Source Weekly - January 21, 2016

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VOLUME 20 / ISSUE 03 / JANUARY 21, 2016

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CONS&

ICONS

take a stand Minimum Wage P6 Public Lands Protest P8 Season of Nonviolence P9

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“Benghazi” and “Big Short” Open

sound P14

David Bowie’s “Blackstar”

News P7

National Day of Service


The Month of Chocolate is almost here!

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ASSISTANT EDITOR Hayley Jo Murphy ARTS & CULTURE EDITOR Jared Rasic NEWS REPORTER Corinne Boyer COPY EDITOR Richard Sitts BEER REVIEWER Kevin Gifford COLUMNISTS Amy Alkon, Rob Brezsney, Matt Jones, EJ Pettinger, Pearl Stark, Steve Holmes, Nick Nayne. FREELANCERS Eric Skelton, Jon Paul Jones, Russ Axon, Angela Moore, Jim Anderson, Sam Katzman, Brian Jennings. PRODUCTION MANAGER Annelie Kahn GRAPHIC DESIGNER Esther Gray ADVERTISING SALES DIRECTOR Amanda Klingman

The 2015 freeze on minimum wage spurred a bevy of ballot initiatives, and not for a token increase, but for a real livable wage. Enter Gov. Brown with a legislative proposal that politicians in Salem will vote on, not voters.

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>News: Great Old Broads for Wilderness Hundreds of activists for public land gathered in downtown Bend with a message for the Malheur National Wildlife armed occupants: “Bullies Go Home!” Taking a stand for public land and advocating for criminal charges is just their cup of tea.

Artist and forensic scientist Jennifer Hannaford recreated the mug shot of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (on this week’s cover), entirely from fingerprints. The photo she studied was taken by Alabama police for a 1956 arrest during the Montgomery bus boycotts when King was just 27 years old.

>Sound: Goodbye Ziggy Stardust David Bowie left us at the top of his game. His adieu album, released two days before his death, broke Internet records and debuted at the top of the charts. The artist was known for change, and “Blackstar” is unexpected. Jared Rasic reviews the seven-track release.

>Smoke Signals: Green Gold The Oregon Legislature will take a look at rules, rules and more rules for marijuana this year, naturally. The two-year residency requirement could go bye-bye, and if that happens, look for some big money coming into Oregon to get into the weed business on the ground floor.

OFFICE/ACCOUNTS/CIRCULATION MANAGER Sarah Curran CONTROLLER Angela Switzer PUBLISHER Aaron Switzer WILD CARD Paul Butler NATIONAL ADVERTISING Alternative Weekly Network 916-551-1770

Skiing at Mt. Bachelor's Nordic Center. Photo by Annelie Kahn.

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ICONS

take a stand Minimum Wage P6 Public Lands Protest P8 Season of Nonviolence P9

>Culture: Cons & Icons (on the cover)

ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Ban Tat, Chris Larro, Kimberly Morse

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screen P27

“Benghazi” and “Big Short” Open

sound P14

David Bowie’s “Blackstar”

News P7

National Day of Service

“Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.”, by Jennifer Hannaford, on view nw at Jenny Green Gallery, full story in Culture.

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3 VOLUME 20 ISSUE 03 / January 21, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

EDITOR Sherron Lumley

>Opinion: Minimum Wage Blues

VOLUME 20 / ISSUE 03 / JANUARY 21, 2016

The Source Weekly 704 NW Georgia Ave. Bend, OR 97703 t. 541-383-0800 f. 541-383-0088 bendsource.com info@bendsource.com

IN THIS ISSUE

COVER


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LETTERS

In his letter printed 1/14/16, Brent asked why we felt his original letter about affordable housing was racist. It was not about the obvious demographics of Bend. As The Source noted 1/7, the issue was that he drew a direct correlation between “white” affluence and a lower rate of crime. There are many reasons for increased crime in a community including poverty, but race is not one of them. That was our point. We are so used to covert and often unintentional racial slurs in our society that we often overlook the inference we or someone else has made. That sends a message, often inaccurate, to others listening. In response to Martin’s letter of 1/14, there are two definitions of cultural diversity. One refers to a community’s arts and entertainment and we certainly agree with him that Bend excels in that sense for a community its size. However, the primary definition in our dictionary of cultural diversity is “the existence of a variety of cultural or ethnic groups within a society.” The thesaurus indicates “ethnic” refers to a wide spectrum of social groups including racial, cultural, and ancestral. As Brent pointed out, Bend’s demographics indicate a very small percentage of minorities live and work here. So it appears that intention, definition, and as always, each of our own filters, has played a large part in this discussion. —Marilyn Massey and William Castell

ODE FOR THE MALHEUR STANDOFF (1/14) We’ll shoot ya, they said Cause you’re better off dead If you can’t see your way To give us our day. Hey! Our pistols we’ll draw If you don’t change the law And turn back the lands To our capable hands. —Janet Whitney

OLD BEND DISAPPEARING “Those giant buildings over there? Can you believe it?” There’s pain in her voice as she peers out the window and watches a new three-story building rise.

@sourceweekly

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5 VOLUME 20 ISSUE 03 / January 21, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

We certainly concur with The Source’s comment printed in Letter of the Week 1/7 that this is a space for opinion and discussion. We also understand the importance of freedom of speech and press. However, just as all of us choose our opinions, newspapers also choose which letters they print. That said, we also respect the difficulty at times of doing so responsibly while allowing for differences of opinion.

Mary Jane has lived in this neighborhood, on the edge of downtown Bend, for most of 70 years. She’s watched as her neighborhood changed and families were edged out, one by one, and can tell you about the people who used to live here. Vacation dwellings took the place of what was once family housing. Mary Jane is a neighborhood icon-- there’s a tiny park named after her on the corner of Georgia Avenue and Lava Road. She remembers when 3rd Street near Safeway was once the home of sagebrush and wild jackrabbits. The old lumber mill was the heart of the city and the families in this neighborhood could hear the whistles blowing at night. When the mill closed down, perhaps we lost a way of life? Old Bend is just about gone now, and those who are in charge of making decisions about building don’t seem to answer to 96-year-old grandmas. How different it might be if they did. —Vanessa Houk

SNOWSHOE VS. FAT BIKING Fat biking is an increasingly popular sport. I welcome it as an enthusiastic cyclist – mountain biking, road, triathlon - but there is a problem beginning to fester at Swampy and Meissner Sno-Parks. Tense confrontations between those on wheels and those on cross country skis or on snowshoes. Fat bikes are using the snowshoe and country-country trails. Even on multi-use trails the trailhead protocol explains right-of-way: those on wheels give way to those on foot but the claim that the snowshoe trails are 'multi-use' is by itself a point of contention given the unambiguous signage at the Sno Parks. Being asked to step aside by cyclists on trails that are a mere shoulder width wide is provocative. No doubt being invited to 'go around' is equally provoking when a bike and rider would sink several feet into the snow. This has led to heated exchanges which could easily deteriorate into something more. There is a real danger to hikers from cyclists on downhill trails, a bit like being buzzed by a motorbike club on the road, albeit in a snow trench. Stepping off the packed surface is for hikers often to risk being swallowed by the snow and a struggle to regain the trail. Hence the potential for tense stand-offs. Time for cool heads and some clarification by the Forest Service. There seem to be three options. 1. Rewrite the rules of the trail - give cyclists precedence over hikers. Bound to be horribly controversial and would fly in the face of the existing protocols for trail use. 2. Segregate the users of the Sno Parks. Cross country skiers have separate trails from snowshoe hikers today, so implement a third trail

David Bowie Day on Monday at Crawmers Critterz Preschool. Photo by school music director Victor Johnson.

for cyclists, as at Wanoga. Also controversial as cyclists would need to create and maintain a new trail system, just as hikers and cross country skiers break trail, today. 3. Ban fat biking at Swampy and Meissner. Controversial but dogs are banned at Swampy and Meissner but permitted at Wanoga so there is clearly a Forest Service precedent for restricting activities that are deemed disruptive and a precedent for park management of this nature. Angry words will inevitably lead to pushing and shoving which will escalate at some point to something more serious. The issue needs some light shed on it to ignite a debate and provide an incentive to the Forest Service to address it before we hear of broken noses or worse. No doubt the community should be canvassed but a moratorium on fat biking until the results are in seems a sensible approach. —Gavin Leslie

LETTER OF THE WEEK Marilyn and William, Thank you for sharing your insight and wisdom on the very important subjects of diversity in our community and the need to be aware of how what one says may be received and interpreted by others. We would all do well to be mindful of ways to be inclusive. There are two opportunities this week for people to learn more about this from global thought-leader john a. powell speaking in Bend. On Jan. 27, “Expanding the Circle of Human Concern,” at noon, and “Opening the Question of Race to the Question of Belonging,” at 6:30 p.m., Wille Hall, COCC’s Coats Campus Center, open to all. Continue the conversation with a cup of coffee on us. Pick up your Palate gift card at the Source Weekly office. E.J. Pettinger’s

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OPINION

HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY? Send your thoughts to editor@bendsource.com. Letters must be received by noon Friday for inclusion in the following week’s paper. Please limit letters to 250 words. Submission does not guarantee publication. Letter of the week receives $5 to Palate!

IN REPLY TO “MALHEUR REFUGE RESIDENT CALLS OUT BUNDYS” (FACEBOOK VIDEO, 1/15) Great message, especially about patience and about the certainty that the refuge still belongs to all of us. Stay steady. Don’t let Bundy’s Band of Bullies get the wish of martyrdom. —Nancy Louise Clayton ItItwas having someone someonearound around wastime timetotoadmit admit it. it. Just Just having totoshare casualdining diningwith with sharethe thedisappointment disappointment of casual wasn’t anymore. wasn’t enough enough anymore.

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FRESH KISSES FOR NEW YEAR

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EDITORIAL Minimum Wage Let the voters decide

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early 200,000 low wage workers in Oregon require public assistance in the form of SNAP (what was once known as food stamps). That is to say, they are not earning enough to be able to afford food.

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On Thursday, Gov. Kate Brown’s office fired off a press release with a proposed plan for legislation to raise the minimum wage in Oregon. So far, so good. She wants to raise minimum wages in Portland up to $15.52 by 2022, and up to $13.50 everywhere else in the state over a six-year period, with no increases until 2017. For those below the poverty level it is hard to care about 2022 or the cost of tea in China when it’s tough to keep gas in the tank or food on the table right now. Prior to the proposed legislation, not one, but four ballot initiatives to raise the minimum wage in Oregon were well underway. The Raise the Wage Coalition is backed by major labor unions. This group’s ballot initiative, if not pre-empted by Gov. Brown’s proposed legislation, would be $13.50 in two years, not six. Currently, minimum wage is $9.25 in Oregon, and $7.25 federally. The Oregonians for 15 (also known as 15 Now Oregon), rallied at the Capitol building on Saturday, Jan. 16. The group says the fight for $15 isn’t going away even if legislators pass a lower minimum wage increase.

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Gov. Brown’s legislative proposal could pre-empt all of the ballot initiatives to raise the minimum wage if passed by the Oregon legislature this year. This means our elected politicians in Salem will vote on the wage increase rather than voters at the polls in November.

Oregon’s minimum wage debate is not something most people below the poverty line – and working two jobs - have a lot of time to think about. Nearly half a million people do not earn a living wage in Oregon, according to the Oregon Workforce Report of 2014, released by the University of Oregon. “Despite rising housing, child care and other household costs, Oregon’s minimum wage will remain $9.25 in 2016,” Oregon Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian announced last September. According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition, a worker in Oregon must earn $16.28 per hour, working fulltime, to afford a two-bedroom apartment. In contrast to stereotypes that most minimum wage earners are teenagers, the average minimum wage worker is most likely to be a 35-year old woman. In Central Oregon, 30 percent of men and 50 percent of women are working in low-wage jobs (less than $15 per hour), according to the Workforce Oregon report. Six percent of the workforce in Oregon, or 100,000 people, earn minimum wage in Oregon, far below a living wage. Although the National Bureau of Economic Research insists that the U.S. recession ended in June 2009, today there are nine job seekers for every living wage job in Oregon; that is, for every job paying more than $15 per hour. Public assistance to low-wage workers costs Oregon taxpayers $1.7 billion annually, according to the Oregon Workforce Report. Take it in, that’s a pretty big tab. If and when Gov. Brown’s plan very slowly rolls into reality over the next six years, Oregon taxpayers will shoulder several billion dollars in the meantime.


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NEWS A Lasting Impact

Martin Luther King Jr. Day provides assistance for Bend nonprofits By Corinne Boyer

Photo by Jill Ward

Photo courtesy of Bend Area Habiat

Right: Some of the Deschutes Brewery team volunteered for the Bend Area Habitat by moving a large lumber rack at the ReStore. Right top: Valentines for Veterans: From left, Ashley Fowler, Laura Thompson and Katie Uselman make valentines for wounded veterans. Right bottom: Volunteers clean equipment on Martin Luther King Jr. Day at Equine Outreach.

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n the Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service, volunteers at the Bend United Methodist Church came together to make valentines for wounded veterans at the VA Hospital in White City. “My company gave me and other employees nationwide a half day to volunteer at the nonprofit of our choice today,” says Ashley Fowler, who works remotely for Acton Software. Martin Luther King Jr. Day not only marks the birthday and accomplishments of the civil rights leader, but it has become significant in the Bend community as a day to give back to the community by volunteering.

promote service learning both for schools and for higher education,” she says. From there, “We expanded to become the regional volunteer center.” Volunteering on MLK day not only helps nonprofit organizations, but Warriner says it’s also a great way to bond with other members of the community. “For somebody who is not quite connected with the community and feeling a little bit on the outside of things, volunteering gets you connected, and we feel this is especially important for young people,” she says.

Dozens of nonprofit organizations rely solely on volunteers to assist with labor and maintenance projects, ensuring funds raised are spent directly on causes and not on employee staff. Volunteer Connect is a nonprofit in Bend that links people in the community to volunteer opportunities.

Warriner wears many hats and is looking forward to many of the Volunteer Connect projects this year. Bright Side Animal Center in Redmond will be sorting clothing to sell to raise money to care for its animals. “We always love the Camp Fire project, which is a whole bunch of families with very young children who come together and make valentines for veterans.”

Volunteer Connect Executive Director Betsy Warriner founded the nonprofit in 2010 after running the volunteer center at Seattle University. She was looking for a way to connect service-learning courses at OSU Cascades and Central Oregon Community College with the community. “I was involved with that, and I wanted to keep doing that work here, so I got together with some faculty and some community organizations and we decided to start an organization that would

Another organization that operates without any staff thanks to the generosity of volunteers is Equine Outreach. Sheila Boynton with the nonprofit says volunteers do everything from “mucking stalls to chipping ice out of troughs to getting grants.” For MLK Day this past Monday, volunteers worked on cleaning donated tack—riding equipment such as harnesses and saddles. Volunteer groups also sort and clean blankets and paint shelters at other times of the year. “Big projects like

that are hard to get done without extra help and are all done by volunteers of all ages,” Boynton says. Habitat for Humanity is always in need of help from the community. Over the last 27 years, Habitat has built 109 houses in Central Oregon, and is nearly finished with house number 110. Volunteers helped with the foundation construction of house 111 on MLK day, according to Robin Cooper, director of development at Habitat for Humanity. “We don’t pay for construction labor,” explains Cooper. The group works with volunteers in order to keep the homes affordable for low-income families. A volunteer group from Deschutes Brewery assisted Habitat at its Restore location, according to Habitat for Humanity volunteer coordinator Brenda Jackson. “I think it brings our community together and it’s a way for people to give back,” she says. Volunteer Connect’s website is a resource for anyone searching for volunteer opportunities throughout the year. Warriner says people looking for ways to make a difference in their communities can find the right opportunity by searching for a spark of interest and imagining something that could be changed. “Is there something that bothers you that you wish wouldn’t happen?” she asks. “For example, the fact that people lack shelter during this cold winter—you don’t have to tackle homelessness on your own; you just join up with an organization that’s working on that with other volunteers,”

she says. Equine Outreach offers an orientation class for volunteers on the third Saturday of every month at its ranch and a follow up training session for people who decide to help by offering guidance on horses’ body language and how to halter and work with them. Warriner says that one day of volunteering often leads to people wanting to volunteer more regularly. “MLK day becomes a great way for people to learn about an organization,” she says. “If you’re painting at Neighbor Impact you will learn what Neighbor Impact does and all of the programs that it has,” she says. That often leads to wanting to do more, such as helping out with Head Start or the local community garden, or the food program. Volunteering can be a very rewarding experience. Warriner watched a group of people working with Neighbor Impact painting offices. “People were just smiling and having a really good time and [were] feeling very satisfied with achieving a project. You can look back and say ‘well that room looks a lot better than when we started’—so there’s that sense of achieving something in one morning and that it is honoring Dr. King.”

To discover Volunteer Connect opportunities in the Bend community, visit the website at volunteerconnectnow.org.

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 03 / January 21, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Photo by Sherron Lumley

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Bullies Go Home!

Great Old Broads for Wilderness rally for public lands

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By Brian Jennings

Old Broads for Wilderness rally in Bend, Jan. 15.

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Nearly 200 public lands supporters, led by the Great Old Broads, gathered in downtown Bend to protest the unlawful occupation led by the sons of Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy. Among the speakers were two Harney County residents. Julie Weikel is a longtime rancher and supporter of the refuge. Her property is adjacent to the refuge boundary on the north. She says that the refuge doesn’t deserve the negative spotlight the Bundys have portrayed. She acknowledges that the refuge has worked hard to collaborate with the Harney County community and has done a good job. She points out that the employees of the refuge are intertwined with nearby residents at a community level, a school level, and that the occupation is just "so wrong." Weikel says she wants them physically gone from her backyard. “I’m not a fearful person. I live 30 miles from the nearest grocery store. I have never locked my doors in my entire life until last Monday night, and I don’t choose to live that way. I just want them out of there.” Weikel says it’s been a gut-wrenching experience for local residents. She notes that local law enforcement officials are being threatened, and that they are under a lot of pressure to maintain public safety.

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ocal members of the group Great Old Broads for Wilderness joined to send a strong message to the armed occupiers of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, south of Burns in Harney County on Friday. They called them bullies and demanded that they leave the refuge. They also demanded prosecution of the occupiers for confiscation of refuge buildings and unauthorized use of public vehicles, among many other potential crimes.

Rynda Clark, of the Old Broads for Wilderness.

Noting that the Bundys want to take the refuge and federal public lands to transition them to state or private control, Weikel says these lands became federal because the states couldn’t afford to manage them. She says the state can’t afford to maintain the cost of what it takes to sustain grazing essential to ranchers depending on federal lands. Rynda Clark, an organizer of the Great Old Broads rally, says she can’t imagine losing federal public lands. “It’s important to keep these lands public so children can have a wildlife experience now and in the future.” Duncan Evered, caretaker of the Malheur Field Station since 1997, told the rally, “We want the refuge back as soon as possible without violence under any conditions.” Evered was forced to leave his residence on the refuge and he says that law enforcement officers continue to tell him that it’s not safe to return. He emphasizes patience to resolve the standoff peacefully. The Malheur National Wildlife Refuge was established in 1908 by executive order of President Theodore Roosevelt for the primary protection of birds. The refuge is used by over 300 species of birds that migrate along the Pacific Flyway from Patagonia to Alaska and use the refuge as a rest stop, breeding and nesting ground.


Season of Nonviolence

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Civil Rights leader john a. powell coming to Bend By Sherron Lumley 9

The college’s visiting scholar program is bringing john a. powell to Bend for two engagements on Jan. 27, open to the public. It is possible to RSVP online (go to the campus home page, and then the visiting scholar program). However, it is not required. All are welcome and it is free to the public.

