APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 1
COUGARS IN YOUR BACKYARD! OR, ARE YOU IN THEIRS?
NEWS
P. 7
Checking Up On the Rookies
VOLUME 19 • ISSUE 14 • April 2, 2015 •
SOUND
P. 12
Corner Gospel Explosion: Familiar Faces, New Sound
CULTURE
“Spring is when you feel like whistling even with a shoe full of slush.” - Doug Larson
P. 27
Poetry Month Beginneth
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THIS WEEK EDITOR ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Phil Busse Erin Rook
EDITORAL ASSISTANT Hayley Murphy COPY EDITOR Lisa Seales FILM & THEATER CRITIC Jared Rasic ARTS CORRESPONDENT Kelsey Rook BEER REVIEWER Kevin Gifford LITERARY CONNOISSEUR Christine Hinrichs INTREPID EXPLORER Corbin Gentzler COLUMNISTS Taylor Thompson, Amy Alkon, Rob Brezsney, Wm.™ Steven Humphrey, Roland Sweet FREELANCERS Ethan Maffey, JP Schlick, Erik Henriksen, Matt Jones, EJ Pettinger, Pearl Stark, Josh Gross, Delano Lavigne, Magdalena Devi, Eric Skelton PRODUCTION MANAGER Jessie Czopek GRAPHIC DESIGNER Katie Ball ADVERTISING SALES DIRECTOR Amanda Klingman ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Ban Tat, Chris Larro, Kimberly Morse OFFICE/ACCOUNTS MANAGER Kayja Buhmann CIRCULATION MANAGER Kayja Buhmann CONTROLLER Angela Switzer PUBLISHER Aaron Switzer WILD CARD Paul Butler NATIONAL ADVERTISING Alternative Weekly Network 916-551-1770 Sales Deadline: 5 pm Mondays Editorial Deadline: 5 pm Mondays Calendar Deadline: 12 pm Fridays Classified Deadline: 4 pm Mondays Deadlines may shift for special/holiday issues.
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D
epending on the angle from which you view it, the differences between the rural and urban areas in Central Oregon are either a yin-yang balance, or a divide as wide as a canyon. Yes, there are working cowboys here, and yes there also are computer programmers who sip their lattes and jawbone about their beer’s IBUs. This week’s issue touches down somewhere in that interface, with a couple articles looking at the friction between those two very different worlds—the wild rural spaces, and the tamed urban zones. Most directly, our feature story this week (page 8) looks at the shooting of a cougar this past week on Pilot Butte—a space that is in some of our readers’ backyard! It is a reminder that part of the very natural beauty many note as this region’s greatest attribute is also one of the region’s most unpredictable factors. Also, in this week’s Glass Slipper (page 6), we give a nod to Rep. Greg Walden, who has been a primary reason that the Secure Rural Schools Act looks to get back in circulation. First passed 15 years ago, that Act was set up to replace federal money for rural schools, which was lost when timber sales dried up. Bringing back—or at least holding onto— some public funding for rural schools is a critical issue for Central Oregon as the rift between graduation rates in urban and rural schools has drifted further apart. Rep. Walden’s work to restore that funding is an important step toward lessening those differences. Cowboy or computer programmer, we hope you enjoy this week’s issue.
EDITOR’S CHOICE: Checking in with Bend’s newest City Councilors, page 7
APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 3
ABOUT THE COVER Illustrator: Lee White Title: Flight of the Zepher Website: leewhiteillustration.com
Mailbox
5
The Glass Slipper
6
News
7
Feature
8
Our Picks
11
Sound
12
Out of Town
14
Clubs
15
Events
17
Chow
22
Culture
24
Outside
28
Film Events
31
Film Shorts
32
I ♥ Television
33
Astrology
34
News Quirks
35
Advice Goddess
36
Puzzles
39
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WHO
You!!! Managers will be available to discuss openings, conduct interviews and hire!
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APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 5
OPINION LETTERS
Have something to say? Send your thoughts to editor@bendsource.com. Letters must be received by noon Friday for inclusion in the following week’s paper. Please limit letters to 250 words. Submission does not guarantee publication. Letter of the week receives $5 to Palate!
In response to the March 26 letter from Stan Baker asking readers to support the TPP “Free Trade” agreement, I urge readers to check out Elizabeth Warren’s speech on the Senate Floor, probably on YouTube, against this impending catastrophe. This secret Act effectively gives international corporate governance power to bypass our legal and jurisprudence systems to screw us all in mind bending new ways. Obama, who I support in most everything else, as with Clinton and NAFTA, is all for this monstrosity, as are virtually all the Republicans in Congress. In fact, it is about the only “bipartisan” issue Republicans are willing agree with Obama about. You know if that’s the case, this train wreck is a disaster for all the rest of us. The text is too lengthy to go into here but is widely available on the net. Read it before you swallow Stan Baker’s Kool-Aid. —R.T.Tihista This week Wikileaks released the secret investment provisions of the Trans-Pacific Partnership. They would give overseas corporations the authority to sue towns and cities for implementing public health, environmental and consumer safeguards, which would allegedly hurt the company’s profits. Lawsuits brought under this investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) provision would be arbitrated outside of U.S. courts by unaccountable trade tribunals. ISDS suits have already challenged fracking moratoriums in Canada and cigarette advertising in Australia. Ironically, we taxpayers may end up paying for lawsuits brought about by U.S.based companies, which have operations in countries included in the pact. The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) would undermine the laws that protect our public health. It would threaten our food security including local food for schools, GMO labeling, and country of origin labeling. It would result in decreased employment, as companies would be free to operate in countries where they can take advantage of weaker labor and environmental rules. Only the biggest multi-national corporations will benefit from the TPP and American citizens will pay the price. I urge you to write your legislators in opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership. —Laurie Lakin
IN REPLY TO DOING THE DAM THING (3/25)
The # 1 priority here should be overall health of the river. I’m glad there are groups
focused on fighting the private entities who are set on masking the core issues in the name of capitalism and profit. The rebuilding of a “new dam” and the restructuring of downtown (how did this idea get brought into the mix anyway?) is geared for nothing more than to protect the interests of a few (rich) property owners and for the financial gain of those wanting to win the contracts for construction. Think Halliburton. DOWN WITH THE DAM. And please don’t let the money hungry one-percenters screw the rest of us out a flourishing, free-flowing river, full of wildlife, that provides for additional recreational opportunities. What’s best for the habitat is ultimately best for us: freetheriver.org. —Rynomill via bendsource.com
LIGHTMETER
IN REPLY TO HEAD OF THE CLASS (3/18)
When do we get rid of “School Improvement Wednesdays?” Are we living in an Orwell novel? —rob_bie via bendsource.com
CITY COUNCIL VOTES 4-3 TO SUPPORT MIRROR POND (3/19)
I’d really like to see Mirror Pond stay as close to the same as possible and it seems like the best way to get that result is the current proposal. —Adam Johnson via facebook.com/ sourceweekly It’ll be cool, there are lots of great parks and things to do in this town! It just keeps blowing up, it’s kind of overwhelming to go out during First Friday and big events though. I just hope that I can continue to afford to live here forever. —Christopher Cook via facebook.com/ sourceweekly Loss of parking will hurt downtown and the traffic. I have heard arguments that it will encourage greener transportation, but quite seriously most of Bend is not bike friendly to get to and from downtown. It’s hard enough during events and First Friday to find parking, even the parking garage is usually full. Without better plans for parking and traffic, this plan is not completely agreeable to me. —Colin Gladden via facebook.com/ sourceweekly Oh great. Let’s add a row of four story condos, shops, and bars. And no parking. Great for a few developer carpetbaggers. I saw this type of “urban renewal” in another community. Created traffic gridlock problems and caused shops and small restau-
ACTIVISTS FROM CASCADIA FOREST DEFENDERS HUNG A BANNER PROTESTING THE MANAGEMENT OF THE DESCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST MONDAY ON THE HWY 97 OVERPASS OVER GREENWOOD AVENUE. PHOTO BY CASCADIA FOREST DEFENDERS.
rants to close. It’s all part of the “bigger is better” developer mentality. —Geoffrey Hance
INTOLERABLE
sad that all the new neighborhoods, where homes are just 10 feet apart with no yards, are destroying the character that once made Bend such a desirable place to live. Period. End of Rant! —Dave Stalker
I have lived here for some 39 years and it just seems some of the current trends need a reality check. To me they are becoming intolerable. There is no reason to tolerate that just copyrighted 2015 E.J. Pettinger’s Dave - A rant like that must work up a good because the Deschutes was dammed up thirst. How about having a cup of something 100 years ago, that it must remain that on us? Stop by our offices for your $5 gift way in perpetuity. Let it run free, like God certificate to Palate. We promise to keep our intended. crotch-sniffing dogs on their leashes while There is no reason to tolerate dogs offyou’re here. leash when you have thousands of open acres of forest to take your crotch-sniffing, E.J. Pettinger’s undisciplined dog out to wander around. There is no reason to tolerate open and legal use of a mind altering drug like marijuana. It is an evil plot to make otherwise intelligent people more pliable to the agenda of uber rich like the Koch Brothers, who envision a race of slaves serving the moneyed classes while having no hope of improving their own fortunes. There is no reason to tolerate homes that cost over a quarter million dollars, for a starter home. We don’t all need to live in McMansions to feel the pride of home ownership. I have always thought Oregon’s Land Use laws were good, but it’s just plain
Letter of the Week!
Mild Abandon copyrighted 2015
Mild Abandon
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IN OPPOSITION TO THE TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP
The rise of the Extremist Moderate. The rise of the Extremist Moderate.
HIGHLIGHTS THIS WEEK
v
Celebrate the 30th Anniversary of
The Breakfast Club
Q&A with the film’s cinematographer
Thomas Del Ruth
A judged costume contest with prizes (more than a pack of smokes!)
Old Stone Church,
6:30 pm, Wednesday, April 22 $12; $10 BendFilm members
6 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM
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Putting Money Where It Belongs A year ago, Congress’ “job approval” rating hit an all-time low, 13 percent. Over the past year, that approval rating has climbed to 23 percent, which yes, is an improvement, but still dismal, and still hamstrung by the constant partisan bickering and stunts like writing letters to Iran’s leaders. But not everything at the U.S. Capitol is broken. Last week, Rep. Greg Walden, who represents pretty much all of Oregon east of the Cascades, helped resurrect and restore the Secure Rural Schools Act. Although not a perfect or necessarily long-term solution, the Act will provide tens of millions in federal funding to schools in rural counties. First passed in 2000, the Secure Rural Schools Act stepped into a void left by waning timber sales. In the previous decades, hundreds of rural counties received a quarter of revenues generated from timber sales from national forests. The arrangement was controversial— ballyhooed by environmentalists as a sort of “blood money”—but it delivered millions each year to fix rural roads and fund schools. But, as timber sales plummeted in the ’80s and ’90s, the plan proved to not be sustainable. In 2000, Congress wisely stepped in and changed the funding system for counties and schools with passage of the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act. The law replaced revenue sharing with a guaranteed level of payments no longer tied to the amount of timber produced from the national forests. But unfortunately, the Secure Rural Schools Act also is neither secure nor solid. It first expired in 2006, and has since been renewed a couple times; it has been subject to the whims of Congress, and in the final days of the last Congress was pulled from the omnibus spending legislation. However, at that same time, just before Christmas, Rep. Walden secured a commitment from House Speaker John Boehner to get the program re-funded by the end of the first quarter of this year—and, right at deadline, they are doing just that. At press time, it is scheduled for a vote and is likely to move easily through the Senate. It is a plan worth about $300 million annually to rural counties in 39 different states, and includes a heavy dose of funding for Central and Southern Oregon. Rightfully so, Walden’s staff pointed to Josephine as a prime example: Without the Secure Rural Schools Act, the county would lose $1 million in federal funding and need to cut its 9-1-1 service and lay off several law enforcement officers. Thirty-three of Oregon’s 36 counties qualify for the funding, money that is particularly keen because it is delivering funding directly to schools in rural areas, including Deschutes and Jefferson counties. For the past two years, Oregon has ranked as one of the states with the worst on-time graduation rates in the country—and more than any other indicator, the primary demographic to not graduate was not race or gender-based, but socio-economic; overall, 70 percent of those who did not graduate were from low-income families, the bulk located in these rural counties. Summit High and Bend High, both of which draw from solidly middleclass and suburban neighborhoods, have strong on-time graduation rates (92 percent, 90 percent), while other schools in the same school district, but drawing from more rural and poorer areas have distinctly lower graduation rates—with La Pine Senior High right at the state average (72 percent), and Redmond High only graduating two out of three students (67 percent). Rep. Walden helping restore funding for the Secure Rural Schools Act is an example of finding an important solution for an immediate problem. And, what’s more, the restoration of the Secure Rural Schools Act shows an important ability for bipartisan work, as Rep. Walden’s office worked with Rep. Peter Defazio, a progressive Democrat who represents much of the mid-Willamette Valley. Two gold stars for Rep. Walden this week!
APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 7
NEWS
(Nearly) 100 Days Progress Report Checking in with Bend’s newest City Councilors
SIDE NOTES BY ERIN ROOK
BY ERIN ROOK. PHOTOS BY MATT FOX.
CASEY ROATS
Source Weekly: Since starting on Council, what has caught you most by surprise? Casey Roats: I have been most surprised to learn how costly and time consuming our Urban Growth Boundary expansion process has been. The 2008 proposal was over 8,000 acres and was remanded back to Bend by the State. The current range of proposed new acreage is between 1,000 and 3,000 acres. If we end up with a proposal that only adds 1,000 new acres for our mandated 20-year developable land supply, it won’t have done anything to address the underlying economic drivers that are making housing too expensive. You can’t build affordable homes on land that isn’t affordable as well.
NATHAN BODDIE
Source Weekly: Since starting on Council, what has caught you most by surprise? Nathan Boddie: While not perhaps a surprise, I think the slow pace at which I am able to address the issues I find most important, has been a reminder of just how change seems to those who do not want it, and just how slowly it proceeds for those of us working towards some-
BARB CAMPBELL
Source Weekly: Since starting on Council, what has caught you most by surprise? Barb Campbell: I am surprised by how little time there is to brainstorm and discuss ideas with the Council as a whole. It’s for an important reason—all deliberations involving a quorum must be made in a public, accessible meeting—but it’s a challenge. We’ve added a third, monthly meeting on the first Friday of the month just to try and address this. For the next two months those meetings have
SW: Have you changed your perspective or position on any issues since starting on Council? CR: I’ve changed my perspective to a certain degree on funding of our bus system. I have traditionally been skeptical of just dumping money into a bus system that only recoups less than 20 percent of its costs through ridership. There is a proposal to target additional routes and frequency of buses in higher density residential areas with destinations at the college, the hospital, and other similar destinations. I think it’s a smarter and more focused approach to helping meet the transportation needs of more people in our community. SW: What do you think are the biggest issues on Council’s plate now and for the rest of 2015? CR: I think 2015 will be dominated with OSU-Cascades, Mirror Pond and associated redevelopment in the area, short-term rentals, and issues surrounding the commercial uses around Galveston. I think that most of these issues can be tied back to our larger problem of, how is Bend going to grow and where? For the crowd that is philosophically opposed to a UGB expansion, my question is, “What parts of town are we going to alter significantly to meet the various needs of a growing city?” Every time change comes to a part of town, whether that be breweries going in, proposed apartment buildings, demand for short-term housing etc., the neighbors are adamantly opposed. I would prefer to not have to change the character of large parts of the existing city, but instead through smart and efficient land use planning, let Bend grow east and west accommodating those various demands. thing new. Of course this is a safety feature built into any legislative process and we wouldn’t want to careen around from one direction to another. My work on council is more of a marathon than a sprint. SW: Have you changed your perspective or position on any issues since starting on Council? NB: As a new Councilor, I think it would be arrogant to think I understood every issue adequately coming out of a campaign and I endeavor to keep an open mind and look at an issue without a predisposed agenda or bias. OSU-Cascades is perhaps the issue about which I’ve learned most since starting. While I continue to have misgivings about impacts to housing and transportation, I am encouraged that we can find solutions to these challenges wherever a university is ultimately located. SW: What do you think are the biggest issues on Council’s plate now and for the rest of 2015? NB: First, second, and third, are all affordability. How we work on that through urban growth boundary expansion, affordable housing code changes, and vacation rental regulation are all issues I am working on actively. Protecting natural resources is also a priority for Council and includes Tumalo Creek restoration, as well as how we expand our UGB to avoid undue risk to Bend citizens’ health or financial stability. morphed into budget meetings, but I am hopeful we’ll have more time once the budget is finalized in the next couple of months. SW: Have you changed your perspective or position on any issues since starting on Council? BC: The new “preferred plan”—preferred by a tiny sliver of our population, the Park Board, and a slim majority of the City Council— to restore Mirror Pond and redevelop downtown is so egregious and unworkable it makes me think I might rather just dredge the darn thing for the $2 million-$5 million that was being discussed in 2012. SW: What do you think are the biggest issues on Council’s plate now and for the rest of 2015? BC: Urban Growth Boundary expansion: Council, staff, and community volunteers have been steadfastly working to have our expansion plan ready for the State on schedule. Transportation: Our streets are crumbling. Our network of sidewalks is fragmented and impassable for many disabled folks. If we don’t improve/expand our bus system and get better connectivity with our bike lanes, we have no hope of integrating a new university campus in to our community. These are daunting challenges but I feel confident the time is ripe for a major transportation overhaul. For the full scoop, read the extended interviews online at bendsource.com.
An activist group called Cascadia Forest Defenders protested proposed clear cuts in the Deschutes National Forest on Monday by hanging a banner from the Highway 97 overpass above Greenwood Avenue that read “Entering Deschutes National Forest: Where Recreation and Clearcuts Abound!” The Defenders, a grassroots environmental organization opposed to what it calls the “ecologically and environmentally exploitative” practices of the timber industry, claims that the Forest Service is engaging in clearcutting under the guise of “renamed regeneration harvests, seed tree harvests, or group selections.” The group also expressed concerns in a press release about old growth logging, the use of herbicides near wetlands, and the loss of spotted owl habitat.
If you haven’t burnt out on discussing—or listening to other people talk about—vacation rentals, the Bend Chamber is hosting a business-oriented town hall on just that topic. The event will focus on the potential impacts of any City regulations on property and business owners, with panelists including Rob Moore of Arbor Mortgage, Sue Carrington of Bend Dutch Vacation Rentals, and Jon Skidmore of City of Bend. The forum will be held on Tuesday, April 7 at the Deschutes Brewery Public House starting at 5:30 pm (with mixing and mingling beginning at 5 pm). Tickets are $15 for Chamber members and $20 for the general public.
Rep. Knute Buehler wants to give people the freedom to be guinea pigs. That is, he is spearheading a bill that would allow terminally ill patients to access treatments that are still technically in the experimental phase, and not yet approved for general use. The bill wouldn’t open the floodgates to snake oil salesmen, rather it would allow access to treatments that have completed Phase 1 of the Food and Drug Administration’s approval process. House Bill 2300, dubbed the “Right to Try” bill, recently unanimously passed the House Health Care committee.
8 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM
FEATURE NEWS
Cat Fight Cougar sightings spark debate about management BY ERIN ROOK
Last Saturday, a brilliant spring day, around 6:45 pm, just as the sun was beginning to set, a hiker spotted a young male cougar sitting within sight of the trail. He wasn’t on some remote, backcountry pathway, but was walking up Pilot Butte, the popular state park with trails that snake around the 500 foot cider cone that looms over Bend’s east side, and sits adjacent to an elementary and middle school. The hiker called 9-1-1, and Bend police officers responded when an ODFW staffer was not available to assist. Though police are not specifically trained in responding to predator sightings, public information officer Lt. Clint Burleigh says officers do what’s required to keep people safe. “Whenever we have a situation where the public is in danger, we need to make a decision about what to do,” Burleigh says. “We’re set up to help with rabid or violent dogs, but we’re not set up for cougars.” Typically, he explains, when police get an animal complaint, officers go out and see if there’s any evidence of a cougar. “If we find the cougar, we call ODFW,” Burleigh says. “That’s their specialty.” But this time, they weren’t available. ODFW Wildlife Communications Coordinator Michelle Dennehy says that the department has just two wildlife biologists covering some 6,000 miles of territory. Police officers do carry tranquilizer guns, but those are intended for use on dogs—not massive cats that weigh upward of 200 pounds—and can take up to 15 minutes to work. Officers were concerned that shooting the cougar last Saturday might simply aggravate the cat and make a scary situation something much worse. This was the second cougar spotted—and subsequently put to death—this year in Bend. The first was a juvenile male discovered lounging in a tree in SE Bend on January 30. He was tranquilized by Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife staff before being euthanized. But while the close proximity of these two incidents lends an impression that cougar-human encounters are on the rise, ODFW statistics show a relatively even trend, with some periodic fluctuation. Dennehy points out that the cougar population is thriving in Oregon, with an estimated 6,000 currently living in the state. Generally, the total number of cougars killed each year in Deschutes County tends to swing between five and 10—and, of those, a small portion is because of concern over human safety. In 2014, for example, of the 10 cougars the ODFW recorded as deceased in Deschutes County, just one was killed out of concern for human safety. By contrast, 4 deaths were attributable to damage, another 4 to legal hunting, and the remaining one was road kill. Yet, as cougar and human populations both continue to increase—and to live in closer proximity with each other—conflicts become more difficult to avoid. “In some locales, our human communities have developed in areas already occupied
by many species of wildlife, including predators such as cougars,” explains Daniel Gumtow-Farrior, a professor of natural resources at OSU-Cascades. “A cougar can easily travel several miles per day; through development, we have essentially moved into cougars’ living rooms and instead of being surprised or shocked at sightings of cougars, we should expect sightings of cougars in these areas and work to develop effective, long-term avoidance and mitigation strategies.” But, he points out, even experts disagree on whether shooting individual cougars in human-occupied areas is an effective management response. “Effective predator management, including cougar management, should not be based on natural human fears, anecdotal or media accounts,” Gumtow-Farrior explains, “but rather based on empirical scientific data and sound ecological principles.” Those protocols, though, do not always favor protecting the cougar’s life. Dennehy says that ODFW policy precludes the relocation of adult cougars because of the perceived likelihood of the animal creating problems someplace else, and a lack of available territory. “If you relocate a problem cougar, it often goes on to create the same problems in a different area,” she says. “Cougar habitat area in Oregon is pretty well occupied.” But some studies indicate that killing cougars increases conflict, rather than mitigating the threat to humans and domesticated animals. Research by the Washington State University Department of Natural Resource Sciences Large Carnivore Conservation Lab in 2012 found that heavy hunting increases the number of young male cougars and that this population is more likely to enter into human-occupied areas than older animals. As such, the researchers hypothesized that this is why killing cougars does not necessarily result in a reduced number of complaints. What is less clear is whether these measures are to thank for the fact that there is no official record of a human being killed by a wild cougar in Oregon—and, all told, only an estimated 20 people have been killed by cougars in North American between 1890 and 2011; six of which were in California. Bend City Councilor Barb Campbell says she’s especially concerned about the management of the local cougar population, but is hopeful that increased attention could lead to change. “I feel confident we can work with our local police force and ODFW to establish a policy that keeps our citizens safe, but also prioritizes saving the lives of the animals,” Campbell says. “When they can be safely relocated out into the wilderness, they might not survive, but they will at least have a chance.” To learn more about the ODFW cougar management policy, visit dfw.state.or.us/wildlife.
APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 9
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OUR PICKS
thursday 2
friday 3 & saturday 4
MUSIC—Like Best Coast, Be Calm Honcho seems to adore California, and play guitar-forward anthems about the state’s carefree mindset, songs beset with just the right mix of LA surf and SF psychedelic influences. Most notable is Shannon Harney sweet, but saucy voice. 9 pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr., Bend. $5.
KAMIKAZE— Portrayed as both brave soldiers and brainwashed fanatics, Ken Ruoff, Professor of History and Director of the Center for Japanese Studies at Portland State University, explores exactly who were the young Japanese men ordered to fly suicide missions during WWII. Friday, noon, Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend. Saturday, 11 am, Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. Free.
Be Calm Honcho
A Novel Idea
thursday 2
friday 3 & saturday 4
Pinedrops IPA Celebration
A Tribute to Baseball
BEER—For the first time, local favorite Pinedrops IPA is being bottled and Deschutes is throwing a party to celebrate. Expect sample trays, a photo booth, food specials, and swag giveaways. Starting at 7:30 pm the soul-meets-hop-hop band Dirty Revival will also play in the taproom. No Bend party is complete without costumes and one partygoer can win an undisclosed big prize for the best impersonation of a hop! 11 am – 10:30 pm. Deschutes Brewery Public House, 1044 NW Bond St., Bend. Free.
BASEBALL AS ART—From “Casey at Bat” to Bull Durham, the sport of baseball has served as an artistic muse for decades. These two evenings are presentations of poetry and one-acts from a teenage acting class. Regular season MLB games start on Sunday! 7:30 pm – 10 pm. Cascade Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood, Bend. Free.
saturday 4
thursday 2
Comedy Extravaganza
Scott Pemberton Trio
JAM BAND—The ratio of bearded fans at a Scott Pemberton Trio concerts often rivals the facial hair at a logger camp. A moldy sound of swamp blues and flannel grunge, Scott Pemberton’s guitar—and good humor—cuts through the jam band clutter like a chain saw through a birch tree. 7 pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis, 700 NW Bond St., Bend. Free.
LAUGHS—Springfield-based comedian and motivational speaker Frank King has made a living making jokes about everything from air travel to hunting (is it really a “sport” if you don’t even have to squint?), all aimed at lightening the mood. He’ll be joined by Eugene’s Alex Elkin, who’s been at the comedy game since before he was old enough to get into the clubs. 7 pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend. $23-$51.
friday 3
sunday 5
N8, Matt Wax & Royal Louis
Easter Egg Hunt for Dogs
DEEJAYS— It is not clear exactly whose “last night” this is, but elusively, Dojos has branded this deejay party as “one last night.” The late-night bar, restaurant, and spot for top shelf drinks has been a cornerstone for downtown weekend nights (and casual week day evenings) for the past two years. End of a chapter? 10 pm. Dojos, 852 NW Brooks, Bend. Free.
FIDO FUN—Now in its 6th year, the Easter Egg Hunt for Dogs gives your fluffy friend free reign of Bend Pet Express’ eastside store to hunt out eggs containing allergy-friendly treats and—in a select few—gift cards. Just be sure your little killer is vaccinated, well-mannered, and leashed. 2-3:30 pm. Bend Pet Express Eastside, 420 Windy Knolls Dr., Bend. Free. Donation Suggested: Please bring a pet food item to donate to the HOPE food bank for pets.
friday 3
wednesday 8
Smokey Brights
The Giving Tree Band
MUSIC—The self-described “vintage rock” of Smokey Brights is a sort of multi-layered time travel, like listening to Pink Floyd bleed into the Joy Division on the jukebox in a smoke-filled dive bar. Even as it makes sound collages out of old issues of Rolling Stone, Smokey Brights’ hypnotic soundscape carries the listener through Oz-like fields of dreamy poppies. If you miss the band in Bend, you can catch them at Sasquatch. 9 pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr., Bend. $5.
BANJOS—If you’re anything like us, Wednesday is just another word for halfway to cracked out crazy. After staring at screens, The Giving Tree Band’s oldtimey tunes are a welcome respite from a tech-obsessed world. Added bonus: The band uses instruments built from fallen or reclaimed wood and follows a vegan diet. 9 pm. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr., Bend. $8 adv., $10 door.
Tickets & Info: 541-317-0700 TowerTheatre.org TheTowerTheatre @towertheatrebnd TheTowerTheatre
Masters of Soul Apr. 8
Lee at Appomattox Apr. 10
Bend Follies Apr. 24-25
Preservation Month May 1
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SOUND A Love Supreme
THE SOURCE
Jazz quartet brings John Coltrane’s legacy to Bend
SUGGESTS... BY ANNE PICK
BY ERIN ROOK
ALTHOUGH THEIR COMBINED AGES HARDLY TOTAL 50, THEY ARE CELEBRATING COLTRANE’S 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF “LOVE SUPREME.” 4/4. PHOTO BY SONALI SAMPAT.
Though jazz music doesn’t enjoy the mainstream popularity it did in the mid-20th century, there are certain albums and songs whose influence has permeated the nation’s musical ground water. John Coltrane’s masterpiece “A Love Supreme,” release 50 years ago February, is one of these classics. While it’s not uncommon for jazz to touch on religious themes, or inspire spiritual impulses, Coltrane’s 1945 album was essentially a poetic prayer put to music. In the liner notes, the poem on which the four-part composition is based is dedicated to the praise of God and the enumeration of the universality of that supreme love. “I’d like to point out to people the divine in a musical language that transcends words,” Coltrane is often quoted as saying. “I want to speak to their souls.” But the praise-filled lines are not among the song’s lyrics—at least, not in a literal sense. The only spoken words in the piece are a brief chant of, “A love supreme. A love supreme.” But neither is the composition a pure abstraction on religious themes. In the final passage of the piece, Coltrane puts the rhythm of the poem’s words to melody, enunciating them through the plaintive sounds of the tenor saxophone. When former Bendite Torrey Newheart first heard “A Love Supreme,” as a high school musician, he says he was struck by the overarching theme. “It definitely had an impact,” Newheart, now 24 and with a master’s in jazz, recalls. “The large point that he was trying to make with it was being grateful for being alive and something greater than yourself, just being human. You can really feel that. I really latched onto that when I first heard it.” Though he’s not particularly religious, Newheart says the album’s universalistic perspective resonates with him. That’s part of why he’s touring with a quartet of young musicians to offer their unique
interpretation of Coltrane’s iconic tune. “For me personally, one of my goals playing music in general is to take somebody out of themselves for a moment,” Newheart explains. “I think most people have had that when experiencing art, that moment when you get lost and have no idea how much time is going by—that kind of exchange is very important to me.” Pianist Newheart will be performing with another Bendite— drummer Adam Carlson. Newheart attended Bend High School, while Carlson went to Mountain View, but the two began playing music together after they met in a class at Cascades School of Music. Bellevue’s Sean Peterson on bass and Ashland’s Adam Harris on saxophone will join the hometown boys for a special performance of “A Love Supreme” in Bend on Saturday, April 4. Newheart says that it’s an intimidating piece to play, and has demanding significantly more rehearsal time than other projects he’s worked on. Part of that demand is due to the piece’s iconic status, but part is because it relies so heavily on improvisation. There’s no sheet music, he explains. Rather, the song is built on a couple simple blues melodies—Newheart uses a single sheet of paper with bullet points as his guideposts. “John Coltrane is an iconic figure and ‘A Love Supreme’ is his big thing,” Newheart says. “To do it any kind of justice you have to go deep into those philosophical questions, [including] are you able to stay in the moment for 45 minutes? It takes so much focus.”
Sweetwater String Band Sweetwater String Band brings together all the best elements of bluegrass and traditional mountain music inspired by the desert and mountain landscapes of its Mammoth Lakes, Calfornia, home. The band plays high-energy, cello-driven bluegrass as well as more traditional, easy-going ballads. Translation: booty-shaking. 8-10 pm. Sunday, April 5. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr.
A Love Supreme: 50th Anniversary Tribute Featuring Adam Carlson, Adam Harris, Torrey Newheart, and Sean Peterson. 6 pm. Saturday, April 4. Mountain View High School Auditorium. $10 general, $6 students.
That Song From That Movie BY JOSH GROSS
SCAN THE QR CODE
Dana and Susan Robinson Hailing from the green mountains of Vermont, Dana and Susan Robinson bring their “new-time, old-time” music to an intimate house concert setting in the Newport Hills of Bend. The combination of Dana’s masculine, yet smooth, vocals with Susan’s harmonies creates a brand of American folk music made for easy listening. Uplifting melodies blend with the blues on a wealth of original songs and standards, with Dana on guitar and fiddle and Susan on banjo. Potluck starts at 5:30 pm, music at 6:30. Please RSVP to reserve your seat; houseconcertsintheglen@ bendbroadband.com, 541-480-8830. 6:308:30 pm. Thursday, April 2. House Concerts in the Glen at Newport Hills, 1019 NW Stannium Rd. $15-$20 suggested contribution.
We’ve all been there, watching a movie and thinking, “Damn Geena, this is a great song.” That’s why for this week’s Mixtape, we gathered songs with iconic placement in films. Everything from Bond themes to Dolly Parton vehicles to the song that introduced the world to Bill Haley and the Comets, “Rock Around the Clock,” via its legendary placement over the opening credits in the 1955 film Blackboard Jungle. And of course, “Don’t You Forget About Me,” from The Breakfast Club, which turns 30 this month, meaning those kids are now the adults they feared becoming (and a reminder that the Source is hosting a special screening on April 22).
IamSu! IamSu! is the stage name of rapper and record producer Sudan Ameer Williams, who is a member of The Invasion production team and the leader of hip-hop group The HBK Gang. In 2011, ‘Su collaborated with 50 Cent and LoveRance on the hit single “Up.” ‘Su’s most recent album has a relaxed flow and rhymes about hipster girls who like dudes straight flexin’ on Instagram. The young, Richmond, California-based rapper has widespread appeal, and we won’t be surprised when he crosses over into the Top 40. See him now before he completely blows up. 8 pm. Monday, April 6. Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave. $20/adv., $23/door, $50/VIP.
APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 13
SOUND
Exploding from the Wilderness Corner Gospel Explosion makes their own splash BY ERIC SKELTON
GARDENING. Get good at it. Join OSU Master Gardeners™ for gardening events Seed Starting, Tues. April 7, 1 p.m., OSU Extension office (at Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center); free. Register at extension.oregonstate.edu/ deschutes/garden-classes. Growing Vegetables, Tues. April 14, 6-8 p.m.; Ridgeview H.S., 4555 SW Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; free. Registration required; extension. oregonstate.edu/deschutes/garden-classes. Community Garden Opening, Sat. April 25, 9 a.m., Hollinshead Park, 1237 NE Jones Rd., Bend. Plots $25-$35, cash/check. Dress for weather and 2-hour work party. For questions on any of these events, call 541-548-6088.
FAMILIAR FACES, DIFFERENT SOUND. PHOTO BY KATE (BAND MOM) YOCHUM.
Bradley David Parsons is finally ready to invite you into his world. A drummer since the age of 10 and the percussive backbone of Bend’s popular folk-rock quartet Wilderness, Parsons has been writing songs of his own for years—quietly honing his voice as a songwriter and vocalist. Though more than happy playing drums in Wilderness (a role he fully intends on keeping), Parsons felt a growing desire to front a project of his own and share his unique musical perspective with others. When a window opened up in the group’s busy schedule, he pulled the trigger and recruited a few friends (including his brother Tyler Parsons and Wilderness bandmate Nick Graham) to finally bring his songs to life. “It was one of those now or never situations, where maybe I can balance it or maybe I can’t,” Parsons explains, “but I thought I might as well give it a shot.” Just like that, Corner Gospel Explosion was born. On the foundation of Parson’s crisp percussion that deftly funnels wild energy into precise strokes, CGE blends reverb-soaked guitars with heavy bass and splashes of synths to create moody atmospheric rock that would nicely soundtrack the wet and foggy Oregon days that inspire the songs themselves. “I grew up in the valley, so I was born with rain around me all the time. The best times for me to write and record songs are when there’s nasty weather outside with rain and tons of fog,” says Parsons. “I really love melancholy music in general and I’m a big fan of the shoegaze genre.” Over a self-described “spooky” musical backdrop, Parsons delivers metaphor-heavy lyrics that leverage approachable subjects like grandfather clocks and fish, to weave intricate narratives that grapple with slippery topics including human mortality and love. This colorful approach to songwriting can at least partially be attributed to the non-musical forms of storytelling he draws inspiration from. “I had just recently gotten into podcasts when I started writing lyrics. I really enjoy NPR shows like This American Life and Radiolab,” reveals Parsons. “Those are great because they’re non-visual and open your mind to new ideas and new ways of thinking—and the storytelling is at a top-notch level.” He adds, “I actually listen to more podcasts than I do music. Things like that inspire me a lot. It can be exhausting to just throw yourself into the music world and stay there. Having that escape of, ‘OK, we’re going to learn about elephants today,’ is always a nice little break.” The generally serious tone of the music is contrasted nicely by the quirky personality of the band members themselves. Named after a phrase that Parsons happened to see on a random church sign in Portland (which by no stretch of the imagination actually describes the music they play), Corner Gospel Explosion has no master plan. A set of tongue-in-cheek band photos reveals members of the group casually standing around with pumpkins on their heads and a one-liner description of their sound reads, “We sound like bands that have ‘bear’ in the name.” Their priorities are clear: play music and have fun doing it. “We want to have as much fun as possible, but play as best we can as well,” Parsons offers. “When you reach that balance, it’s something special. After releasing a self-titled debut EP in January, Corner Gospel Explosion finally shifted its focus to the stage, and turned the initial obstacle of figuring out what to do with a lead vocalist who plays drums, into a cornerstone of the group’s spirited performances. “I think people enjoy seeing a left-handed drummer with the kit switched around backwards, singing lead,” Parsons says. “It’s a little insane—even for me—trying to pull it all together. It’s a bit of a spectacle.” Corner Gospel Explosion & All You All 6 pm. Friday, April 3. Crow’s Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St. No cover.
NOW ENROLLING Compassion, joy and learning as the river rolls by
• Year-round • 8:00 - 5:30 • Montessori Education • Arts and Yoga
• Joyful, hands-on learning • DHS Provider • Primary (3-6) & Toddler (2-3) • Non-profit
Learn more: http://bendriversongschool.org Contact us at 541-647-2739 or riversongschool@live.com
Now Open
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CLUBS
: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM
wednesday 1 Cabin 22 StandUp Comedy Bend Comedy presents Bend’s most talented comedians. Hosted by Dana Buckendahl. 18+. 8-9:30 pm. Free. Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Jackie with A Fine Note Karaoke hosts. 9 pm. No cover.
chanting, and driving, mean guitars, there is nothing very funny about Silent Comedy, a four-piece rockand-roll band from San Diego. But there certainly is something catchy. 7 pm. No cover. Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic With Derek Michael Marc. 6-9 pm. Reed Pub Co. CJ Boyd With Lore Uprise Bassist, composer, vagabond, C.J. Boyd uses low-end loops and voices in order to try and stop time. On perpetual tour since March 2008, movement and stasis are both at the center of his music. With opening local sensation Lore Uprise, it is sure to be an awe of a midweek performance. 8 pm. $3.
21st Annual
Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke Rawkstar karaoke Wednesday nights. 9 pm. Free. M&J Tavern Open Mic Night 21+. 6:30 pm.
Maverick’s Country Bar and Grill Country Karaoke Pick from 1000s of songs and let’r rip! 7 pm. No cover.
SPRING BEER & WINE FEST McMenamins Old St. Francis School The Silent Comedy As if every song were drawing its life’s breath from an old western town—in equal parts from the Baptist Church as well as the whiskey-soaked tavern—and with vocals that sounds more like stern
OUT OF TOWN
Seven Nightclub Hump Day Karaoke We like to try a little something different, so come and check out our Hump Day Karaoke—it’s definitely not your normal karaoke party! 8 pm.
Continues on page 15
BY SARA JANE WILTERMOOD
21 ST ANNUAL SPRING BEER AND WINE FESTIVAL 4/3 - 4/4.
eugene Fri & friday 3 Quixotic
Sat • April 3 & 4, 2015 Noon to 10 pm
Quixotic is, oh, the standard acrobatic circus on ecstasy. You will literally be seeing double with their projection mapping, which creates eye-popping displays of color and aerial grace. Through their strings/drums mix and out-of-this-world costuming, Quixotic envelops “electronic dance music meets Cirque” for the layman. The Kansas City based group is anything but traditional; prepare to be mesmerized. 8 pm. Silva Concert Hall, Hult Center for the Performing Arts. $20-$45. ADMISSION $8.00 One Day ~ $10 Two Days
L SPECIA I R L AP Through April 19th
Oregon Convention Center • Portland Oregon
portland
Free Admission 1st 500 Friday
friday 3 - saturday 4
For more information please visit our website at Spring Beer and Wine Festival
{
1/2 lb of Certified Angus Beef, Tillamook Cheddar, Bacon, House Made BBQ Sauce, Topped with Onion Rings served with House Cut French Fries & a Glass of Cabernet $17
}
~ RESTAURANT HOURS ~ Wed-Fri : 11 am - 8 pm Lunch & Dinner Sat & Sun : 8am - 8 pm Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner
62000 Broken Top Drive
541-383-8200
Reception@brokentop.com www.brokentop.com
For the three greatest legal indulgences of our time, check out the Spring Beer and Wine Festival. (The third is chocolate, of course). Daily seminars will instruct those needing guidance for pairing chocolate with wine or how to drink alcohol gluten-free. Stump City Soul will provide dance numbers from the 60s and 70s, and The Rolling Tones promise tunes from the Stones themselves. Plus, don’t forget, the event benefits the Alzheimer’s Association. Free admission to the first 500 on Friday. 12 pm-10 pm. Oregon Convention Center. $8-$27.
www.springbeerfest.com
saturday 4
SCAN WITH SMARTPHONE
Alpenrose Dairy Easter Egg Hunt
Spring Beer & Wine is a registered not-for-profit supporting Whether you Fest, revereInc Easter as the day that Jesus cameorganization back after a 3-day hiatus, scholarships or you just and cha want to find some eggs filled with candy, Portland offers endless opportunity to get your Easter on. Alpenrose Dairy, a local Easter-egg favorite since 1962, offers traditional hunting grounds for this iconic day, and they now are serving second and third generations at this event. 10:30 am, 3-5 year-old hunt. Noon, 6-8 year-old hunt. Alpenrose Dairy. Free.
friday 3 - sunday 5 Faux Film
The 10th annual Faux Film Festival lives on in all of its faux-glory! From Faux-Commercials to Faux-PSAs to Mocumentaries, no topic is exempt from scrutiny. If Best in Show and A Mighty Wind make your favorite top-ten, this is the event for you. Let’s not forget the Faux-Training Films or Faux-travelouges or Faux-Music Videos—so many things to make fun of. 7 pm. Clinton Street Theater. $8.
APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 15
CLUBS
: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM
Stihl Whiskey Bar Bobby Lindstrom The ever-funky, blues-laced, down and dirty sounds of Bobby Lindstrom. 7-10:30 pm. No cover. The Lot Open Mic at The Lot Young budding performers or seasoned professionals. Timid yet courageous or confident and commanding. Open mic is for one and all…step up to the open mic! Local favorite performer/artist MOsley WOtta hosts this fun night showcasing local talent. 6 pm. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub Dead Winter Carpenters There is no fooling the effortless harmonies the Dead Winter Carpenters create. Their five-piece outfit blends alt-country and Americana into performances that are edgy yet whimsical. The band’s strengths are in the use of storytelling and instrumentation to create powerful songs that capture the audience. All members of DWC lend their vocals during the show, leading to smooth happy-harmonies. 9 pm. $8 adv., $12 door.
thursday 2 Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Jackie with A Fine Note Karaoke hosts. 9 pm. No cover. Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards The Substitutes Join us for a classic Thirsty Thursday with some good music and good times! 6-9 pm. $5. Hey Joe Coffee Bar Leroy and the Gang Join us for a foot stompin’ good time as Leroy and his Gang play some old time banjo favorites. First Thursday of every month, 5:30-7:30 pm. Free. Maverick’s Country Bar and 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 Scott Pemberton Trio The ratio of bearded fans at a Scott Pemberton Trio concerts often rivals the facial hair at a logger camp. A moldy sound of swamp blues and flannel grunge, Scott Pemberton’s guitar—and good humor—cuts through the jam band clutter like a chainsaw through a birch tree. 7 pm. No cover. Northside Bar & Grill Tim Cruise Former musician with Crosby, Stills & Nash, plays classic rock and oldies. First Thursday of every month, 7:30-10:30 pm. Seven Nightclub Flirty Thursday Karaoke A perfect date night karaoke party! 8 pm. Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open Mic with Hal Worcester Local singer-songwriters perform original songs. 6 pm. No cover. The Lot Matt Summers Matt Summers, lead singer of The High Street Band, Secret Agent, and “International Man of Mystery.” Always brings the party and the party people! 6-8 pm. Free. Volcanic Theatre Pub Be Calm Honcho Like Best Coast, Be Calm Honcho seems to adore California, and play guitar-forward anthems about the state’s carefree mindset, songs beset with just the right mix of LA surf and SF psychedelic influences. Most notable is Shannon Harney sweet, but saucy voice. 9 pm. $5.
friday 3 Astro Lounge Chinups & Harley Bourbon Come down and celebrate First Friday and enjoy two very different and talented local acts. First on are the Chinups with a blend of psychedelic country and blues. Then followed promptly by Harley Bourbon with their blend of folk, Americana, punk rock. 8 pm. $5. Century 21 Lifestyles Realty Break The Static Join us for First Friday with musical guest Break the Static. 5-7 pm. Checker’s Pub The River Pigs Classic rock ‘n roll. 7:30-11 pm. Crow’s Feet Commons All You All & Corner Gospel Explosion Live music for First Friday. 6 pm. Crux Fermentation Project Honey Don’t Welcoming Benji Nagel on dobro and lap steel for a night of fine original americana music—country, bluegrass, swing, rock and roll, blues, folk—in one word Americana! 6-9 pm. Free. Dogwood Cocktail Cabin DJ Wicked Join the Dogwood for a special First Friday performance by Portland’s DJ Wicked! Old school R&B and hip-hop. All vinyl, all night. First Friday of every month, 9 pm-midnight. No cover. Dojo N8, Matt Wax, & Royal Louis It is not clear exactly whose “last night” this is, but elusively, Dojos has branded this deejay party as “one last night.” The late-night bar, restaurant, and spot for top shelf drinks has been a cornerstone for downtown weekend nights (and casual weekday evenings) for the past two years. End of a chapter? 10 pm. No cover. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe Loose Gravel A little bit of country, bluegrass, and American roots music by way
of Central Oregon for your listening pleasure. Come on down to Dudley’s on First Friday for a fun night of beer, wine, coffee, books, good music, and great people. 6:30-8:30 pm. Free. Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards Doug Michaels Join us for Fondue Friday and in welcoming a new artist here at the vineyards! It’s always fun to hear something new, and of course, enjoy delicious cheese fondue and our tasty wine! 6-9 pm. $5. Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise Tim used to play with Crosby, Stills, and Nash and Jefferson Starship, as well as many other famous performers. Classic rock and oldies. Warm intimate environment. Tim will get the crowd singing along, making a fun piano bar feel. 7-11 pm. Free. Jackson’s Corner Eastside Coyote Willow Pacific Northwest acoustic group Coyote Willow’s 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. 7-9 pm. Free. Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Long Tall Eddy With roots in Austin, and blending rockabilly, rock ‘n roll, blues, and country western, Long Tall Eddy creates their own retro-flavored can of Texas refried. Originals and covers. Electric. 7:30 pm. Maverick’s Country Bar and Grill Free Friday Dance Lessons 21+. 8 pm. No cover. Seven Nightclub Ultra Dance Party 21+. First Friday of every month, 8 pm. No cover. Silver Moon Brewing The Sindicate A high energy reggae fueled rock band from Vancouver, WA. They have a unique sound that combines sultry seductiveness with hard edged rock; smoothing it out with reggae passion. They have a range that can work through classic jamming, reggae, rock ballads, to full on hiphop fusion. Happy First Friday! 9-11:45 pm. Free. The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele 21+. 9 pm. No cover. The Cinnabar Lounge The Bad Cats! It is First Friday with music by the Cats! Enjoy the full bar and restaurant! 9 pm-1 am. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub Smokey Brights The self-described “vintage rock” of Smokey Brights is a sort of multi-layered time travel, like listening to Pink Floyd bleed into the Joy Division on the jukebox in a smoke-filled dive bar. Even as it makes sound collages out of old issues of Rolling Stone, Smokey Brights’ hypnotic soundscape carries the listener through Oz-like fields of dreamy poppies. If you miss the band in Bend, you can catch them at Sasquatch. Also performing Modern Kin and The Swings. 9 pm. $5.
saturday 4 Astro Lounge MC Raider Mystic He’s back and in full effect. Raider Mystic will be performing all the classic hip hop tracks. 10 pm. Bend Brewing Company Coyote Willow Progressive acoustic Americana. 6:30-9 pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop Torrey Newhart Jazz Besides playing keyboards, piano, melodica, and accordion, Torrey Newhart is also a composer and educator. He plays in the bands Inner Limits, Michael Radcliff Quartet, and Troupe Carnivàle, in addition to leading his own trio and quintet. Post-bob, jazz, fusion, and funk. 7-9 pm. Free. Checker’s Pub The River Pigs Classic rock ‘n roll. 7:30-11 pm. Elks Lodge #1814 The Back Roads Band The band returns to Prineville Elks! 7:30-11 pm. Hardtails Bar & Grill Live Music Saturdays All day party. Food and drink specials, live music with The Manic Mechanics, classic rock at its finest! Our way of saying thank you for supporting Hardtails these last 4 years! 11-2 am. Free. Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise Tim used to play with Crosby, Stills, and Nash and Jefferson Starship as well as many other famous performers. Classic rock and oldies. Warm intimate environment. Tim will get the crowd singing along, making a fun piano bar feel. 7-11 pm. Free. Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Karaoke 21+. 8 pm. No cover. M&J Tavern Lamp Woman fronted rock group is powerfully charged and ready to blow your mind. 21+. 9 pm. No cover. Maverick’s Country Bar and Grill Free Dance Lessons Come learn the popular line dances to your favorite country songs every Saturday! 9 pm. No cover. Portello Wine Café Allan Byer Allan does his original Americana music from three cds, new songs, and selected Bruce Cockburn covers. 7-9 pm.
Silver Moon Brewing Royal Jelly Jive An intoxi cating mixed drink of hard-swingin’ soul jive, Royal Jelly Jive dives deep head-first into the old school throwback sounds of the 1940s with a groovy new twist. Rapturous horns, sleek bass, elegant keys, and swingin’ cymbals are just some of the sweet tastes you may devour if you’re lucky enough to catch them. 9-11:45 pm. Free.
wednesday 8 Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Jackie with A Fine Note Karaoke hosts. 9 pm. No cover. Hardtails Bar & Grill Karaoke Rawkstar karaoke Wednesday nights. 9 pm. Free. M&J Tavern Open Mic Night 21+. 6:30 pm.
The Summit Saloon & Stage DJ Steele 21+. 9 pm. No cover.
Maverick’s Country Bar and Grill Country Karaoke Pick from 1000s of songs and let’r rip! 7 pm. No cover.
The Cinnabar Lounge The Bad Cats A full moon Caturday night. Dance to live music and enjoy a full bar and restaurant! 9 pm-1 am. No cover.
McMenamins Old St. Francis School Albatross with The Quiet American The music of Albatross focuses around the idea of simplicity. The masterly crafted tunes cut straight to the heart with lyrical themes rushing from love and life, but with added poignancy being brought to the table by the optimistic and inspiring message throughout. 7 pm. No cover.
Volcanic Theatre Pub Elektrapod Another legendary night of hot sweaty grooves! If you haven’t caught an Elektrapod show at VTP yet, you really must do it. This band stands out as one of the hottest bands ever to have emerged from the Central Oregon scene. 10 pm. $5 adv., $7 door.
sunday 5 Broken Top Bottle Shop Ground Score Willie An improvisational rock group whose seeds were sown in Chicago in 2007. Audiences at a GSW show should expect to go for an unpredictable ride through danceable grooves, dirty riffs, ambient sweetness, lyrical gems, sparkling harmonies, and daring loop-a-whirls. The band is very prolific with original material, but also love to bust out some crowd-pleasing covers at every show. Psychedelic, jam, experimental. 7-9 pm. No cover. Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Jackie with A Fine Note Karaoke hosts. 9 pm. No cover. Dawg House ll Acoustic Jam Session/Open Mic Come join our house band, Dawg House Rhythm Hounds & Friends, as they host our Sunday Jam Session. We have a combination of seasoned and recreational musicians coming together to share the stage. This is a much needed outlet for singer/songwriters, seasoned and amateur musicians to develop/ perform new material, improve improvisation, and live performance skills, or just simply socialize with others that have similar interests. 4-6 pm. Free. Strictly Organic Coffee - Old Mill Paul Eddy Country, folk. All ages. Every other Sunday, 3 pm. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub Sweetwater String Band Delivering a hard drivin’ mix of original and traditional mountain music. 8-10 pm.
monday 6
Domino Room IAMSU Sudan Ameer Williams is a rapper and record producer, better known by his stage name Iamsu! He is also a member of the production team The Invasion, and the leader of the hip hop group The HBK Gang. Hip-hop. 8 pm. $20 ad., $23 door, $50 VIP. Northside Bar & Grill Karaoke With DJ Chris! 7-9 pm.
tuesday 7 Astro Lounge Trivia Tuesdays Bring your team or join one! Usually six categories of various themes. 8 pm. No cover. Bamboo Room DJ Shane Come down to the Bamboo Room (behind the Hong Kong) on 3rd street and Wilson and get your pre-funk on. Drink specials, good food, great music! 7 pm. No cover. Hey Joe Coffee Bar Janellybean Live A music teacher and entertainer for children and their famlies! Come on in with your young children for a great hour of songs and music. First Tuesday of every month, 9:30-10:30 am. Free. Kelly D’s Irish Sports Bar Ukulele Jam All ages. 6:30 pm. No cover. M&J Tavern SkyGuy Re-upped and amped out. Ready to take charge and run down a world’s dose of satire filled reality. Take the time to enjoy a moments honesty full of the crass humor in life. A little rock, a little punk, and a whole lotta whiskey! 21+. 9 pm. No cover. Northside Bar & Grill Lori Fletcher and Deco Moon Jazz Lori Fletcher and Deco Moon Jazz bring you a relaxing evening of Jazz standards and dancing. First Tuesday of every month, 6-9 pm. Seven Nightclub Rockstar Karaoke Join us downtown for Rockstar Karaoke every Tuesday. We’ve also got a weekly pool tournament at the same time, so you can possibly win some cash too! New menu—so stop in and check it out! 8 pm. The Blacksmith Restaurant NTT (Deb&Kev) Playing your favorites at the Blacksmith Restaurant. Come early! 6-8 pm. No cover.
Northside Bar & Grill Acoustic Open Mic With Derek Michael Marc. 6-9 pm. Seven Nightclub Hump Day Karaoke We like to try a little something different, so come and check out our Hump Day Karaoke—it’s definitely not your normal karaoke party! 8 pm. The Lot Open Mic at The Lot Young budding performers or seasoned professionals. Timid yet courageous or confident and commanding. Open mic is for one and all…step up to the open mic! Local favorite performer/artist MOsley WOtta hosts this fun night showcasing local talent. 6 pm. No cover. Volcanic Theatre Pub The Giving Tree Band If you’re anything like us, Wednesday is just another word for halfway to cracked out crazy. After staring at screens, The Giving Tree Band’s old-timey tunes are a welcome respite from a tech-obsessed world. Added bonus: The band uses instruments built from fallen or reclaimed wood and follows a vegan diet. Also performing, The Cerny Brothers. 9 pm. $8 adv., $10 door.
thursday 9
Astro Lounge DJ Hugg Life This performer/producer is blowing up right now! Don’t miss your chance to see him in such an intimate environment. 10 pm. The Belfry Brothers Comatose The environment the band creates with their music and their live shows isn’t the exclusive band vs. crowd world of rock and pop, but rather the sing-along, stomp-along, inclusive world that gave birth to string band music. The band—while playing festivals like Hardly Strictly Bluegrass, Strawberry, High Sierra, Outside Lands, and SXSW—has not lost sight of their roots, their fans and the relationships that have brought them where they are. Also performing Marty O’Reilly and The Old Soul Orchestra. 8 pm. $13. Corey’s Bar & Grill Karaoke Jackie with A Fine Note Karaoke hosts. 9 pm. No cover. Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards Heather & Tom Such a fun duo to listen to! Come get your Thursday night groove on and listen to this amazing combo! 6-9 pm. $5. Hub City Bar & Grill Tim Cruise Tim used to play with Crosby, Stills, and Nash and Jefferson Starship, as well as many other famous performers. Classic rock and oldies. Warm intimate environment. Tim will get the crowd singing along, making a fun piano bar feel. 7-10 pm. Free. Maverick’s Country Bar and 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 The Talbott Brothers A rock band from the heartland led by brothers Nick and Tyler Talbott. The group formed in 2012 and has since played over 300 national shows and independently released 2 albums. 7 pm. No cover. Rat Hole Brewpub Junior Harris and Robert Lee Old school blues, R&B, and jazz. With an ear for the groove, this act offers a rich blend of blues and jazz classics with flair for roots R&B. Every other Thursday, 7:30-9:30 pm. Seven Nightclub Flirty Thursday Karaoke A perfect date night karaoke party! 8 pm. Silver Moon Brewing Thrashicana with Calamity Cubes! A Kansas thrashicana band, The Calamity Cubes! feature guitar, banjo, and upright bass. They sing about love, drinking, and murder...themes not unlike those found in the Bible. 8-11 pm. No cover. Strictly Organic Coffee Company Open Mic with Hal Worcester Local singer-songwriters perform original songs. 6 pm. No cover. The Lot The Rum and The Sea Get ready for a fun eclectic set list that focuses on their own originals, which include punk/rock-leaning love ballads to roller derby girls, quietly powerful blues tunes with emotional storylines, folk/bluegrass romps, and nearly every other genre of music you could think of, somehow seamlessly melded into an intensely powerful live show. 6-8 pm. Free.
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APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 17
EVENTS
: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM
CATCH THE MOUNTAIN SOUNDS OF SWEETWATER STRING BAND, A CELLO-DRIVEN BLUEGRASS BAND AT VOLCANIC THEATRE PUB, 4/5.
Music Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band Practice The Cascade Highlanders Pipe Band is a traditional bagpipe and drum band with members from the Central Oregon area. Experienced pipers and drummers are welcome to attend, along with those who are interested in taking up piping or drumming and would like to find out what it would take to learn and eventually join our group. Wednesdays. City of Bend Fire Department West Station, 1212 SW Simpson Ave. 541-633-3225. Free. Community Orchestra of Central Oregon Rehearsals The orchestra [COCO] welcomes all musicians who enjoy playing music with others. Auditions are not necessary and there are monthly dues. For more information call 541-306-6768 or email cocomusicmakers@gmail.com. Tuesdays, 6:45-9pm. Cascade Middle School, 19619 SW Mountaineer Way. Dana and Susan Robinson From the Green Mountains of Vermont, Dana and Susan Robinson bring to the stage an exciting blend of original songs of the American landscape. With Dana on guitar and fiddle, Susan’s clawhammer banjo playing and harmony singing, their music is the sound and feel of bedrock America. They have performed at Carnegie Hall and have been featured in Ken Burn’s PBS documentaries, such as The National Parks, and The Dust Bowl. Dana and Susan have been playing their trademark brand of “new-time, old-time music” for 20 years. Potluck starts at 5:30, music at 6:30. Kindly RSVP to reserve your seat! April 2, 6:30-8:30pm. House Concerts in the Glen, 1019 NW Stannium Rd. 541-480-8830. $15-20. Masters of Soul Celebrate the legendary songs and performers who defined soul music. Stylish costumes, smooth choreography, striking vocals, and a live band pay tribute to the greatest Motown and Stax acts of all time. April 8, 7:30pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. Reserved Seating: $35, $40, $45.
Thorn Hollow String Band Stomp your feet and dosey doe to the pioneer-inspired jigs of the frontier. April 4, 11am-3pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97.
Dance Adult Jazz Dance Class Love to dance? Join the Jazz Dance Collective for adult intermediate jazz dance class. Styles include Broadway, lyrical, Latin, and contemporary. May have opportunity to perform with JDC. JDC is part of Bend Dance Project, a nonprofit organization that promotes dance in Bend. Tuesdays, 7-8:30pm. Get a Move On Studio, 63076 NE 18th St., Suite 140. 541-410-8451. $10 drop-in donation (first class free). Argentine Tango Class & Práctica Beginning tango class 6:30-7:30 pm followed by two hours of practice from 7:30-9:30. 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. Bachata Dance Classes This Bachata dance class is beginner friendly, focusing on the fundamentals of the dance. Bachata is perfect for first comers to Latin dancing with very easy to learn basic steps. First Monday of every month, 6:30-7:30pm. Dance Surge Studio, 63220 O.B. Riley Rd. 541-325-6676. $40 month (4 classes) or $12 drop-in. Bachelor Beauts Square Dance Lessons Come learn how to square dance right here in Central Oregon. We welcome new dancers and previous dancers wanting refresher lessons. The lessons’ instructor is longtime caller Ron Bliven. Thursdays, 7-9pm. Through April 9. Pine Forest Grange Hall, 63214 Boyd Acres Rd. 541617-8589. $5 per lesson. Beginner Salsa Classes Learn to dance salsa in a friendly group class setting. This class focuses on the fundamentals of the dance, making it ideal for first timers and those looking to add a solid foundation to
their exciting salsa dance skills. 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 Drive #3. 541325-6676. $40 month (4 classes) or $12 drop-in. Conscious Ecstatic Dance Celebrate the joy of free-form, expressive dance. Discover the power of movement for alchemical personal transformation. Dancing freely is the best practice for healing and liberating your body, mind, and spirit. Sponsored by PULSE: The Alchemy of Movement. Wednesdays, 7-8:30pm. 360-870-6093. $10. 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. #3. 541325-6676. $40 month (4 classes) or $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. 541-314-4398. $5 per person includes the class & dance. Latin Wednesdays Come meet a group of welcoming Latin dance enthusiasts. Starting with a Latin dance lesson (salsa, bachata, cha cha cha, and merengue, alternating every week). Followed by social dancing to fun energetic Latin rhythms. Come learn some new steps and dance or just watch and enjoy. The place to get your mid-week Latin dance and music fix! Wednesdays, 7:30-9:30pm. Seven Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St. 541-325-6676. $5. Learn to Dance - Private Lessons Want to learn to dance in a comfortable, private setting? I’m here to help! You can learn a specific dance like Salsa or
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Swing, or just how to be comfortable on the dance floor. Two left feet are perfectly acceptable! Ongoing, 3-10pm. Victoria’s Studio, 19833 SW Porcupine Dr. 541-213-7127. $45/hour. The Notables Swing Dance Join us for the Sunday Afternoon Dance with The Notables Swing Band. Dance from 2-4pm. Light refreshments served. First Sunday of every month, 2pm. Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Rd. 541-388-1133. $5 per person. 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, 7pm. Victor Performing Arts, 2700 N. E 4th St. Suite 210, 4th Street & Butler Market Road. 818-636-2465. $10 drop in.
Local Arts “A Novel Idea Art Show - A Tale for the Time Being” “A Novel Idea” Exhibit sponsored by Friends of Sisters Library. Theme is A Tale for the Time Being—the book by Ruth Ozeki. Tuesdays-Saturdays, 10am-6pm. Through April 30. Sisters Library, 110 N. Cedar. Free. Art Walk Feat. MaryLea Harris Come meet local artist MaryLea Harris, and learn about her process as she works on a new painting, during First Friday. Free chair massages for adults! There will also be a free, hands-on “make and take” craft for adults and children, as well as complimentary wine and snacks. Recent artwork by the artist will be on display and available for purchase. April 3, 5-8pm. Synergy Health & Wellness, 244 NE Franklin Ave. #5. 541-323-3488. Free.
