Sep 10 - Cascadia Weekly
Transcription
Sep 10 - Cascadia Weekly
/# "-$./' +} ART WALK, P.18 ( /'(./ -.+y c a s c a d i a REPORTING FROM THE HEART OF CASCADIA * * * WHATCOM SKAGIT ISLAND LOWER B.C. 9.03.08 :: #36, v.03 :: !- - $* #*0GARRISON KEILLOR COMES WEST, P.13 ILLUSION AS REALITY: PALIN NOMINATION CHANGES THE GAME, P.8 HIP-HOP ALERT: THE POWER OF GRAYSKUL, P.21 * BEST OF BELLINGHAM: EVERY VOTE COUNTS, P.25 FOOD 34 CLASSIFIEDS 28 STAGE 16 ART 18 MUSIC 20 FILM 24 One Day Only! 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CW c a s c a d i a 09.03.08 Skatefest: 1pm, Ben Root State Park, Anacortes Run 542: 3pm, White Salmon Lodge, Glacier WEDNESDAY ON STAGE 09.07.08 The Tempest: 7pm, Vanier Park, Vancouver B.C. SUNDAY DANCE CLASSIFIEDS 28 FILM 24 AROUND AT A CONCERT SEPT. 5 AT NANCY’S FARM A glance at what’s happening this week MUSIC 20 +-$'1 -# WILL FIDDLE FOOD 34 AWARD-WINNING MUSICIAN Ballroom Dance: 6-9pm, Leopold Crystal Ballroom Titus Andronicus: 7pm, Vanier Park, Vancouver B.C. Bellingham Music Club: 10:30am, Faith Lutheran Church Used Book Sale: 10am-8pm, Bellingham Public Library Arleen Williams: 7pm, Village Books WORDS Brunonia Barry: 7pm, Village Books COMMUNITY Brigid Collins Celebration: 4:30pm, Garden Street Family Center VISUAL ARTS 09.05.08 FRIDAY ON STAGE King Lear: 7pm, Vanier Park, Vancouver B.C. Theatresports: 9pm, Upfront Theatre DANCE Contra Dance: 8-11pm, Fairhaven Library Dance Party: 9-11pm, U & Me Dance MUSIC April Verch: 7:30pm, Nancy’s Farm Swil Kanim: 8pm, Bellingham Public Market WORDS Used Book Sale: 10am-6pm, Bellingham Public Library Michael Daley: 7pm, Village Books MONDAY Art Walk: 6-10pm, downtown Bellingham 09.06.08 SATURDAY ON STAGE Titus Andronicus: 1pm, Vanier Park, Vancouver B.C. The Tempest: 7pm, Vanier Park, Vancouver B.C. Rick Epting Benefit: 7pm, Lincoln Theatre, Mount Vernon Rooster: 9pm, Upfront Theatre DANCE Mt. Baker Ballet Auditions: 12:30-4pm, Nancy Whyte Studio Scottish Ceilidh: 7pm, Depot Arts Center, Anacortes MUSIC Millie and the Mentshn: 7-9pm, Bellingham Public Market WORDS Used Book Sale: 10am-3pm, Bellingham Public Library Susan McCaslin: 7pm, Village Books COMMUNITY Anacortes Farmers Market: 9am-2pm, Depot Arts Center Bellingham Farmers Market: 10am-3pm, Depot Market Square Ferndale Farmers Market: 10am-3pm, Riverwalk Park Territorial Courthouse Celebration: 5pm, 1308 E St. Salmon BBQ: 1-4pm, Fairhaven Village Green Sam Hill Day: 1-4pm, Peace Arch Park, Blaine Soup for Shelter: 4-8pm, Boundary Bay Brewery 09.02.08 TUESDAY ON STAGE Christmas Carol Auditions: 6-9pm, Lincoln Elementary School, Mount Vernon The Tempest: 7pm, Twelfth Night WORDS Caroline Sutherland: 7pm, Village Books GET OUT Bike 101: 6pm, REI GET OUT Work Party: 10am-1pm, Squalicum Creek Family Sailing Day: 10am-4pm, Bellingham Bay Community Boat Center Dahlia Show: 12-5pm, Bloedel Donovan Park GET OUT 15 GET OUT Outdoor Cooking Class: 6pm, Lake Padden MAIL 4 WORDS 09.08.08 DO IT 3 ON STAGE Good, Bad, Ugly: 8pm, Upfront Theatre Twelfth Night: 8pm, Vanier Park, Vancouver B.C. The Project: 10pm, Upfront Theatre +' .0- .*!!'' GET READY FOR THE BY SAMPLING MORE THAN 30 HEARTY CONCOCTIONS FROM LOCAL RESTAURANTS AS PART OF THE ANNUAL SOUP FOR SHELTER FUNDRAISER HAPPENING SEPT. 6 AT BOUNDARY BAY 9.03.08 09.04.08 WORDS 13 GET OUT Ride 542: 7:30am, Glacier Skagit Flats Marathon: 8am, Burlington-Edison High School Dahlia Show: 10am-4pm, Bloedel Donovan Park #36.03 COMMUNITY Wednesday Market: 12-5pm, Fairhaven Village Green Green Drinks: 5-8pm, RE Store CURRENTS 8 COMMUNITY Community Breakfast: 8am-1pm, Rome Grange Mini Meet Car Show: 9am-3pm, Hovander Homestead Park, Ferndale Kindred Spirits: 1-6pm, Boxx Berry Farm, Ferndale TO GET YOUR EVENTS LISTED, SEND INFO TO CALENDAR@CASCADIAWEEKLY.COM CASCADIA WEEKLY Used Book Sale Preview: 3-6pm, Bellingham Public Library Nalini Nadkarni: 7pm, Village Books Spoken Word Wednesday: 8-10pm, Bellingham Public Market VIEWS 6 Northern Lights Jazz Orchestra: 1:30pm, Fairhaven Village Green STAGE 16 MUSIC WORDS THURSDAY ART 18 ON STAGE MUSIC 3 THIS ISSUE Contact mail Cascadia Weekly: E 360.647.8200 FOOD 34 Arts & Entertainment Editor: Amy Kepferle Eext 203 ô calendar@ cascadiaweekly.com FILM 24 Editor & Publisher: Tim Johnson E ext 260 ô editor@ cascadiaweekly.com CLASSIFIEDS 28 Editorial In a week of strained levees and national conventions, late last week actor David Duchovny chose to enter rehab for a purported case of sex addiction. Rumors have circulated the married X-Files alum was caught having an affair with a tennis instructor, but a close friend says, nope, it’s just a hankering for porn. Stay tuned. MUSIC 20 VIEWS & NEWS Production 6: Schadenfreude and you ART DIRECTOR: Jesse Kinsman ô graphics@ cascadiaweekly.com ART 18 STAGE 16 GET OUT 15 12: Last week’s news ART & LIFE 14: Garrison comes west 16: In search of sun 17: Entertaining for Epting 18: Walking for art 20: Masters of metal WORDS 13 24: One night in Bangkok REAR END 9.03.08 DO IT 3 MAIL 4 VIEWS 6 CURRENTS 8 31: Help Wanted, Services #36.03 L E T T ER S 13: Crimes of the times 21: The power of Grayskul CASCADIA WEEKLY CREDI T S Music & Film Editor: Carey Ross Eext 204 ô music@ cascadiaweekly.com 4: Words from our readers 8: The language of conservatism CONT ENT S 32: Volunteer, Sodoku, Wellness 33: Troubletown, Ogg’s World, Bulletin Board 34: Free Will Astrology 36: This Modern World, Tom The Dancing 38: Eat local, darn it! A S C Stefan Hansen ô stefan@ cascadiaweekly.com Send All Advertising Materials To Ads@cascadiaweekly.com Advertising Nicki Oldham E360.929.6662 ô nicki@ cascadiaweekly.com Marisa Papetti E360.224.2387 ô marisa@ cascadiaweekly.com Frank Tabbita E360.739.2388 ô frank@ cascadiaweekly.com Distribution Bug C GRAPHIC ARTIST: Kim Baldridge kim@ kinsmancreative.com A D I A ©2007 CASCADIA WEEKLY (ISSN 1931-3292) is published each Wednesday by Cascadia Newspaper Company LLC. Direct all correspondence to: Cascadia Weekly PO Box 2833 Bellingham WA 98227-2833 | Phone/Fax: 360.647.8200 info@cascadiaweekly.com Though Cascadia Weekly is distributed free, please take just one copy. Cascadia Weekly may be distributed only by authorized distributors. Any person removing papers in bulk from our distribution points risks prosecution SUBMISSIONS: Cascadia Weekly welcomes f reelance submissions. Send mater ial to either the News Editor or A&E Editor. Manuscr ipt s w ill be returned of you include a stamped, self-addressed envelope. To be considered for calendar list ings, not ice of event s must be received in wr it ing no later than noon Wednesday the week pr ior to publicat ion. Photographs should be clearly labeled and w ill be returned if accompanied by stamped, self-addressed envelope. LETTERS POLICY: Cascadia Weekly reserves the right to edit letters for length and content. When apprised of them, we correct errors of fact promptly and courteously. In the interests of fostering dialog and a community forum, Cascadia Weekly does not publish letters that personally disparage other letter writers. Please keep your letters to fewer than 300 words. SUBSCRIPTIONS: One year $70, six months $35. Back issues $1 for walk-ins, $5 for mailed requests when available. Cascadia Weekly is mailed at third-class rates.Postmaster: Send all address changes to Cascadia Weekly, PO Box 2833, Bellingham, WA 98227-2833 4 NEWSPAPER ADVISORY GROUP: Robert Hall, Seth Murphy, Michael Petryni, David Syre David Cloutier, Robert Bell, JW Land & Associates ô distro@ cascadiaweekly.com Letters Send letters to letters@ cascadiaweekly.com. Keep letters shorter than 300 words. COVER: Illustration by Jesse Kinsman NEW PLAN FOR CHUCKANUTS Mitch Friedman accurately responded to Chuckanut Mountains Park District architect, Ken Wilcox’s excuseladen letter to the Weekly. Wilcox should stop trying to delude the public. As Friedman points out, Wilcox’s letter covered up the fact that the CMPD proposal is now dead, unanimously rejected by the Whatcom and Skagit Boundary Review boards and their petition invalidated by the Superior Court. Friedman says he was unclear about the CMPD Advisory Committee’s goals and somewhat skeptical of their strategy. Friedman’s concerns are shared by many—including those people who unknowingly signed the faulty petition only to discover the regrettable truth later. The overreaching CMPD proposal was a bad idea that misused the intent of the metropolitan park district law. Poorly conceived, and even more poorly executed, the vague, disingenuous, gerrymandered CMPD proposal threatened increased taxes, taking of private property by eminent domain, and creation of an unnecessary new layer of government while failing to respect private property owners’ rights. That galvanized intense, widespread opposition by property owners, government agencies, and organizations. The CMPD AC’s pursuit of high-volume tourism—with its associated, increased risk of crime, forest fire and ecological damage—was anti-environmental and most people quickly figured that out. The CMPD offered an ill-conceived, untenable solution to a problem that did not exist. North Sound Conservancy favors responsible projects that achieve worthwhile conservation goals while protecting property owners’ rights. Many members are already excellent stewards of their land and have supported beneficial public conservation projects, e.g. the Blanchard “Compromise.” They realize, just as Wilcox and Friedman do, that we live in an awesome area; it’s in our own best interests to protect it. I concur with Friedman that a major detrimental effect of the CMPD proposal has been to poison the well for beneficial conservation projects coming from credible sources in the future. As Friedman points out, Wilcox’s lawsuit against the reasonable, workable Blanchard “Compromise” jeopardizes legitimate environmental causes. Let’s put the CMPD behind us, and work together constructively to protect and preserve the Chuckanuts. —Roger Mitchell, Bow HONOR MR. STINKY Listening to the Democratic National Convention on NPR has motivated me to write that although I will not vote for him, should “the people” elect Mr. Stinky, I will honor him as our president. Honor seems a word that denotes dutiful resolve more than affectionate approval and an appropriate response. That acknowledged, it is my strong conviction that, as citizens, it is our duty to know the issues that matter to us, a state that few have attained be it our long reactionary educational response and/or willful ignorance. As wonderful as it is, science and technology can only answer certain needs and we should look to other venues for more meaningful questions. Wednesday-Saturday 10-5 +Goodwin Road, Everson www.cloudmountainfarm.com ART 18 cascadiaweekly.com ornamentals, natives, fruit STAGE 16 world is now online: CLASSIFIEDS 28 our little GET OUT 15 I am a bleeding-heart liberal and a card-carrying member of the American Civil Liberties Union. And I love Cascadia Weekly. Thank you for publishing John Reid’s tirade, in which he rails against Cascadia Weekly, and also writes, “We hate liberals for a reason, and it pisses us off when your kind of trash comes around and tries to change things.” My perception is that change is constant, from the moment you’re born. If you do not embrace those changes your life will leave you behind, stuck, stagnant and full of fear. You will learn absolutely nothing new about yourself or anything or anybody else. How can you ever experience the gratitude and appreciation for what it means to be human? Wake up! Don’t waste time! We’re all going to die, and that’s a change you can believe in! FILM 24 PLANTS FOR NORTHWEST GARDENS MORE ‘FAN MAIL’ MUSIC 20 UNIQUE —Noel Collamer, Bellingham FOOD 34 NURSERY, LANDSCAPING & ORCHARDS DON’T BE FOOLED AGAIN 30 TICKETS ON SALE NOW DEPT. OF CORRECTIONS Due to a transcription error in Patrice Clark’s letter last week, a sentence should have read, “Back in the early 1900s, there were plans for Governor’s Point to become an oil refinery” instead of “Back in the early 1990s….” We regret the error. Tickets available at Diamond Dividends /PENsToll Free (866) 383-0777 SilverReefCasino.com )%XITs-INUTES7EST )NTERSECTIONOF3LATER2OAD(AXTON7AY ©3ILVER2EEF#ASINO MAIL 4 VIEWS 6 $ DO IT 3 -*.', 9.03.08 - . / , 3 6IEB #36.03 —Tom Edgar, via email h!0LACE)N4HE3UNv h,OVE7ILL&INDA7AYv h7HATCHA'ONNA$Ov CASCADIA WEEKLY I am concerned about John McCain, who is running again to be our president, mostly because he seems mentally incompetent—unable to remember important things like who we’re actually fighting. I am a veteran of WWII, and suffer periodic bouts of “Old Timers Syndrome.” For us common folks, that may be acceptable, but not for our would-be president. It is critical to understand subtle differences, if we wish to withdraw our forces from Iraq in a reasonable time and in a safe way. Let’s avoid more war, more outrageous national debt, and little concern for vital domestic issues. This one is up to us, the citizens. CURRENTS 8 WORDS 13 —Judith A. Laws, Bellingham 5 HOTEL CASINO SPA CASCADIA WEEKLY #36.03 9.03.08 DO IT 3 MAIL 4 VIEWS 6 CURRENTS 8 WORDS 13 GET OUT 15 STAGE 16 ART 18 MUSIC 20 FILM 24 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FOOD 34 THE GRISTLE 6 8)&3& "/(&-4 '&"3 50 53&"% Not to be gloomy, but we predict the first casualty of the state’s new “top two” primary may be suspense. The new primary is likely an uncanny and stubborn forecaster of the mood of the electorate, and we predict alignments—at least in state and local races—in November will vary not one jot from those in August. In this calculus, incumbents in the 42nd Legislative District will enjoy returns similar to those telegraphed last month; and even in the up-for-grabs 40th, the percentage of votes assigned to the Republican candidate will remain unchanged while (once Whatcom Dems stop licking their self-inflicted wounds) the rest will deposit and pattern around the remaining Democrat like iron filings drawn to a magnetic field. Even in Washington’s gubernatorial race, we’ll predict statewide percentages in November unchanged from those seen in August, as an incumbent-favoring electorate judges whether our pitch-perfect, known governor warrants a replacement by the unknown Dino Rossi. All this said, one state race offers uncertainty—Commissioner of Public Lands, head of the state Dept. of Natural Resources. Here the incumbent, embroiled in a painfully well-documented sexual harassment complaint, faces a well-qualified challenger. Barely 1 point separates DNR chief Doug Sutherland from rancher Peter Goldmark—and that vulnerability has emboldened campaign contributions. Yes, DNR is actually at risk of changing hands. Couple potential instability in that agency’s leadership with the departure of Sen. Harriet Spanel and the arrival of new discharge standards from the brethren Dept. of Ecology, and surely the litmus issue in local 2008 politics remains Lake Whatcom. With a change of leadership, Spanel’s seminal Lake Whatcom bill—which establishes this reservoir as a unique body of water under Washington law—may come under new scrutiny. Into this ferment Bellingham Mayor Dan Pike and Whatcom County Executive Pete Kremen joined Ecology water quality engineer Steve Hood to address a capacity crowd at a City Club luncheon last week. Hood recently co-authored a report that indicates the impacts of land development around Lake Whatcom must be reduced by about 70 percent in order to meet federal clean water standards. Describing the filtration effects of forested lands within a watershed and the importance of forest canopy, Hood explained to listeners that in effect we must “fool the lake” into believing the land clearing and urbanization encircling its drainage basin is really not there. To that end, local officials have done a pretty good job of gathering the low-hanging fruit, Hood said, including land acquisitions and land use revisions. But, likening the fruit to blackberries, Hood said the effort must now wade deeper into the thickets and approach much thornier and costlier issues. Kremen sketched the history of water quality efforts to date by both the county and city. views OP INIONS T HE GR I S T L E BY PAMELA WEILER GRAYSON Power of Negative Thinking THE SCHADENFREUDE GUIDE TO HAPPINESS ARE YOU happier than you were last year? Of course you are not! And do you know why? No, it isn’t because the world is a sick and scary place run by maniacs and morons. You are unhappy because you are not searching for happiness the right way. Forget about all those inspirational books on happiness. If you want to truly increase your happiness quotient, you have to think negatively, which is the way most people think 80 percent of the day anyway, if they are being honest with themselves. The key to consistent and attainable happiness is schadenfreude, which is a German word essentially meaning “pleasure taken from someone else’s misfortune.” This word has made its way into popular culture as defining a moment of illicit thrill when others, particularly those you envy or dislike, experience pain or disaster, but surprisingly nobody has claimed it as a guiding principle to human happiness. Here are some simple steps that will help increase your personal sense of well-being and inner harmony, based on the suffering of others: t,FFQ B TDIBEFOGSFVEF KPVSOBM Many happiness experts advocate gratitude journals, but how joyful can you feel writing the same insipid things like “I’m grateful for my loving family,” or “I’m grateful for the sun and the flowers”? You need to start being grateful for things that happen to others and not you! Several people who have tried the schadenfreude happiness method successfully have written journal entries like this: “I’m grateful that Bob lost his job because he was re- ally getting to be a pompous ass,” or “I’m grateful that Cindy’s facelift makes her look like a scared rat, because she thinks she’s so hot, when what she really is, is just a plastic shallow bitch!” Whew, doesn’t just listening to these fantastic entries make you feel better, even though you don’t know Bob or Cindy? t1SBZ Prayer is a very powerful tool for happiness seekers, but instead of just praying for wonderful things to happen to you and those you love, try praying for bad things to happen to those you hate. It’s easy! And you don’t have to feel guilty because it’s not like you will actually be causing