Source Weekly - June 9, 2016

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J UNE 9, 2016


BECAUSE HE'S THE BEST Celebrate Dad With a Sunriver Resort Gift Card

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Helloooooo SUMMER! Get Cool at The Cove

Grab your flip flops and pull up a lounge chair. The sunshine is yours for the taking. Book your summer stay, and enjoy The Cove.


> News: Is Crime in Bend on the Rise? - p. 7 We take a look at several recent high visibility violent incidents to see if this is a trend or an aberration. Angela Moore interviews Bend Police officers and the district attorney to find out where the community is heading.

JU N E 9 , 2 0 1 6

Aaron Switzer ASSISTANT EDITOR Hayley Jo Murphy ARTS & CULTURE EDITOR Jared Rasic STAFF REPORTER Angela Moore

> Feature: IP 28—Good Idea, Bad Idea? - p. 9 Taxing large corporations making more than $25 million is an idea that could come before voters in the general election. Find out what makes this measure a controversial subject between organizations like EDCO and A Better Oregon as business impacts are balanced by a growing need for tax support. Jaclyn Brandt breaks it down for readers, giving us the facts we need to decide for ourselves.

COPY EDITOR Richard Sitts MULTIMEDIA REPORTER Brian Jennings BEER REVIEWER Kevin Gifford

> Sound: Alert the Stoopidheads! - p. 15 Southern California band Slightly Stoopid makes the trek to Bend after years of entertaining audiences near and far. Check out Angela Moore’s take on the band’s evolution of sound and mind.

FREELANCERS Jim Anderson, Russ Axon, Steve Holmes, Nick Nayne, Jaclyn Brandt, Brittany Manwill,

> Chow: Jump in the Currents - p. 33 Angela Moore goes down to the river to experience the newly revamped restaurant at Riverhouse on the Deschutes. Currents at the Riverhouse boasts an upgraded look and a locally-sourced menu. It isn’t just for prom anymore.

On The Cover: Design by Esther Kang.

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3 VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

EDITOR/PUBLISHER

COVER VOLUME 20 / ISSUE 23 /

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

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OPINION Letters

Think about this typical scenario: A person goes with their dog to the trailhead. They begin their walk. At some point in the first couple hundred yards or so nature calls and the dog poops. The owner does the right thing and bags it. But do they hike a couple hundred yards back to the trailhead and then begin their outing all over again? Not very often. What they do is place the bag next to the trail (or place it discretely off the trail so as not to offend the easily offended) so they can grab it on their way back. In the mean time you come along, see an unattended bag and jump to the wrong conclusion. The people too lazy to see their dogs poop to the trash can are the ones also too lazy to bag it in the first place. The fact is that if the poop makes it into a bag then it’s almost always going to get collected, just not with the immediacy you expect. Have a little patience. ~Rick Johnson DogPAC Board Member

ROUNDABOUTS Street roundabouts flow quickly and easily in other parts of the world as vehicles MERGE safely. In the U.S. we get to practice this routine at much higher speeds, usually on a freeway entrance or while changing lanes. Curiously, some drivers are reluctant to merge into Bend roundabouts, apparently preferring to stop and wait until traffic has stacked up longer than a European train. Roundabouts are smart, attractive and fun, and they don’t come with red lights, Bendites, so please just keep on flowing! ~Gigi Green

TRUMP’S ATTACK ON JUDGE CURIEL In 2012, I had the honor of litigating a monthlong complex trade secret and intellectual property jury trial before Judge Gonzalo Curiel. I can say without reservation, that he was the most conscientious, intelligent, and level-headed jurist I’ve encountered.

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The legal system is our best hope for peacefully resisting tyranny. And make no mistake, Trump, by any measure, is an aspiring tryant. Trump’s attack on this nation’s bedrock principles must not be tolerated. ~William G. Wardlow, Esq.

APOLOGY TO VETERANS Please forgive me if I offended any veterans or their families over the Memorial day weekend. Friday’s flyover indicated my property was on the weekend’s events rooster. I littered my property to make it less attractive for flyovers to protect my health. Let me explain. My passion is gardening and landscaping, a lifelong passion that balances the stress of my developmental disability (ASD) and sensory processing disorder. But labor intensive twelve-year-old gardens are unusual in this climate. When private pilots found these gardens they claimed them as a favorite flyover. When I objected, flights became threatening and illegal causing PTSD. Informing the flying community of this injury resulted in increased aggressive flights worsening the PTSD. It is difficult for anyone to get over PTSD; it is impossible when you have ASD and reactivity is triggered multiple times daily. I will soon be 71 years old; each passing flight triggers the PTSD, raising my blood pressure to unsafe levels and increasing my risk of heart attack or stroke. Please forgive me. What may have appeared as disrespect of our war heroes, was a desperate attempt to keep PTSD triggering overflights away. ~PJ Eilers

SAVING HISTORIC TROY FIELD IS IN THE BEST INTEREST OF THE PUBLIC Troy Field is 109-years-old, the city of Bend is 111-years-old. Saving historic places has always been the best thing for the entire community.

Judge Curiel learned of his nomination for the Federal bench during our trial, and attorneys for both parties were openly enthusiastic and proud of the pending appointment. His appointment gave me hope for the judiciary and provided proof that the system works—that the very best rise to the top.

We have been lucky to have Troy Field for the past century. Somehow through all the years, it hasn’t been eliminated, like other historic places. The Crane Shed was demolished illegally by its owners, in the night, because vacant land in downtown Bend is worth much more than a historic building.

Donald Trump’s racist attacks on Judge Curiel are not merely offensive because I personally know the target and would not hesitate to

Well now, Historic Troy Field is being considered, by the School District, the City Officials and Parks and Rec. as something that should

@sourceweekly

LIGHTMETER

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Denise, have you gone back and looked later? Are the bags still there?

vouch for his integrity. The deeper reason is that Trump’s attacks signal a shameless contempt for the judiciary, judicial process, and separation of powers.

The colors of the Painted Hills at John Day Fossil Beds National Monument. Photo by Steve J. Giardini Photography. Follow Giardini on Instagram @giardiniphotography.

be eliminated, for an old development plan which would make a more “designer” looking park on the west side of Bond Street. They want to dig up the parking lot in front of the School Admin. Building and make that the park instead. Why are they determined to get rid of Troy Field, even after the field has been recently proven to be much older than they had thought-it goes back to 1907 not to just to 1940? The old development plan is called Heritage Square. Not sure, why it has this name, considering the plan is about getting rid of the actual Heritage of Bend. Citizens have come forward, asking the School District to preserve Troy Field for historical reasons, and they also have stated that they would raise the funds, through fundraising, in order to acquire the historic field to be kept for the public. The developer would have no interest in a historically preserved field. The City states that they need to “balance competing interests” and decide what is best for the public and the entire community. What are the competing interests? Development vs. Historic Preservation and the community?

The City, the Park District, and the School District need to actually listen to the people and stop talking about an outdated development plan that would be absolutely no benefit to the community—destroy a historic field to make a more upscale, “designer” park, that could be promoted for new condo owners. The public entities are supposed to be representatives of the public and doing what is in the best interest for the entire community, while also “carrying out” Bend’s policies on historic preservation, not ignoring it all, because it doesn’t fit into Their Plan. ~Julia Ohlson

LETTER OF THE WEEK Julia ~ Thank you for your letter about saving historic Troy Field. Maybe you can continue the conversation with fellow activists with a cup of coffee on us; pick up your Palate gift card at the Source Weekly office. E.J. Pettinger’s

Mild Abandon

E.J. Pettinger’s

There wouldn’t be a field that is full of memories and history, just a plaque stating what used to be there, a field that could have easily been saved.

Not to dig up a parking lot.

copyrighted 2016

Mild Abandon

How would eliminating Troy Field benefit the community?

What actually would be best for the entire community would be, to beautify the historic field, with beautiful fencing created by an artist—then a brick path surrounding it, with the names of all the citizens who donated to preserve the field—a true community field.

copyrighted 2016

justcan’t can’thelp help but but think think ififwe a little “I“Ijust wehad hadadded added a little straight talk to the routine, back when I wanted to, straight talk to the routine, back when I wanted to, we might be leaders of the free world now.” we might be leaders of the free world now.”

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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!


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NEWS

Crime in the Public Eye

High profile crimes lead to speculation regarding rising violence

SIDENOTES By Angela Moore

By Angela Moore

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Recently there have been at least three notable cases of violent crimes that have raised alarm within Central Oregon. One of them was a shooting that occurred at the end of April on Newport Avenue, where two separate groups of friends had a drunken altercation that ended with an AK-47 assault rifle being fired in the neighborhood. The two arrested were Walker Henneke, 23, and Philip True, 27. Blake Blevins, 32 and Erik Menezes, 31, were taken to St. Charles in Bend for gunshot wounds from the incident. About a month later, a shooting at the Rodeway Inn & Suites on SE Third brought yet more evidence of violence in the community. At least four individuals were in the motel room where the incident occurred. One man was shot and two arrested. Steven Premo, 35, and Justin Perkins, 29, have been arraigned and face charges on multiple counts of crimes including possession of heroin, unlawful use of a weapon and varying degrees of robbery. Both are scheduled for their next court appointment on the 23rd of this month. Arguably the most notable violent crime was the recent shooting at the High Desert Museum. A man, Nicholas Berger, 36, grabbed an employee and held her at knifepoint. Berger was shot and killed by a state trooper who had been called to the scene. According to the 2009-2015 Total Crime Statistics that were put together by the District Attorney’s office, the most common crimes committed in Bend are DUIIs totaling 6,722 incidents and theft totaling 5,704. Drug charges followed in third with 4,261 reported cases during that time and assault reports showing 767. Sgt. Brian Beekman addresses the high-profile crime cases in Bend, but states these are a rarity and acknowledges that what he experiences most is

Many cats in need of adoption. Photo courtesy of CRAFT Shelter.

CRAFT Shelter Closes

Left, District Attorney John Hummel wants to involve the community in safety. Right, websites, such as www.raidsonline.com shown above, are available to show crime in the area.

theft, “Bend has property theft issues. Car break-ins, bikes being stolen, these are all things I get called on all too often,” says Beekman. Lt. Clint Burleigh agrees that theft is the most common crime he sees day to day. “I know that when I come into work that I am going to get called out to a few car break-ins or thefts. I just know that. The good thing about Central Oregon is that we don’t have too many person-to-person crimes,” says Burleigh. Bendites’ belief in its small town status is one that locals and the newly transplanted hold dear, but it can lead to a false sense of security that criminals use to their advantage. “A lot of people have that small-town mentality, leaving their doors unlocked or valuables within sight,” says Beekman. Officer Kevin Uballez, also with the Bend Police Department, talks about prevention. “The easiest thing you can do to avoid getting your belongings stolen is simply locking things away,” says Uballez. He agrees that theft is an issue in Bend, and says that perhaps the cases on Newport, at the motel and at the museum were all raising concern because of the degree of violence as well as the close time frame in which they all occurred. “We, thankfully, live in a pretty safe community. The crimes that we are seeing are things like thefts and DUIIs,” says Uballez. Many crimes Uballez sees involve alcohol. “We live in a town with multiple breweries and alcohol is so widely accepted and available it is really becoming a problem keeping people off the road,” says Uballez as he mentions the cost of a cab versus the cost of court, tickets, suspensions, and all other financial liabilities associated with getting a DUII.

Hummel’s approach to prevent a rise in violent crime relies on his newly created community advisory board called DeschutesSafe. It is a group of professionals, students and residents that gather together once a month to discuss how crime can be prevented and safety ensured. Naomi Mozelle, a community activist and mortgage loan officer, is one of the 16-plus members who serve on the board. “What we discuss is approached solely by data, it is not emotionally charged,” says Mozelle as she speaks to the importance of keeping the community involved in crime prevention. The group right now is focusing primarily on recidivism, which is the act of reoffending. Andrew Doyle, a public defender attorney also serving on the board, echoes Mozelle’s sentiment. “The data is important. It raises the question, ‘Do we really know what we think we know?’” says Doyle. “I don’t think violent crimes are increasing. We’ve seen some high profile cases, so they are more in the public eye, but we’ve always had a low level of violent crimes. Low, but not no,” says Hummel. The population of Bend is growing. Currently the Census Bureau has Bend’s population estimated at 87,014, a number surmised from the 2014 report of 84,084. Change is coming to Bend. “People are moving to Bend, for good or bad, and it’s our job to keep on top of these changes,” says Uballez, by encouraging folks to take action by reporting crimes as well as by aiding in preventing them. SW For more information on DeschutesSafe visit www.dcda.us. To report a crime visit www. bendoregon.gov and to access the database of crimes happening in any area visit the website www.raidsonline.com.

Due to financial reasons, the Cat Rescue, Adoption and Foster Team of Central Oregon (CRAFT) is closing its doors after eight years operating at its current location off Tumalo Road. CRAFT is a cats-only shelter that prides itself on service to sick, abandoned and injured cats. Bonnie Baker, who runs the nonprofit, had initially made plans to relocate in 2019. However, she explains that the building owner’s health has changed those plans. The idea was to eventually move to an Exclusive Farm Use (EFU) property to allow the cats more room. “We are a cage-free facility, so the cats live in a more homelike environment,” says Baker, thus, making larger digs more appealing to the nonprofit. Baker has very strong opinions and thoughts as to why obtaining EFU lands or funding has been so difficult, and she is not afraid to share them. “The real estate market is rather tight...the new ‘gold rush’ with marijuana growers and processors scooping up these types of properties for businesses are driving up prices and making it that much harder to find something suitable,” Baker says. She is also not too pleased about the general response from the media or from the government. “The shelters...get thousands of dollars every month from the county or city because they deal with dogs. There is no such arrangement if you just help cats. This might be dog town, USA, but this certainly does not apply to the cats here, many are invisible or ignored,” says Baker. The shelter is no longer accepting cats, due to its doors closing. Baker estimates that during its eight years, almost 10,000 cats have been taken in and taken care of. She asks that anyone who would like to volunteer, to please reach out and do so. They still need help placing cats with special needs in forever homes. SW

CRAFT Saturday & Sunday, 1 to 5 p.m. Other times by appointment 65480 78th St., Bend 541-420-6035 or 541-389-8420 www.craftscats.org

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“I

f it bleeds, it leads” is a popular saying in the news industry. High profile criminal cases of a violent nature often flood radio, computers, television screens, and the pages of newspapers around the globe. Currently Bend is going through its own collection of random acts of violence. These sporadic and newsworthy incidents give the impression that crime is on the rise in our humble town with its relatively crime-free status. District Attorney John Hummel, along with members of the Bend City Police, are making a case that the crimes, while violent and newsworthy, are still an aberration.


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S O M EBO DY H A S T O PAY IP 28 asks large corporations to make some hard decisions

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regon residents may feel lucky not to have to pay a sales tax, but the reality is that someone has to make up that money. A new measure will be placed on the November 2016 ballot with the goal of taxing those who make the most—but according to some, it could cost the state big in the end. Under current law, C-corporations in the state of Oregon with sales of more than $25 million must pay a minimum $30,000 in taxes (in addition to corporate income tax, currently 6.6 percent for companies with income below $1 million and 7.6 percent for companies with income above $1 million). Initiative Petition (IP) 28 changes current law to say those companies must pay a minimum $30,001 plus 2.5 percent of any profits over $25 million. So for instance, a company bringing in $35 million would pay $30,001 plus $250,000 (2.5 percent of $10 million), or $280,001 — and that is before the income tax they pay.

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

By Jaclyn Brandt

EDCO believes IP 28 would affect around 10 or 15 companies in the Bend area. A report by the Oregon Legislative Revenue Office found that the measure would raise around $548 million in new revenue from 2015 to 2017, $6.1 billion from 2017 to 2019, and $6 billion from 2019 to 2021. The report also found that IP 28 would reduce the growth of Oregon’s workforce by a total of 20,000 jobs between 2016 and 2022. And although wages will be higher, the report found that is because many lower-paid private sector jobs, many in retail, would be eliminated and shifted to higher-paying public sector jobs, due largely to the programs proposed under the measure (the report estimated that 38,200 fewer private sector jobs would be created compared with current forecasts, while 17,700 new public

making it more difficult for companies to maintain a margin, but also creating an atmosphere that is making them feel unwelcome in the state. He explained that, “Businesses are feeling a bit demonized when they are providing the jobs for

“From our perspective, defeating IP 28 is very critical to hopefully sending a message back to businesses saying, ‘You are supported here.’ But it’s going to be a big bloody battle to do that.” -Roger Lee, executive director for EDCO

Katherine Driessen, press secretary for A Better Oregon, the organization that introduced IP 28, explained the measure is needed to help Oregon compete with national averages in many social services. “It’s enough to boost our graduation rates to national average,” she explained. “It’s enough for us to make healthcare more affordable, and it’s enough for us to help seniors stay in their homes longer.” A Better Oregon spent more than four years testing different ballot measures that would help bring in additional income and would “make a real meaningful difference.” But according to Economic Development for Central Oregon Executive Director Roger Lee, the impact of the measure could cost the state in other ways — like jobs—as well as potentially creating a trickling-down sales tax on Oregonians. “[This will affect] not just the wealthy, not just business owners,” he explained. “It’s going to impact banking, grocery stores, utilities, car dealerships, etc. A lot of high-volume, low-margin-type businesses.”

sector jobs would be created). Consumer prices would also rise under the measure. “Because IP 28 is based on Oregon sales and heavily concentrated on domestic consumer sectors, it is expected to largely act as a consumption tax on the state economy,” according to the Oregon Legislative Revenue Office’s report. “Taxes initially born by the retail trade, wholesale trade, and utility sectors are expected to result in higher prices for Oregon residents.” But A Better Oregon believes the measure is needed because large businesses are not doing their part to take care of the average Oregonian. “The truth is these are not small momand-pop businesses that we are talking about,” Driessen said. “If you are doing $25 million in sales, you are a large corporation. We are asking these corporations to just pay their share. It’s not unreasonable.” Companies are also working to prepare for the recently-passed required paid sick leave law, as well as an increasing minimum wage. Lee said the rules are not only

people. This is just one more thing. It’s all these things together that businesses are saying, ‘I need to get out of this state because it feels very hostile. It feels like I am being told what to do at every corner and that just doesn’t feel right.’” According to Lee, the companies are not just unhappy, but many are actually looking to leave, which could in turn have a significant effect on jobs. “It doesn’t impact all businesses, obviously, but we have a number of businesses that don’t even meet the threshold that would probably leave the state because they feel the state’s policy is headed in the wrong direction,” Lee explained. “The reality is they are big employers. There may be a smaller number of companies but they could have a huge impact. Each one of those [provide] a big significant number of jobs.” Oregon would also become one of only five states in the country that has a gross sales receipt tax, which taxes businesses based on total sales rather than net income.

The Council on State Taxation (COST) EDCO. has been working Photos by closely with the Jaclyn Brandt business community across the state to help it navigate the possibilities of the measure passing. Nikki Dobay, west coast tax counsel for COST, explained, “Some companies don’t even make a profit of 2.5 percent. In those situations they will have to decide what to do, and it’s either going to come out as increased prices or they’re going to have to cut workforces. So I think companies are going to have to make very hard decisions.” While A Better Oregon is focused on helping IP 28 pass in November, many business organizations are working toward its defeat. EDCO believes IP 28 will be a detriment to job growth for which they have worked so hard. Lee explained that, “From our perspective, defeating IP 28 is very critical to hopefully sending a message back to businesses saying, ‘You are supported here.’ But it’s going to be a big bloody battle to do that. Even the work EDCO is doing is not driving people to come here for jobs. We are just trying to keep up with the people who are coming here anyway and need jobs. This could unwind 20 years of work.” A Better Oregon believes that the measure is needed to better the lives of Oregonians. And where sales tax in the state has been non-existent, IP 28 will solve Oregon’s tax issues. “We are not asking for anything extraordinary, all we are asking is that they pay their share,” Driessen explained. “And we think that the privilege of doing business in Oregon means they have to pay their taxes.”


Sunriver Owners Association Presents

S N O I T A T P M E T E H T

ing hits Performers of the award-winn ’ Stone” “My Girl” & “Papa Was a Rollin

WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / June 9, 2016 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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Opening Vocalist

Portland-based gospel, soul and R&B-infused artist

LIZ VICE

FRIDAY, AUGUST 19

A 10-piece horn section of local musicians will also accompany The Temptations!

John Gray Amphitheater at SHARC in Sunriver

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Saturday 11

OUR PICKS

Friday 10

SISTERS ART IN THE PARK

POP TARTS—KPOV is hosting an event that is sure to bring out the Brit in you! With a mix of local bands covering some of the best and notso-best Beatles songs. Some of the bands bringing to life the tunes of this pop sensation are Corner Gospel Explosion, Truckstop Gravy and Stronghold. 7 to 10 p.m., Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon. 61980 Skyline Ranch Rd., Bend. $12 adv., $10 for KPOV members, all tickets at door, $15. $5 youth under 18.

LOCAL ARTS—Now in its 14th year, Sisters Art in the Park is an annual event that features a variety of locally-produced arts and crafts. There will also be food and live entertainment with a special fundraiser benefiting the MakeA-Wish Foundation of Oregon. There’s no better way to spend a sunny day than supporting the local community. 10 a.m., Sisters City Creekside Park, Hwy 20 and Jefferson St., Sisters. Free admission.

Saturday 11

Friday 10 to Saturday 25

FRANK SOLIVAN & THE DIRTY KITCHEN

“BLACK COMEDY” THEATER—When a fuse blows and the lights go out, several characters are stranded in the dark and the audience is left laughing hysterically. One of the most interestingly developed plays in years, “Black Comedy” keeps the characters in a dark room while keeping them well lit so all the hijinks are visible. 7:30 p.m. & 2 p.m. matinees, Cascades Theatrical Company, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend $13-$20.

WASHBOARD MUSIC—This group touches on topics involving love, loss, life, and a lot about women. The music created is complimentary to the ears and hearts in Bend with its roots in Americana, jazz, folk, and just about any other form they find fit. This is sure to be a night of energy and entertainment. 10 p.m., The Capitol, 190 NW Oregon Ave., Bend. $5.