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EVENTS
: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM
Artist Reception Local artist featured for a full month in the Humm brewery. Artist receptions the first Thursday of each month are held with local music, snacks from Agricultural Connections, and Locavore. Guests receive a complimentary glass of kombucha! Thurs, April 2, 4-6pm. Humm Kombucha, 1470 NE 1st St. 541-306-6329. Free. Bird Nests of Oregon A collection of drawings by Gena Goodman-Campbell depicting life-sized nests of birds that make their homes in Oregon. Through April 1. Lone Pine Coffee Roasters, 845 Tin Pan Alley. First Friday Art Walk Art, music, and drinks in downtown Bend. First Friday of every month, 5-9pm. Downtown Bend, Corner of Wall Street and Newport Avenue. Free. First Friday April Art Exhibition Photographer Lexy Potts exhibits at Townshend’s Bend Teahouse in April. An Alaskan baby, Bend outsider, and soon to be a clueless Australian, fourteen year old Lexy Potts photographs explode with creativity; with stories untold and images that make a statement in her exhibition entitled “Odd and Peculiar.” April 3, 6-8:30pm. Townshend’s Bend Teahouse, 835 NW Bond St. Gypsy Fire Bellydance Returning to the Taj Palace Restaurant for our First Friday performances! Come savor the exotic flavors of India, and enjoy some mesmerizing, energetic and always improvised Tribal bellydance. Two shows, family-friendly. April 3, 6:45pm. Taj Palace Restaurant, 917 NW Wall St. Free. Myths & Legends A6’s 2nd International Biennial Artist Books exhibit opens for First Friday. Artists from China, India, United Arab Emirates, Canada, and the U.S. explore the theme of “Myths & Legends” in three-dimensional forms that challenge our idea of “books.” Friday, April 3, 4-9pm, Mondays-Fridays, 9:30am-7pm, Saturdays, 10am-6pm, and Sundays, noon-5pm. Through April 26. A6, 389 SW Scalehouse Ct. Suite 120. Free. A Novel Idea: Origami Learn to fold origami with Wabi Sabi owner Barbara Campbell. Space is limited and registration is required. Register online at www. deschuteslibrary.org or by calling 541-312-1032. April 2, 3:30-5:30pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1032. Free. A Novel Idea: Origami Learn to fold origami with Wabi Sabi owner Barbara Campbell. Space is limited and registration is required. Register online at www. deschuteslibrary.org or by calling 541-312-1032. April 3, 6-8pm. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St. 541-312-1032. Free. Spring Art Salon: Connie Cyrus, Mike Biggers & String Junkies The String Junkies will open for long time local, Connie Cyrus, who will be accompanied by Mike Biggers and Donna Moyer. She will sing her favorite old-time classic songs from the 40s, 50s, and 60s. Terrebonne vineyard and winery, Faith, Hope, and Charity will provide wine tasting and for purchase by the glass. Event is second in a three part series fundraiser for Circle of Friends, a Sisters youth mentoring organization. April 9, 6:30-8:30pm. Downtown Sisters, Hood Ave. 541-719-1800. Suggested donation $10.
Presentations “Bend Beer” It’s no secret that Central Oregon is famous for its craft breweries. Local author Jon Abernathy will present his book “Bend Beer: A History of Brewing in Central Oregon,” which begins back in 1882 and stretches right up to the present day. If you like local history and/or beer, this event will make your night! Three Creeks Brewing will provide a free beer tasting. April 3, 6:30-8pm. Paulina Springs Books, 252 W Hood Ave. 541-549-0866. $5. Admission refunded upon purchase of book. The Alta Via: Hut to Hut Hiking in the Italian Alps Sally and Gary Winter, global hikers and educators, will share photos and stories about hiking the Alta Via trail in the Italian Dolomites. Sponsored by the Bend Belluno Sister City Association. 21+. April 7, 7-8pm. The Wine Shop and Tasting Bar, 55 NW Minnesota Ave. 541-389-2884. Free. Internet Safety This training helps parents and caregivers become aware of the dangers that exist online. Participants will learn tips on how to talk to children
about using the Internet safely and steps to protect children online. Friday, April 3, 10am-noon. KIDS Center, 1375 NW Kingston Ave. 541-306-3062. $10. Jon Abernathy with “Bend Beer” It’s no secret that Central Oregon is famous for its craft breweries. Local author Jon Abernathy has written a history of Central Oregon breweries, beginning back in 1882 and stretching right up to the present day. If you like local history and/or beer, this event will make your night! Juniper Brewing will provide a free beer tasting. April 4, 6:30-8pm. Paulina Springs Books-Redmond, 422 SW Sixth St. 541-526-1491. $5. Admission refunded upon purchase of book. LWV First Thursday Luncheon Welcoming La Pine Mayor, Ken Muleenx and La Pine City Manager, Rick Allen to our First Thursday Luncheon series. They will give a State of the City presentation about La Pine and what’s happening to our neighbor to the south. The speakers will begin at noon and questions will be taken at the conclusion of the presentation. No reservations are necessary. April 2, 11am-1pm. Black Bear Diner, 1465 NE Third St. 541-382-2660. Free. Public Welcome. The Next Tsunami The Japanese earthquake of Japan in 2011 triggered a massive tsunami that killed nearly 16,000 people. As the tsunami withdrew from Japan’s coastline, it pulled with it millions of tons of debris. Though much of that debris sank quickly, some made its way to our shorelines. But the arrival of the debris was not our coast’s first encounter with tsunami. The 1700 Cascadia earthquake triggered a series of tsunami waves that battered the PNW coast. That was more than 300 years ago—are we due for another? Geologist Daniele McKay explores the history of tsunami in the PNW. April 4, 11am12pm. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. 541-3121034. Free. The Next Tsunami The Japanese earthquake of Japan in 2011 triggered a massive tsunami that killed nearly 16,000 people. As the tsunami withdrew from Japan’s coastline, it pulled with it millions of tons of debris. Though much of that debris sank quickly, some made its way to our shorelines. But the arrival of the debris was not our coast’s first encounter with tsunami. The 1700 Cascadia earthquake triggered a series of tsunami waves that battered the PNW coast. That was more than 300 years ago—are we due for another? Geologist Daniele McKay explores the history of tsunami in the PNW. April 7, 6-7pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-312-1034. Free. A Novel Idea: Japan’s Imperial Military and the Kamikaze End Game Portrayed as both brave soldiers and brainwashed fanatics, Ken Ruoff, Professor of History and Director of the Center for Japanese Studies at Portland State University, explores exactly who were the young Japanese men ordered to fly suicide missions during WWII. April 3, noon-1pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541312-1032. Free. A Novel Idea: Japan’s Imperial Military and the Kamikaze End Game Portrayed as both brave soldiers and brainwashed fanatics, Ken Ruoff, Professor of History and Director of the Center for Japanese Studies at Portland State University, explores exactly who were the young Japanese men ordered to fly suicide missions during WWII. April 4, 11am-12pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1032. Free. A Novel Idea: Sake Tasting Taste and learn the sake basics with Newport Avenue beer and wine manager, Suzi Moran. Participants must be 21+. Space is limited and registration is required. Register online at deschuteslibrary.org or by calling 541-312-1032. April 4, 3-4pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. Free.
Theater 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee Centered on a fictional spelling bee set in a geographically ambiguous Putnam Valley Middle School. Six quirky adolescents compete in the Bee, run by three equally quirky grownups. The show was nominated for six Tony awards, winning two including Best Book. Audience participation makes this musical a fun-filled experience. Opening night champagne reception
Featured Event April 10, 2015
Jerry Joseph & the Jackmormons w/ ailure Machines
THE SIMPLE AND HONEST TUNES OF ALBATROSS CAN BE HEARD AT MCMENAMINS OLD ST. FRANCIS SCHOOL, 4/8.
6:30 to 7:30 pm, April 3. Fri., April 3, 7:30pm, Sat., April 4, 7:30pm, Sun., April 5, 3pm and Thurs., April 9, 7:30pm. 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave. $22 Adults, $19 Student & Seniors. Jake Daniels & Andrew Ouellette Jake has headlined Las Vegas Hard Rock Hotel and performed internationally. He will begin a 40 state tour in the US, which will be recorded for release by Netflix. New York City based entertainer, Andrew Ouellette, is the subversive embodiment of underground comedy; this trailer-raised 9th grade dropout dances on the line of hilarious and twisted. April 2, 8-10:30pm. The Summit Saloon & Stage, 115 NW Oregon Ave. 541-419-0111. $8 adv., $10 door. Comedy Extravaganza Springfield-based comedian and motivational speaker Frank King has made a living making jokes about everything from air travel to hunting (is it really a “sport” if you don’t even have to squint?), all aimed at lightening the mood. He’ll be joined by Eugene’s Alex Elkin, who’s been at the comedy game since before he was old enough to get into the clubs. April 4, 7pm. Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St. 541-317-0700. $23-$51. CTC’s Second Annual Billy Shakes Festival CTC’s Second Annual Shakespearean Scene/Monologue Festival open to students grades 8-12. Bring a prepared scene/monologue for our panel of esteemed judges. Prizes awarded to 1st and 2nd places with feedback given to all. Contact Brad Thompson for more information at brat@cascaedstheatrical.org. April 4, 10:30am. CTC Cascade Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood. 541-389-0803. Free. A Tribute to Baseball From “Casey at Bat” to Bull Durham, the sport of baseball has served as an artistic muse for decades. These two evenings are presentations of poetry and one-acts from a teenage acting class. Regular season MLB games start on Sunday! April 3, 7:30-10pm and April 4, 7:30-10pm. CTC Cascade Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood. 541-3890803. Free. Donations at the door accepted.
April 4
Words A Novel Idea: Book Discussion Read and discuss A Tale for the Time Being, Deschutes Public Library’s community-wide reading selection. April 9, noon-1pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541312-1032. Free. A Novel Idea: The Art and History of Manga Community librarian April Witteveen takes us inside the world of manga, traditional Japanese comics. Developed in Japan in the late 19th century, manga has roots in earlier Japanese art. Part of A Novel Idea 2015. April 8, 6-7pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-312-1032. Free. Plant Spirit Medicine Book Discussion Twenty years after its first printing, the new edition of Plant Spirit Medicine by Eliot Cowan includes a new introduction and conclusion, and five new chapters. Join plant spirit medicine healer Jessica De la O in an ongoing group to discuss this classic work. This is one of the many events around the country celebrating the timeless wisdom of a book that has opened thousands of people to the deep healing available from the natural world. Come prepared to celebrate and discuss the book’s introduction during the first meeting. Note what caught your attention. Let’s read and it explore together. April 1, 7-9pm. Sacred Fire Community Hearth, 2801 N.E. Lapointe Ct. 541-241-6056. National Poetry Month 2015 Award-winning poet, Stephanos Papadopoulos and an evening of poetry from his various collections with an emphasis on his latest book, The Black Sea. He was awarded a Civitella Ranieri Fellowship for The Black Sea, and in 2014 he received the Jeannette Haien Ballard Writer’s Prize, selected by Mark Strand. April 2, 6:30pm. Barnes and Noble, 2690 NE Hwy 20. 541-318-7242. Free.
April 6
TThe Volcanic Theatre Pub Presents
The Domino Room Presents
Elektrapod
Iamsu
April 8
The Volcanic Theatre Pub Presents
The giving tree band w /the cerny brothers
April 9
The Belfry Presents
Brother Comatose
w Marty O’Reilly & the Old Soul Orchestra
APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 19
EVENTS
KIDS EVENTS
: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM
Call For Volunteers 2015 Summer Forest Service Volunteer Recruitment Event Deschutes National Forest and partner, non-profit stewardship organization, Discover Your Forest, is hosting a volunteer recruitment event to find volunteers interested in supporting educational and interpretive programs at Newberry National Volcanic Monument and Mt. Bachelor. The event is focused on recruiting volunteers to serve as rangers; however, people interested in other volunteer opportunities are encouraged to attend. For more info contact Stacey: 541-383-5530 or stacey.cochran@discovernw.org. April 9, 6-7:30pm. Deschutes National Forest, BendFort Rock Ranger District, 63095 Deschutes Market Rd. 541-383-5530. Free. Mentor Heart of Oregon Corps is a nonprofit that inspires and empowers positive change in youth through education, jobs, and stewardship. We are in need of caring adults who are willing to dedicate four hours each month to providing additional support and being positive role models to young people, helping them transform their lives and become successful members of society. For more information or to become a mentor, contact Susie at 541-526-1380. Mondays-Fridays. Heart of Oregon YouthBuild, 68797 George Cyrus Rd. 541-526-1380. Tech Expert for Short-Term Sharepoint Project Heart of Oregon Corps is seeking a Microsoft SharePoint savvy individual who would be willing to volunteer their time to help us set up, utilize, and maintain a SharePoint Team Site. The agency is spread across five separate sites in Central Oregon and rapidly growing in numbers. As we grow we must become more efficient for simple tasks such as sharing and updating our cross-agency calendar, collaborating on important documents and general communication across our programs and sites. This will allow the staff more time to focus on our mission and the youth we serve. Mondays-Fridays, 8am-3pm. Heart of Oregon Corps. 541-633-7834. How You Can Help Community Cats First Tuesday of every month, 6pm. Bend Spay & Neuter Project, 910 SE Wilson Ave. 541-617-1010. 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, we make up gifts for veterans and homeless. If interested, please contact us. We can’t do what we do, without great volunteers like you! First Monday-Friday of every month, 8am-4pm. Bend, RSVP for address. 541-389-8888. Volunteer—Advisory Board Partners in Service Advisory organization members are concerned men and women who voluntarily use their professional skills and knowledge of the community to make a practical difference for their neighbors, strengthening The Salvation Army’s ability to serve. Mondays-Sundays, 1-2pm. Bend, RSVP for address. 541-389-8888. Volunteer Drivers Needed Volunteer drivers needed to transport veterans to the Bend VA Clinic and Portland VA Hospital. Must have clean driving record and be able to pass VA-provided physical and screening. Transportation vehicle is VA-provided 10-passenger van. Call John at 541-309-9804 or Paul at 541-647-2363 for more details and information on the application process. Mondays-Fridays. Warehouse Sorting and Pricing The Brightside Thrift Store in Redmond is looking for volunteers to receive donations, sort, and price items. A variety of skills are appreciated from apparel to electronics. Share your knowledge and get a great workout too! 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, 9am. Brightside Animal Thrift Store, 838 NW 5th St. 541-504-0101.
Race and Competition Calendar
derailleur adjustments to tire changes (even without a spare tube) and more. Come on down, belly up to the bar, have a free beer, and talk about bikes! Thursdays, 7-8pm. Bend Cyclery, 133 SW Century Dr. Suite 202. 541-385-5256. Free. Bee School 2015 We are very excited to bee working with Naomi Price and Richard Nichols (The Hive Man) of the Prineville Honey Bee Mentoring Partnership, for a year of promoting a healthier ecosystem through organic beekeeping. Every other Saturday, 11am-1pm. Through Oct. 17. SmudgieGoose Farm, 19221 NE O’Neil Hwy. 541-215-0357. Buddhist Chant We chant Buddhist scripture, The Heart Sutra in Japanese, and discuss the meaning of the words. Wednesdays, 5-6pm. Through April 29. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St. 541-383-5031. $10. Business Start-Up 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 two-hour class and decide if running a business is for you. Wed., April 1, 11am-1pm. COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave. 541-383-7290. $29. Darkness to Light: Stewards of Children This training provides participants with steps to better protect children from sexual abuse. Learn how to recognize and respond to suspicions in your community. Tues., April 7, 12:30-3pm. KIDS Center, 1375 NW Kingston Ave. 541-306-6062. $20. 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. Japanese Group Lesson We offer lessons for beginners and advanced students. Wednesdays, 5-6pm. Through April 29. Wabi Sabi, 830 NW Wall St. $10, +$5 one time material fee. Open Gym Come play with us! Bring your aerial skills, acro ninja moves, juggling clubs, hoops, and more! We have lots of props to use, tumbling mats and aerial equipment (experienced only) to play with and on. Mondays, 7:30pm. Bend Circus Center, 911 SE Armour. $5.
Backpack Explorers Art in nature. Look at all of those beautiful patterns in nature. Use the Museum’s nature trails to inspire your artwork. And we’ll do it all while learning a bit of Spanish vocabulary! Preschoolers ages 3-5 engage their senses on an adventure created just for them and an adult chaperone. April 1, 9:30-10:30am and April 2, 9:30-10:30am. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. Museum members: $10 per child. Non-members: $15. East Bend Animal Adventures Ages 3+. Live animals, stories & crafts with High Desert Museum. Space is limited. Tues, April 7, 9:30am. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. 541-330-3760. Free. East Bend Old-Fashioned Family Game Day All ages. April 8, 2:30-4pm. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. 541-330-3760. Free. East Bend Rockie Tales Puppet Show Ages 3-5. Learn about the world through puppets & stories. Thurs, April 9, 9:30am. East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Rd. 541-330-3760. Free.
Easter Egg Hunt for Dogs Now in its 6th year, the Easter Egg Hunt for Dogs gives your fluffy friend free reign of Bend Pet Express’ eastside store to hunt out eggs containing allergy-friendly treats and—in a select few—gift cards. Just be sure your little killer is vaccinated, well-mannered, and leashed. April 5, 2-3:30pm. Bend Pet Express Eastside, 420 Windy Knolls Dr. 541-385-5298. Free. Donation Suggested: Please bring a pet food item to donate to the HOPE food bank for pets. Easter Egg Hunt! Hosted by the Filipino American Association of the High Desert. All the proceeds will go towards helping local non-profits, such as Bethlehem Inn, FAN, and Caring for Troops. Please come and bring your families for some fun games, prizes, and snacks at Gardenside Park while helping those in need. Salamat! April 5, 1-3pm. Gardenside Park, 61750 Darla Place. Donations accepted.
Classes
Easter Sunrise Service at Pilot Butte Join in the celebration of Christ’s resurrection and attend this non-denominational sunrise gathering atop Pilot Butte. The event begins with singing and a brief Easter message shared by Bob Shaw. Invite your friends and visit EasterService.org to learn more. April 5, 6:307am. Pilot Butte State Park. .Free.
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Music, Movement & Stories Ages 3-5. Movement and stories to develop skills and encourage fun with music. Sat, April 4, 10:15am. Sisters Public Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters. 541-312-1070. Free. Musical Playdate Sing, dance, play instruments, laugh, and learn with new friends at this musical playdate with our acclaimed Kindermusik curriculum. Parents or caregivers attend the class with their child and join in the fun! The theme for our playdate is Our Earth. Ages 1-4. April 4, 10-11am. Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. 541-3826866. $12 for first child, $5 for siblings.
Pajama Party Ages 0-5. Evening storytime with songs, rhymes, & crafts. Wear your PJs! Wed, April 8, 6:45pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7097. Free.
Fandom Friday Ages 12-17. Geek out at this after-hours event celebrating your favorite fandoms! April 3, 6:30-8pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7097. Free.
Enrichment Wednesdays—PAWttery Work in clay with your favorite animals in mind. Make a mug that looks like a furry friend, fun bowls with legs and tails, and creations with scales, spots, or stripes! Sign-up online. Wed, April 8, 2:30-4:30pm. Art Station, 313 SW Shevlin Hixon Dr. Member: $63.75. Non-member, $75.
The Great Easter Egg Hunt The Easter Bunny’s favorite tradition, The Great Sunriver Easter Egg Hunt! Children will be provided with a wooden Easter basket, Sunriver egg hunting license, and all the eggs they can find filled with excellent candy and toys! April 5, 10am-12pm. Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center Dr. $15.
Deadly By Nature: Poison and Venom In our new exhibit you’ll get a live, close-up look at some of the world’s deadliest creatures, including some you would never expect. Join us for a walk through evolutionary time as we explore the adaptations of venomous animals, including the long-spined sea urchin and the rear-fanged, ornate, flying snake. Exhibit open until June 29. Mondays. Through June 29. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. Free with museum admission.
La Pine Fizz! Boom! Read! Ages 3-5. Stories and science with hands-on experiments. Sat, April 4, 1pm. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. 541-3121090. Free.
Family Block Party All ages. LEGO® Universe: Start with a little inspiration & build away! Thurs, April 9, 10:15-11:30am. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7097. Free.
What’s Hot in Franchising Explore how to make money and enjoy life in Bend with your own franchise. In this highly interactive two-hour workshop, find out about the top trends, the best industries and “What’s Hot” in franchising for 2015. Wed., April 8, 6-8pm. COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave. 541-3837290. $29.
Community Healing Night Intuitive readings, energetic healing, and bodywork in exchange for canned and dry foods in support of Neighbor Impact food bank. First Thursday of every month, 5-7pm. Old Stone Church, 157 NW Franklin Ave. 541-389-1159.
La Pine Animal Adventures Ages 3+. Live animals, stories & crafts with High Desert Museum. Tues, April 7, 11:30am. La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St. 541-312-1090. Free.
Easter Egg Hunt We’re in close communication with the Easter Bunny and will be having a Kid’s Easter Egg Hunt! One very lucky Easter Egg will contain a $50 gift certificate to Wonderland Toy Shoppe! Bring your friends and family to watch the kids hunt for eggs and have some fun! Please RSVP so we can make sure the Easter bunny has enough eggs for everyone! April 4, 11am-1pm. Kendall Toyota of Bend, 61430 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4040. Free.
Fiesta de Pijamas (Pajama Party in Spanish) Ages 0-5. Evening storytime with songs, rhymes, & crafts. Wear your PJs! Tues, April 7, 6:45pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1050. Free.
Events
School of Music, 200 NW Pacific Park Ln. 541-3826866. First class free, $70 per month.
No School Nature Days: Beaver Builders Ages 6 - 10. Kids will have a chance to let out their inner builder and creative architect in this exciting outdoor adventure. The basics of shelter building will be covered and actively applied as the children build a home base for their team. Children will learn the importance of living near the riparian zone, who their nearest animal and plant neighbors are, and what resources are available for use to create a comfortable village experience. April 9, 9am-3:30pm. Skyliners Lodge, 16125 Skyliners Rd. 503-680-9831. $59 / day.
West African Drum Class David Visiko teaches rhythms from Guinea, Mali, and Cote’ de Ivory. Sundays, 3:30-5pm. Joy of Being Studio, 155 NW Hawthorne (behind address). $15 per class.
Horse Butte 10 Miler The race kicks off the trail race season here in Central Oregon. Horse Butte 10 miler has a field limit of 200 runners, which has kept its small race feel intact as it has gained popularity. The course, not-so-spring-like weather, and post race Oregon Country Beef hot dog barbecue have become synonymous with spring trail running in Bend. April 4, 9am. Horse Butte, Billadeau Rd. Register online.
