210 - Valley Planet
Transcription
210 - Valley Planet
VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 #0604015062415 READ THE PLANET, IT’S FREE WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM (256) 533 • 4613 Entertainment, Arts & Lifestyle JUNE 4 - 24, 2015 INSIDE THIS ISSUE: Microwave Dave Day, Cipher-Inflections at Mango’s Restaurant, Recycle Different, Boston’s Tommy DeCarlo, Lifelong Learning, Local Farmers Markets, Dr. Anarcho: BB King, Doctor Who – Shada, What Then Must We Do?, An Eye for What’s Really Valuable, The Greatest Music & Event Calendars on Planet Earth!!! 2 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM #0604015062415 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 THE VALLEY PLANET In The Planet june 4 - 24, 2015 NEXT ISSUE: JUNE 25, 2015 203 Grove Ave., Huntsville Al, 35801, phone 256.533-4613 THE VALLEY PLANET VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 #0604015062415 Table of Contents 3 Letter From The Publisher 3 On the Cover 4 Riding The Pulse with Boston’s Tommy DeCarlo, Tom Colbey, Jr. 4 The Microwave Dave Music Education Foundation and Microwave Dave Day, Jane DeNeefe 5 An Eye For What’s Really Valuable, John Davis 5 Cipher-Inflections at Mango’s Restaurant, Tom Colbey, Jr. 5 The Farmer, The Cowhand, and YOU Should be Friends, Jim Zielinski 6 News of the Weird, Chuck Shepherd 7 What Then Must We Do?, Bonnie Roberts 7 Zee’s Rocket City bEAT, Jim Zielinski 7 Dr. Anarcho’s Rx For Old Stuff That Don’t Suck: B.B.King 8 Sci-Fi Review: Doctor Who, Matthew Kresal 8 Lifelong Learning has a Home at The University of Alabama in Huntsville Excerpts from an article by Linda McAllister 8 The Jazz Lounge, Jackie Anderson 10 Music Calendar Begins 11 Music Calendar Ends 12 Events Calendar Begins 13 More Events Calendar 14 Events Calendar Ends 15 Free Will Astrology, Rob Brezsny 15 Unusual Place for Entertainment, John Davis 16 Marley From The Darkside, Marley 16 Pet Store Disappointment, Mark Hauer 16 Unchained Maladies, Ricky Thomason 17 ReLit: Smokin’ Good Reads Worth A ReKindle: Big Bad Love, Review by Ricky Thomason 17 The Owl’s Eye: A Tale of Many Cities, John Davis 17 Auntie Jen’s Animal Crazy 17 Recycle Different, John Davis 18 Music Exchange 18 To Yuno From Yunohoo 18 The Single Guy: Communi-Date, Aaron Hurd 18 Regional Concert Calendar Publisher Jill E. Wood Calendar Joani Williams Graphic Design Douglas A. Lange Contributors Bonnie Roberts Elaine Nelson Ricky Thomason Jim Zielinski Tim Owen Aaron Hurd John Davis Tom Colbey, Jr. Jennifer Roberts Marley & Her Human Jackie Anderson Matthew Kresal Jane DeNeefe Mark Hauer “Stop looking at me like that!” - Capt Lewis Nixon On The Cover : Letter from the Publisher T o me, June always signals vacation, school’s out, swimming, picnics, hammocks, and family. Summer has always seemed like a break that you look forward to all year. I am not sure why… Still stuck in childhood, I guess, because I haven’t had a summer off since I was in school! With fathers’ day and my father’s birthday both this month, I have a mixture of feelings. This is our first fathers’ day without our Dad. And June 13th is the first of his birthdays without him. I have the greatest of memories. I think of his big grin and his booming laugh. How I could go for one of his big, tight hugs. This summer and this month are full of great opportunities to have fun, make memories, and to spend time and energy on things and with people who are most important to you. Both our events and music calendars have tons of great options again this issue! Thank you to all of you who read the Valley Planet and thank you to everyone in the community who contributes to it, distributes it, and especially to our advertisers who keep it free for everyone. We appreciate your calls, emails, and letters and especially love the smiles and the high fives! Thank you to my Dad, who always believed in me, was always proud of me, and always loved me, no matter what. And to my Mom, who still does. Jill E. Wood Amita B. Bhakta “E migrated as a teenager from India and moved around in US, finally settled in beautiful Tennessee Valley of North Alabama. Happily married with two sons and successful business owner, yet art is where my journey begins and continues on. I was a chemistry major who ended up doing business. Even when it appeared that my path was not leading me to art yet all along it was propelling me towards it. I