bad things to happen. But a short communion with a Superior Being could speed things up a little in that department. You don’t need to pray for something disastrous—just something that upsets the seemingly perfect balance of someone’s life. Many of our followers have prayed for unfortunate things to happen to people they resent, like being passed over for a promotion or contracting a partially curable sexually transmitted disease. Sometimes all it takes to boost your happiness quotient is praying for your nemesis to have a particularly painful bikini wax. t)BOH BSPVOE XJUI -PTFST Let’s face it: Being around people whose lives seem fabulous is not going to make you happy. Try to expand your social circle to include more people whose lives are significantly worse than yours. You might think this would be depressing, but interestingly, it is a real high. Whenever you have a bad day, you can just VIEWS EXPRESSED ARE NOT NECESSARILY THOSE OF CASCADIA WEEKLY call up your friend the struggling actor who works at Red Lobster and lives with four roommates in a studio apartment, or your obese, chain-smoking divorced friend. After spending time with these folks, you will feel great, because you are not them! It’s so simple. t4FBSDIGPSVOIBQQJOFTTJOPUIFST Forget about searching for happiness within yourself, because it’s too exhausting, time-consuming and basically hopeless. Humans measure themselves against each other, and fighting that innate emotion is bound to stress you out. And stressed out people are not happy—at least not unless they see others who are more stressed out and possibly suicidal. Then they feel better. The key is not finding out what fills you with joy, but what fills other, more successful people with despair. Once you nail that down, you will discover that your life is not so bad compared with those of arrogant people who are brought to their knees by things like financial ruin and a bad pre-nup. So take a look around at all the wretched souls out there whose lives have been wracked with pain, and stop looking for the happy person within. Once you admit that hearing about the traumas of people you dislike fills you with a sense of euphoria that you could never achieve just trying to think positively or appreciate the things you have, you will finally be happy. Or at least happier than others, and that’s what really matters. Pamela Weiler Grayson lives in New York. GET OUT 15 WORDS 13 CURRENTS 8 VIEWS 6 MAIL 4 DO IT 3 9.03.08 for increased transit ridership. #36.03 #1 in the nation STAGE 16 ART 18 MUSIC 20 FILM 24 CLASSIFIEDS 28 Thanks for riding WTA. CASCADIA WEEKLY Pike distinguished himself by describing, in some detail, efforts the city will make moving forward, including stronger policing of water withdrawals from the lake (so-called exempt wells) and a greater commitment to take charge and control of this municipal resource. For Pete to focus on the past and Dan to focus on the future is reasonable, given the evolution of burden to protect COB’s municipal water supply, as well as COB’s superior access to revenues (utility fees) to fund solutions. Pike also made keen observations about the double-edge of property ownership (it confers responsibility and liability, he observed, as well as rights); and also lamentable observations about a proposed settlement of lawsuits filed by taxing districts who collect revenues from timber harvests. Lamentable, first, because these lawsuits have not yet settled and carry with them certain disclosure covenants the mayor may’ve breached in improvident remarks to listeners! Second, because he reinforced the mythology that delay in settling these lawsuits unduly burdens those taxing districts—in particular, the Mount Baker School District, which fails to collect a windfall from timber harvests in the watershed on the order of $525,000... in a district with an annual budget of $9.3 million! These forest board funds are denied to most school districts in the state, and are a windfall to MBSD only as a consequence of the school district’s happy proximity to state forest board lands. Pike is correct to be concerned about children’s education being held hostage to water quality concerns; yet the reverse is equally true, as water quality concerns become hostage to wedge arguments in a watershed that, as Hood describes, needs its working forest canopy protected so very badly. Which is why litigants wished for a nuanced settlement that apportions money back to the school district without acknowledging any sacred “right” of MBSD to these forest board trust revenues. It’s a slippery slope because other taxing districts also share this “right” to LW timber revenues—including Whatcom County, the largest of these, which has agreed to forego these revenues to preserve water quality. Less generous is Skagit County, which continues to press its claims for timber harvests inside Bellingham’s drinking water supply. This is, at heart, what Spanel’s Lake Whatcom bill ultimately sought to address, and settlement of claims does challenge a precarious legal and social balance. Tread softly, Mr. Mayor. FOOD 34 THE GRISTLE 7 currents news commentary briefs BY GEORGE LAKOFF ILLUSION DEMS TREAD ON VEEP PICK AT THEIR PERIL FILM 24 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FOOD 34 MCCAIN’S CHOICE Palin is the mom in the strict father family, upholding conservative values. Palin is tough: she shoots, skins and eats caribou. She is disciplined: raising five kids with a major career. She lives her values: she has a Down syndrome baby that she refused to abort. She has the image of the ideal conservative mom: pretty, perky, feminine, Bible-toting and fitting into the ideal conservative family. And she fits the stereotype of America as small-town America. ILLUSION, CONTINUED ON PAGE 10 STAGE 16 GET OUT 15 WORDS 13 CURRENTS88 CURRENTS VIEWS 6 MAIL 4 DO IT 3 differences on the issues. But the Palin nomination is not basically about external realities and what Democrats call “issues,” but about the symbolic mechanisms of the political mind—the worldviews, frames, metaphors, cultural narratives, and stereotypes. The Republicans can’t win on realities. Her job is to speak the language of conservatism, activate the conservative view of the world, and use the advantages that conservatives have in dominating political discourse. Our national political dialogue is fundamentally metaphorical, with family values at the center of our discourse. Republican strength has been mostly symbolic. The McCain campaign is well aware of how Reagan and W won—running on character: values, communication, (apparent) authenticity, trust and identity—not issues and policies. That is how campaigns work, and symbolism is central. Conservative family values are strict and apply via metaphorical thought to the nation: good vs. evil, authority, the use of force, toughness and discipline, individual (versus social) responsibility, and tough love. Hence, social programs are immoral because they violate discipline and individual responsibility. Guns and the military show force and discipline. Man is above nature; hence no serious environmentalism. The market is the ultimate financial authority, requiring market discipline. In foreign policy, strength is use of the force. In fundamentalist religion, the Bible is the ultimate authority; hence no gay marriage. Such values are at the heart of radical conservatism. This is how John McCain was raised and how he plans to govern. And it is what he shares with Sarah Palin. 9.03.08 matters because of realities—the realities of global warming, the economy, the Middle East, nuclear proliferation, civil liberties, species extinction, poverty here and around the world, and on and on. Such realities are what make this election so very crucial, and how to deal with them is the substance of the Democratic platform. Election campaigns matter because who gets elected can change reality. But election campaigns are primarily about the realities of voters’ minds, which depend on how the candidates and the external realities are cognitively framed. They can be framed honestly or deceptively, effectively or clumsily. And they are always framed from the perspective of a worldview. Republicans have long known this; and the choice of Sarah Palin as their vice presidential candidate reflects their expert understanding of the political mind and political marketing. Democrats who simply belittle the Palin choice court disaster. It must be taken with the utmost seriousness. The Democratic responses so far reflect external realities: She is inexperienced, knowing little or nothing about foreign policy or national issues; she is really an anti-feminist, wanting the government to enter women’s lives to block abortion, but not wanting the government to guarantee equal pay for equal work, or provide adequate child health coverage, or child care, or early childhood education; she shills for the oil and gas industry on drilling; she denies the scientific truths of global warming and evolution; she misuses her political authority; she opposes sex education and her daughter is pregnant; and, rather than being a maverick, she is on the whole a radical right-wing ideologue. All true, so far as we can tell. But such truths may nonetheless be largely irrelevant to this campaign. That is the lesson Democrats must learn. They must learn the reality of the political mind. The Obama campaign has done this very well so far. The convention events and speeches were orchestrated both to cast light on external realities, traditional political themes, and to focus on values at once classically American and progressive: empathy, responsibility both for oneself and others, and aspiration to make things better both for oneself and the world. Obama did all this masterfully in his nomination speech, while replying to, and undercutting, the main Republican attacks. But the Palin nomination changes the game. The initial response has been to try to keep the focus on external realities, the “issues,” and #36.03 THIS ELECTION CASCADIA WEEKLY AS REALITY ART 18 MUSIC 20 THE TACTIC IS TO DIVERT ATTENTION FROM DIFFICULT REALITIES TO POWERFUL SYMBOLISM. 9 COMMENTARY CASCADIA WEEKLY #36.03 9.03.08 DO IT 3 MAIL 4 VIEWS 6 CURRENTS CURRENTS 88 WORDS 13 GET OUT 15 STAGE 16 ART 18 MUSIC 20 FILM 24 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FOOD 34 currents 10 Democracy Now! host and Weekly columnist Amy Goodman and her producers Sharif Abdel Kouddous and Nicole Salazar report they were violently manhandled by law enforcement officers following their arrest at the Republican National Convention in St. Paul this week. Goodman suffered facial injuries when she was slammed to the ground while displaying her security credentials, resulting in a bloody nose. Goodman was arrested while questioning police about the unlawful detention of Kouddous and Salazar, who were arrested as they covered street demonstrations at the RNC. Goodman’s crime appears to have been defending her colleagues and the freedom of the press. A photographer for Associated Press was also arrested. All have been released from police custody. IL LUS ION, F ROM PAGE 9 It is Reagan’s morning-in-America image. Where Obama thought of capturing the West, she is running for Sweetheart of the West. And Palin, a member of Feminism for Life, is at the heart of the conservative feminist movement, which Ronee Schreiber has written about in her recent book, Righting Feminism. It is a powerful and growing movement that Democrats have barely paid attention to. At the same time, Palin is masterful at the Republican game of taking the Democrats’ language and reframing it—putting conservative frames to progressive words: reform, prosperity, peace. She is also masterful at using the progressive narratives: she’s from the working class, working her way up from hockey mom and the PTA to mayor, governor and VP candidate. Her husband is a union member. She can say to the conservative populists that she is one of them—all the things that Obama and Biden have been saying. Bottom-up, not top-down. Yes, the McCain-Palin ticket is weak on the major realities. But it is strong on the symbolic dimension of politics that Republicans are so good at marketing. Just arguing the realities, the issues, the hard truths should be enough in times this bad, but the political mind and its response to symbolism cannot be ignored. The initial Democratic response to Palin—the response based on realities alone— indicates that many Democrats have not learned the lessons of the Reagan and Bush years. They have not learned the nature of conservative populism. A great many working-class folks are what I call “bi-conceptual,” that is, they are split between conservative and progressive modes of thought. Conservative on patriotism and certain social and family issues, which they have been led to see as “moral,” progressive in loving the land, living in communities of care, and practical kitchen table issues like mortgages, health care, wages, retirement and so on. Conservative theorists won them over in two ways: inventing and promulgating the idea of “liberal elite” and focusing campaigns on social and family issues. They have been doing this for many years and have changed a lot of brains through repetition. Palin will appeal strongly to conservative populists, attacking Obama and Biden as pointy-headed, tax-andspend, latté liberals. The tactic is to divert attention from difficult realities to powerful symbolism. What Democrats have shied away from is a frontal attack on radical conservatism itself as an un-American and harmful ideology. I think Obama is right when he says America is based on people caring about each other and working together for a better future— empathy, responsibility (both personal and social) and aspiration. These lead to a concept of government based on protection (environmental, consumer, worker, health care, and retirement protection) and empowerment (through infrastructure, public education, the banking system, the stock market and the courts). Nobody can achieve the American Dream or live an American lifestyle without protection and empowerment by the government. The alternative, as Obama said in his nomination speech, is being on your own, with no one caring for anybody else, with force as a first resort in foreign affairs, with threatened civil liberties and a right-wing government making your most important decisions for you. That is not what American democracy has ever been about. What is at stake in this election are our ideals and our view of the future, as well as current realities. The Palin choice brings both front and center. Democrats, being Democrats, will mostly talk about the realities nonstop without paying attention to the dimensions of values and symbolism. Democrats, in addition, need to call an extremist an extremist: to shine a light on the shared anti-democratic ideology of McCain and Palin, the same ideology shared by Bush and Cheney. They share values antithetical to our democracy. That needs to be said loud and clear, if not by the Obama campaign itself, then by the rest of us who share democratic American values. Our task is to bring external realities together with the reality of the political mind. Yet it is through cultural narratives, metaphors and frames that we understand and express our ideals. George Lakoff is the author of The Political Mind: Why You Can’t Understand 20th Century Politics With and 18th Century Brain. Diane Arvin, M.D. Gynecology and Women's Healthcare Welcoming New & Returning Patients 3487!Nbjo!Tusffu-!Tvjuf!4 Gfsoebmf-!XB!:9359 )471*!495.3:11 xxx/cfuufsifbmuiczdipjdf/dpn!!!!!Dpwfsfe!cz!nptu!jotvsbodf!qmbot Contact us to find easy ways for you or your school to celebrate Walk to School Day in 2008. 360.671.BIKE www.everybodybike.com 35!zfbst!pg!fyqfsjfodf jo!dmjojdbm!qsbdujdf XpnfoÖt!Ifbmui!Dbsf INJURED? Auto Accident •Fall •Defective Product Free consultation (360) 312-5156 Michael Heatherly northwestdrg@ mhpro57.com CLASSIFIEDS 28 FILM 24 Childre love the adventure of walking with parents and Children friends, discovering neighborhood wonders along the way. In 2007, millions of kids from 42 counties around worl participated in Walk to School Month events the world during Oc October. Walking to school promotes safety, health, con concern for the environment, a sense of community and healthy physical activity. MUSIC 20 Eff!Xjmefsnvui!BSOQ!! XpnfoÖt!Ifbmui!Ovstf!Qsbdujujpofs!'!Dmbttjdbm!Ipnfpqbui ART 18 Gentle competent care throughout a woman's lifetime Attorney VIEWS 6 CURRENTS88 CURRENTS WORDS 13 “I’ll help ease the stress of your injury by protecting your legal rights while you recover.” GET OUT 15 JOIN TH THE FUN! PARENTS AND KIDS: WALK OR BIKE TO SCHOOL IN OCTOBER. STAGE 16 Please call 360-676-8212 anytime to schedule a timely, convenient appointment OCTO OCTOBER 8 IS INTERNATIONAL WALK TO SCHOOL DAY! FOOD 34 to 1202 Washington Street Bellingham, WA 98225 1055 N State St DO IT 3 9.03.08 B’ham 671-3414 ! e n o n i s w o h e Circus 3S ★ Dream Scienc how The Cody RivernstSTheater (improv) and The Upfro SAT., SEPT. 6TH 8pm Reserved Seats $24,21,18 ★ 360-336-8955 2008 Rick Epting Benefit for the Arts Proudly Sponsored by: Skagit Valley Publishing, Skagit Valley Food Co-op, Susan Cooper with Realty Executives Northwest, Hugo Helmer LINCOLN THEATRE MOUNT VERNON,WA #36.03 Open Nightly Except Monday SINCE 1988 CASCADIA WEEKLY COOKING OUTSIDE THE BOX MAIL 4 PEP PER SISTERS 11 THE WEEK IN REVIEW WEDNESDAY Lynden public schools open, along with Blaine and Nooksack Valley schools. MUSIC 20 ART 18 08.27.08 BY TIM JOHNSON FILM 24 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FOOD 34 currents THE ee THAT WAS Western Washington University’s Engineering Technology program receives a $125,000 grant to build a hydrofoil that will be used on a new passenger ferry being built for Kitsap Transit by Bellingham’s All American Marine. The project is the first to be conducted in the new Marine Trades Innovation Partnership Zone established between Western and the Port of Bellingham. 08.28.08 STAGE 16 THURSDAY The aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk arrives in Puget Sound on its final voyage before decommissioning at Bremerton. 