“Last year we wanted to do something with more of a long-lasting effect,” says Karen Roth, director of Multicultural Activities at COCC, “We wanted to deepen the experience over a period of time.” The book conversations span four to six weeks and this year the focus is on Claude M. Steele’s "Whistling Vivaldi: How Stereotypes Affect Us and What We Can Do." People are asked to read two chapters of the book. “They don’t have to read the whole book before they go to a book conversation,” Roth explains. These conver-

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COCC partners with Building Common Ground, which is a collective of leaders and community members throughout Central Oregon who care about issues of social justice and building opportunities for dialogue. This is the second year of community-wide book conversations.

john a. powell, visiting scholar to speak at COCC, Jan. 27.

sations are open to the public, and focus on our human need to belong. Visit the COCC.edu website to find locations throughout the community, including several local churches, COCC campuses, the Social Justice Center in Bend and the Redmond Public Library.

Professor powell (he prefers his name be printed in lowercase) is an internationally recognized expert and author in the areas of civil rights, race and structural racism, ethnicity, housing, poverty, and democracy. He is Professor of Law and Professor of African American Studies and Ethnic Studies at UC Berkeley, and the Executive Director of the Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society. Powell intentionally prefers his name to appear in lowercase, to be a “part of the universe, not over it.”

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VOLUME 20 ISSUE 03 / January 21, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

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COCC’s multicultural activities are year-round and include a three-pronged effort: first, recruitment and retention of under-represented students, which includes establishing a welcoming environment to those students who may not have previously felt respected, Roth says. The second goal is creating a campus community that respects all differences and the third is an educational effort, educating the campus and the community of all the ways that people are different.

eason of Nonviolence is an international event that began in 1998 on what was the 50th anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi’s assassination and the 30th year of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s assassination. The goal of the movement is to keep social activism alive. Central Oregon Community College (COCC) launched its Season of Nonviolence in 2009, honoring Dr. King, Gandhi, Cesar Chavez, and Chief Wilma Mankiller, with a goal of helping people to reflect on what it means to advocate for social justice in a nonviolent way.


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saturday 23

STRANGER’S STORIES—Is there a better way to spend the evening than by listening to strangers tell stories about their experiences in strange lands? Gather round to hear people tell their 15-minute true stories. A few audience members will have a chance to tell stories as well. 7 pm. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NW Tin Pan Alley. $10

ROCK SHOW—Combining a Boise-based Americana rock band with local favorites Broken Down Guitars sounds like a recipe for bluesy, bar rock kind of fun. For fans of Blues Traveler, Allen Stone, Mickey & The Motorcars and Dangermuffin, Innocent Man is poised to bring excellence to Bend. 9 pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $5.

INNOCENT MAN & BROKEN DOWN GUITARS

ARMCHAIR LIVE STORYTELLING

sunday 24

CHARITABLE DOCUMENTARY— The 11th annual Backcountry Film Festival will feature powdery shots of backcountry skiing and proceeds raised from the event will benefit the Studying Nature Outdoors in Winter. This organization teaches 2,000 kids about the outdoors. Stick around for the auction and raffle prizes. 7 pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $10.

BLUES—If the doldrums of winter have grabbed on too tightly, going to see a blues/rock band seems like a likely way to feel better. Inspired by Tom Waits, Sam Cooke and many more, Andy Frasco & The U.N. have an original sound all the better to be warmed by. 8 pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $8.

friday 22 - saturday 6

wednesday 27

“THE 39 STEPS”

SALMON IN THE DESCHUTES

THEATER—Not the same things as the Hitchcock film, this version of “The 39 Steps” is a fast-paced comedic mystery filled with thrills, spills and chills. Fun for all ages, this show will give the entire family something to talk about the next morning over breakfast. 7:30 pm & 2 pm. Cascades Theatrical Company, 148 NW Greenwood Ave. $13-$20.

ENVIRONMENT—Nature Nights are back at the Tower Theatre and January’s evening will focus on the history and current state of salmon and steelhead in the Deschutes River basin. This historical presentation will be conducted by retired fisheries biologist Don Ratlif, who currently focuses on salmon reintroduction into the middle Deschutes. 7 pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. Free, but ticket required.

ANDY FRASCO & THE U.N.

friday 22 - saturday 30 “SHREK THE MUSICAL’

wednesday 27

WILD WEDNESDAY

BROADWAY MUSICAL—“Shrek The Musical” on Broadway was a surprisingly fun adaptation of the series of animated films, filled with memorable songs, excellent performances and a child-like sense of wonder. Judging from Thoroughly Modern Productions' past successes, their version might be even better. 7:30 pm & 2 pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. $28-$35.

WILD STORYTELLING—Karen Lillebo and Mike Riley have stories to share with you about their adventures above the Arctic Circle along the Noatak River. Here stories of close encountered with wildlife, frigid waters and unknown territories. This monthly series features storytelling by local adventurers. 5:30 pm. Crow’s Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St. No cover.

saturday 23

THE HIDDEN LIFE OF ANTS

wednesday 27

BROTHERS GOW

EXHIBIT—The High Desert Museum rolls out its new exhibit which focuses on the complex world of ants. Viewers can explore the lives of these tiny creatures through oversized models, a 3D cast of an ant nest, large-scale photographs, and more. These creatures have more in common with humans than would be expected. 10 am-4 pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. $12 adults, $10 seniors, $7 ages 5-12, under 4 free.

Groundhog Day Feb. 2

JANUARY 21 - 28

BACKCOUNTRY FILM FESTIVAL

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VOLUME 20 ISSUE 03 / January 21, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

friday 22

OUR PICKS

thursday 21

FUNK—The San Diego-based funk sextet has traveled more than 30,000 miles on tour since 2007. Their influence stems from thrash to the Red Hot Chili Peppers to old jazz and they’ve been on stage with the Eric McFadden Trio, Bad Fish and Delta Nove. 7 pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. No cover.

Mardi Gras Party Feb. 9

A Cappella Fest Feb. 19-21

Mariachi de Mexico Mar. 8


WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / January 21, 2016 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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GOODLIFE BEERS ON TAP! For more information about times, conditions, parties and team building visit seventhmountain.com and facebook.com/SMRRecreation

Admissions is $7

LLC

Open Mondays! 2754 NW Crossing Dr, Suite 102

(Across from La Rosa)

• 541.647.6911

Skate Rental is $5 Free admission for children 5 and under with paid adult

GBOTS And The Journeymen The Docs Of Rock & DJ Mark Brody

190 NW Oregon, Bend, Oregon 97701

$10 suggested donation at the door $5 raffle tickets purchased inside includes gifts from all sponsors listed below.


S

THE SOURCE

SOUND Deep in the Woods

SUGGESTS

Get your pre-folk on in Sisters

By Jared Rasic

By Jared Rasic 13

Here we have sultry female vocals accompanied by an electric guitar in a space filled with some of the finest whiskey known to man. If there were a way to get your feet rubbed at the same time while Morgan Freeman tells you everything is going to be all right, then it would be a completely perfect night. 7pm. Thursday, Jan. 21. Stihl Whiskey Bar, 550 NW Franklin. No cover.

submitted

DOWNHILL RYDER

The Wood Brothers are ready to folk you up. Photo by Michael Bloom.

T

he Sisters Folk Festival is always a sold-out musical extravaganza, but one aspect of the festival that sometimes gets overlooked is its Winter Concert Series. In January we have The Wood Brothers, in February it’s Bumper Jacksons and the series concludes in March with Darlingside. The Wood Brothers was a supergroup from inception, with Chris Wood bringing a massive following over from his work with the incomparable jazz group Medeski Martin & Wood, and Oliver Wood commanded a legion of respect from his work with blues legend Tinsley Ellis and his own band King Johnson. As kids they were steeped in the blues work of Jimmy Reed and Lightnin’ Hopkins, but Chris and Oliver weren’t destined to make music together until much later. Oliver spent most of the intervening years focusing on blues. According to their website, Oliver says about the blues, “It still has the electricity of rock, but it’s more primitive. It’s plugged in and rockin’, but it’s more emotional. And the guitar sings like a voice.”

Whereas Oliver focused more on blues and mostly toured the South, Chris headed to the New England Conservatory of Music to study jazz before eventually going on to help form Medeski Martin & Wood. After years of touring and multiple albums, the moment came when Oliver’s King Johnson opened for Medeski Martin & Wood and Chris saw his brother play. “He sat in with us during our set,” remembers Chris, “and it was a creepy experience, like watching myself. He had a lot of the same impulses I did. Part of it was influences, part of it was blood.” With Chris on upright bass, Oliver on guitar and the addition of multi-instrumentalist Jano Rix, The Wood Brothers band was born. Now with three live albums and six studio albums under their belt, The Wood Brothers are in no one’s shadow anymore. Their sound has gradually evolved from a murder ballad, almost folk traditional sound where the songs are deceptively simple (with early albums like “Ways Not To Lose” and “Smoke Ring Halo”) to a fuller sound on their newest records.

The band’s latest release, “Paradise,” is all over the spectrum, with deep country holler blues (“Never and Always”), good old-fashioned bar rock (“Singin’ to Strangers), country pop (“Snake Eyes”) and quiet, introspective folk (“Two Places”). No two songs sound alike or really even in the same genre and their live show promises to bring that unpredictability and excitement alive. We still have quite a wait for the Sisters Folk Festival proper, but the Winter Concert Series isn’t messing around. All three bands are hugely talented and deserve their own spotlight outside of the festival scene. The Wood Brothers are only going to grow in estimation over the next few years and now just might be the perfect time to catch them.

The Wood Brothers Thursday, Jan. 28. 7pm Sisters High School Auditorium, 1700 McKinney Butte Rd., Sisters $15-$25

Bend knows how to do it and do it right this week. A kick-ass roots-rock band in one of the finest breweries in the entire Pacific Northwest...and it’s free. Downhill Ryder doesn’t play every weekend, sometimes they only play once a month, so when they do, it is wise to be there and bask in the rock. 5:30pm. Friday, Jan. 22. Crux Fermentation Project, 50 SW Division St. No cover.

DANNY SCHMIDT: HOUSE CONCERT IN THE GLEN Another phenomenal musician playing the intimate house concert venue means another remarkable show. Danny Schmidt was added to the Chicago Tribune’s 50 Most Significant Songwriters of the Last 50 Years list, which means seeing him live should be something special to behold. Potluck at 6pm, music at 7pm. Saturday, Jan. 23. 1019 NW Stannium Rd. $15-$20 donation.

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 03 / January 21, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

CLARIEN STONE & JASON PLANKEY


S

V i s i t o u r H U G E h o m e d é c o r c o n s i g n m e n t s t o r e .

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / January 21, 2016 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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D o n ’ t w a n t p e o p l e o f f e r i n g y o u G A R A G E S A L E p r i c e s f o r y o u r b e a u t i f u l f u r n i t u r e ?

C a l l u s a t R E D E U X 5 4 1 - 3 1 8 - 1 5 0 1

New Merchandise Arriving Daily!

DIRECT PRIMARY CARE FAMILY MEDICINE

We Can Hear You

Bowie’s “Blackstar” is a complex art rock masterpiece By Jared Rasic

Local. Independent. Affordable. EVEN WITHOUT INSURANCE

Dr. Mark E. Gonsky, DO

541.323.3960

deschutesfamilycare.com

n, Bend V i s i t u s a t 930 SE Textro

1345 NW Wall Street, Suite 302 Bend, OR

D

avid Bowie (Jan. 8, 1947 – Jan. 10, 2016) is gone, long live David Bowie. His final album, “Blackstar,” is the magnificent swan song of a dazzling career and a final gift to his fans released just days before he took his final bow.

Tracks such as the prophetic “Lazarus,” the aggressively textured “Sue,” and “Dollar Days,” with the heartbreaking refrain “I’m trying to, I’m dying too,” show “Blackstar” to be a work of art that is very personal.

Looking at “Blackstar” outside of the scope of Bowie’s death is impossible, but as this album grows outside of that notoriety, it won’t fit any easy attempts to categorize. It is much more than just the end cap of a legendary career and life. Critics are calling “Blackstar” a jazz record and it does offer haunting sax solos, mournful and plaintive as in “‘Tis A Pity She Was a Whore.”

It exists not just as a complex and layered snapshot of Bowie’s mind as he fought to accept death, but as the world’s window into everything that was put on his shoulders as a modern day icon. “Blackstar” is seven darkly seductive tracks released on Bowie’s 69th birthday, just two days before his death. It debuted at the number one spot on Billboard’s chart and broke Youtube records with 51 million views on Monday, the day of his death.

There are avant-garde drums that do not inspire one to dance, but instead create a sense of anxiety and miasmatic solitude. “Blackstar” is as much art rock as it is jazz and is as much avant-garde as it is experimental and abstract.

Bowie is survived by his wife Iman, his son Duncan and his daughter Lexi.


CALENDAR

CLUBS >

Bt

Tickets Available on BendTicket.com

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Astro Lounge Hilary Scott Indie-Ameri-

cana singer-songwriter Hilary Scott released her latest album, Freight Train Love, in November. It has grabbed the attention of reviewers from Billboard, No Depression, Maverick, and many more. 9 pm. No cover

Cabin 22 KC Flynn & Friends This longtime Bend favorite cranks out fresh takes on acoustic folk, rock, country covers on The Cabin stage. Frequently joined by fellow local musicians. 7-9:30 pm. No cover.

Submitted

Checker’s Pub Talent/Open Mic Night Bring your friends, your instrument, or maybe your voice. We have Mic Tipitino is your host for the night. 6-8 pm. No cover. Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm.

Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Bobby Lindstrom & All Three Cylinders All Three Cylinders combines killer guitar and vocals, whistling, percussions and Djembe drum, harmonica and harmonies. Playing your favorite blues, rock, Americana, Bobby’s originals with a unique style that makes it a great show! 6-9 pm. No cover. Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. No

cover.

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. No cover.

M&J Tavern Open Mic Night Sign ups and stage ready to go by 6:30 pm till last band/ artist or last call, whatever comes first. 21+. 6:30 pm.

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Karaoke

7 pm. No cover.

McMenamins Old St. Francis School

Pete Kartsounes Armed with an acoustic guitar, blazing skill, powerful voice, award winning songs and relentless heart, Pete Kartsounes writes music that will move and inspire your soul. 7 pm. No cover.

Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic With Derek Michael Marc. 6-9 pm. Seven Nightclub Karaoke 8 pm. The Lot Open Mic Open mic is for one and all! Local favorite performer and artist MOsley WOtta hosts this fun night showcasing local talent. 6 pm. No cover.

21 Thursday Astro Lounge DJ Theclectik DJ mixing

‘90s hip-hop, R&B, funk, electronica, with special sit in guest MCs and musicians. 10 pm-2 am. No cover.

Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. No cover.

Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Bobby

Lindstrom’s Lunchtime Blues Bobby’s smooth but gritty blues style and dynamic vocals make for a great show, playing all the old blues, digging deep into the heritage of the music. Noon-2 pm. No cover.

Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise & Kara-

oke Classic rock and oldies with Tim Cruise. Plus karaoke at 9 pm. 6-9 pm. No cover.

submitted

Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Bobby Lindstrom’s Lunchtime Blues Bobby’s smooth but gritty blues style and dynamic vocals make for a great show, playing all the old blues, digging deep into the heritage of the music. Noon-2 pm. No cover. Boise-based Americana rock band, Innocent Man, brings a mixed bag of styles and genres to Volcanic Theatre Pub, 1/23.

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free Country Swing Dance Lessons Every Thursday night, learn how to country swing. No partner needed. 8 pm. No cover. McMenamins Old St. Francis School

Jeff Crosby & The Refugees Crosby’s rich, hook filled music and his smooth vocals combine with poignant lyrics to make each track its own gem. 7 pm. No cover.

Northside Bar & Grill Nice & Brown

Covers and originals keep you singing and dancing to a funky beat and original style.

Revolvr Menswear Third Thursday

Social Hour Live music, cocktails, and good company! Every third Thursday of the month, we’re hosting social hour downtown at Revolvr Menswear. See you there! Third Thursday of every month, 5-7 pm. No cover.

Silver Moon Brewing Open Jam Open

The Lot Eric Leadbetter of Jive Coulis Travelling from Southern Oregon, Eric will play an array of classic rock, Americana, folk, and blues. 6-8 pm. No cover.

22 Friday Bt The Belfry Dennis McGregor & The Spoilers The Spoilers play Dennis McGregor’s songs, which are often wryly twisted, making them pretty much impossible to call normal. That’s what people like most about them. 8 pm.

Checker’s Pub The River Pigs Rock ‘n’ roll, blues, folks, and R&B. Lets get up on the dance floor! 8-11 pm. No cover. Crux Fermentation Project Downhill Ryder Honest roots-rock that will move your body and soul! 5:30-8 pm. No cover.

Jam is kinda like open mic, but with a full band to back you up! Anyone can participate. You can jam with our band, perform solo, perform with friends, or even bring your own band. Other entertaining performances are welcome too. Sign ups start at 5 pm. 6-9 pm. No cover.

Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe Spencer John-

Stihl Whiskey Bar Clairen Stone & Jason Plankey Local duo throwing down smooth jazz, blues, and R&B. Electric guitar accompanies sultry female vocals. Billie Holiday meets Amy Winehouse at Stihl. 7-10 pm. No cover.

Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues The Bad Cats Bobby’s smooth but gritty blues style and dynamic vocals make for a great show, playing all the old blues, digging deep into the heritage of the music. Noon-2 pm. No cover.

Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open

Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues The Bad

Mic with Hal Worcester Local singer-songwriters perform original songs. 6 pm. No cover.

The Summit Saloon & Stage Bend Comedy: Craig May & Jeff Oliver Oregon native Craig May has been actively been doing comedy for over three years. His comedy style can best be described as an awkward hug that goes on for too long but you hold on anyway. Craig recently performed at Bumbershoot and the Bridgetown Comedy Festival. 8-10:30 pm. $8 adv., $10 door. The Capitol ‘80s Flashback Dance Party

With Mark Brody spinning the vinyl. Come dance to Love and Rockets, The Cure, Yaz, Book of Love, Art of Noise, New Order, Ministry, Ramones, Frankie, Front 242, and all the other sounds of the ‘80s club scene. Third Thursday, 9 pm. No cover.

son Come on down to Dudley’s for a night of music with local singer-songwriter Spencer Johnson. Beer, wine, coffee, books. Take your pick and join us for another fun Friday night of music at Dudley’s. 7-8:30 pm.

Cats Enjoy Cajun and Southern cooking with a side of blues, soul, and rock ‘n’ roll! Dance to live music, full bar, with a touch of Mardi Gras. Come get your beads on! 7-10 pm. No cover.

Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise & Kara-

oke Classic rock and oldies with Tim Cruise. Plus karaoke at 9 pm. 6-9 pm. No cover.

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free Friday Dance Lessons 21+. 8 pm. No cover. Northside Bar & Grill Just Us Justus is back at the Northside playing fiery original blues rock, soul, funk. Recording over the two nights for the live portion of our new CD. 8:30 pm. Seven Nightclub Latin Dance Social 21+. Fourth Friday of every month, 7:30 pm. Free. sevenbend.com.; Hosted by the Latin

Dance Academy of Bend. Fourth Friday of every month, 8-9:45 pm.

Silver Moon Brewing Jive Coulis Jive

Coulis is a big part of the Silver Moon family. They are one of our few resident bands that perform about every three months. This show is extra special; as we are celebrating Madeline’s birthday! 9 pm. No cover.

The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele

21+. 9 pm. No cover.

The Capitol Hit Machine The energy

projected from this 5 piece band is highly contagious to say the least. The band plays hits from all eras as it’s not uncommon to here Stayin’ Alive (Bee Gees), Kiss (Prince), Dynamite (Taio Cruz), You Shook Me All Night Long (AC/DC) all in the same set. 9:30 pm. $10.

23 Saturday Armature The Jubilee Get on board and help us make the Children’s Museum a reality for our community. Join us for our first annual winter fundraiser. Enjoy live music, great food, good drinks, and the best company you could ask for on a Saturday night. Experience some of our stunning science displays, see conceptual drawings, and meet the directors behind CMCO. 7-10 pm. $60 adv., $75 door. Astro Lounge MC Mystic An eclectic mix of electronic music Saturday night! 10 pm.

