for lilting metaphors and lyrical prowess. 6-8:30 pm, The Drift Inn, 124 Hwy. 101 N., Yachats, 541-547-4477. DON’T SEE YOUR FAVORITE BAND? CARVE THE DATE, TIME AND VENUE ON TO THE FRAME OF MATT BLAKEMAN’S GLASSES AND SEND THEM TO MID CITY PLAZA. CHISEL BLUNT? JUST EMAIL THE DETAILS TO NEWS@OREGONCOASTTODAY.COM.
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oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014 • 19
By Dave Green
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learn a little
tide tables
Spend a day
LINCOLN CITY
at prep school
Every Sunday 9am - 3 pm at the Lincoln City Cultural Center
540 NE Hwy. 101 lincolncityfarmersmarket.org
ve We Mo . 26th! s Oct r o o d n I NEW HOURS: 10am - 3pm
Tillamook Bay, Garibaldi Date
Thurs., Oct. 23 Fri., Oct. 24 Sat., Oct. 25 Sun., Oct. 26 Mon., Oct. 27 Tues., Oct. 28 Wed., Oct. 29 Thurs., Oct. 30
6:47 am 7:23 am 7:58 am 8:35 am 9:14 am 10:00 am 10:57 am 12:08 pm
Siletz Bay, Lincoln City
If you go
Date
6:48 am 7:22 am 7:57 am 8:34 am 9:16 am 10:05 am 11:05 am 12:02 am
COST: Free
Thurs., Oct. 23 Fri., Oct. 24 Sat., Oct. 25 Sun., Oct. 26 Mon., Oct. 27 Tues., Oct. 28 Wed., Oct. 29 Thurs., Oct. 30
MORE INFO: www.lincolncountysheriff.net
Yaquina Bay, Newport
WHAT: Emergency readiness fair WHERE: Lincoln County Fairgrounds, 622 NE 3rd St., Newport WHEN: 11 am - 2 pm, Saturday, Oct. 25
the United States speaks to the head, the Declaration of Independence speaks to the heart and to the body;” she said, “if the Constitution is prose, the Declaration is poetry.” Willis serves as executive director of the Policy Consensus Initiative, a national nonprofit organization that is housed at Portland State University and devoted to improving democratic governance. Her first book of poems, “Blood Sisters of the Republic,” was
Date
Thurs., Oct. 23 Fri., Oct. 24 Sat., Oct. 25 Sun., Oct. 26 Mon., Oct. 27 Tues., Oct. 28 Wed., Oct. 29 Thurs., Oct. 30
Learning some home truths The role of the Declaration of Independence in modern America is the topic of the latest Oregon Humanities talk, which will take place at the Tillamook County Pioneer Museum on Saturday, Oct. 25. Wendy Willis, a poet, essayist and national leader in civic engagement, will present “The Truths We Hold: The Poetry and Lessons of the Declaration of Independence,” a free conversation starting at 1 pm. “If the Constitution of
Outdoor Market
6:10 am 6:44 am 7:19 am 7:56 am 8:38 am 9:27 am 10:27 am 11:41 am
Alsea Bay, Waldport Date
6:39 am 7:13 am 7:48 am 8:25 am 9:05 am 9:53 am 10:50 am 12:02 pm
Low Tides
1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.7 3.0 3.3 3.4
7:22 pm 7:59 pm 8:38 pm 9:18 pm 10:02 pm 10:52 pm 11:48 pm ---
Low Tides
1.4 1.5 1.7 1.9 2.1 2.3 2.4 0.0
7:30 pm 8:07 pm 8:45 pm 9:27 pm 10:13 pm 11:05 pm --12:19 pm
Low Tides
2.0 2.3 2.5 2.8 3.1 3.3 3.5 3.5
6:52 pm 7:29 pm 8:07 pm 8:49 pm 9:35 pm 10:27 pm 11:24 pm ---
Low Tides
1.8 2.0 2.2 2.5 2.7 3.0 3.2 3.2
7:17 pm 7:54 pm 8:32 pm 9:13 pm 9:58 pm 10:47 pm 11:44 pm ---
High Tides
-0.2 -0.5 -0.7 -0.8 -0.6 -0.3 0.0 --
1:08 am 1:49 am 2:31 am 3:13 am 3:57 am 4:47 am 5:42 am 6:41 am
7.3 7.4 7.4 7.3 7.1 7.0 6.8 6.8
0.0 -0.2 -0.4 -0.4 -0.3 -0.2 -2.4
12:45 am 1:26 am 2:07 am 2:51 am 3:39 am 4:31 am 5:29 am 6:32 am
5.6 5.7 5.7 5.6 5.5 5.4 5.3 5.3
0.0 -0.3 -0.5 -0.6 -0.5 -0.3 0.0 --
12:36 am 1:17 am 1:58 am 2:42 am 3:30 am 4:22 am 5:20 am 6:23 am
7.3 7.3 7.3 7.3 7.1 7.0 6.9 6.9
-0.1 -0.3 -0.5 -0.5 -0.4 -0.2 0.1 --
12:49 am 1:30 am 2:11 am 2:54 am 3:40 am 4:31 am 5:28 am 6:30 am
6.9 7.0 7.0 6.9 6.7 6.6 6.5 6.5
1:00 pm 1:33 pm 2:06 pm 2:40 pm 3:18 pm 4:03 pm 4:58 pm 6:06 pm