Saturday 11 to Sunday 12

Friday 10 to Sunday 12 OPERA—A brand new opera sung in English, “Via Lactea” tells the story of a woman on a pilgrimage along Spain’s Camino de Santiago. She is searching for some big answers about life and finds all different kinds of people, bursting with their own special kind of life. World premiere. 7:30 p.m. & 3 p.m. matinee, Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend. $35-$45.

FLOWERS—The 28th annual wildflower family-friendly show will celebrate Oregon’s unique floral diversity with a showcase of hundreds of native wildflowers. This colorful event will feature kids activities, floral henna, botanical hikes, plant sale and more! 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. both days, Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245 River Rd., Sunriver. $6 adults, $4 kids.

Friday 10 to Sunday 12

Tuesday 14

SISTERS RODEO

AFROMAN

YEE HAH—It is that time of year again to dust off your cowboy boots and hat and mosey on over to Sisters for its 76th Annual Rodeo. This event draws top competitors from across the nation. If you like sweaty, dusty, rough and tough—then this is for you. Check www.sistersrodeo.com for more information about times and some events happening on June 8 and 9. Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 Highway 20, Sisters. Prices vary.

HIP-HOP—Afroman brings his stoner-friendly stylings to Central Oregon. “Because I Got High” was one of the biggest songs of the year 2000 and described all the terrible things happening to a guy because of weed. He then made a positive remix in 2009 describing all the good things about weed. Now we’re confused. 9 p.m., Volcanic Theater Pub, 70 SW Century Dr., Bend. $20 adv., $23 door.

Tuesday 14

Saturday 11

JAMES MCMURTRY

JOE PURDY

ROCK—James McMurtry has been described as giving unparalleled powerhouse performances which sounds right up Bend’s alley. His shows have been known to be singular experiences with some of the most powerful and true-to-life songwriting around. This would be a good chance to find out. 8 p.m., Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend. $16. SW

PURDY PLUCKING—What is usually just one man, his beard, his voice, and a guitar, this rough-looking man from Arkansas plucks the strings on his guitar like an angel on a harp. His soft approach to romance and life is only contradicted by his raw vocals that suit his frame. 8 p.m., Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr., Bend. $20.

June 14

JUNE 9 - 15

CENTRAL OREGON WILDFLOWER SHOW

“VIA LACTEA”

Preservation Hall Jazz

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VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

BEATLES SINGALONG

Teen Film Camp

June 27 - July 8

Lee Ann Womack July 10

David Benoit July 16


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June 11 2016


S

SOUND

The Great Outdoors

4 Peaks returns to Central Oregon

ALBUM REVIEW By Angela Moore

By Jared Rasic 13

4 Peaks Music Festival began in 2007 with a simple idea. Co-founder, owner and promoter Stacy Totland explains, “We had an idea for a glorified backyard party/family picnic and somebody got wind of it that had acreage, and a couple bands got wind of it so we just decided to do a festival. So, in 2007 and 2008 we went pretty big. We had ELO and Trampled by Turtles, local bands and about 1,500 people. 2009 we skipped because everything just kind of crashed and my partners moved out of town, so we had to take a hiatus for a year. We came back in 2010 with an event permit for up to 500 people and then were able to build up from there. In 2013 I got the large event permit again to be able to have 3,000 people, but we limited it to about 1,000 to make it really intimate, family-friendly and comfortable the last two years. This year it’ll be 1,500.” Locals Honey Don’t start things off on Thursday night followed by Portland’s The Student Loan String Band. Friday has the Jeff Austin Band from Colorado, followed by Portland’s breakout band, The Good Time Travelers. Local mainstays Elektrapod then hit the stage to open for Friday’s headliner, The Jackie Greene Band. Saturday brings the blues with Robben Ford, the funk with World’s Finest and the country jam with Grant Farm. Sat-

“The Tides” Raman Ellis

Central Oregon's homegrown music festival remains alive and rocking. Photos by Jason Charme.

urday’s headliner is The Chris Robinson Brotherhood. The Brotherhood is the blues band that Chris Robinson formed while The Black Crowes were on hiatus. Guitarist Neal Casal is pretty amazing on his own, as he was a huge part of what made The Cardinals rock a few years back. Totland bought out her partners in 2012 and has been relishing the experience of running the festival herself. “You might be thinking, ‘there’s no way I could do that by myself,’ but it’s this natural progression where once you start doing it, it’s like you just fine tune the well-oiled machine that it’s become. Every year there are new changes, new things to do, appeasing everybody involved and the property owner, making it more experiential and fine tuning it and just making it a better experience for everybody. It’s always changing and evolving, but it’s really been fun!” One big question is whether 4 Peaks will eventually become something akin to Sasquatch. Totland has some ideas for the future. “I’m not trying to be Coachella or Bonnaroo here, but for Central

Oregon we’ve essentially outgrown the property and we’re going to be in a new location next year with more acreage. There will be larger national acts, more spreading out for families, tents and RVs, more luxury stuff, glamping, more yurts and just really embellish what we already have going for us, but it will always be the intimate family-friendly 4 Peaks that everybody knows.” Whether 4 Peaks grows massively or keeps that intimate vibe, it’s still a treat to have something like this in our own backyard. Music festivals are a dime a dozen these days, but good ones are harder to find. Totland knows how rare the perfect combination of music, environment and vibe can be, as it’s such a fleeting thing. Regardless of the future, the festival is in good hands right now. SW

4 Peaks Music Festival All day, June 16 to 19 Rockin A Ranch, 19449 Tumalo Reservoir Rd., Bend $10-$170 www.eventbrite.com for tickets

“The Tides” is the first album put out by the Sisters-spawned group called Raman Ellis. The album is 11 tracks of Americana-folk style music that is both familiar and appealing to those living in Central Oregon. Produced in Sisters by Brent Alan Studios, this album was released in 2015. This month the band will be celebrating the creation of its first CD with a release party on June 24 in Sisters. The band consists of Raman Ellis, who plays fiddle, guitar, banjo and mans lead vocals. He is also the mastermind behind the music. Benji Nagel has been playing alongside Ellis since they were in middle school together (awwww). Nagel plays dobro and guitar, but can also sing a tune. Sisters local, Brent Alan, who had first been involved with the original two as a mentor when they were young, is on mandolin, guitar and vocals. The final addition to the group is Peter Heithoff, who plays bass. All of these fellows will be playing at the release party, but it is important to mention that there were many hands (and voices) involved in the creation of “The Tides,” including Justin Veloso, Patrick Pearsall, Laurenne Ross, Juna Muller, Nick Patterson, Dennis McGregor and Madeleine Sullivan. Not surprisingly, there is an underlying theme to the album. “In my mind all the songs stem from a place of reflection about the polarities of life: highs and lows, love and loss, hope and fear…the tides,” says Ellis. Titles include “My Way,” “Love on the Vine” which is a personal favorite of Ellis,’ “Lay You Down,” and “She Rides.” All songs have a haunting melody and lasting vocal impression to them that is worth giving a listen. Ellis is most inspired by honesty. “The honest truth is wild, unfiltered and inspiring. My hope with the music I play is to come closer and closer to an honesty that moves others to be honest with themselves and each other,” says Ellis. SW

Raman Ellis “The Tides” Available for download or purchase on www.cdbaby.com Download $9.99 or CD $14

Album Release Party, June 24 Angeline’s Bakery 121 W Main Ave., Sisters 7 p.m., sliding scale entry fee $10-$15

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

C

entral Oregon plays host to many events: tons of live music, all kinds of outdoor activities and a steady plethora of festivals, block parties and outdoor markets. If there were something missing from our High Desert oasis (other than, you know, affordable housing), it would be a massive, weekend-long music festival with camping, food and bounce houses. 4 Peaks Music Festival comes close to footing the bill, and although not quite massive, it’s not really trying to be.


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Slightly Spectacular Slightly Stoopid comes to the Les Schwab Amphitheater

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By Angela Moore

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Longtime rockers, Slightly Stoopid, hit the road again this summer, including a stop in Bend on 6/18. Photo by Amanda McCarver.

T

he band Slightly Stoopid has been around for literally decades. Their creative sound is an energetic fusion of reggae, punk, hip-hop, folk, jazz and whatever else they feel like bringing to the mix. Often compared to the legendary group Sublime, this Southern California-born band has made a name for itself across the globe and will soon be gracing Bend with its horn-thumping, crowd-pleasing presence at the Les Schwab Amphitheater June 18. This seven-piece band known for having a killer stage presence, Slightly Stoopid is made up of Kyle McDonald, Miles Doughty, Ryan “Rymo” Moran, Oguer “OG” Ocon, Daniel “Dela” Delacruz, Paul Wolstencroft, and what the others call the “unofficial eighth member,” Karl Denson. “Stoopid-Heads”, a term of endearment for those die-hard fans of the group, will confirm that Slightly Stoopid is a band many of us have grown up with. Formed in 1994, the group was first discovered by Sublime’s frontman, Bradley Nowell (RIP). Nowell and bandmate Michael “Miguel” Happoldt formed the record label Skunk Records in 1990 and then quickly signed Slightly Stoopid onto their label and released the album

“Slightly $toopid” in 1996 while the band members were still in high school. More recently, “Meanwhile...Back At The Lab” is the band’s eighth studio recording released in 2015 under the label Stoopid Records. Admittedly, things have changed over the years for the band members. “We were always a road band, and when we were in our twenties that never changed. Now most of us are married with kids... when you come home from tour and see [them] you’re reminded of why you do all of this. It’s actually pretty grounding,” says drummer of the group, Rymo. Even band members grow up, but although these dudes have also become dads, they still know how to make music that draws a crowd. Slightly Stoopid is used to touring, “... especially back in the day when we were first getting things started,” says Rymo. The group has been to Oregon a few times and is always looking forward to shows in this state, but it’s been a while since they’ve been to our now-greener Oregon. Supporters of marijuana legalization, Slightly Stoopid band members don’t mind performing in a state with a proven tolerance record. “We have always enjoyed recreational use of herb

as part of our lifestyle...and we enjoy indulging. Why hide it?” asks Rymo. The Return of the Red Eye Summer Tour 2016 kicks off in Redmond, Wash., on June 15, ending in Detroit, Mich., on Aug. 28. The group will have some help along the way with bands such as SOJA (reggae), Living Legends members Zoin I, The Grouch and Eligh (hip-hop), and Fortunate Youth (reggae) will join later in the tour. This is a collection of long-standing professional musicians that have spent much of their careers in front of crowds big and small. In Bend at the Amphitheater, come June 18, Slightly Stoopid will remind fans and new listeners alike why they’re once again hitting the road and entertaining us all. SW Slightly Stoopid SOJA, The Grouch & Eligh & Zoin I Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 SW Shevlin-Hixon Dr., Bend Saturday, June 18, 5:30 p.m. $35 Tickets at www.bendconcerts.com

“Meanwhile...Back In The Lab” www.slightlystoopid.com iTunes $9.99

TICKETS AT Ranch Records www.towertheatre.org www.bendticket.com


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The Old Stone Performing Arts Center in association with Howard Schor Productions Proudly Presents:

David and Lisa

an unusual love story directed by Mary Kilpatrick Play by James Reach Adapted from the book by Theodore Isaac Rubin Screenplay by Eleanor Perry

Waxing Appointments – Prices Vary

10 Performances - Fri. June 10 - Sat. June 25 7:30 PM including 2pm Sat. Matinees In the Round at The Old Stone Performing Arts Center

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Professional Student Clinic (hair must be ½ inch long)

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CLUBS

CALENDAR

>

Tickets Available on BendTicket.com

17 VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

8 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. Hardtails Bar & Grill Rowdy McCarran Band—Rodeo Kick off Party Rowdy and the band will be kicking off our rodeo party this year after the extreme bulls on Wednesday night in the huge party tent. They hail from Las Vegas and put on a great show! The beer wagon is back too. Rowdy will be playing nightly the entire Rodeo week! 10 pm-1 am. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm.

submitted

Jersey Boys Pizzeria Kinzel and Hyde Cascade Blues Association Hall of Fame Inductees and three time winners of the Best Traditional Act, Kinzel and Hyde will take listeners on a tour of blues and roots music that will blow you away! 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. 6:30 pm.

Maverick’s Country Bar Karaoke 7 pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School

Lewi Longmire & Anita Lee Elliott Portland’s multi-instrumentalist go-to guy also pens his own fine tunes and fronts an accomplished roots-rock/Americana ensemble which believes in good songs played with high energy. 7 pm. No cover.

Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic

With Derek Michael Marc. 6-9 pm.

Sisters Saloon & Ranch Grill After Ro-

deo Party Dry Canyon Stampede, Central Oregon’s premiere country western dance band rocks Sisters Saloon for a rodeo after party under the big tent. 8:30 pm. No cover.

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.

9 Thursday Astro Lounge DJ Clectik 10 pm. Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards and Events Silver Foxes A four-piece country rock and blues band that will entertain you with there lively sets and stage presence. 6-9 pm. $5.

Hardtails Bar & Grill Love & Theft Live from Nashville! Hardtails proudly presents Love & Theft for one night only. Rowdy McCarran closes out locals night. 8:30 pm. $10. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free

Country Swing Dance Lessons 8 pm. No cover.

McMenamins Old St. Francis School

The Resolectrics A classic rhythm and blues band. Their ragged-yet-heartfelt harmonies, bluesy riffs and swampy grooves are sure to move you. 7 pm. No cover.

Hear ShaggaMon perform alongside Baba B and Unified Culture for a night of reggae at Volcanic Theatre Pub, 6/10.

Northside Bar & Grill Victory Swig A group of seasoned, fun loving, musicians based Bend, Oregon. We play music that moves your body, mind and soul. rock, R&B, funk, soul, jam, bluegrass, reggae and about everything in between. Come out and get a taste of “The Swig.” 7:30-10 pm. Sisters Saloon & Ranch Grill Sisters Saloon After Rodeo Party—The Joe Slick Band Back by popular demand The Joe Slick Band plays the Rodeo after party. Locals night! Sister locals get in free. Kick up your heels at the biggest and best Rodeo after party! 8 pm. $10, locals get in free. Strictly Organic Coffee Company Allan Byer Open Mic Allan hosts this all originals open mic. 6-8 pm. No cover.

you like our renditions of familiar bluegrass standards and our originals that base their roots in hard driving acoustic music. 6-9 pm. $5.

Sisters Saloon & Ranch Grill After Rodeo Party Back by popular demand The Joe Slick Band plays the Rodeo after party at historic Sisters Saloon. 10 pm. $10.

Hardtails Bar & Grill Rowdy McCarran

21+. 9 pm. No cover.

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm.

Sing and dance to Beatles favorites played by Corner Gospel Explosion, Stronghold, Butterfly Breakdown, Thomas T and the Bluechips, Truckstop Gravy and Juju Eyeball. Proceeds benefit KPOV and the unique programming you love! 7-10 pm. $12 adv., $10 door KPOV members. $15 GA, $5 youth.

Band & Bull Riding Rowdy and the band are back for the Friday night after rodeo party in our huge ten! Ride our bull and win a free rodeo party t-shirt! $3 16oz. drafts and outdoor beer garden. 10 pm-1:30 am.

J DUB Mark Ransom Mark Ransom plays the patio at J DUB. 6-8 pm. No cover. Jackson’s Corner Westside Coyote

Comedy—Alex Rios, Tim Ledwith & Karen Sipes Host Ryan Traughber. 8-10 pm. $8 adv., $10 door.

Willow Exciting combination of cello, guitar and rich vocals combine to take you on a musical journey that will have you laughing, crying, dancing and celebrating the rhythms of life. 7 pm. No cover.

The Capitol Core Thursdays An un-

Genesis Arts & Music Festival Genesis

The Summit Saloon & Stage Bend

derground house music journey. We will journeying into the Earth’s core to find the deepest and grooviest house tunes around. 9 pm.

The Lot Bittercreek Bank Easy listening

rock, blues and folk. 6-8 pm. No cover.

Volcanic Theatre Pub Ben Rice

His original music blends soul, Delta-blues, rockabilly, jazz and funk into a roots stew. 8 pm. $5.

10 Friday

Arts & Music Festival Genesis is the first annual Arts and Music Festival sponsored by S.O.B. and Headbangers in Prineville to be held on 200 acres of private land called The Burn in the Ochoco Mountains roughly 20 miles east of Prineville. $60.

Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar The Bad Cats Enjoy the best Reuben in Bend along with other great food and drink items, all served up with a side of rock ‘n’ roll, blues and soul. 7:30-10:30 pm. No cover. Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free Friday Dance Lessons 21+. 8 pm. No cover. Northside Bar & Grill The Substitutes

Astro Lounge Chuck Boogie 10 pm.

Rock. 8:30 pm.

Checker’s Pub Highway 97 Come in for

Seven Nightclub Bachata & Latin Night

a great night of great food, fun and dance! 8-11:30 pm. No cover.

Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards and Events Blackstrap Those who like our style

of bluegrass won’t be disappointed with the latest assembly of red hot pickers. Hope

21+. 7:30 pm.

Sip Wine Bar Bill Keale Bill’s talent is

undeniable. His voice unmistakable. And his presence healing. His music is a celebration of the Spirit...pure music...all heart. 6-8 pm. No cover.

The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele

PICK Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon Beatles Singalong

Volcanic Theatre Pub Baba B with Unified Culture & ShaggaMon Presented by Positive Island Vibrations. 9 pm. $12 adv., $15 door.

11 Saturday Astro Lounge DeeJay Weather 10 pm. Checker’s Pub Highway 97 Come in for a great night of great food, fun and dance! 8-11:30 pm. No cover. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe Ian Carrick &

Friends A Bend native, Ian is hosting an intimate evening of mostly original acoustic music intended to bring joy and cultivate open hearts. Featuring bassist Jamie Morris, percussionist Jason Plankey, singer Jaimee Simundson, guitarist Sterling Dillingham, and a small chorus led by Hannah Carrick. 7-9 pm. Free.

Hardtails Bar & Grill Rowdy McCarran Band & Bull Riding Last chance to party with Rowdy McCarran and the band. Final night to ride the bull and win a free rodeo shirt! Don’t miss the only Coors and Crown Royal sponsored official after rodeo party in Sisters! 10 pm-1:30 am. Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm.


CLUBS

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT

Genesis Arts & Music Festival Genesis Arts & Music Festival Genesis is the first annual Arts and Music Festival sponsored by S.O.B. and Headbangers in Prineville to be held on 200 acres of private land called The Burn in the Ochoco Mountains roughly 20 miles east of Prineville. $60.

Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Karaoke 8 pm. M&J Tavern Jess Ryan & Friends This

sultry siren transforms the stage with her guitar and guests. 9 pm.

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Free

Dance Lessons 9 pm. No cover.

Northside Bar & Grill The Substitutes

Rock. 8:30 pm.

Sisters Saloon & Ranch Grill After Rodeo Party Back by popular demand, The Joe Slick Band plays the Rodeo after party at historic Sisters Saloon. Kick up your heels at the biggest and best Rodeo after party! 10 pm. $10. The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele

21+. 9 pm. No cover.

PICK The Capitol Frank Solivan & The Dirty Kitchen A wide variety of new acoustic American roots music focusing on bluegrass, folk, swing and jazz. Powerful vocal harmonies, expressive songwriting, smooth ballads and instrumental prowess lend this versatile group of musicians to any type of venue. Each member an inventive powerhouse. 10 pm. $5. Volcanic Theatre Pub Joe PICK Purdy Arkansas Americana star. His fans include music tastemakers and early adopters, as well as followers of mainstreams acts such as Bob Dylan or Bruce Springsteen. With Garrison Starr from Tennessee also performing. 8 pm. $20.

12 Sunday Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Dogwood Cocktail Cabin Locals Night

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Hip-hop artist Afroman brings his stoner-friendly stylings to Volcanic Theatre Pub, 6/14.

Domino Room James McMurtPICK ry Rock and folk-rock, Americana singer, songwriter, guitarist, bandleader and occasional actor. 8 pm. $16 adv. Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Karaoke

Rockin’ Robin takes the stage with her incredible song list and awesome singers. 7-10 pm.

M&J Tavern Blue House Revival These

boys amp it up, and switch it out for your listening pleasure. Makes you wanna’ shake a little on the dance floor. 9 pm. No cover.

North Rim BrewPub StrongHold Local

Drink and food specials for locals with live DJs starting at 9 p.m.

singer-songwriter Andy Armer and Richard Taelour play their original music. 6:30-8:30 pm. No cover.

First United Methodist Church Oregon Pianist John Nilsen in Concert Oregon pianist John Nilsen, (19 CDs released, over one million in sales) performs a solo piano concert in Bend on Show includes folk, jazz, boogie-woogie, classics, originals. Great pianist. 3-4:30 pm. $10.

Northside Bar & Grill Lisa Dae Jazz Tuesday night is jazz night at the Northside Bar & Grill. Join Lisa Dae (vocals), AJ Cohen (keys) and Raul Fiol (percussion) for a night of jazz standards, Latin jazz and R&B mix. Dancers welcome! 6-9 pm. No cover.

House Concerts in the Glen Ruth

Moody & Band House Concert Australian born Ruth Moody (two-time Juno Award winning singer-songwriter of Wailing Jennys) and her Canadian Band plus Portland’s Sam Howard performing—outdoors weather permitting. BBQ potluck 6-7 p.m., kindly RSVP. 7-9:15 pm. $20 donation.

Genesis Arts & Music Festival Genesis Arts & Music Festival Genesis is the first annual Arts and Music Festival sponsored by S.O.B. and Headbangers in Prineville to be held on 200 acres of private land called The Burn in the Ochoco Mountains roughly 20 miles east of Prineville. $60.

13 Monday Astro Lounge Open Mic Bring your

guitars, keyboards, drums, mandos, ukes, voice, poems, comedy! The open mic is just that open for you. Sign ups start at 7 p.m. 8 pm-midnight. Free.

Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm.

14 Tuesday Astro Lounge Trivia Tuesdays Bring your team or join one! Usually six categories of various themes. 8 pm. No cover.