Bend Brewing Company Yvonne Ra-

mage Local singer-songwriter and cover artist. 6:30-9 pm.

Broken Top Bottle Shop Jive Coulis Jive Coulis is funky, blues, rock! We love these guys and you will too! Brews & Bands features free live music at BTBS. 8-10 pm. No cover. Checker’s Pub The River Pigs Rock ‘n’ roll, blues, folks, and R&B. Lets get up on the dance floor! 8-11 pm. No cover. Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues The Bad Cats Enjoy Cajun and Southern cooking with a side of blues, soul, and rock ‘n’ roll! Dance to live music, full bar, with a touch of Mardi Gras. Come get your beads on! 7-10 pm. No cover.

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 03 / January 21, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

20 Wednesday


WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / January 21, 2016 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

USE YOUR FILTER

(The one on your furnace, that is.)

Want in on a dirty little secret? A less-than-pristine furnace could be costing you, big time. Furnaces with dirty filters or ducts waste energy and money, shorten the life of your furnace, and pollute your indoor air. The good news? Cleaning up your furnace’s act starts with changing the filter regularly. For more quick and not-so-dirty tips, visit bendenergychallenge.org. #dojust1thing

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CLUBS

House Concerts in the Glen Danny

Schmidt House Concert Austin, Texas internationally touring folk artist, Danny Schmidt was named to the Chicago Tribune’s 50 Most Significant Songwriters in the Last 50 Years. Touching, insightful lyrics plus great guitar, performed with passionate, smooth vocals are Danny’s hallmark. 7-9:30 pm. $20-$15 donation.

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Karaoke 8

pm. No cover.

M&J Tavern The Dirty Hounds Gritty

soul and swanky blues bring this rock ‘n’ roll Saturday night to a climax. Sing along to classic favorites, and wet your whistle while you listen to the originals. Support local music! 9 pm. No cover.

nied by two No. 1 music videos), “Pickin’ Wildflowers,” and “Every Time I Hear Your Name,” along with two Top 30 hits “XXL” and “Podunk.” With local support from Juniper & Gin. 7 pm. $15 adv., $20 door.

Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic With Derek Michael Marc. 6-9 pm.

Astro Lounge Trivia Tuesdays Bring your

Weierhauser Live comedy with Alex Rios and Caitlin Weierhauser, hosted Jake Woodmansee. 8-10 pm. $8 adv., $10 door.

team or join one! Usually six categories of various themes. 8 pm. No cover.

Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Bobby Lindstrom’s Lunchtime Blues Bobby’s smooth but gritty blues style and dynamic vocals make for a great show, playing all the old blues, digging deep into the heritage of the music. Noon-2 pm. No cover. Hub City Bar & Grill Comedy Show

Comedy night every Tuesday, with open mic at 9 pm. 7-9 pm. $5.

Dance Lessons 9 pm. No cover.

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free

Jersey Boys Pizzeria Paul Eddy Bedell artist Paul Eddy performs originals and songs of yore. 6-8 pm. No cover.

Northside Bar & Grill Just Us Justus is

Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Ukulele Jam

back at the Northside playing fiery original blues rock, soul, funk. Recording over the two nights for the live portion of our new CD. 8:30 pm.

Silver Moon Brewing Patrimony pres-

ents Foxy Lemon One of Silver Moon’s favorite bands (Patrimony) is bringing their good friends Foxy Lemon back to the stage! If blues, rock ‘n’ roll, and punk are your thing, then this double header is for you! 9 pm. No cover.

Strictly Organic Coffee Company Ca-

naan Canaan Japanese singer-songwriter, Canaan Canaan will sing in both English and Japanese. 3-5 pm. No cover.

The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele

21+. 9 pm. No cover.

The Capitol Antennae Antennae is one

of San Francisco’s most sought after DJs and live performers. He has taken the art of live remixing to new heights with his own customized setup, that bends genres in ways seldom heard. His sound is called acid crunk, and there are no rules. 10 pm. $10 adv., $15 door.

PICK Volcanic Theatre Pub Innocent Man & Broken Down Guitars Boise-based Americana rock band, Innocent Man, brings a mixed bag of genres and styles ranging from bluegrass to progressive rock. Innocent Man appeals to a diverse audience of music lovers. Locals Broken Down Guitars to open. 9 pm-12:30 am. $5.

24 Sunday Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Dogwood Cocktail Cabin Cin City

(Cabin Industry Night) Drink and food specials for local service industry workers, plus board games and DJ DMP (Indie, R&B, hip-hop, and electronica). 9 pm.

The Capitol Benefit Concert A benefit

concert for Asa Pollard featuring music by GBOTS and the Journeymen, The Docs of Rock, and DJ Mark Brody. $5 raffle tickets available. 6 pm. $10 donation.

PICK

Bt

Volcanic Theatre Pub Andy

Frasco & The U.N. Blues rock band formed in Los Angeles. Influenced by Damien Rice, Sam Cooke, Professor Longhair, Van Morrison and Tom Waits, Frasco’s style is as uninhibited as those artists who inspire him. 8 pm. $8.

25 Monday Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm.

26 Tuesday The Annex Keith Anderson, Zach Hinson His debut CD, “Three Chord Country and American Rock & Roll,” was certified Gold and garnered two Top 10 hits (accompa-

All ages. 6:30 pm. No cover.

M&J Tavern Travis Myrick Central Ore-

gon local brings a Tuesday evening set of acoustic music. Setting the tempo with each song, Travis leads the crowd through a myriad of memories with covers and originals. Support local musicians. 9 pm. No cover.

Seven Nightclub Karaoke 8 pm. The Summit Saloon & Stage Bend

Comedy Open Mic Sign up at 7 pm. Five minutes or two songs of stage time. All performance types are welcome. 8-10 pm. Free.

The Lot Trivia at The Lot Bend’s smartest smartipants who love trivia. A rotating host comes up with six questions in six different categories. 6-8 pm. Free. Wubba’s Barbeque Shack Jim Roy & Steve Beaudry Acoustic blues featuring finger style guitar and harmonica. Music from Mississippi to Chicago. 5-8 pm. No cover.

27 Wednesday Cabin 22 KC Flynn & Friends This longtime Bend favorite cranks out fresh takes on acoustic folk, rock, country covers on The Cabin stage. Frequently joined by fellow local musicians. 7-9:30 pm. No cover. Checker’s Pub Talent/Open Mic Night Bring your friends, your instrument, or maybe your voice. We have Mic Tipitino is your host for the night. 6-8 pm. No cover. Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Jim Roy & Steve Beaudry Bobby’s smooth but gritty blues style and dynamic vocals make for a great show, playing all the old blues, digging deep into the heritage of the music. Noon-2 pm. No cover. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com.; Acoustic blues featuring finger style guitar and harmonica. Music from Mississippi to Chicago. 6-9 pm. Free. Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Level 2 Allan Byer Americana. 21+. 5:30 pm. No cover. M&J Tavern Open Mic Night Sign ups

and stage ready to go by 6:30 pm till last band/artist or last call, whatever comes first. 21+. 6:30 pm.

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Kara-

oke 7 pm. No cover.

PICK McMenamins Old St. Francis School Brothers Gow Borrowing from a

massive cache of influences, this funk-rockimprov sextet relies on thoughtful lyrics, deep grooves, and improvisational tact that allows them creative freedom during their live performance. 7 pm. No cover.

Seven Nightclub Karaoke 8 pm. The Capitol Comedy: Alex Rios & Caitlin

The Lot Open Mic Open mic is for one and all! Local favorite performer and artist MOsley WOtta hosts this fun night showcasing local talent. 6 pm. No cover.

28 Thursday Astro Lounge DJ Theclectik DJ mixing

‘90s hip-hop, R&B, funk, electronica, with special sit in guest MCs and musicians. 10 pm-2 am. No cover.

Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues Bobby Lindstrom’s Lunchtime Blues Bobby’s smooth but gritty blues style and dynamic vocals make for a great show, playing all the old blues, digging deep into the heritage of the music. Noon-2 pm. No cover. Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise &

Karaoke Classic rock and oldies with Tim Cruise. Plus karaoke at 9 pm. 6-9 pm. No cover.

Kelly D’s Banquet Room Benefit Concert for Soldiers Songs and Voices Jeff Leslie, River Pigs, will team up with Erin Wiley, while Scott and Maggie of Burning Moonlight will do some original material from their archives. Then add original works and covers of Jess Ryan, a transplanted Montana troubadour with a powerful message firmly delivered. The result is Song Circle Supreme. Please join us starting the new year with zest and gusto. 7-9 pm. Free, donations accepted. Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free Country Swing Dance Lessons Every Thursday night, learn how to country swing. No partner needed. 8 pm. No cover. Northside Bar & Grill Kenny Blue Ray & the High Desert Hustlers Classic and progressive blues will fill the air. Very danceable. Fourth Thursday, 7:30-10:30 pm. Bt Sisters High School The Wood Brothers The Sisters Folk Festival is pleased to announce the 2016 Winter Concert Series. The Wood Brothers will perform their brand of masterful and soulful folk, with hints of blues, Americana, and acoustic soul. Steeped in a songwriting tradition, they are celebrating their sixth studio album, “Paradise” and have quickly become one of the best live acts touring the country. 7 pm. $25 adv., $30 door.

Strictly Organic Coffee Company

Open Mic with Hal Worcester Local singer-songwriters perform original songs. 6 pm. No cover.

The Summit Saloon & Stage Bend Comedy: Travis Nelson & Ray McMillin It’s not often the world spits out a 6’9” soft core misanthrope with a heart of gold. Comedian Travis Nelson has performed with Ryan Stiles, Bill Nye the Science Guy, and many more. 8-10:30 pm. $8 adv., $10 door. The Lot Paul Eddy With a voice smoother than a velvet Elvis, artist Paul Eddy sings originals and forgotten gems. Kick back, and let Eddy transport you to a warm Texas evening ‘neath a lighted oak, local brew in hand, and the smell of good food in the evening air. 6-8 pm. No cover. Bt Volcanic Theatre Pub Kung Fu & Elektrapod Just when things are starting to really get cold around here, Parallel 44 Presents and Lunchbox Alchemy have just the show to warm you up! New York’s funk masters Kung Fu are teaming up with Bend’s own Elektrapod to bring the heat. 9 pm. $13 adv., $15 door.


EVENTS

CALENDAR MUSIC Big Band Tuesday & Lunch People over

60 years of age can enjoy big-band music and dancing performed by Alley Cats, 10:30-11:30 am. Free or low-cost lunch served from 11 am12:30 pm. Join us for a fun-filled day of great music and food. Tuesdays, 10:30am. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St.

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is a traditional bagpipe and drum band with members from the Central Oregon area. Experienced pipers and drummers are welcome to attend, along with those who are interested in taking up piping or drumming and would like to find out what it would take to learn and eventually join our group. Mondays, 5:30-7pm. Bend Church of the Nazarene, 1270 NE 27th St. 541-633-3225. Free.

Central Oregon Community Orchestra

The orchestra [COCO] welcomes all musicians who enjoy playing music with others. Auditions are not necessary, but there are monthly dues. For more information call 541-306-6768 or email cocomusicmakers@gmail.com. Wednesdays, 6:30pm. Cascade Middle School, 19619 SW Mountaineer Way.

Danny Schmidt House Concert Austin,

Texas internationally touring folk artist, Danny Schmidt was named to the Chicago Tribune’s 50 Most Significant Songwriters in the Last 50 Years. Touching, insightful lyrics plus great guitar, performed with passionate, smooth vocals are Danny’s hallmark. Kindly RSVP, space is limited. Community Potluck 6-7 pm, music at 7 pm. All proceeds to artist and charity. Jan. 23, 7-9:30pm. House Concerts in the Glen, 1019 NW Stannium Rd. 541-480-8830. $20-$15 donation.

Jazz at the Oxford Reggie Houston’s Cres-

cent City Connection featuring Charmaine Neville. Rhythmic wizardry brings New Orleans to Bend. Jan. 22, 8pm and Jan. 23, 5 and 8:15pm. The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave.

Reggie Houston’s Crescent City Connection Jazz at the Oxford presents the

unmistakable sounds of the New Orleans jazz scene when Reggie Houston’s Crescent City Connection hits the stage with Charmaine Neville. Jan. 22, 8-10pm and Jan. 23, 5-7 and 8:15-10:15pm. Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota. 503-432-9477. $48.

DANCE Adult Jazz Dance Class First class is free. Tuesdays, 7-8:30pm. Get a Move On Studio, 63076 NE 18th St. Suite 140. 541-410-8451. $10. Argentine Tango Class & Práctica

Beginning tango class 6:30-7:30 pm followed by two hours of practice from 7:30-9:30 pm. No partner needed! Wednesdays, 6:30-9:30pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd. $5.

submitted

Central Oregon Percussion Ensemble

Central Oregon symphony spotlight recital. Percussion ensemble will perform selected pieces to showcase their talent. Jan. 24, 2pm. COCC Campus Center - Wille Hall, 2600 College Way.

Blues rock band Andy Frasco & The U.N., who pull influences from Damien Rice, Van Morrison, Tom Waits and more, perform at Volcanic Theatre Pub, 1/24.

Argentine Tango Milonga Tango dancing every 4th Saturday. For all levels of dancers. No partner needed! Fourth Saturday of every month, 7:30-10:30pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd. $5. Beginner Salsa Classes Progressive four-

class series starting on the first Thursday of each month. Drop-ins also welcome. Thursdays, 6:30-7:30pm. Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Dr. $40 month or $12 drop-in.

Ecstatic Dance Bend Dance your own dance in your own way in a supportive community of kindred spirits. Discover the power of movement improvisation for self-awareness, self-expression and holistic health. Ecstatic Dance - Every Wednesday at 7:00 pm Sunday Dance Church - Every Sunday at 11:00 am. Old Stone Church, 157 NW Franklin Ave. $10-$20. Fun Salsa Patterns Dance Classes

Thursdays, 7:30-8:30pm. Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Dr. 541-325-6676. $40 month (4 classes) or $12 drop-in.

Group Class & Ballroom Dance! Class

topic changes weekly. No experience or partner necessary. Ages 16-plus. All proceeds donated to Bend’s Community Center. Fridays, 7pm. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. 541-314-4398. $5.

High Desert Bellydance Guild Showcase Join performers from the High Desert

Bellydance Guild for a dance showcase. Our show will feature a variety of talented performers showcasing some of the many different styles of belly dance. Jan. 23, 5:30-7:30pm. Kelly D’s Banquet Room, 1012 SE Cleveland Ave. Free.

Latin Dance Social Hosted by the Latin

Dance Academy of Bend. Fourth Friday of every month, 8-9:45pm. Seven Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St. 541-760-9412.

Scottish Country Dance Weekly Class

Weekly classes include beginner & advanced dances. Mondays, 7-9pm. Sons of Norway Hall,

Featured Events

549 NW Harmon Blvd. First class is free, future classes are $5.

Square Dance Lessons The Bachelor

Beauts Square Dance Club. We welcome new dancers. Thursdays, 7-9pm. Pine Forest Grange Hall, 63214 Boyd Acres Rd. $5, first lesson free.

West African Dance Class Every class taught to live drumming by Fe Fanyi Drum Troupe. Mondays, 7:30pm. Victor Performing Arts, 2700 NE Fourth St. Suite 210. 818-6362465. $15 drop-in, $50 for five classes. Zumba Zumba is a great cardio fitness class.

Great moves, great music. You won’t even know your working out. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 5:30-6:30pm. Get a Move On Studio, 63076 NE 18th St. Suite 140. 541-788-2153. $7.

FILM EVENTS COTA Movie Night Off The Beaten Path shows that fatbiking is somewhat of a natural progression of mountain biking. Early mountain bikers were looking to create bikes that allowed them to ride on terrain and in conditions they otherwise wouldn’t be able to. Many now look to fat bikes for the same reason. Jan. 21, 9pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. $5, cash only.

PICK Backcountry Film Festival

Tune into a night of human-powered winter celebration at the 11th annual Backcountry Film Festival. Funds raised support Project SNOW (Studying Nature Outdoors in Winter), program dedicated to providing outdoor education for over 2,000 kids in CO. Raffle prizes, auction items and more. Jan. 22, 7pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $10.

Raven’s Touch LGBT Stars and Rainbows movie night. A lesbian love story about loss, nature, and healing. Jan. 25, 6pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $5. This Changes Everything Explore the

premise that climate peril is not about carbon,

January 22

it’s about capitalism. Can we use the climate crisis to transform our failed economic system into something radically better? “Klein and Lewis paint a picture of a post-fossil-fueled, post-capitalist future that seems not only within reach, but like a place where we actually want to live,” YES Magazine. Jan. 20, 7-8:45pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. 541-389-0785. $5 donation.

LOCAL ARTS January Studio Sale Fourth Friday art stroll. January studio sale, artists bring examples of their working process, as well as pieces that document changes and shifts in their media and subject. Collect art by your favorite artist, or expand the scope of your collection with work by a new artist. Exhibit dates: Jan. 20 to Feb. 22. Free reception with live music and refreshments. Jan. 22, 4-7pm. Hood Avenue Art, 357 W Hood Ave., Sisters. Artventure with Judy Artist-led painting

event! No experience necessary! Fee includes supplies. Pre-register and see upcoming images at artventurewithjudy.com. Tuesdays, 6-9pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. 541-410-3267. $25 pre-paid.

Open Studio Nights Bring a project, spread out on our 18ft work table (or use our large open room) and spend an evening with others in your community. Work on art, dance, paint, build, music, knitting, crocheting, play games, or any creative project you can imagine! Wednesdays, 5-9pm. Through Dec. 28. Armature, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 2. 541-390-7666. $5. Art & Wine, Oh My! Local artists will guide you through replicating the night’s featured image. Food and beverage available for purchase. Register online. Tuesdays, 6pm. Level 2, 360 SW Powerhouse Dr. Suite 210. 541-213-8083. $35-$45. Reception & Silent Auction 2016 Sisters

Library annual art exhibit. Reception with hors d’oeuvres and beverages, People’s Choice Awards and silent auction. Presented by the

January 24

The Belfry Presents

Volcanic Theater Pub Presents

Dennis McGregor and The Spoilers

Andy Frasco & The U.N.

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Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band Practice The Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band


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See Winnie Givot’s watercolor, "Breitenbush River," and more artists' work at Hood Avenue Art during the Fourth Friday Art Stroll in Sisters, 1/22. Friends of Sisters Library Art Committee. Featuring more than 250 works by local artists. Jan. 22, 6-7:30pm. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. 541-549-6157. Free.

stellar nurseries to their breathtaking deaths by supernova. Jan. 26, 6-7pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1032. Free.

Sisters Library Annual Art Exhibit 2016 Featuring more than 250 works by

Krayna Castelbaum: The Joy of Sudden Disappointment A poem by

Sisters area artists; two- and three-dimensional objects. Presented by the Friends of Sisters Library Art Committee. Tuesdays-Saturdays, 10am-6pm. Through Feb. 25. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. Free.

PRESENTATIONS Members’ Exhibit Opening: The Hidden Life of Ants Small yet abundant,

ants are everywhere. They have much more in common with humans than you might expect. Get a macro view thier world through photographs by ant expert and photographer Dr. Mark Moffett and hands-on models. Hear Dr. Dr. Matt Orr of OSU-Cascades discuss the incredible traits of specialized worker ants. Jan. 22, 6-8pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. Members free, guests $5.

Expanding the Circle of Human Concern Presented by professor John A Powell,

Director, Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society at the University of California at Berkeley. Jan. 27, 12-1:30pm. COCC Campus Center - Wille Hall, 2600 College Way. No cover.

How to Choose a School: Preschool-Grade 8 School Search Join Elie Gaines for a free event to learn tips on how to choose the best school fit for your child and family. Bring a friend, arrive early to chat, snack and share your thoughts on school search services coming to Central Oregon. Call Elie at All Schools Considered for more info. Jan. 28, 11am-noon. Greg’s Grill, 395 SW Powderhouse Dr. 602-686-4480. Free.