08.26.08 TUESDAY 9.03.08 The Lynden School Board decides to review results of a second investigation into the conduct of Superintendent Dennis Carlson. The Lynden Tribune reports the investigations allege Carlson’s actions intimidated staff and were unprofessional. #36.03 A 23-year-old Ferndale man turns himself in after allegedly raping a young girl in Maple Falls on Sunday. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers prepares to repair a damaged levee in Deming. A 2007 flood damaged more than 3,000 feet of a Nooksack levee. Repairs are estimated at $808,000. 12 A Whatcom County Court Commissioner delivers a maximum sentence to the 13-year-old boy who helped start a fire in the Delft Square building in Lynden. The teen is sentenced to 60 days of juvenile detention, two years of probation and 300 hours of community service, a punishment beyond what even prosecutors had recommended. A second boy, accused of actually adding flammable materials to increase the fire, is scheduled for sentencing Sept. 11. Classes begin for Lynden Christian schools. CASCADIA WEEKLY DO IT 3 MAIL 4 VIEWS 6 CURRENTS CURRENTS 88 WORDS 13 GET OUT 15 A grand jury in North Dakota indicts a Hells Angel biker injured in a bar shooting at an annual motorcycle rally together with five members of the rival motorcycle gang that assaulted him, a gang made up of law enforcement officers and firefighters. Joseph McGuire, 33, was shot Aug. 9 by vacationing Seattle Police Officer Ronald Smith, 43. Both men are charged with alternative counts of aggravated and simple assault. Other men charged include Customs and Border Protection officers Scott Lazalde of Bellingham and James Rector of Ferndale. Researchers launch a couple of surveys to learn more about how motorists drive in Whatcom, Skagit, and Island counties. To participate in the public survey, visit nustats.com/ northsound. Lynden School District cuts $600,000 from its budget for the coming school year. School board members passed a new budget that calls for retiring seven full-time staff positions and reduces spending on after-school programs such as sports. A Swinomish tribal member drowns after a mishap on a crab boat west of Blaine. Dean P. Dan, 50, of LaConner was pulling up crab pots when a large wave knocked him into the water. Canadian Coast Guard medics are unable to revive him. 08.29.08 FRIDAY Two hikers who spent more than a day stranded on an 18-inch ledge in the North Cascades are res- More than 84,000 listeners crowded Denver’s Invesco Field last week to hear Barack Obama’s historic speech accepting his party’s nomination for President of the United States. Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware is Barack Obama’s pick as vice presidential running mate. cued, aided by workers who stayed with the couple until they were able to descend below cloud cover from the 8,000-foot level of Spire Point near Darrington. They were then retrieved by a helicopter. A Bellingham seafood company recalls packages of pepper-smoked salmon that were distributed in seven states. According to a Food and Drug Administration news release, the presence of listeria monocytogenes was found by the company in routine testing of a package. No illness from the product is reported. 08.31.08 SUNDAY The Bellingham Herald reports an empty Amtrak train comes off the rails, injuring no one but causing a minor disruption in Labor Day travel. 09.02.08 TUESDAY School begins for the remainder of the area’s public school districts, including Bellingham. History is made as the Republican Party greets its first woman to be nominated for Vice President of the United States at the GOP’s convention in Minneapolis. On Aug. 26, juveniles in Shelton dropped a heavy object from a freeway overpass, smashing the windshield of the vehicle passing below. The vehicle was a Washington State Patrol pursuit vehicle whose occupant reported the incident, leading to the arrest of the youths. The arrested teens said they thought their stunt would be “funny.” COCHLEAR CONUNDRUMS On Aug. 22, Blaine Police visited Adelia Street where “a resident living at Wits End called police pleading for protection from the beeping noise blasting from a house on Mitchell Street for hours,” police reported. “An officer contacted two homes near the complainant: one agreed to turn off his loud music, and the other agreed to turn off the beeping alarm on her ra- FOOD 34 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FILM 24 MUSIC 20 EX-SO’S M.O. On Aug. 17, a man reported someone had thrown bird seed and small dead fish on his parked truck. The man told Blaine Police he suspected his ex-girlfriend, “because he knew that she had done similar things to other people back when they were blissfully together.” Police said they’d contact the the alleged vandal to get her side of the story. 1 CHANCE IN 2 a focus group of undecided but conservative vot- 1 CHANCE IN 2 a person polled on Aug. 29 said they'd never BBQ CRIMES On July 17, a woman ran out of the Deming IGA with two bags believed to contain beefsteaks. Sheriff’s deputies were unable to capture the Prime suspect. 64 On July 19, a Southside woman told Bellingham Police her barbecue grill had been stolen off her porch in the night. 6 On June 28, employees thwarted the theft of several barbecue grills from a store on Sunset Drive in Bellingham. 669,900 On Aug. 31, a man walked out of a Meridian Street convenience store with a cart full of stolen groceries. Bellingham Police were unable to recover the groceries. On Aug. 28, a person was reported swimming nude at Lake Padden. Bellingham Police were unable to locate the swimmer. 29 2 ers expressed a negative initial opinion of John McCain's pick for vice president, Sarah Palin. heard of Alaska Governor Sarah Palin. PERCENT OF ALASKANS who score Palin's performance as governor "good to excellent." Of that group, 87 percent believe she's lying about "TrooperGate," an incident where she allegedly pressured and then fired the state’s public-safety commissioner after he refused to dismiss her sister's ex-husband, a state trooper. PERCENT OF AMERICANS who think women make better political leaders than men (69 percent say men and women make equally good leaders). POPULATION OF SNOHOMISH County. Population of Alaska: 670,000. PERCENT OF THOSE polled who think Palin will hurt McCain's chances in November rather than help them. CHANCE IN THREE a political insider privately expressed relief to reporters that George W. Bush would not make an appearance at the Republican National Convention in Minnesota this week. CURRENTS88 CURRENTS WORDS 13 GET OUT 15 STAGE 16 ART 18 On Aug. 26, state Republicans sought distance from Barack Obama’s claim that he doesn’t “look like the other presidents on the currency” after Snohomish County Sheriff’s deputies helped collect a series of $3 bills depicting the presidential nominee wearing Arab headgear and leading a camel. The bills were featured at the Snohomish County Republican Party’s booth at the Evergreen State Fair in Monroe. A GOP volunteer brought them to the fair, thinking they were funny. VIEWS 6 On Aug. 10, juveniles in Blaine dropped a heavy object from a freeway overpass, smashing the windshield of a motorist passing below. Police searched the area, but the villains were not located. Damage to the 2006 Nissan was estimated at about $300. FUNNY MONEY MAIL 4 SAME STUNT, DIFFERENT RESULTS On Aug. 25, Bellingham Police took mercy on a youth in the Lettered Streets after a neighbor called to report his mother had been yelling at her son for what the caller described as “several hours.” DO IT 3 On Aug. 7, Blaine Police responded to a 911 hang-up call originating inside Blaine Middle School. Officers deduced the phone was defective and called for repair service. Over the next several days, they would be dispatched to the school again and again, only to confirm fault with a phone. On Aug. 16, an officer investigated an early morning call with the sound of dialing in the background. The officer checked the area but found nothing suspicious. Finally, the officer “called the number provided and received an answering machine. Unknown cause of the call,” the officer observed, “but it’s believed to be a phone problem.” A request to repair the problem was again made. Later that evening, officers were again dispatched to Blaine Middle School. “They arrived and determined the call originated with a faulty phone,” the report noted. “They been dispatched to the same location multiple times. An officer contacted a school employee who will be checking into the problem and hopes to have it resolved shortly.” Nothing further. INDEX N 9.03.08 LONELY PHONE dio. Thus ended the evening’s audio war between the neighbors. Both were berated about the collateral cochlear conundrum their criminally creative cacophony caused the non-combatant caller.” #36.03 fuzzbuzz POLICE BEAT :: INDEX CASCADIA WEEKLY currents 13 SOURCES: Frank Luntz/AARP focus group; USA Today/Gallup Poll; Rassmusen Reports; Pew Research Center; U.S. Census 2006 estimate; Zogby Poll; CNN Politico; ABC News; Minneapolis Star-Tribune FOOD 34 words LECTURES BOOKS CLASSIFIEDS 28 COMMUNITY Growing Up With Garrison RHUBARB AND POWDER MILK BISCUITS CASCADIA WEEKLY #36.03 9.03.08 DO IT 3 MAIL 4 VIEWS 6 CURRENTS 8 WORDS WORDS 13 14 GET OUT 15 STAGE 16 ART 18 MUSIC 20 FILM 24 BY TRAIL RAT 14 “THE STRONG point of radio,” Garrison Keillor once said, “is that there’s no distractions. People are driving down the road and you’re right there, whispering in their ear. They have nobody else to talk to. It’s a lovely situation for spreading untruths and pulling people’s legs.” Keillor, who was inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame in 1994, has been pulling legs and tickling eardrums in a big way ever since his world-renowned old-timey radio show, “A Prairie Home Companion,” commenced its first live broadcast on July 6, 1974 on the campus of Macalester College in St. Paul, Minn. Although there were a whopping 12 people in the Janet Wallace Auditorium to witness Keillor and his friends performing that Saturday afternoon, over the course of the next 500 episodes—between then and 1983—the audience for “A Prairie Home Companion” grew exponentially, capturing listeners far and wide across the globe. Currently, Keillor’s noisy but melodic brainchild is carLISTEN WHAT: Garrison ried by 580 radio stations in Keillor will be the United States, Canada, featured during a Ireland, England, Iceland, special “Chuckaand Germany, generating a nut Radio Hour” WHEN: 7pm Tues., legion of more than four milSept. 16 at WWU’s lion weekly listeners. Performing Arts The show’s immense and Center enduring popularity has COST: Tickets are propelled Keillor to an insold out. Tune ternational icon, helping into KRME-LP 102.3 FM to hear enshrine him into the small the broadcast but prolific lineage of bona INFO: 671-2626 or fide Minnesota-bred celebrichuckanutradioties, a roster that includes hour.com Charles Lindbergh, Judy GarSEE land, Bob Dylan, Prince, and WHAT: A Prarie F. Scott Fitzgerald. Home Companion WHEN: 1:45pm Born in the bucolic, gloriSept. 6-7 ously nondescript hamlet of WHERE: Pickford Anoka, Minn., Keillor spent Cinema, 1416 his youth alternately sufferCornwall Ave. ing through a strict and unINFO: pickfordcinema.org yielding regiment of stuffy, over-formalized church services at Plymouth Brethren—a fundamentalist Christian denomination he has since left—and frolicking wild and free along the forested bluffs of the Mississippi River (a pastime he claims simultaneously bolstered his spirits and fueled his creative aptitude). Growing up in a family of long-suffering, churchgoing Scandinavians during the 1970s and ’80s, the telltale places, hilarious characters and poignant over-the-top events Keillor described in and around his fictional Minnesota town of Lake Wobegone both reflected the plight of and became enmeshed deep within my family’s lore. Come rain, shine or sub-Arctic blizzard, each and every Saturday evening our radios were rev- erently tuned to Minnesota Public Radio, where we could track the oddly mundane, yet somehow revelatory, trials and tribulations of Pastor Inqvist, Father Wilmar, sundry members of the Bunsen and Krebsbach clans and, of course, assorted Norwegian bachelor farmers. The heedless ice fishing, gigantic caramel rolls and endless tuna hot dish recipes struck a deep and resonate chord within our nostalgic Midwestern hearts. For better or worse, Keillor became like some kind of crazy mischievous uncle to me. However, not everyone in our family appreciated his antics. I recall vividly when, one time, after listening to him describe lutefisk as reminiscent of “the afterbirth of a dog or the world’s largest chunk of phlegm,” my proud and normally unflappable Norwegian-American grandmother winced in disgust. CURRENTLY, KEILLOR’S NOISY BUT MELODIC BRAINCHILD IS CARRIED BY 580 RADIO STATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES, CANADA, IRELAND, ENGLAND, ICELAND, AND GERMANY, GENERATING A LEGION OF MORE THAN FOUR MILLION WEEKLY LISTENERS. “Uff-dah,” she growled, turning off the radio in protest. “That man is a menace!” “You’d see me on the street and never think I was an entertainer,” Keillor once noted. “Less is more. Quieter is better. The audience thinks ‘What’s this about?’ ‘What’s this leading to?’ And, in the end, it doesn’t really lead to anything. But you’ve managed to keep their attention for hours. They feel satisfied. It’s a mystery.” doit SAT., SEPT. 6 LIF T ING STONE: Susan McCaslin reads from Lifting the Stone at 7pm at Village Books, 1200 11th St. 671-2626 MON., SEPT. 8 LACE READER: Brunonia Barry reads from The Lace Reader at 7pm at Village Books, 1200 11th St. 671-2626 TUES., SEPT. 9 AGING SECRE TS: Caroline Sutherland talks about concepts from her book, The Body Knows: How to Stay Young, at 7pm at Village Books, 1200 11th St. 671-2626 WED., SEPT. 10 MEDICINE DANCE: Marsha Scarrough reads from her new tome, Medicine Dance, at 7pm at Village Books, 1200 11th St. 671-2626 COMMUNITY WED., SEPT. 3 WEDNESDAY MARKE T: The Wednesday Market takes place from 12-5pm every Wednesday through Sept. 30 at the Fairhaven Village Green. 647-2060 OR BELLINGHAMFARMERS.ORG FRI., SEPT. 5 BRIGID CELEBRAT ION: Help celebrate the Brigid Collins Family Support Center’s purchase of their building from 4:30-6pm at the Garden Street Family Center, 1231 N. Garden St. SELECT BULB VARIETIES NOW AVAILABLE ON OUR PORCH! Flowers just don’t get any fresher! -ONTHROUGH3ATTOs3UNDAYTO "EAVER-ARSH2OADs-OUNT6ERNON7! s6ISITUSONLINEWWWTULIPSCOM Ready to Ride? COM SAM HILL DAY: Celebrate the 87th anniversary of the Peace Arch at “Sam Hill Days” from 1-4pm at Peace Arch Park in Blaine. A history exhibit, antique cars, re-enactors and much more will be part o the free fun. PEACEARCHPARK.ORG SOUP FOR SHELTER: The fifth annual Soup for Shelter happens from 4-8pm at Boundary Bay Brewery, 1107 Railroad Ave. The event, which is a fundraiser for Northwest Youth Service, features unlimited soup sampling from more than 30 local restaurants and caterers. Tickets are $25. 734-9862 OR NWYS.ORG FOOD 34 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FILM 24 Iris, Greenhouse Tulips, Asiatic Lilies, Oriental Lilies MUSIC 20 Ship flowers anywhere in the USA overnight! FRESH CUT FLOWERS AVAILABLE: ART 18 FAIRHAVEN BBQ: The annual Fairhaven Salmon BBQ happens from 1-4pm on the Fairhaven Village Green. A $12 ticket gets you the full meal deal and live music by Blues Union on the grassy green. 920-8223 OR FAIRHAVEN. Gifts for your home & garden STAGE 16 TO CURVE: Poet Michael Daley reads from his latest collection, To Curve, at 7pm at Village Books, 1200 11th St. 671-2626 COURTHOUSE CELEBRAT ION: Celebrate the 150th birthday of the Territorial Courthouse Building from 11am-5pm at 1308 E St. Walking tours, a carving demo, live music and more will be part of the free festivities. WHATCOMMUSEUM.ORG Locally grown flowers & bulbs WE HAVE WHAT YOU NEED! GET OUT 15 FRI., SEPT. 5 BELLINGHAMFARMERS.ORG Open year-round! WORDS WORDS 13 15 SERIAL STORY: Arleen Williams reads from her book, The Thirty-Ninth Victim, at 7pm at Village Books, 1200 11th St. 671-2626 BELLINGHAM MARKE T: The Bellingham Farmers Market is open from 10am-3pm at the Depot Market Square, located at the corner of Railroad Avenue and Chestnut Street. 647-2060 OR CURRENTS 8 THURS., SEPT. 4 SAT., SEPT. 6 VIEWS 6 BOOK SALE: A preview for the Friends of the Bellingham Library Used Book Sale happens from 3-6pm Wed. at the Bellingham Public Library, 210 Central Ave. The sale continues from 10am-8pm Thurs., 10am-6pm Fri., and 10am-3pm Sat. 778-7250 SUN., SEPT. 7 ROME BREAKFAST: The monthly Community Breakfast continues from 9am-1pm at the Rome Grange, 2821 Mt. Baker Hwy. This month and next, there’ll also be a Farm Stand in the parking lot. Entry is $3-$5. 671-7862 MINI MEE T: The 36th annual Whatcom County Mini Meet Car Show happens from 9am3pm at Ferndale’s Hovander Homestead Park, 5299 Neilsen Rd. Admission is free, and it’s $10 to enter your vehicle. 738-0103 KINDRED SPIRITS: As part of Eat Local Week, take part in today’s annual Kindred Spirits gathering from 1-6pm at Ferndale’s Boxx Berry Farm, 6221 Northwest Rd. 647-7093 OR SCONNECT.ORG MAIL 4 SEPT. 3-6 DO IT 3 at him, which was a burden he bore for many years as a regular on the show, “Whizzing Through With Whipple,” but he had secret ambitions to write a narrative in verse of American history. The lines I quoted were from that work, which was left incomplete on his tragic death, crushed by a falling bookcase. CW: Clint Bunsen, the car mechanic protagonist of Liberty, suffers a life-altering identity crisis when a DNA test reveals that, rather than being 100 percent pure Norwegian as he always thought, he is actually half Spanish. What makes Norwegian-Americans so goddamned proud? Is it all the churchgoing and lutefisk? Or do they put some top-secret enzyme or special protein powder in the lefse? GK: Clint is quite happy to accept being Latino. It explains why he feels out of place among the Norwegians of Lake Wobegon. It’s a sort of freedom from lutefisk and lefse, and the chance to sing passionate romantic songs. And it gives him an excuse to dress up in a mariachi outfit, including trousers with silver buttons down the sides. CW: Sixty-year-old Clint first meets his 28-year-old lover, Angelica, on a website called “Heritage is Destiny” and they spend a goodly portion of time flirting in a chat room called “ZipZone”. Is the Internet generally a corruptive force in Lake Wobegon? GK: The Internet is definitely having an impact. Lake Wobegon is a place where people feel they must repress so much of themselves and the Internet gives you the chance to be bold and free—and anonymous. Unfortunately, it is something of a fantasy world, harmless on the whole but capable of burning up enormous amounts of time. And it’s very seductive. It would be sad if people were so addicted to it that they didn’t take long hikes in the woods or canoe down a river or have coffee with their friends. 