Redmond Farmers Market Appaloo-

15 Wednesday Astro Lounge TOPE Producer, rapper

TOPE is considered one of the top up and coming artists in the Northwest region and has been recently featured on XXL, 2DopeBoyz, Okayplayer, Jay-Z’s Life + Times, Hip Hop Wired, Hip Hop DX and more for his album latest “Broke Boy Syndrome.” 8 pm-1 am. 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. 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. Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm.

sa Appaloosa is a local Americana band which plays Original Music and tunes from singer-songwriters from the ‘60s and ‘70s. Come hear their folk, country blend of great songwriting and storytelling by Dottie and Eli Ashley. 2-5 pm. Free.

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm.

The Summit Saloon & Stage Bend Com-

Maverick’s Country Bar & Grill Karaoke

edy 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 Blacksmith Restaurant Coyote

Willow Exciting combination of cello, guitar and rich vocals combine to take you on a musical journey that will have you laughing, crying, dancing and celebrating the rhythms of life. 7 pm. No cover.

The Lot Trivia at The Lot Bring your team or join one. Enjoy the heated seats, brews, and tasty eats while rubbing elbows with Bend’s smartest smartipants who love trivia. A rotating host comes up with six questions in six different categories. 6-8 pm. Free. Volcanic Theatre Pub AfroPICK man An American hip-hop recording artist and musician. He is best known for the hit single “Because I Got High.” With Chandler P and TNC 9er also performing. 9 pm. $20 adv., $23 door.

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.

7 pm.

McMenamins Old St. Francis School

Rabbit Wilde If you like dancing, forest landscapes, adventures, Colorado, the PNW, harmonious vocals, love stories, early mornings, late nights, local produce, or strong coffee, you will love Rabbit Wilde. 7 pm. No cover.

Oregon’s self-appointed rock ‘n’ roll border patrol The Substitutes have been defending our (and your) right to rock since 1996. For nearly two decades we have dedicated ourselves to honoring the tradition and integrity of what it means to be a rock band by excluding other music. 6-9 pm. $5.

Hub City Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. 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

Matthew Szlachetka A multi-album artist, Szlachetka has busily recorded four albums over the past five years. As well, he has played more than 150 shows a year throughout the US with his blend of rock, blues, country and folk influences. 7 pm. No cover.

Northside Bar & Grill Jones Road Alter-

native rock. 7:30 pm.

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.

Rockin A Ranch 4 Peaks Music Festival Join us during summer solstice weekend for the 9th annual 4 Peaks Music Festival. Three days and three nights of music, family, friends and fun! This intimate family-friendly festival spans many genres of legendary musicians including Chris Robinson Brotherhood, Jackie Greene, and Jeff Austin Band. noon-1 am. $170 for weekend pass. Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open

Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic

With Derek Michael Marc. 6-9 pm.

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

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.

The Summit Saloon & Stage Bend Comedy—Benjie Wright, Jamie Boyd & Larry Loyd Host Ryan Traughber. 8-10 pm. $8 adv., $10 door.

16 Thursday Astro Lounge The Clectik 10 pm. Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke 9 pm. Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards and Events The Substitutes As Central

The Lot Marc Proctor Acoustic driven singer-songwriter of simple, honest music. 6-8 pm. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub The Rocketz On tour in the U.S. in support of their latest release, “California Hell!” Rockabilly and punk rock is all you’re getting, so let’s rock! With Send Medicine also performing. 9:30 pm. $5. SW


EVENTS

CALENDAR MUSIC Appaloosa Appaloosa, a local band, plays original music and tunes from the 60’s/70’s. A very engaging group with story telling and entertainment at its best, Appaloosa’s new CD, “On The Loose” is just released and will be available for sale at Dudley’s. Come support local music and our bookstore! June 10, 7-9pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-306-8336. free.

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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.

Cascade School of Music’s “Harp3” Harp Ensemble “Harp3” Harp Ensemble

will perform in collaboration with Renaissance Sisters Recorders, vocalists Marilyn Anthony and Julie Cash, and guest Harpist Laura Zaerr from Corvallis. The musicians will perform a light-hearted program celebrating summer and napping, in various configurations of instruments. June 9, 7-8:30pm. Sisters Episcopal Church, 68825 Brooks Camp Rd. 541-728-8568. Donations to benefit Sisters Habitat for Humanity.

Community Orchestra of Central Oregon 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.

Oregon Old Time Fiddlers All ages

welcome; we encourage youngsters to come and learn the art of fiddling and other traditional acoustic instruments. Non-smoking, alcohol free. Come participate, listen and dance. Sun, June 12, 1-4pm. Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SW Reif Rd. Jeanette Bondsteel, 541-410-5146 or Ron Jackson 541-462-3736. Free.

Oregon Pianist John Nilsen in Concert Oregon pianist John Nilsen, (19 CDs

released, over one million in sales) performs a solo piano concert in Bend on Show includes folk, jazz, boogie-woogie, classics, originals. Great pianist. June 12, 3-4:30pm. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 541-382-1672. $10.

Preservation Hall Jazz Band When

Allan and Sandra Jaffe transformed the 726 venue into Preservation Hall in 1961, they

submitted

Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band Practice The Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band is

Hear the Preservation Hall Jazz Band, that derives its name from the Preservation Hall venue located in New Orleans’ French Quarter, at the Tower Theatre, 6/14.

made it a point to integrate and highlight jazz musicians who were present during the birth of jazz through hosting nightly performances. June 14, 7:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. $28, $38, $48.

Ruth Moody & Band House Concert

Australian born Ruth Moody (two-time Juno Award winning singer-songwriter of Wailing Jennys) and her Canadian Band plus Portland’s Sam Howard performing—outdoors weather permitting. BBQ potluck 6-7 p.m., kindly RSVP. June 12, 7-9:15pm. House Concerts in the Glen, 1019 NW Stannium Rd. 541-480-8830. $20 donation.

DANCE Adult Jazz Dance Class Intermediate

level adult jazz dance class with members of Jazz Dance Collective. 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. Individualized attention for beginner dancers in a friendly and supportive environment. No partner needed! Wednesdays, 6:30-9:30pm. 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. $12 drop-in.

Bend Ecstatic Dance Dance your own dance in your own way in a supportive community of kindred spirits. Discover the power of free form dance for self-expression, community connection and holistic health. Visit BendEcstaticDance.com. Mondays, 7pm. Old Stone Performing Arts Center, 157 NW Franklin Ave. 360-870-6093. $10.

JUNE 10

Dances of Universal Peace Celebrating spiritual traditions, the joy of connection, and the longing for peace through movement and song. All dances fully taught. June 12, 4:30-6pm. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 61980 Skyline Ranch Rd. 541385-3908. $3-$5 donation.

Fun Salsa Patterns Dance Classes

Learn Salsa pattern combinations in this friendly and encouraging class in which you will learn to put together salsa dance pattern sequences including some fun turns. We recommend you feel comfortable with your basic salsa steps for this class. Thursdays, 7:30-8:30pm. Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Dr. 541-325-6676. $12 drop-in.

Group Class & Ballroom Dance Get your dance on at our Friday night group class and 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. 541314-4398. $5 per person includes the class & dance. Scottish Country Dance Weekly Class

No experience or Scottish heritage necessary. Weekly classes include beginner & advanced dances. Mondays, 7-9pm. Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd. First class is free, future classes are $5.

West African Dance Class Every class taught to live drumming by Fe Fanyi Drum Troupe. Mondays, 6:30pm. Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd. 818-636-2465. $10 drop-in. 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.

The Old Stone Presents

DAVID AND LISA, A PLAY BY JAMES REACH JUNE 14

The Domino Room Presents

JAMES MCMURTRY

LOCAL ARTS “A6 Retrospective” Favorite works from

A6’s last nine years return to the gallery walls for this retrospective of past exhibits, visiting artists, and fine press projects. M.C. Escher’s “Waterfalls,” Edward Curtis’ “Crater Lake,” and prints from “The Typewriter Returns!” are among those highlighted. Saturdays, 10am-6pm, Sundays, noon-5pm and Mondays-Fridays, 10am-7pm. Through June 26. A6, 550 SW Industrial Way Suite 180. 541-330-8759. Free.

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. Art Reception Join us for the first art

exhibition “Business Walls Become Gallery Walls!” featuring artists and photographers from throughout Central Oregon. The exhibition opens June 4th and continues through August 5th. June 11, 5-7pm. Looking Glass Imports & Cafe, 150 NE Bend River Mall Dr. Suite 260. 541-225-5775. Free.

Artists Gallery 5th Anniversary Celebration Party with the artists! Food wine

and fun featuring music with Tara Snow of Bend. Free art raffle! June 11, 4-7pm. Artists’ Gallery Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Dr. Suite 19. 541 593 4382. Free.

Artventure with Judy Artist-led paint-

ing 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.

Business Walls Become Gallery Walls

Looking Glass Imports & Café announces its inaugural exhibition featuring artists and photographers from throughout Central

JUNE 11

The Volcanic Theatre Pub Presents

JOE PURDY W/ GARRISON STARR JUNE 14

The Volcanic Theatre Pub Presents

AFROMAN

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

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 am-12:30 pm. Join us for a fun-filled day of great music and food. Tuesdays, 10:30am. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St.


EVENTS

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WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / June 9, 2016 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

20

Take part in a Japanese tea ceremony at the Bend Public Library, 6/11, and Tetherow Golf Club, 6/12.

Oregon. First Monday-Sunday of every month, 11am-6pm. Through Aug. 5. Looking Glass Imports & Cafe, 150 NE Bend River Mall Dr. Suite 260. 541-225-5775. Free.

Open Studio Nights Bring a project,

Brookswood Animal Clinic Supports Our Local Shelters.

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. Armature, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 2. 541-390-7666. $5.

PICK Sisters Art in the Park Art in the Park has been taking place in Sisters for 14 years. It is an annual event that features a variety of arts, crafts, food and entertainment with a special fundraiser benefiting the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Oregon. June 11, 10am. Sisters City Creekside Park, Hwy 20 and Jefferson St. Sunriver Music Festival: Young Artists Scholarship Concert Over the 20

Visit us at Pet Pawlooza

Free Therapy Laser Demonstrations

Dr. Ruth Loomis | Dr. Ashley Portmann Dr. Kara Erickson

Mon - Fri 8-6 | Saturdays 9-3

Open Saturdays

19550 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite 100 in SW Bend’s Brookswood Meadow Plaza

541.306.6991 www.brookswoodanimalclinic.com

year history, the Young Artists Scholarship program has awarded over $400,000 in scholarships to 127 Central Oregon classical music students. This annual concert is a showcase of the exceptional talent of these young musicians. June 12, 7-8pm. Holy Trinity Catholic Church, 18143 Cottonwood Rd.

Vision vs. Viewfinder An exhibition

by Shandel Gamer and Jill L. Tucker. The exhibition will focus on different aspects of seeing and creating art. Whether you wish to share a vision in a painting or you see something through your camera’s viewfinder—each creative process is a means for the artist to tell a story. Wednesdays-Sundays. Juniper Brewing Company, 1950 SW Badger Ave. Suite 103, Redmond. Free.

PRESENTATIONS Discovering Bend Vanessa Ivey, Museum Manager of the Deschutes County Historical Society, is presenting on discovery Bend. June 8, 2-3pm. Touchmark at Mt. Bachelor Village, 19800 SW Touchmark Way. 206-390-2009. Free.

We are Made from Stardust Resident Carol Schwiebert is presenting. Carol holds multiple scientific degrees and has been involved with the Society of Women Engineers and Planetary Society. She loves to keep in touch with the scientific community. June 15, 2-3pm. Touchmark at Mt. Bachelor Village, 19800 SW Touchmark Way. 541-390-2009. Free. Introduction to a Clairvoyant Reading

In this class we will go over the process of having a clairvoyant reading and remove the fear of it. Included will be the various ways information is gathered, what to expect out of your reading and how to make the most of it. June 10, 6-6:45pm. Looking Glass Imports & Cafe, 150 NE Bend River Mall Dr. Suite 260. 541-225-5775. Free.

Traditional History & Radical Dreams in Oregon’s WPA-era Public Art PSU

Professor David Horowitz will discuss several artists affiliated with the Oregon Federal Art Project and address the paradox by which these radical and anti-capitalist painters participated in a government program designed to rejuvenate a capitalist economy. June 9, 6-8pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. Members $3, non-members $7.

University of Oregon presents Oregon Folklife Network Artists A member

of the Wasco tribe, Pat Courtney Gold is an accomplished fiber artist and basket weaver. An Oregon Governor’s Arts Award winner, she’ll share her knowledge and examples of the twining basket-making technique. June 14, 6-8pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-968-5284. Free.

William Sullivan: New Hikes on the Oregon Coast Sullivan presents a slide

show tour of a dozen new trails he discovered while researching the new fourth edition of his hiking book, “Oregon Coast & Coast Range.” Discover a loop hike around Depoe Bay, an abandoned railroad along a river, and a trek to the world’s tallest redwoods. June 10, 3-4pm. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. 541-312-1034. June 11, 1-2pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-312-1034. Free.


EVENTS

THEATER PICK ”Black Comedy” A fuse blows. The lights go off. The laughs begin. Don’t be left in the dark. Fri, June 10, 7:30pm, Sat, June 11, 7:30pm, Sun, June 12, 2pm and Thurs, June 16, 7:30pm. Cascades Theatrical Company, 148 NW Greenwood Ave. $20 adult, $15 senior, $13 student.

“Hedwig & the Angry Inch” Encore One Night Stand Hedwig and her band

the Angry Inch are back for one night only. Come see why this show has been called, “... one of the most memorable nights of theater this town has ever seen,” Jared Rasic. June 11, 7-10pm. Kelly D’s Banquet Room, 1012 SE Cleveland Ave. 541-6396520. $22 adv., $25 door.

PICK Via Lactea: A New Opera in English In this new opera, sung in English,

a woman “of a certain age” embarks on a pilgrimage along Spain’s Camino de Santiago in search of answers to life’s questions. A full array of characters—witty to wise, confrontational to bawdy—debate love, life, religion and bedbugs in song and dance. Fri, June 10, 7:30pm, Sat, June 11, 7:30pm and Sun, June 12, 3pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. $35, $45.

WORDS Barnes & Noble Teen Book Festival

Barnes and Noble Teen Book Festival featuring trivia blast, local author panel, spelling showdown and other games, writing workshop as well as prizes and giveaways from the publishers. One winner at trivia blast will win an advance reader copy of one of the most anticipated new teen books. Fri, June 10, 7-8pm, Sat, June 11, 12-1:30 and 2-3pm and Sun, June 12, 2-3pm. Barnes and Noble, 2690 NE Hwy. 20. 541-318-7242. Free.

The Library Book Club Discuss “The Black Hour” by Lori Rader-Day. June 9, noon-1pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-3121055. Free. Second Sunday Reading Series: Pop-up Science Fair As part of the

Second Sunday reading series, DPL is hosting the second-year students of the OSU-Cascades MFA in Creative Writing for their event, the Pop-up Science Fair. Part imagination, amateur science and DIY-art making! June 12, 2-4pm. Deschutes Public Library, 507 NW Wall St. Free.

OSU-Cascades MFA Students Meet, mingle, get messy and make some art with the second-year MFA students in Creative Writing at OSU-Cascades. You can expect to get a hands-on experience of our innovative, holistic approach to growing writers, enjoy some wholesome snacks and experiment. June 12, 2-3:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541312-1032. Free.

VOLUNTEERS 350Deschutes Climate Advocacy & Education Use your special talents to

encourage 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

The Blitz The Blitz pro MTB race is coming up, and we need volunteers! All volunteers receive a t-shirt and beer on us. We need people to work several hour shifts between 4 pm and 10:30 pm (depending on the job). June 16. Tetherow Golf Club, 61240 Skyline Ranch Rd. 503-314-6729.

Meet our latest

commitment

to your health.

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. . Bend, RSVP for address.

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. We also give examples of Gatekeeper referrals and how COCOA is able to connect clients with needed services and programs. Central Oregon Council On Aging (COCOA), 373 NE Greenwood Ave. 541-678-5483.

Matt Slater, MD Cardiothoracic Surgery

Make Your Mark at Bend Spay+Neuter! We are looking for compassionate,

awesome people to join our incredible team of volunteers. Whether you want to give your time in the clinic, or you want to be out and about at festivals, or helping with our community cat population, we can definitely use your unique talents. Bend Spay+Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. Suite B1. 541-617-1010.

Mentor Heart of Oregon Corps is a non-

profit 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. Heart of Oregon YouthBuild, 68797 George Cyrus Rd.

Volunteer The Salvation Army has a wide variety of volunteer opportunities for almost every age. We have an emergency food pantry, we visit residents of assisted living centers, and we make up gifts for veterans and homeless. If interested, please contact us. Bend, RSVP for address. 541389-8888. Volunteer—BCC Bend’s Community

Center has a wide variety of volunteer opportunities for individuals over age 6. 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 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 Paul at 541-647-2363 for more details.

St. Charles Heart & Lung Center is pleased to welcome Matt Slater, MD, to our team of providers. Dr. Slater, who has worked as a cardiothoracic surgeon at OHSU for 23 years, received his medical degree from Eastern Virginia Medical School. At OHSU, Dr. Slater served as director of the cardiac surgery program and director of quality for the Knight Cardiovascular Institute. Having participated in team sports from a young age, Dr. Slater likens the idea of teamwork to what happens in an operating room. He is passionate about motivating himself and fellow caregivers to play their roles well and stay at the top of their game, resulting in better outcomes for patients. When not performing surgery, Dr. Slater enjoys bicycle racing and spending time in the great outdoors.

Warehouse Sorting & Pricing The

Brightside Thrift Store in Redmond is looking for volunteers to receive donations, sort, and price items. The Brightside Thrift Store’s success is critical to the operations of our high-save shelter and our volunteers at the thrift store contribute directly to the care of our animals by making sure that all of our donations are processed and ready to purchase. Mondays-Sundays. Brightside Animal Thrift Store, 838 NW 5th St. 541504-0101.

CLASSES AcroYoga This all levels AcroYoga class blends the wisdom of yoga, the dynam-

2500 NE NEFF RD - BEND | 541-388-4333 StCharlesHealthCare.org

21 VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

“David and Lisa” Set in the late 1950’s, David and Lisa is a play based on the classic film named by Time Magazine as the “Best American Film of 1962,” following the love story between two teens lost in mental health complications. A play by James Reach. Fri, June 10, 7:30pm, Sat, June 11, 2 and 7:30pm and Thurs, June 16, 7:30pm. Old Stone Performing Arts Center, 157 NW Franklin Ave. 541-322-7273. $18 adults, $14 students & seniors.

events, attend rallies, write or do art about the climate. Bend, RSVP for address. 206498-5887.


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EVENTS ic power of acrobatics, and the loving kindness of healing arts. No partner or experience in yoga or AcroYoga necessary. Wednesdays, 5:30-6:45pm. Through July 6. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. $7 - $12.

Basic Skills Kayaking Class Learn the basic skills every new kayaker needs to

7pm. Junque in Bloom, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 19. 541-728-3036. $40.

Create a Chalkboard Message Center

Paint a chalkboard for a charming message center. Learn techniques to apply to a bigger project like cabinets or furniture at home. All materials included. Sign up online or in store! June 16, 5:30-7:30pm. Junque in Bloom, 50 SE Scott St. 541-728-3036. $35.

Feisty Fido Dealing with dog-to-dog

aggression. Free from DogPAC. Info and reserve a seat at happytailsworkshops@ gmail.com. June 13, 5:30-6:30pm. Deschutes Public Library (Brooks Room), 601 NW Wall St. 541-213-9119. Free.

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. Home Studio, 63198 NE de Havilland St. 541-7603204. $15. 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. Discover how the brain, nerves, and lines connect in

Table Saw Class This class will introduce you to one of the most important tools in the shop—the table saw. June 8, 6pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $45.

TIG Welding Sign up at DIYcave.com. TIG is the ultimate method for beautiful welds. This project based class will introduce you to how TIG works. Thurs, June 9, 5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-3882283. $70. Welding Workshop Sign up at DIYcave. com. This hands-on class is perfect for beginners or anyone needing a refresher class in cutting and welding. June 8, 5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $50. 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. Home Studio, 63198 NE de Havilland St. 541-760-3204. $15.

What’s Hot in Franchising In this highly interactive two-hour workshop, find out about the top trends, the best industries and ‘What’s Hot’ in franchising for 2016. Learn how to pick the right franchise for you and how to pay for your new business. June 8, 6-8pm. COCC Chandler Lab (off-campus), 1027 NW Trenton Ave. 541383-7290. $29.

submitted

Women Who Run With The Wolves Workshop This is a four week in-depth

The 3rd annual CARGo Bike Rodeo is for avid cyclists, cargo-bike adventurers, or anyone who is cycle-curious, at Bend Electric Bikes, 6/11.

explore the beautiful waterways of Central Oregon in this multi-week class. June 11, 9am-1pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. $75.

Beginning Aerial Central Oregon Aerial

Arts is the premier, professional aerial silks acrobatics program! Wednesdays-Saturdays-Sundays, 2:30-4pm. Central Oregon Aerial Arts, 63017 NE 18th St. 775-342-8710. $17.

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.

Business Start-Up Class Do you have

a great idea that you think could be a successful business, but just don’t know how to get started? Cover the basics in this twohour class and decide if running a business is for you. June 16, 6-8pm. Redmond COCC Campus Technology Education Center, 2324 NE College Lp. 541-383-7290. $29.

Capoeira Experience this exciting martial

art form of Brazilian culture which incorporates unique martial arts techniques, music, foreign language, and acrobatics for all levels. There is a concurrent kids class. Mondays, 5:20-6:50pm and Thursdays, 4:205:20pm. Get a Move On Studio, 63076 NE 18th St. Suite 140. 541-678-3460. $25, three week introduction.

Create Two Pair of Earrings Basic wire wrapping and hand painted finish. Learn the basics of jewelry design and create two pairs of hand painted earrings. June 8, 5:30-

Figure Drawing Salon Develop your skills at our live model figure drawing salon hosted by Workhouse studio members Christian Brown and Abney Wallace. This drop-in salon features a live nude model. Tuesdays, 7-9pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. 347-564-9080. $15.