IDA Orientation Thinking of opening an

Individual Development Account (IDA) with NeighborImpact? Come to an orientation session and learn what’s involved. A coach will walk you through everything you should know before getting started. Tues, Jan. 26, noon. NeighborImpact Office, 20310 Empire Ave., Suite A110. 541-323-6567. Free.

PICK January Nature Night: Salmon in the Deschutes Large, ocean-going salmon

TICKETS AT

historically returned annually to the Deschutes River and many of its tributaries. Today salmon and steelhead are coming back to their home waters after an absence of nearly 50 years. Learn about their historic and present distributions, their life histories, and how they fit into the extremely diverse river system that is the Deschutes River. Jan. 27, 7pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. Free.

Evolution & Black Holes Dr. Wendi

Wampler outlines the life of stars, from birth in

Rumi, “The Joy of Sudden Disappointment,” is the inspiration for this talk. The invitation is to gently immerse in reflections on desire, non-attachment, disappointment and happiness. Loving indifference and a process for discernment of the deep motive in desire will be explored. Bring your sense of humor. Jan. 24, 5:15-6:30pm. Spiritual Awareness Community at Old Stone Church, 157 NW Franklin Ave. 541-385-1332. Free.

Meet Teen Author Amber J. Keyser

Local teen author Amber J. Keyser reads from her debut novel The Way Back From Broken. This book tells the story of two young people thrown together by shared tragedy who end up on their own in the Canadian wilderness. A Booklist starred review said, “Keyser’s debut novel is an exquisite and enthralling exploration of love, loss, and healing.” Jan. 23, 4:305:30pm. Barnes and Noble, 2690 NE Hwy 20. 541-318-7242. Free.

Nature Night: Salmon in the Deschutes Large, ocean-going salmon histori-

cally returned annually to the Deschutes River and many of its tributaries. Today salmon and steelhead are coming back to their home waters after an absence of nearly 50 years. Join retired fisheries biologist Don Ratliff for an illustrated overview of salmon and steelhead in the Deschutes River basin. Jan. 27, 7-8:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. 541-330-0017. Free.

Opening the Question of Race to the Question of Belonging Presented by pro-

fessor John A Powell, Director, Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society at the University of California at Berkeley. Jan. 27, 6:30-8pm. COCC Wille Hall Campus Center, 2600 NW College Way. Free.

Reading the Cultural Landscape Emily

Pritchard, MS in Archaeology, will present, “Reading the Cultural Landscape,” about preserving our historic and cultural resources, focusing on archaeology, and resource management. Jan. 21, 7:30-8:30pm. COAR Building, 2112 NE Fourth St. 541-598-5920. Members free, $5 donation non-members.

Rojava Revolution in Kurdish Nationhood Amnesty International 610 January meeting. Casey O’ Corcrain of the Blackjack Bookstore will be speaking about the various Kurdish groups working for a Kurdish nation in Iran, Iraq, Turkey, and Syria (the PKK, Peshmerga, PUK, YPJ, YPG, and others and the importance of the new Democratic Authority Movement. Jan. 20, 6-8pm. Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-388-1793. Free.

Save Your Photos Learn how to organize,

protect, and share your print or videotaped images so they can be enjoyed by present and future generations. This is a P.E.O. fundraiser and all proceeds go to scholarships for women. Call to reserve a seat. Jan. 23, 1:30-3:30pm. Village Wiestoria Depot, 805 Wiest Way. 541647-2750. $15.

Taps & Traps: A Community Cat Town Hall Style Meeting Join us for an open discussion about feral and stray cats in Redmond and throughout Central Oregon. The Central Oregon Cat Alliance works to provide humane population control for cats through the use of trap, neuter, return. Everyone is welcome to attend this free event and learn how you can help! Jan. 20, 6-8pm. Wild Ride Brewing, 332 SW Fifth St. 541-617-1010. free.

THEATER

PICK The 39 Steps Mix a Hitchcock masterpiece with a juicy spy novel, add a dash of Monty Python and you have The 39 Steps, a fast-paced whodunit for anyone who loves the magic of theatre! Fri, Jan. 22, 7:30pm, Sat, Jan. 23, 7:30pm, Sun, Jan. 24, 2pm and Thurs, Jan. 28, 7:30pm. CTC Cascade Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave. $20 adults, $16 senior, $13 student. PICK 5 Lesbians Eating a Quiche

Presented by Lonely Fish and Stage Right Productions It’s 1956 and the Susan B. Anthony Society for the Sisters of Gertrude Stein are having their annual quiche breakfast. Will they be able to keep their cool when Communists threaten their idyllic town? Opening night champagne reception, Jan. 15, 6:30-7:30 pm. Thurs, Jan. 21, 7:30pm, Fri, Jan. 22, 7:30pm, Sat, Jan. 23, 7:30pm and Sun, Jan. 24, 3pm. 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave. $19 adult, $16 student & senior.

Arsenic & Old Lace Summit HS Theatre presents the classic dark comedy Arsenic and Old Lace, about two elderly old women who poison lonely men as a charity. Thurs, Jan. 21, 7-9:30pm, Fri, Jan. 22, 7-9:30pm and Sat, Jan. 23, 7-9:30pm. Summit High School Auditorium, 2855 NW Clearwater Dr. 541-355-4190. $5. First Speak Story Performance Workshop Do you have a story to tell? Do

you have a story that needs to be heard? Story telling has become a popular and powerful art form. Why not join the movement. Shay Knorr is teaching a personal story telling workshop. Four workshop sessions at her home and one performance at Armature A Creative Space. 4-8 people. Tues, Jan. 26, 7-9pm. Armature, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 2. $125.

Prime Time Crime Presented by Bend

High Culinary DECA Drama. Our extraordinary culinary program will be providing dinner and dessert that will be a treat for your taste buds. Plus a spoof on ‘70s detective shows on


the main stage! Jan. 22, 5:15pm and Jan. 23, 5:15pm. Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St. $40.

WORDS PICK Armchair Live Storytelling

“Strangers in a Strange Land.” Join us for a night of never before shared stories. We take inspiration from the surprising places that perfect strangers transport us to with their stories. Additional information at armchairbend.com. Tickets through tinpantheater.com. Jan. 21, 7pm. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NW Tin Pan Alley. $10.

Call for Storytellers Armchair live storytelling seeks storytellers for our event “Strangers in a Strange Land.” Please submit your ten minute story idea to armchairbend@ gmail.com. Armchair takes inspiration from the surprising places perfect strangers transport us with their stories. Submission deadline January 7th. Jan. 21, 6pm. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NW Tin Pan Alley. Nacho Ordinary Food Writing Workshop Led by instructors Mike and Irene Coo-

per, this workshop is designed to bring creative writing into the world of food writing, or more specifically to use food as a subject for creative writing. We will read some non-traditional contemporary food reviews and essays, and touch on some of the food-writing greats such as MFK Fisher and John McPhee. Registration is required. Jan. 23, noon-4pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. 541-312-1032. Free.

VOLUNTEERS

350Deschutes Climate Advocacy & Education Use your special talents to en-

courage awareness of the need for meaningful climate action. We organize with leaders at schools, faith communities, nonprofit groups, and people in the community. Speak or organize educational events, attend rallies, write or do art about the climate. RSVP for address. 206-498-5887.

Outreach Volunteer Go out and make

a change for animals right here in Central Oregon. We will empower you to use clinic resources and donations to help animals in difficult situations. Bend Spay and Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. Suite B-1. 541-617-1010.

Fences For Fido Help free dogs from

chains! We are seeking volunteers to come out and help us build fences for dogs who live on chains. No experience is required. Sign up on Facebook: FFF Central Oregon Region Volunteers or Bend Canine Friends Meet Up group. More information can be found at fencesforfido.org.

Gatekeeper Program Through the Gatekeeper program, you would help us train community business staff and volunteers who may come into contact with seniors and adults with disabilities, to recognize warning signs that can indicate abuse, neglect, or an increased need for services or care. Central Oregon Council On Aging (COCOA), 373 NE Greenwood Ave. 541-678-5483. Mentor Heart of Oregon Corps is a nonprofit

that inspires and empowers positive change in youth through education, jobs, and stewardship. For more information or to become a mentor, contact Amanda at 541-526-1380. Mondays-Fridays. Heart of Oregon YouthBuild, 68797 George Cyrus Rd. 541-526-1380.

build relationships through positive guidance by spending quality time with preschool children from low-income communities. Buddies volunteer in our classrooms, playing and reading with little ones aged 3-5. Opportunities available in Bend, Redmond, LaPine, and Prineville. Contact Kathy at 541-323-6503 or kathypa@neighborimpact.org.

Volunteer—BSNP Save the day by

coming in morning or afternoon to help scrub surgical instruments, clean dog kennel,s and help us get caught up on laundry. You’ll be an essential part of providing care to the animals that come to Bend Spay and Neuter Clinic. Wednesdays-Fridays. Bend Spay+Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. Suite B1.

Give to Great Charities Any Time of Year!

CLICK ON THE GIVE GUIDE LINK AT bendsource.com

Volunteer—BCC Bend’s Community Center has a wide variety of volunteer opportunities for individuals over age 6. BCC serves meals Monday-Friday to seniors over 60 years of age from 11 am-12:30 pm. If interested in volunteering go to bendscommunitycenter. org or call 541-312-2069 for more information. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. Volunteer—Advisory Board Partners in Service Advisory organization members are concerned men and women who voluntarily use their professional skills and knowledge of the community to make a practical difference for their neighbors. RSVP for address. 541389-8888. Volunteer Drivers Needed Volunteer drivers needed to transport veterans to the Bend VA Clinic and Portland VA Hospital. Must have clean driving record and be able to pass VA-provided physical and screening. Call John at 541-309-9804 or Paul at 541-647-2363 for more details. Warehouse Sorting and Pricing The Brightside Thrift Store in Redmond is looking for volunteers to receive donations, sort, and price items. A variety of skills are appreciated, from apparel to electronics. Brightside Animal Thrift Store, 838 NW 5th St. 541-504-0101.

CLASSES

NEW EXHIBIT

Art for Stress Management Like exer-

cise and meditation, making art can help to alleviate stress levels. In this beginning six-week course, we will explore six different artistic modalities which have all been proven to quiet the mind and reduce stress. Jan. 20, 6-8pm. The Wilds, 30 SW Century Dr. Suite 120. $210.

January 23 through April 3, 2016

Basic Electronics 101 This class is de-

signed for anyone interested in electronics. No prior technical knowledge is required. The class consists of ten 90-minute sessions once a week of classroom and lab work. Wednesdays, 6:30-8pm. Through March 24. E::Space Labs, 48 SE Bridgeford Blvd. Suite 180. 541241-8801. $100.

Beginning Aerial Central Oregon Aerial Arts is the premier, professional aerial silks acrobatics program with locations in both Bend and Sisters! Wednesdays-Saturdays-Sundays, 2:30-4pm. Central Oregon Aerial Arts, 63017 NE 18th St. 775-342-8710. $17. Bend Fair Housing Summit Join us for

a fun-filled day of Fair Housing education including lunch and earn up to 7 CEU’s. The morning sessions from 9 am-noon: “Fair Housing for Maintenance Staff and On-site Vendors” or “50 Shades of Fair Housing for Management and Leasing Staff”, interactive lunch session “Fair Housing Jeopardy” from noon-1 pm, afternoon session on “Reasonable Accommodations” from 1-4 pm. Jan. 21, 9am4pm. Doubletree/Hilton, 300 NW Franklin Ave. 503-213-1281. $35 session or $50 day.

Free Music Education Saxophonist Reggie Houston and vocalist Charmaine Neville will be accessible for music students and professionals to talk with, learn from, and jam with. All ages welcome. Free parking available at the public garage adjacent to the Oxford hotel. Jan. 23, 11:15am-1:15pm. The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-771-8916. Free.

Farmers, Warriors, Builders: The Hidden Life of Ants, featuring the photographs of Mark W. Moffett, is organized by the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History and circulated by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service (SITES).

With local support from:

James F. and Marion L. Miller Foundation

59800 south highway 97, bend 541-382-4754 | www.highdesertmuseum.org

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PICK Shrek the Musical The tale of an unlikely hero who finds himself on a life-changing journey alongside a wisecracking Donkey and a feisty princess who resists her rescue. Throw in a short tempered bad guy, a cookie with an attitude, and over a dozen other fairy tale misfits, and you’ve got the kind of mess that calls for a real hero. Fri, Jan. 22, 7:30pm, Sat, Jan. 23, 2 and 7:30pm, Sun, Jan. 24, 2 and 7:30pm and Thurs, Jan. 28, 7:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. $33-$35 adult, $28-$30 children & seniors.

NeighborImpact Boomer Buddies Help

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Buddhist Mantras Chanting Explore the spiritual insights and learn how to correctly chant Buddhist Mantras in Japanese. Reservations required. Mondays-Tuesdays-Thursdays-Fridays, 10:30am-4pm. Custom Built Computers Of Redmond, 439 SW 6th St. 541-848-1255. $10.

Capoeira Capoeira is for all! Beginners can experience this exciting artform of Brazilian culture which incorporates martial arts, movement, music, acrobatics, and fun for all ages. Adults all-levels fundamentals and music on Mondays. Concurrent music class at the same time. Learn more at ucabend.com or call 541678-3460. Mondays, 5:20-6:50pm. Get a Move On Studio, 63076 NE 18th St. Suite 140. $25, three week introduction. Bt Charcoal Portraiture This charcoal portrait workshop will cover basic beginning steps to advance finishing techniques needed to create a portrait in a contemporary realist style. Jan. 24, 3-7pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. 347-564-9080. $60.

Contemporary Mix Dance Class Dance class for adults and teens incorporating a mix of ballet, jazz, contemporary, and lyrical dance styles. Mondays, 5:15-6:30pm. Through March 28. Academie de Ballet Classique, 162 NW Greenwood Ave. 541-382-4055. First class free. Contractors CCB Test Preparation Course Contractors must take a 16-hour

state-approved course to satisfy the educational requirement for Oregon construction contractor licensing. Take this two-day live class (1/22 & 23) to prepare for the state-mandated test (not included) to become a licensed contractor. Jan. 22, 8am-5:30pm. Redmond COCC Campus Technology Education Center, 2324 NE College Loop. 541-383-7290. $359.

Developing Your Personal Practice

Developing a personal practice takes courage whether it be in yoga, meditation, sports training, or unfolding your big dream. Resistance, procrastination, and fear inevitably arise when you get serious about something. Thursdays, 6:15-7:45pm. Through Feb. 4. Sol Alchemy Yoga, 2150 NE Studio Rd. 541-639-6246. $12, $40 series.

DIY Cabinet Building The cabinetry tech-

niques demonstrated will give you the start you need to design and build anything from a workshop cabinet to an armoire. You’ll learn the ins and outs of a solid cabinet design that’s been used for centuries. Jan. 24, 11am-1:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. $45.

DIYcave Orientation How DIYcave functions and get a tour of the space including a demonstration of the safety features of the shop’s equipment. Jan. 23, 10:30-11:30am. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. $10, free for members. IntroRUN 5k Training Group Looking to

learn the basics of running, start a consistent fitness program, or just train for a 5k with a great group of people? Our IntroRUN 5k Training Group prepares you for the St. Pat’s Dash. Jan. 23, 8-10am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. $65.

All Levels Partner Acro This class is de-

signed so that everyone from the beginner to advanced practitioner can play! We make each skill accessible so that you feel safe and supported. No partner or experience is necessary. Includes hour-long jam after class. Fridays, 6:30-9pm. Bend Circus Center, 20700 Carmen Lp. 541-678-2229. $15.

German Conversation Group With a

tutor to learn conversational German. Mondays, 7-8pm. In Sisters, various locations. 541-5950318. Cost is variable depending upon number of students.

Growing Your Business with QuickBooks Combine two three-hour evening

classes (1/20 & 2/3) that teach you the fundamentals of business accounting and QuickBooks operation, with up to three hours of one-on-one daytime advising sessions. Jan. 20,

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Have a leg-shakin' good time with Dennis McGregor & The Spoilers at The Belfry in Sisters, 1/22.

6-9pm. COCC Chandler Lab (off-campus), 1027 NW Trenton Ave. 541-383-7290. $199.

I Did My Cleanse, Now What? Certified health coach Lauralyn Eimans will guide us through the process of identifying our health goals and transitioning from a cleanse to a healthy lifestyle. Jan. 26, 7-8pm. Heal Grow Thrive, 999 SW Disk Dr. Suite 105. Free.

Introduction to Arduino The class consist of three 2-hour sessions. This class is scheduled for the many new members of the Bend Arduino Group and anyone interested to get started with the powerful Arduino ecosystem. Tues, Jan. 26, 6-8pm. E::Space Labs, 48 SE Bridgeford Blvd. Suite 180. 541.241.8801. $50.

Introduction to Linux This class is designed for anyone interested in either developing an embedded Linux device or wanting to escape the tyranny of major computer corporations Microsoft and Apple. Thursdays, 6-8pm. E::Space Labs, 48 SE Bridgeford Blvd. Suite 180. $80.

Japanese Group Lessons Group lessons

for both beginners and advanced students for all ages. Mondays-Tuesdays-Thursdays-Fridays, 10am-4pm. Custom Built Computers Of Redmond, 439 SW 6th St. 541-848-1255. $20 or $80 for five lessons.

Japanese Group Lessons Wednesdays, 5-6pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St. 541-6337205. $15 or $55 for six lessons. Knife Sharpening Learn how to make your

knives sharper than razors from expert knife maker, Jim Allen, owner of Three Sisters Forge. Jim will take you through the process, step by step of getting your knives sharp and keeping them that way. Bring a dull knife to hone your skills on! Tues, Jan. 26, 6-8pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $40, 20% discount for members.

West African Drumming Learn traditional rhythms, and experience the brain-enhancing, healing and joyful benefits of West African drumming from experienced teacher David Visiko. This is a beginner class open to anyone who has ever been drawn to drumming! Thursdays, 7pm. Joy of Being Studio, 155 NW Hawthorne Ave. (behind address). $15.

Mindful Parenting Join us for our next education series talk, Mindful Parenting with Molly Carroll, MA, LPC. She will help us discover how to live a mindful life in our busy worlds. Jan. 21, 6:30pm. Cascades Academy, 19860 Tumalo Reservoir Rd. 541.382.0699. Free.

Open Gym Looking for a place to roll around, climb high in the air, juggle, and move your body? Come to Bend Circus Center, we’ve got mats, aerial silks, big mirrors, and lots of fun props. Thursdays, 7-9pm. Bend Circus Center, 20700 Carmen Lp. $5.

Oriental Palm Reading Discover how the brain, nerves, and lines connect in palmistry. Reservation required. Mondays-Tuesdays-Thursdays-Fridays, noon-5pm. Custom Built Computers Of Redmond, 439 SW 6th St. 541-383-5031. $20 an hour. Oriental Palm Reading Discover how the brain, nerves, and lines connect in palmistry. Wednesdays, 6-7pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St. 541-848-1255. $10. Paint Your Own Small Piece of Furniture You pick the piece. Something small you

can easily carry in to class. Have fun painting in a group setting. Sign up online or in store! Thurs, Jan. 21, 9am-noon and Thurs, Jan. 28, 6:30-9:30pm. Junque in Bloom, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 19. 541-728-3036. $75.

Recycle in Style Turn junk to gems with artist Marianne Prodehl. Explore the endless possibilities of repurposing scrap metal by learning techniques of cutting, sculpting and refining metal. Tuesdays, 6-9pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. $65. Salt of the Sea This eight week experience

explores the mandala of our feminine spirit through ancient practices of ritual, dreamwork, earth honoring, and connecting to intuition in a safe and supportive circle of open-hearted people. Harness creative expression, practice receptivity, and strengthen your emotional connection in a deeply nourishing environment. Classes meet Wednesdays. Jan. 27, 5:307:30pm. Sol Alchemy Yoga, 2150 NE Studio Rd. Sliding scale $120-$160.