734-4616 or br igid collins.org 9.03.08 Though the stolid denizens and bucolic terrain of Garrison Keillor’s fictional Minnesota town, Lake Wobegon, are most widely known through the synoptic, cream-rich monologues he delivers every weekend on his long-running radio show, “A Prairie Home Companion,” the Bard of Hot Dish and Tuna Casserole is also an accomplished wordsmith who has been serving up fresh, juicy slices of Wobegonian lore via full-length novels since 1985. Liberty, Keillor’s sixth and latest Lake Wobegon gospel, reveals the lusty, rusty trials and tribulations of Clint Bunsen, an outspoken 60-year-old car mechanic, husband and father of three who must face down a gauntlet of interpersonal issues, inexplicable impulses and a veritable smorgasbord of antagonistic community members in his pre-geriatric struggle for fulfillment and freedom. Cascadia Weekly: At the beginning of Liberty you include a quote attributed to Emmett Lazarus. Who is Emmett Lazarus? Is he related to Emma Lazarus, the renowned Jewish-American “poet of the huddled masses” who has part of her sonnet, “The New Colossus,” engraved on the base of the Statue of Liberty? Or is he somebody from Lake Wobegon? An extroverted Norwegian bachelor farmer, perhaps? Garrison Keillor: Emmett Lazarus is the pen name of an old radio comedian named Whiz Whipple whose trademark was the line, “Whyyyyyyyyyyy me?” Whenever his fans met him on the street, they would holler that WORDS #36.03 INSIDE LAKE WOBEGON CASCADIA WEEKLY LIBERTY 15 MUSIC 20 FILM 24 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FOOD 34 getout HIK ING RUNNING C YCL ING THURS., SEPT. 4 HILL RUN: Fairhaven Runners hosts a weekly Evening Hill run at 6pm leaving from the store, 1209 11th St. The gathering is free. 676-4955 STORY AND PHOTO BY JOHN D’ONOFRIO What’s in a Name? SEPT. 5-7 WALK ING FEST IVAL: The Whidbey Walking Festival happens daily in Coupeville through the weekend. Routes feature options of three- to 13-mile walks. NWTREKKERS.ORG SUNSHINE ON RAINY PASS CASCADIA WEEKLY #36.03 9.03.08 DO IT 3 MAIL 4 VIEWS 6 CURRENTS 8 WORDS 13 GET OUT OUT 16 15 GET STAGE 16 ART 18 READY FOR 16 doit a backpacking excursion, we want to ensure lots of warm sunshine. The forecast is iffy so, naturally, we head for Rainy Pass. Despite its name, Rainy Pass is situated at the point in the range where east meets west—the transition zone between the wet western side of the mountains and the drier eastern high country. It’s a good bet when the weather on our side is unsettled, and a chance to explore the high country with a reasonable hope of staying dry. The Maple Pass loop begins—and ends—at the Rainy Pass trailhead situated on Highway 20 and offers a scenic, concise and easy tour of the alpine wonderlands near the crest of the range. We arrive at the trailhead in—sure enough—bright sunshine and head up the trail through sweet-smelling forest. Bypassing the turnoff for Lake Ann, we continue upward toward Maple Pass, enjoying ever-expanding views as we move above the tree line. At the pass, the monumental peaks to the south come into view— Corteo, Storm King, Dome, and Glacier peaks dominating a resplendent chorus line of jagged mountains. Turning east, we follow the loop trail to its high point on a shoulder of Frisco Mountain, where we make camp on a sinuous ridge with a million-dollar view. The morning breaks beneath clear blue skies. We explore along the ridge as dark clouds begin to gather and when we return to camp we string our little tarp amongst the krumholtz. Just in case. No sooner are we done then rain begins to fall—big, heavy drops that raise small clouds in the dust. As we hunker down beneath the small shel- SAT., SEPT. 6 DAY TRIP: From 8:30am4pm, head to the North Cascades Institute’s Learning Center on Diablo Lake for free Day Trip excursions, including canoeing and forest and waterfall hikes. The event is first come, first served. (360) 856-5700 OR NCASCADES.ORG WE ARRIVE AT THE TRAILHEAD IN—SURE ENOUGH—BRIGHT SUNSHINE AND HEAD UP THE TRAIL THROUGH SWEET-SMELLING FOREST. ter, everything goes white and the wind begins to blow. We eat dinner beneath the tarp as the rain blows sideways, making it challenging to stay even semi-dry. In the tent, we lie awake and listen to the howling wind. It’s a long, mostly sleepless night. In the early morning the wind and rain finally let up and we emerge bleary-eyed, grateful for the chance to dry our wet gear in the shafts of tentative sunlight. By mid-morning the skies are blue. Buoyed by this happy turn of events, we set off up Frisco Mountain over rock and steeply pitched gardens of blooming purple and white heather. We ascend progressively higher stone parapets, reaching a small rock platform where we drop our day packs and survey the 360-degree spectacle of wild mountains. On one side, the burnt umber teeth of the Early Winters spires rise beyond Liberty Bell in a sea of bare peaks. On the other side, the view encompasses a wild horizon of blue and green ice and forest. As the sun prepares to make its exit, we climb down to camp. By the time dinner is ready, the sky is filled with stars. We dine by the ethereal light of the Milky Way and watch tendrils of mist move toward us from the valleys on both sides, eventually meeting in the middle and erasing the stars. Morning hummingbirds buzz us as we break camp and hoist our packs. We make our way down toward Rainy Lake through sunlit gardens of wildflowers. Alas, all good things must come to an end and all too soon we find ourselves plunging down through the forest toward the trailhead. We came for sun and got a little of everything—just a typical weekend in the North Cascades. SERVICE PROJEC T: Join the Nooksack Salmon Enhancement Association for a service project from 10am-1pm along Squalicum Creek. Meet at Cornwall Park on Meridian St. to remove non-native invasive plant species. 647-8955 OR N-SEA.ORG PLANT WALK: Master gardeners will lead a “Native Plant Walk” at 10am at Birch Bay State Park’s Terrell Creek Interpretive Trail. The outing is free. 371-2800 FAMILY SAILING DAY: The Bellingham Corinthian Yacht Club will host a free Family Sailing Day from 10am-4pm at the Bellingham Bay Community Boat Center, 501 Harris Ave. Reservations are required. 714-8891 OR SAILPADDLEROW.ORG FARM WORK SHOP: “Fall in the Orchard: When is it Ripe?” will be the topic of a free workshop starting at 10:30am at Everson’s Cloud Mountain Farm, 6906 Goodwin Rd. 966-5859 OR be live music, food and prizes. CIT YOFANACORTES.ORG RUN 542: As part of the Mt. Baker Hill Climb, runners can take part in today’s Run 542, which starts at 3pm at Glacier’s White Salmon Lodge. The run continues up to Artist Point. Cost is $25-$30. NORKARECREATION.COM SEPT. 6-7 DAHLIA SHOW: The Whatcom County Dahlia Society presents its annual Dahlia Show from 12-5pm Sat. and 10am-4pm Sun. at Bloedel Donovan Park, 2214 Electric Ave. More than 2,000 blooms from the best growers in the region will be on display. Entry is free. WHATCOMCOUNT YDAHLIA SOCIET Y.ORG SUN., SEPT. 7 RIDE 542: Take advantage of the only day of the year that Hwy 542 is reserved for cyclists as part of Ride 542, which kicks off at 7:30am in Glacier. Entry costs vary, and there is no day-of registration. NORKARECREATION.COM SK AGIT FLATS: The Skagit Flats Marathon and HalfMarathon kicks off at 8am at the Burlington-Edison High School, 301 N. Burlington Blvd. The entry fee is $50-$75. SKAGITFLATSMARATHON.COM GOLF TOURNE Y: The “Little Wishes” golf tournament held today at the Shuksan Golf Club will raise funds for Blue Skies for Children. Cost is $85 per person or $340 for a four-person team. 312-9590 MON., SEPT. 8 DUTCH OVENS: Car campers can learn more about feeding themselves in the great outdoors at a free “Dutch Oven Cooking” workshop at 6pm at Lake Padden. Take the east entrance and look for the REI event tent. 647-8955 CLOUDMOUNTAINFARM.COM TUES., SEPT. 9 SK ATEFEST: The 10th annual Skatefest gets rolling at 1pm at the Ben Root Skate Park on R Avenue in Anacortes. In addition to the competitions, there’ll BIKE 101: Learn how to keep your two-wheeler in tip-top shape at a free “Bike Maintenance 101” clinic at 6pm at REI, 400 36th St. 647-8955 doit stage 733-8855 OR THEUPFRONT.COM SEPT. 5-6 MIXED BAG: Teams of improvisers will go head to head in a Theatresports match at 9pm at the Upfront Theatre, 1208 Bay St. The all-male group Rooster will take the stage at 9pm Sat. Admission is $8$10. 733-8855 OR THEUPFRONT.COM SEPT. 9-10 efit Show Mount Vernon COST: $18-$24 INFO: (877) 754-6284 or lincolntheatre.org C ODY R I V E R S PHOTO BY JOHN MELOY WHEN: 8pm Sat., Sept. 6 WHERE: Lincoln Theatre, THEATERARTSGUILD.ORG WED., SEPT. 3 AUDIENCE MEMBERS lucky enough to score tickets to the annual “Rick Epting Benefit for the Arts” happening Sat., Sept. 6, should take careful note of the seats they’re occupying at the Lincoln Theatre. Without Epting’s help, they might not be sitting there at all. Before Epting’s untimely death in 2005, the musician and tireless arts supporter was instrumental in the restoration campaign for the historic Mount Vernon landmark, which was built in 1926 as a vaudeville and silent movie house. Featuring a Spanish motif and one of 98 Wurlitzer organs remaining in its original space, today the restored theater features everything from movies to live theater to world-renowned bands and local talent shows. Not wanting his mission to falter, in 2006 friends of Epting formed the Rick Epting Foundation for the Arts with the aim to keep his legacy of supporting the arts in Skagit County alive. The annual benefit show, now entering its third year, raises money needed for nonprofit groups to promote live performances and continue serving the community. You’ll likely forget you’re at the Lincoln Theatre for a cause once the curtains go up. Touted as “three shows in one,” the night will feature performances from the Cody Rivers Show, the Dream Science Circus, and members of the Upfront Theatre. “We are doing almost all-new material which will be debuted at the Lincoln,” says Andrew Connor, one half of the creatively combustible sketch comedy duo that is the Cody Rivers Show. “That stuff is currently in development, and we will be mixing in a few really obscure pieces from the past, revised and revamped.” Connor and co-conspirator Mike Mathieu have been touring for the past five months, and he says they’re “very much looking forward to being back in the Fourth Corner.” The Dream Science Circus, another regional gem, will also take to the stage to astound and amaze theatergoers. With a wily blend of acrobatics, dance, comedy and pantomime, the performers SEE IT WHAT: Rick Epting of this unique circus will draw you deep Benefit Show into their mystical blend of storytelling WHEN: 8pm Sat., Sept. 6 and physicality. Members have traveled WHERE: Lincoln Theatre, the globe to share their “dreams,” and Mount Vernon their show shouldn’t be missed. COST: $18-$24 INFO: (877) 754-6284 Fans of comedy created on the spot or lincolntheatre.org will be glad to see the improvisational antics provided by mainstage members of Bellingham’s Upfront Theatre. Utilizing suggestions from the audience, the actors will bring their offerings to life, and may provide some standup comedy as well. Throughout the night, as audience members laugh and gasp at the troika of talent taking the stage as part of the benefit, they should remember that it’s thanks to people like Rick Epting—those who believe the arts are a vital part of any healthy community and do what they can to ensure they continue—that they’re able to be there at all. FOOD 34 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FILM 24 DANCE BALLROOM MOVES: Sentimental Journey will provide live tunes for a free Ballroom Dance happening from 6-8pm at the Leopold, 1224 Cornwall Ave. 733-3500 FRI., SEPT. 5 CONTRA DANCE: Live music and a caller will be part of the first Contra Dance of the season happening from 8-11pm at the Fairhaven Library, 1117 12th St. If you need instructions, there’ll be a 7:30pm lesson. Suggested donation is $8-$10. 676-1554 SAT., SEPT. 6 AUDIT IONS: Get ready for the upcoming 2008/2009 season at the Mt. Baker Ballet by auditioning from 12:30-4pm at the Nancy Whyte Studio, 1412 Cornwall Ave. 734-9141 OR NANCYWHYTEBALLET.COM SCOT T ISH DANCE: The Skagit Scottish Country Dancers invite the public to a Ceilidh at 7pm at Anacortes’ Depot Arts Center, 611 R Ave. Admission is $6 per person or $15 per family. SKAGITSCD.ORG CURRENTS 8 WHAT: Rick Epting Ben- AUDIT IONS: The Theater Arts Guild will hold auditions for upcoming performances of A Christmas Carol from 6-9pm at Mount Vernon’s Lincoln Elementary School, 1005 S. 11th St. There are parts for up to 60 actors of all ages. (360) 770-8751 OR VIEWS 6 SEE IT MAIL 4 ENTERTAINING FOR EPTING DO IT 3 Three Shows in One MUSIC 20 GOOD, BAD, UGLY: Catch “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” at 8pm at the Upfront Theatre, 1208 Bay St. At 10pm, stick around for “The Project: Mad Comedy in the Making.” Cost is $5 for the early show, $3 for the late one. ART 18 THURS., SEPT. 3 BY AMY KEPFERLE STAGE16 17 STAGE (877) 739-0559 OR GET OUT 15 BARDONTHEBEACH.ORG 9.03.08 PROF IL E S WORDS 13 BARD ON BEACH: Twelfth Night plays in repertory with The Tempest, King Lear, and Titus Andronicus as part of Bard on the Beach through Sept. 26 at Vanier Park in Vancouver, B.C. Tickets are $18-$33. #36.03 DANCE SEPT. 3-10 CASCADIA WEEKLY T HE AT ER S TA G E 17 FOOD 34 visual OPENINGS WED., SEPT. 3 CALL FOR ART: Skilled artists and artisan vendors from Whatcom, Skagit, Island, and Snohomish counties can sign up now to take part in the Fall Harvest Festival happening Sept. 27 in Mount Vernon. (360) 336-5087 OPEN HOUSE: Attend an Open House for a new art space from 6-10pm at Jinx, 306 Flora St. The night will feature works by Richard Olmstead and others, as well as live music. 920-4216 BY AMY KEPFERLE Art Walk FIRST FRIDAY: The monthly Art Walk happens from 6-9pm at various venues in downtown Anacortes. The event is free. ANACORTESART.COM NEW NAME, NEW CONCEPT TUES., SEPT. 9 “ART IS ALL AROUND US, AND WE SHOULD BE CELEBRATING IT ALL THE TIME.” GET OUT 15 — GRETCHEN BJORK, DOWNTOWN RENAISSANCE MEMBER WORDS 13 CURRENTS 8 VIEWS 6 MAIL 4 DO IT 3 9.03.08 #36.03 CASCADIA WEEKLY 18 PROFILES EVENTS FRI., SEPT. 5 STAGE 16 ART 18 18 ART MUSIC 20 FILM 24 CLASSIFIEDS 28 GALLERIES doit See Erin Libby’s “Walking with Moonchild” at the Blue Horse Gallery as part of the Art Walk DURING THE past few weeks, you may have seen posters touting the new Art Walk pasted on bulletin boards and windows throughout downtown Bellingham. The image is simple: a crossing signal features the flashing word “ART” with the symbol of a human in motion representing the letter “R.” According to Downtown Renaissance Network member Gretchen Bjork—the owner of shoe store Left Right Left and upscale furnishing establishment, Digs—the Art Walk is a new and improved version of the longtime Gallery Walk. “A group of business owners have been talking about the problems we have with how the Gallery Walk was,” Bjork, 30, says. “Nobody knew when it was because it was kind of random and the months weren’t consistent. Plus, we felt the words ‘Gallery Walk’ excluded a lot of other venues that have art in them.” When the Art Walk makes its debut Fri., Sept. 5, 22 venues will take part in the new format, which aims to keep to a regular schedule. Every first Friday of the month—except for this October, when it’ll happen on the second Friday—galleries, restaurants, businesses and studios will stay open later than usual so the public can better partake of their offerings. “We changed the name to Art Walk so it includes different kinds of venues,” Bjork says. “We’re hoping to see everything from culinary arts to performance arts and music. Because it’s now being put on by the Downtown Renaissance Network, we thought it made sense to match it to the downtown branding that’s going on.” Although walls full of art are still one of the main draws of the monthly event, Bjork and other DRN members are encouraging venues to think outside the box. For the inaugural event, you can still peruse exhibits at more traditional spaces such as the Blue Horse Gallery, Allied Arts, Waterfront Artists Studio Collective, WFA Dream Space studios, and more. New are events such as “The Art of Paella” at the Temple Bar, which pairs outdoor dining with a special dinner by Paellaworks Catering’s Knut Christianson. Left Right Left will host a trunk show SEE IT featuring local jewelry artWHAT: Art Walk ist Yellow Dame, and BackWHEN: 6-10pm, Fri., country Essentials will highSept. 5 WHERE: Downtown light Entertwined Designs, Bellingham Heather Fitzstarawn’s hemp INFO: downtownbelclothing and textiles—and lingham.com that’s just the beginning. To get new venues to participate, Bjork says they’re offering monthly rates. Nonprofits can sign up for $50, and it’ll be $65 for regular folks to take part. Scholarships will also be available for independent artists and others who may not be able to participate otherwise. Above all, Bjork notes, they want downtown to be a vibrant hub every first Friday of the month. “Art is all around us, and we should be celebrating it all the time,” Bjork says. “I think the new energy will be contagious and the audience will grow. I think the more reasons people have to come downtown and enjoy it, the better.” FACES OF BURMA: Dennis Walton will present “Faces of Burma,” a photographic portrait of Myanmar, at 12:30pm at the Whatcom Museum of History and Art, 121 Prospect St. The event is free, and participants can bring their lunch along. WHATCOMMUSEUM.ORG O N GO I N G E X H I B I T S ALLIED ARTS: “Seeing From Within, A Retrospective and Celebration of Life, Tammy Zlotnik, 1963-2007” shows through Sept. 6 at Allied Arts, 1418 Cornwall Ave. 676-8548 ART WOOD: Woodworker Michael Flaherty will be featured through September at Artwood Gallery, 1000 Harris Ave. 647-1628 BELLINGHAM RAILWAY MUSEUM: The museum is open to the public from noon-5pm Tues. and Thurs.