German Conversation Group With a tutor to learn conversational German. Mondays, 7-8pm. In Sisters, various locations. 541-595-0318. Cost is variable depending upon number of students. German Language Group German

language study and conversation group. Open to all levels. Second Saturday of every month, 2-3:30pm. Through June 11. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 541749-2010. Free.

It’s Just Paint It’s okay if you’ve never

painted. This is a guided class great for all ages. The painting is broken out in easy steps to help you create a masterpiece. June 15, 6-8pm. June 8, 6-8pm. Looking Glass Imports & Cafe, 150 NE Bend River Mall Dr. Suite 260. 541-225-5775. $35.

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 by yourself. Have fun painting in a group setting. We supply all materials with exception of the piece of furniture. June 9, 5:30-8:30pm. 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. Through July 6. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. 347-564-9080. $65.

The Riveted Cuff Combine metal and leather with rivets into a unique cuff with Marianne Prodehl of Junk to Jems. In this workshop you will learn basic cold connections for metal and simple leatherworking with snaps and rivets. June 16, 6-9pm. The Workhouse, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 6. 347564-9080. $65.

Japanese Group Lesson We offer group lessons for both beginners and intermediate students for Japanese for all ages. Wednesdays, 5-6pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St. 541-633-7205. $10 plus material fees.

Sheet Metal Art Sign up at DIYcave.com.

Jewelry Studio Sign up at DIYcave.com. Use your membership to access our jeweler’s tools and get expert advice about your project from DIYcave jewelry instructor, Alicia Esche. Fridays, 10am-4pm. Through July 29. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283.

two Thursday workshops teach how to prepare for ceremony (or personal change) with sharing circles and intention ties. The 6/9 workshop helps release the things you want in your life towards yourself. Thursdays, 6:15-8:15pm. Residence, 61287 Kristen St. 541-639-6246. $12 each.

Use a torch to cut creative forms from sheet metal. Wed, June 15, 5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $65.

Summer Solstice Workshops These

journey of self discovery, through the story of Bluebeard in the powerful “Women Who Run With The Wolves Myths and Stories Of The Wild Woman Archetype” book. Explore mythical adventures alongside our own life stories. Use dreams to reclaim the wild. June 16, 6-8:15pm. Palate a Coffee Bar, 643 NW Colorado Ave. 541-977-1924. $85, for 4-week journey.

Women’s Full Immersion Whitewater Kayaking Weekend Experience this complete introduction to whitewater kayaking in a supportive, all-female environment! Fri, June 10, 5-8pm to Sun, June 12, 8am-5pm. Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way Suite 6. 541-317-9407. $245.

Wood Lathe Sign up at DIYcave.com. Learn the basics of the wood lathe and how you can use it to create beautiful bowls, table legs, candlesticks and much more. June 13, 5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $40. Router Class Sign up at DIYcave.com.

Learn many ways this versatile woodworking tool can be used to get the shapes you want and add interesting details to your project. June 14, 5:30pm. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $40.

EVENTS PICK 28th Annual Central Oregon Wildflower Show The Central Oregon

Wildflower Show and Native Plant Sale exhibits hundreds of native wildflowers each year in celebration of Oregon’s unique floral diversity. This event is family friendly with kids activities, botanical hikes, floral henna and more! The most colorful event of the summer! June 11, 9am-5pm and June 12, 9am-5pm. Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245 River Rd., Sunriver. 541-5934394. $6 adults, $4 kids.

3rd Annual CARGo Bike Rodeo CARGo Bike Rodeo is for avid cyclists, cargo-bike

adventurers, or anyone who is cycle-curious. It’s a free, family friendly event with obstacle courses, live music, food and of course beer. June 11, noon-4pm. Bend Electric Bikes, 223 NW Hill St. 541-410-7408. Free.

23 VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

All Levels Acro Yoga Open to beginner, intermediate and advanced AcroYogis. This practice is about listening to your body, opening up to trust, and building compassionate communication. Mondays, 7-8:30pm. Sweaty Happy People, 2330 NE Division St. $15 drop in.

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT


EVENTS Geeks Who Drink Each week geek teams of up to six challenge one another in eight rounds of all-out fun and randomness! The rounds vary from week to week, but generally deal with music, movies, comics, TV, books, science, history, news, food, beer, geography, and more. Tuesdays, 8-10pm. The Platypus Pub, 1203 NE Third St. 541323-3282. Free. Grassroots Cribbage Club Newcomers welcome. For info contact Sue at 541-3826281. Mondays, 6-9pm. Bend Elks Lodge, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd. $1 to $13.

Est. 1998

Community, Spirituality, A Feeling of Home, Something for Everyone, Welcoming, Positive Energy, Live Music Sundays 10a.m.

Youth Program for Infants & Children thru Age 12

Happy Learners Preschool Celebration Cake, coffee and stories celebrating

Happy Learners Kindergarten/Preschool’s thirty-six years of continuous service will take place. The school began in 1979 and will close at the end of this school year. It was begun, staffed and housed continuously at First Presbyterian Bend. The festivities will include recognition of long time

Pool Tournament Cash Cup Anyone

can join in, regardless of experience! We also have karaoke going on every Tuesday and Thursday, so there’s a lot of fun going on all night! APA rules, winnings based on number of participants. Tuesdays, 8pm. Seven Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St. 541760-9412. $5.

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

microchips, 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.

Second Saturday at WAAAM Air and Auto Museum WAAAM Air and Auto Mu-

Rev. Jane Meyers Hiatt

Service held at The Grange

62855 Powell Butte Hwy [near the Bend Airport]

www.UnityCentralOregon.com

How did Kevin end up at SELCO?

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directions. June 14, 10am-noon. Newcomers Club of Bend, P.O. Box 7972. 541-610-5003. Free.

Hear Americana star Joe Purdy perform at Volcanic Theatre Pub, 6/11.

He wanted to be able to act fast once he found the perfect home. SELCO’s experienced loan officers led Kevin through the home buying experience. He was able to move quickly, thanks to his SELCO mortgage preapproval. With new house keys in hand, he turned to SELCO Insurance Services to protect his investment with a homeowner’s policy.

How will you end up at SELCO? Visit us to see what SELCO can do for you.

selco.org / 541-686-8000

Several locations in Bend and Redmond

NMLS# 402847 Membership requirements apply. See SELCO for details.

Banking | Mortgages | Insurance | Retirement | Business Lending

teacher Karen Sipes. June 12, 11am-1pm. First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St. 541-382-4401. Free.

High Desert Porsche Club Arrive & Shine Car Show Join the High Desert

Porsche Club of America for the annual Arrive and Shine event. This casual car show is a great chance for the public to see all types June 11, 9am-noon. Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave. Free to public, $20 to enter a car.

Japanese Tea Ceremony The Japa-

nese American Society of Central Oregon offers a rare opportunity to experience the Japanese Tea Ceremony, which dates back to the thirteenth century. Portland Tea Teacher Marjorie Yap will present the ceremony in a formal kimono using traditional tea utensils. She has studied tea for over 35 years. June 11, 3:30-4:30pm. Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-3901220. June 12, 2-3pm. Tetherow Golf Club, 61240 Skyline Ranch Rd. 541-390-1220. $15, reservations required.

Lamp Makeover Bring in your outdated lamp and let us help you give it new life. You bring the lamp and we will provide everything else. Thurs, June 9, 5:30-7:30pm. Junque in Bloom, 50 SE Scott St. Suite 19. 541-728-3036. $25. Newcomers Club of Bend Hospitality Coffee Are you new to Bend or just want

to make new friends. Come to our women’s coffee social to learn about NCOB and the activities our 300+ friendly members enjoy. Email grateful@bendbroardband. com or call 541-610-5003 to RSVP and get

seum opens the doors to run some of its antique airplanes and cars. Visitors watch airplane operations up close and may get to ride in old cars. Open 9-5. Activities 10-2. Lunch 11-1. Second Saturday of every month, 9am-5pm. Western Antique Aeroplane and Automobile Museum, 1600 Air Museum Rd. 541-308-1600. $6-$14.

Trivia Tuesdays Pick your smartest friends to make teams of two-to-five people for a mind-bending game of trivia. A new host each week comes up with six categories with six questions in each category. The team with the most points wins swag! Another fun night at The Lot with great food, beer, and friends. Come join! Interested in being a trivia host? Email: info@thelotbend.com for details. Tuesdays, 6-8pm. The Lot, 745 NW Columbia St. Free. Vern Patrick Saturday Market Supporting family fun and entrepreneurs of all ages! Homemade goods, jewelry, food, raffles, live music, free ice cream. Do you do crafting, artistry, independent sales, or a food truck? Booths available for $25. June 11, noon-4pm. Vern Patrick Elementary School, 3001 SW Obsidian Ave. 541-9234832. Free. Young Professionals Network Social

You heard Sarah Pool’s story at PINTS. Now YPN is taking you on an exclusive tour of her facility, Pacific Superfood Snacks! June 9, 5-7pm. Pacific Superfood Snacks Innovation Kitchen, 34 NW Park Pl. 541382-3221. $15 Bend Chamber Member, $20 community.


EVENTS

SENIOR EVENTS Senior Meal Program Through a

Community Bingo Food and refresh-

ments are sold. Community Bingo is fun time for any community member 18 years or older. Second Saturday of every month, 1pm. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. 541-312-2069.

Foot Clinic for Seniors Clinic is per-

of every month, 6:30pm. St. Charles Medical Center, 2500 NE Neff Rd. 541-604-0861. Free.

Communicators Plus Toastmasters

Citizens Climate Lobby Monthly Meeting Local chapter of national CCL

Cool Cars and Coffee All makes, models

organization working for federal policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Second Wednesday of every month, 4-6pm. Through June 8. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. 541-389-5400. Free.

City Club of Central Oregon It is a lunch discussion, but don’t expect this City Club forum to turn into a

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

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

Emotions Anonymous 12-step program.

(Use NW Kansas Ave. entrance) Thursdays, 10:30-11:30am. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 954-562-8487. Free.

Owners of all makes, models, and vintages of European cars are welcome to join our community of enthusiasts. The club’s Monthly Meets are held at Cascade Lakes Lodge on the second Sunday of every month. BendUbs car club members host an annual charity show’n shine, participate in car shows and sanctioned racing. Visit bendubs.com or like us www.Facebook.com/ bendubsCC for info on local events. Second Sunday of every month, 7-9pm. Cascade Lakes Lodge, 1441 SW Chandler Ave. Suite 100. 541-325-2114. Free.

Central Oregon Infertility Support Group Peer-led support group for women

(and occasionally couples) struggling with infertility. Meetings will be an open discussion format among peers. Second Tuesday

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

Socrates Cafe Group People from different backgrounds get together and exchange thoughtful ideas and experiences while embracing the Socratic Method. Open to all comers. Second Thursday of every month, 6-8pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-749-2010. Free.

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

Or 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 of every month, 6:30-9pm. Aspen Ridge Retirement, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd. Free.

ci s,

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 of every month, 11:30am. St. Charles Center for Health and Learning, 2500 NE Neff Rd. 541-633-7163. $20/$35.

6/ 9.

Al-Anon Family Groups 12-step group

BendUbs Car Club Monthly Meet

Overeaters Anonymous Meeting Mon-

Revelry & Resistance Fighting for change seems increasingly futile as the future looks grimmer and grimmer. And yet resistance is essential or there is no hope. June 12, 10:30-11:30am. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon, 61980 Skyline Ranch Rd. 541-385-3908. Free.

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

for friends and families of alcoholics. Check afginfo.org or call 541-728-3707 for times and locations. Ongoing.

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

the death of a child from any cause including, but not limited to: Infant/young child death, SIDS, stillbirth, and miscarriages. Second Wednesday of every month, 7-8:30pm. Through July 13. Partners in Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct.

submitted

Adelines’ Showcase Chorus Practice

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

Pregnancy & Infant Loss Support Group For mothers and fathers enduring

formed by registered nurses. If interested, please call 541-312-2069 to reserve a spot. Second Monday of every month, 12-1:30pm. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. $15.

MEETINGS

Disease. There will also be demonstrations and speakers from the surrounding areas. Second Sunday, 3:30-5pm. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. 541-330-0334. Free.

an Fr t. dS

Epilepsy Support Group Meet up

Ol ns mi a n Me t Mc Our group welcomes rics a The Resolect

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.

families and individuals struggling with a new epilepsy diagnosis or a life long experience with a seizure disorder. Every third Saturday, 4-5pm. Through May 20. St. Charles Heart & Lung Center Conference Room, 2500 NE Neff Rd. 503-360-6452. Free.

Italian Conversation Group Join our weekly informal Italian conversation group at Dudley’s. No textbooks, no homework, no instructor. 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.

Lyme Disease Group of Central Oregon The group is for anyone fighting Lyme

Women’s Cancer Support Group For the newly diagnosed and survivors of cancer. For information call: Judy, 541-728-0767. Candy, 907-209-8181. Thursdays, 1-3pm. Looking Glass Imports & Cafe, 150 NE Bend River Mall Dr. Suite 260. Free. SW

Disease or anyone supporting the ones they love fighting Lyme disease. A place to share stories and learn from others including Lyme-literate doctor recommendations, diet, lifestyle, and thriving in life with Lyme

I love my doc.

As a first time mom, I’ve had more than a few questions about keeping my son healthy. Dr. Booker is always there to give me answers and, more importantly, peace of mind.

Pediatrics for every kind of kid. Extended weekday and Saturday appointments available.

16BMC009 “Pediatrics” Bend Memorial Clinic

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contract with Central Oregon on Aging (COCOA) BCC hosta 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. Lunch served 11 am-noon. Mondays-Tuesdays-Wednesdays-Fridays, 10:30am-12:30pm. Bend’s Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St. 541-312-2069. $3 donation.

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT


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Presented by

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aA co sta "M ar ke tC olo rs”

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n ist r yC b k or w t Ar

June 18th – Sept 17th

Aug 13th

NorthWest Crossing Farmers Market presented by Cascade Sotheby's International

Aug 19th – Sept 9th (FRIDAYS)

(SATURDAYS)

Kids Crit & Day at the Market NorthWest Crossing Munch & Movies in Compass Park


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NorthWest Crossing

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www.NWXevents.com

NorthWest Crossing Farmers Market Presented by

JUNE 18TH – SEPT 17TH (SATURDAYS) 10am – 2pm

A weekly ritual for neighbors and the community at large to shop and interact with local farmers and artsans—and each other— the NorthWest Crossing ar Saturday Farmers Market presented by Cascade Sotheby's International has truly blossomed. Young and old, friends and families gather and enjoy the sights, smells and sounds of this charming neighborhood market each week throughout the summer. And now in its 8th year, the market promises to be the best one yet! Our market stage features talented local, regional and even internatonal entertainers, with sounds that vary each week. In additon there are musicians busking on the streets and sidewalks, including students Our family looks forward from String Theory to walking to the Farmers Music. Don’t miss Market every Saturday our rotaton of guest during the summertime. chefs serving up We find the best selection of tasty bites, as well as other food, wellness fresh organic food... not to and garden experts mention the most fabulous sharing new ideas and selection of flowers! informaton to our market guests. Our – Kelly Jamieson, NWX Resident popular Taste of the Season weekly recipe is back with 14 delicious new recipe ideas on how to use market bounty in new and unexpected ways. Each week a new recipe, using ingredients from market vendors will be featured on our website and Facebook page (be sure to LIKE us to stay in the know!), as well as at the market itself.

Kids’ Day at the Market SATURDAY, AUGUST 13TH 10am – 2pm Kids Crit, Face painting, activities and more!

Much of our market’s success is based on the enthusiastc and hard-working slate of farmers and vendors that serve up fresh produce, meats, cheeses, eggs, flowers, hand-crafted items and tasty food and drink each week. We’re also grateful to the dedicaton and year-round work of the C3 Events team for recruitng vendors and coordinatng the logistcs of the entre season. To our sponsors, partners, neighbors and businesses, thank you for your support of this wonderful event.

Munch & Movies

AUG 19TH – SEPT 9TH (FRIDAYS) 10am – 2pm AUG 19TH

SEPT 2ND

ZOOTOPIA

INSIDE OUT

AUG 26TH

SEPT 9TH

OF THE GALAXY

EPISODE VII

GUARDIANS STAR WARS

The NorthWest Crossing events could not be possible without help from the following partners, sponsors and supporters:


Shevl in

Park Rd.

NW Crossing Dr.

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Lemhi Pass

Compass Park

The NorthWest Crossing

SATURDAY FARMERS MARKET

. d R s ner i l y k S

MUNCH & MOVIES

N

WE ARE. BEND

www.CascadeSothebysRealty.com 541.383.7600

BEND

PORTLAND

CANNON BEACH

SISTERS

LAKE OSWEGO

MANZANITA

SUNRIVER

VANCOUVER

GEARHART EACH OFFICE IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED.

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M t. Washington Dr.

NorthWest Crossing Summer Guide 2015 / 3


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2016 NorthWest Crossing Saturday

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Presented by

SATURDAYS, JUNE 18TH – SEPT 17TH 10AM-2PM

FRUIT/VEGETABLE:

Four Acre Farm Good Earth Farm Hope Springs Dairy Juniper Jungle Farm Mahonia Gardens Marquam Hill Berries Radicle Roots Farm The Vegetable Man Produce Vicky's Farm Whiskey Hill Berry Garden

MEATS/SEAFOOD:

DD Ranch Home Farm Foods Precious Cargo Seafood Richie's English Style Sausages Vaquero Valley Ranch

PREPARED FOODS: ACME HOT DOG CO Jumbo Size Tamales Merrill Cellars Siamsmilechef service Sunny Yoga Kitchen

GOURMET FOODS & BEVERAGES:

adoboloco Bonta - Natural Artsan Gelato Bucha Buena kombucha Esotco Pasta Fearless Baking Fur Friends Doggie Bakery Holm Made Toffee Co. Hope Springs Dairy Humm Kombucha Justy's Jelly Manipura Kitchen Maragas Winery Merrill Cellars Navidis Olive Oil & Vinegars Oregon Spirit Distllers Rik's Rubs Southwest Salsa Co. Sweet Alchemy The Sparrow Bakery The Village Baker Thomas & Sons Distllery Venture Fermenters

ARTISANS/CRAFTS:

Americana Woodworks BlissPillow DK Designs Jewelry Geeky Chic Kids La Pette Savonnerie MaileKai Creatons Michael Miller Ceramics Pink Rakes Ceramic Studio Relic Workshop Rofe Designs scottisomwoodturnings.com Sew Savvy & 4 The Love of Crafts Sweet Mamas Goat Milk Soap & Loton T's Tonics TALLOW BALM Skin Care tumalo lavender Zantana Designs

NON-PROFITS:

Central Oregon Locavore HDFFA Oregon Natural Desert Associaton

If you would like to participate in the market please email farmersmarket@c3events.com to get started

Sprouts Camp Kids have their own zone at the market! Every week at the new Sprouts Camp kids can come together and work on a farm craft or game to learn more about farm life and food. Each week is something new and fresh, like everything else at the market!


NorthWest Crossing Summer Guide 2015 / 5

Farmer's Market Feta Bruschetta is a fresh, delicious appetzer that is always a hit. Serve with crostni or pita chips. Be sure to set a few scoops aside, because the bowl will be sure to come back empty no matter how high you fill it! Enjoy! Source: www.thecafesucrefarine.com

Farmer’s Market Feta Bruschetta INGREDIENTS Vegetarian, Gluten free Produce: 1 Bell pepper, medium 2 ears Corn, fresh 1 Lemon, fine zest from 1 cup Red onion 4 Scallions, medium 3 tbsp Thyme, fresh leaves 1 Zucchini, small Condiments: 3 tbsp Lemon juice Baking & Spices: 1 Black pepper, freshly ground 1/4 tsp Sea salt Oils & Vinegars: 4 tbsp Olive oil, extra virgin Dairy: 1 cup Feta INSTRUCTIONS • Wrap each ear of corn in plastc wrap and place in microwave on high power for 2 minutes. Remove and allow to cool slightly before unwrapping. Slice corn from cob. • Place corn, zucchini, pepper, green onions and lemon zest in a medium size bowl. Str to combine. • Drizzle with lemon juice and olive oil and sprinkle with sea salt. Str again. • Add Feta and thyme leaves, reserving 1 tablespoon of thyme for garnish. Str gently. Transfer to a serving bowl and sprinkle with reserved thyme and freshly ground black pepper. Serve with crostni (see below) or pita chips.

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TASTE OF THE SEASON


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SATURDAYS

10am-2pm at NorthWest Crossing Dr. & Fort Clatsop St.

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Fresh food and great music naturally just go together! This year, we’re excited to bring even more free, live, world-class music to your Saturday morning market traditon- right in NorthWest Crossing each week. As you stroll the local food producers, purveyors, and fine artsans, take a music tme-out and enjoy the sounds from the best of Bend’s local music scene, along with some regional and internatonal standouts. It’s unlike any other market in the Northwest! Steve Beaudry , who Thomas calls “ a World Class Harmonica player” who had exactly the tone and feel that fits so well with the Chicago and Texas style Blues the band loves. Joining most recently is drummer Jeff Ingraham, who has toured with and recorded several albums for Country music legend, Merle Haggard.

JUNE 18

Inka Jam

Inka Jam's music includes originals from the band members and some traditonal covers in a variety of styles with an Andean flare. We play Huaynos, Cumbia, Salsa, Boleros, Trova and Afro-Peruvian. Due to the novelty of certain rhythms we usually step out to teach the crowd some basic steps and then involve them in the dancing.

JUNE 25

Hot Club of Bend

JULY 16

Nomads

All experienced performers in various musical genres, members of Nomads organized originally to focus their shared passion for the music of the Middle East, Mediterranean and Balkans. They developed their cohesion playing for local belly dance groups and through regular rehearsals and jam sessions. “It’s a very simple idea, but also very rich,” says band leader Miguel de Alonso, known around Bend for his flamenco guitar performances. “We want to give you glimpses of other people, places and tmes through the music and the dance. We want to share with our neighbors the special aesthetcs of music from this part of the world, music that can be energetc, but also so elegant, sweet and soft.” The band’s performances feature many authentc instruments like: the violin, oud, rababa, bouzouki, guitar, baglama, clarinet, darbuka and drums.