‘Fix-it, Don’t Throw it!’ Bicycle Mechanic Clinic Learn tips and tricks from professional bike mechanics...for free! When your bike is acting up it can frustrate you so much that you just want to throw it off a cliff! Don’t throw it, just come see us Thursdays at 7pm! Eric (owner) will be here to share some of the tips, tricks, and secrets he has learned from over 20 years of experience. Covering everything from
Animal Adventures Ages 3+. Live animals, stories, & crafts with High Desert Museum. Space is limited. Wed, April 8, 1-2pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7097. Free.
Homeschool Nature Classes: Otter Clan Tracker’s Club is for homeschool families who want their children to understand and feel deeply connected to the natural world. We facilitate a variety of activities such as nature arts and crafts, attuning to the wild, tracking, primitive skills, survival skills, nature songs, and much more! Tuesdays, 10am-3pm. Through May 19. Skyliners Lodge, 16125 Skyliners Rd. 503-6809831. $42 a class. Homeschool Nature Classes: Squirrel Clan Tracker’s Club is for homeschool families who want their children to understand and feel deeply connected to the natural world. We facilitate a variety of activities such as nature arts and crafts, attuning to the wild, tracking, primitive skills, survival skills, nature songs, and much more! Ages 5-8 welcome. Mondays, 12:30-4pm. Through May 18. Skyliners Lodge, 16125 Skyliners Rd. 503-680-9831. $30 a class. Juniper Elementary Storytime & Lunch Ages 3-5. Help your child prepare for school with stories & fun. Families welcome! April 1, 11:15am. Juniper Elementary, 1300 NE Norton Ave. 541-617-7097. Free. Kids’ Drum Making Workshop For ages 7 and up accompanied by an adult raw hide drums have been a tool of humanity for thousands of years to create beats and rhythms for dancing, singing, celebrating, journeying, and healing. This workshop will be a celebration of life, harmony, and rhythm! Participants will come away with: A 10-inch raw hide drum, instructions on how to use the drum, and knowledge of how to make more! April 4, noon-4pm. Skyliners Lodge, 16125 Skyliners Rd. 503-680-9831. $120 Per Child. Kindermusik Class Bring your children ages 1-2 years (Monday) or 2-3 years (Friday) to our classes that engage through music to teach early literacy skills, physical coordination, emotional skills, and cognitive skills, as well as a love of music! The parent/grandparent or caregiver participates in the class with the child and a good time is had by all! Each month we have a new theme, new songs, new dances, stories, games, and more. Kindermusik is research-based and promoted by experts in early childhood development. Fridays, 9:30-10:15am and Mondays, 9:30-10:15am. Through May 25. Cascade
Redmond Animal Adventures Ages 3+. Live animals, stories & crafts with High Desert Museum. Mon, April 6, 10am. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1050. Free. Redmond Family Block Party All ages. LEGO® Universe: Start with a little inspiration & build away! Sat, April 4, 1:30pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1050. Free. Redmond Pajama Party Ages 0-5. Evening storytime with songs, rhymes, & crafts. Wear your PJs! Tues, April 7, 6pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1050. Free. Redmond Teen Advisory Board Ages 12-17. Get involved! Drop in, eat snacks, and tell us what to do! Wed, April 1, 2-4pm. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond. 541-312-1050. Free. Rockie Tales Puppet Show Ages 3-5. Learn about the world through puppets & stories. Tues, April 7, 1:30pm. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St. 541-617-7097. Free. Sunriver Teen Territory Ages 12-17. Strategy games, crafts, Wii & more! Wed, April 1, 1:30pm. Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Ln. 541312-1080. Free. Underwater Egg Hunt and Rubber Duck Races Get EGG-cited and join SHARC’s lifeguard staff for the EGG-stravagant Underwater Egg Hunt & Rubber Duck races. Participants will decorate “snow ducks” and send them down the lazy river with prizes for the top heat finishers. Kids will be grouped by age to dive for eggs that can be exchanged for prizes. Advanced registration is required. Call 541-585-3147. April 4, 9am-12pm. SHARC, 57250 Overlook Road. 541-5853147. $10-$15. Zumba Fitness Family Class Join Ms. Rita for some fun and laughter together as we shake what our momma gave us. For ages 4 years and up. Space is limited. A 4-week session. Mondays, 4:30-5:15pm. Through April 27. Janellybean Music & more, 1735 SW Chandler Ave. 541-390-7386. $40/2 persons + $15/extra family member. Zumba Kids classes Zumba class for ages 7-12 years. Let’s have some fun and fitness with good music, no experience necessary. A 4-week session. Mondays, 3:30-4:15pm. Through April 27. Janellybean Music & more, 1735 SW Chandler Ave. 541390-7386. Introductory price of $25/mth. Zumba Kids Jr Class Zumba class for children ages 4-6 years. Introduce your kiddos to a fun way to exercise, no experience necessary. A 4-week session. Good for mind, body, and spirit. Wednesdays, 2:30-3:15pm. Through April 29. Janellybean Music & more, 1735 SW Chandler Ave. 541-390-7386. Introductory rate $25/mth.
20 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM
EVENTS
: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM
Exhibit Opening: Growing Up Western The history of the High Desert or the Far West conjures up images of skilled buckaroos, determined miners, and hard-working sheepherders. The High Desert included more than rugged men building homesteads, ranches, and towns on their own, however. Women and children were an essential part of this process—providing labor, support, and community. But what was it really like to be a child growing up in the High Desert 150 years ago? Our exhibit, Growing Up Western, answers this question with historical photographs, inspiring artifacts and treasured toys. April 4, 10am. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. Grassroots Cribbage Club Newcomers welcome. For info contact Sue at 541-382-6281. Mondays, 6-9pm. Bend Elks Lodge, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd. $1 to $13. HOPE Food Bank Distribution Free food for up to 3 pets for one month. Must be on government assistance or show proof of low income to qualify. Call The Bend Spay + Neuter Project for more information at 541-617-1010. Food is distributed on the first Saturday of each month. 10am. Bend Pet Express Westside, 133 SW Century Dr. 541-617-1010. Housing Solutions Showcase Join Bend 2030 and the American Institute of Architects as we showcase urban, dense, sustainable solutions to our housing affordability issues. More than a dozen local architects will present beautiful, high-quality housing designs in this gallery format to show us what density and affordability actually looks like. Enjoy complimentary appetizers from Hola!, and free wine and beer too! For more information, contact Erin Foote Marlowe, 541-420-8603, erinfootemarlowe@gmail.com. April 3, 5-8pm. St. Clair Place, 920 NW Bond St. Museum & Me A time for children and adults with physical, cognitive, and/or social disabilities to enjoy the Museum after hours in a low-stimulation environment. Bring your family to make lasting memories at the Museum. April 9, 4-7pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754 ext. 320. Free. Passover Community Seder Get ready for festive, family-friendly Passover Seder led by Rabbi Johanna Hershenson. The Seder is a ritual based on the Biblical verse commanding Jews to retell the story of the Exodus from Egypt. The event is open to the public. Doors open at 5:15 p.m., and the Seder begins promptly at 6:00 p.m., followed by dinner. Sponsored by Temple Beth Tikvah. RSVP by Wed., March 25. April 3, 6-9pm.
DRINK BEER FOR A GOOD CAUSE WITH THE PINTS FOR POLIO PUB-CRAWL, BEGINNING AT SUMMIT SALOON, 4/4. PHOTO BY TODD CARY.
St. Charles Bend Conference Center, 2500 NE Neff Rd. 541-388-8826. Seder costs: $37 for adults; $15 for children ages 6-12; children 5 & under free.
Pizza Fundraiser Join us for a Base Camp Pizza Fundraiser supporting Mustangs to the Rescue. Visit our website: MustangsToTheRescue.org to download and print the required flyer and give it to Base Camp Pizza, when you order and 50% of your food order purchase
will benefit Mustangs to the Rescue! Important—Be sure to download and print the flyer so that the money is donated to Mustangs to the Rescue. First Sunday of every month. Base Camp Pizza, 8060 11th St. 541330-8943.
APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 21
EVENTS
: TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BENDTICKET.COM
Best Venue for live music, dancing, food and libations
Live Music 5 Days a Week STROLL DOWN MEMORY LANE WITH THE MASTERS OF SOUL AT THE TOWER THEATRE, 4/8.
Pool Tournament Cash Cup Join us every Tuesday for our Cash Cup Pool Tournament. Anyone can join in, regardless of experience! Grab some food from our new menu and stay and have some fun. We also have karaoke going on every Tuesday and Thursday, so there’s a lot of fun going on all night! Signups by 8pm. $5 buy-in, double-elimination, APA rules (if you’re curious, just ask). Winnings based on number of participants. Tuesdays, 8pm. Seven Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St. 541-760-9412. $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 Suite. B-1. Public Bingo New game programs with increased pay-outs. Must be 18, starter pack (28 games) $21. $10 minimum buy-in. Food and drinks available. Visit bendelkslodge.org or 541-389-7438. Thursdays, 6pm. In Bend, call for info. 541-389-7438. Repair Cafe at The Gear Fix Join our Rethink Waste Project at The Gear Fix for our Spring Repair Cafe! The event connects people with broken stuff with people that like to fix stuff. Gear Fix staff and volunteers will be on hand to repair: Small appliances, small furniture, jewelry, clothes/material goods, outdoor gear, bikes, skis, boots, and shoes. Disclaimer: some repair potential may be out of the scope of this free repair cafe. Bring it in and we’ll see! This is a free event, but bring some cash to reimburse for potential replacement parts your fixer may provide. April 2, 5:30-7:30pm. The Gear Fix, 345 SW Century Dr. 541-385-6908. Free. Sip & Shop Vendor Blender Moms, grab your girlfriends and head over for this event! Free wine, free appetizers, and treats! Door prizes, raffle prizes, and 14 different vendors to shop with from women’s clothing to artisanal soap makers to jewelry to antiques and health or home products. Support local moms in business! For $5, you can bring your kids to play supervised and they’ll get pizza and a drink while they play. Wed., April 1, 6-8pm. Bouncing off the Walls, 1134 Centennial Ct. 541-306-6587. Free. Trivia Tuesdays at The Lot Pick your smartest friends to make teams of 2-5 people for a mind-bending game of trivia. A new host each week comes up with 6 categories with 6 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.
Meetings Adelines’ Showcase Chorus Practice For more information call Diane at 541-447-4756 or showcasechorus.org. Mondays, 6:30-9pm. Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave.
Al-Anon Family Groups 12-step group for friends and families of alcoholics. Check www.afginfo.org or call 541-728-3707 for times and locations. Ongoing. Various Locations. Communicators Plus Toastmasters Thursdays, 6:30-7:45pm. DEQ Office, 475 NE Bellevue Dr., Suite 110. 541-388-6146. Community Circle Gathering & Potluck Join our spiritual family for a discussion on the topic of “resurrections.” Then share your bounty for a potluck following the conversation. Or just bring you and share your presence. We gather to give thanks, and to bless one another. Share if you want, or just soak it all in. It is an extremely loving and healing atmosphere. April 5, 5:15-6:30pm. Spiritual Awareness Community at Old Stone Church, 157 NW Franklin Ave. 541-3851332. Free. Cool Cars and Coffee All makes, models welcome. Saturdays, 8am. C.E. Lovejoy’s Brookswood Market, 19530 Amber Meadow Dr. Live Talk Moderated discussion group with voted topics. First Thursday of every month, 6:30pm. Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave. Free. NAMI Depression & Bipolar Disorder Support Group Mondays, 7-9pm. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 541-480-8269. Free. Overeaters Anonymous Meeting Mondays, noon. Saturdays, 9:30am and Thursdays, noon. First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St. 541-306-6844. Free. Sigma Chi of Central Oregon Central Oregon Sigs of Sigma Chi Fraternity will meet for a casual dinner and a special home brewing presentation by one of our members. Sigs of all ages and from all chapters are welcome. Check our Facebook page for ongoing events. April 9, 6:30-8:30pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. 630-885-1665. Smart Recovery Meeting April 6, 6-7pm. Smart Recovery Meetings, 920 SW Emkay Suite104.
Thu 4/2 Tim Cruise 7:30 to 10:30
every year since we opened!
Sun 4/5 The Walking Dead 6 to 7 Mon 4/6 Karaoke with DJ Chris 7 to 9 Tue 4/7 Lori Fletcher’s Deco Moon Jazz 6 to 9
541.385.RIBS
Wed 4/8 Acoustic Open Mic with Derek Michael Marc 6 to 9
2670 N Hwy 20 Near Safeway
Saturday and Sunday Breakfast
950 SW Veteran’s Hwy Near Fred Meyer
62860 Boyd Acres Rd in Bend (541) 383-0889
541.923.BBQ1
Redmond:
www.NorthsideBarFun.com
www.baldysbbq.com
Facebook.com/NorthsideBarAndGrill
What’s Brewing? A weekly open forum on topics relevant to citizens of Central Oregon, Crook County in particular. Topics range from political issues to current events and local interests. Wednesdays, 7-8am. Through May 13. Meadow Lakes Golf Course, 300 SW Meadow Lakes Dr. 541-280-4097. Free.
Sports Event Portland Fit Marathon/Half Marathon Training Program – Registration Open Join Portland Fit today at portlandfit.com and take the first step toward your new fitness goals! We offer group runs/walks on Saturday mornings led by a team of over 50 head coaches, assistant coaches, and medical staff. Train with our 13-week half marathon or 32-week marathon program for runners and walkers of all abilities— couch potatoes are welcome! Through April 10. Zidell Yards, SW Moody Ave.
Carl Seaver
MEDIUMSHIP SESSIONS
• Psychic Readings • Past-Life Regression Counselor • Psychic Development Classes
FOR OVER 25 YEARS SUNTRACK SOUND HAS BEEN CENTRAL OREGON’S LEADER IN CONCERT PRODUCTIONS. THIS YEAR WE ARE EXCITED TO EXPAND OUR SERVICES TO INCLUDE:
-FULL VIDEO PRODUCTION SUPPORT -CORPORATE SET DESIGN -SPECIALTY LIGHTING -A/V RENTALS Like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/suntrackbend
CARLSEAVER.COM | 732-814-8576 Sessions by appointment in person, by phone, Skype or FaceTime
Suntrack Sound LLC. | 541.241.1118 | www.suntrack.com | info@suntrack.com
22 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM
CHOW
Tea For All
Metolius Tea is homegrown, but globally appealing BY ALLI MILES
Metolius Tea & Apothecary owner Amy Seidenverg was living in New York and studying the theory of history when she stumbled upon an herb shop in Brooklyn that changed her life’s path. The Brooklyn herb shop held a community class, where Seidenverg discovered she had a hidden passion for plant medicine and herbal remedies. Returning to the Pacific Northwest (she is from Bend originally), she studied with expert herbalists, developed a program to teach children about herbal remedies and basic ailments, and began designing a medicinal tea line for Townshend’s Tea Company. From there, Seidenverg soon discovered the art of blending for flavor. “I learned that no matter how effective a tea might be, say, on a sore throat, it won’t work if the sick person won’t drink it,” she explained. Branching out on her own, with many mentors and guides believing in her and supporting her along the way, Seidenverg grew Metolius Tea & Apothecary, a premium Bend-based tea company. While sourcing ingredients from all over the world, Metolius Tea & Apothecary incorporates as many locally and regionally-sourced ingredients as possible. Lavender and blueberries are always sourced from Oregon; however, certain plants are best grown and processed in their native countries. “My favorite region for tea is Assam, India,” Seidenverg explains. “I blend with Assam a lot because I feel the malty, rich flavor pairs well with many herbs and spices without getting lost in the background.” Seidenverg also considers the social, environmental, and economic impacts of each ingredient that she buys. But, this doesn’t necessarily mean all of her ingredients are certified organic. Some farms are very small and cannot afford certification, Seidenverg says, explaining, “Small farm, family, artisanal teas and herbs carry a vibrant nature that I want to share. That’s more important to me than having organic certification.” For flavor inspiration, Seidenverg seeks to blend the medicinal benefits of the herbs with flavors that bring pleasure to the drinker. “The North blend, for example, is the ideal tea for sugar monsters like myself,” Seidenverg explains. Coconut gives the tea a smooth, thick body, cardamom, ginger, and peppercorns give it warmth, while cinnamon and licorice regulate blood sugar levels, creating a blend that feels like a sweet treat yet curbs sugar cravings and helps stabilize blood sug-
TUMMY TEA. PHOTO BY STEVE TAGUE.
AMY SEIDENVERG IS HER OWN BEST ADVERTISEMENT; HEALTHY AND HAPPY. PHOTO BY CHRIS MARTELL.
ar levels. Similarly, the Emma blend incorporates a base of raspberry leaf, believed to be a general tonic for the female reproductive system. Other than constantly evolving tea blends and flavors, tea enthusiasts can look forward to new packaging from
CENTRAL OREGON VETERINARY GROUP • Orthopedics • Internal Medicine
• Wellness Exams • Ultrasound
• Acupuncture • Online Pharmacy
Two locations to serve you and your pets
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(541) 382-7067
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visit us at www.centraloregonvet.com
LEMON CREAM TEA; ROOIBOS, LEMONGRASS, VANILLA BEAN, AND JASMINE FLOWERS. PHOTO BY CHRIS MARTELL.
Amy Rewick DVM
Metolius Tea & Apothecary rolling out this week. Vibrant lavender, gold tipped tea and miniature chocolate chips are clearly visible, so tea drinkers don’t need to be told that they’re about to have a special experience. They can see it for themselves.
APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 23
MICRO REVIEW
Three Creeks: All Grown Up Expansion, special beers, and a grand opening all due this spring
EASTER BRUNCH
BY KEVIN GIFFORD
One rule of thumb for all beer fans: A craft brewery where everyone knows your name is truly a comforting, gratifying experience. A McDonald’s where everyone knows your name, meanwhile, might be an indication that you need to adjust your eating habits. Sisters resident Don McKay, along those lines, is particularly blessed. For the past five springs in a row, Three Creeks Brewing in Sisters has been kind enough to release McKay’s Scottish Ale, a pub exclusive that features a dark, smoky flavor that’s easy on the hops but long on the flavor. (Don is the guy with the bushy white beard and the top hat. He’s fairly unmissable. If you see him at the pub, tell him the Source said hi.) McKay’s Scottish Ale ‘s release is a well-established annual event over at Three Creeks by now, but the rest of the year is shaping up to be one full of changes—and expansion, of course. The outfit’s new production brewery (originally announced back last fall) is now up and running over in north Sisters, just over a mile from the original brewpub, which serves as your first town landmark when driving in from Bend. It’s capable of producing up to 20,000 barrels per year, and the crew’s now putting it to fine use, brewing up the Knotty Blonde, Hoodoo Voodoo IPA, and FivePine Chocolate Porter that it now distributes statewide in cans. This leaves the brewpub system free for more one-off projects like McKay’s, and the brewery already has three new beers set to debut at the bar in early April. If you live close to downtown Bend and the concept of actually driving to a brewery strikes you as alien, now might be a good time to visit Sisters and check out the bar space—the beer is pouring fine, the décor is attractively Western (not the Texas Roadhouse sort of Western), and the burgers, entrees, and pizza are all enticing. You could always procrastinate a little longer if you like, too—Three Creeks is planning a big grand-opening party at its production brewery during Central Oregon Beer Week in May.
FOOD & DRINK EVENTS Food Events
Beer Events
Easter Brunch At Chanterelle and Cascada. First seating 11 am; second seating 1 pm. Make reservations with guest services. There will be a special guest appearance by Mr. Peter Rabbit, who will lead the Easter Egg hunt at the Pavilion. April 5, 11am1pm. Pronghorn Clubhouse, 65600 Pronghorn Club Dr. 877-481-2039. $48 adult; $18 children 6-12; children under 5 free.
Beer and Wine Tastings We always have a wonderful selection of beer and wine! Come join us every Friday and Saturday. Fridays-Saturdays, 3:30-5:30pm. Newport Avenue Market, 1121 NW Newport Ave. 541-382-3940. Free.
Easter Brunch & Egg Hunt Enjoy Chef Ryan’s annual farm-to-table Easter brunch, highlighting produce from local farmers and foragers. Children are invited to enjoy supervised egg hunts at the Range lawn at 11 am & 2 pm. There will be a designated area for children ages 5 and under, and a separate area for children over 5. Keep an eye out for real-life bunnies around the property, and a visit from the Easter Bunny. View Menu: brasada.com/ pdf/Easter-Menu.pdf April 5, 9am-3pm. Brasada’s Range Restaurant & Bar, 16986 SW Brasada Ranch Rd. 855-990-0265. $45 Adult, $20 Youth (5 to 10), 4 and under free. Plus 22 percent service charge. Easter Brunch Buffet Easter is early this year! Where will you find a plentiful buffet that will please grandma, young kids, and everyone in between? Try our hearty brunch, complete with a fresh buffet of all-natural ham, bakery offerings, a variety of salads, fruit, omelette station, and desserts April 5, 9am2pm. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St. $28 adults, $17 kids 5-12, Free kids 4 and younger. Reservations Required. A Novel Idea: Sushi Demo and Tasting Local sushi expert Teresa Bowerman demonstrates the art of sushi rolling. Class size is limited and registration is required. Register online or by calling 541-3121032. Note: Consuming raw or undercooked meats, poultry, seafood, shellfish, or eggs may increase your risk of foodborne illness. April 9, noon-1pm. Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Ln. 541-312-1032. Free. A Novel Idea: Sushi Tasting and Demo Local sushi expert Teresa Bowerman demonstrates the art of sushi rolling. Class size is limited and registration is required. Register on-line or by calling 541-3121032. Note: Consuming raw or undercooked meats, poultry, seafood, shellfish, or eggs may increase your risk of foodborne illness. April 8, noon-1pm. Sisters Library, 110 N. Cedar. 541-312-1032. Free.