Saving & Investing Workshop Learn: Tips for saving, how to set savings goals, when to think about investing, the pros and cons of different types of investment. Jan. 20, 5:307:30pm. NeighborImpact Office, 20310 Empire Ave., Suite A110. 541-323-6567. Free. Shop Safety Orientation You’ll be introduced to how DIYcave functions and get a tour of the space including a demonstration of the safety features of the shop’s equipment. Tues, Jan. 26, 5-6pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541388-2283. $10, free for members. Snowshoeing the Cascades Snowshoe

across meadows and through forests to snopark shelters or snowy mountain vistas. Learn about the wildlife, cultural and natural history of our beautiful Central Oregon Cascades. 4-6 miles, no snowshoeing experience required. Wednesdays, 9am-3pm. COCC Community Learning, 1027 NW Trenton Ave. $89.

Soldering School A comprehensive 6-hour

3-session soldering course. The course is designed for beginners and those who want to improve their soldering skills. Mondays, 6-8pm. Through Jan. 26. E::Space Labs, 48 SE Bridgeford Blvd. Suite 180. 541.241.8801. $60.

Sterling Silver Drop Earrings In this class will get you familiar with wire wrapping, hammering silver and you will be able use this technique to create a pair of drop with pearls. Materials provided. Jan. 22, 5:30-7:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $45, 20% discount for members. Wax & Wine: Painting Bring your friends, open your favorite bottle of wine and get ready to be inspired as artist Lisa Marie Sipe guides you through the process of encaustic painting. Jan. 21, 6-9pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. 347-564-9080. $70. Welding Workshop Perfect for beginners or anyone needing a refresher in cutting and welding. Cut steel with a torch and weld those pieces back together. An introduction to brazing and gas welding, Arc, and MIG welding. No welding experience needed! Ages 13 and up. Wed, Jan. 20, 5:30-8pm and Wed, Jan. 27, 5:30-8pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-3882283. $50, 20% discount for members. West African Drumming Level II/III

Build on your knowledge, technique, and performance skills. Teacher/troupe director David Visiko and members of Fe Fanyi practice and play joyfully each Thursday. Any players with previous training, experience, and/or intermediate abilities welcome! Tuesdays, 7pm. Joy of Being Studio, 155 NW Hawthorne Ave. (behind address). 541-760-3204. $15.

What’s Hot in Franchising Explore how

to make money and enjoy life in Bend with your own franchise. In this highly interactive two-hour workshop, find out about the top trends, the best industries and what’s hot in franchising for 2016. Jan. 27, 6-8pm. COCC Chandler Lab (off-campus), 1027 NW Trenton Ave. 541-383-7290. $29.

Windows 10 Explore Windows 10 with Microsoft-certified instructor Troy Ford. Jan. 22, 2-3:30pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1055. Free. Wine Bottle Drinking Glasses Make se-

riously cool drinking glasses from your empty wine bottles. Learn how to cut them using a simple jig and fire polish the rim of the glasses with our custom torch. Beer, soda bottles, and jars make great glasses, too. Great for ages 12 and up! Bring 4 empty bottles to class. Jan. 21, 6-9pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-3882283. $40, 20% discount for members.

EVENTS Bend Chamber Business After Hours

Hear a sneak preview of upcoming shows and exclusive member benefits. Go behind the scenes and experience the “real” Tower Theatre during this special mixer. Hear how the nonprofit Tower Theatre Foundation provides performing arts and education programs to our community and area schools. Fourth Thursday, 5-7pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. Free.


Crystal Bowl Harmonic Sound Bath Experience the awesome tones of 11+ crystal and Tibetan bowls and three crystal pyramids. This will realign, energize and help wake up your spirit into the next dimension. Bring a mat and pillow. Jan. 24, 7:15-8:30pm. Sol Alchemy Yoga, 2150 NE Studio Rd. 509-456-8315. Donation.

Environmental Priorities for the 2016 Legislative Session at Pints and Politics Join OLCV and special guests Bend City

Exploration with Plant Spirit Medicine

Plants give us clothes, medicine, food, shelter, even oxygen. There is one more gift plants want to share with you. Wisdom. Since rediscovering plant medicine over 20 years ago, Eliot Cowan has taught hundreds of students to communicate directly with the plant spirits who so generously offer their healing gifts. Join Eliot around the fire for an evening of exploration. Jan. 26, 7-10pm. Sacred Fire Community Hearth, 2801 NE Lapointe Ct. $20 donation.

PICK Exhibit Opening: The Hidden Life of Ants Small yet abundant, with complex

and wildly diverse lifestyles, ants are everywhere. They have much more in common with humans than you might expect. Get a macro view of this tiny creature’s world through photographs by ant expert and photographer Dr. Mark Moffett and hands-on models. Jan. 23, 10am-4pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. $12 adults, $10 ages 65+, $7 ages 5-12, under 4 free.

Free One Day Kid Inspection Clinic

Healthy Beginnings will bring its 12-point kid

inspection to Bend. There are no eligibility requirements and all families are welcome to attend. Jan. 23, 9-11am. Juniper Pediatrics, 2275 NE Doctors Drive Suite 1. Free.

Free Day Free Day gets busy, so arrive early! Note: Parking is limited! A free shuttle is offered from the Morning Star Christian School, 19741 Baker Road, to the museum and back all day. Sat, Jan. 23, 10am-4pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. Free.

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Geeks Who Drink Each week geek teams of up to six challenge one another in eight rounds of all-out fun and randomness! Tuesdays, 8-10pm. The Platypus Pub, 1203 NE Third St. 541-323-3282. Free. Grassroots Cribbage Club Newcomers welcome. For info contact Sue at 541-382-6281. Mondays, 6-9pm. Bend Elks Lodge, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd. $1 to $13. History of Disabilities Exhibit Through Jan. 31. Rotunda Gallery, Barber Library, COCC Bend Campus, 2600 NW College Way. History Pub: Timberline Lodge Timberline became the showplace for Oregon’s Works Progress Administration art and craft. Recent developments at the lodge, new ski opportunities, and Friends of Timberline projects will be mentioned at the end. Presented by Sarah Baker Munro, historian of Timberline Lodge and director of the Hoover-Minthorn House Museum. Jan. 26, 7pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. Free. The Jubilee Get on board and help us make

the Children’s Museum a reality for our community. Join us for our first annual winter fundraiser. Enjoy live music, great food, good drinks, and the best company you could ask for on a Saturday night. Experience some of our stunning science displays, see conceptual drawings, and meet the directors behind CMCO. Jan. 23,

Internationally touring folk artist Danny Schmidt performs at House Concerts in the Glen, 1/23. 7-10pm. Armature, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 2. 206947-0576. $60 adv., $75 door.

Idaho St. 541-350-9189. 1/28 is free. $25 single day, $45 full event. $30 student.

Sacred Conversations for Racial Justice Trinity Episcopal is bringing you this

US Forest Service: Networking Job Seekers with Disabilities A networking

national podcast that explores structural racism. This event consists of an opening keynote speaker followed by two full days of talks, panels, and networking. It features leading activists, theologians, authors, and experts on racial justice. Thurs, Jan. 28, 4:30-7pm. Trinity Episcopal Church - St. Helens Hall, 231 NW

event for job seekers with disabilities to make personal connections with the participating federal agency representatives and learn about applying for federal positions. Participating agencies: The US Forest Service, Timber Lake Job Corps, US Department of Agriculture, Oregon Department of Forestry, and the

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 03 / January 21, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Councilor Barb Campbell and Page Atcheson of Renew Oregon for a lively discussion about the upcoming legislative session. Learn about Oregon Conservation Network’s priorities for a healthy Oregon and find out how, together, we can make important progress for the environment in 2016! Jan. 21, 7-9pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln.

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT

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EVENTS


demands of being right and being good. Jan. 24, 10:30-11:30am. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 61980 Skyline Ranch Rd. 541-385-3908.

Pool Tournament Cash Cup Tuesdays,

The Abraham Inspiration Group The

Preschool-Grade 12 School Search: How to Choose a School Join Elie Gaines

secret behind The Secret. Esther and Jerry Hicks relate their story and the Abraham Family explains the fundamentals of their teachings. A perfect opportunity to share the Art of Allowing & Law of Attraction with friends. Jan. 23, 5-8pm. Rosie Bareis Campus, 1010 NW 14th St. Donation.

8pm. Seven Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St. $5.

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / January 21, 2016 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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for a free event to learn tips on how to choose the best school fit for your child and family. Bring a friend, arrive early to chat, snack and share your thoughts on school search services coming to Central Oregon. Questions? Call Elie at All Schools Considered. Jan. 27, 6-7pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 602-686-4480. Free.

Preventative Walk-in Pet Wellness Clinic First come, first served. Vaccines, mi-

crochips, toenail trims, and de-worming available. Service fees can be found at bendsnip. org. Saturdays, 10am. Bend Spay and Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. Suite B-1.

Adelines’ Showcase Chorus Practice

For more information call Diane at 541-4474756 or showcasechorus.org. Mondays, 6:30-9pm. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave.

Al-Anon Family Groups 12-step group for friends and families of alcoholics. Check afginfo.org or call 541-728-3707 for times and locations. City Club of Central Oregon It is a lunch

Rain, Snow, or Shine Exhibit From rain to shine to snow to hail, weather plays a large role in how we live our everyday lives. It affects how we dress, our daily activities, the crops we grow, work we do, and water we use. 10am4pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. $15 adult, $12 senior, $9 children.

discussion, but don’t expect this City Club forum to turn into a food fight. They are way too civil for that. But if information and insights are what you want, there’s no better place for lunch today. Third Thursday, 11:30am. St. Charles Center for Health and Learning, 2500 NE Neff Rd. $20/$35.

SCORE Small Business Counseling

COHO—Central Oregon Homebrewers Organization Do you like to brew beer? Or

Receive confidential business planning with a SCORE volunteer. Tues, Jan. 26, 5:30-7:30pm. Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. Free.

Taps & Traps: A Community Cat Town Hall Enjoy some great beer while discussing

the stray and feral cat issue in our community! Open discussion is encouraged. Let’s work together to not only help the cats in need but make sure they don’t continue to overpopulate. Jan. 20, 6-8pm. Wild Ride Brewing, 332 SW Fifth St. 541-617-1010. Free.

Traditional Healing with Eliot Cowan

Experience the deep, mysterious transformation available through an ancient healing tradition. The medicine of the old cultures runs deep and exerts a powerful effect on our bodies, minds, and, most importantly, our spirits. Jan. 26 and Jan. 27. Sacred Fire Community Hearth, 2801 NE Lapointe Ct. 541-241-6673.

Trivia Tuesdays Pick your smartest friends to make teams of two-to-five people for a mind-bending game of trivia. Come join! Interested in being a trivia host? Email: info@ thelotbend.com for details. Tuesdays, 6-8pm. The Lot, 745 NW Columbia St. Free.

Acro Jam Need time to train and practice

your acro skills with a supportive community? Come to our acro jam! No experience necessary. Ages 16+. Wednesdays, 7-9pm. Bend Circus Center, 20700 Carmen Lp. $5.

SENIOR EVENTS Senior Meal Program Through a con-

tract with Central Oregon Council on Aging (COCOA) BCC hosts a senior meal program, providing a healthy lunch to seniors and their guests. In addition, Bend’s Community Center offers a comfortable senior library with billiards, computer, and internet access. Mondays-Fridays, 11am-12:30pm. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. 541-312-2069. Free-$3.

Mindful Movement Pilates A gentle pi-

lates class led by Paula Logan that focuses on deliberate and mindful movement of the body. Learn how to reduce stress, to release tense muscles, and to perform exercises properly. Thursdays. Healthy Lifestyle Resource Center, 2525 NE Twin Knolls Dr. Suite 9. $8.

MEETINGS Creative Good In light of our monthly worship theme, “What does it mean to be a people of integrity?” Guest speaker Rev. Jon Luopa will take a look at trying to balance the twin

have you always wanted to learn how? Come join us! We’re a fun group of people, from all over Central Oregon, dedicated to improving our craft. Educational sessions, group brewing, competitions, and other beer-related events. Third Wednesday, 6:30-9pm. Aspen Ridge Retirement, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd. Free.

Communicators Plus Toastmasters

Thursdays, 6:30-7:45pm. DEQ Office, 475 NE Bellevue Dr. Suite 110. 541-388-6146.

Cool Cars and Coffee All makes, models

welcome. Saturdays, 8am. C.E. Lovejoy’s Brookswood Market, 19530 Amber Meadow Dr.

Italian Language Group Italian language

learning, study, and conversation group. All levels welcome. Mondays, 1-2pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. Free.

NAMI Depression & Bipolar Disorder Support Group Mondays, 7-9pm. First

United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 541-480-8269. Free.

Overeaters Anonymous Meeting Mon-

days-noon-Saturdays, 9:30am and Thursdays-noon. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 541-306-6844. Free.

Science Club Advocates for math and

science in Sisters. Jan. 26, 6pm. The Belfry, 302 Main St., Sisters.

Socrates Cafe Group People from different backgrounds get together and exchange thoughtful ideas and experiences while embracing the Socratic Method. Open to all comers. Fourth Thursday of every month, 6-7pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-749-2010. Free.

Spanish Club Spanish language study and

conversation group. All levels welcome. Thursdays, 3:30-5pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-749-2010. Free.

Vote of Approval Bend-la Pine school district vote on new charter school! Jan. 26, 6-7pm. Bend La Pine Administration Building, 520 NW Wall Street. 541-213-8682. Free. Italian Conversation Group Join our weekly informal Italian conversation group at Dudley’s. No textbooks, no homework, no instructor: just come and have fun. We welcome all skill levels from beginner to expert. Saturdays, 10-11:30am. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 541 749 2010. Free.

KIDS’ EVENTS

Natural Resources Conservation Service. Jan. 21, 9:30am-noon. Bend Park & Recreation District, 799 SW Columbia St. 971-244-0305. Free.

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EVENTS

Tween Yoga class at Namaspa Yoga Studio introduces the basics of yoga to help build strength.

Baby Steps Ages 0-18 months. A gentle storytime for infant and caregiver. Thursdays, 1:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. Free.

STEAM Team: LED Valentines Ages 9-17 yrs. Engineer light-up circuit Valentines. Registration required. Jan. 27, 1:30pm. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. Free.

Backpack Explorers Parents and

Music, Movement & Stories Ages 3-5

children ages 3-5 investigate science, art, music, stories, and culture in a fun, handson manner. New themes weekly! Wed, Jan. 20, 10-11am, Thurs, Jan. 21, 10-11am, Wed, Jan. 27, 10-11am and Thurs, Jan. 28, 10-11am. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541382-4754. Members $10, non-members $15.

LEGO Block Party Read! Build! Play!

Join other builders and a gazillion LEGOs. Wed, Jan. 27, 2:30pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. Free.

East Bend Saturday Stories Interactive storytime with songs, rhymes, crafts. Sat, Jan. 23, 9:30am. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. Free. Family Fun Ages 0-5 years. Interactive storytime with songs, rhymes, crafts. Thursdays, 10:30am. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. Free. Kindermusik Class The world’s most popular and trusted music education program for children. Not only will your child receive a fantastic music education, kindermusik also enhances brain development, physical skills and social growth. Call to register for a free class. Tuesdays, 1:302:15pm. Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. Free. Free One Day Kid Inspection Clinic

Healthy Beginnings will bring its 12-point kid inspection to Bend. At these screening clinics, each child receives nearly $3,000 worth of assessment services at no cost to the family. There are no eligibility requirements and all families are welcome to attend. Jan. 23, 9-11am. Juniper Pediatrics, 2275 NE Doctors Drive Suite 1. Free.

Harry Potter Story Hour Drop in for our weekly story hour, featuring Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. This is a free event with Harry Potter themed treats and gelato for purchase. Ages: Tiny through Dumbledore, all welcome! Thursdays, 4-5pm. Bonta Natural Artisan Gelato, 920 NW Bond St. Suite 108. Free.

Kids Welding Tailored just for kids (ages 8-17), this “hands-on” class will teach kids to cut steel with a torch and weld those pieces back together. They’ll learn some amazing skills and take their creations home with them. Tues, Jan. 26, 5-7:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $45, 20% discount for members. Kids’ Night Out Kids get JSFC to themselves as they swim, play games and have fun with their friends under the supervision of our staff. Drinks and snacks provided. Note: Ages 3 through 5 will enjoy crafts, games and storytime. Swimming is not included for this group. 5 and under must be potty trained. Fourth Saturday, 6:309:30pm. Juniper Swim & Fitness Center, 800 NE Sixth St. $10 adv., $13 door.

years. Movement and stories to develop skills. Thurs, Jan. 21, 10:30am. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. Free.

OBOB Book Club Discuss titles from the middle school OBOB list. Share questions. Wed, Jan. 27, 4-5pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. Free. Pajama Party Ages 0-5 yearss. Evening storytime with songs, rhymes, crafts, PJs. Wed, Jan. 27, 6:45pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. Tues, Jan. 26, 6:30pm. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. Free. Parent & Kids Movie Night Dr. Calley Asbill will be screening the movie Inside Out for the kids while giving a demonstration on how to make elderberry gummies for parents. Feel free to bring any snacks your family may want. Jan. 22, 6pm. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. 541-330-0334. Free. Preschool Parade Ages 3-5 years. Stories, songs, rhymes, crafts to develop early literacy skills. Tuesdays, 1:30pm, Fridays, 10:30am. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. Thurs, Jan. 21, 9:30am and Thurs, Jan. 28, 9:30am. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. Free.

Rockie Tales Puppet Show Ages 3-5. Learn about the world through puppets. Jan. 25. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Free.

Redmond Teen Makers with Cascade Culinary Institute Decorate a pastry and learn about the Cascade Culinary Institute. Ages 9-17 yrs. Jan. 20, 2pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Free.

Science Spectacular Come join us for

our first Science Spectacular event! For all ages! See amazing science demonstrations that will thrill even the adults. Try your hand at creating some explosive reactions, learn how to make an electric toy car, play with pulleys, and watch your toddler lift you in the air! Jan. 23, 10am-4pm. Armature, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 2. 206-947-0576. Free.

Storytime & Lunch Get ready for

school with librarian-led stories and fun. Lunch is free for children. Jan. 27, 11:15am. Juniper Elementary, 1300 NE Norton Ave. Free.

Teen Writing Group A year-long writing project that ends with a self-published anthology. Fri, Jan. 22, 4-5pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. Free.

Tween Yoga This class for 10-12 year olds, will introduce the basics of yoga to help build strength and flexibility. Some partner and group work will be included. Wednesdays, 4-5:15pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. $5-$6.


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CULTURE

Cons & Icons

An interview with forensic scientist and artist Jennifer Hannaford

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By Sherron Lumley

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 03 / January 21, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Mugshots of David Bowie, Margret Leonard and a detail of the fingerprints creating the mugshot of Jim Morrison by artist Jennifer Hannaford.

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orensic scientists are fascinating fictional characters. Sherlock Holmes, for example, was the first to use fingerprint evidence in 1890, 11 years before Scotland Yard. Artist Jennifer Hannaford is a forensic fingerprint examiner and the real life forensic scientist behind the Cons & Icons show at the Jenny Green Gallery in Bend. Her work processing crime scenes and authenticating fine art leads to an incredible eye for reading the situation. Looking at the mugshots hanging in Green’s pop-up gallery, there’s something of the soul of each person that jumps off the paper.

in Sacramento in 1994, and a Masters in Biomedical Forensic Science from Boston University in 2013. “The strain of being a forensic scientist is part of the reason she turned to art,” says Green. Hannaford, now residing in New York, took the time this week to discuss her work with the Source. Here’s what she said: SW: How would you describe the art in the Cons & Icons show in your own words?