The Hot Club of Bend features an internatonal lineup of musicians collaboratng in the traditon of Gypsy Jazz, Hot Swing, Bossanova, and Blues. Hailing from the heart of Cascadia, this group brings energy and innovaton to the stage with every performance.

JULY 2

Honey Don’t Quartet

Honey Don’t Quartet is the musical union of Bill Powers and Shelley Gray, perhaps better known as one-half of the Paonia, Colorado based old-tme bluegrass band, Sweet Sunny South. Their music may be delivered acoustc or electric and is based in the folk traditon with bluegrass and old-tme at its deepest roots.

SEPT 3 The Wavras

Marimba Band AUG 6

Popcorn

Popcorn plays acoustc covers you do, and don't want to hear. And just like Popcorn you'll want to hear more. Locals Joe Schulte, Jenny Wasson and Nicolas Miranda make up this tasty, buttery trio.

AUG 13

Third Seven

Local musician Billy Mickelson draws out the cello’s natural darkness and weaves it into a half-cello music, half-blak metal creaton. Hauntng and one-of-a-kind.

JULY 23

Bram Brata

Bram Brata’ – a performance steel drum band out of Richland, Washington – heads our way this July. The band consists of middle and high-school aged musicians playing a wide variety of songs on these remarkably versatle Caribbean instruments – bringing a touch of island attitude to all styles of music! Bram Brata’ has performed all over the Pacific Northwest, as well as in Hawaii and Canada, and Disneyland, drawing thousands of people into their “unexpected party”.

AUG 20

Ubuntu

UBUNTU is a 6 piece band that brings a groove-heavy, afro-roots rhythm sound whose music makes it difficult to not start dancing. While many of UBUNTU's songs are based in the mother rhythms of African drumming, several of the band's players bring a strong rock, funk, and psychedelic influence providing for a very unique and innovatve sound.

& the Blue Chips

This blues band started to come together after bassist and lead vocalist, Thomas T (Tsuneta) had left his traveling sales job and decided he wanted to form a real Blues band. “I had been in a cover band for 6 or 7 years with guitarist, Jeff Leslie and we both had added Blues songs we liked to the set list. When I asked if he could play Blues all night, he said “Sure”! They were quickly joined by

The Wavras are a family band consistng of Scot Wavra and his two young boys, Symon and Kaleb, along with close friend Tom Scott. The band plays marimba music originatng in southeast Africa. While all 4 members are Northwest natves, Both Scot and Tom have studied the music of Zimbabwe since the early 90s.

SEPT 10

B Side Brass Band

B Side Brass Band brings the New Orleans brass band traditon to the Pacific North West. Our mission is to get you moving and grooving, sweatng up the dance floor, and shaking your BackSide to the beat!

Wayward Soul

A 6-piece American Roots/Soul band built from strong roots in the gorgeous Central Oregon landscape they call home, Wayward Soul blends styles from Bluegrass and Country to Funk and RnB, weaving their music into the subtle tones of the world around them. This eclectc group of musicians each bring their own sense of style to the mix, creatng a sound that is truly their own.

JULY 30 Thomas T JULY 9

catalog. You're likely to hear your favorite, and no one's stopping you from dancing. Party on, Jojo.

AUG 27 Juju Eyeball

Juju eyeball-Bend Oregon has a Beatles cover band? They do now, luv. From She Loves You to She's So Heavy, JuJu Eyeball takes an excitng and exactng look at The Beatles

SEPT 17

Tom Scott Marimba

Long tme bend resident and musician, Tom Scott, is the music teacher at Bear Creek Elementary School. Having long studied the music of Zimbabwe, Mr. Scott has been teaching his elementary school students the art and culture of zimbabwean marimba, for years. His groups will include a mix of students and adult players, as the streets come alive with the sounds of Africa!


NorthWest Crossing Summer Guide 2015 / 7

Miguel de Alonso

COMMUNITY This year the informaton booth at the market expands to become the “Community Hub” which will house Central Oregon Locavore offering local food products for sale, a weekly spotlight area showcasing Master Gardeners and Master Local Chefs and the High Desert Food & Farm Alliance Grow and Give Donaton Staton. Every week there is something to learn, pick up and drop off at the Community Hub!

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Lino Gerardo Davila

Flamenco’s flare is only kept alive with the respect and truthful intentons of communicatng musically. Gerardo Dávila, is a guitarist that incorporates Jazz and classical roots learned from his adventurous travels.

Central Oregon Locavore Market Center Spotlight Central Oregon Locavore is a local, communitybased non-profit established in 2009, located near downtown Bend, serving both food producers and consumers throughout Central Oregon. Locavore operates a year-round indoor farmer’s marketplace which features freshly harvested produce, organic grass-fed meats, free-range eggs, local honey, locally made value added products such as salsa, sauces, and many environmentally-conscious products for sustainable living. In additon to the marketplace, Locavore also operates a number of programs including Farm Kids!,Willing Workers on Local Farms, Edible Adventure Crew, Small Farmer Support Program, and farm-to-table dinners such as Meet Your Farmer Dinner Series and Community Supper quarterly celebratons. These programs serve to connect and educate community members to the local foodscape of Central Oregon and provide a platform for support and celebraton. The High Desert Food and Farm Alliance (HDFFA) is dedicated to supportng a community based food system in Central Oregon. New this year to the market, HDFFA will collect fresh food donatons to help augment nonperishable food items in the pantry system. Currently, there is a push by the Oregon Food Bank to increase the number of fresh foods available at regional food banks and to partner pantries by 50% over the next five years. In Central Oregon, HDFFA is partnering with NeighborImpact, to help drive this change. Among their many programs, they operate the food distributon center for over thirty food pantries and shelves in the region. The collecton point at the NorthWest Crossing Saturday Farmers Market will also serve as a locaton for backyard gardeners to bring their extra garden vegetables. Please join us in supportng this very worthy endeavor for our community!

The NorthWest Crossing Builders’ Guild consists of a select group of experienced general contractors who understand the guidelines and procedures involved in designing and building quality homes in this one-ofa-kind neighborhood. Their common goal is reflected in the diverse, charming collection of homes that line the streets of NorthWest Crossing. B&C LLC Cloninger Custom Homes Greg Welch Construction Hackbarth Builders Heritage Homes NW Jim St. John Construction, LLC Leader Builders Meloling Construction Services Mike Knighten Construction Nordic Construction PD Construction Ridgeline Custom Homes, LLC

Rivers Northwest Enterprises, Inc. Robert Camel Contracting Sage Builders Salvesen Homes SolAire Homes, Inc. Stonebridge Homes Stucture Development NW SunWest Builders The Grout Company The W.H. Hull Company Tyee Development WoodCraft Building Inc.

Learn more at www.northwestcrossing.com

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

As you wander our NorthWest Crossing Saturday Farmers Market you will bump into the vibrance of our three resident busking performers. The first staton features Lino and his world guitar fusion blend, the second staton features Miguel De Alonso, and his authentc Latn flamenco sounds, and the third staton features youth musicians from Joe Schulte's String Theory class. The market is proud to support these young musicians! Please support all of our buskers by making donatons to them if you enjoy their market sounds

Miguel de Alonso plays instrumental Latn Jazz on Guitar and Violin. Utlizing the popular music style known as: “Nouveau Flamenco”. The music he plays is characterized by extensive use of Latn percussion, lively rumba flamenco rhythms, and his own brilliant soloing techniques.


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AT THE MARKET

August 13th August 13th is COPA Kids Day at the Farmers Market. The day kicks off with the return of the popular NorthWest Crossing Kids Crit, presented by Umpqua Bank at 10am. on is free and open to kids 11 and under, but prePartcipaton registraton on is required at the NorthWest Crossing Umpqua Bank store. The course is around the uniquely round Compass Park, located in the heart of NorthWest Crossing. Partcipants tcipants cipants are grouped by age and prizes will be awarded for the 1st, 2nd and 3rd place finishers in each category. Free ice cream from Umpqua Bank provides a very cool and yummy finish! After the races, head down the street to the market where to check out the petting zoo, pony rides, face paintng, ng, and many more kids actvites es to keep curious kids occupied. Stop by the Community Booth to get a Kids Day Scavenger Hunt form. Complete the hunt and return it to the Info Booth to receive a free prize!

Featuring: • Small Seating Area • Changing Table • Children’s Recipes

Rest and take care of your youngest at the market this year!

We’re each made to grow. How – and how far – is up to us. We're inspired by the potential within us all and delighted to help bring it to life.

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NorthWest Crossing Summer Guide 2015 / 9

Learn the top ten ways to get your kids to eat fruits and vegetables.

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The NorthWest Crossing

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MUNCH

&

MOVIES

FREE MOVIES IN COMPASS PARK AUGUST 19TH - SEPTEMBER 9TH (FRIDAYS) Compass Park, NorthWest Crossing Drive

AUG 19TH

Zootopia Rated PG

AUG 26TH

Guardians of the Galaxy

SEPT 2ND

Inside Out Rated PG

Rated PG-13

SEPT 9TH

Star Wars

Episode VII The Force Awakens Rated PG-13

With the waning of summer and the closing days of the Bend Memorial Clinic Munch & Music Free Movies in the Park Series, the NorthWest Crossing Munch & Movies Free Movies in the Park Series picks up with new family friendly festvites startng Friday nights in August. The event officially starts at 6:00pm with live performances by local musicians - with each night featuring a different musical guest who will double as the emcee for the evening. Movies will begin at dusk and there will be a brief intermission. There will be dinner food, dessert, and kettle korn available from one of many restaurants on site. Relax in the park, under the stars in front of a 60 foot outdoor movie screen featuring recent favorites and one to teach a new generaton about.

MUNCH FOOD VENDORS!

Be sure to come early to find a good parking spot, and bring a coat as the nights can get chilly. We also recommend you bring a blanket to sit on or a low-backed chair, so it does not block the view of others enjoying the film.

Dinner food, dessert, and kettle korn available from a variety of food vendors.


Central Oregon’s Best Events From Central Oregon’s Favorite Radio Stations

75 VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

PEAK SUMMER NIGHTS at Athletic Club of Bend

July 5 5 k.d. lang, Neko Case andCase Laura Veirs August 21 August 21 Trampled by Turtles and Lord Huron July k.d. lang and Neco Trampled by Turtles and Lord Huron September 13 Band September 13 Tedeschi Tedeschi Trucks Trucks Band

CROOK COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS August 13

DESCHUTES COUNTY FAIR

Nitty Gritty Dirt Band

August 3

Tracy Lawrence

✓ Bend Summer Festival ✓ Munch & Music Concert Series ✓ Bend Fall Festival

y m fm For Central Oregon Event information visit

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WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / June 9, 2016 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 76


KIDS EVENTS

Music, Movement & Stories Ages 3-5 yrs. Movement and stories to develop skills and fun with music. Tues, June 14, 9:30am. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. Thurs, June 16, 10:30am. Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. Free.

Nature Kids Join the Deschutes Land Trust and Stephanie Rohdy for Wednesday Nature Kids! Take advantage of early release Wednesdays and venture to your Land Trust Preserves for a seasonal nature hike just for kids ages 6-11. Kids will enjoy hands-on activities along with their essential dose of nature. June 15, 3-4:30pm. Camp Polk Meadow Preserve, outside Sisters. 541-330-0017. Free.

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Pajama Party Ages 0-5 yrs. Evening

storytime with songs, thymes, crafts and PJs. Tues, June 14, 6:30pm. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. Wed, June 8, 6:45pm. Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. Free.

PlayDance Playful creative dance for

young children with ballet, jazz, hip hop and imaginative dances for children ages 3-5. A fun time to make new dance friends. Thurs, June 16, 11-11:45am. Academie de Ballet Classique, 162 NW Greenwood Ave. 541-382-4055. $47.50 a month.

Razzle Jazz Dance Class Enjoy jazz

Summer Day Camps: Kayak Instruction Level 1/2 & 2/3, at Bend River Promenade 6/13.

Camp Tamarack Community Carnival A fun filled day in Drake Park

with face painting, archery, giant jenga, food vendors and more! 100% of the proceeds will go to scholarship funds for outdoor school for participating schools. June 11, 10am-2pm. Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd. 541-633-9847. $10 unlimited activity bracelet, individual tickets available.

Capoeira Kids Experience this exciting

martial art form of Brazilian culture which incorporates unique martial arts techniques, music, foreign language, acrobatics and fun for ages 5-12, all levels. There is a concurrent adult/teen class at the same location. Mondays, 5:206:50pm and Thursdays, 4:20-5:20pm. Get a Move On Studio, 63076 NE 18th St. Suite 140. 541-678-3460. $25, three week series.

Children’s Yoga: Movement & Music

Designed for children aged 4-8, this class is a playful way of introducing children to the miracles of movement, yoga and music. Mondays, 4-5pm. Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Dr. Suite 113. 541-322-9642. $10.

Discover Nature Day: Water & Wildlife Get outside and discover with your little explorers! Join us for 2twohours of science, art and play while learning about the natural world and exploring local parks. Free and recommended for ages 5-10. In partnership with the Upper Deschutes Watershed Council and The Environmental Center. June 11, 10amnoon. Sawyer Park, 62999 O.B. Riley Road. Free.

DIY Kids Kaleidoscope Register at DIYcave.com. Kids will create a hand made kaleidoscope using pieces of pipe, mirrors, and polished stones, and other sparkly items then decorate their creations with markers and stickers. All

materials supplied. Sun, June 12, 11am. DIYcave, 444 SE Ninth St. 541-388-2283. $38.

Free Flags for Kids at Sisters Farmers Market Bend Chapter DAR

will give out free flags to kids in honor of Flag Day. Each year on June 14 the United States celebrates Flag Day to commemorate the anniversary of the adoption of the U.S. flag in 1777. June 10, 3-6pm. Barclay Park, 199 Ash St., Sisters. Free.

Happy Learners Preschool Celebration Cake, coffee and stories cele-

brating Happy Learners Kindergarten/ Preschool’s thirty-six years of continuous service will take place. The school began in 1979 and will close at the end of this school year. It was begun, staffed and housed continuously at First Presbyterian Bend. The festivities will include recognition of long time teacher Karen Sipes. June 12, 11am-1pm. First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St. 541-3824401. 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! Mondays, 4-5pm. Bonta Natural Artisan Gelato, 920 NW Bond St. Suite 108. Free. LEGO Family Block Party All ages.

Read! Build! Play! Join other builders and a gazillion LEGO pieces. Sat, June 11, 10am-noon. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Free.

Live-Action Video Games Play

live-action versions of your favorite video games. June 11, 2:30-3:30pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. Free.

technique using ballet as the foundation, to stretch, strengthen, and inspire you. Floor, center work, and dance exercises with a variety of music each week. Choreography will be taught each week as well. Opportunity to perform in Mary Poppins, June 2016. Thursdays, 6:307:30pm. Through June 10. Academie de Ballet Classique, 162 NW Greenwood Ave. 541-382-4055. $52 month.

Rockie Tales Puppet Show Ages 3-5. Children learn about the world through puppets and stories. June 15, 1pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. Free. Saturday Stories Interactive storytime with songs, rhymes and crafts. Saturdays, 9:30am. Through July 30. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. Free. Summer Day Camps: Kayak Instruction Three days of kayak instruc-

tion for beginners. This is a fun camp where kids will be given instruction on basic river running technique including getting comfortable in the water as well as in a kayak. There will be light splashes and tons of laughs on this one. Mon, June 13, 2-5:30pm. Bend River Promenade, 3188 N Highway 97. 541-241-6263. $250.

Summer Day Camps: Kayak Instruction Level 2/3 This three day

course is designed to bring a safe and fun environment to children while they build on skills learned from the level 1/2 course. There will be slightly bigger splashes, bigger rapids with all the laughs of level 1/2. Mon, June 13, 9:30am2pm. Bend River Promenade, 3188 N Highway 97. 541-241-6263. $250.

Tween Yoga This class for 10-12 year olds, will introduce the basics of yoga to help build strength and flexibility. Flowing sequences and physically challenging postures can help increase self-confidence, balance, and compassion. Breathing exercises can increase mental awareness and focus which can help with school work and challenging everyday situations. Some partner and group work will be included. Wednesdays, 4-5:15pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. $5-$6. SW

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WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / June 9, 2016 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 28


C

CULTURE The Light in the Dark CTC performs a black comedy

ART WATCH By Annette Benedetti

By Jared Rasic 29

The 20Time Project: Summit High Students Get Creative and Make a Difference Erin Carrol spends her weekdays teaching a standard English lit class to high school seniors attending Summit High in Bend. “These aren’t necessarily 4.0 students, but that doesn’t mean they are less than exceptional,” she says. To prove her point she implemented a yearlong classroom assignment called The 20Time Project. The results were convincing.

The cast of "Black Comedy" is blinded by the light. Photos by Makenzie Whittle Photography.

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uilding a play on a central gimmick can either work wonders or completely derail a show. “Black Comedy” has a gimmick that has to be bought into or everything else will fall apart. It’s a gutsy proposition and “Black Comedy” pulls it off with aplomb.

stumbles in, Carol’s angry father arrives and Miller’s not-so-quite-ex girlfriend decides to drop by. These characters, combined with a German electrician and the Godot-like art collector, make for a play filled with colorful characters that are a joy to watch.

Brindsley Miller is a young sculptor who, along with his fiancee Carol, have “borrowed” some antiques from his neighbor’s flat to spruce up his dilapidated apartment. They have done this for two reasons: 1) Carol’s strict military father is coming over to meet Miller for the first time and 2) a very rich collector is coming over to possibly purchase some of Miller’s artwork. Alas, there is a problem! A fuse in the cellar bursts and causes a blackout through the entire building.

Although everyone acquits themselves nicely, Kelley Ryan steals the show as Carol with a perfectly calibrated performance as a slightly ditzy debutante with a flair for the dramatic. Will Futterman once again brings his consistently excellent deadpan to the role of Harold, the mildly robbed neighbor. Watching Harold slowly become more upset and embroiled in a losing situation is a blast to behold.

Here is where the gimmick kicks in. The entire play is built around a reverse lighting scheme. So, when the play begins and everyone has power, the stage is in complete darkness. When the fuse blows only a few short minutes into the production, the lights come up and the audience is able to see all the shenanigans afoot. During the blackout, Miller’s neighbor (of the aforementioned borrowed antiques) comes home early, a teetotaling spinster with a fear of the dark

Once Harold arrives, Miller realizes he must use the blackout to his advantage and take the borrowed antiques back to Harold’s apartment. Josh Carrell as Miller nails the physical comedy in the breakout scene of the show. All the characters are stumbling across the bright stage as if they are in the dark, while Carrell crawls, ducks, dives and dodges his way around, carting one set piece off at a time in almost perfect silence. It’s a barn burner of a scene that’s worth the price of admission alone. Director Ron McCracken gave the actors an exercise during the rehearsal

process that paid off immensely. He had everyone do the show as they would normally, but with blindfolds on. This allowed the actors to slow their movements and preserve the illusion that everyone on stage is wandering in the dark. It’s such a slight thing to notice, but the actors do truly act and use their eyes like sighted people in a dark room, not like actual blind people. It helps sell the gimmick right away. “Black Comedy” was first performed in 1965, so some of the gender roles and behavior is most definitely dated, but never with a detrimental effect. The script smartly challenges binary stereotypes and actually seems downright progressive by the curtain. The play exists simply as a joke delivery machine balanced with broad physical comedy and farcical flair. Simply, it’s a fun night of theater designed to put a smile on the face and some lightness in the heart. At that, it succeeds admirably. SW

"Black Comedy" Friday, June 10 to Saturday, June 25 7:30 p.m., matinees 2 p.m. Cascades Theatrical Company, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend $16-$23

Created by a teacher in Southern California, the 20Time Project is based off of the 80/20 Google work model credited with the development of Gmail and AdSense. This approach allowed employees to dedicate 20 percent of their workweek to creative projects designed to make the company better. In the classroom, the idea looks similar but with a slightly different purpose: improving the community. Every Friday Carrol’s students were instructed to use the class period to do something that would have a positive impact. With minimal guidance, students had to tap into their passion and creativity and learn new life-skills that would allow them to make a difference. What they managed to accomplish surprised everyone. Chara Gardemann created “Sew Many Dresses,” which involved both a fundraiser and sewing day designed to provide pillowcase dresses to girls in Africa. She raised $550 and sent 110 dresses. Troy Viola, Jeffrey Brundage, Aiden Ullman and Connor Olsen teamed up to raise funds to help deliver warm clothes to the homeless. They created a video for their final presentation that went viral and inspired others. (www.bit.ly/1U5ZnR9) Fans of the Humans of New York Facebook Page, Cary Percich, Miranda Harris Hamlin, and Kelsey Macy created a Humans of Bend website designed to give a face to the people of Bend and tell their stories. (humansofbend.wordpress.com) Carol wants her students to know that life isn’t dictated by what is on your high school transcript. “Even if you receive a 'C' your junior year, you can still change the world,” she explains. Her students did just that one act at a time—and in this way her 20Time experiment was an undeniable success. SW

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Troy Viola, Jeffrey Brundage and Connor Olsen delivering warm clothes to the homeless.


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CULTURE Growing Wild

Wildflower show highlights native floral diversity By Russ Axon

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Now is the time to get out into nature for prime time viewing of wildflowers. Photos by Annelie Kahn.