Beer Tasting: Sessions and Imperials Drop in to explore our “Brewing” exhibition and taste the differences between session and imperial beers. April 2, 4:30-8pm. High Desert Museum, 59800 S Hwy 97. 541-382-4754. Members, $3; Non-members, $5. Geeks Who Drink Pub Trivia We have moved upstairs at Summit Saloon and Stage, in downtown Bend! Play in teams of up to six, or by yourself if you’re some kind of savant. If you want to play but don’t have a team, come anyway. We can usually get single players recruited onto an existing team. Prizes for winning teams! Wednesdays, 7-9pm. The Summit Saloon & Stage, 115 NW Oregon Ave. 541419-0111. Free. Pinedrops IPA Celebration Party For the first time the local favorite, Pinedrops IPA, is being bottled and Deschutes is throwing launch party to celebrate. Expect sample trays, a photo booth, food specials, and swag giveaways. Starting at 7:30 pm the soul-meets-hop-hop band Dirty Revival will also play in the taproom. No Bend party is complete without costumes and one partygoer can win an undisclosed big prize for the best impersonation of a hop! April 2, 11am-10:30pm. Deschutes Brewery Public House, 1044 NW Bond St. 541-382-9242. Free admission. Pints for Polio Eradicate Polio one pint at a time! Get a group of friends together for one of Bend’s largest pub crawls. Sample 6 oz. craft beer tastings at over a dozen pubs while helping eradicate Polio worldwide. Ticket includes a map and commemorative pint glass. April 4, 2-6pm. The Summit Saloon & Stage, 115 NW Oregon Ave. 541-383-8180. $25 online, $30 door. Worthy Garden Club Launch Party Worthy Garden Club is making its entrance into Central Oregon’s beer scene this summer, offering monthly events focused on hop education and networking opportunities. Come meet our garden specialist (and hop grower) and get more info about upcoming summer activities—including garden workshops, guest speakers, and a local hop yard tour. Hop rhizomes will also be available for purchase. April 2, 5-7pm. Worthy Brewing, 495 NE Bellevue Dr. Free.
at Pronghorn Bring the entire family to celebrate Easter at Pronghorn. Executive Chef Kevin Linde will prepare an exceptional buffet menu to delight all ages and our special guest Peter Rabbit will be hosting the Egg Hunt at 12:00pm and 2:00pm, leaving gifts and surprises for kids of all ages. EASTER BRUNCH Sunday, April 5th Seatings at 11:00am & 1:00pm
$48/adults - $18/ages 6 to 12 - Children 5 & under Free RSVP to Guest Services (888) 976-0383 | pronghorn.aubergeresorts.com 65600 Pronghorn Club Dr. Bend, OR 97701
Join our #PerfectlyPronghorn Instagram contest for a chance to win a free room night! Find us @pronghornauberge
24 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM
CULTURE
ART WATCH BY KELSEY ROOK
Artist of the Month: Lee White Embracing the whimsical BY KELSEY ROOK
SAN FRANCISCO OWL. ILLUSTRATED BY LEE WHITE. What does an artist do when his work seems to elicit the same response— that it looks like an image from a kid’s book? He runs with it, establishing himself as a successful and prolific children’s book illustrator with almost 20 books under his belt. Illustrator Lee White’s drawings inhabit a dreamland where children ride seahorses like ponies and a pianist plays his grand piano atop a giant striped cat. Audiences both young and old are drawn to the playful magic in White’s fantastical world, whether they encounter it at a library or in his booth at Art in the High Desert. For the artist himself, observing the nostalgia and joy his images inspire in others is what brings his dreamy works to life. Source Weekly: A lot of your drawings have a very soft and whimsical quality to them. Is this an effect of illustrating children’s books, or have you always drawn in this style? Do you have a stash of angry drawings somewhere that are super dark and painted in blood? Lee White: That’s pretty funny and I have definitely heard that before! I think I was just meant to make the kind of images I make. When I was in college, some of my instructors wanted more “serious” work out of me, but the funny thing is that it always looked like kids book stuff. Even during my “college angst” phase, people would comment with, “How whimsical!” I love hearing and seeing people react with delight as they come across my work. They may not have seen children’s book work since they were little, [but] they just light up and it looks like they are remembering something deep and nostalgic. I figure there are enough dark images in the world right now. I just want to make something that makes people happy. SW: What does your illustration process look like? Are there any particular media you favor for certain projects? LW: My process is all over the place. I started out in acrylic and then moved to oil, then pastel, digital, and finally watercolor. The first time I laid down a wash of watercolor I knew it was special. I just loved watching the shapes change and colors blend on the wet paper. It’s great because no matter how much you plan, watercolor will do what it wants. You are just along for the ride. When I
painted in acrylic and oil I just felt like I was filling things in like a coloring book. Watercolor is alive and spontaneous. It also mixes well with other media like colored pencils and pastels so I use those techniques too. When I do publishing work I tend to work digitally because it’s fast and I can edit quickly. SW: You’re a pretty prolific children’s book illustrator. How did you get into the “picture book” business? LW: I went to school for illustration at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California, where I studied illustration and entertainment design and loved all of it. Like I said before, all my work looked so specific to kids’ books, so it seemed like the logical route to go. Once I graduated, I went to New York and did portfolio drop offs at quite a few publishers. I ended up signing with an artist’s agent and they got my foot in the door. It started off slow and didn’t pay well, but now I’m on my 20th book and it has gotten way better. It’s a fairly stable industry to be in as an artist once you get in the door. The hard part is actually getting in the door. SW: Any plans to write a children’s book now that you have a kiddo yourself? LW: I am writing my own stories and those should be on the shelves in about two years. It’s great to do the writing because I can craft the story around images that I think are interesting. I have a lot of stories floating around in my head and I’m slowly getting them down on paper. SW: A lot of your work has a good deal of depth—there is so much happening in the details of your drawings. Is this a result of creating pictures that tell a story to kids who might not know how to read? LW: I think it comes from really thinking about what is happening in a story. I don’t want it to paint “realistic” but I want people to be able to feel what it’s like to be in the story. A lot of times when I am painting, I picture how it sounds in a scene. I can hear the crisp snow crunching underneath my feet or feel the sun on my skin. I want to convey that to people so they get something more than just [what’s] drawn in there. I want an emotional response.
Throughout April at the Red Chair Gallery in downtown Bend, aspiring high school students will experience the ins and outs of a “real world” art show— from the jury selection process to hanging and pricing and (hopefully) selling their work. For the past four years—almost as long as the gallery has been in existence—the women at the helm of Red Chair Gallery have taken their model of representation for local artists to area high schools with the goal of encouraging young artistic talent and entrepreneurship. “We view ourselves as very community-minded,” said co-owner Lise Hoffman-McCabe. “We’re trying hard to give the students real experience [by] giving local artists representation where they might not have it otherwise.” The students whose work will be on display during the First Friday Art Walk are required by the gallery to sign a standard 30-day contract outlining commission rates, payment schedules, and gallery requirements. For many, this will be the first time that their art has been for sale in a retail space. “The only real stumbling block is that [the art] must be framed to gallery specifications—no picture hangers or Plexiglas,” said Hoffman-McCabe. For students Nicole Bitterlich and Chloe Baker, their gallery experience will continue throughout the month as the two young women embark on an internship experience to include jurying art from other schools, working four-hour shifts at the gallery, and participating in workshops taught by the established artists represented at Red Chair. “If you’re planning on being an artist as a side job or as a career rather than a hobby, it’s extremely helpful if you can get your nose in the business when you’re young,” said Bitterlich, a senior at Bend High School who plans to pursue a career in the Air Force. Mountain View High School student Chloe Baker will be showing her fractured self-portrait titled “All Eyes on Me,” which also won a Scholastic Gold Key and American Visions Award this winter. Although she was part of the gallery’s showcase last year, she is excited to have her work seen by an audience, and to support her classmates whose pieces will hang alongside hers. “It feels a bit unreal to have a piece you’ve worked so hard on to actually be appreciated by an audience or be lucky enough to have a buyer,” said Baker. “I am very excited for the art walk, mainly to see the faces of my classmates who also got into this showing when they see their work on the walls.”
APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 25
“Emerging Artists”
“Local High School Art Student Show”
Autry’s 4 Season Florist
Come Join Us for a Day of Shopping with local artists, a fun photo booth and much more!
103 NW Oregon Avenue Bend, OR 97701 541.306.3176 Open Every Day
www.redchairgallerybend.com
Red Chair was voted
Silent Auction
Best Gallery
Prizes will include a Metal Art Piece by Russell Crum, a Mini Photo shoot by Sweet Vine Photography, a Custom Gift Basket of your choice by The SL Shop and more! Autry’s 4 Seasons Florist 759 NE Greenwood Ave Ste. 2, Bend, OR 97701 (541) 382-3636 Friday April 10, 2015 8 am to 7 pm Light refreshments and drinks will be available all day long! Meet and greet with local artists that are selling their wares at the shop from 5 pm – 7 pm!
by Sawyer Alcazar-Hagen by The Source Weekly Readers
When it Comes to Reading, Your Child Deserves the Best Combining Science and Heart for Students with Learning Differences
Sanford Shapiro, M.Ed. DIRECTOR
SanfordShapiro@bendlearningcenter.com
404 SW COLUMBIA ST, SUITE 140 404 SW COLUMBIA ST, SUITE 140 BEND, OR 97702 BEND, OR 97702
541-383-3208
Call or visit our website to learn more about our Summer Reading Camps Cogmed for Attention and Memory
July14 - 30th and August 4 - 20th, 2015
Call Sanford Shapiro for a no-cost initial consultation: 541 383-3208
Where good things happen for students with learning differences
www.bendlearningcenter.com
MAINSTAGE CONCERT SCHEDULE
LOCATED AT THE INTERSECTION OF MT. WASHINGTON DRIVE AND NORTHWEST CROSSING DRIVE
FREE CONCERTS ALL WEEKEND LONG Excellent Gentlemen
SATURDAY APRIL 11
FRIDAY NIGHT APRIL 10
SUNDAY APRIL 12 11:00am | Miguel D’alonso
5:30pm | Tim Snider
11:00am | The Moms
1:00pm | Levi Weaver
7:30pm | Wilderness
1:00pm | Jacob Westfall Band
3:00pm | Mbrascatu
9:15pm | Fruition
3:00pm | The Junebugs 5:00pm | Weather Machine
7:00pm Excellent Gentlemen 9:00pm Staxx Brothers Fruition Sponsored by:
Welcomed by:
Supporting Sponsors:
Presented by: Media Sponsors:
Staxx Brothers
26 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM
Artwork “Hummingbird” by Tamara Adams
FRI 5-11pm • SAT 11am-11pm • SUN 11am-5pm
• THE PEAK 104.1 MAINSTAGE • GOURMET FOOD, WINE & LIVING • FINE ARTISTS PROMENADE • SPRING INTO FUN FAMILY AREA
• • • •
STREET CHALK ART COMPETITION CONSCIOUS LIVING SHOWCASE SPRING FESTIVAL BITES FRIDAY ART AND WINE BOP
Sponsored by: STREET CHALK ART COMPETITION
Presented by:
Welcomed by:
Media Sponsors:
Additional Sponsors:
For additional information contact inquiry@c3events.com For additional assistance, both in advance of the week-end and once on site, contact Kilee Johnson, C3 Events ADA Liaison, kilee@c3events.com : 503-338-8829
EVENTS
APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 27
CULTURE
F-U-N-N-Y
Use that in a musical? BY PHIL BUSSE
Ten years ago, 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, an interactive musical, stormed Broadway, capturing six Tony nominations and a Grammy nomination for its songs. The performance is a perfect storm of improv comedy, theatrical flare and gleeful musical numbers. This month, the musical is being staged for the first time in Central Oregon. Recently, the Source sat down with director Karen Sipes, a local actress and vocal coach herself, to hear her insights into the play, and musicals in general. Source Weekly: Certainly for the percentage of performances in town, there seems to be a large number of musicals—Beauty & the Beast earlier this year, Les Mis last year and Avenue Q is coming up. Karen Snipes: I definitively see that trend continuing. Bend has a lot of talented singers and performers, and they are passionate. SW: I suppose that a musical about a spelling bee seemed inevitable. There was the book—and movie— Bee Season, and the documentary Spellbound, and even Bad Words, a recent big screen comedy with Jason Bateman. Why do you think there is such a cultural fascination with spelling bees? KS: We are fascinated with kids who have an extraordinary talent in one area. And a lot of the population are bad spellers. It is a little like the Olympics. You see people doing what you can’t imagine doing. SW: Okay, I can understand that appeal of the subject matter, but why a musical? KS: The musical lends itself to a great deal of humor. When you take a thought and put into song, or when you put music to [an idea] you put in all these elements of beauty or sadness. It just makes for an enjoyable experience. There has been a buzz about this play for a while. It was on the top 10 list of Broadway plays, and when I heard the music from it, I was absolutely enchanted. It’s one of the funniest musicals I’ve seen in a long time—a lot of pathos, and touching moments; the characters are just really unique
AUDIENCE WARNING: YOU MAY BE PULLED ON TO STAGE AND ASKED TO SPELL! OPENS 4/3. PHOTO BY SANDY KLEIN.
and quirky. SW: Maybe this seems like a simple question, but why is it funny? Is it funny in the way that many other contemporary musicals are, like Book of Mormon or Avenue Q (which Sipes is directing in a few months), which is from its shock value. KS: It is funny because the characters are incredibly quirky. This is adolescent angst at its best, and we’re using adults to play children. Each has a well-defined character, and each has something quirky. These are almost caricatures. It is nine really defined characters and there is something about each one that goes a little beyond the norm in some way. SW: Nine! That’s a lot. What was the casting process like?
KS: We had a lot of talent come out. Because I am a vocal instructor, I listened to vocal potential, and expression, as well as a certain amount of comedic timing. There were nine people that fit—people who can vocally carry out the roles, have a comic sense of timing, and who can bring a certain amount of tenderness or pathos when it is needed. These are nine lead characters. There is no chorus. There are no bit characters. The talent base in Bend is pretty remarkable. We found that in Les Mis, when 170 some people auditioned. 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette 7:30 pm Friday-Saturday, 3 pm Sundays, through April 18. $22 adults, $19 students/seniors
From Athens to Paris to, of course, Bend
Greek-American-Bend Poet Stephanos Papadopoulos kicks off poetry month BY CHRISTIE HINRICHS
HE IS A POET, AND YES HE KNOWS IT. PAPADOPOULOS READS 4/2.
For Greek-American and Bend-based writer Stephanos Papadopoulos, the poems collected in his recent book The Black Sea embody the “inherited memories” of his ancestors. His grandfather, a tobacco merchant who was born in Samsounda, recounted to his grandchildren the trials of the Pontic Greeks of The Black Sea, and the Asia Minor Catastrophe of the early 20th century. Though many of his readers won’t be familiar with the exact situations that inspired Papadopoulos’ collection, they’ll discover many universal themes—family, myth, history, and the legacy of a distant, yet haunting, landscape. Papadopoulos was born in the United States, yet spent much of his childhood in Paris and
Athens, where his father was a well-known Greek artist (NONDA 1922-2005). As a young man, he began to ponder his connection to the place where so many of his ancestors suffered and died, and turned to poetry as a way to imagine these “voices” from the past, and the stories they had to tell. He traveled by motorcycle from Athens and rode though Anatolia, along the southern coast of the Black Sea, exploring the villages and birthplaces of his forebears. “Sometimes I feel poetry is a way of holding onto my childhood,” Papadopoulos says, “preserving those memories without the crippling effects of nostalgia. Those images are deeply Greek for me and, even though I write in English as a Greek and American poet, inescapable.” The most resonant of these images, which are reflected in the sonnets of The Black Sea, are articulated by characters, both real and imagined, who have everything at stake. In “The Poet in the Harbor,” Papadopoulos explores the role of the poet in history: “He likes to lie down in the mounts of fishnets / with the dogs, with the ghosts of dolphins / snared by negligence, by careless ropes cut loose, / by a second in which joy becomes abandon / and abandon, as it never fails to do, / enters the realm of tragedy, and so he likes / to go down there alone and fall asleep / in the nets with the dogs and the reek of the sea.” In “Roads,” an unnamed man wanders the gravel roads of a coastal town: “He walked bare-headed and empty-handed / toward those smiles, thin descending slashes / glimpsed through a parted door and door frame.” Throughout The Black Sea, Papadopoulos manages to weave together the bleak tragedies of a lost generation—his own family history, imagined lives, firsthand accounts—to create something that is not singularly tragic. Instead, there is a kind of quiet acceptance that comes in the final page: “I’m a name they never spoke, I stepped from the ashes / blind, deaf and dumb to what they saw, still a witness / by some force that drags me toward hills with nothing / but the shards of words passed on, the crumbling photographs, / the tears that slid from my father and grandfather / through the huge black eyes of paintings and into mine; / that week when the light breaks on these imaginary cliffs.” As part of a celebration for National Poetry Month, Papadopoulos will read his poetry at 6:30 pm, Thursday, April 2 at Barnes & Noble, 2690 NE Hwy 20.
28 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM
BEND’S LOCAL INDEPENDENT OUTDOOR
OUTDOOR RESEARCH PATAGONIA PETZL PRANA RAB SALEWA SCARPA SIERRA DESIGNS SEA TO SUMMIT SMARTWOOL THERMAREST MOUNTAIN HARDWEAR ZEAL MONTRAIL ARC’TERYX FIVETEN HYDRO FLASK GARMONT KEEN LA SPORTIVA MAMMUT MERRELL RETAILER OSPREY CHACO SMITH DARN TOUGH DRAGON METOLIUS MONTRAIL OBOZ BLACK DIAMOND BOREAS
Gold Hunting! BY CORBIN GENTZLER
Last summer, I worked at Bend Park & Rec, and while putting in long hours keeping Bend’s parks beautiful, a coworker of mine, a Crook County native, spun me tales of gold in the hills near Prineville Reservoir. The stories were entertaining, and I filed them away, like pirate’s treasure maps, for later consideration. Scan the internet for “Central Oregon buried treasure” and Google returns 41,000 results. There’s gold in them there hills. I mean, even the internet says so, so it must be true.
Sleeper Spring Snow Storms or Early Alpine Starts, We’ve Got You Covered!
834 NW Colorado Avenue Bend, Oregon 97701 541-388-0688 www.mountainsupplybend.com
GO HERE!
Monday - Saturday: 10am-6pm Sunday: 10am-5pm PRINEVILLE RESERVOIR. PHOTO BY FREEPHOTOS.COM
Skeleton Rock A cursory review of the internet reveals about a half dozen different takes on who buried what, where, and why. But most of them go a little like this: In 1870, somewhere southeast of Prineville, two men robbed a stage coach and made off with 50 grand in cash and gold. They intended to head west to Portland, but were pursued by authorities and got hung up by the raging Crooked River. Following the banks of the river, they looked for a place to hide the stash and noticed the distinctive Skeleton Rock formation. Unfortunately, one man was shot and killed and the other caught by authorities before they were able to return and collect their loot. To this day, the exact location is known only to the stony hillside of Prineville Reservoir. Swan Lake This legend takes place in what was once the pioneer settlement of Swan Lake, located somewhere around 10 miles east of Klamath Falls. The sole internet corroboration for this source comes from a website titled losttreasure.com, so you know it’s definitely true. Legend has it that the advent of a post office in Swan Lake brought with it moneyed, but lonesome, stage coach travel between Klamath Falls and Lakeview. It is said that one particular Swan Lake resident made a pretty penny knocking off stage coaches on the regular, and kept his proceeds buried in the potato patch behind the post office. Find the remains of the post office and you’ll find the treasure.
th
June 6 2015
5:30pm Riverhouse Convention Center
Enjoy cocktails, hors d’oeuvres, dinner, live & silent auctions, music by The High Street Band & dancing, all to benefit the animals. Tickets: $100 per person
$1,000 per table (10)
Available at www.hsco.org or call 541.330.7096 or email John@hsco.org
OUTSIDE EVENTS Cascades Mountaineers’ Meeting Promoting outings, enhancing training and experience, and expanding a sense of community among Central Oregon mountaineering enthusiasts is the goal of Cascades Mountaineers. Join monthly meetings to discuss recent outings and plan new outings. Second Wednesday of every month, 7-9pm. Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Ln., Ste. 1. Free. Twin Bridges Ride Weekly group ride led by shop mechanic Nick Salerno in conjunction with Visit Bend. Riding the registered Twin Bridges Scenic Bikeway, this great road ride has a decent pace challenging all levels. Come a little early for a fresh pastry and a beautifully crafted Stumptown morning beverage. Saturdays, 9:30am-noon. Crow’s Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks. 541-728-0066. Free. Fleet Feet Group Walks Thursdays, 6pm. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. Free. FootZone Noon Run Order a Taco Stand burrito when you leave and we’ll have it when you return. Meet at FootZone for a three- to five-mile run. Wednesdays, noon. Foot Zone, 845 Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free. Moms’ Running Group Rain or shine, FootZone hosts runs from three to four and a half-miles every Thursday meeting at FootZone. Thursdays, 9:30am. Foot Zone, 845 Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free. Monday Hikes Guided hikes explore scenic local trails in April and May, covering around 3 to 5 miles per hike. A great way to meet new people and see some of the region. Two hikes per session. Pre-register through Bend Park and Recreation. Every other Monday, 9am-2pm, through May 25. Bend Park & Recreation District, 799 SW Columbia St. 541-706-6116. $32. Move it Mondays First and third Monday of the month will be a trail run, we will meet at FootZone and then carpool to the location. Second and fourth Mondays runs start and end at FootZone. 3-5 miles and paces between 7 and 12-minute miles can be accommodated. Mondays, 5:30pm. Foot Zone, 845 NW Wall St. 541-317-3568. Free. Birding Walks The Old Mill District and the East Cascades Audubon Society are again offering free weekly bird walks every other Friday. Walks are guided by an expert from the Society and wind around the trails that run along the Deschutes River. Appropriate for all ages and interested parties, from novices to experienced avian experts. Binoculars available for check out. Fri, April 3, 10am-noon. Ticket Mill, 475 Southwest Powerhouse Drive. 541-312-0131. Free. Pub Run to Bridge 99 We’re excited to announce a new partnership with Cascade Relays for this and future pub runs! Please note this is a 4 mile run. Every runner’s 1st beer will be sponsored by Cascade Relays, producers of the Bend Beer Chase! Small appetizers will also be available from Wubba’s BBQ. April 6, 5:30pm. FootZone, 845 NW Wall St. Thursday Night Growler Runs Three-and five-mile runs with several pace groups to accommodate any running level. Upon return we will crack open a growler of local beer, courtesy of Growler Phil’s, to celebrate your commitment to fitness. Thursdays, 5:30pm. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. Free. Trail Course Play and Pay Day Fundraiser Come practice your trail course maneuvering skills on the trail course at Rolling M Ranch in Sisters, then participate in a friendly competition to win a little cash. WEATHER PERMITTING!! Visit our website at MustangsToTheRescue.org for details and times. First Saturday of every month, through Sept. 5. Rolling M Ranch, 69516 Hinkle Butte Rd. 541-306-9957.
www.centraleventrentals.com 541-389-6275
Tuesday Hikes Guided spring hikes on local trails in April and May. Pre-register through Bend Park and Recreation for the Tuesdays that work best for you. Typically cover 4 to 6 miles per hike. Tuesdays, 9am-2:30pm. through May 26. Bend Park & Recreation District, 799 SW Columbia St. 541-706-6116. $18. Wednesday Reflective Runs Run 3-5 miles and have several pace groups to accommodate any running level. Wednesdays, 6pm. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. 541-389-1601. Free.
APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 29
Do what makes you smile!
TIME TO FRESHEN UP! APRIL SEMINAR | THURSDAY, APRIL 9TH | 5:30 Please join us for an intimate gathering and hear about the latest techniques and procedures in facial cosmetic surgery. Dr. Villano will discuss various treatment options for facial rejuvenation. The atmosphere will be relaxed and interactive. RSVP 541-312-3223
2015
Michael E. Villano MD, FACS CASCADE FACES 431 NE Revere Ave #110
www.cascadefaces.com
541-312-3223
SATURDAY MAY 30th Women’s Race
Custom finisher’s necklace for all half marathon finishers Great post-race festivities Fabulous goody bag
A portion of proceeds benefits
HALF MARATHON 10K RUN 5K RUN HAPPY LITTLE KIDS RUN
April 9 th 5-8 PM
AN EVENT OF HEALTH PLANS
the Races Series
Register at
www.HappyGirlsRun.com
Special pricing on certified angus beef and big bold red wines. Our dinner menu, featuring NW cuisine, will also be available along with our award winning wine list. RESTAURANT HOURS
Wed-Fri : 11 am - 8 pm Sat & Sun : 8 am - 8 pm 62000 Broken Top Drive
541-383-8200
Reception@brokentop.com www.brokentop.com
30 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM
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Kick with aa true trueBend Bendtradition tradition- -the Kickoff offthe the2015 2015 race race season season with the 27th annual Salmon Traverse beautiful 27th annual Salmon Run.Run. Traverse beautiful dirt dirt andand paved paved trails along the Deschutes River in Bend, the trails along the Deschutes River in Bend, the racerace winds winds through some of the most scenic trails in town. through some of the most scenic trails in town. Bring the whole family, young racers 10 and under can participate in The Little Fry Run!
BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY Racers 10 and under can participate in The Little Fry Run! HEALTH PLANS
An event of
An event of
the Races Series
The Source Weekly’s 2015
RESTAURANT GUIDE
The always anticipated Restaurant Guide will be serving up a new batch of mouth-watering restaurant reviews plus new foodie features that are sure to please the palate. Sink your teeth into stories on new food trends, the future of the restaurant scene and of course, top-shelf reviews. In addition to the coveted Restaurant and Rookie of the Year awards, we will also crown a Food Cart of the Year plus introduce a new Reader's Choice award!
SHOWCASE YOUR BUSINESS AND BEEF UP YOUR MARKETING IN THE SOURCE WEEKLY'S 2015 RESTAURANT GUIDE! It is sure to tempt the taste buds.
ADVERTISING DEADLINE: APRIL 16TH ON THE STANDS: APRIL 23RD
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Race Details and Registration Information
www.runsalmonrun.com www.runsalmonrun.com Race Details and Registration Information
APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 31
FILM EVENTS
azillion beads More Beads Than You Can Imagine! Back from Tucson! New items coming out daily...Don’t miss! Corner of Harriman & Greenwood (910 Harriman, Ste 100) 541-617-8854
Nfinity Champions League 2 Here it is: The moment we’ve all been waiting for. Every single day of your life has been building to this. While the birth of your children was nice and all, the Nfinity Cheerleading Championships shall make that first beautiful wail pale in comparison. This year the blood, sweat, and cheers move from Georgia to sunny Los Angeles as “22 league members return to the big screen allowing eight spots for Level 5 teams to ‘Play-In’ to the league.” I don’t know what a word of that means, but holy heck does it sound exciting. With teams like the Lady Bullets, the Shooting Stars, and Lady Lightning, expect this competition to blow your face off of your head and into the gutter with all the other faces. 7 pm, Thursday, April 2. Old Mill Stadium. 680 SW Powerhouse Dr.
Beyond the World of Interstellar Just in case last year’s sci-fi Interstellar simultaneously made you feel incredibly smart and completely lost, here is a behind-the-scenes look at one of last year’s most hotly debated films. Some people found it a thought provoking look at our future if we continue to treat the Earth the way that we do (i.e. poorly), and others thought it was overly sentimental and nonsensical fluff. Either way, people were talking about it. This director’s cut of the film features never-before-seen footage and interviews, a chat with physicist Kip Thorne, and a musical performance by composer Hans Zimmer. The new footage will be cut into the film, which will be shown in its entirety, followed by the interviews and bonus features. Three hour and ten minute running time. 7 pm, Tuesday, April 7. Old Mill Stadium. 680 SW Powerhouse Dr.
32 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM
FILM SHORTS
JARED RASIC
Providing private, compassionate euthanasia services for your cats & dogs in the privacy of your pet's home.
541-647-6810
www.MobileCatandDogVet.com Libby Hays, DVM DrLibby@MobileCatandDogVet.com
CHAPPIE While Chappie definitely looks like Short Circuit for the 21st century, because South African director Neill Blomkamp’s name is on it, we’re also likely to get some social commentary spritzed throughout bursts of ultra-violence. A police droid is stolen by revolutionaries (played in part by the members of Die Antwoord) and reprogramed to feel human emotion. Naturally, the government fears and hates Chappie, and sets about to destroy the robot and everything it stands for. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX CINDERELLA A live-action retelling of the Disney classic directed by Shakespearean master Kenneth Branagh. Disney will be able to print money pretty soon once the next Star Wars movie comes out, so this version of Cinderella must exist just to remind people about the cartoon. Either way, this seems pointless and get the hell off my lawn. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Pine Theater, Redmond Theatre, Sisters Movie House
HOURS: Mon - Sat 9a - 9p Sun 10a - 7p PH: 541-318-2977
THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT Even if you try to give Divergent (and its sequels) the benefit of the doubt that they aren’t just Hunger Games rip-offs, by the time you reach the end of the first book your optimism will be shredded. While Shailene Woodley is a fine actress, the Teen Post-Apocalyptic genre hits the wall pretty hard here, and flails every which way with its pat ideas about freedom, individuality, and painfully generic love. In this installment the factions start going to war and Kate Winslet cashes extra paychecks. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Pine Theater, Redmond Theatre, Sisters Movie House
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DO YOU BELIEVE? From the makers of God’s Not Dead and starring Samwise Gamgee, Jefferson from Married With Children, The Boz, and some asshole named Schwayze, comes the next level of christian entertainment. A pastor’s faith is tested when he watches a street preacher explode with faith he cannot match. This film’s hermetically sealed message should be easily consumed by the choir to which it is preaching. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
FOCUS Will Smith and Margot Robbie as con artists getting ready to take down some marks sounds pretty delightful. Even though Smith’s movie star power has somewhat dimmed over the last few years, people forget that when he’s given a strong role, he tends to knock it out of the park. Not saying that this movie has that going for it, but Margot Robbie is damned delightful also, and if she and Will Smith had a baby, it would be too beautiful to look at. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX FURIOUS 7 While I wouldn’t stand up for the first four films in this franchise, Fast Five and Fast and Furious Six are both smorgasbords of explosions and jaw-dropping stunts, worthy of being mentioned alongside the best action films of the last 15 years. Furious 7 pits Paul Walker (in his final screen role), Vin Diesel, Mr. The Rock, and family against a pissed off Jason Statham. Expect cars flying through the air, Mr. The Rock with a minigun and Statham kicking our heroes in their faces. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Theatre
GET HARD Will Ferrell is a white collar criminal headed to San Quentin, and Kevin Hart is the guy he hires to train him how to be tough for prison. Since Hart has never been to prison and Ferrell only hires him because he’s black, I’m assuming mildly racist hijinks will ensue. With some of the writers behind the brilliant Key and Peele scripting, this could be a return to form for Ferrell and the vehicle Hart needs to show how funny he can be when not improvising. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX,
Redmond Theatre
541-550-4900
937 NW Newport Ave., Ste. 140 Bend, OR 97701
THE GUNMAN Sean Penn, Idris Elba, Javier Bardem, and Ray Winstone in an action movie by the director of Taken sounds like a delight. Penn plays a sniper who kills a minister of the mines in the Congo. When he returns years later, he becomes the target of a hit squad and must use his very special set of skills. Expect brainless action with lots of slow motion in the rain and you should be well prepared for this one. Old Mill Stadium 16
& IMAX
HOME Home is the new film from DreamWorks Animation, home to How to Train Your Dragon, Kung-Fu Panda, and Shrek One through Fifty. This one tells the story of an alien (voiced by The Best
Amigo Steve Martin) whose race is hiding from their mortal enemy on Earth, which they decide to invade. Obviously, wacky hi-jinks ensure because Jim Parsons is also part of the voice cast and that man has two modes: wacky and fauxnerdy. If they exterminate the human race by accident, then this should be a children’s classic. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, Redmond Theatre, Sisters Movie House
IT FOLLOWS Critically acclaimed and scary as hell, It Follows creates a new urban legend for the ages. After having sex with a near stranger, a teenage girl starts feeling like she’s always being followed by some dark and shadowy force. Even without the subtext and thematic weight, the film is still creepy and the finest horror film of the last few years. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX JUPITER ASCENDING From the creators of The Matrix Trilogy and the criminally underrated masterpiece Cloud Atlas. Jupiter Ascending is either poised to be this year’s sleeper sci-fi hit or a flop the size of Johnny Depp’s Mortdecai mustache. Mila Kunis plays Jupiter Jones, an unlucky Earth janitor who is actually space royalty and must be protected by Channing Tatum’s half albino, half wolf warrior Caine Wise. If this film is half as good as The Fifth Element, it will be much better than most sci-fi action releases of the last few years. St.Francis Theater KINGSMAN: THE SECRET SERVICE The new film from the madcap bastard behind Layer Cake, Stardust and X-Men: First Class, Matthew Vaughn. Kingsman has Colin Firth using a bulletproof umbrella and beating a bunch of ass while never breaking a sweat. It also has Samuel L. Jackson dressing like Jay-Z, talking with a lisp, and hellbent on world domination. I mean, sure, this could be one of the worst movies ever made, but it won’t be. It will be gloriously, batshit insane. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
MR. TURNER Mr. Turner tells the story of J.M.W. Turner, the controversial and revolutionary painter. Following him to brothels, historical meetings, and his sexual relationship with his housekeeper, this biopic skips the typical notes of the average biography and delves deeper into the psychology of a deeply flawed but brilliant man. With some of the finest cinematography and costume design of the year, Mr. Turner will please historical drama fans as well as those with an artist’s eye. Tin Pan Theater
RUN ALL NIGHT Liam Neeson plays The Gravedigger, an aging mob hitman who has to go to war with his old boss/best friend in order to protect his son and family. Since the film boils down to Liam Neeson vs. Ed Harris, it seems guaranteed to entertain with those two badasses squaring off against each other. Hopefully this will be more in line with The Grey as opposed to Taken 3, because that movie was steamed garbage. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX
THE SECOND BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL Leisurely strolling into theaters three years after the sleeper hit made 1,000 percent profit comes a sequel no one really asked for, but will probably embrace all the same. Judi Dench, Maggie Smith, Bill Nighy, Penelope Wilton, Dev Patel and everyone else returns to the hotel but there is only one vacant room. Will Judi Dench and Maggie Smith fight with chains and teeth? Please make it so. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX,
Sisters Movie House
STILL ALICE Julianne Moore won an Oscar for her portrayal of Alice Howland, a linguistics professor who starts forgetting words due to early-onset Alzheimers. Oscar voters love an actor taking on a debilitating disease and Moore has been snubbed a few times in the past, so the stars aligned this year to give her the golden dude. Tin Pan Theater WILD Filmed around Central Oregon and along the Pacific Crest Trail, Wild tells the story of Cheryl Strayed and her path to self-discovery across a thousand-mile hike. One of the most hyped films of the year, Wild is a very powerful examination of loneliness, isolation, and the power of the human spirit. Also, Central Oregon is pretty and fun to look at on the big screen. St.Francis Theater
APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 33
I ♥ TELEVISION
NATURAL MIND DHARMA CENTER
Easter Charade
Vajrayana Buddhism in the Nyingma Tradition
BY WM.™ STEVEN HUMPHREY
As you know, this coming Sunday is Easter—which is when Christians bellyache about how we non-Christians “stole” the holiday and replaced “religion” with “bunnies and hard boiled eggs.” Well, don’t get it twisted—because Christians STOLE IT FIRST. It was Christians who yoinked the name “Easter” from the pagan celebration of spring—but, whatever. Sounded like a boring party, anyway. HOWEVER! The least Christians could’ve done was make Easter super awesome, instead of super depressing! (For more information on “the fetishation of Christ’s crucifixion,” see the last 2000 years of Christian history, or consult your local library.) So HELL YEAH we’re going to add bunnies and hard-boiled eggs! Sundays are terrible enough without the extra guilt trip they’re laying on us! (Besides, if your club doesn’t serve candy—and later in the day, egg salad—we don’t want to join.) That brings me to the subject of television. Networks are a lot like Christians— they pretend to be pious on Easter and Christmas, but the other 363 days of the year they’re gettin’ CRUNK, y’all. For example, this Easter the networks are hiding their immorality underneath their mattress (along with their porn mags and cigarettes) and pretending to be fine, upstanding Christian with the following shows: • 8 Minutes (A&E, Thurs., April 2, 10 pm). When I first read the title, I was like, “YAY! A new bull-riding show!” But then I was like, “Wait. People don’t ride bulls for 8 minutes.” As it turns out, “8 Minutes” follows “cop-turned-pastor” (UGH!!) Kevin Brown, who meets sex workers in hotel rooms— purportedly to have, you know, “sex”—but then forces them to listen to an eight-minute long lecture on why they shouldn’t be prostitutes! (And I thought I was kinky!) Obviously this guy is a SUPER…CREEP,
WEDNESDAY 1
9 PM VH1 WALK OF SHAME SHUTTLE One-night stands get driven home by comedians, and hilarity ensues! 10 PM FX THE AMERICANS Philip and Elizabeth dream up a new creative way of screwing over the CIA.
THURSDAY 2
10 PM SYFY OLYMPUS Debut! Like “Game of Thrones” except with Greek gods! 10 PM FX ARCHER Season finale! Archer finds himself in deep poop in this parody of Fantastic Voyage.
FRIDAY 3
9 PM VH1 BACKSTREET BOYS: SHOW ‘EM WHAT YOU’RE MADE OF A documentary following what the Backstreet Boys have been up to for the last two years. (Probably not much, but who cares? SQUEEEEE!!)
SATURDAY 4
9 PM STARZ OUTLANDER Season premiere! The addictive return of this sexy Scottish Highland time-traveling romance!
because while some women are certainly trapped in the sex trade, many see it as a legit life/career choice. And they really don’t need some uptight honky shame-junkie “mansplaining” how they should live their lives. Treat this show like Sunday school, and never, ever go. • A.D. (NBC, Sun., April 5, 9 pm). Producer Mark Burnett—best known for cursing the world with “Survivor,” “The Apprentice,” and “Shark Tank”—is the devil behind this biblically based miniseries, which follows the birth of Christianity immediately following the death of Jesus Christ. Like it’s prequel (History Channel’s “The Bible”), Burnett hopes to rake in more cash from gullible believers who currently have very little in the way of entertainment—if you don’t count those hilariously bad Kirk Cameron movies. But don’t worry, Christians! Since the series will also depict Jesus’ magical resurrection (“Who’s got two thumbs and just climbed out of a grave? THIS GUY!”), historical accuracy won’t get in the way of a good time. BOOOOO HISTORICAL ACCURACY!! • The Ten Commandments (ABC, Sun., April 5, 7 pm). And of course, what would Easter be without a showing of Cecil B. DeMille’s 1956 classic, The Ten Commandments? This flicks stars Charlton Heston as the Easter Bunny, who leads his people on a 40-year egg hunt across the desert to the “Promised Land”—home of the bottomless bowl of candy and egg salad. (SIGH. I love Easter.) This is my evil twin’s Twitter. @WmSteveHumphrey
SUNDAY 5
10 PM AMC MAD MEN Season premiere! The seventh and FINAL season debuts…in the swinging ‘70s! 10 PM NBC AMERICAN ODYSSEY Debut! In this “rah-rah America” drama, a female soldier tries to escape al-Qaida territory, and return to her family.
MONDAY 6
8 PM HBO SINATRA: ALL OR NOTHING AT ALL Part two of the documentary about the life (and sexy loves) of Frank Sinatra! 10 PM AMC BETTER CALL SAUL Season finale! Jimmy’s neck deep in trouble, and makes a life-changing decision.
TUESDAY 7
9 PM CW IZOMBIE When Clive refuses Liv’s help on a case, she wonders, “Is it because I eat brains?” 10 PM FX JUSTIFIED Raylan and Boyd search for Ava in the mountains. (Scary hillbilly alert!)
Practices & Dharma Talks Wednesday 7-8:30 pm Sunday 8-9 am
345 SW Century Dr. Suite 2 ~ 541-388-3352 naturalminddharma.org
34 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM
ASTROLOGY Weekly Unity Services - Sunday, 10 a.m. Youth Program Offered for ages 4-17 High Desert Community Grange - 62855 Powell Butte Hwy., Bend
Find Love in One and All
Whether single or a partner, you need to find unconditional love not only for lasting romantic love but for yourself too. By learning some prospecting skills, we can all succeed at love. Starting in April and running nine months, Rev. Jane is offering monthly experiential workshops each 2nd Sunday, beginning April 13 from 12:30-2:00 at Unity Community, 62855 Powell Butte Hwy., Bend. Cost is $15/person/month or $120 upfront for the series.
Unity Community of Central Oregon
Men's Group & Women's Sacred Circle, Gratitude Circles 541-390-8244
ARIES (March 21-April 19):“Choconiverous” is an English slang word that’s defined as having the tendency, when eating a chocolate Easter Bunny, to bite the head off first. I recommend that you adopt this direct approach in everything you do in the coming weeks. Don’t get bogged down with preliminaries. Don’t get sidetracked by minor details, trivial distractions, or peripheral concerns. It’s your duty to swoop straight into the center of the action. Be clear about what you want and unapologetic about getting it. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): The American
snack cake known as a Twinkie contains 68 percent air. Among its 37 other mostly worthless ingredients are sugar, water, cornstarch, the emulsifier polysorbate 60, the filler sodium stearoyl lactylate, and food coloring. You can’t get a lot of nutritious value by eating it. Now let’s consider the fruit known as the watermelon. It’s 91 percent water and six percent sugar. And yet it also contains a good amount of Vitamin C, lycopene, and antioxidants, all of which are healthy for you. So if you are going to eat a whole lot of nothing, watermelon is a far better nothing than a Twinkie. Let that serve as an apt metaphor for you in the coming week.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You may be as
close as you have ever gotten to finding the longlost Holy Grail—or Captain Kidd’s pirate treasure, for that matter, or Marie Antoinette’s jewels, or Tinkerbell’s magical fairy dust, or the smoking-gun evidence that Shakespeare’s plays were written by Francis Bacon. At the very least, I suspect you are ever-so-near to your personal equivalent of those precious goods. Is there anything you can do to increase your chances of actually getting it? Here’s one tip: Visualize in detail how acquiring the prize would inspire you to become even more generous and magnanimous than you already are.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): People are paying attention to you in new ways. That’s what you wanted, right? You’ve been emanating subliminal signals that convey messages like “Gaze into my eternal eyes” and “Bask in the cozy glow of my crafty empathy.” So now what? Here’s one possibility: Go to the next level. Show the even-more-interesting beauty that you’re hiding below the surface. You may not think you’re ready to offer the gifts you have been “saving for later.” But you always think that. I dare you to reveal more of your deep secret power.