Hannaford’s work starts with the mugshots of iconic leaders, famous public figures and convicts. Each portrait is recreated with thousands of fingerprints, requiring Hannaford to study the mugshot for many hours. In the case of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Hannaford’s sensitive eye noted the vulnerability of the position he was in when arrested during the Montgomery bus boycott in 1956. The work conveys a complexity of emotion in the eyes of the young 27-yearold King.

Jennifer Hannaford (JH): Parts of some of the well-known figures are the experiences that make them human, like the rest of us. The mug shot is a process that captures the individual in a most vulnerable moment, unscripted and beyond choice. While these images are necessary for documentation for criminal records, they reveal more. An entire range of unmasked emotions is accessible. Some images depict the individual not wanting to be arrested and booked for their actions, while others depict one’s attitude after taking that risk to make a statement.

“It’s a great opportunity to consider why these people were arrested,” says Jenny Green, curator of the pop-up show that runs through the end of January.

SW: What was going through your mind as you were working on the piece of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s mugshot?

Hannaford and Green grew up together in Placerville, California. Hannaford earned her Bachelor of Forensic Science from California State University

JH: As I painted the image of Martin Luther King Jr., I spent many hours intensely examining this man's face; his expression and a slight downward tilt of the head reveals his vulnerability, but his

eyes show determination. This moment captures the spirit of a man who risked his own freedom to achieve civil rights for all. Many associate humiliation with being arrested, but I think this demonstrates (along with Bowie, St. Cyr, Morrison, Margaret Lawrence) that people have things that happen in their lives, and it does not mean their creative pursuits or messages come to an end. These are people who lived productive and interesting lives. SW: When and why did you start becoming fascinated by fingerprints? JH: I had studied forensic science and chemistry in college. After college I went to work for the Oakland (California) Police Department’s crime lab, which included a latent print section. I was involved in the processing of crime scenes and evidence for latent prints, and their comparison in criminal cases. It is hard to believe, I have now been working in the field for twenty years. The blending of my work and personal interests seemed like a natural progression. Aside from style and content that defines the artist, I cannot think of anything that reveals the signature of an artist’s true identity other than their prints throughout a piece of art! Although, I think the signature of an artist’s through brushstroke, style and sometimes message is far more important. SW: Who are the most influential artists to you and your work?

JH: There are so many artists who have influenced my work. Two come to mind immediately, Chuck Close and Picasso, where my fingerprint work is concerned. Both have actually used fingerprints to create portraiture. SW: The David Bowie piece - how were you affected by his death, having devoted a work in this collection to him? JH: The death of David Bowie came as a surprise and with sadness. I truly admire any artist with the courage to live for his or her art. We are fortunate he left this world the generous gift of tremendously innovative music, and he was a visual artist as well. His passing left me eager to listen to his music again and understand Bowie the man. It is clear this creative soul took risks and pursued his passion somewhat fearlessly. I think most artists, in any medium, wish to create something yet to be seen by the world, with a style uniquely his or her own. David Bowie accomplished this, and more. His example is an inspiration for me to dive deeper into the heart of my art and push myself to my own creative edges, and beyond.

Cons & Icons Runs through January Jenny Green Gallery 849 NW Wall St., Bend


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Espionage and Pratfalls Not the average comedic spy-thriller By Jared Rasic

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / January 21, 2016 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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The Cottonwood Cafe Breakfast/Lunch 8am-3pm Wed-Sun

Join us for our casual 3-course dinner on Friday & Saturday nights 3 courses for only $25! Gift Certificates Available

Reservations • 541.549.2699 403 E. Hood Avenue | Sisters, OR

Best Venue for live music, dancing, food and libations

Live Music 5 Days a Week Thu 1/21

Nice and Brown 7:30-10:30 PM Fri 1/22

Just Us

8:30 to 12 PM Sat 1/23

Just Us

8:30 to 12 PM Sun 1/24

NFL Game Day All games all day NFL Sunday TICKET

AFC

Championship Game

12pm NFC

Championship Game

3:40pm

Tue 1/26

The Cutmen 6 to 9 PM

Wed 1/27 Acoustic Open Mic

w/ Derek

Michael Marc

6 to 9:30 PM

Saturday and Sunday Breakfast 62860 Boyd Acres Rd in Bend

(541) 383-0889

Facebook.com/NorthsideBarAndGrill northsidebarfun.com

Photos by Makenzie Whittle Photography

“T

he 39 Steps” is an interesting beast because it subverts expectations at every corner. Even those who have seen the 1935 film by Alfred Hitchcock or read the 1915 book by John Buchan will enjoy it quite a bit, but the stage adaptation also keeps its tongue planted firmly in cheek for the entire running time. It takes the spy thriller plot line and the confused and desperate characters adding to this extremely fun theatrical conceit to make the entire enterprise a bit more showy. Aside from the lead actor playing the central role, every other character in the play is performed by just three actors. The play tells the tale of Richard Hannay, a somewhat ordinary man who gets sucked into a spy caper. Hannay is a wisecracking member of the idle rich who is bored one night and heads out for a night of theatre. As he watches a demonstration of the powers of recall of a man named “Mr. Memory,” shots ring out in the theater and Hannay finds himself protecting a beautiful spy who convinces him to take her back to his place. She tells him of a plot she uncovered to steal extremely sensitive military secrets and mentions something called “The 39 Steps” without elaborating further. Later that night she bursts into Hannay’s room clutching a map of

Scotland, fatally stabbed, and implores him to flee. What ensues is Hannay, who is now on the run from the law for the beautiful spy’s death, following an ever narrowing trail of clues throughout London and Scotland, desperately hoping to clear his name while also unraveling the mystery of the 39 Steps. Every single person he meets on his adventure is played by the same three actors and they do a fantastic job making the show an obscenely fun ride. The two men who play all the male roles (and several female ones) are called the Clowns in the script, due to their constant shifting of attitudes, emotions and faces. Clown #1 is played by Bradley Rode and Clown #2 is played by Adrian Mikkelson and the amount of fun they’re having is palpable. There are moments when they are playing multiple characters in the same scene, sometimes simultaneously, with a constant flurry of different accents, facial hair and hats to let the audience know who its watching. Although something like that could overwhelm the story in a lesser show, the script is smart enough to let the spy thriller aspects take a backseat to the bravura performances by the clowns.

Annie Tappouni plays all the female characters, of which there are significantly fewer, but more time is given over to them to allow them all to be fully realized women. Tappouni instills each character with not only different physicality, but with different spirits, allowing the roles to really come across as distinct, three-dimensional individuals. Brian Johnson is wonderful as Richard Hannay, adding a slyly smirking bravado to the character that recalls an early David Niven. Johnson is having a blast with the role, but also understands Hannay, so the meta-narrative never gets in the way of him delivering a solid performance. Pulling off a show of this complexity seems astonishingly difficult, but director Diane Turnbull looks to have everything well in hand. This, combined with Kelley Ryan’s wonderful and prolific costume design, makes “The 39 Steps” an immersive theatrical experience designed specifically to wow the audience. Judging from the rehearsal, it most certainly will. “The 39 Steps” Friday, Jan. 22 to Saturday, Feb. 6. 7:30 p.m. Matinees at 2 p.m. Cascades Theatrical Company 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend $13-$20


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to Town CHOW New Five Guys comes to Bend By Angela Moore

Welcome to Ahimsa Body Therapies!

Linda Frantz is a Registered Nurse, a Certified Colon Hydrotherapist,

Gentle detox to increase energy

Curb cravings Promote wellness

3 Treatments for $150 (A $210 value - must book before 1/31/16)

541.610.5528 www.AhimsaBodyTherapies.com Burger fans have flocked to the new Five Guys in Bend. Photos by Angela Moore.

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ive Guys Burgers and Fries has opened its doors to an eager assembly of hungry Bend residents. Located off 3rd Street across from the new Walgreens, Five Guys is one of the few new food-faces popping up along one of the busiest streets in Bend. Since its announcement to open up a store in Central Oregon last year, many residents have been eagerly awaiting opening day. Having visited the location in Eugene, Bend resident Edward Kehoe didn’t mind waiting in line, saying simply, “I love Five Guys, ” a sentiment shared by, apparently, thousands of people in Bend. Indeed, this seemed to be the general consensus as 4,300 people were served opening day, according assistant manager Jeff Christensen. “We have been extremely busy since

the doors opened,” said Mel Garges, co-owner of this location. He equates the success of the business to high quality standards, including hormone-free beef that is hand-formed into patties daily and are never frozen. In fact, Five Guys does not even have freezers at any of its 1,000-plus locations nationwide and this one is no different. While employees in uniformed red shirts filled the assembly line behind the counter, there were many more unsung heroes in the back cutting and preparing fries for the masses.Aside from pleasing the palates of many new customers, Five Guys has also created about 45 new jobs for the area. Five Guys Burgers and Fries 222 NE Emerson Ave., Bend Sun-Thurs: 11 a.m. - 10 p.m. Fri-Sat: 11 a.m. - 11 p.m.

FOOD & BEER EVENTS PICK Bt January Dinner & Pop Up Film Festival A fabulous dinner by Wendy

at Willow Camp Catering and a Mini Pop Up Film Festival. The mini film festival will include short films highlighting the complex and diverse landscape of films being shot in Central Oregon. You will be meeting filmmakers and entrepreneurs from many different walks of life. Jan. 20, 6-8:45pm. The Belfry, 302 Main St., Sisters. $35.

Three Creeks Brewing Co. Beer & Dessert Pairing Indulge in this mouthwa-

tering event with Chef Mark and Brewer Zach. Reservations required. Call to reserve. Check out the menu! Crantastic Voyage/fresh berry napoleon with creme anglaise, Crowdpleaser IPA/meyer lemon pie, Dark Hollow Winter Warmer/sweet potato pie, Coffee TenPine Chocolate Porter/double chocolate mousse and raspberry sauce. Jan. 23, 3-4:30pm. Three Creeks Brewing Co., 721 Desperado Ct. $25 (gratuity included).

Beer & Wine Tastings We always have

a wonderful selection of beer and wine! Come join us every Friday and Saturday. Fridays-Saturdays, 3:30-5:30pm. Newport Avenue Market, 1121 NW Newport Ave. 541382-3940. Free.

Beer’ducation Join us in exploring the

wonderful nuances and breadth of craft beer every Monday evening in our Tasting Room. Each Monday evening, a different Crux beer will be highlighted via a special beer menu offering that includes a tasting guide to help you make the most of your experience. Mondays, 4-10pm. Through Feb. 29. Crux Fermentation Project, 50 SW Division St.

Firkin Friday A different firkin each week. $3 firkin pints until it’s gone. Fridays, 4pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr. 541639-4776.

Paint Nite Drink Creatively Join Paint Nite for a night of drinking creatively. We will be painting Love Constellations. No worries if you’ve not painted in a very long while, if ever! Jan. 28, 6:30-8:30pm. Wild Ride Brewing, 332 SW Fifth St. 541-980-7482. $45. Pints & Politics Join OLCV and fellow

community members who care about protecting Oregon’s natural legacy for Pints and Politics. Third Thursday of every month, 7pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln. Free.

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 03 / January 21, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

and a Wellness Coach with over 17 years of experience.

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PDX: The Strategy Guide

26

Making time fly at PDX’s brilliant bars By Kevin Gifford

Pangea means “all earth” and it was the name given to the super-continent when all the landmasses on earth were connected around 300 million years ago. We feel that PANGEA accuratley represents the flavors in mexican cuisine. Los jalapeños invites you to our second location ‘Pangea’ ‘Pangea’ offering breakfast lunch and dinner.

Open Monday - Saturday 7:30am-8:30pm Pangea 744 NW Bond St.

Photos by Kevin Gifford

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s anyone with a love for beer and travel knows, attempting to find something decent to drink at an airport can be a harrowing experience. At Dulles International in Washington, there’s a bar that’s enticingly titled “DC Craft Beer” on the far end of one terminal. It contains a whopping three taps, one of which is Stella Artois. And woe be to the unfortunate traveler who winds up in the international terminal at LAX—it’s exclusively an AB-InBev shop, and the best beer you’ll find there is Goose Island’s 312 pale ale, a mere $8.99 for a pint. This isn’t the case at Roberts Field, the Redmond Municipal Airport, where the restaurant serves Central Oregon beer almost exclusively, and it definitely isn’t the case for good ol’ PDX. Portland International Airport installed a giant cuckoo clock just past security featuring (among many things) a wooden carving of a man holding a beer and riding a barrel to parts unknown. The Made in Oregon shops allow you to fill up growlers and bring them on the plane as carry-on souvenirs. How many other airports can say that? None, is how many. That’s the wonder of PDX, without even bringing the restaurants into the picture.

Striking out on a theoretical airport pub crawl at Portland International, one would do well to begin at Laurelwood Brewing Company. Laurelwood tends to fall below many Oregonians’ radar, perhaps because it’s been around a while and doesn’t offer a ton of innovation with its offerings. That’s perhaps unfair, because its base lineup—including the ever-lovable Vinter Varmer—is solid and just the thing for the kind of early-morning drinking people at airports often do. The same can be said of Rogue Ale’s Public House in Terminal D— Rogue may not be the favorite of many people in Oregon, but who can turn down Rogue’s 7-Hop IPA right next to the gate. Meanwhile, for something more substantial foodwise, a couple of PDX’s restaurants will fill the bill. The Country Cat Dinnerhouse has great omelets and Phriem’s pilsner and Deschutes’ Jubelale on tap. The largest selection in PDX, though, is at Henry’s Tavern, the airport outpost of the 12th Street classic. Two dozen Oregon beers are on tap there, and (just like the original place in the Pearl), there’s a refrigerated surface on the bar to keep your drink cold while discussing politics with the adjacent stranger who’s heading to Chicago. Good times.


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SCREEN

Six Men Down

"13 Hours" is intense and exhausting By Jared Rasic 27 VOLUME 20 ISSUE 03 / January 21, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Call me Jim one more time. I dare you!

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hen a military film like “13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi” comes out, based on how far left or right a military film leans, the box office receipts can usually be predicted. Left gets the film Oscar nominations, critical acclaim and a healthy return, while right means the film makes a ton at the box office, but is critically snubbed and ignored come awards season. There are outliers on both sides, but this trend is usually fairly spot-on. “13 Hours” is going to have problems because it lands somewhere in the middle. Right wingers hoping for a criticism of Hillary Clinton and the Obama administration will be disappointed and liberals hoping for an in-depth examination of cause and effect will be left wanting. “13 Hours” isn’t interested in whether the at-

tack was perpetrated by Ansar al-Sharia or Al-Qaeda, nor does it care about placing the blame on Americans. Instead, the film paints a minute-by-minute account of the men and women on the ground who lived and died on Sept. 11, 2012. The film follows six CIA contractors working at a secret base a mile down the road from an outpost where the US ambassador to Libya is staying. When the base is attacked, the contractors have to fight their way to the outpost to try and rescue the ambassador, fight their way back to the base, and then hold it long enough so reinforcements can come and evacuate them from the country. John Krasinski (Jim from “The Office”) is our window into these six men. He arrives in Benghazi only a few weeks before the attack and we learn about the

setup of the CIA base from his point of view. The other five are played by James Badge Dale (“Iron Man 3”), Max Martin (“The Unit”), Dominic Fumusa ("Nurse Jackie"), Pablo Schreiber (Porn Stache from “Orange is the New Black”) and David Denman (Jim’s nemesis Roy from “The Office”). Saddled with tons of cliché tough guy dialogue, these six actors still sell every moment of their hellish night. The audience feels their exhaustion, adrenaline and injuries right along with them and it is a testament to Michael Bay’s directorial style. RPGs are ricocheting, cars exploding and heads bursting, but Bay never tries to make any of it look cool like he would in a “Bad Boys” or “Transformers” movie. Even with the clunky dialogue, “13

FEATURED FILM EVENTS

Hours” is a gripping nail-biter. Dale, Krasinski and Schreiber deserve to be bumped up to full-fledged movie stardom after this. This film is exhausting in its intensity and crafts some of the most breathtaking action sequences since Michael Mann’s “Heat.” “13 Hours” is probably the finest modern military action flick since “Black Hawk Down” and deserves to be seen before being judged, regardless of where the political lines are drawn.

“13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi” Dir. Michael Bay Grade: BNow Playing at Old Mill Stadium

By Jared Rasic

OFF THE BEATEN PATH

PARENTS AND KIDS MOVIE NIGHT

BACKCOUNTRY FILM FESTIVAL

The Central Oregon Trail Alliance brings another fun documentary to McMenamins. This one looks at fatbiking as the natural progression of mountain biking since it allows the rider to traverse more difficult terrain. With some breathtaking biking footage, expect an exciting night at the movies.

This sounds delightful: A screening of "Inside Out" for families while Dr. Calley Asbill gives a demonstration on how to make elderberry gummies for the parents. Multi-tasking is one thing, but learning how to do ANYTHING with elderberries while watching a movie is impressive and downright awe-inspiring.

Thursday, Jan. 21. 9pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis, 700 NW Bond St. $5

Friday, Jan. 22. 6pm Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Free

It’s time for the 11th annual Backcountry Film Festival, packed to the knapsack with all kinds of flicks about adventures folks are having. The money raised will go toward Project SNOW (Studying Nature Outdoors in Winter), which is giving 2,000 local kids a chance to learn awesome things while dreaming of hot chocolate. Friday, Jan. 22. 7pm Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr. $10


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Bread and Circuses

"The Big Short" entertains and enrages By Jared Rasic

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / January 21, 2016 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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he Big Short” is a gripping movie from start to finish, populated with fascinating characters. Christian Bale plays Michael Burry, a hedge fund manager who figures out the U.S. housing market is unstable. He realizes he can make a massive profit if he creates a credit default swap market (basically betting that the housing market is going to collapse) and convinces the banks to allow him to do so. Separately, Jared Vennett (Ryan Gosling), a trader for Deutsche Bank and Mark Baum (Steve Carell), another hedge fund manager and outspoken moral crusader, hear about what Burry is up to and also invest. Finally, Charlie Geller (John Magaro) and Jamie Shipley (Finn Whitrock), founders and partners in an up and coming hedge fund, also stumble onto Burry’s investment and look to dive in. Due to their lack of experience and funds, they rope their next door neighbor into their scheme. Luckily, that neighbor is Ben Rickert (Brad Pitt), an ex-trader

with Deutsche Bank who knows exactly how to break through the glass ceiling. Watching these separate groups all stumbling across the same horrifying truth is more fun than it might seem. At times, “The Big Short” almost plays like an “Oceans” movie, where all of the characters are five steps ahead of the audience and not patient enough to wait. Christian Bale once again shows his versatility in a role that is somehow different than anything he has done before, but also subdued and underplayed. However, Steve Carell has “Foxcatcher” problems here. Although his performance is OK, it is still too saddled with affected mannerisms and a goofy accent to push Mark Baum into the realm of three-dimensionality. Ultimately, the performance feels more like a decent Saturday Night Live character than anything. The film is infuriatingly angry about what the banks and the eventual bailout did to this country, which makes the

point of view of the film even more deliciously pessimistic. Every single character in this film is not out to save the world. They have no plans to share with anyone that the economy is about to collapse and that millions of Americans are about to lose their homes and savings. In fact, all of these characters bet millions of dollars that it would happen. Director and co-screenwriter Adam McKay knows how charismatic these actors are and how audiences are trained to root for them. The dichotomy between what these people are actually doing and how much fun it is to watch them do it is brilliant. “The Big Short” is teaching the country about what happened without any repercussions for those responsible. “The Big Short” Dir. Adam McKay Grade: B+ Now playing at Old Mill Stadium

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FILM SHORTS By Jared Rasic

13 HOURS: THE SECRET SOLDIERS OF BENGHAZI: A film about what really went down in Benghazi is something the world could definitely use, but maybe not in this format. Directed by Michael Bay, the auteur behind the Transformers franchise and Armageddon, the trailers definitely are selling the film as more of an action movie than a political thriller. I guess if things blow up pretty enough, we won’t really care. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