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ikers hitting the trails this summer can expect to see tons of beautiful scenery, especially when it comes to wildflowers. Central Oregon is full of them—blue ones, pink ones, tall ones, short ones—full of them. However, describing these flowers beyond simple color and size adjectives can be intimidating. “The problem that people often come across is they will go on a hike and they’ll see this amazing flower, but they won’t know what kind it is,” said Olivia Wallace, a naturalist at Sunriver Nature

end admission is $6 for adults and $4 for kids, and covers all the events. Central Oregon’s unique environment helps thousands of native flowers and plants to thrive each year, and the Nature Center’s Wildflower Show highlights hundreds of these botanical wonders, Wallace said. “Many of the flowers are brought in just for this event,” she said. “We have volunteers that will go out and just take a small trimming off of the plant, and it will get brought in and put into a vase. A lot of these wildflowers are blooming

“There are so many different species that it really takes an expert to identify them.” - Olivia Wallace, Naturalist

Center. “There are so many different species that it really takes an expert to identify them.” Hikers, budding botanists and everyone in between are in luck, though, because the Nature Center will host the 2016 Central Oregon Wildflower Show this weekend. This annual event will showcase wildflowers native to the region, and experts will be on hand to educate visitors about the unique properties of each flower. Additionally, the show will have flowers available for purchase and guest lectures at SHARC (Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center). The two-day show runs from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, June 11, and closes one hour earlier on Sunday, June 12. Week-

right now, so it’s the only good time to see them.” The best way to view and learn about these flowers will be during the hourlong wildflower hikes. These guided walks through the Nature Center’s botanical gardens allow visitors to get a close-up view of these native plants. The walks are scheduled for 10 and 11 a.m., and 1 and 2 p.m. on both days. While the view will definitely be worth talking about, the show plans to jumpstart discussions with four lectures. Presented by local experts, these lectures will focus on how Central Oregon’s wildflowers affect the environment and wildlife. Scheduled topics include how butterflies and honeybees rely on the native wildflowers to survive, how

to incorporate the native plants into landscaping projects, and a visual tour of some of Central Oregon’s best wildflower locations. The 45-minute lectures will be held on Saturday only. Visitors can check them out at SHARC starting at 9 a.m. Visitors can apply their new wildflower knowledge by purchasing wildflowers at the show. The nature center will sell native plants and seeds from its nursery, allowing amateur botanists to continue their wildflower education. “We have little cards that come with the plants that explain why they’re beneficial, which a lot of them are beneficial to butterflies and native bees, which is extremely important for Central Oregon,” Wallace said. Lastly, volunteers can assist in cleaning up the botanical gardens on Sunday from 9 to 11 a.m. Few places in the United States can boast the floral diversity of Central Oregon, and this event allows locals to learn much more about the one-of-a-kind nature surrounding them. With so much to see and learn, the Central Oregon Wildflower Show is a great chance to get out and smell more than just the roses. SW The Sunriver Nature Center 57245 River Rd., Sunriver www.sunrivernaturecenter.org 541-593-4394

SHARC 57250 Overlook Rd., Sunriver www.sunriversharc.com 541-585-5000


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CHOW

Crossings Becomes Currents The restaurant at the Riverhouse on the Deschutes has rebranded and remodeled By Angela Moore

Firkin Friday A different firkin each

week. $3 firkin pints until it’s gone. Fridays, 4pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr. 541-639-4776.

Hop Yard Prep & Design Visit Smith Rock Hop Farm with Worthy Garden Club to learn about the farm’s conception, design, installation and maintenance. Bring your boots, gloves, and pruners for this one! Children are welcome, but must be kept under close supervision. June 8, 6-7pm. Smith Rock Hop Farm, 2940 NE Smith Rock Way. June Happy Hour in the Garden

This ongoing volunteer series is open to anyone who wants to dig in the garden and help out with various garden tasks and projects. Come enjoy a drink as we work in the garden! June is sponsored by Boneyard Beer and Brew Dr. Kombucha. Tuesdays, 4-6pm. Through June 28. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. 541-3856908. Free.

Oregon Cider Week Celebrate this ode to an ever-more-popular handcrafted beverage, which we’ve been crafting since 1992. Edgefield hard cider will be on tap for $5.50 at all Oregon locations, so raise a pint, get the Passport stamp, and cheers! June 16-26. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. $5.50 pint.

The bar, as well as the general seating area, is a great place to enjoy the smoked salmon eggs benedict or a pear and brie sandwich. Photos by Angela Moore.

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he Riverhouse on the Deschutes is famous for its prime location on the Deschutes River. The setting is close to but still removed from downtown and situated next to a bubbling part of the Deschutes River. The former restaurant, Crossings, had a beautiful deck but repeatedly struggled to rebrand itself. After a great deal of effort and cost, Currents has finally reopened its much-improved doors and dishes to the public. Where Crossings had served a great steak and a lot of homecoming and prom couples, Currents is shooting for a much higher mark. With the changing dining habits of Central Oregonians and ever-changing culinary landscape, reinvention has been a long time coming. Jeff Stokholm, director of food and beverage at the hotel, is the one responsible for making the new Currents’ vision a reality. Stokholm has been with the company since the beginning of the year and was able to witness the before, as well as be a significant part of the after. “The concept of the new restaurant was driven by the overall rebranding and renovation of the property,” says Stokholm. With the new rebranding, Currents has become

something really special. “The previous restaurant was a steakhouse…Currents is seasonally focused, serving the cuisine of the Pacific Northwest and is based on local flavors and ingredients,” says Stokholm. Head Chef Mark D. Hosack echoes the diplomatic responses of Stokholm in terms of why staying local and fresh is now a standard of Currents. “Fresh means it is easier to bring a bright, colorful plate presentation to our guests…we have some of the best well-rounded producers anywhere. Why not showcase their talents,” says Hosack. The Currents’ menu certainly does reflect quality produce and just some genuinely delicious dishes. The restaurant offers a little bit of everything on each of its breakfast, brunch, lunch, and dinner menu. One of the more memorable dishes we tried was the smoked salmon eggs Benedict served with home-fried potatoes. A fresh medley of veggies sat atop a Big Ed’s English muffin with smoked salmon that can be, and was, fought over with a dining partner. The poached eggs and hollandaise sauce were a buttery-soft blanket. If lunch is calling, then surely the answer is the pear and brie sand-

wich. The pears are soaked in a tart pomegranate juice that contrasts nicely with the sweetness of the pears. Melted brie cheese covers thick slices of apple-wood smoked bacon and all of this is between two hearty pieces of local soda bread. Dear Diary, seconds please. Dinner, brunch and an impressive drink list are also available. It is nice to report that the dishes were as equally well plated as they were well prepared. Don’t let the past inform your decision regarding Currents. “We want our guests to feel welcome, and like they are truly at home here. Whether they are having breakfast, dinner with friends, a light bite outside…the goal is to give them an experience that is memorable and inspires them to return again and again,” says Stokholm. The hard work and thoughtful design is noticeable, and honestly, it’s worth giving it a fresh shot. SW Currents at the Riverhouse 3075 N Hwy 97, Bend 541-389-8810 www.currentsbend.com Breakfast: Monday to Friday, 6 to 11 a.m., Saturday to Sunday, 7 to 11 a.m. Lunch: Everyday, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Dinner Everyday, 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.

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. Rowdy McCarran Band & Bull Riding Last chance to party with

Rowdy McCarran and the band. Final night to ride the bull and win a free rodeo shirt! Don’t miss the only Coors and Crown Royal-sponsored official after-rodeo party in Sisters! June 11, 10pm-1:30am. Rowdy and the band are back for the Friday night after-rodeo party in the huge tent! Ride the bull and win a free rodeo party t-shirt! $3 16oz. drafts and outdoor beer garden. June 10, 10pm-1:30am. Hardtails Bar & Grill, 175 Larch St., Sisters.

Summer Beer Garden Local brew-

eries and ciders on hand, live music by a local band each night and BBQ food. All invited to join the fun! Thurs, June 16, 5-8pm. C.E. Lovejoy’s Brookswood Market, 19530 Amber Meadow Dr. 541-388-1188. Music is free, charge for drinks and food.

Food, Wine & Beer Tastings Tasty treats, delectable wines and yummy beer. Join us for an afternoon tasting. Try something new, or enjoy a classic fave. Fridays-Saturdays, 3:30-5:30pm. Through Dec. 31. Newport Avenue Market, 1121 NW Newport Avenue. 541382-3940. Free. Wildland Session Ale Release Party We are releasing beer No. 2 in

the Sustainable Session Series and it’s called Wildland Session Ale. We teamed up with the Deschutes Collaborative Forest Project to brew this 4.5% session ale with Citra and Cascade hops. Come join us and try our newest beer! June 10, 5-8pm. GoodLife Brewing, 70 SW Century Dr. SW

33 VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

FOOD & DRINK EVENTS

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Adult Night Adult night at Peak Airsoft! An awesome evening of fun! 21+, BYOB with some refreshments and snacks provided. We have a lobby for libations and an upstairs viewing area. June 9, 6-9pm. Peak Airsoft, 921 SE Armour Rd. 541-389-5640. $25+.


lotsa Breweries • tastings 2-7pm

20% off 6-packs of craft beer cans

34 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / June 9, 2016 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

(when you buy four or more 6-packs)

BUSINESS AFTER HOURS at 2nd Street Theater June 22 | 4:30 - 6:00 PM 220 NE Lafayette Ave FREE to attend / RSVP at BendChamber.org 1121 NW Newport Avenue • Bend, OR 541.382.3940 • www.newportavemarket.com


MICRO A Brewer’s Journey

LOCAL MEATS AND ORGANIC PRODUCE

AWESOME PEACHES

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SELF-SERVICE DELI, SOUPS, SANDWICHES

Wolves & People the culmination of a beer career

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FRESH BREADS, SOUPS, AND SANDWICHES DAILY STORE HOURS M-F 10-6 SAT 9-5

64678 Cook Avenue, Tumalo • 541.389.2968

Beer writer has created his own farmhouse brewery. Photos by Kevin Gifford.

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hristian DeBenedetti wrote the book on beer travel. A joy to read, The Great American Ale Trail, originally published in 2011, just came out in a new and massively expanded edition. DeBenedetti’s engaging reviews of over 500 breweries, spanning all 50 states, are enough to inspire a spontaneous sudsy road trip. And now he’s got his own brewery—Wolves & People Farmhouse Brewery in Newberg, about 25 miles southwest of Portland. Road trip, anyone? “I started dreaming about this brewery,” DeBenedetti writes in his book, “during my freshman year of college at Whitman, in Walla Walla, oh-so-many years ago. A good friend who lived across the hall taught me to brew. One crisp, hoppy taste of Abe’s Ale told me he knew what he was talking about. And with a single stir of my own kettle, I was hooked.” Wolves & People, located adjacent to a hazelnut field at the farm where DeBenedetti grew up, has been a long time in the making. Renovating the farmhouse

so it could function as a brewery took over a year and required the aid of Jordan Keeper—once the brew master at Jester King Brewery in Austin, Texas, an accomplished farmhouse brewery in the Lone Star state. It’s now open to the public on Saturday afternoons, welcoming visitors to check out the seven-barrel system purchased from nearby Heater Allen Brewing, while taking in the scent of the oak barrels lying in every nook and cranny. Both the water and the yeast come from the farm, and it is that purity that really makes a difference in the beer DeBenedetti produces. A self-professed “lover of saisons and wild ales as long as I have been legally allowed to drink,” DeBenedetti already produces some amazing ales, from the Instinctive Travels dryhopped saison to Tractor Pull, a strong dark ale with flavors of cinnamon and graham crackers. Just like Agrarian Ales outside of Eugene, it’s exactly the kind of brewery worth traveling to—a lovely country retreat where the walls tell just as many stories as the ale. SW

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VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

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SCREEN

Superhero Fatigue The X-Men fail to thrill By Jared Rasic 37 VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Best Venue for live music, dancing, food and libations

Live Music 5 Days a Week Thu 6/9

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The actors try, but ultimately fail to liven things up in "X-Men: Apocalypse."

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he last thing the X-Men franchise needed was another origin story. The series, which started with 2000’s “X-Men,” has circled around so many times it almost plays like an SNL sketch mocking superhero films. While “X-Men,” “X-2” and “X-Men-The Last Stand” introduced a large majority of the mutant team, “First Class” and “Days of Future Past” gave us either alternate or younger versions of already well known characters. Now with “Apocalypse,” we get the backstories of Cyclops, Jean Gray, Nightcrawler, Storm, Angel and others, without bothering to tell an interesting story of its own. In ancient Egypt, the first mutant, En Sabah Nur, rules with an iron fist until he is betrayed by his followers. Due to some flashing lights and chanting, he is entombed alive and preserved until he awakens in 1983. He hooks up with the weather goddess Storm, watches some TV and decides he needs to cleanse the Earth of humanity and rebuild a better

civilization. Nur is never even called Apocalypse in the film, but that’s par for the course. “X-Men: Apocalypse” assumes its audience already knows the characters or at least remembers their iconic imagery from the comics. The film fails to deliver an exciting X-Men story that comic fans will enjoy and completely ignores anyone stepping into the franchise without previous knowledge of the other films. Its target demographic appears to be no one. The special effects range from mildly entertaining to SyFy Channel-level terrible with only a brief scene involving Quicksilver and the last 10 minutes being remotely entertaining. The rest of the film is a boring slog surrounded by mopey whiney characters the script has given the audience no reason to care for. What is left is almost 150 minutes of bland exposition, groan-inducing dialogue and lifeless pacing.

8:30 to 12

If it weren’t for this review assignment, I would have walked out by the halfway point. I guarantee you haven’t seen a superhero movie this boring and inert. The characters themselves are still fun and well developed, but it is time for new blood in the director’s chair. Being Bryan Singer’s fourth “X-Men” film, he should have it down to a science instead of churning out garbage. If someone with real vision is brought into the franchise like an Edgar Wright, Spike Jonze or David Cronenberg, the series could be saved. As it stands, there is no life here, just an expensive movie filled with stupidity, laziness and an existing intellectual property. Avoid the theater and head to the comic store instead. SW “X-Men: Apocalypse” Dir. Bryan Singer Grade: D Now playing at Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

Sat 6/11

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Tue 6/14

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Conscious Uncoupling

"The Lobster" is a singular sensation By Jared Rasic

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he Lobster” is a romantic science fiction/black comedy about coupling, loneliness and the possibility of getting changed from a human into an animal. Singularly strange, sad and hopeful, there has never really been anything like this movie and probably never will be again. Colin Farrell plays David, a doughy, depressed man whose wife has just left him. He leaves The City and heads to The Hotel, where he has 45 days to be partnered up with someone new or else he must become an animal (of his choice) for the rest of his life. In the woods surrounding The Hotel are The Loners: people who were unable to be matched in 45 days, but escaped The Hotel before being transformed into an animal. Each day, the singles from The Hotel are sent into the woods with tranquilizer guns to hunt The Loners. For each one they catch, they have one day added to their stay. This premise is not going to be for everyone (as evidenced by the two women sitting in front of me, complaining the entire time about how “weird” everything was). Sadly, if the film is completely dismissed because of how outlandish the premise is, a very potent and powerful story brimming with universal truths will also be discarded. The point of truly exceptional science fiction or speculative fiction is to put modern ideas about life, philosophy and truth into a bizarre locale to see if those truths still hold steady. Think “Blade Runner” which is bursting with singular imagery and style, but it’s all in service to a story focused on lonely and isolated “people” wondering what it is to be human. “The Lobster” is a bitingly satirical look at a society obsessed with coupling off and the sad and lonely nature of being single. The amount of hell these

characters put themselves through in order to find a mate is staggering, with one character going so far as to bash himself in the face daily in order to pair with a pretty woman who has regular nosebleeds. In this world, people are only compatible if they share a trait like nosebleeds, near-sightedness or a defining limp. To love here is to sacrifice all individuality for harmonious coupledom. Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos has a few other bizarre films under his belt with “Dogtooth” and “Alps,” but “The Lobster” is his English language debut. The film doesn’t just feel like it comes from a foreign viewpoint, but an alien world. Where “Dogtooth” focused on the importance of trust and the malleability of language, “The Lobster” is a Kafka-esque deep sea dive into the narrative that gets us out of bed in the morning. Farrell put on some weight, added a nerdy haircut and glasses and captures the loneliness of a man who just wants to be loved, not for who he is, but for the things he has in common. The humor is so dry and his performance so deadpan that it might be one of the finest comedic performances of the year. Every frame of the film is lovingly constructed with a flawless eye. The thematic layering is so dense as to beg the viewer for multiple chances to unfold its secrets. “The Lobster” isn’t necessarily an easy film to watch, but it is ultimately a rewarding one filled with sharp jabs at Tinder culture, the art of co-dependence and the virtuousness of being alone. SW "The Lobster" Dir. Yorgos Lanthimos Grade: A Now playing at Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX


"Me Before You"

FILM SHORTS By Jared Rasic

For fans of the original, this one is even better. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

from Johnny Depp, whose Mad Hatter gave children weird dreams for months. This sequel finds Alice having spent the intervening years as a sailor. When she finds out there is something deeply wrong in Wonderland, she heads back to find things are much worse than she ever could have imagined. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

THE NICE GUYS: The pedigree here is phenomenal! Russell Crowe and Ryan Gosling in a buddy comedy/action flick written and directed by Shane Black, the mind behind “Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang,” “Lethal Weapon” and “The Long Kiss Goodnight?!?!” Shut up and take my money, Regal. The story follows a pair of private dicks as they get caught up in 1970s Los Angeles. Picture “The Big Lebowski” meets “Chinatown.” Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE: There have been many video game movies in the past, but never one pulled from something with so little of a story. This follows three angry birds as they investigate the arrival of pigs to their little island. Advanced reviews are pretty dire, but the voice cast has ringers including Jason Sudeikis, Bill Hader, Maya Rudolph, Danny McBride and Peter Dinklage, so there might be enough here to be entertaining. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR: The highly anticipated throw-down has finally arrived with Team Iron Man vs. Team Cap fighting over a huge disagreement involving The Avengers and the destruction they have wrought. This film also introduces a new Spider-Man (a wonderful Tom Holland) and the Black Panther (a solid Chadwick Boseman) without feeling overstuffed like “Spider-Man 3” or “Batman v Superman.” “Civil War” is a fantastically entertaining night at the movies. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

EVERYBODY WANTS SOME: The new

ME BEFORE YOU: Apparently they’re offering tissues at the box office for this one, but that might be an urban legend. A young woman starts taking care of a paralyzed, handsome young man whose recent accident has left him depressed and angry. Their relationship blossoms and probably ends terribly because don’t they all? An excellent cast should hopefully elevate this to something above its maudlin premise. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX. MILES AHEAD: Don Cheadle’s writing/ directorial debut! He plays the legendary Miles Davis in a film that covers his good times and his bad ones. The trailers make the film look darkly humorous and powerful with an intense and focused performance from Cheadle. Most biopics tread fairly lightly when it comes to their subjects, but “Miles Ahead” appears to show a very ugly side of Davis as well as his gentler side. Tin Pan Theater

film from the director of “Dazed and Confused” moves past the 1970s and takes on the 1980s. Featuring great music, ridiculous wardrobes and a fun premise, “Everybody Wants Some” is a solid look at American culture and very much worth audiences’ time and money. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX.

RACE: A new biopic about athlete Jesse Owens and his experiences at the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin. With director Stephen Hopkins (“Predator 2” and “Blown Away”), it will be visually sumptuous, as well. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

THE LOBSTER: The film takes place in a society where people are legally bound to be part of a couple. If a relationship ends, then the lone person is sent to a hotel where all the other singles are gathered. They have 45 days to find a new mate or else they are turned into an animal of their choice, which they must remain as for the rest of their life. It’s a weird, wonderful, dry comedy/sci-fi mashup for fans of “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” and other bizarre romantic films. See full review, p 38. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS: It must be sum-

MONEY MONSTER: George Clooney and Julia Roberts star in this 90s-esque thriller about the host of a money advice show taken hostage live on television. There is sure to be lots of commentary on the fake TV “experts” and the real definition of criminality, so audiences should strap in for some on-thenose sermonizing. The trailer is decent (if overplayed), but advanced reviews are less than kind. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING: The sequel to 2014’s surprise hit, “Neighbors,” sees the premise staying the same while inverting the genders. Seth Rogan and Rose Byrne return as the owners of the worst located house in history. Instead of dealing with a loud and obnoxious fraternity house, they now must deal with a loud and obnoxious sorority. This time, Zac Efron teams up with the homeowners to teach the sorority a lesson in manners.

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS: Another bit of nightmare fuel

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Gigabit Speed Will BLOW Your Hair Back…

*

mer because here we have two weeks in a row bringing us unwanted sequels to movies that weren’t very good. This time we have Leonardo, Donatello, Raphael and Michelangelo teaming up with April O’Neil and Casey Jones to fight...Tyler Perry? The reviews say this one is leaps and bounds better than the last, but that just sounds like damning with faint praise. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX.

X-MEN: APOCALYPSE: Although it does feel like we just had an X-Men movie, "Apocalypse" boasts several fan favorite characters returning to the franchise and a possible end to the arc of the last two films. With Jennifer Lawrence possibly leaving the franchise after this one, expect an epic and exciting adventure with everyone's favorite blue mutant. Oscar Isaac plays the ancient evil mutant Apocalypse who brings forth his four horsemen to make many pretty explosions and special effects. All snark aside, this one looks like a fun time at the movies. See full review, p 37. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX ZOOTOPIA: One of the best animated films in years with a genuinely important message. Zootopia is a place where all animals live together side by side, predators and prey, but when some bad stuff goes down, an unlikely duo teams up to find out what happened. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX SW

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The stakes are high and the winner takes all in the Best of Central Oregon reader’s choice awards. Source readers will do the voting for their favorite businesses and determine who has the winning hand in the Ballot Issue. Bet on the Ballot Issue for a great read and up the ante when you advertise in this one of a kind publication.

Advertising Deadline: June 24 Advertise@bendsource.com / 541.383.0800 / bendsource.com


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OUTSIDE

The Other End of The Deschutes

GO HERE By Brittany Manwill

Head North for early season hiking By Brittany Manwill

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Oregon Senior Games Athletes ages 50 and older can enter, but all ages are welcome to watch and enjoy this entertaining and fun competition. There are 16 different sporting events taking place from Thursday, June 9 through Sunday, June 12. Athlete entrance fees vary based on event, but spectating is free. Visit www.oregonseniorgames.com or call 541-382-8048 for more information.

Women’s Kayaking Weekend Clockwise from lower right, the old Oregon Trunk Railroad line runs alongside the upper Deschutes River. Trout Creek Bluffs rise above the Deschutes River. A view of the river, as seen from Trout Creek's rails to trails conversion. Photos by Brittany Manwill.