-Sat. at 1320 Commercial St. 393-7540 BLUE HORSE: Erin Libby’s retrospective, “A Creative Life: Visions of the Fantastic” shows through Sept. 27 at the Blue Horse Gallery, 301 W. Holly St. 671-2305 FERNDALE LIBRARY: The Whatcom Art Guild’s “Fall Art Exhibit” shows through Oct. 2 at the Ferndale Public Library, 2222 Main St. The work of 25 artists is on display. 384-3647 GOOD EARTH: Nature-based ceramic designs by Gene Buckley and Cheryl Lee will be featured through September at Good Earth Pottery, 1000 Harris Ave. 671-3998 OR GOODEARTHPOTS.COM HISTORICAL MUSEUM: View “Lost Cities of Skagit: Rediscovering Places of Our Past” until Nov. 2 at La Conner’s Skagit County Historical Museum, 501 South 4th St. (360) 466-3365 OR SKAGITCOUNT Y.NET INSIGHTS: Anne Schreivogl’s “Last Splash of Summer” exhibit can be see through Sept. 30 at Insights Gallery, 516 Commercial Ave., Anacortes. (360) 588-8044 OR INSIGHTSGALLERY.COM QUILT MUSEUM: “Paths to Edo: Quilts from Japan” and “Sashika Old & New: Works of Kazuko Yoshiura” can be seen through Sept. 21 the La Conner Quilt & Textile Museum, 703 South 2nd St. (360) 466-4288 OR LACONNERQUILTS.COM SMITH/VALLEE: Jack Gunter’s “Where Pigs Fly” exhibit will be on display from 11am-5pm every Fri.-Sun. through Sept. 28 at Edison’s Smith/ Vallee gallery, 5742 Gilkey Ave. The 25-year retrospective features Gunter’s championship flying mammal. (360) 305-4892 VILLAGE BOOK S: “Messages Home” shows through September at Village Books, 1200 11th St. 671-2626 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FILM 24 MUSIC 20 ART 18 19 ART CASCADIA WEEKLY #36.03 9.03.08 DO IT 3 WHATCOM MUSEUM: “World of the Shipwright” is currently on display at the Whatcom Museum, 121 Prospect St. 778-8930 OR WHATCOMMUSEUM.ORG STAGE 16 PUBLIC MARKE T: An exhibit featuring photos from the demolition of Georgia-Pacific buildings by Tore Ofteness will show through October at the Bellingham Public Market, 1530 Cornwall Ave. 647-8006 GET OUT 15 PEACE ARCH PARK: The annual Peach Arch Park International Sculpture Exhibit is open through Oct. 1 at Blaine’s Peace Arch Park. 332-7165 OR PEACEARCHPARK.ORG WORDS 13 PAPERDOLL: Libby Chenault’s “Fascination: Portraits in Thread” shows through Sept. 6 at the Paperdoll, 1200 10th St. 738-DOLL CURRENTS 8 ONE OF ONE: “Untied,” featuring the paper artistry of Helen Hiebert, is currently on display at Bison Bookbinding’s One of One gallery, 1420 N. State St. BISONBOOKBINDING.COM VIEWS 6 MONA: Glass artist Ginny Ruffner’s “Aesthetic Engineering: The Imagination Cycle” can be perused through Oct. 5 at La Conner’s Museum of Northwest Art, 121 S. First St. (360) 466-4446 OR MUSEUMOFNWART.ORG MAIL 4 MINDPORT: Sculptures, paintings, ceramics and more are on display as part of the multi-artist “Off the Edge” exhibit on display through Sept. 28 at Mindport Exhibits, 219 W. Holly St. Admission is $2. 647-5614 OR MINDPORT.ORG FOOD 34 doit Shirley Erickson’s mixed-media works are on display as part of the “Off the Edge” exhibit on display at Mindport through Sept. 28 19 FOOD 34 music RUMOR HA S I T musicPREVIEW BY CAREY ROSS 3 Inches of Blood RAISE THE DEVIL HORNS CASCADIA WEEKLY #36.03 9.03.08 DO IT 3 MAIL 4 VIEWS 6 CURRENTS 8 WORDS 13 GET OUT 15 STAGE 16 ART 18 MUSIC 20 FILM 24 CLASSIFIEDS 28 PRE V IE W S 20 THEY WEAR spikes and leather, sing songs titled things like “Destroy Orcs” and “Through the Horned Gate,” and feature a vocalist that isn’t afraid to get in touch with his inner Rob Halford. No wonder people have mistaken Vancouver’s 3 Inches of Blood for a joke metal band. But a joke they are most certainly not, and one could easily argue that, if this were the early ’80s, 3 Inches of Blood would simply be some of the metalest dudes around, rather than a oft-suspected parody of the same. However, people in general have never really known what to make of 3 Inches of Blood. Much more so than other types of music, metal is fractured into a number of distinct subgenres— black metal, metalcore, thrash metal and power metal are just a few that come to mind—and at some point or another, 3 Inches of Blood has been classified and claimed by each. However, the band itself remains unconcerned with such classifications, content to be who and what they are, evolving as they see fit. The general genre of heavy metal was good enough for the bands they claim as influences—Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, and the like—so it’s good enough for them. Despite all this classification controversy, it is worth noting that the band’s most recent release, 2007’s Fire Up the Blades, defiHEAR nitely trends more WHO: 3 Inches of toward the black Blood, Full Frontal metal end of the Assault, Super Happy Story Time Land spectrum than their WHEN: Sun., Sept. 7 previous efforts. WHERE: Wild Buffalo, Maybe it’s because 208 W. Holly St. that’s what guitarCOST: $8 advance, ists Shane Clark and $10 day of show MORE INFO: wildbufJustin Hagberg, falo.net who penned all the album’s songs, were into at the time, but personally, I think this black metal bent can be ascribed to the fact that they wrote the entire thing while holed up in the heavy metal bastion of Tacoma, Wash. Whatever the reason, this effort hits harder and faster and sounds darker than previous releases, and also has the sound of a band that is leaning less and less on its influences and creating a sound BLOOD, CONTINUED ON PAGE 21 Rumor Has It 3 INCHES OF Blood at the Wild Buffalo? I know. When I saw the show listed on the Buff’s calendar, I had to shake my head and do a double take too. While I’ve been open to the possibility that anything can happen at the Wild Buffalo since DeVotchka played there, I don’t know that I was quite prepared for “anything” to come in the form of 3 Inches of Blood. But I am glad it does. The show, which happens Sept. 6—a Sunday, so plan accordingly—and also features Full Frontal Assault and Super Happy Story Time Land. While we may all be familiar with what FFA has to offer (a ferocious punk/ metal hybrid that, frankly, scares me a little), Sequim’s Super Happy Story Time Land may be a bit more of a mystery around these parts. They are self-described purveyors of “punishing metal with uplifting lyrics and a positive message,” and claim to be “Disneyland meets Cannibal Corpse and the Partridge Family at the same time.” It’s a little hard to wrap the mind around. But I do know SHSTL will make a delightful counterpoint to 3 Inches of Blood’s “we’re alll doomed—and I mean really, really doomed” lyrical content. Another show that I’m pretty excited about is an upcoming WhAAM fundraiser featuring JaBY CAREY ROSS panther, No-Fi Soull Rebellion, Little Party and the Bad Business, and 10 Killing Hands. It’s been too long since we’ve seen the likes of Japanther around these parts, which propels their Sept. 16 show at the Nightlight into the realm of long-awaited and much-anticipated. Advance tickets are $7 and are available at Everyday Music, and the whole thing, as I mentioned, is a benefit for WhAAM, an organization with big goals but little money to make them a reality. (In the spirit of full disclosure, it should be noted that I recently joined WhAAM’s board of directors because, as I have said many, many times before, I believe a self-sustaining all-ages music venue to be vital to the health and well-being of the arts community in any town.) If it seems like the Sweaty Sweaters are everywhere these days, well, it’s because they are. Since releasing their new album, Care, in mid-August, it feels a little like the band has spent more time onstage than off. They’re currently at the beginning of a month-long Monday-night run at the Green Frog, and you can also catch them this Sat., Sept. 6 at the Wild Buffalo, and they’ll also play—along with a whole slew of your favorite local bands—at a big ol’ benefit for Homes For Our Troops Sept. 13 at Boundary Bay. musicPREVIEW musicPREVIEW BLOOD, Grayskul, Dim Mak, Smoke, and Xperience play at 8pm Thurs., Sept. 4 at the Rogue Hero, 1313 N. State St. Cost: $4. More info: myspace.com/themightyconquest non-clubMUSIC WED., SEPT. 3 MUSIC CLUB: Guest artists from the Skagit Opera will perform at a free concert being put on by the Bellingham Music Club at 10:30am at Faith Lutheran Church, 2750 McLeod Rd. BELLINGHAMMUSICCLUB.ORG FRI., SEPT. 5 APRIL VERCH: Award-winning Canadian fiddler and singer April Verch will perform at 7:30pm at Nancy’s Farm, 2030 E. Smith Rd. Suggested donation is $10-$12. 966-4640 OR APRILVERCH.COM FOOD 34 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FILM 24 MUSIC 20 ART 18 STAGE 16 GET OUT 15 WORDS 13 $4 Cajun Bloody Marys & Cajun Coffees CURRENTS 8 Sleep in and still get breakfast! Late Risers Welcome 9.03.08 a musical legacy built on a foundation of flannel and angst, truth is, musicians of all stripes find themselves nestled in the Emerald City’s rainy but musically welcoming embrace. In fact, the city is home to a hip-hop community that has, in recent years, grown exponentially in both strength and numbers. Hip-hop in Seattle, as in many places, tends to be a group effort, and no group is more prolific or prominent than the Oldominion collective, which counts among its offshoots Boom Bap Project, Sleep, Norman, and Snafu. In the world of underground hip-hop, Oldominion is unquestionably influential and its artists undeniably innovative. Four years ago, two such artists, Onry Ozzborn and JFK—along with on-again, off-again bassist Rob Castro—decided to hook up and Sat & Sun 10-2 VIEWS 6 WHILE SEATTLE may boast Brunch create a darker and more mystical brand of hip-hop. Dubbing themselves Grayskul, the duo established itself by opening for Eyedea and Abilities, before cranking out Deadlivers, a release that quickly caught the attention of the underground hip-hop community. However, while necessity may indeed be the mother of invention, when it comes to Grayskul, creativity is the mother of reinvention, as evidenced on their latest release, 2007’s Bloody Radio. Designed to both show the dexterity of Ozzborn and JFK, as well as turn a genre that has, like so many others, recently become fractured into ill-defined subgenres, on its ear, the album is a mash-up of sounds and styles, featuring cameos by the likes of Aesop Rock, Slug, and Pigeon John—not to mention former Pretty Girls Make Graves alum Andrea Zollo. Lest you think Grayskul is simply an exercise in hip-hop exploration, it should be noted that the duo’s songs are still rife with the kind of message and substance that are their stock in trade. But don’t take my word for it—you’ll have your chance to see this duo in action when they play Sept. 4 at the Rogue Hero. MAIL 4 GRAYSKUL DO IT 3 By the Power of… FIRST FRIDAY: Virtuoso violinist Swil Kanim will give a free concert from 8-10pm at the Bellingham Public Market, 1530 Cornwall Ave. 714-0800 SAT., SEPT. 6 MILLIE, MENTSHN: Millie and the Mentshn will perform from 7-9pm at the Bellingham Public Market, 1530 Cornwall Ave. The concert is free. 714-0800 SUN., SEPT. 7 JAZZ ORCHESTRA: The Northern Lights Jazz Orchestra will feature a plethora of Cuban music at a performance at 1:30pm at the Fairhaven Village Green. The event is free, but donations are appreciated. 223-8845 WED., SEPT. 10 YOUTH BAND: The 12th annual Bellingham Youth Jazz Band will begin rehearsals from 7-8:30pm at the Bellingham Senior Activities Center, 315 Halleck St. Interested 7th-9th grade musicians are invited to take part. 676-5750 OR JAZZPROJECT.ORG #36.03 they can claim as their own. While some folks may have a hard time wrapping their mind around the kind of music 3 Inches of Blood so expertly creates—after all, it is hard and fast and fantastic in lyrical content—those who speak out in defense of the genre point to the near-impossible level of technical skill it takes to create a truly good metal song. And while preachers and parents may be afraid of heavy metal, any true music fan should be awestruck by the musicianship it requires to not only crank out killer guitar riffs at hyperspeed, but also to have each one sound distinctly different than the next. Hearing all this top-notch musicianship in its recorded form is one thing, but the proof is in the performance pudding, and 3 Inches of Blood is a band with a well-earned reputation for leaving it all on the stage at every show. And they’d better be in top form, because they’ll be taking the stage at their Sun., Sept. 7 show at the Wild Buffalo right after Bellingham’s best purveyors of “melodic death punk,” Full Frontal Assault, who owe their legions of loyal local fans both to their all-out live show, as well as a work ethic that gives their music its razor-sharp edge. Judging from the band’s previous appearances, Bellingham boasts a sizey contingent of metal fans, proving that, despite the rumors they might be a joke band, 3 Inches of Blood’s lethal brand of metal is no laughing matter. BY CAREY ROSS CASCADIA WEEKLY FROM PAGE 20 21 See below for venue addresses and phone numbers MUSIC 20 FILM 24 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FOOD 34 Boundary Bay 09.03.08 09.04.08 Yogoman Happy Hour Music feat. Juba Marimba (early), Woodstock (late) WEDNESDAY Commodore Ballroom ART 18 STAGE 16 GET OUT 15 WORDS 13 CURRENTS 8 VIEWS 6 MAIL 4 DO IT 3 9.03.08 #36.03 CASCADIA WEEKLY FRIDAY Thunderstruck, The Unknown Soldiers 09.06.08 SATURDAY MORELAND & ARBUCKLE/Sept. 5/Green Frog Karaoke Green Frog Café Acoustic Tavern Main St. Bar and Grill DJ Bam Bam Blindfate Kate Graves Moreland and Arbuckle The Naked Hearts Country Karaoke Open Mic w/Chuck D feat. Cherish Third Rail Epik Anniversary-Detention 5 Rockfish Grill Frankly Moanin' Rogue Hero Vaughn Kreestoe Paul Klein (tap room), Gallus Brothers (beer garden) Jazz Jam w/Julian MacDonough Open Mic w/Chuck D feat. Amateur Pros College Night The Sweaty Sweaters Colby Stead SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY 3 D-vas Spaceband Third Rail Players Club Comedy The Shadies Karaoke Rishloo, Let It Come Down, Mokshya, Opus Dai The Tread Abraham, Low Red Land, Ergo Ego Industry Night College Night Ladies Night Party Night Betty Desire Show, DJ Velveteen DJ Buckshot, DJ Deerhead DJ QBNZA DJ Mike Tollenson The Jimmy Murphy Band The Jimmy Murphy Band The Jimmy Murphy Band Karaoke Five Dollar Fine Five Dollar Fine Jeff Reier & Mark Woodworth Equinox The Otters Elemental Sher Vadinsky Elemental Broken Bottle Band, Vox Solis Happy Hour Jazz Project (early), Pirate Pirate Motorhome, Void in Theory (late) Sweaty Sweaters Skagit Valley Casino Skylark's Three Trees Coffeehouse Equaleyes Tivoli Bar Tabac Acoustic Oasis Open Mic feat. Janie and Joe (early), Reggae Night Afterparty Fucked Up, Crystal Antlers The Juan Maclean Randy Oxford Grayskul, Dim Mak, Smoke, XP, J-Walk Silver Reef Hotel Casino & Spa Wild Buffalo Compete for a Cause Cribbage Tournament, The Otters Indelible Mess, Hepp-C, Saving Arcadia Richard's on Richards Rumors 09.09.08 Aleah Springsnow Old Foundry Royal 09.08.08 CharacterFlaw Edison Inn Fairhaven Pub 09.07.08 Mogwai, Fk Buttons Common Ground Coffeehouse Honeymoon 22 THURSDAY 09.05.08 MOGWAI/Sept. 6/Commodore Ballroom Karaoke Band Fight Nite Karaoke w/Poops DJ Postal, DJ Shortwave Irish Session Open Mic feat. Walk Through Fire 3 inches of Blood, Full Frontal Assault, Super Happy Story Time Land Lucky Lounge feat. Vaughn Kreestoe w/ DJ Grapenuts Jessica Reifler, Human Host Boundary Bay Brewing Co. 3BJMSPBE"WFt]Commodore Ballroom (SBOWJMMF4U7BODPVWFSt ]Common Ground Coffeehouse1FBTF3PBE#VSMJOHUPOt ] Department of Safety UI4U"OBDPSUFTt ]The Edison $BJOT$U&EJTPOt]Fairhaven Pub & Martini Bar )BSSJT"WFt]Green Frog Café Acoustic Tavern /4UBUF4Ut]Honey Moon/4UBUF4Ut]Main Street Bar & Grill .BJO4U'FSOEBMFt] Nightlight Lounge 211 E. Chestnut Stt]Old Foundry&.B QMF4Ut]Poppe’s Bistro & Lounge -BLFXBZ%St]Richard’s on Richards 3JDIBSET4U7BODPVWFSt ]Rockfish Grill $PNNFSDJBM"WF"OBDPSUFTt ]The Rogue Hero /4UBUF4Ut]The Royal &)PMMZ4Ut]Rumors Cabaret 3BJMSPBE"WFt]Silver Reef Casino )BYUPO8BZ'FSOEBMFt]Skagit Valley Casino Resort /%BSSL-O#PXt ]Skylark’s Hidden Cafe UI4Ut]5ISFF5SFFT$PGGFFIPVTF8)PMMZ4Ut]6OEFSHSPVOE$PGGFFIPVTF7JLJOH6OJPOSE'MPPS 886]Wild Buffalo 8)PMMZ4UtXXXXJMECVGGBMPOFU]5PHFUZPVSMJWFNVTJDMJTUJOHTJODMVEFEJOUIJTFTUFFNFEOFXTQSJOUTFOEJOGPUPDMVCT!DBTDBEJBXFFLMZDPN%FBEMJOFTBSFBMXBZTBUQN'SJEBZ Clothing | Jewlery | Gifts | Clothing | Jewlery | Gifts | Clothing ~ ADMISSION: $2 PER PERSON $5 PER FAMILY SEPTEMBER 19TH & 20TH AT THE SKAGIT COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS Come into either store for a free gift FOOD 34 S to re C l o s i n g S a l e B2C EXPO Skagit Valley F&SATURDAY 10 AM-8 PM ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ 104 Indoor Exhibits Daily Drawings & Prizes ◆ Fun Children’s Activities Indoor/Outdoor Demonstrations ◆ Meet Weatherman Andy Wappler Sample Skagit Restaurants Food Tasting Local Beer & Wine Tasting ◆ FREE PARKING! Entertainment Featuring Hot Box on Friday night & Mid-Life Crisis on Saturday night *while supplies last Presented by: CLASSIFIEDS 28 Lul u 2 2ND ANNUAL Premier Sponsors: Executive Sponsors: My Own Vintage Evening Reception Sponsors: For information, schedule & booth registration, visit www.skagitb2c.com or call the Chamber at 360-428-8547 Wanna change your look? Then here’s your chance! At Plato’s Closet, we buy and sell brand name gently used teen and twenty something clothing for guys and girls. That means you can afford to rock GET OUT 15 STAGE 16 ART 18 Clothing | Jewlery | Gifts | Clothing | Jewlery | Gifts | Clothing Grand Sponsor: MUSIC 20 LU LU’S 1208 11TH ST FAI R H AV E N 360-756-6939 LU LU’S 1 2 4 W. H O L LY BELLINGHAM 360-733-3923 FILM 24 24 FILM and WORDS 13 abercrombie & fitch, american eagle, hollister and your other faves all year long for less than half the price of new. Change is good, T U E S - S U N 5 -1 1 P M LIVE MUSIC T U E S -T H U R - S AT 8 P M 1053 N. STATE ST. -ALLEY DOWNTOWN BELLINGHAM DO IT 3 9.03.08 SANGRIA! #36.03 U U CASCADIA WEEKLY MAIL 4 VIEWS 6 CURRENTS 8 so 23 1SPEVDUJPO8JOFSZt8JOF#BS Light Appetizers & Desserts FOOD 34 film F IL M T IME S MUSIC 20 FILM 24 CLASSIFIEDS 28 RE V IE W S REVIEWED BY JORDAN MINTZER Bangkok Dangerous ART 18 ART IMITATING ART WORDS 13 GET OUT 15 STAGE 16 dleman, he successfully knocks off the first three targets in more or less professional fashion. Exterior-based assassination sequences, highlighted by a lengthy boat chase set inside a picturesque floating market, make the first half easier to digest. But Joe’s sudden and unexplained character change midway through, marked by his growing teacher-student relationship with Kong and his altogether platonic affair with an attractive pharmacist (Hong Kong pop singer and New Police Story star Charlie Young), is never fully fleshed out, and adds little resonance to the mul- CASCADIA WEEKLY #36.03 9.03.08 DO IT 3 MAIL 4 VIEWS 6 CURRENTS 8 LIVELY BANGKOK LOCALES OFFER UP A COLORFUL URBAN PORTRAIT THAT WINDS UP BEING MUCH MORE COMPLEX THAN THE SCRIPT’S UNDERDEVELOPED CHARACTERS. 