THE BIG SHORT: "The Big Short" tells the story about the 2008 subprime home loans crisis leading to the near-collapse of the country’s economy. With a cast featuring Brad Pitt, Ryan Gosling, Christian Bale and Steve Carell, the film is getting much more attention than it would otherwise. Grab some popcorn and prepare to be infuriated. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

CONCUSSION: Will Smith takes another swing at an Oscar with this story based on true events. Smith plays Bennet Omalu, a forensic pathologist who discovers a causality between neurologic deterioration and the constant concussions received by football players. As Omalu takes on the NFL, Smith plays the role of a quiet and dignified man like only he can. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX DADDY’S HOME: It’s real dad versus stepdad in this comedy featuring Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg. The pair face off for the love of two children, with Wahlberg playing the kids’ bad boy dad and Ferrell cast as the sensible stepfather. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

THE GOOD DINOSAUR: Pixar so rarely disappoints that just having its name on the project is enough to get most people into the theater, and "The Good Dinosaur" comes at a time when dinosaur love is peaking. The animated film follows the journey of a dinosaur and his companion, a cave-man boy who acts like a dog. The jury is still out with this one. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

THE HATEFUL EIGHT: Tarantino is definitely not for everyone, but for fans, this is a must-see. A western tale of bounty hunters and outlaws set during a blizzard in post-Civil War Wyoming, it’s as fascinating, beautiful, funny and deadly as could be. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAYPART 2: Although it does feel like this series has been going forever, "Mockingjay Part 2" should give the epic series a proper sendoff. As fans of the books know, this is the part of the story where everything actually happens (unlike the completely event-free Part 1), so tissues should be held at the ready. This is also the final screen appearance of the late Philip Seymour Hoffman. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

JOY: Another collaboration between the great David O. Russell and his dual muses

Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper, following four generations of a family as they struggle and fight for the lives they want to lead. Even the worst of Russell’s films are worth watching just to peek at the process of the famously difficult director. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

Healthy Adventures Await! Unleash Your Inner Mutt

MUSTANGS: Five Turkish orphan girls deal with growing up in a conservative environment as they grow to understand what freedom to them really means. Up for the Best Foreign Film Oscar, Mustang is an absolutely gorgeous, timely film with a power that will be universal to anyone, anywhere, that feels a little different. Tin Pan Theater POINT BREAK: Since it is actually impossible to improve upon perfection, this remake of the classic Patrick Swayze/Keanu Reeves vehicle seems like a pointless exercise in franchise greed. The trailers make the film look different enough from the original and possibly worth a viewing, but there is still something sour about the entire enterprise. Old Mill Stadium & IMAX

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Urgent Care • Open 7 Days THE REVENANT: From the visionary director of "Birdman" comes the movie that almost killed Leonardo DiCaprio multiple times. "The Revenant" tells the somewhat true tale of Hugh Glass, a frontiersman who gets super mauled by a bear and then ditched by his hunting team and left for dead. What follows are 150 minutes of revenge, followed by violence, followed by catharsis, then repeat. Old Mill Stadium & IMAX

RIDE ALONG 2: Kevin Hart and Ice Cube team up again to make puns and shoot guns in this sequel to the ridiculously popular Ride Along. Now that Hart is a full-fledged cop, will his constantly bumbling antics get him and Mr. Cube shot to pieces by some gangsters? Probably not. Old Mill Stadium & IMAX ROOM: Based on the absolutely stunning novel, "Room" tells the story of what we must do to protect those that we love from the harshest of truths. Brie Larson is going to explode after this movie and become the next big thing. Go into it knowing as little as possible in order to let the film take you under its wing. Tin Pan Theater

SISTERS: Tina Fey and Amy Poehler playing sisters throwing a house party in their childhood home sounds like a pretty good recipe for a classic. With a supporting cast full of ringers like Ike Barinholtz, James Brolin, Samantha Bee, Jon Glaser, John Leguizamo and Maya Rudolph means that even if the script isn’t great, it will still be worth a watch. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS: The line is long. The air is cold. Lightsaber fights in the parking lot are fun but discouraged. And all of it was worth it. A definite return to the magic of the original trilogy. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX.

2016 SISTERS FOLK FESTIVAL

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The Wood Brothers

THE WOOD BROTHERS

Soulful folk with hints of blues, Americana and acoustic soul - Opening by Liz Vice

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BUMPER JACKSONS Jazz, early blues, old-time music and country swing

Bumper Jacksons

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DARLINGSIDE SFF fan favorites Opening by Caitlin Canty

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VOLUME 20 ISSUE 03 / January 21, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Concussion

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OUTSIDE Snow-rific!

NRCS Snowpack Report for January By Brian Jennings

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GO HERE By Brian Jennings

Central Oregon backcountry by snowshoes & candlelight

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / January 21, 2016 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

FEB. 3 -24: COCC offers snowshoe course for beginners Central Oregon Community College is offering a way to participate in the winter beauty of our nearby yet remote backcountry through a three-week beginner course for snowshoe enthusiasts. Instructor Molly Johnson takes students across scenic meadows and through majestic forests of the Central Oregon Cascades. Participants enjoy high mountain vistas, warming up at the sno-parks. This is an opportunity to learn not only best methods with COCC, but also where to go safely. Snowshoeing experience is not required. Each field session will cover a distance of four to six miles, so moderate physical fitness is recommended to participate. The required gear list will be provided by COCC and after completing this class, individuals should be able to plan their own snowshoe outings with confidence. Field sessions depart from the Chandler Lab parking lot. The cost for each participant is $89, and a liability form will be required. For more information and to sign up, visit www.cocc. edu/continuinged, or call 541-383-7270.

The Cascades wilderness continues to get buried under feet of fresh snow. Photos by Annelie Kahn.

Mt. Bachelor Snow Report: Powder; Snowline: 1740m. Snow Depth: 97”/base; 119”/summit. Heavy snow is forecast for Thursday, Friday and Saturday, January 21-23, with snow line falling to resort level.

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lbeit a dry January in Central Oregon, with less precipitation so far this month, December was one of the wettest in terms of rain in western Oregon and snowfall in the rest of the state. The Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), which is part of the US Department of Agriculture, keeps track of the snowpack as a means of forecasting overall water needs in the region. The NRCS – which reports on snowpacks once a month from January to June -- has released its latest findings as of Jan. 1 and there was good news to report. Most snow measurement sites across the state reported above-normal snowpack: 138 percent of normal compared to last year at this time when it was only 53 percent of normal. With drought conditions in the mountains and desert, this is good news for everyone including farmers and ranchers, sportsmen, and conservationists who watch over our streams and rivers. The NRCS is optimistic about the state’s streams and rivers, saying that the current level of precipitation should result in “normal to well above normal” stream flows for the 2016 summer season. If winter continues to bring snow

to the mountains, then the water supply will remain adequate for the drier and warmer summer months to come. This is good news for rivers such as the Lower Deschutes where emergency fishing regulations had to be imposed to protect resources. Rivers, including the Upper Crooked in the Ochoco National Forest, were the lowest levels seen in many years, which put a huge strain on native Redband trout. Statewide, stream flows were slow, water temperatures rose, and there were numerous documented examples of fish dying because of the conditions. More snow will result in all water needs being met and fewer forest and rangeland wildfires in the summer and fall of 2016.

ever, recent hot summers and dry conditions have been detrimental to reservoir storage around the state. Remember the low levels of Wickiup and Detroit Reservoirs this past summer and fall? Lake Shasta in northern California was almost non-existent in many areas. Stumps and snags were visible everywhere and boat ramps were useless in many cases. Marsh lands such as Malheur Lake in Harney County saw severely shrinking shorelines. There was such high demand for water that reservoirs were drawn down to levels not seen in many years. Even though snowfall is plentiful right now, many of Oregon’s reservoirs are currently below average for Jan. 1.

The wettest locations in Oregon in December were the Rogue and Umpqua Basins where NRCS reports that 200 percent of average precipitation fell in those areas. The Rogue Basin monitoring station had the highest snow water content, with snow that measured 14 times more than last year. The lightest precipitation fell in northeast Oregon in the Grande Ronde, Powder, and Imnaha regions but was still well above average at 160 percent. As of Jan. 1, the Harney Basin had 186 percent of normal snowpack, which was the highest in the state with respect to normal. The lowest snowpack is in the Hood, Sandy, and Lower Deschutes Basin but is still 117 percent of normal.

For now, the good news is that temperatures in the high elevations have remained cold, holding the December snowpack and avoiding early melt and runoff. If weather patterns match those of a few years ago, February, March, and even early April may see more snow in the mountains with high water content and good retention. Forecasts call for above-average temperatures for the next three months, which may be detrimental to the snowpack at higher elevations. Amy Burke, hydrologist for NRCS snow surveys, says, “This has been a great start to the year, but it’s real early. We need more storms and snow before we’re in the clear, but for now we’re cautiously optimistic.”

Thus it appears that December’s snows have enabled us to dodge a bullet. How-

FEB. 13: Meissner Nordic Club’s “Meissner Luminaria” for cross-country skiers and snowshoers A fun and festive event, perfect for families, is being planned by the Meissner Nordic Club for Feb. 13. It’s the annual evening “Meissner Luminaria” event for cross-country skiers and snowshoers. The Luminaria borrows from that tradition to light 1.5 miles of trails with paper bags containing candles for skiers to follow to the Meissner shelter. It is their biggest fundraiser each year, and donations are encouraged. Candles will be lighted at dusk and will continue burning until 9 pm. The event gets underway at 5:30 pm. This is a very popular event, so participants are encouraged to carpool because of limited parking space. Don’t forget your snow park permit. Participants are advised to bring head lamps or light sticks but are encouraged to use them only as necessary. Meissner Nordic Club was founded in 1996 as the Tumalo Langlauf Club and was named after a local landmark, Tumalo Mountain. “Langlauf” is a German word meaning “long run.” Now the club is named after longtime conservationist and ski enthusiast Virginia Meissner, who helped blaze the trail to make Bend a premiere ski destination. The club’s activities include working in collaboration with the Deschutes National Forest to develop and maintain cross country trails. The Meissner Snow Park is located 14 miles west of Bend on Century Drive.


OUTSIDE EVENTS

EVIDENTIAL MEDIUMSHIP Connect with Your Loved Ones in Spirit PSYCHIC READINGS Guidance on Your Life Path

Email now to schedule a private session. Join me for my next mediumship demonstration. GO TO CARLSEAVER.COM FOR DETAILS

2016 Winter X-Games Showing Winter X Games Showing all evening. Come early to grab a comfy couch with great flat screen TV’s. Drink and food specials all night long. Jan. 28, 5pm-2am. Velvet, 805 NW Wall St. 541-728-0303. No cover.

Bend Bikes App Hutch’s Bicycles re-

members what it’s like to be a beginner, not knowing where, how, or what to ride. That’s why Hutch’s created the Bend Bikes app, the official guide to beginner biking in Bend powered by My City Bikes and Interbike. Download Bend Bikes free for Apple or Android at mycitybikes.org/oregon. Wednesdays. Hutch’s, eastside, 820 NE Third St. 888-665-5055.

Twin Bridges Ride Weekly group ride led by shop mechanic Nick Salerno in conjunction with Visit Bend. Riding the registered Twin Bridges Scenic Bikeway, this great road ride has a decent pace challenging all levels. Come a little early for a fresh pastry and a beautifully crafted Stumptown morning beverage. Saturdays, 9:30am-noon. Crow’s Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St. 541-728-0066. Free. Dutch Oven Night Cooking Clinic We’ll

teach you all the tricks you need to be a DO master! Jan. 27, 6-8pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541317-9407. $5 donation.

FootZone Noon Run Order a Taco Stand burrito when you leave and we’ll have it when you return. Meet at FootZone for a 3 to 5 mile run. Wednesdays-noon. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free. Moms Running Group Rain or shine, FootZone hosts runs from 3 to 4.5 miles every Thursday meeting at FootZone. Thursdays, 9:30am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-3173568. Free. Move it Mondays First and third Monday of the month will be a trail run. We will meet at FootZone and then carpool to the location. Second and fourth Mondays runs start and end at FootZone. 3-5 miles and paces between 7 and 12-minute miles can be accommodated. Mondays, 5:30pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free. Snowshoe Tours with a Forest Service Ranger Interpretive snowshoe tour

programs focus on the ecology, geology, and wildlife of the Cascades. Interested participants will meet at the Forest Service snowshoeing hut located at Mt. Bachelor’s West Village. Snowshoes are provided for the tour. No prior experience is needed. Participants must be 10 years or older. Saturdays-Sundays, 10-11:30am and 1:30-3pm. Through March 31. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 Century Dr. 541-383-5530. Free, donations of $5 suggested.

Wednesday Night Group Runs Join us Wednesday nights for our 3-5 mile group runs, all paces welcome! This is a great way to get exercise, fresh air, and meet fellow fitnatics! Wednesdays, 6-7:30pm. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. 541-389-1601. Free.

PICK Wild Wednesday Epic backcountry adventure stories told by local people. The monthly Wild Wednesday series is about giving local adventurers a stage to inspire the rest of us. This month Karen Lillebo and Mike Riley will tell about a month long trip on the Noatak River above the Arctic Circle. Jan. 27, 5:30-7pm. Crow’s Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St. 541-728-0066. Free.

ATHLETIC EVENTS PICK Bend Boulder Bash Series A local climbing competition series, inviting climbers to compete for cash prizes at the final event of the season. Food, beverages, great climbing, and good fun! Spectators welcome. Each installment of the competition will involve both a qualifying round and a finals round. First place finishers of finals rounds qualify to have the entry fee waived to January’s “Finals Bash.” All Bashes, including “Finals,” are open to all competitors. Raffle ticket sales at each event will benefit a local nonprofit: Bend Endurance Academy. Sat, Jan. 23, 4pm. Bend Rock Gym, 1182 SE Centennial Ct. 541-3886764. $20 Oct-Dec/$40 Jan. Pub Run to the Barrel Thief Join us for a 3-5 mile run to the Barrel Thief, followed by a free cocktail and appetizers provided by FootZone and Cascade Relays. Strollers, friendly dogs, and all paces are welcome. Jan. 25, 5:30-7pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541317-3568. Free, please RSVP. Hoodoo City League Racing Hoodoo has City League Racing that begins Jan. 22. We need sponsors for teams and skiers to make up those teams. Please contact Joseph Bentley 541-419-9187 for more info. If you want to race just show up, we’ll put you on a team. It’s fun and no waiting if you need to get home. Jan. 22, 5pm. Hoodoo Ski Area. Lululemon Trunk Show Lululemon

athletic wear trunk show featuring the latest styles of performance technical gear for before, during, and after your workout. Jan. 21, 9am-noon. Bend Pilates, 155 SW Century Dr.

Ski or Snowboard with a Forest Service Ranger Interpretive ski and snowboard

tour programs focus on the ecology, geology and wildlife of the Cascades. Begins at the top of the Pine Marten lift. Saturdays-Sundays, 2-3pm. Through March 26. Mt. Bachelor, 13000 Century Dr. 541-383-5530. Free, $5 donation suggested. Lift ticket required.

Tour of the Heart This annual fun 5km XC ski or snowshoe tour to raise awareness that heart disease is the number one cause of death for women. An individual’s risk for heart disease can be lowered by over 80% by leading a healthy lifestyle and exercise is one of the keys to lowering that risk. Jan. 24, 11am. Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center, 13000 Century Dr. Free Range Skimo Race Multi lap night

uphill ski mountaineering event on groomed terrain. Race and rec categories. Helmet and headlamp required. Run in conjunction with Hoodoo BC Fest. Bring your A game or B game! Jan. 23, 6-7pm. Hoodoo Ski Area, Hwy 20, Box 20. 541-480-8035. No entry fee.

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ADVICE GODDESS Ben Hurry

—Unsatisfied Sex can sometimes be confusing, but timewise, it shouldn’t leave you wondering whether you’ve been having it or poaching an egg. There is only so much room for improvement if, in bed, two people go together like peanut butter and an oar. Still, Cosmo wasn’t entirely wrong. Sexual technique can be tweaked at least somewhat by working on it—that is, if both partners show up to the office and admit that there’s a job to do. And then there’s your husband, dead set on continuing to have sex on the “success in bank robbery” model: in and out before anybody knows what hit ‘em. Though your sex face is obviously a frown, the big issue here isn’t bad sex; it’s bad love. You don’t seem to see it that way, perhaps due to “cognitive dissonance.” That’s social psychologist Leon Festinger’s term for the psychological discomfort of simultaneously holding two conflicting views—like the belief that you’re worthy of love and the observation that your husband’s about as attentive to you in bed as he is to the headboard. To smooth out an inconsistency like this, we typically grab for whichever explanation helps us feel good about ourselves—which is maybe why you describe yourself as “happily married” to a man who acts like the clitoris is a rare exotic bird. If, outside of bed, he’s actually loving enough for you to want to fix this, you might say something like “I love you and want to save our marriage, but I feel deeply unloved whenever we have sex.” Explain that if he isn’t willing to take steps to change, you don’t think you can stay with him. Specify the steps, like practice sessions in which you show him what you like and maybe some get-togethers with a sex therapist (a referee to call him on his sense of sexual entitlement).

33 VOLUME 20 ISSUE 03 / January 21, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

I’m a woman in my 40s, and I’ve been happily married for 22 years. Unfortunately, my husband and I have never been very compatible sexually. I had read so much Cosmo in college that I believed sex was something we could work on. Well, he is quick in the sack and uninterested in my pleasure. It’s been two decades of “Wham, bam, thank you, ma’am,” and our old four minutes of intercourse now lasts for about two. And yes, I have asked him to attend to my needs—for years. He just blows me off. He’s always been satisfied, so he is not motivated to change. After a particularly quick encounter this morning left me feeling used, my thought was that I need a divorce. I’m distraught to think this way. Is there another option?

Even if he were to agree to all of it, be realistic. Sex might start feeling more like being made love to than being bumped into by a naked man, but it’s unlikely to ever be mind-blowing or anything close. Still, you might be happy if you just see that he cares enough to make an effort in bed—one leisurely enough that you don’t expect it to be followed by “meep meep!” and a cartoon cloud of dust.

Look Before You Keep This guy I’m dating had a mean, demanding girlfriend, and it left him kind of a relationship-phobe. He says meeting me two months ago made him want to change that. He is loving and seems excited to be with me, except for how he introduces me—as his “friend” or “ladyfriend.” Should I be worried that he doesn’t call me his girlfriend?

—Irked It’s easy to go straight to all the worst reasons for why he won’t call you his girlfriend, like that it would seem disloyal to that secret wife he has stashed away in the suburbs. However, keep in mind that a label (like “girlfriend”) isn’t just a word. Labels actually have power over our behavior. Research by social psychologist Elliot Aronson finds that we seem to have a powerful longing for consistency—for things to match. So, committing to a label tends to make us feel obligated to follow through with the behavior that goes with it—and never mind figuring out whether it’s what we really want.

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Give the guy some time. He’s (understandably!) slow to do a cannonball into a new relationship, but you say he is “loving” and seems “excited” to be with you. So, sure, he may be on the fence, but he doesn’t seem to be on the run. Until his answer to “What are we doing here?” is no longer “Not sure yet,” you might ask him to drop the likes of “ladyfriend” and just use your name—charming as it is to be introduced with what sounds like 19th-century code for “two-dollar hooker.”

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Six-Week Weight Loss Class

Amazing class to identify and tackle obstacles to weight loss not addressed in other courses. The class is for people who would like to lose 25lbs or more. Tuesdays, noon-1pm. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. $160.

Access Consciousness: An Intro

Curious about Access Consciousness and The Bars? Learn a tool or two that can help you change the unchangeable. Jan. 23, 2-4pm. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. Free.