W

ith the Deschutes River running straight through town and the Cascades just beyond, it’s no secret that Central Oregon is an outdoor lover’s paradise. The Cascade Lakes Highway and Three Sisters Wilderness are just a few miles away, providing easily accessible world-class skiing in winter and top-notch hiking in summer. But as with most things, getting spoiled just makes people a little whiny when things don’t go their way. Sorry to be the bearer of bad news, friends, but demanding a big snow year and an early hiking season isn’t realistic. We can’t have it both ways, but each year we’re eagerly optimistic enough to assume we can. With the unofficial beginning to hiking season already upon us, the recreation areas will soon be buzzing with activity (and mosquitoes). Snowmelt thinned quickly last year, but this year will be a few weeks behind schedule. Gung-ho hikers may be disappointed when they find that their favorite trailheads are still inaccessible due to deep snowdrifts. Even with recent high temps eating away at the snowpack, it’s wise to wait a few weeks before heading out into the higher elevations to allow trail maintenance crews time to clear out fallen trees from winter storms. If you’ve never explored outside the stunning Cascade Lakes Highway area, this is a great time to do

so. Rather than fight Mother Nature (you’ll always lose), walk in stride with her by visiting areas that are ready now.

Road (1.4 miles), right on Peninsula Drive (3.1 miles), left on Meadow Drive (0.5 miles), and right on Scout Camp Trail Road (0.2 miles).

From Bend, head to the northern stretches of the Deschutes River and you’ll find that trails are already snowfree with little to no blowdown. As a bonus, they’re also less buggy than the alpine zones and are blooming with wildflowers. Try these two less-visited trails for prime early season hiking.

Oregon Trunk Railroad

Scout Camp Trail While this route may be unfamiliar to you, the destination probably isn’t. This 2.3-mile trail is relatively new and travels down into a canyon to the confluence of the Deschutes and Whychus Rivers—a scene most often taken in from the opposite side of the river at the end of the Alder Springs trail. Just 0.4 miles into your hike, turn left to begin a steep 700-foot descent into the canyon. A bit after the trail turns back uphill, you’ll have to scurry over a fun little rock ledge to continue. Just a tad farther and you’ll see the view you came for – layered canyon walls above the two rushing rivers as they converge. Turn left at the junction to close the loop and retrace the last 0.4 miles. Directions From Terrebonne, turn left onto Lower Bridge Road (2 miles), right onto 43rd Street (1.7 miles), left on Chinook Drive (2.4 miles), left on Mustang Road (1.1 miles), right on Shad

For a pick-your-own-adventure kind of day, take a long drive to the Trout Creek Recreation area and the old Oregon Trunk Railroad. Back in the early 1900s, two competing railways battled it out to build the first route in this area. The Oregon Trunk Railway’s loss is our gain. As you would expect from an old railsto-trails conversion, this path is long, straight, and flat. From the trailhead, walk as far as seven miles one way right alongside this wild and scenic chunk of the Deschutes River. Bring binoculars to eye nesting eagles atop the Trout Creek Bluffs at 0.7 miles. Continue another 1.25 miles to the pretty Frog Springs footbridge. The trail keeps on for another five miles to Mecca flat, offering plenty of places to relax and enjoy the beginning of hiking season before you turn back. Directions Follow Highway 97 north from Madras (3.5 miles), turn left on Cora Drive (3.9 miles), stay left onto Clark Drive (4.3), right on Clemens Drive (5 miles), and left through the campground to the day use area at the far end. SW

For more information on these two hikes, check out Day Hiking Bend & Central Oregon, recently released by Mountaineers Books.

Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe will host an all-female whitewater kayaking course over the weekend. This full immersion course starts with the basics and river safety under the instruction of local experts. By the end, you’ll be able to confidently run a Class II rapid – just in time for summer. Class meets at 805 SW Industrial Way in Bend (Fri., 5 to 8 p.m., Sat., 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sun., 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.). $245 for 2 1/2 day course. Visit www.tumalocreek. com or call 541-317-9407 to learn more.

Central Oregon Wildflower Show It’s the ideal time for viewing native wildflowers here in Central Oregon. Catch them all in one spot at the 28th annual Central Oregon Wildflower Show in Sunriver. Along with lectures and a native plant sale, this family-friendly event features activities for kids, hikes, and henna tattoos. Events are open on Saturday and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in various locations. Adults $6, kids $4. Visit www. sunrivernaturecenter.org or call 541593-4394 for more information.

Dirty Half Marathon This 13.1-mile race features a hilly route through the Phil’s Trail system on the west side of Bend. Limited to only 500 racers, this locals’ favorite is already sold out. But, come out to enjoy the high desert and support local runners. The race begins Sunday, June 12 at 7 am. Check out the course map at www.footzonebend.com to pick a good viewing spot. For more information, stop by FootZone (842 NW Wall St.) or call 541-317-3568. SW

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Seniors compete at Oregon Senior Games, 6/9-12. Photo by Nate Wyeth.


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NATURAL WORLD

Our Only Backyard Salamander By Jim Anderson

the tail. That may not sound like fun, unless you like to sleep and not move at all during winter. (When my wife Sue, or Doctor Fan gives my fat gut the evil eye, I tell ‘em it’s my survival fat for winter, which doesn’t always bring on a laugh, or a groan.)

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Surprisingly, Long-toeds are active when there’s still frost in the night air. One can find their eggs in water under a thin skim of ice on small ponds. Like many amphibians, the Long-toed’s eggs are surrounded by a transparent, gelatinous capsule, making the embryo visible during development.

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The Long-toed Salamander, perhaps coming soon to a garden near you. Photo by Jim Anderson.

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t’s always a pleasure for me to come out the back (or front), step off the porch and suddenly see a long, slender amphibian with a bright yellow patch on its back, madly scrambling for cover under the porch.

mists who are discussing animal names keyed to geography, geology, habitat preferences, food, color of adults, method of reproduction and any other traits they have tossed into the naming grinder.)

If that happens to you some stormy night after a rain, don’t be surprised, for it’s “our” Long-toed Salamander, aka Ambystoma macrodactylum, to local herps experts, as the only native salamander we have running around on this side of the Cascades.

The body of the Long-toed Salamander is usually dusky dark with a dorsal (on the back) stripe of dusky tan, yellow, or olive-green, which at times can be seen as broken up into a series of spots. The sides of the body can have tiny fine white or pale blue flecks. There is no other salamander in the Northwest that looks like that.

Breaking down the etymology of the salamander’s genus name we have: Ambystoma—from amblys (Greek) for blunt; stoma (Greek) meaning mouth; (or in the New Latin) to cram into the mouth; tigrinum – from tigris and tigrinus (Latin) for of tigers, and somehow that got the animal-namers to Longtoed Salamanders. To further confuse the naming process, zoologists have the Long-toed Salamanders broken into five subspecies.

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According to paleontologists, salamanders originated approximately 81 million years ago in the Late Cretaceous, which was a long time ago.

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(If you want to get into a heated discussion, step into a room-full of taxono-

The Long-toed can be found throughout the Northwest, almost as far north as Alaska. It lives at altitudes ranging from 2,400 to a little over 9,000 feet above sea level. That is, you can find them in the sagebrush and juniper, clear up to the summit of Mt. Bachelor scurrying about in damp underbrush. Amphibians and salamanders hibernate in winter, surviving on moisture and absorbing oxygen through their skin in the hibernaculum, which is located in damp soil well below the freeze line. Salamanders cannot move to feed while hibernating, so they keep alive by living off the fat reserve under the skin and in

When in its egg, the Long-toed embryo is darker on top and whiter below. Prior to hatching, the larvae have “balancers”—thin skin protrusions sticking out the sides and supporting the head. The balancers eventually fall off and their external gills appear. Long-toed Salamanders are predators in the larval form, and as they become adults, the head grows longer (to catch larger prey it would seem). Then their limbs appear—four digits on the front limbs and five on the rear. When lungs are developed, the gills are resorbed into the animal’s tissue bank. (Metamorphosis is, to me, one of the “Miracles of Nature.” As the process moves the larval animal to becoming an adult, the internal organs go through some kind of change, requiring the new one taking over a new process as they become an adult—such as wings and the reproductive system in insects, lungs in amphibians and adult humans.) As Long-toed larvae metamorphose, the developing digits distinguish this species from others, thus accounting for the etymological origin of its specific genus: macrodactylum (Greek makros, and long, and daktylos for toe). They are also known as the mole salamanders for the way they dig into the soil to escape predators, find food (worms and larval insects), and stay cool and damp. As a citizen scientist your observations could be vital to the herptile scientific community (the study of amphibians and reptiles). Reproductive habitat, such as ponds and small, slow streams with larva could be brought to the attention of local wildlife officials. If you bump into an adult Long-toed while you’re gardening or conducting other outdoor activities, that too is important information. Many thanks. SW


OUTSIDE EVENTS birds found only south of the border. June 16, 6:30-8:30pm. The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave. 503 432 5688. Free.

Moms Running Group Thursdays, 9:30am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. Free. Mountain Bike Ride Join the Deschutes

Whit Bazemore Photography

Move it Mondays Runs are between 3-5 miles, paces between 7 and 12-minute miles can be accommodated. Mondays, 5:30pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. Free.

The best MTB racers in the nation will compete in The Blitz that finishes at Tetherow Golf Club, 6/16.

OUTDOORS 28th Annual Central Oregon Wildflower Show Lecture Series 9-9:45

am: “Monarch Butterfly Conservation,” Matt Horning. 10-10:45 am: “Honey bees are more than a buzz: Bee complexity, beauty and cause for wonder,” Cathy Platin and Naomi Price. 11-11:45 am: “Native Landscapes for Central Oregon,” Rick Martinson. Noon12:45pm: “Wildflower Hikes of Central Oregon,” M.A. Willson. June 11, 9am-12:45pm. SHARC, 57250 Overlook Rd. 541-593-4394. $6 adults, $4 kids (includes access to wildflower show and Sunriver Nature Center).

PICK 76th Annual Sisters Rodeo Sisters

Rodeo has the highest purse in the nation, drawing top competitors. World champions return year after year, making the Sisters Rodeo part of their annual schedule. From a buckaroo breakfast to Xtreme Bulls, this rodeo has it all! Fri, June 10, Sat, June 11 and Sun, June 12. Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 Highway 20.

Bend Ultimate Co-ed Clinic Players of

all abilities are invited to attend. The clinic will have sessions for beginner, intermediate

and advanced players. June 14, 6:30pm. Ponderosa Park, 225 SE 15th St. Free.

Cascades Mountaineers Meeting

Promoting outings, enhancing training and experience, and expanding a sense of community among Central Oregon mountaineering enthusiasts are the goals of Cascades Mountaineers. Second Thursday, 7-9pm. Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave. Free.

FootZone Noon Run Wednesdays-noon. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. Free.

Free Shooting Day Free shooting day at the Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range east of Bend. All ages are welcome to the open house. Guns and ammo are provided. Free barbecue! June 11, 9am. Central Oregon Shooting Sports Assn. Range, Hwy 20. Free. Mexico-Anhinga to Yellow-winged Tanager Kevin Smith as he takes us on

a birding adventure around Veracruz and Bacalar, Mexico. Enjoy Kevin’s memorable images of the Bumblebee Hummingbird, the Double-Striped Thick-knee and many other

NW Run/Walk for Epilepsy The North-

west Run/Walk for Epilepsy is the Epilepsy Foundation Northwest’s annual epilepsy awareness walk. The run/walk raises money for EFNW programs and services and increases public understanding about epilepsy. June 11, 9am-noon. Crow’s Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St. $25.

Wednesday Night Group Runs Join us

Wednesday nights for our 3-5 mile group runs, all paces welcome! Wednesdays, 6-7:30pm. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. 541-389-1601. Free.

ATHLETIC EVENTS The Blitz Pro MTB Invite The Blitz features the 40 best pro men and women MTB racers in the nation. Riders race from Wanoga down to Tetherow for Big Air jumps and beer chugging at the finish. To spice things up, there are three cash prizes along the way, plus arm wrestling championships. June 16, 5pm. Tetherow Golf Club, 61240 Skyline Ranch Rd. FC Timbers Broken Top 3v3 Soccer Tournament The inaugural tourney will

take place at Big Sky Park and will feature divisions for girls, boys, adults, co-eds and 30-and-over crowd! June 11, 8am. Big Sky Sports Complex, 21690 Neff Rd.

FootZone’s Dirty Half Marathon Enjoy a challenging course through high desert forest with 499 of your trail running peers, and then toast your accomplishment with a Deschutes Brewery beer in your finisher’s Hydro Flask! June 12, 7am. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. $40.

and to Wild Ride, with FootZone! Each runner will receive a complimentary beer from Wild Ride and tasty appetizers. Runners are responsible for their transportation to Wild Ride. June 13, 5:30-7pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free, please RSVP.

Good Form Running Clinic FootZone

has offered these free clinics since 2010 and over 2000 runners have participated! Learn proper running mechanics from FootZone experts through demo, drills, and video. Good Form Running teaches you to run faster, more efficiently, and with less injury. Thurs, June 9, 5:30-7pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free, RSVP required.

Oregon Senior Games Competitors from around the country will gather in Bend for an unforgettable weekend of athleticism and fun. Athletes ages 50 and older can compete in one (or more!) of the sixteen sports offered. It’s a great chance to test your mettle against others while enjoying a getaway to the outdoor playground of the West. Thurs, June 9 to Sun, June 12. 541382-8048. Price depends on event, more info: oregonseniorgames.com.

Sagebrush Cycles Time Trial Series

Come race the clock on your time trail or regular road bike on our one way 7.3 mile course up Century Drive. Race starts near the Athletic Club of Bend and ends ~7.3 miles later at the chain-up area. Must have annual or one-day OBRA license to race. Races are weekly (except no race on May 18th). Wednesdays, 5:30-7:30pm. Through June 8. Bend, RSVP for address. 541-4199780. $15 a race or $60 for series.

United Way Charity Golf Classic The

United Way Charity Golf Classic features an 18-hole scramble on the private Crosswater course. Check-in begins at 11 a.m. Teams can register via email aimee@deschutesunitedway.org or kati@deschutesunitedway. org. All proceeds benefit United Way of Deschutes County. June 12, 1pm. Crosswater Golf Course, 17600 Canoe Camp Dr. 541389-6507. $780 four-some.

Weekly Steel Ride Break out that cool retro steel bike and ride with friends along a 30 mile loop on sweet roads to the east of Bend. This ride is open to all, steel bikes are suggested. Pace will be medium, there will be two regroup stops. Route will be marked. Meet at Bend Velo Bike Shop. Fridays, 6-7:45pm. Bend Velo Bike Shop, 1212 NE First St. 541-382-2453. Free. SW

43 VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

Land Trust and Gary Gustafson for a 6-7 mile intermediate mountain bike ride at the Metolius Preserve. Register at www. deschuteslandtrust.org. June 11, 10am-1pm. Metolius Preserve, Camp Sherman. Free.

Pub Run to Wild Ride Brewing Run from


WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / June 9, 2016 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE 44


ADVICE GODDESS

Canine And A Half Weeks

—Second Fiddle She doesn’t trust them down there in the spare room? What will they do, get on the landline and make prank calls to Taiwan? The truth is, a dog (or dogs) left alone in a room may, in short order, chew a $900 leather chair into a $900 pile of stuffing. People tend to see this as the dog’s scheming attempt to show its owner who’s boss. However, anthrozoologist and doggy behavior researcher John W.S. Bradshaw says the notion that dogs are engaged in this fight for dominance with humans just isn’t supported by modern science. Unfortunately, widespread belief in this myth has led many to see (highly effective) reward-based dog training as coddling and instead opt for Stalinistic confrontationand punishment-based training, which Bradshaw writes “may initially suppress (some unwanted) behavior but can then cause the dog to become depressed and withdrawn.” Chewing, Bradshaw explains, is actually a form of tension relief for a dog. Tension? Because the dog has a big project due at the office? Well, actually, we bred dogs to bond with us, so they evolved to find human contact very rewarding. And according to Bradshaw’s research, many dogs experience serious “separation distress” when isolated from their owner—which they often express in all sorts of decor-destroying ways. (Welcome to Bed Bath & Look, It’s A Giant Dog Bone With Throw Pillows!) Now, maybe you’re thinking, “The girlfriend’s two dogs have each other!” If only that counted in dog terms. Bradshaw references a study in which mutts in a kennel, separated from their usual canine kennel mates, didn’t act out; however, those separated from their usual human caretakers freaked. As Bradshaw puts it, for a dog, the key pack member is “almost always a human.”

Ugly Batty I’m a guy in my late 30s. I don’t fear commitment; I fear surprise—the surprise I get when I find I’m with yet another crazy woman. My previous two girlfriends eventually turned out to be total psychos—mean, controlling, and paranoid that I was cheating (which I’ve NEVER done). I’m beginning to think love is a ruse, with women pretending to be cool and balanced until their true crazy colors come out. —Weary There are events in life that are totally unexpected, like getting sucked up by a big vacuum hose into a passing alien spaceship. If you’re the one who ends up under the probe, we don’t get to go all accusey on you, like, “You…went out to the mailbox on a Saturday afternoon?! WHAT WERE YOU THINKING?!!” In relationships, however, though there are a few gifted crazies who can pull the long con, most reveal who they really are in many small ways—long before you wake up strapped to a chair with a bright light shining in your eyes: “Tell me why you had sex with the neighbor!” she bellows. You: “Wait—the 90-year-old?” Identifying which ladies are from Batshitistan involves two things: 1. Taking things really slowly so you can look at a woman’s behavior over time (especially when she doesn’t think you’re looking). 2. Wanting to see more than you want to believe. It also might help you to take an honest approach to the past—admitting that you treated hope as a creative alternative to critical analysis. This should help keep you from rashly welcoming the wrong people into your life, like that dark stranger ringing your bell in the hooded cloak: “Come on in, mister! There’s a bowl of nuts on the table and there are cocktails on the minibar. May I take your scythe?”

As for the human conflict here, relationships researcher John Gottman explains that the answer to gridlock on an issue isn’t solving the problem (which may be impossible) but being able to talk about it with humor, empathy, and affection. What’s essential is that your feelings seem to be important to your girlfriend and that she at least considers possible compromisAMY ALKON

(c) 2016, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved. Got a problem? Write Amy Alkon, 171 Pier Ave. Suite 280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or e-mail AdviceAmy@aol.com (advicegoddess.com).

summe summer EventsGuide The Source Weekly's Summer Guide will feature the lowdown on beer festivals, stage and film happenings, food events, street fairs, outdoor activities and more!

Don’t miss your chance to Shine! Advertising deadline

June 17th

Heats up the stands

June 2 23rd 23 3rd 3rd

Reserve Your Ad Space Today! 541.383.0800 Advertise@bendsource.com www.bendsource.com

45 VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

My girlfriend sleeps with her two medium-sized dogs. They are, to quote her, her “babies.” I see them more as her bodyguards. We don’t live together, but even when I sleep over, which is a few times a week, she refuses to kick them out of the bed. She has a nice bed they could sleep on downstairs in a spare room, but she says she doesn’t trust them down there.

es, like having the doggies in her bedroom but on beds on the floor. (It may take some training to get a bed dog to be a floor dog.) Ultimately, in the bedroom, the Reign of Terrier may not end, but on the upside, paw print place mats have yet to appear on the dining table, and your customary glass of merlot isn’t being set next to a bowl of pasta primavera on the floor.


REAL ESTATE ADVERTISE IN OUR REAL ESTATE SECTION ADVERTISE@BENDSOURCE.COM

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46

Otis Craig Broker, CRS

Get Noticed in our Real Estate Section

FIND YOUR PLACE IN BEND

www.otiscraig.com

541.771.4824 otis@otiscraig.com

2755 NW Shields Dr. Quite possibly one of the most exquisite lots in NorthWest Crossing, situated on a corner this oversized lot is across from the northern portion of Discovery Park.

STUNNING THREE PINES HOME 19035 Mt. McLoughlin Lane Every feature has been exquisitely selected in this stunning Three Pines custom home, minutes from Shevlin Park.

HISTORIC DISTRICT 443 NW Congress St. This beautiful English cottage style home with Tudor accents. Easy walking distance to the river, downtown, and several parks.

PREMIER WESTSIDE LOCATION

AMAZING SHOP AREA

DRAKE PARK DREAM!

1025 NW Quincy Premier Westside Bend location with end-of-street privacy is close to shops and restaurants on Newport Ave & downtown. $549,000

62595 Eagle Rd. 3 BR, 3 BA on 1.12 acres with filtered mountain views. Approved for 2 horses, the last of it's kind!

846 NW Riverside Ideally located in the heart of Downtown Bend. It's proximity to shopping, dining and entertaining make it a successful licensed vacation rental. $1,275,000

$325,000

contact

advertising@bendsource.com

DESERT PINE PROPERTIES, LLC

$799,000

$549,900

$875,000

THE BEST RESOURCE FOR YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS & BEYOND.

www.desertpineproperties.com

Management with Pride

Introducing new ownership

Deborah Posso Principal Broker

Skjersaa Group | Duke Warner Realty

NorthWest Crossing* Miller Heights* Deschutes Landing* The Plaza The Bluffs* Franklin Crossing* Awbrey Butte* Tetherow* Braeburn* Aspen Rim* Larkspur* Skyliner* Old Mill* Mountain High*

1033 NW Newport Ave. Bend, OR 97703

541.383.1426

www.SkjersaaGroup.com

Check on availability of homes, townhomes and condos in these areas. Specializing in NW Bend: Listings • Sales • Rentals

541-388-9973

REAL ESTATE* PROPERTY MANAGEMENT* VACATION RENTALS

stay@desertpineproperties.com 415 NW Hill Street | Bend, OR 97703

RARE OPPORTUNITY TO OWN A COVETED HOME ON OCHOCO RESERVOIR Your own personal lake front haven with 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, bonus room, all furniture & appliances included, lake views from almost every window, detached 2592 s.f. insulated shop bldg w/12x16 roll up door, private dock. MLS#201602629

$499,900

Five Star Rated!