High Tides
12:27 pm 12:58 pm 1:30 pm 2:06 pm 2:46 pm 3:32 pm 4:28 pm 5:36 pm
High Tides
12:18 pm 12:49 pm 1:21 pm 1:57 pm 2:37 pm 3:23 pm 4:19 pm 5:27 pm
High Tides
12:37 pm 1:09 pm 1:41 pm 2:16 pm 2:55 pm 3:41 pm 4:36 pm 5:44 pm
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Coastal public safety and community volunteer agencies are pooling their resources to present the Prepare Together in 2014 emergency readiness fair in Newport on Saturday, Oct. 25. The fair, which is free and open to all, will run from 11 am to 2 pm at the Lincoln County Fairgrounds, 622 NE 3rd Street. From 11:30 am to 12:30 pm, Lincoln County Emergency Manager Jenny Demaris will give a presentation entitled “What you may not know about the Cascadia Subduction Zone Earthquake and your need to prepare.” The presentation will focus on the need for personal, family and business preparedness efforts in advance of a catastrophic natural event such as an earthquake or tsunami. The readiness fair will provide various booths with educational information as well as demonstrations on how to mitigate hazards in your home, business or community gathering places. Local vendors will be on hand to provide examples of emergency readiness kits and gadgets to help with preparedness efforts. One of the key demonstrations will focus on how to purify your own water with no power for less than $50 in set-up supplies. Stop by and sample the water to see just how easy it is to transform water from dirty to clean. For more information, go to www. lincolncountysheriff.net.
FARMERS & CRAFTERS
8.5 8.6 8.6 8.6 8.5 8.2 7.8 7.4 6.6 6.8 6.9 6.8 6.7 6.5 6.1 5.8 8.6 8.8 8.9 8.9 8.7 8.4 8.0 7.5 8.0 8.2 8.3 8.3 8.1 7.8 7.4 7.0
Wendy Willis
Thurs., Oct. 23 Fri., Oct. 24 Sat., Oct. 25 Sun., Oct. 26 Mon., Oct. 27 Tues., Oct. 28 Wed., Oct. 29 Thurs., Oct. 30
released in 2012. The museum is located at 2106 Second Street, Tillamook. For more information, contact Carla Albright at 503-842-4553.
Bold = Minus Tides. Tide tables are for recreational use. If you’re piloting the “Costa Concordia II” in front of your college roommate’s oceanfront bungalow at Otter Crest or Cape Lookout, talk to a harbormaster. Tide info courtesy tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov. If you discover a seal pup or other stranded marine animal on the beach, do not approach, touch, or pour water on the animal. Instead, call 800-452-7888. Keep dogs leashed and far from all marine mammals. Japanese Tsunami Debris Info: Information on significant marine debris sightings on the coast can be reported to the NOAA Marine Debris Program at DisasterDebris@noaa.gov.
oregon coast TODAY • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014 • 21
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22 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014
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learn a little
Find
Harmony
Duck Fan? Beaver Fan? Lincoln County High School Fan? To hear all the highlights of your favorite team keep your radio tuned to AM 1310 AM KNPT or 1400 AM KBCH. Cowabunga Longboard Classic, Otter Rock, 1983 Photo by Scott Blackman
Catch this new exhibit in Newport Plus, Lincoln Countyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s high school sports action! knpt â&#x20AC;˘ 1310am â&#x20AC;˘ newport
|
kbch â&#x20AC;˘ 1400am â&#x20AC;˘ lincoln city
Now Playing %HQ $Ď&#x2026;HFN 5RVDPXQG 3LNH 7\OHU 3HUU\ 1HLO 3DWULFN +DUULV
GONE GIRL
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Keep our stations on your presets, and tune in during power outages for news updates!