Bhakti Church Using guided meditation, breathwork, and chanting we will gather in circle to dive deep into the heart space of Bhakti: Devotion to God, love, spirit, that which lives within the heart of all. Jan. 21, 6:30-8pm. Old Stone Church, 157 NW Franklin Ave. Donation. BodyFit A weight-free, prop-free training program that increases total body strength, and torches calories using nothing but your own body weight! Tuesdays-Thursdays, 7-8am. Thin Lizzy Athletics, 800 NW Wall St. $10. Community Healing Flow Come join this gentle flow class and meet others in our yoga community. The class is by donation and all proceeds will benefit the Humane Society of Central Oregon. Fridays, 4-5:15pm. Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Dr. Donation. Facing Climate Change Together

Guided by activist, filmmaker, and yoga instructor, Vanessa Schulz, this class allows the sadness and dread of environmental collapse to be acknowledged, experienced, and accepted. Mondays, 7-8:30pm. Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Dr. Suite 113. . $10.

Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement In these highly integrative

movement lessons you will learn to recognize habits that are working against yourself and replace them with more pleasant and refined actions. Mondays, 10:30-11:30am. Massage & Movement Therapies, 605 NE Savannah Dr. $10.

Fit Camp Meet at Pilot Butte on Monday, Fitness 1440 South on Wednesday and Friday. Mondays-Wednesdays-Fridays, 6-7pm. GOT CHI, 365 NE Greenwood Ave. 541-639-2699. Free. Gong Immersion Sound Healing

Immerse yourself in the healing sounds, vibrations, and harmonic frequencies of the gong. Sun, Jan. 24, 6-7:30pm. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. 360-333-6154. $20.

Health Care Coverage Enrollment Event Health care coverage is an important part of your life, come meet with professional enrollment assistants before the January 31st deadline. Get information about free and low cost coverage to keep you and your family healthy and protect against accidents. Jan. 23, noon5pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-693-4232. Free.

Healthy Back Class Join Dr.

Raymond for a weekly class that will introduce a self-treatment system to eliminate and prevent chronic pain. Thursdays, 8-8:30am. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. 541330-0334. $9 drop in or $30 month.

Laughter Yoga Tuesdays, 12:30-1pm. Center for Compassionate Living, 339 SW Century Dr. Suite 203. Donation.

Recipes to Dress Up Your Veggies Polyunsaturated fats found

in bottled salad dressings promote inflammation. Dress your greens with recipes demonstrated at this class and

maintain a balanced intake of Omega 3 and 6 fatty acids which support optimal health! Jan. 27, 1-2:30pm. Natural Grocers by Vitamin Cottage, 3188 N Hwy 97 Suite 115. Free.

Recovery Yoga Wherever you are on the road of recovery, this yoga class offers a safe and confidential place to explore how meditation, pranayama (breath work), journaling, and yoga can aid in your recovery and enhance your life. The format is organic and will evolve with the students and teachers involved. This gathering is not limited to drug and alcohol dependence, as we are all on the road to recovery from something! Thursdays, 7-8pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. By donation. Resistive Stretching Donation Workshop Learn the most effective

and safe form of stretching! You’ll stand taller, be more limber and ready for your favorite sport. Experience strength, length, power and grace and support our community! Ten students only, so call now to sign up. Jan. 23, 10-11am. Bend Align, 61383 S Third St. Suite E. 541-4082948. $10+.

Rocking into the Present Experience the unifying effects of the nine principles of harmony as you learn self-breema exercises and exchange Breema bodywork sequences. Breema is for anyone interested in a practical way to deepen their relationship to life while nurturing the body. Please wear comfortable pants and bring clean socks. No previous experience necessary. Jan. 24, 1-4pm. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. 541-948-3829. $45. Saturday Morning Group Runs

Join us Saturday mornings for our group runs, all paces welcome! We meet at the store and run a combination of road and trail routes. Saturdays, 8-9:30am. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. 541-389-1601.

Tuesday Performance Group

Maximize your time with focused, intense efforts. All ages and ability levels welcome. Sessions led by Max King, one of the most accomplished trail runners in the country. Email Max for weekly details and locations: max@footzonebend.com. Tuesdays, 5:30pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. Free.

Beyond Curry This wonderful yellow

spice has been consumed for its health benefits for thousands of years. Combining turmeric with certain spices or healthy fats can help your body absorb and use curcumin—the active component of turmeric. Jan. 20, 4-5:30pm. Natural Grocers by Vitamin Cottage, 3188 N Hwy 97 Suite 115. Free.

Yoga Six Week Intro Class This 6 week session, taught by Bonnie Walker, is especially designed for students beginning in the Iyengar method or anyone wanting to review the basics to pick up their practice again. You will learn: basic standing and seated poses, simple twists, preparation for inversions, posture correction, breathing instruction and the art of relaxation. Pre-registration by phone or email. Tuesdays, 10-11:15am. Iyengar Yoga of Bend, 660 NE Third St. Suite 5. 541-318-1186. $65. Yoga Nidra An ancient sleep based meditation. You will be guided through a series of body, breath, visualization, and awareness techniques. This is designed to disconnect the practitioner from the thinking mind and reconnect with the feeling body, enabling entry to a state of being, rather than doing, which allows deep restoration to take place in the body, mind, and spirit. Mon, Jan. 25, 6-7:30pm. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. $25.

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whole time you’re living this life, you’re thinking about a different one instead,” wrote Latvian novelist Inga Abele in her novel High Tide. Have you ever been guilty of that, Aquarius? Probably. Most of us have at one time or another. That’s the bad news. The good news is that the coming months will bring you excellent opportunities to graduate forever from this habit. Not all at once, but gradually and incrementally, you can shed the idea that you should be doing something other than what you’re doing. You can get the hang of what it’s like to thoroughly accept and embrace the life you are actually living. And now is an excellent time to get started in earnest on this project.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “Even nightingales can’t be fed on fairy tales,” says a character in Ivan Turgenev’s novel Fathers and Sons. In other words, these marvelous birds, which sing sublimely and have long been invoked by poets to symbolize lyrical beauty, need actual physical sustenance. They can’t eat dreamy stories. Having acknowledged that practical fact, however, I will suggest that right now you require dreamy stories and rambling fantasies and imaginary explorations almost as much as you need your daily bread. Your soul’s hunger has reached epic proportions. It’s time to gorge.

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TAURUS (April 20-May 20): People turn to you Tauruses for help in staying grounded. They love to soak up your down-to-earth pragmatism. They want your steadfastness to rub off on them, to provide them with the stability they see in you. You should be proud of this service you offer! It’s a key part of your appeal. Now and then, though, you need to demonstrate that your stalwart dependability is not static and stagnant—that it’s strong exactly because it’s flexible and adaptable. The coming weeks will be an excellent time to emphasize this aspect of your superpower.

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ily Brontë’s novel Wuthering Heights? At one point, the heroine Catherine tells her friend about Edgar, a man she’s interested in. “He wanted all to lie in an ecstasy of peace,” Catherine says, “and I wanted all to sparkle and dance in a glorious jubilee. I said his heaven would be only half alive; and he said mine would be drunk: I said I should fall asleep in his; and he said he could not breathe in mine.” If you’re a typical Aries, you’re more aligned with Catherine than with Edgar. But I’m hoping you might consider making a temporary compromise in the coming weeks. “At last, we agreed to try both,” Catherine concluded, “and then we kissed each other and were friends.”

source.altperks.com

pine trees that grow near mountaintops may not be able to draw water and minerals from the ground through their roots. The sustenance they require is frozen. Luckily, their needle-like leaves absorb moisture from clouds and fog, and drink in minerals that float on the wind. Metaphorically speaking, Gemini, this will be your preferred method for getting nourished in the coming weeks. For the time being, look UP to obtain what you need. Be fed primarily by noble ideals, big visions, divine inspiration, and high-minded people.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): We all go through phases when we are at odds with people we love. Maybe we’re mad at them, or feel hurt by them, or can’t comprehend what they’re going through. The test of our commitment is how we act when we are in these moods. That’s why I agree with author Steve Hall when he says, “The truest form of love is how you behave toward someone, not how you feel about them.” The coming weeks will be an important time for you to practice this principle with extra devotion— not just for the sake of the people you care about, but also for your own physical, mental, and spiritual health. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): After fighting and killing each other for years on end, the Roman and Persian armies agreed to a truce in 532 A.D. The treaty was optimistically called “The Endless Peace.” Sadly, “endless” turned out to

be just eight years. By 540, hostilities resumed. I’m happy to announce, though, that your prospects for accord and rapprochement are much brighter. If you work diligently to negotiate an endless peace anytime between now and March 15, it really is likely to last a long time.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “I shiver, thinking how easy it is to be totally wrong about people, to see one tiny part of them and confuse it for the whole.” Author Lauren Oliver wrote that, and now I’m offering it to you, just in time for your Season of Correction and Adjustment. The coming weeks will be a favorable time for you to get smarter about evaluating your allies—and maybe even one of your adversaries, as well. I expect you will find it relatively easy, even pleasurable, to overcome your misimpressions and deepen your incomplete understandings. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): In June 1942, the U.S. Navy crushed Japanese naval forces at the Battle of Midway. It was a turning point that was crucial to America’s ultimate victory over Japan in World War II. One military historian called it “the most stunning and decisive blow in the history of naval warfare.” This milestone occurred just six months after Japan’s devastating attack on U.S. forces at Pearl Harbor. To compare your life to these two events may be bombastic, but I’m in a bombastic mood as I contemplate your exciting possibilities. I predict that in the second half of 2016, you’ll claim a victory that will make up for a loss or defeat you endured during the last few months of 2015. And right now is when you can lay the groundwork for that future triumph. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Playwright Edmond Rostand (1868-1918) had a lot of friends, and they often came to visit him uninvited. He found it hard to simply tell them to go away and leave him alone. And yet he hated to be interrupted while he was working. His solution was to get naked and write for long hours while in his bathroom, usually soaking in the bathtub. His intrusive friends rarely had the nerve to insist on socializing. In this way, Rostand found the peace he needed to create his masterpiece Cyrano de Bergerac, as well as numerous other plays. I suggest you consider a comparable gambit, Scorpio. You need to carve out some quality alone time.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “I opened my mouth, almost said something. Almost. The rest of my life might have turned out differently if I had. But I didn’t.” The preceding reminiscence belongs to a character in Khaled Hosseini’s novel The Kite Runner. I bring it up in hopes that you will do the opposite: Say the words that need to be said. Articulate what you’re burning to reveal. Speak the truths that will send your life on a course that’s in closer alignment with your pure intentions.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): According to some traditional astrologers, you Capricorns are vigilant to avoid loss. Old horoscope books suggest that you may take elaborate measures to avoid endangering what you have accumulated. To ensure that you will never run out of what you need, you may even ration your output and limit your self-expression. This behavior is rooted in the belief that you should conserve your strength by withholding or even hiding your power. While there may be big grains of truth in this conventional view of you Capricorns, I think it’s only part of the story. In the coming weeks, for instance, I bet you will wield your clout with unabashed authority. You won’t save yourself for later; you’ll engage in no strategic self-suppression. Instead, you will be expansive and unbridled as you do whatever’s required to carry out the important foundation work that needs to be done.

Homework What could you do to free your imagination from its bondage? Read “Liberate Your Imagination”: http://bit.ly/Liberate © Copyright 2016 Rob Brezsny

35 VOLUME 20 ISSUE 03 / January 21, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

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Tony Levison

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Glenda Mackie, Broker 541.410.4050

Tony Levison Broker, Windermere CentralLevison Oregon Tony

Broker, Windermere Central Oregon

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •

gmackie@bendbroadband.com www.lowesresidential.com

Broker, 541.977.1852 Windermere alevison@me.com Central Oregon

541.977.1852

alevison@me.com

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695 SW Mill Vi ew Way Sui te 100• Bend, OR 97702 • www.Alevison.withwre.com

541.977.1852 695 SW Mill View way Vi Suite 100 Sui Bend, OR 97702 695 SW Mill ew Way te 100• Bend, OR 97 alevison@me.com www.Alevison.withwre.com •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

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920 NW Bond St., Ste 107 | Bend, OR 97701

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695 SW Mill Vi ew Way Sui te 100• Bend, OR 97702 • www.Alevison.withwre.com


TAKE ME HOME Affordable Housing for Bend By Nick Nayne Principal Broker

Fortunately, Bend and other communities experiencing the same problems are addressing these issues and looking for solutions. Our housing crisis pretty much put a stop to new housing construction while home values plummeted as much as 50 percent. This, coupled with population growth being in excess of new housing construction, has fueled the housing

shortage and made prices rise much faster than household earnings.

37

The effort to create more affordable housing and even the term “affordable housing” can produce negative emotions among people who believe it will drive down adjoining property values or increase burdens on infrastructure. None of this needs to be true if affordable housing is properly integrated within the existing community and built to the same standards as market rate housing,

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 03 / January 21, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

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rom tiny homes to micro homes to co-housing, the objective seems to be people trying to create affordable community housing solutions. The lack of affordable housing appears to be an issue in many communities and very much so in Bend. It seems that when a person chooses to work in our community as an educational professional to educate our children or in the food service, construction, health care, public safety, or hospitality industry field, that they should have the earning power to live in the community in which they work. Too often that has not been the case. Currently, with the median income being about $52,000 in Bend and the median home price being about $330,000, a household earning the median income would not qualify to buy a median price home.

Affordable housing allows people who work in a community to live near where they work, reducing traffic congestion. In Bend, Northwest Crossing is a classic example of a mixed use development that includes affordable housing that is well-integrated with the surrounding community, with stable and rising property values. Environmental issues aside, most people would not opt to live in freight containers or tiny homes on wheels if attractive affordable housing was available within the community. It may mean some higher density housing, but like it or not, Bend is growing and it doesn’t look like it will stop any time soon.

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SMOKE SIGNALS

Oregon Cannabis Law – Green Gold Rush vs. Mom & Pop

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / January 21, 2016 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

38

By Steve Holmes

Now Open to the Public

Adults 21 Years and Older

Sunday Select: 20% off Strain of the Day for Both Medical and Recreation Patients on Sundays

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he Oregon Legislature will consider some important changes to the cannabis market in the short legislative session that starts Feb. 1. Perhaps the best change for cannabis businesses would be one that would allow cannabis to be grown and processed in the same facility. This change would greatly lower costs for cannabis businesses, since only one location, and no transportation, would be required to take cannabis from seed to a usable product for wholesale. Given that there is no public policy reason to separate growing and processing, this bill should help ensure that legal cannabis stays price-competitive with black market cannabis. Next, the best change for medical marijuana patients would be one that would let medical dispensaries sell a wider range of non-smoked products such as edibles and THC oil. This would give medical marijuana patients in Oregon a similar range of products available to medical marijuana patients in other states without any negative consequences. Another proposed change that would benefit medical marijuana patients would allow patients to purchase cannabis products at recreational stores tax-free. Again, without any public policy reason to tax these products to be consumed as medicine. Medical marijuana patient advocates are also lobbying for a delay on the impending limits on the number of plants that medicinal growers are allowed to grow. Beginning March 1, medical growers in residential areas are limited to 12 plants (with rural growers limited to 48 plants). Advocates fear that patients’ access

to their medicine will be limited due to these restrictions, coupled with the fact that recreational cannabis sales will not ramp up until the OLCC approves business licenses, which is expected to begin fall 2016. Advocates want lawmakers to delay the growing restrictions until September, but so far no such proposal has been introduced. Perhaps the best change for out-ofstate millionaires is a proposed repeal of the residency rule for recreational cannabis business owners. Currently, would-be owners of cannabis businesses in Oregon must prove that they have lived in Oregon for at least two years before being eligible for a business license. Repealing the rule would allow for a flood of investment in Oregon’s cannabis industry from all over the country and even internationally. Oregonians would be able to purchase products such as Willie Nelson’s “Willie’s Reserve” and “Leafs by Snoop” from Snoop Dogg (now Snoop Lion). The increased competition would also lower prices, furthering the stated purpose of the law of eliminating the cannabis black market. However, patient advocates say repeal of the two-year residency rule would push mom-and-pop businesses out of the market and could even push medical dispensaries out of the market entirely. That outcome would have a negative impact on some local economies in Oregon, but lower prices through consolidated production seems inevitable in the newly-legal cannabis industry, as is the case in other industries. The upside is that this would likely lead to lower prices for cannabis consumers.


Crossword

THE REC ROOM Answers at bendsource.com

“It’s E->Z”--but not the other way around. - Matt Jones

Pearl’s Puzzle

Difficulty Level

P M W Y N

N O R M A P A M

T Y O

W P A N R M Y A

Fill in every row, column, and 3x3 box with each of the letters

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“How many husbands have I had? You mean _____ from _____?” - Zsa Zsa Gabor

ANSWER TO LAST WEEK’S PUZZLE

ACROSS 1 Optimistic 5 Riding around the city, maybe 11 “La ___” (Debussy opus) 14 Outside introduction 15 City on the Merrimack River 16 “___ seen worse” 17 Possible autobiography title for comedian Horatio? 19 Canceled (with “out”) 20 Chocolate stand-in 21 Hardly Mercedes quality? 23 French numeral 24 Part of IPA 27 Told 28 Some grads of RPI or MIT 29 ___-foot oil 32 Spring harbinger 33 Medium-hot chili pepper variety 35 Uno or Twenty-One, e.g. 36 Cracker you must hand over to get through? 39 Mexican restaurant staple 40 Demographic nickname coined in the 1980s 41 Have ___ with (chat up) 43 Condom material 44 Clerical vestment 47 Submitted 49 “Either you do it ___ will” 50 Falsehood 51 Fuzzy green stuff growing on a former Comedy Central “Dr.”? 54 “Buona ___” (Italian sign-off) 56 Air gun pellets 57 Hip bath in the great outdoors? 60 Pie-mode connection 61 Getting a move on, quaintly 62 Singer of “The Man With the Golden Gun” theme song 63 Daisy Ridley’s “Star Wars” character 64 Conducive to peace 65 Suffixes denoting sugars

DOWN 1 Coast Guard mission 2 Rating at the pump 3 Long looks 4 You may walk the dog with it 5 Guest quarters 6 Constantly criticize 7 Trade org. 8 Bush Labor Secretary Elaine 9 Relatives of nieces 10 Flea market 11 Hodgepodge 12 10 seconds for 100 yards, in running lingo 13 Old Spice deodorant variety 18 Big name in electric guitars 22 Renewable fuel derived from organic matter 25 Colorful sports artist Neiman 26 Load of gossip 30 Thin, fibrous bark (or one-third of a dance instruction for Lisa Simpson) 31 Become sharply attentive 33 Eric of “Pulp Fiction” 34 Basketmaker’s willow 36 Like people on some dating apps 37 “It’s hard to tell” 38 Process of determining gender, as zoologists do 39 Row of buttons on a screen 42 Seoul food 44 Latin for “higher,” as in the Olympic motto 45 Wee 46 Ramona’s sister, in Beverly Cleary books 48 2008 Jordin Sparks/Chris Brown duet 52 “Hook” sidekick 53 Twirl around 55 City that the band a-ha hails from 58 “Here Comes the Hotstepper” singer Kamoze 59 Coin collection appraisal co. (found in COLLECTING COINS)

©2015 JONESIN’ CROSSWORDS (EDITOR@JONESINCROSSWORDS.COM)

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“I intend to live forever. So far, so good.” - Stephen Wright

We’re Local!

© Pearl Stark

Questions, comments or suggestions for our local puzzle guru? Email Pearl Stark at pearl@bendsource.com

39 VOLUME 20 ISSUE 03 / January 21, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

T M O P O M A W

★★★


LINGERIE • SEXTOYS • PARTY SUPPLIES • COSTUME & WIGS • VAPORIZERS & E-CIGA LOCAL HAND BLOWN GLASS PIPES

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NEW YEAR, NEW AIRLINE CAREERS – Get training as FAA certified Aviation

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STRUGGLING WITH DRUGS OR ALCOHOL?

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CATERING

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January 24

The Belfry Presents

Volcanic Theater Pub Presents

Dennis McGregor and The Spoilers

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1345 NW Wall Street, Suite 302 Bend, OR

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