Short Term Vacation Rental w/ ADU, Rented 150 nights in the last 12 month calendar period. Property includes 2 transferable land use permits and STR licenses. This tech forward & energy efficient home built in 2013 sits on a beautifully landscaped corner lot located 2 blocks from downtown. Steps aways from Mirror Pond. Open floor plan, boasts high end finishes, SS appliances. Featuring a gracefully gated private courtyard with pavers, newer spa, fire pit and outdoor seating. Oversized 2 Car Garage W/ additional parking space.

Price $1,100,000

|

Premier listing

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NICK NAYNE PRINCIPAL BROKER, GRI CELL OFFICE

541.680.7922 541.647.1171

The Broker Network, LLC www.TheBrokerNetworkRealty.com 505 NW Franklin Ave, Bend, OR 97703

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TAKE ME HOME

By Nick Nayne Principal Broker

Buying & Selling a Home with Solar Panels Solar panels have been cited as adding $15,000-$20,000 to the value of a home if purchased outright. This is because of the appeal of energy independence as well as energy cost savings. Purchases of systems via financing, however, require credit qualification and processing, and therefore could result in a lapse in time for installation. In recent years, solar leases have attracted many homeowners because they require no money down and result in lowered utility bills. Leases have made solar panels affordable to a wider range of the population, but problems can occur when the home is put up for sale. The buyers may not wish to assume the lease, which could have upward of 15 more years left on the term. Potential buyers may not be able to afford to purchase the system due to financing

restrictions. With home prices rising faster than incomes, many buyers barely qualify for the home mortgage, let alone an additional lease. Statistics show that most of the time, the buyer either assumes the lease or the seller is asked to pay off the lease prior to the sale of the home. This is an important consideration when selling or buying a home with solar panels. Green energy and home construction are great, but it is important for sellers to do their homework on this topic before listing their home. This includes investigating lease assumption and buy-out provisions and disclosing those terms to potential buyers. If the current system is owned and financed, the seller might consider paying off the solar loan upon sale by increasing the selling price of the home to reflect the increased value of the solar panels. SW

Caldera Springs Lots Prices from $159,000 Build your dream home in the forest near lakes and streams 541-593-3000 Listed by Sunriver Realty

47 Caldera Cabin $615,000 Luxurious 4 Bdrm/5 Bath vacation home with panoramic views of Caldera Links Course and Paulina Mountains. 541-593-3000 Listed by Sunriver Realty

Bungalows at NWX $199,000 - $499,000 24 unit condominium development comprised of 4 individual phases. Condos range from 400-1401 sq. ft. Call for more information. 541.383.1426 Listed by The Skjersaa Group

For further information on leasing or buying solar panels, the following website has detailed information: www.energysage.com.

HOME PRICE ROUND-UP

‹‹ LOW

63121 De Haviland Ct., Bend, OR 3 beds, 2.5 baths, 1,428 square feet, .07 acre lot | Built in 2014 $249,000 Listed by Allison James Estates & Homes of Oregon LLC

‹‹

MID

2297 NW TORREY PINES, BEND

2813 NE Red Oak Dr., Bend, OR 3 beds, 2 baths, 1,854 square feet, .17 acre lot | Built in 1999 $350,000

$439,000 >

2 bed 2bath on main level with elevated deck for forest views

>

1 bed 1 bath Guest Suite on lower lever with separate entrance and covered parking space.

>

Double Garage with alley access

>

New Interior and Exterior Paint, clean and ready to go.

>

Open great room floor plan.

>

Only Blocks from Trails and westside amenities.

Listed by Total Property Resources LLC

‹‹ HIGH

1020 NW Farewell Dr, Bend, OR 4 beds, 4 baths, 4,204 square feet, .78 acre lot | Built in 1997 $950,000 Listed by The Hasson Company

Glenda Mackie, Broker 541.410.4050 gmackie@bendbroadband.com www.lowes-group.com

Photos and listing info from Central Oregon Multiple Listing Service

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

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

T

here is an abundance of reasons why buying a house with solar panels is a great idea, but there are also some negatives that can arise when a house is being sold.

REAL ESTATE LISTINGS


Natural Safe • Certified • Trusted • Superior Quality

WELLNESS

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ADVERTISE IN OUR WELLNESS SECTION ADVERTISE@BENDSOURCE.COM

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WELLNESS EVENTS

• •

High Velocity CBD Oil CBD Maxx Oil with Patented Formula 2 (Patent #: 8986752)

A product by Sher-Ray Organic Cosmetics, LLC 19883 8th St. Tumalo Mall (Red Building) Bend, OR 97703

Heavenly Hemp Cream CBD Premier 15 Oil

CBD Products starting at $59.98

Improve how you move with Feldenkrais, Mondays at Massage & Movement Therapies, through 6/27.

2nd Annual Wellness Faire Come and

enjoy some of Central Oregon’s finest health practitioners and wellness advocates as they educate, demo and share their modalities! Salud will be open serving delicious, organic food, juices and treats so come hungry! Classes, massage, readings, live music! Victor Johnson, the Mostest, Shireen Amini, Moon Mountain Ramblers! June 11, 11am-6pm. Salud Raw Food Cafe, 431 NW Franklin Ave. Suite 150. 541-6785368. Free.

- Heal pain or Planter Fasciitis - Flat feet or Fallen arches - Ball of foot pain or Morton’s neuroma - Achilles tendonitis - Bunions - Back, Hip & Knee pain

30 Years Experience Insurance Billing Scott Peterson, C. Ped, CO

ABC Certified Pedorthist/Orthotist

900 SE Wilson Ave. Suite F, Bend | 541.647.1108 | CycleSoles.com

BMC Walk With A Doc Walking for

as little as 30 minutes a day can reduce your risk of disease. Join a different BMC provider each week along with others in the community looking to improve their health. Tuesdays, 7-7:30am. Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St. Free.

Couples & Individuals

CoreAlign Learn how to balance and be

* Relationships * Grief * Trauma * Transitions

for the discerning! Nadine Sims 660 NE 3rd St. #5

419-3947 D’Arcy Swanson, MC NCC

balanced in your body in this dynamic and fun workshop. 100% donation to support Partners in Care. June 15, 6:30-7:30pm. Bend Align, 61383 S Third St. Suite E. $15 donation for Partners in Care.

since 1998

541.318.1186

Free Intros

Community Healing Flow Come join

yogaofbend.com

Ronald D. Rosen, MD, PC Board Certified Internal Medicine and Medical Acupuncture

Compassionate Communication: The Basics Compassionate communication

Medical acupuncture including KHT with no needles Manual Medicine Osteopathy and Cranial Osteopathy Prolotherapy and PRP Functional Medicine 541.388.3804

|

918 NE 5th St. Bend

|

www.ronaldrosenmdpc.com

(nonviolent communication) is an effective strategy for finding out what each person in a conflict wants and needs without fighting about it. It brings a combination of honesty and kindness to situations that are often tense and difficult. June 11, 9am-noon. Center for Compassionate Living, 803 SW Industrial Way Suite 200. 530-867-3198. $20.

Essential Oils & Wellness Join us as we explore the therapeutic benefits of essential oils and share insight on how certified pure therapeutic grade essential oils can be used for occasional physical ailments, injuries and stress management for the entire family! June 13, 6-7:30pm. Looking Glass Imports & Cafe, 150 NE Bend River Mall Dr. Suite 260. 541-2255775. Free.

Make Peace with your two-piece.

Colon Hydrotherapy and Body Contouring

SPRING... TIME TO CLEANSE & HEAL FROM THE INSIDE OUT Natural Digestive Wellness

Book N

Feldenkrais Improve how you move! Learn more efficient, coordinated and comfortable ways to organize your body for optimal movement. Guided sequences of movements engage thinking, sensing and moving. A refreshing approach to functional health. Mondays, 10:30-11:30am. Massage & Movement Therapies, 605 NE Savannah Dr. Suite 3. 541 815 5292. $10. ow

& Enjoy 15% Sp rin Discoun g t

Less Fatigue, Constipation, Bloating, Cravings, Headaches, Irritability, Skin Issues, etc.

BOBBYE ROTELLO, CCT, CNC Experienced, Gentle, Effective COLONHYDROTHERAPYBENDOREGON.COM

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, 5-6:15pm. Bend Community Healing, 155 SW Century Dr. Suite 113. 541-322-9642. Donation.

805.218.3169

Healthy Back Class Join Dr. Raymond for a weekly class that will introduce a self-treatment system to eliminate and prevent chronic pain, erase the signs of aging, and help you feel fantastic in just 10 minutes per day. Thursdays, 8-8:30am. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. 541-330-0334. $9 drop in. How Brain Training Can Benefit Your Health Although the brain is not tech-

nically a muscle, it needs to be exercised

and trained to stay in optimal shape. This presentation will discuss brain training and some of the tools we use at BrainPilots to help clients reach optimal brain performance. June 16, 6-7:30pm. The Lotus Building, 300 SE Reed Market Rd. 541-306-6332. Free.

Laughter Yoga Join Danielle Mercurio as she leads this joyful and free offering. Laughter yoga has been proven to reduce stress and increase health. It’s a great team-building activity which increases individual and group effectiveness in organizations and businesses. Second Wednesday, 8-9am. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. 541-330-004. Free. Practice Groups (Compassionate Communication) Through practicing

with others, we can learn and grow using real life experiences to become more compassionate with ourselves and others. Tuesdays, 6-7:30pm and Wednesdays, 4-5:30pm. Through Nov. 30. Center for Compassionate Living, 803 SW Industrial Way Suite 200. 541-350-6517. Free.

Prenatal Yoga Autumn Adams is leading a prenatal yoga class just for expecting mamas. A yoga practice during pregnancy has many different benefits. Sundays, 11:30am-12:45pm. Through June 26. Juniper Yoga, 369 NE Revere Ave. 541-4082884. $15. Quit Smoking with Hypnosis—Informational Meeting Simple fact about quitting smoking, everyone quits cold turkey. Whether you’ve used the patch, the gum, meds or just quit on your own, everyone who smokes at some point has to quit cold turkey. June 9, 6-7pm. The Lotus Building, 300 SE Reed Market Rd. 541-306-6332. Free.

Recovery Yoga 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. 541550-8550. By donation. Restorative Yoga & Yoga Nidra As the seasons begin from spring to summer, take time to slow down, ground into our practice, and reduce stress with a 120 minute quiet, contemplative restorative yoga class. Autumn Adams, RYT will lead the class through an intuitive series of restorative postures, gentle pranayama and yoga nidra. Fri, June 10, 6-8pm. Juniper Yoga, 369 NE Revere Ave. 541-389-0125. $20 adv., $25 door. 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 for weekly details and locations: max@ footzonebend.com. Tuesdays, 5:30pm. FootZone, 842 NW Wall St. Free. SW


ASTROLOGY

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In his poem “Inter-

CANCER (June 21-July 22): The following excerpt from Wendell Berry’s poem “Woods” captures the essence of your current situation: “I part the out-thrusting branches and come in beneath the blessed and the blessing trees. Though I am silent there is singing around me. Though I am dark there is vision around me. Though I am heavy there is flight around me.” Please remember this poem at least three times a day during the next two weeks. It’s important for you to know that no matter what murky or maudlin or mysterious mood you might be in, you are surrounded by vitality and generosity. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): A half-dead blast from the past is throttling the free flow of your imagination. Your best possible future will be postponed until you agree to deal more intimately with this crumbled dream, which you have never fully grieved or surrendered. So here’s my advice: Summon the bravest, smartest love you’re capable of, and lay your sad loss to rest with gentle ferocity. This may take a while, so be patient. Be inspired by the fact that your new supply of brave, smart love will be a crucial resource for the rest of your long life.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Five times every

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Whether we like to admit it or not, all of us have acted like puppets. Bosses and teachers and loved ones can manipulate us even if they’re not in our presence. Our conditioned responses and programmed impulses may control our behavior in the present moment even though they were formed long ago. That’s the bad news. The good news is that now and then moments of lucidity blossom, revealing the puppet strings. We emerge from our unconsciousness and see that we’re under the spell of influential people to whom we have surrendered our power. This is one of those magic times for you, Capricorn.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A few weeks ago you undertook a new course of study in the art of fun and games. You realized you hadn’t been playing hard enough, and took measures to correct the problem. After refamiliarizing yourself with the mysteries of innocent joy, you raised the stakes. You began dabbling with more intensive forms of relief and release. Now you have the chance to go even further: to explore the mysteries of experimental delight. Exuberant escapades may become available to you. Amorous adventures could invite you to explore the frontiers of liberated love. Will you be brave and free enough to meet the challenge of such deeply meaningful gaiety? Meditate on this radical possibility: *spiritually adept hedonism.*

day, devout Muslims face their holiest city, Mecca, and say prayers to Allah. Even if you’re not Islamic, I recommend that you carry out your own unique version of this ritual. The next three weeks will be a favorable time to cultivate a closer relationship with the inspirational influence, the high ideal, or the divine being that reigns supreme in your life. Here’s how you could do it: Identify a place that excites your imagination and provokes a sense of wonder. Five times a day for the next 21 days, bow in the direction of this treasured spot. Unleash songs, vows, and celebratory expostulations that deepen your fierce and tender commitment to what you trust most and love best.

PISCES (Feb.19- March 20): Poet Sharon Dolin compares artists to sunflowers. They create “a tall flashy flower that then grows heavy with seeds whose small hard shells you must crack to get to the rich nut meat.” As I contemplate the current chapter of your unfolding story, I see you as being engaged in a similar process, even if you’re not literally an artist. To be exact, you’re at the point when you are producing a tall flashy flower. The seeds have not yet begun to form, but they will soon. Later this year, the rich nut meat inside the small hard shells will be ready to pluck. For now, concentrate on generating your gorgeous, radiant flower.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): “The road reaches

Campbell analyzed fairy tales for clues about how the human psyche works. For example, he said that a fairy tale character who’s riding a horse is a representation of our relationship with our instinctual nature. If that character drops the reins and lets the horse gallop without guidance, he or she is symbolically surrendering control to the instincts. I bring this to your attention because I suspect you may soon be tempted to do just that that—which wouldn’t be wise. In my opinion, you’ll be best served by going against the flow of what seems natural. Sublimation and transcendence will keep you much stronger than if you followed the line of least resistance. Homework: Visualize yourself, as you ride your horse, keeping a relaxed but firm grasp of the reins.

every place, the short cut only one,” says aphorist James Richardson. In many cases, that’s not a problem. Who among us has unlimited time and energy? Why leave all the options open? Short cuts can be valuable. It’s often smart to be ruthlessly efficient as we head toward our destination. But here’s a caveat: According to my analysis of the astrological omens, you’re now in a phase when taking short cuts may be counterproductive. To be as well-seasoned as you will need to be to reach your goal, you should probably take the scenic route. The long way around may, in this instance, be the most efficient and effective.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “Truth is like the flu,” says poet James Richardson. “I fight it off, but it changes in other bodies and returns in a form to which I am not immune.” In the coming days, Scorpio, I suspect you will experience that riddle first hand—and probably on more than one occasion. Obvious secrets and wild understandings that you have fought against finding out will mutate in just the right way to sneak past your defenses. Unwelcome insights you’ve been trying to ignore will finally wiggle their way into your psyche. Don’t worry, though. These new arrivals will be turn out to be good medicine.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): According to Guinness World records, the most consecutive hours spent riding on a roller coaster is 405 hours and 40 minutes. But I suspect that during the next 15 months, a Sagittarian daredevil may exceed this mark. I have come to this conclusion because I believe your tribe will be especially

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Mythologist Joseph

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): I will provide you with two lists of words. One of these lists, but not both, will characterize the nature of your predominant experiences in the coming weeks. It will be mostly up to you which emerges as the winner. Now read the two lists, pick the one you like better, and instruct your subconscious mind to lead you in that direction. List 1: gluttony, bloating, overkill, padding, exorbitance. List 2: mother lode, wellspring, bumper crop, gold mine, cornucopia.

Homework

Psychologists say that a good way to eliminate a bad habit is to replace it with a good one. Do that! Testify at www.freewillastrology.com. © Copyright 2016 Rob Brezsny

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rupted Meditation,” Robert Hass blurts out the following exclamation: “I give you, here, now, a magic key. What does it open? This key I give you, what exactly does it open?” How would you answer this question, Gemini? What door or lock or heart or treasure box do you most need opened? Decide today. And please don’t name five things you need opened. Choose one, and one only. To do so will dissolve a mental block that has up until now kept you from finding the REAL magic key.

adept and relatively comfortable at handling steep rises and sudden dips at high speeds. And that won’t be the only rough talent you’ll have in abundance. I’m guessing you could also set new personal bests in the categories of most frequent changes of mind, most heroic leaps of faith, and fastest talking.


SMOKE SIGNALS

PTSD and Pot By Steve Holmes

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s early as the 19th century, doctors, nurses, and other medical professionals noticed that many people who returned from military service had serious difficulty coping with the horrors of war. So many men (mostly) became disabled by combat experience – unable to continue fighting – that the US government set its best mental health professionals to studying the problem. After over a century of research, one fact has become undeniably clear: Experiencing war first-hand causes debilitating mental illness in many, if not most, people. We now call this illness post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD. Although there are no reliable data on the topic, America’s veterans of the Bush-era wars seem to be using cannabis in great numbers to treat their PTSD symptoms. But due to the Obama administration’s continuing ban on cannabis-related research and its denial that the drug has any medical benefits, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has gone so far to prohibit its physicians and psychiatrists from even discussing the potential benefits and harms of cannabis with veterans, even those who admit to using cannabis to cope with the symptoms of PTSD, chronic pain, or some other reason. This policy has been roundly criticized by experts, not only because of cannabis’ obvious potential to help veterans, but also because of the federal government’s

intrusion into the doctor-patient relationship, where honesty and openness is critical to healing. Oregon Rep. Earl Blumenauer has been a leading critic, and he now seems to be making progress toward changing the policy. On May 19, the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate approved a law that would prohibit the VA from using federal money to stop doctors from discussing or recommending cannabis to their patients. “The death rate from opioids among VA healthcare is nearly double the national average. From what I hear from veterans is that medical marijuana has helped them deal with pain and PTSD, particularly as an alternative to opioids,” said Blumenauer, who introduced the proposal. For two years, Blumenauer has been introducing the proposal that effectively removes the federal government’s censorship of doctors, and its passage after a handful of defeats is yet another signal that attitudes about cannabis are undergoing great change. Next, House and Senate committees will work to create a single version of the proposal, which would then be inserted into the larger 2017 military appropriations bill, which provides funding to the VA. The bill would then go to President Obama for approval, something that Congressional pundits believe is likely given its inclusion in the larger funding bill.


THE REC ROOM

Crossword “Crosswords: Dial Ext. 2468”—we appreciate your patience.

Pearl’s Puzzle

Difficulty Level

-Matt Jones

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

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

T

I

P

S

Y

H

O

U

R

“Keep close to Nature's heart...and break clear away, once in a while, and climb a mountain or spend a week in the woods. Wash ______ clean.”

- John Muir

ANSWER TO LAST WEEKS PUZZLES

ACROSS

4 “Dragnet” creator Jack

1 Scratch (at)

5 Calligraphy tool

5 First-rate

6 “Two thumbs way up” reviews

10 “EastEnders” network

7 “Aha moment” cause

13 Tony winner Neuwirth

8 “Mad” cartoonist Drucker

14 “Mop”

9 Commonly, to poets

16 Top-down ride from Sweden

10 Cakes with a kick

18 It comes between nothing and the truth

11 Master sergeant of 1950s TV

19 Put away some dishes?

12 Small stream

20 Crater, e.g.

14 Taunt during a chili pepper dare, maybe

21 “Batman” sound effect

15 Sword handle

24 Sits up on two legs, maybe

17 Like a 1980s puzzle fad

26 “No worries!”

21 Religion with an apostrophe in its name

27 Mode opener

22 Smartphone clock function

28 “Am ___ longer a part of your plans ...”

23 Bricklayer

(Dylan lyric)

25 French composer Charles whose music

29 Second-busiest airport in CA

was used as the theme for “Alfred Hitchcock

31 Gets way more than a tickle in the throat

Presents”

38 2015 returnee to Yankee Stadium

26 Tiny charged particle

39 The Teamsters, for one

29 “Grey’s Anatomy” creator Rhimes

40 Norse letter

30 They’re in the last round

41 Statement from the immovable?

32 “And now, without further ___ ...”

44 Degree of distinction

33 Two-handed card game

45 551, in Roman numerals

34 “Despicable Me” supervillain

46 The “G” of TV’s “AGT”

35 Sweet panful

47 Bar buys

36 Bar from Fort Knox

51 Eric B. & Rakim’s “___ in Full”

37 Gear features

52 Biblical suffix after bring or speak

42 Pranks using rolls?

53 Phnom ___, Cambodia

43 European bathroom fixture

54 Homer Simpson’s exclamation

47 Bug-smacking sound

56 Locked in place

48 Swiss miss of kiddie lit

58 Vulcan officer on “Star Trek: Voyager”

49 When some fast food drive-thrus close

64 They create commercials

50 Hired goon

65 Yellow, as a banana

51 “Whip-Smart” singer Liz

66 Director Burton

54 Just say no?

67 Mike of “The Love Guru”

55 “Falling Slowly” musical

68 Indian restaurant basketful

57 Revolution

DOWN 1 Colbert’s current channel 2 Thompson of “Back to the Future” 3 Org. of attorneys

59 President pro ___ 60 “Duck Hunt” platform 61 Through, on airline itineraries 62 ___-Locka, Florida 63 “Barbie: Life in the Dreamhouse” character

©2016 JONESIN’ CROSSWORDS (EDITOR@JONESINCROSSWORDS.COM)

“Commencement speeches were invented largely in the belief that outgoing college students should never be released into the world until they have been properly sedated.” - Garry Trudeau

VOLUME 20 ISSUE 23 / June 9, 2016 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY

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52 WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM / June 9, 2016 / BEND’S INDEPENDENT VOICE

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JUNE 10

The Old Stone Presents

DAVID AND LISA, A PLAY BY JAMES REACH JUNE 14

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AFROMAN


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