24 HEAVY ON the spice and cheap on the meat, Bangkok Dangerous adds plenty of Thai seasoning to the Hollywood lone-assassin recipe, but the result is only mildly pungent. Rehashing certain elements—including striking location shooting—that marked their much grittier 1999 feature of the same title, Hong Kong’s Pang brothers increase the decibel level of the gunshots and the schmaltz level of the scenario, but such embellishments, not to mention a Nicolas Cage doused with Clairol, make this hefty remake seem less dangerous than incongruous. Twins Danny and Oxide Pang made their dual-directorial debut with the Thai-language version of Bangkok Dangerous, whose effective lowlife atmosphere and wide-ranging stylistic palette propelled them onto the international scene. They followed with the original 2002 The Eye and its two local sequels before debuting Stateside with last year’s moody horror tale The Messengers. Working here with a script by Jason Richman (Swing Vote), the helmers reshape their rough, Bangkok underworld-set story into a cleaner tourist’s take on crime and corruption. Yet without the technical nastiness and fatal realism that made the initial film so compelling, the remake feels like a hollow excuse to present the myriad ways in which a bullet can pierce a cranium, rather than an edgy portrait of Third World violence. As in the original, the film follows the gloomy itinerary of solitary gun-for-hire Joe (Cage), who, in the opening scene, takes out a highprofile target in Prague, then coldly eliminates his assistant via lethal injection. With no hints as to what exactly pushed Joe into such a dirty business, we’re left to work with the few personal guidelines he repeats in a voiceover, used sparingly throughout. Arriving in Bangkok to execute four contracts he hopes to be his last, Joe quickly finds himself immersed in the city’s “corrupt, dirty and dense” lifestyle, which the filmmakers effectively (albeit hastily) render through neon-lit street shots and strobing nightclub scenes. Hiring local henchman Kong (Thai actor Shahkrit Yamnarm, who delivers the film’s most endearing turn) to serve as a mid- tiple killings that follow. Lively Bangkok locales offer up a colorful urban portrait that winds up being much more complex than the script’s underdeveloped characters. Working with usual cinematographer Decha Srimantra (who lensed their three Eye productions), the Pangs manage to bring back some of the exotic grit of the first film, although the imagery here is more postcard-like. Cage gives a mostly laconic performance, yet at times can’t seem to hide his joy at shooting in so many cool locations, which adds a befitting sense of wonder to his humdrum persona. Co-stars Young and Yamnarm are both solid actors who unfortunately disappear in the film’s final stages. A kinetic score by Brian Tyler is mixed with several cheesy pop tunes played at a racy Bangkok dance club, which, in this U.S.-friendly version, features only scantily clad, but no nude, entertainment. 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FILM 24 24 FILM STAGE 16 Best News Story In 2007-08 ________________________ GET OUT 15 Best Local Author _________________________________ ART 18 Best Breakfast ___________________________________ WORDS 13 Best Local Artist__________________________________ FOOD CURRENTS 8 PEOPLE MUSIC 20 OR: Fill out the form online at CASCADIAWEEKLY.COM/BOB/ Entries due Sept. 26. Winners will be announced Oct. 8. VIEWS 6 NOTE: Personal information is for prize-awarding purposes only MAIL 4 Your Phone Number _______________________________ DO IT 3 The City In Which You Live _________________________ 9.03.08 Your Email Address ________________________________ Fill out the form. Must include at least 15 categories to be eligible for prize drawing. If you don’t include your name and contact info, how are we to award you a prize? Mail to Cascadia Weekly, PO Box 2833, Bellingham WA 98227-2833 or drop off at 115 W. Magnolia St., Ste. 210, Bellingham WA. #36.03 Your Name _______________________________________ CLASSIFIEDS 28 DIRECTIONS: CASCADIA WEEKLY ABOUT YOU FOOD 34 '08.Best.of.Bellingham 25 SHOWTIMES BY CAREY ROSS Mamma Mia: I wouldn’t care if this former Broadway hit starred Carrot Top and Britney Spears instead of Pierce Brosnan and Meryl Streep, the fact that it features most of ABBA’s back catalog is good enough for me. ★★★1(tISNJO Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. FILM SHORTS Babylon A.D.: Vin Diesel stars in what I’m sure was supposed to be a piece of near-future social commentary. But since, like I said, it stars Vin Diesel, things didn’t quite turn out that way. ★1(t hr. 30 min.) Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. Man on Wire: Imagine someone stringing a high wire between the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center— UIFOXBMLJOHBDSPTTJU4PVOETJNQPTTJCMFCVUJO Phillippe Petit did that very thing. And, almost 35 years later, James Marsh made this fascinating documentary about it. ★★★★★1(tISNJO Pickford 4:15 Bangkok Dangerous: See review (and Nicolas Cage’s mullet) on previous page. ★★3tISNJO Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. College: John Belushi wore a sweatshirt that simply said “College” on it in Animal House, which is somehow related to this film. A movie based on a shirt? Someone should alert the Traveling Pants. This sounds like an intellectual property issue to me. ★3tIS NJO Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. The Dark Knight: With more than $500 million in ticket sales (making it the second-highest-grossing film of all time), oodles of critical acclaim and Oscar buzz surrounding Heath Ledger’s maniacal turn as the joker, this Batman blockbuster could very well be the best superhero movie ever made. ★★★★★1(t 2 hrs. 32 min.) Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. Disaster Mov ie: Because we’d gone probably two whole weeks without another stupid spoof movie, Hollywood offers us this travesty of celluloid. Um, thanks? ★1(tISNJO Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. Hamlet 2: What do you do if you’re a high-school drama teacher facing the possibility of having your program cut from the curriculum? If you’re Steve Coogan, you conjure up a sequel to Hamlet, pen a song called “Rock Me Sexy Jesus” and watch the chaos and controversy ensue. ★★★★3tISNJO Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. A PR AI R E HOME COMPAN ION The House Bunny: Despite my suspicion that this is yet another throwaway comedy rife with pratfalls and toilet humor, I have to confess a soft spot for the film’s star, Anna Faris, who grew up not far from here, in Edmonds, Wash. However, from what I can tell, she’s pretty much the only thing this effort has going for it. ★★1(tISNJO Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. Death Race: Does Jason Statham really love to drive, or is he just typecast as a guy behind the wheel? This time around, he’s in prison, competing at the behest of a corrupt warden (Joan Allen) against a group of vicious criminals for his chance at freedom. ★★★ (R tISNJO Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. The Longshots: Sure, this is a film about a girl who, with the help of a down-on-his-luck former football star (Ice Cube), becomes the quarterback of the local Pop Warner football team. But it is also a sign of the apocalypse. How so? It is directed by Mr. Limp Bizkit himself, Fred Durst. Time to build that bomb shelter you’ve been planning. ★1(tISNJO Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor: Brendan Fraser returns as explorer Rick O’Connell to combat the resurrected Han Emperor (Jet Li) in an epic that races from the catacombs of ancient China high into the frigid Himalayas. ★★★1(tIS NJO Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. Pineapple Express: Seth Rogen, who graduated magna cum laude from the Judd Apatow School of Comedy, helped pen this exercise in hilarity, which Rolling Stone says is “like if Superbad met Midnight Run and they had a baby and then meanwhile that freaky Quentin Tarantino talk from Pulp Fiction and True Romance met that freaky Judd Apatow TV stuff from Freaks and Geeks and Undeclared and they had a baby, and by some miracle those babies met... this would be the funny shit that they birthed.” ★★★★ 3tISNJO Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. A Prair ie Home Companion: When Garrison Keillor and the late, great Robert Altman team up with a cast that includes Meryl Streep, Lily Tomlin, Tommy Lee Jones, Virginia Madsen, Woody Harrelson, and many more, you know the end result is going to be a film that is, by turns, touching, poignant and goodnaturedly funny. ★★★★★1(tISNJO Pickford Sat. & Sun. @ 1:45 The Rocker: Rainn Wilson channels Jack Black (School of Rock-style, that is) in this forgettable yet funny bit of slacker comedy. ★★★1(tISNJO Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2: The quartet of lovely ladies are back in a coming-of-age sequel to their first coming-of-age film. Perhaps this installment will answer the question on everyone’s minds: Just how do those damn pants manage to fit all four girls, anyway? ★★★1(tIS Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. Step Brothers: Sure, Will Ferrell is a funny guy. But in this grownup tale of sibling rivalry run amok, look for the always amazing John C. Reilly to totally steal the show. ★★★3tISNJO Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. Tell No One: See review previous page. ★★★★ (UnSBUFEtISTNJO Pickford 6:30 | 9:15 Traitor: Don Cheadle stars in this film, which tries to be a thoughtful treatise on the blurry world of international terrorism, but instead is just, well, boring. ★★1(tISNJO Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. Tropic Thunder: Sure, protesters have taken umbrage with this film, but that hasn’t kept it from cashing in on the comedic gold that is the trio of Ben Stiller, Robert Downey Jr., and Jack Black. God bless the return of the R-rated comedy. ★★★★3tISNJO Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. WALL-E: A comedic love story between two adorable robots—one of whom, WALL-E, manages to save civilization and get the girl at the same time—brought to you in singular, distinctive Pixar-perfect style. Kung Fu Panda, you have met your match. ★★★★★(t ISNJO Call 676-9990 for theaters and showtimes. Woodstock: With a title like that, you pretty much know what you’re getting. Lots of music, lots of mud and a whole lotta free love are the stars of this docuNFOUBSZBCPVUUIFTFNJOBMNVTJDGFTUJWBM%SFTT up theme: hippies. ★★★★★3tISTNJO Boundary Bay Beer Garden Thurs. @ dusk NOW SHOWING @ The Pickford Cinema SEPTEMBER 5-11 Held Over! See the sensation--FINAL WEEK CASCADIA WEEKLY 9.03.08 Tell No One “Beautifully written and acted, Tell No One is a labyrinth in which to get deliriously lost.” Stephen Holden, NYT 125 min (Unrated) Show times: Fri–Thr @ 6:30 & 9:15pm #36.03 DO IT 3 MAIL 4 VIEWS 6 CURRENTS 8 WORDS 13 GET OUT 15 STAGE 16 ART 18 MUSIC 20 FILM 24 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FOOD 34 film 26 Man on Wire Real Estate for Real People JEFF BRAIMES 961.6496 E 734.3420 OIE !& #'%# A Prairie Home Companion 105 min (PG-13) Sat & Sun Only @ 1:45pm MILLER-ARNASON REAL ESTATE, LLC JUST ASK: &%$+ "%'(""% & ')""&+&*+( * $8 regular | $6 matinees & under 12 | $5 members | 1416 Cornwall | movie line: 360.738.0735 | pickfordcinema.org Are you compassionate? Are you a good listener? Are you looking for a meaningful way to help the community? Domestic Violence & Sexual Assault Services of Whatcom County needs dedicated volunteers to work with survivors of domestic violence & sexual assault. 90 min (PG-13) Show times: Fri - Thr @ 4:15pm In celebration of Garrison Keillor’s Appearance 9-16 At Village Books’ Chuckanut Radio Hour CARING PEOPLE NEEDED! 1-57 14 or check Call (360) 67 671-57 1-5714 sas .or g today for more .dv www.dv .dvsas sas.or .org www aining information. Volunteer tr training starts October 4, 2008. Be part of the solution! FILMpreview OR, TELL EVERYONE YO G A N O RT H W E S T to a live Internet feed that seems to show his dead wife alive in the here and now. Smart begins a search for her, and soon enough he’s uncovering all sorts of dark secrets from the past while being pursued by both thugs and cops. The audience is right there with yoganor thwe st. co m 1440 10th Street VIEWS 6 CURRENTS 8 WORDS 13 Vo t e d B e s t Yo g a S t u d i o i n 2 0 0 7 TELL NO ONE DARTS ITS WAY PAST ALL THE IMPROBABILITIES AND CLICHÉS THAT WEIGH DOWN MOST MYSTERIES MAIL 4 SPERRY Pelican Boots WATERPROOF $ Reg. 60 Only $4999 9.03.08 DO IT 3 SPERRY BOAT MOC’S Reg. $70 Only $5999 #36.03 Smart throughout the film, never really knowing what’s going on, biting at suspicions but then finding them confounded, not knowing where things are headed. Cluzet has just the right combination of Everyman incredulity and sharp-edged passion to sell the film, and Canet caroms him through wrong and right turns so quickly it’s hard to tell which is which. Tell No One darts its way past all the improbabilities and clichés that weigh down most mysteries, shooting toward a conclusion that’s both endearingly old-fashioned and satisfying. Tell someone. 360.647.0712 Historic Fairhaven $ 10 OFF COUPON - EXPIRES 9/10/08 ANY SPERRY, TEVA, OR GEORGIA BOOT SHOES Excludes clearance items. Limited to stock on hand. LFSMARINEOUTDOOR.COM Hours: Weekdays 8 - 6 Saturdays 9 - 5 851 Coho Way, Bellingham 360-734-3336 CASCADIA WEEKLY AFTER DECADES of mysteries solved, it’s darn hard these days to make a whodunit movie in which the eventual “who” isn’t either blatantly absurd or completely predictable. It’s even harder to pull off an intricate every-which-way plot and then wrap up all the loose ends convincingly. But American author Harlan Coben is a master at such acrobatics. Apparently, no American filmmakers felt capable of taking on his nail-biter Tell No One, so French writer-director Guillaume Canet jumped at the chance, and it’s a good thing: It’s hard to imagine any U.S. director tackling a story with so many elements without tripping all over them. Not that Canet doesn’t fall back on an old-fashioned, long-winded explanation of just what the heck’s been going on to finish his film. There’s no other way out. But his smooth handling of the story’s many tentacles, as well as the pulse-pounding running-whoknows-where tension he maintains throughout gets you plenty frazzled and keeps you just this side of confusion on the way to resolution. Francois Cluzet (think mid-Dustin Hoffman) plays Dr. Alex Smart, a man knocked unconscious as he tried years ago to rescue his wife (Marie-Josée Croize) from unseen attackers. He was a suspect in her murder then, but now he’s a successful pediatrician. But just before the anniversary of her death rolls around, he receives a mysterious email, which leads him Free Classes: Aug 25 - 31 Early Fall: Sept 8 - Oct 5 Late Fall: Oct 6 - Dec 14 GET OUT 15 Come stretch, breathe and relax in our peaceful, quiet new Yoga studio. STAGE 16 ART 18 MUSIC 20 THE B.K.S. IYENGAR YOGA CENTER OF BELLINGHAM FILM 24 24 FILM Tell No One CLASSIFIEDS 28 FOOD 34 REVIEWED BY TOM LONG 27 classifieds broadcast VIEWS 6 CURRENTS 8 WORDS 13 GET OUT 15 STAGE 16 ART 18 MUSIC 20 FILM 24 CLASSIFIEDS 28 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FOOD OD 34 JOBS JOB 100 Employment HELP WANTED EMPOYMENT PART-TIME TYPIST WANTED Looking for part-time, home-based typist. No prior experience required, however, 40+ wpm minimum a must. Need a strong applicant with exceptional work ethic and ability to complete tasks on a deadline. Email resume to chhenna@gmail.com SERVICES 100 1 Employment EMPLOYMENT OPPORT. VAN.B.C. WORK All skills, especially trades. Live/ work/both sides of the border. Van.bc is booming,esp. construction, the Olympics/ oil and gas. Fast track work visas.1800 661 7799 or www. businessnavigator.com CLASSIFIEDS@ CASCADIAWEEKLY.COM Career Opportunities in: Culinary Arts Facilities Maintenance Gaming Customer Service REAL ESTATE 100 Employment WORK FOR ACTORS Local production company seeks actors for paid work in film and commercials. Send resume and headshot to info@ handcrankfilms.com. come grow with us! RENTALS EMPLOYMENT WANTED Housesit ter/Petsit ter Available I am an experienced housesitter/petsitter available to take care of your home and loved ones while you are away. References available upon request. Fee based on day-to-day needs of home and pets. I may also be interested in partial barter for services. If interested, please write to me at lavendargrass@hotmail.com. EDUCATIONINSTRUCTION ATTEND College online from home. Medical, Busi- BUY SELL TRADE 100 Employment ness, Paralegal, Computers, Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer provided. Financial aid if qualified. Call 1(866)8582121; www.OnlineTidewaterTech.com 200 Volunteer Bham Bay Swim Team/ Whatcom Ranger Soccer Club: Help at our annual marathon with traffic control, end of race functions, water stations, racer packets assembly, data entry, or award hand-outs. 4 hr commitment preferred. Race day Sept 28. Call Kris Runestrand: (360) 410-0142 2 Great Casinos 1 Great Opportunity for You! Get on a real career path with a growing company. We have great benefits including generous group medical, dental & vision insurance, paid holidays, paid vacations, free meals, and promotion from within. L WE’ALIN TR U YO GRE BENEFAITT S CASCADIA WEEKLY #36.03 9.03.08 DO IT 3 MAIL 4 Cashiering 28 Bartending Accounting Information Technology Security Download an application: Nooksackcasino.com Or Apply at a Human Resources office: Nooksack River Casino on Mt. Baker Highway in Deming 360.592.5472 or Nooksack Northwood Casino 9750 Northwood Road Just East of Lynden off Badger Rd. 360.734.5101 TO PLACE AN AD CLASSIFIEDS.CASCADIAWEEKLY.COM BULLETIN BOARD 200 Volunteer Girls on the Run: Help us assemble our packets & other materials for our Fall running program. Volunteers needed until project is complete; must be complete by first weeks of September. Hours very flexible. Call Amber Swim: (360) 733-8630. Northwest Youth Services: Volunteers needed for 5th Annual Soup for Shelter. Range of needs: set-up to check-in, serving soup to tear down and clean-up that evening and the next morning. Sat. Sept 6th, 4-8 pm. Call Sonya Samuelson: (360) 734-9862. The Arc of Whatcom County: Help w 5th annual Buddy Walk to promote 200 Volunteer awareness & acceptance of ppl w Downs Syndrome. Volunteers needed for registration, door prizes, food, entertainment, & organization. Oct 4. 