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LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Some people believe
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VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): According to the Biblical stories, Peter was Christ’s closest disciple, but acted like a traitor when trouble came. After Christ was arrested, in the hours before the trial, Peter denied knowing his cherished teacher three different times. His fear trumped his love, leading him to violate his sacred commitment. Is there anything remotely comparable to that scenario developing in your own sphere, Virgo? If you recognize any tendencies in yourself to shrink from your devotion or violate your highest principles, I urge you to root them out. Be brave. Stay strong and true in your duty to a person or place or cause that you love. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Marketing experts
say consumers need persistent prodding before they will open their minds to possibilities that are outside their entrenched habits. The aver-
age person has to be exposed to a new product at least eight times before it fully registers on his or her awareness. Remember this rule of thumb as you seek attention and support for your brainstorms. Make use of the art of repetition. Not just any old boring, tedious kind of repetition, though. You’ve got to be as sincere and fresh about presenting your goodies the eighth time as you were the first.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): In Cole Porter’s song “I Get a Kick Out of You,” he testifies that he gets no kick from champagne. In fact, “Mere alcohol doesn’t thrill me at all,” he sings. The same is true about cocaine. “I’m sure that if I took even one sniff that would bore me terrifically, too,” Porter declares. With this as your nudge, Scorpio, and in accordance with the astrological omens, I encourage you to identify the titillations that no longer provide you with the pleasurable jolt they once did. Acknowledge the joys that have grown stale and the adventures whose rewards have waned. It’s time for you to go in search of a new array of provocative fun and games. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): The English writer William Wordsworth (1770-1830) wrote hundreds of poems. Among his most famous was “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud,” which is also known as “Daffodils.” The poem sprung from him after a walk he took with his sister around Lake Ullswater in the English Lake District. There they were delighted to find a long, thick belt of daffodils growing close to the water. In his poem, Wordsworth praises the “ten thousand” flowers that were “Continuous as the stars that shine / And twinkle on the milky way.” If you are ever going to have your own version of a daffodil explosion that inspires a burst of creativity, Sagittarius, it will come in the coming weeks. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Your sub-
conscious desires and your conscious desires seem to be at odds. What you say you want is not in precise alignment with what your deep self wants. That’s why I’m worried that “Don’t! Stop!” might be close to morphing into “Don’t stop!”—or vice versa. It’s all pretty confusing. Who’s in charge here? Your false self or your true self? Your wounded, conditioned, habit-bound personality or your wise, eternal, ever-growing soul? I’d say it’s a good time to retreat into your sanctuary and get back in touch with your primal purpose.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Sometimes you’re cool, but other times you’re hot. You veer from acting aloof and distracted to being friendly and attentive. You careen from bouts of laziness to bursts of disciplined efficiency. It seems that you’re always either building bridges or burning them, and on occasion you are building and burning them at the same time. In short, Aquarius, you are a master of vacillation and a slippery lover of the in-between. When you’re not completely off-target and out of touch, you’ve got a knack for wild-guessing the future and seeing through the false appearances that everyone else regards as the gospel truth. I, for one, am thoroughly entertained! PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): How can you ripen the initiatives you have set in motion in recent weeks? Of the good new trends you have launched, which can you now install as permanent enhancements in your daily rhythm? Is there anything you might do to cash in on the quantum leaps that have occurred, maybe even figure out a way to make money from them? It’s time for you to shift from being lyrically dreamy to fiercely practical. You’re ready to convert lucky breaks into enduring opportunities. Homework: Before bed on the next five nights, remember everything that happened during the day. Do it with compassion and objectivity. Testify at FreeWillAstrology.com. © Copyright 2015 Rob Brezsny
APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 35
NEWS QUIRKS CURSES, FOILED AGAIN
A burglar used the homeowner’s devices to log on to porn, YouTube and his Facebook account, but authorities in Monroe County, FL, quickly identified him because he forgot to log off Facebook. Sheriff’s official Becky Herrin said the 16-yearold suspect also ate a Pop Tart and drank a soda. (Miami Herald) Burglary suspect Christopher Wallace, 24, eluded sheriff’s deputies in Somerset County, Maine, for several weeks but then unwittingly alerted them to his whereabouts by revealing on Snapchat that he had just returned home. A second post followed that deputies were at his home and coming inside, but he was hiding in a cabinet. Social media-monitoring deputies then headed for the cabinet and found “a pair of feet,” the sheriff’s department’s Facebook page reported. “The feet just so happened to be attached to a person, and that person was Christopher Wallace.” (Kennebec Morning Sentinel)
THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE
Shortly after Will Swenson was named to receive the Medal of Honor for heroism in Afghanistan, the Army placed the outspoken critic of Army leadership under surveillance because his name appeared, along with others, in a one-paragraph book review on Amazon.com. Swenson, whom the book itself didn’t mention, said agents questioned him, pawed through his trash and rattled his girlfriend. Then-Secretary of the Army John McHugh agreed the Amazon review triggered the surveillance, which, he suggested, “was really about his award, his criticism of the Army and the hope that agents would find something to shut him up.” (The Daily Beast)
DOUBLE TROUBLE
Arthur Mondella, 57, spent five hours with investigators answering complaints that his New York City factory, which makes Maraschino cherries, was dumping syrup and “cherry-related waste” in the waters around the warehouse. When agents noticed a flimsy shelving system attached to an office wall and asked Mondella about it, they said he excused himself, went into the bathroom and shot himself in the head. After the shooting, agents were surprised to uncover “a huge marijuana-growing operation” underneath the warehouse, including 80 pounds of pot, hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash and several high-end vehicles. (New York Daily News)
PAPER TIGER
The developer of Tiger Woods’s new restaurant in Jupiter, FL, said it couldn’t be named after the golfer because Tiger Woods doesn’t own commercial rights to his name. Nike does. (CNN)
WHEN GUNS ARE OUTLAWED
Authorities accused Travis Lanning, 34, of beating a woman in her 50s with a weapon described as “a club with a spiked ball on the end”—known in medieval times as a mace. The Sacramento County Sheriff’s Department reported the woman wasn’t robbed but said her attacker threatened to kill her. (The Sacramento Bee)
MADE IN THE SHADE
A London-based architectural firm announced it has developed a skyscraper that doesn’t cast a shadow. NBBJ explained the design involves a pair of precisely aligned towers with curved and angled facades that reflect sunlight to the street below and onto each other. “The ‘No-Shadow Tower’ redirects sunlight to visibly reduce shadows at the base of the towers by 60 percent over typical buildings,” a company official said. (Britain’s The Telegraph)
SCHOOL DAZE
The University of Iowa allowed “a very small number of students” who said they were offended by a 7-foot-tall statue of a Ku Klux Klan-like robed figure to be exempted from class assignments because it affected their “state of mind.” (Cedar Rapids’s The Gazette)
Jeff Landfield, 30, had his name withdrawn as an appointee to the board that oversees judicial ethics after Alaska Gov. Bill Walker discovered “disrespectful images” on Facebook showing Landfield wearing a Speedo and bathing with women. One showed his hands on a woman’s breast. Landfield said the images are “not something I hide. I think everybody knows that about me. I’m kind of an open book.” (Anchorage Daily News)
NOUS SOMMES CHARLIE HEBDO
Surviving staffers of the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo are feuding over how to split the surge in revenue since the deadly shootings at its Paris office. Sales rose from 30,000 copies a week to hundreds of thousands, and revenue jumped to $32 million. Eleven members of the staff asked lawyers to turn the magazine into a cooperative so everyone can share the profits. Others oppose the move, saying it’s an attempt to get their hands on the 40 percent of shares owned by murdered editor Stephane Charbonnier that now belong to his parents. (New York Daily News)
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DO-SI-DON’T
NO BELIEVING ALLOWED
After a group called the Satanic Temple asked the Orange County (FL) School Board for permission to distribute a Satanic coloring book to students, the board voted to ban not only Satanic materials, but also outside Bibles. The World Changers of Florida had previously been allowed to hand out Bibles. (Orlando Sentinel)
SLIGHTEST PROVOCATION
UNHAPPY REUNION
Police who responded to reports of a disturbance involving 20 to 30 teenagers in Burbank, IL., found that one 17-year-old girl had been stabbed several times in the back. Investigator Mike Dudio said the victim had gone to the “house of her adversary,” another 17-year-old girl, to confront her about “issues” the two were having on Twitter. (Chicago Tribune)
FRIDAY, APRIL 10TH 5-9PM NORTHWEST CROSSING DRIVE
ANTHONY WIENER OF THE WEEK
Chinese officials are cracking down on square dancing, which is popular with elderly women, known as “dancing grannies,” who gather in public squares in large groups to perform. Concerned that the “over-enthusiasm of participants has dealt a harmful blow, with disputes over noise and venues,” Liu Guoyong, the chief of the government’s General Administration of Sports Mass Fitness Department, said a panel will introduce 12 authorized routines, and announce when they are permissible and the volume of the music. “The unified drills will help keep the dancing on the right track where they can be performed in a socially responsible way,” said fitness trainer Wang Guangcheng, a member of the panel. (BBC News)
Eldridge Dukes, 58, told police in Baton Rouge, La., that he shot his 18-year-old son in the buttocks after the two argued because they were out of orange juice. (Baton Rouge’s The Advocate)
Art and Wine Bop
While former police officer Domingo Villa Arellano, 40, was serving time in a Mexican maximum-security prison for killing his wife in a jealous rage, his long-time girlfriend Ericka Isela Velazquez Cocula, 36, visited with their two children and stepdaughter. When the children complained that their mother was mistreating them, Arellano fatally stabbed Cocula and the three children. He turned the makeshift weapon on himself, but prison guards intervened. (Britain’s Metro)
Compiled from mainstream news sources by Roland Sweet. Authentication on demand.
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I saw your recent column about a hiking date, and I was wondering whether I’d seem cheap if I asked a woman on a hike for the first date. A buddy says it’d seem rude to a woman to not be wined and dined, and I’d come off as chintzy or poor. I’m neither, but hiking’s fun, and I like the idea of not spending big on first dates (most of which are busts anyway). —Mountain Man
On a first date, a woman should be getting to know you, not getting to know how much you can put on your MasterCard before the waiter comes over with a big pair of scissors. Sure, some women will find you cheap for suggesting a hike—mainly those who resent having to trudge up hills to procure a funding source with a penis. However, even women who are into exercising aren’t always into doing it where they may get close enough to a bear to see that it could use one of those little nose hair trimmers. For these women, you might offer “activity date” alternatives, like bowling or attending a street fair or a gallery opening. These might also work better for first dates with any women you barely know—alluring as it is to hear, “Hi, I’m a total stranger, and I’d like to take you off to a dark, wooded area where there’s no cellphone reception.” (Your shallow grave or mine?)
(c)2015, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved. Got a problem? Write Amy Alkon, 171 Pier Ave, #280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or e-mail AdviceAmy@aol.com (advicegoddess.com).
WELLNESS CLASSES $5 Equipment Classes Join our student instructor Emma Maaranen for a special $5 Equipment Class. Class is open to new clients for four weeks, and is limited to five participants. Please reserve your spot by calling or emailing us. Wed, April 1, noon-1pm and Wed, April 8, noon-1pm. Bend Pilates, 143 SW Century Dr. 541-6470876. $5. Alleviate Stress with Essential Oils Learn how to manage stress effectively, how to use the oils safely, sample and experience the purity and potency of doTerra essential oils. RSVP: 541-420-5730. First Wednesday of every month, 1-2pm. Spirit of Pilates, 61419 Elder Ridge St. Beginners Yoga Workshop Series Join certified Baptiste teacher, Nancy Lumpkin, to learn the Baptiste flow with a demonstration of the poses as well as modifications for your body. This class will be offered at a room temperature and will be one hour of transformation. Wednesdays, noon-1pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. $12 drop-in, $5 for unlimited pass holders. Cravings, Weight Gain, and the Blood Sugar Rollercoaster Achieving your healthiest weight is not about dieting or even pure willpower, but rather understanding how certain foods affect blood sugar levels and appetite. Learn how nutrient-dense meals support healthy metabolism and which nutrient supplements support healthy blood sugar levels and appetite control. Tues, April 7, 6-7:30pm. Natural Grocers by Vitamin Cottage, 3188 N Highway 97 Suite 115. Free. Essential Oils 101 Discover a more natural and proactive approach to your baby and child’s health. Using essential oils can be a safe natural option to protect and maintain you and your family’s health. Maintain health and find natural solutions for colds, cough, flu, sunburn and more. RSVP: 541-420-5730. Second Wednesday of every month, 1-2pm. Spirit of Pilates, 61419 Elder Ridge St. Free.
By appointment only. Offer expires 04/30/15
856 NW Bond St #3 Call 541.480.4516
Fit Camp Meet at Pilot Butte on Monday, Fitness 1440 South on Wednesday and Friday. Get fit and get healthy. Mondays-Wednesdays-Fridays, 6-7pm. GOT CHI, 365 NE Greenwood Ave. 541-639-2699. Free.
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Want to know more about your options for a natural pregnancy and birth experience? Meet six of Bend’s best Pre and Postnatal Natural Health and Wellness Professionals for a day of learning and empowerment. You and your birth partner will gain the knowledge and confidence you’ve been looking for.
Roller Yoga A new “twist” on yoga. The focus is on proper use and techniques of foam rollers with yoga inspired stretches. Wednesdays, 6:30pm. Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave. 541-380-1601. Free. Science & Wellness Meet Come learn about the science of Redox Signaling—one of the fastest growing areas of science in the world right now, with a huge impact on aging, athletic endurance and recovery, and overall health! Over 12,000 studies published in peer-reviewed scientific and medical journals. No obligation—come and learn. Refreshments provided. April 9, 6-7:30pm. Coldwell Banker, 486 SW Bluff Dr. 971-506-2178. Free.
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Head to Heal Therapy Massage & Bodyworks Swedish - Deep Tissue - Shiatzu Pregnancy - Injury - Couples Introductory Offer 60 minutes for $49 Gift Certificates Available We invite you to create wellness in your life in a safe, healing environment.
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Recovery Yoga Wherever you are on the road of recovery, this yoga class offers a safe and confidential place to explore how meditation, pranayama (breath work), journaling, and yoga can aid in your recovery and enhance your life. The format is organic and will evolve with the students and teachers involved. This gathering is not limited to drug and alcohol dependence, as we are all on the road to recovery from something! Thursdays, 7-8pm. Namaspa Yoga Studio, 1135 NW Galveston Ave. 541-550-8550. By donation. Restorative Yoga Class Restorative yoga is a very gentle, passive approach to a yoga practice. With the body comfortably supported by various props, we remain in the postures for a few minutes in order to fully let go and receive. All levels of experience welcome. Mondays, 6-7pm. Kelby’s Yoga Room, 841 NW Bond St, Suite 11. 609354-8789. $10 per class.
Saturday, April 18th 10am - 3pm
Conveniently located in the Old Mill District.
Laughter Yoga Come Laugh with us on your Tuesday lunch hour: Just a half hour of simple movements that facilitate laughter and child like playfulness. It’s fun, energizing, and healing! Tuesdays, 12:30-1pm. Center for Compassionate Living, 339 SW Century Drive, Suite 203. 541-382-7543. Donation Basis.
541-388-1969
Spring Cleanse with Dr. Kerie Raymond Join us for a group cleansing process based on the Metagenics Clear Change Metabolic Detoxification Program and the Clean Program. Naturopathic Physician Kerie Raymond will lead the cleanse which will include nutritional counseling, recipes, group sessions. Also included is the medical food detox shake, detox tea, bentonite clay and psyllium powder. This is not a fast. We will be eating regular meals and foods throughout the cleanse. Thurs, April 9, 5:30-6:30pm. Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave. 541-330-0334. $199 all-inclusive. Stretch & Restore Grace-ful Yoga Take a break mid day and join in this noon hour restorative, relaxing, stretch and breath yoga session for all ages and all levels. Bring your own yoga mat. Please RSVP to 541-382-6862. Tuesdays-Thursdays, 12:15-12:45pm. through May 4. Grace First Lutheran Church, 2265 NW Shevlin Park Rd. Free. Tuesday Performance Group Maximize your time with focused, intense efforts. All ages and ability levels welcome. Sessions led by Max King, one of the most accomplished trail runners in the country. Email Max for weekly details and locations: max@footzonebend.com. Tuesdays, 5:30pm. Foot Zone, 845 Wall St. Free. Where to Start to Love Your Heart Taking care of your heart doesn’t have to be complicated. Start by uncovering some common heart care myths, and then begin your journey toward heart health with 3 simple dietary strategies and three supplements that will pump up your heart health. April 2, 1-2:30pm. Natural Grocers by Vitamin Cottage, 3188 N Highway 97 Suite 115. Free.
APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 37
CANNABIS CORNER
SMOKE SIGNALS Moving an informal commerce into the rigid bureaucracy of a state authorized activity requires a lot of attorneys and elected officials sweating the small details. With questions about policing, flow of tax dollars, and overall what-the-hay questions, the issue about how to create a legalized system of marijuana has pulled in a gaggle of state senators who meet every Monday and Wednesday at 5 pm in Salem. Since January, the aptly and blandly named Joint Committee on Implementing Measure 91, has been tinkering with the language in various laws, and trying to decide how to stretch and tailor the state’s law to accommodate a substance that is still illegal—and will be until July 1. But the real heavy-lifting in the effort to legalize marijuana is being done by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission, the state agency which currently regulates alcohol sales—and is expanding its scope to manage the newest drug-of-choice. But last Thursday, that controversial agency took a major hit when (the appropriately named) Tom Burns, the director for OLCC’s marijuana programs, was fired. The reasons for his dismal remain hazy (sorry, couldn’t resist), but his firing leaves the agency somewhat rudderless just three months before the state is expected to have its ducks in a row. “I don’t know how we’re going to get through this without him,” said Sen. Ginny Burdick, D-Portland, co-chair of the Joint Legislative Committee, in a press statement. “He’s the most knowledgeable person on marijuana policy in the state.” Burns had overseen the rollout of Oregon’s medical marijuana program. One of the primary questions about legalizing recreational marijuana is how the medical marijuana industry will fit into the new recreational allowances. Will it be part of? Alongside? Separate but equal? Burns was uniquely positioned to answer those questions. Now he’s gone! Weed thought you’d like to know.
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APRIL 2, 2015 / THE SOURCE WEEKLY / 39
THE REC ROOM
CROSSWORD
PEARL’S PUZZLE
“Live Free and Style Hard”--more wild words. Matt Jones
R H D
D O
C
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Difficulty Level:
★★
T
A R
D T
H
R O C
S O
A
S
C O R
A E
O D A
Fill in every row, column, and 3x3 box with each of the letters
H O R D E C A T S
The highlighted letters read left to right and top to bottom will complete the quote:
“When one tugs at a single thing in nature, he finds it ________ of the world.” - John Muir ANSWER TO LAST WEEK’S PUZZLE:
ANSWERS AT BENDSOURCE.COM Across 1 Make it through the season intact? 11 Second of 24 15 Protected sequence in some spy movies 16 Biological transmitter 17 Station wagons, in Stratford 18 Go to sleep, with “out” 19 Distort 20 “It’s ___ bad ...” 21 Record label with late-night TV ads 22 Word div. 23 As a result of 24 Extensive 25 Harkness ___ Mansion (part of Harkness Memorial State Park in Waterford, CT) 28 Depilatory brand name 29 ___ above the rest 30 Believer in good and evil 32 Petty tyrants 34 Level usually checked along with triglycerides 35 Was winning 36 Trap set under the kitchen window, say 40 Some TVs 44 Show set in Baltimore, with “The” 45 Christmas crooner Perry 47 Venomous snake 48 Dakota du Sud, for one 49 Dog’s decoration? 51 “___-la-la...” 52 Work on a nameplate 53 In again 54 Golfer Inkster 55 Restrain, as breath 56 Like Bill Murray and Bob Odenkirk, by birth 58 “You ___ out?” 59 It’s a real peach 60 Pericles’ princedom 61 Palace of Westminster structure, before its renaming after Queen Victoria
Down 1 Like some events 2 “So tell me ...” 3 Spread brand invented in Italy 4 Wear down 5 Prefix meaning “outer” 6 “___ you get in?” 7 Narrative 8 Just so 9 Banking info 10 Sentiment in Taylor Swift’s “Wildest Dreams” 11 Russian letter that makes the “ya” sound 12 Unusual collection 13 Hit the gym 14 Low jewelry 26 The Jackson 5’s fourth #1 hit single (and Mariah Carey’s sixth) 27 Verdi opera 31 “La Di Da Di” rapper with Doug E. Fresh (1985) 33 Furniture wood 36 Slightly, in Shetland 37 ___ Lions (Penn State athletes) 38 It gets fired up on the farm 39 Baroque violinist and composer Giuseppe 40 Hard, like rain 41 World Series of Poker champ Mike, nicknamed “The Mouth” 42 Path for a jet 43 Dye company worker 46 “Children of a Lesser God” Oscar winner 50 They may help to lift wings 54 Medieval Japanese land manager (hidden in MOJITOS) 57 Cologne compass point ©2015 Jonesin’ Crosswords (editor@ jonesincrosswords.com)
©2014 JONESIN’ CROSSWORDS (EDITOR@JONESINCROSSWORDS.COM)
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“It’s absolutely unfair for women to say that guys only want one thing: sex. We also want food.” - Jarod Kintz, $3.33
We’re Local! Questions, comments or suggestions for our local puzzle guru? Email Pearl Stark at pearl@bendsource.com © Pearl Stark
40 / WWW.BENDSOURCE.COM
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