SATURDAY MORNING cinema! Sunday, Oct. 25 Alfred Hitchcockâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
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This exhibit features many Blackman photos of the areaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s pioneer surfers, including members of the famous Agate Beach Surf Club. Also featured is surďŹ ng memorabilia from the community and items the Blackmans discovered in the course of their book research. More than just a photo exhibit, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Making Wavesâ&#x20AC;? includes early surďŹ ng posters and several 1960s vintage surfboards, most of which were loaned by Mike Jipp, PaciďŹ c Northwest Surf Museum and Lincoln City Surf Shop. These rare old-school boards were made by Oregon board makers such as Jensen, Tillamook Head and Jim Sagawa. Most are long boards, one of which dates from 1946 and is 12 feet long. An opening reception for the â&#x20AC;&#x153;Making Wavesâ&#x20AC;? exhibit will be held at the PaciďŹ c Maritime & Heritage Center on Friday, Oct. 24, at 5 pm. Admission to this event is free for Lincoln County Historical Society members and $5 for non-members. For more information, call 541-265-7509. The PaciďŹ c Maritime & Heritage Center is located at 333 SE Bay Blvd. and is open 11 am to 4 pm Thursday through Sunday. Admission is $5 for adults and $3 for children 3 through 12.
Special Showtimes: Oct. 24 - Oct. 30 BLACKMAIL )UL 6DW á 6XQ 0RQ (1929) â&#x20AC;˘ 11:00am â&#x20AC;˘ $2 7XHV WKURXJK 7KXUV Full schedule @ cinemalovers.com R BIJOU THEATRE â&#x20AC;˘ 1624 NE Hwy. 101, Lincoln City â&#x20AC;˘ 541-994-8255 â&#x20AC;˘ cinemalovers.com
Make a Fused-Glass Project and SAVE! Starting at $30 & up Create beautiful plates, platters, bowls, coasters, sconces, window pieces, etc. Gift CertiďŹ cates Available
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4933 SW Hwy. 101 â&#x20AC;˘ 541-994-2427 â&#x20AC;˘ Lincoln City â&#x20AC;˘ morart.net
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The history of Oregon Coast surďŹ ng, surfer culture and the pioneers who made it happen is on show in â&#x20AC;&#x153;Making Waves,â&#x20AC;? a new exhibit at Newportâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s PaciďŹ c Maritime & Heritage Center. For centuries, surďŹ ng was central to ancient Polynesian culture. It was â&#x20AC;&#x153;discoveredâ&#x20AC;? by European explorers in the late 1700s. The ďŹ rst written account of surďŹ ng in Hawaii appears in the journals of Captain James Cook, who describes with envy the pleasure experienced by these early surfer dudes in December 1777. Locally, surďŹ ng got a false start in the early 1910s at Newportâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Agate Beach. As far as anyone knows it went into hibernation in 1918 after World War I. The era of modern surďŹ ng began locally in 1964 when Scott Blackman went to Sears in Salem, bought a board and caught his ďŹ rst wave at Agate Beach. Immediately he was hooked. Blackman, who is known nationally for his photography, was not only the areaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ďŹ rst modern surfer and mentor to the eraâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s young surfers, he used his camera to artfully document local surfers and surďŹ ng culture. Scott and his wife, Sandy, recently wrote a book, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Oregon SurďŹ ng, Central Coastâ&#x20AC;? and the two of them made this exhibit possible.
oregon coast TODAY â&#x20AC;˘ facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday â&#x20AC;˘ october 24, 2014 â&#x20AC;˘ 23
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24 • oregoncoastTODAY.com • facebook.com/oregoncoasttoday • october 24, 2014