9 am-3 pm. Call Kristy Gillig: (360) 715-0170. The Arc of Whatcom County: The Arc of Whatcom County is seeking volunteers to help with their awareness fundraiser concert on Sept. 23 from 5-9:30 pm. Help needed for admissions, ushers, and stage hands. Call Kristy Gillig: (360) 715-0170. Woodstock Farm Conservancy: Volunteers needed September 12th-14th to help w/ W.F.C.’s Farm Art Show. Help w/ opening, registration, wine serving, 200 Volunteer greeting, passing out maps, hostessing, and parking. 2.5 hour shifts. Call Christine Turnbaugh: (360) 527-2366. Woodstock Farm Conservancy: Volunteers needed Thurs, Sept 11, for setup duties for Woodstock Farm Conservancy’s Farm Art Show. Call Christine Turnbaugh: (360) 527-2366 300 Services Expert Editing / Business Writing I specialize in editing thesis papers, manuscripts, and marketing copy. For your business, I can write a feature article or create a business biography that 300 Services will strengthen your ties to your community and expand your customer base. Free consultations. 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Stress Relief 1988 ski to sea poster $10, 966-2663 Chronic Pain Jessica Mcclintock wedding dress $25, 966-2663 Tendinitis Headaches 738-4121 Carpal Tunnel -BCPS*OEVTUSJFT.PUPS7FIJDMFT .PTU*OTVSBODFT"DDFQUFE 0OMZ0SHBOJD)ZQPBMMFSHFOJD 1SPEVDUT6TFE /P/VU0JMT 500 Rentals Plus Sized PTSD Welcome On Eagle’s Wings Counseling Counseling | Hypnotherapy | Reiki | EFT Sue Stackhouse, RC, CHT, CRMT ROOMMATES WANTED WONDERLAND HERBS & TEAS & SPICES 360-599-2627 Locally made Bath & Body Products Essential Oils Vitamins • Books Life Transitions, GLBTQ, Grief/Loss, Depression, Anxiety, Relationships, Codependency, Spirituality, Smoking, Health Enhancement, Regression 1305 Railroad Rd. Bellingham 360-733-0517 Sliding Scale Rates ¹/² Off Your First Visit Licensed Esthetician Airbrush Tanning Bellingham www.faceit-skincare.com 360 738 8368 Body Type Bra Fitting 1800 custom fitted bra sized for your “body type” Superior design & fit can provide ultimate comfort & back support The Healthy Bra Company (360) 815-3205 www.theHealthyBraCompany.com TO SHARE Large house to share w/1-2 others on 20 acres on Chuckanut. Ponds, creek, garden, green house, mule & 2 Llamas. House is alt. power (off grid), hrdwd floors, wood heat. Very quiet, beautiful place 360-303-8381 RENTALS: WWU $749 / 2br - Walking distance to WWU & Fairhaven! Private 2 br., 1bath duplex apartment available now for move-in! Private front patio, fenced backyard, 2 large bedrooms and office. Washer & Dryer on site & off street parking! Located in Happy Valley, close to Fairhaven, WWU, parks & trails! Call Brian at 303-1787 for a showing! RENTALS: BELLINGHAM $750 / 2br - 2br, 1ba Duplex with fenced yard and garage 789 sqft. Garage. Private fenced pack yard. W/S/G paid. All appliances. Near bus, shopping. 1.5 miles fro downtown. Pets ok with $250 non-refundable pet deposit. $500 deposit. 527-9600 $1295 / 4br - 1321 Raymond Beautiful creek in partially fenced yard, vintage home, gas heat, bonus room/ bedroom, fireplace, 1.75 bath, washer/dryer, garage and carport, near Whatcom Falls Park & bike trails, no smoking, no pets and sorry, no students. Rent includes yard care. 2200 sq.ft., $1500.00 deposit. Windermere Property Mngmt by Ebright Wight, LLC, 360-733-7944 $1198 / 3br - Duplex for rent Duplex for rent $1198 Large 3 bedroom with two bath duplex unit, 1500 SF, with family room, deck, patio, large yard, attached garage. Gas heat. Includes washer/dryer and water/sewer. No pets or smoking. 2211 Michigan St, south of Alabama, Bellingham. Available for move-in Sept 1 - one year lease. Deposit of $1175. Monthly rent is $1198. Call Dan at 671-8220. 600 Real Estate REAL ESTATE HOUSE FOR SALE Country craftsman home for sale on 1 1/3 acres. 3 bedrooms freshly painted, new carpet, new septic system, new hot water tank , new holding tank and pump for artisian well, 2 decks, fruit trees, newer roof, all appliances included. Propane and wood heat. Come enjoy country living for 179,000. 360714-0570 $179,000 Quiet Peaceful Living Charming home on 1 1/3 acres, 3 bedroom, 2 decks, French doors, brand new septic system, artisian well, fruit trees. Priced to sell $179,000. Call 360-714-0570 700 Bulletin Board CLASSES & WORKSHOPS ONLY $85,000 A permanently affordable condo for sale, 1 bedroom, 1 bath, Ground floor condo On the busline 600 sq. ft. FOOD 34 CLASSIFIEDS 28 CLASSIFIEDS 28 MAIL 4 Injury Treatment Jessica David LMT, RMT Nat. Certified MA#00017175 GET OUT 15 Vo t e d B e s t Yo g a S t u d i o 2 0 0 7 ! yoganorthwest.com FILM 24 4 (360) 752-9595 7 MUSIC 20 LMP 5 ART 18 1 WORDS 13 9 CURRENTS 8 Marjorie Scarlett, 7 VIEWS 6 Healing touch for chronic stress & pain Tai Chi sequence emphasizing slow continuous energy flow for increased balance, strength, flexibility, and a tranquil state of mind- important tools in a stressful world. Recommended for all physical conditions, ages, and levels of You may be eligible if you: Have good credit and are able to obtain a bank loan Meet the income guidelines for your family size (See our website for new income limits!) For more information visit www.kclt.org or call 360-671-5600, ext. 7 DO IT 3 Jin Shin Jyutsu® STAGE 16 700 Bulletin Board 9.03.08 000 Sudoku #36.03 000 Sudoku CASCADIA WEEKLY 000 Sudoku To place your ad, contact Marisa Papetti 360-224-2387 or marisa@cascadiaweekly.com 29 Wu Style Tai Chi New beginning and continuing Wu Style Tai Chi. A long form classifieds CASCADIA WEEKLY #36.03 9.03.08 DO IT 3 MAIL 4 VIEWS 6 CURRENTS 8 WORDS 13 GET OUT 15 STAGE 16 ART 18 MUSIC 20 FILM 24 CLASSIFIEDS 28 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FOOD 34 JOBS JO 30 700 Bulletin Board SERVICES 700 Bulletin Board RENTALS TO PLACE AN AD CLASSIFIEDS.CASCADIAWEEKLY.COM REAL ESTATE BUY SELL TRADE BULLETIN BOARD 700 Bulletin Board experience. $50/eight weeks, $10/class, or bring a friend and each pay $40/8 weeks. Fridays- 3:30 - 4:30. September 5th. Firehouse Center, Fairhaven. Humphrey Blackburn has 28 years martial arts experience and has been practicing and teaching this form for 19. For more infor- 700 Bulletin Board mation call 360 366 570 DREAM WORKSHOP IN BELLINGHAM, on 9/9 Understand the helpful message in every dream. End nightmares, increase well-being and creativity. Learn how to apply insights to your relationships. TUESDAY, SEPT. 9, from 7-9 pm. $20. Presented by Jenny Davidow, M.A., author of “Embracing Your Subconscious - Bringing All Parts of You into Creative Partnership.” All levels welcome. For information and registration, please call Jenny at (360) 6761009 or visit: http://members.cruzio.com/~twave FREE INTRO-TO- 700 Bulletin Board DREAMS WORKSHOP on 9/23 Understand the helpful message in every dream. End nightmares, increase well-being and creativity. Learn how to apply insights to your relationships. TUESDAY, SEPT 23, from 7-9 pm. Presented by Jenny Davidow, M.A., author of “Embracing Your Subconscious - Bringing All Parts of You into Creative Partnership.” At the Fairhaven Library, 1117 12th St., in B’ham. More info: Call Jenny at (360) 676-1009 or visit: http://members.cruzio.com/~twave JOURNALING WORKSHOP on 9/16 Learn enjoyable and satisfying ways to express your heart, spirit and senses as you journal. Bring more sensory aliveness, creative excitement and self-discovery to the story of your life, lived in this moment. All levels welcome. TUESDAY, 700 Bulletin Board SEPT. 16, 7-9 pm. $20. Presented by Jenny Davidow, M.A., lifelong journaler and author of “Embracing Your Subconscious - Bringing All Parts of You into Creative Partnership.” For more info and registration, please call Jenny at (360) 676-1009 or visit: http://members.cruzio. com/~twave 6:15 am Yoga Class Early Morning Yoga with Dave Koshinz at Everybody’s Yoga 1609 Broadway, Suite 202 (Upstairs), Bellingham WA 98225 360.738.2207 yogabellingham.com. Change the course of your day with an early practice! Tuesday and Thursday, 6:15-7:30 am $35 per month for once per week, $50 for twice This is a mixed levels class. Payment is due at the beginning of each month. Mole Trapping Lessons I will come to your house and CERISE NOAH Windermere Real Estate Whatcom, Inc. Licensed since 1996 Helping buyers and sellers with their Real Estate needs throughout Washington State. Business (360) 734-7500 Ext. 273 Cell (360) 393-5826 700 Bulletin Board teach you everything there is to know about how to trap moles. It will take me about 2 hours and I will show you exactly where to set them on your property and how to stop new moles from entering your yard. Call Travis 253886-4763 Beginner Quilting Classes Learn the basics of quilting, including rotary cutting, using templates, basic piecing, paper piecing, applique, seminole patchwork, log cabin, strip piecing, circular piecing while completing a 40”x40” wall quilt. 6-2hr classes for $60. Classes starting March 1 nancls60@juno. com Dynamic Dance Classes New dance classes offered in Bellingham: Hip Hop, All skill levels and abilities welcome. Join us every Tuesday 4-5pm @ BAAY- Bellingham Arts Academy for Youth (located at 1059 N. State St.). Beginning Modern Dance: every Tuesday 6-7 @ the Chinese Martial Arts Academy. Contact Improvisation Classes: suitable for teens and adults 16 and over. Every Tuesday 7-8pm @ Chinese Martial Arts Academy (located at 1705 N. State St., near Hot Shots and Bellingham Fitness). All classes are $10 drop-in or $35 for the month More info at DancePlant.org. Instructor: Nicole Byrne, nicole@ baay.org Play Bluegrass Banjo, Mandolin, Guitar louder, 700 Bulletin Board faster, better! Bluegrass, Old Country, Old Timey. All Levels. Banjo: Learn Scruggsstyle on your 5-string banjo using finger & thumb picks. Mandolin: Learn how Bill Monroue & other greats flat pick leads or chop chords. Guitar: Learn how to flat pick or strum & sing at the same time in any key. Music theory is optional- learn to play by ear. 20+ years teaching experience. Contact Jordan Francisco (360)296-5007 at Coda Music 1200 Harris Ave #104 in Fairhaven. Knitting Lessons by Jen Interested in learning to knit but don’t know where to start? Wish you could learn at home where you’re comfortable and you can find the time? Then I’m your girl! My name is Jen and I’ll do everything for you that I wish someone had done for me when I started knitting. Let’s make a scarf, dishcloth or hat for your first project! Call Jen at 303-7300 Music Theory and Lefthanded Guitar Instruction Take your songwriting to the next level. I also specialize in left handed guitar instruction. Email Adam at bluebiz@ mac.com for more info. CHILDREN’S DANCE CLASSES Creative Dance and Beginning Ballet for children. Ferndale - 6 miles North of downtown Bellingham. Ballet Arts Northwest, (360) 333-0293 Last Week’s Puzzle Down 1 Like some chances 2 “Hold On Tight” band 3 Getting rid of a spill 4 Wally and the ___ (classic TV brothers, for short) 5 Meat preparers that use salt and smoking 6 Prepare peanuts, perhaps 7 “Masterpiece The- ©2008 Jonesin’ Crosswords editor@ jonesincrosswords. com GEMINI (May 21-June 20): The governor of Minnesota has a wife who loves to go fishing. Tim Pawlenty told radio station WCCO that his wife Mary is smitten with the sport. She is genuinely driven to cast her bait into the lake in quest of the catch. “Now, if I could only get her to have sex with me,” the governor added, suggesting that her passion for intimate union with him was not as pressing as her urge to fish. While I personally lean toward the position that eros is one of life’s best gifts, I don’t judge Mary harshly for her preference. Many people find that the most satisfying and useful way to express their libido is through some non-sexual activity. You may want to consider that possibility, at least in the coming days. It’s the sublimation phase of your astrological cycle. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Normally, you’re not the most direct person in the world. Nor are you the most concise. You sometimes display tendencies to sidestep the main issues and take the long way home to the truth. Why, then, have you apparently turned into a sleek paragon of precise communication? To what do we owe your crisp new efficiency, your knack for cutting through the crap, and your commitment to saying exactly what you mean? Maybe it has to do with the alignment of the planets. Or maybe you really, really don’t want to be misunderstood. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Resilience is a quality that allows you to rise above setbacks and find resources in unexpected places. It’s a willful instinct to seek the higher ground and a bigger vision. It’s intensely practical, because it shushes the nagging voices in your head that make negative interpretations of your experience, thereby allowing you to act courageously in your own best interests. This is Resilience Week for you, Leo. Call on your dormant reserves. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Pregnant giraffes give birth standing up. Babies arrive in their new environment with a jolt, hitting the ground after plummeting six feet. Although they were fairly safe before, upon leaving the womb they are in danger of being preyed upon by animals like leopards and hyenas, which wouldn’t dare attack their giant mothers. I’m thinking there’s a resemblance between the newborn giraffes and a new project you’re will ultimately feel a strong need to learn from has recently become known to you, or will soon become known. A series of lessons you will benefit from studying throughout 2009 is already revealing its contours. I suggest you do some meditation and free-writing about these developments. Making your intuitions more conscious will prime your deep psyche for the work ahead, helping it to attract the experiences you’ll require to prepare for your future educational assignments. CLASSIFIEDS 28 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FILM 24 MUSIC 20 ART 18 STAGE 16 GET OUT 15 SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): A teacher you WORDS 13 memories is gazing into my Taurus daughter’s face just moments after her complicated birth. She had been through a heroic ordeal that scared the hell out of me, and yet she looked calm, beatific, and amused. “She’s part-Buddha and part-elf,” I thought to myself as I held her in my arms. I saw elegant compassion blended with wise playfulness, two states I had never before witnessed in the same person. This unexpected marvel imprinted me deeply, and has informed my work ever since. Do you have a comparable memory, Taurus? A time when a key to your destiny was revealed to you? A turning point when you got a gift that has fueled your quest for years? This is not only a good time to revisit that breakthrough; it’s also a ripe moment to ask life for another one. mutilated when it is removed from all its unreality.” So said the French philosopher Gaston Bachelard in his book The Poetics of Reverie. He meant that realism alone is not enough for human beings to live on, especially in our most intimate relationships. We need fantasy to augment the merely factual perspective. We require poetic truths to keep the rational approach honest. Without the play of the imagination, in fact, our understanding of the world is impoverished and distorted. In this spirit, Scorpio, I invite you to be extra daydreamy and imaginative about love in the coming days. Feed your soul and the souls of those you love with experiences that arouse mystery and wonder. (P.S. Nietzsche said: “We have art in order not to perish of truth.”) CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): “The whole history of civilization is strewn with creeds and institutions which were invaluable at first, and deadly afterwards.” So said British essayist Walter Bagehot. I would add the following corollary: The fortunes of many individuals have declined because of belief systems and structures that were invigorating earlier in their lives but that gradually became paralyzing or parasitical. Has that ever been true about you, Capricorn? More importantly, might it become true in the future? Please take inventory of your reliance on theories and attitudes and methods that made good sense once upon a time but that are now becoming irrelevant or even counterproductive. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): “What did you do this summer?” I asked my Aquarian readers. “I didn’t build a single sandcastle,” wrote Emma from Baltimore. “I didn’t fall in love. I didn’t celebrate the full moon. I didn’t run through a meadow. I didn’t taste honeysuckle. But on the other hand, I worked hard on the book I’m writing. I dramatically improved my diet. I kept my house clean and well-organized. I watched less TV.” If I’m analyzing the omens correctly, many of you Aquarians were like Emma in the past months: more successful at accomplishing practical goals than at having free-form fun. I don’t think that’s a problem, though. You can’t do everything, right? But these next few weeks before the equinox will be a good time to correct the imbalance. I suggest you go in quest of what has been missing. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You will have a knack for seeing what has been invisible and for describing what no one else can say. You’ll have a talent for perceiving the open secrets that everyone else has refused to notice and for speaking about truths that everyone has avoided articulating. I’m not sure what you’ve done to attain these wizardly abilities, but the cause isn’t really important, is it? Get out there and use your superpowers to generate breakthroughs that will forestall and maybe even cancel sluggish breakdowns in the group processes.. CURRENTS 8 TAURUS (April 20-May 20): One of my favorite SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “The reality of love is VIEWS 6 44 They’re pulled from the shell, in a Squeeze song title 48 ___ Kippur 51 One of five children born at the same time, slangily 53 Reese of “Touched by an Angel” 54 “___ Feel Like a Woman!” (Shania Twain song) 55 sa>le) 58 Sleep problem 59 “All Those Years ___” (George Harrison song) 60 Make happy 61 Handle effectively 62 ___ Te Ching (classical Chinese text) 63 ___ Tag (1980s toy set) 64 Items on a chain 65 Button on some cell phones 66 Spider egg holders in monsoon season or the skipper of a grounded ship, one must sometimes go forward by going back,” wrote novelist John Barth in The Friday Book. Consider using that approach, Aries. Retreat may be the strongest move you can make right now; surrender could turn out to be a masterstroke. But in order to get the most out of this strategy, you’ve got to keep your ego from injecting its agendas into situations. Don’t act out of shame or pride; don’t humble yourself excessively or be burning for revenge. Be objective, neutral, poised. MAIL 4 1 Not a lot 4 A followers 7 “Would You Like to Buy ___?” (“Sesame Street” song) 10 Smog watchdog: abbr. 13 “American Gladiators” co-host Laila 14 Iberia’s cont. 15 “That’s funny!” on the message boards 16 “Mayor of Simpleton” band 17 The art of sculpting shrubbery 19 Emphatic speaker’s phrase 21 Je9ns 23 Cremation containers 25 Miniseries whose final episode was the third-mostwatched scripted show in U.S. history 26 Philosopher David Hume, for one 29 Exasperated exhalation 30 Doctor’s request while holding a tongue depressor 31 ___ Valley, California 32 Waters, in Oaxaca 34 “___ Married an Axe Murderer” (1993 movie) 35 Passport endorsements 36 aldde 39 Grab a bite 40 Be in the red 41 Pink Floyd founder Barrett ARIES (March 21-April 19): “Like an ox-cart driver LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): My friend Joan was experiencing a cascade of annoying physical symptoms— mediocre digestion, mild headaches, chronic congestion in her ear, itchy skin. None was terrible, but together they were a big distraction. After two trips to her regular acupuncturist, there was little improvement. The acupuncturist decided it was time for more drastic measures: He was going to try a dramatic treatment that was akin to pushing a reset button on a machine. Success! Joan was freed from the nagging ailments and experienced a thorough rejuvenation. I suggest you seek out the equivalent treatment, Libra: Push the reset button. DO IT 3 Across FREE WILL ASTROLOGY 9.03.08 THAT’S HOW IT’S GONNA BE BY ROB BREZSNY working on, Virgo. Its initial splash into the world may be a bit rocky and fraught with dicey challenges. But I’m here to say that if you’re a vigilant caretaker in the early going, it will grow to maturity. #36.03 Flippin’ Sweet atre” host Cooke 8 “That’s okay, take your time” 9 Kennedy couturier Cassini 10 It’s good to get some every so often 11 Bake sale sponsor, sometimes 12 Get one’s ass in gear 18 Fit 20 Inactive 22 “Happy Birthday ___” 23 Men’s 4x100 meter medley relay winners at the 2008 Olympics 24 Latvia’s capital 27 Giants shortstop Vizquel 28 “___ the season to be jolly” 33 Poetry competition 35 Wedding exchanges 37 Chopin piece 38 Baseball Hallof-Famer Ryan 41 Complain loudly 42 “The Year of the ___” (1984 designation by Newsweek) 43 “WALL-E” coreleaser 45 Put under 46 Campaign encapsulation 47 The only Blues Brother to reappear in “Blues Brothers 2000” 48 Japan’s equivalent of the Mafia 49 “It’ll be just a moment” 50 Stingy people 52 Nobel Prizewinning physicist Bohr 54 Michelle Phillips and Cass Elliot, musically 56 Nuclear family member 57 Silent ___ (presidential nickname) FOOD 34 CROSSWORD :: ASTROLOGY CASCADIA WEEKLY rear end 31 Literature LIVE! THURSDAY, SEPT. 11th, 7pm FILM 24 CLASSIFIEDS 28 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FOOD 34 EVENTS PNBA Book Award Winner & IndieBound Favorite World-Renowned Canopy Biologist GARTH STEIN will introduce his bestselling novel THE ART OF RACING IN THE RAIN From the author of How Evan Broke His Head and Other Secrets... A heart-wrenching but deeply funny and ultimately uplifting story of family, love, loyalty, and hope, The Art of Racing in the Rain is a beautifully crafted and captivating look at the wonders and absurdities of human life . . . as only a dog could tell it. VILLAGE BOOKS T h e Be s t C h o i c e f o r I m m e d i a t e M e d i c a l C a r e 7 Days a Week ➲ No Appointment Necessary Board Certified M.D.’s on Staf f ➲ ➲ ➲ ➲ ➲ ➲ ➲ ➲ CURRENTS 8 WORDS 13 GET OUT 15 STAGE 16 ART 18 MUSIC 20 a FREE event at Northwest Ave. Clinic CASCADIA WEEKLY #36.03 9.03.08 DO IT 3 MAIL 4 VIEWS 6 4029 Northwest Ave. One block north of Jerry Chambers Chevrolet 32 (360) 734-2330 Flu & Other Immunizations Injury & Illness Treatment Lab & X-Ray Available Mammography & Ultrasound Available Occupational Health Care School, Sports & DOT Physicals Travel Consultations Work-Related Injuries Squalicum Parkway Patients: Please See Us at Our New Location Urgent Care for Medicare & DSHS Patients Welcome Petite thru Plus Sizes Casual Wear Business Wear Evening Wear Shoes & Purses 1905 James Street, Bellingham exit 254, 1 block west of McDonalds 738-7759 www.the-clothes-rack.com HOURS: Monday–Saturday, 10am–6pm Sunday, 12pm–4pm rear end COMICS Criminal Defense, Civil & Family Law Mark@Lustick.com YOUHAVEHEArDABOUTIT #OMESEEFORYOURSELF Bare Escentuals How could you ditch him in that barren wasteland where he toils in the biting cold breaking rocks on the work gang and eating only stale crusts of bread and watery soup? All because he moved to Siberia to be with you. Oh, sorry— Colorado. No, breaking up isn’t a laugh riot, but if a guy’s going to get dumped somewhere, a mountain paradise with hordes of hot ski bunnies isn’t exactly the Gulag annex. And besides, he chose to move there. I’m guessing you didn’t encourage him to do it, thinking, “Hah! I’ll lure him out, ditch him and ruin his life!” As for your idea of moving home to finish school, if it’s for educational reasons, have at it. Otherwise, maybe you could do the adult thing and tell him what he surely already knows—that it isn’t working—instead of giving him the idea that you aren’t breaking up, just moving. Well, eventually giving him the idea. When the U-Haul pulls up, he’s sure to figure it out. FOOD 34 San Francisco 4AKING#AREOF9OUR3KIN3INCE WORDS 13 sWWWLISASKINCARECOMs,INCOLN3TREET3TEs4UES4HURS3AT ROCKY MOUNTAIN HI AND GOODBYE G◊R◊A◊N◊D ◊ O◊P◊E◊N◊I◊N◊G ◊ S◊P◊E◊C◊I◊A◊L 10 95 Cuts! $ Regularly $13 ◊ Children $11 Receive 20% Off of any Hair Care Product — Wide Selection! Next to Trader Joes! Mon–Fri 9–8, Sat 9–7 Sun 10–6 ◊ Call: 360.715.1040 ◊ 2430 James St. Bellingham Family Health Clinic Be Satisfied With Your Health Care. Men & Women’s Health plus Families Flu, Coughs, Sore Throats, Skin Issues and Rashes, Birth Control, Menopause, Allergies, High Blood Pressure, Depression and Well Primary Care. Immunizations: We have Gardisil: HPV. Cholesterol Screening, Strep Throat Tests. Sports Physicals, Travel, Pap Exams. Monday – Friday 8am to 6pm Located next to the College Bookstore in Sehome Village. Bonnie Sprague, ARNP Insurance Accepted www.bellinghamhealth.com Kirstin Curtis, ARNP “People are happy seeing Nurse Practitioners” Renee Wilgress, ARNP for appointment call: 360-756-9793 CURRENTS 8 I’ve been dating my boyfriend for two years, and I’m miserable. I want to break it off, but he moved to Colorado to be with me while I finish college, and has no friends here. The last thing I want to do is hurt him. I was thinking about moving back home and finishing college there. —Stuck ART 18 Fmr. State & City Prosecutor Lisa Crosier Skin Care SPECIALIZING IN s-ICRODERMABRASION s!CNE!NTI!GING s0EELS7AXING s#LINICAL3KIN#ARE s0ERSONALIZED-AKEUP%DUCATION MUSIC 20 (360) 685-4221 STAGE 16 Fmr. Bellingham City Prosecutor Mark A. Kaiman GET OUT 15 Jeffrey A. Lustick Jeff@Lustick.com FILM 24 Experienced, Effective Counsel for Citizens in Whatcom, San Juan & Skagit Counties CLASSIFIEDS 28 CLASSIFIEDS 28 Lustick Law Firm VIEWS 6 Your problem isn’t that you don’t have the perfect boyfriend right here, right now, but that you’re in a panic about it, probably making you about as seductive as a mountain lion that hasn’t eaten for weeks: “Shall I pounce on you from above, claw your heart out and eat it raw, or do you feel you need a glass of wine first?” You appear to be confusing your love life with The Amazing Race. Your sister, your friends, and all their men are licking fondue off each other’s fingers on a plane to the Swiss Alps, while you’re in the dressing room of some dusty sporting goods store, waiting for the manager to come back from lunch and unstick the zipper of your snowsuit. And why aren’t you doing exactly what your sister and friends are doing, exactly when they’re doing it? Um...because you are not them? Sadly, there’s a good chance some of them are also better at long division, and have much shinier hair. At the moment, you’re with some guy you’re not that into, who makes you feel bad because he treats you like an afterthought. This should tell you something—something like, “Hey, self, maybe it’s time to leave!” What, leave? Because a guy has you feeling not just starved but “STARVED” for attention? Well, does sticking around for more seem like a better idea? Yeah, it’s harsh out there, particu- Open daily in downtown Mount Vernon Your natural market since 1973 MAIL 4 I grew up witnessing my sister and close friends being chased after by many guys, some even claiming to be in love. Then there’s me, 23, never in a relationship, and barely ever sought after. I’m not unattractive, but I’ve just begun to get it together with the clothes, the hair and whatnot. I lost my virginity last year in a hookup on vacation. I’m now dating somebody I don’t see as relationship material, but who goes MIA, calls randomly and makes me initiate us hanging out. I’m literally STARVED for attention, tired of coming in last place and meeting men who act interested, but turn out to be distant, sex-crazed maniacs. I feel sick to my stomach when I see how late in the game I am compared to my friends. Am I doing something wrong? —Late Bloomer 360-336-9777 DO IT 3 SECOND TO NUN Celebrating 35 years of food and community. 9.03.08 THE ADVICE GODDESS larly at 23. Guys are distant because they’re 23 and not that comfortable with themselves. They’re also vats of hormones with shoes and maybe a mustache for a disguise. In other words, it’s not exactly the ideal time to find lasting love. It is, however, a great time to figure out what you want in a lasting love by trying on a lot of fleeting “love.” To do that, you’ll have to stop living like you’ll turn into a cleaning lady and your car will turn into a corn dog if you don’t land the romance of the century by midnight. While you’re at it, you might relax some in the “grass is greener” department. Judge the value of what you’re doing by whether it makes you happy, not by whether your friends did it by age 12. Try to remember that things aren’t always as they seem from the outside. Sure, way back when, maybe there were a few claims of love tossed at your sister and friends, and maybe even a “Wherefore art thou, Heather”— if that’s what it took for a 14-year-old boy to get Heather to let him stick his hand inside her bra. Dig in to the Freshness! #36.03 BY AMY ALKON ALKON CASCADIA WEEKLY rear end 33 FOOD 34 34 FOOD chow RE V IE W S PROF IL E S FILM 24 CLASSIFIEDS 28 REC IPE S CASCADIA WEEKLY #36.03 9.03.08 DO IT 3 MAIL 4 34 Eat Local Week YOUR BODY WILL THANK YOU WHATCOM AND Skagit county farmers are making eating local a delicious reality that exists beyond the realm of a trendy buzzword. Every year, more small farms pop up in the countryside, and many existing farms grow stronger by building lasting relationships with enthusiastic chefs and consumers. Whether you believe in buying locally produced food because it cuts pollution from transportation and lowers our dependency on oil, or simply because it feels good to personally know who is producing your food, now is the time to jump in and take part in local gastronomic delights. Sustainable Connection’s fourth annual Eat Local Week is bigger and more dynamic than ever, so from Sept. 7-14 join in the celebration of our region’s agricultural bounty. Festivities include a farm tour, cooking classes, film screenings and local lunch and dinner specials at featured restaurants. Eat Local Week is a great way to celebrate our farmers during peak harvest season and feel a connection with this place. Eating local food, however, does not have to be something ATTEND we relish once a year; it can be WHAT: Eat Local an everyday delight. Week One easy way to eat localWHEN: Sept. 7-14 WHERE: Throughly is to cook more. Use local out Whatcom and produce and either get fancy Skagit counties or keep it simple. My friend INFO: 647-7093 or Gretchen Norman, from Holissconnect.org tic Homestead Farm, pointed out that veggies fresh from the farm generally just need olive oil or butter and salt and pepper to make a fantastic dish. Be flexible and ready to substitute. If you can’t find local strawberries, use blueberries. If a recipe calls for spinach and you can’t find it locally, try chard or kale. Make a goal to include something locally produced or harvested into your everyday diet. Shop at the farmers’ markets on Saturdays in Bellingham, SPECIAL EAT LOCAL WEEK EVENTS FILM CYNTHIA ST. CLAIR VIEWS 6 CURRENTS 8 WORDS 13 GET OUT 15 STAGE 16 ART 18 MUSIC 20 BY DANA ZEMEL Mike Boxx takes a ride at Boxx Berrry Farm. See him in action during the Sept. 13 Farm Tour happening during Eat Local Week Ferndale, Anacortes, and Mount Vernon, or visit the new Local Food Exchange at 1314 Railroad Ave. from 12-6pm six days a week (closed Sundays) and find local fruits and vegetables from more than 15 small farmers and producers. Another option is to create a food tradition for yourself and family: canning, pickling, drying or preserving is a fun and rewarding way to spend a day in the peak harvest. The pay-off in winter? Open your cupboard or freezer and help yourself to homemade pickles, jams, pesto, tomato sauce and onion marmalade. To get professional guidance with canning and preserving, Ciao Thyme’s “In The Kitchen” cooking school offers a class Sept. 23 on quick pickles and basic jams (call 927-4890 for more details). Whatcom Community College’s Community Education offers “Canning 101: The Fall Harvest class” Sept. 23 (call 383-3200 for more details). It was not long ago that people subsisted primarily on locally grown meats, dairy and produce. Here in Whatcom County, we are lucky to have a relatively long harvest season that allows us to enjoy fresh veggies through December and certain foods like seafood, dairy, meat and locally processed foods we can savor all year round. Happy eating! From 6-10pm Tues., Sept. 9 , watch Good Food: Sustainable Food & Farming in the Pacific Northwest at Boundary Bay’s beer garden, 1107 Railroad Ave. The film features Whatcom County locals Rosalinda Guillen of Community to Community, the Alm Hill Gardens crew, and Ben Scholtz from Mallard Ice Cream. Speakers will follow. Suggested donation is $6-10, not including food or drink. FOOD At 6:30 Fri., Sept. 12, at the Co-op Connections building, Dandelion Organic Delivery will present “Wild Greek Kitchen: Simple Traditional Greek Dishes Using Wild and Local Northwest Veggies.” Suggested donation is $10-$20. Call 933-1130 to register. FARMS From 9am-5pm Sat., Sept. 13, take part in Tour de Farms: Visit eight farms and tour in one of three ways —by bus, bike or carpool. Visit a berry farm, an educationally focused farm, a winery, a buffalo ranch and more all in one day. WellSpring is a Private, Fully Accredited, WA State Approved School, founded in 1992. Student transcripts and portfolios are transferable to all schools and colleges. FOOD 34 CLASSIFIEDS 28 FILM 24 MUSIC 20 ART 18 920 24TH ST. Bellingham (360)671-5433 www.wellspringcommunityschool.com Garden · Bakery · Cafe STAGE 16 Gift & Wine Shop Fabulous Lunches & Rustic Pastries Fresh ideas for planning your weekend every Wednes- Apple Cider Donuts Hard Cider & Wine Gluten-Free Pastries OALPAI>AN3)-0(.,,4 WORDS 13 n Gravenstei ilable Apples A va ber Mid-Septem GET OUT 15 5-lb Apple Pie CURRENTS 8 and stewardship projects.” VIEWS 6 inspiring others in meaningful ways and to make a difference through community service Students are engaged in an academically creative and challenging learning environment. A smorgasbord of events & specials featuring the finest in local food & agriculture! ) Nearly 2-dozen restaurants offering all-local specials all week long ) 1st annual “Tour de Farms”, by bike, bus or carpool, 9/13 ) Whatcom premier of Seattle International Film Festival selection Good Food at Boundary Bay, 9/9 ) 8th annual Harvest Dinner, 9/14 ) Cooking classes, picnics, recipes & much more! For all the delicious details visit www.SustainableConnections.org Choose local businesses taking action for a healthy community. MAIL 4 life choices; to enjoy the process of informing and DO IT 3 skills and ethics necessary to make responsible, positive 9.03.08 to develop the knowledge, At WellSpring, each student receives the personal attention necessary to reach his or her goals. #36.03 “Our goals are for our students COLLEGE PR*ÊUÊCAREER TRACKS CASCADIA WEEKLY Co-Founders, Co-Directors Bill Snow, Ph.D Headmaster Professor History * Political Science Laurie Riskin-Snow Program Director WELLSPRING COMMUNITY HIGH SCHOOL 35 FISTFUL of We’re giving away up to You can enjoy our full lunch or dinner buffet for only two dollars every Tuesday at Northwood Casino. Great food, great price, great fun! during September. Drawings are EVERY Friday & Saturday from 1:30 PM - 11:30 PM See Winners Booth for details. 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