was submerged into family, friends, business, community; yet my creative passage whether it was in paint, clay or words always stayed on course. I am pretty much self taught artist, my work vibrates with my thoughts, my feelings it is a journal of my heart. Now as my journey continues, I feel blessed that God has granted me the heart of an artist. He’s given me such nurturing, and supportive family, and surrounded me with valuable friends and wonderful community in North Alabama. I feel extremely lucky to have the opportunity of combining the cultural ideals of the two vastly different free nations: one of my ancestors and the one of my family’s future.” www.artbyamita.com Thank you for reading the fine print of the Valley Planet. The Valley Planet and valleyplanet.com are published every three weeks by J W Publications in Huntsville, AL. You can pick up the paper free all over the place or get it free on the web. Copyright 2003 by the Valley Planet, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction or use without our permission is strictly prohibited. The views and opinions expressed within these pages and on the website are not necessarily those of the Valley Planet or its staff. The Valley Planet is not responsible for unsolicited manuscripts or art. Back issues are available for viewing on our website www. valleyplanet.com in the archives section. You may reach the Valley Planet office @ 256.533.4613 or by mail at Valley Planet 203 Grove Ave. Huntsville, AL 35801. Contact by email: info@valleyplanet.com. 256-533-4613 Valley Planet Deadline for June 25 issue is June 12, 2015. THE VALLEY PLANET #0604015062415 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 3 Riding The Pulse with Boston’s Tommy DeCarlo by Tom Colbey, Jr. B oston. Say that name, and I think of a wave of great music; the sound of smooth melodies oscillating speaker cone stacks (taller than I was at the time) accompanied by childhood visuals of multi-colored shag carpet, Formicapaneled walls, and beanbag chairs. Say it, and my sixty-two year old father remembers the spaceship flame from his favorite album cover. Say the word, my ten year old niece will belt out the chorus to More Than a Feeling. Say it on a good day, and my ninety-three year old grandfather may remember that one of their songs was performed on The Voice, a show he never misses. It’s a groovy kind of loud that punches both big and minor bruises onto four generations. It takes a special kind of lyrical sincerity for a chorus to embed itself into the mind of a 21st century child as deeply as for the near-retiree who remembers 8-track tapes. A lot of energy (converted from the weighty mass of smash hits and attitude and peace of mind) goes into the atomic blast of a resonating intergenerational pulse through so much time and space and brain. Tommy DeCarlo is in the middle of all that physics. I talked to Tommy about the upcoming Huntsville show, the band, and Boston’s music. Tommy, the new front man, and the embodiment of Boston’s internal intergenerational journey himself, sees graying fans with their own kids and grandkids rocking out in the crowds he sees on tour. Fans create other fans by many methods, having babies is most effective. Tommy appreciates every fan because, since twelve years of age, with his school buddy, Tim, in Utica, New York, he’s been one. He’s dedicated to delivering the goods precisely like the long-rocking fans remember it (how he remembers it, too), to recreating the Boston sound people love (the sound he loves, too). However, he’s also focused on the young; focused on Boston’s own Generation Next fan base personified in ten-year olds like my niece. Tommy’s not just riding the pulse in a sugar high of good fortune, he’s exploring and expanding it. Months before they hit the road for the Life, Love, & Hope tour, Tommy and the band hit rehearsals. Recreating that sound means repeatlooping through those songs until they’re right. “Trying to dial into the original sound,” his body gets tired, but his mind never tires of those songs. Really, though, Tommy is still amazed he’s not singing Boston lyrics into a Karaoke machine at a hometown bar, so the hard work of repeat-loop rehearsals is bonus! Tommy says Tom Scholz is the kind of easy-going it takes to smooth the rough edges inevitably exposed in critical band transitions and the grueling tour grind. Tommy says Tom drives him to get it right, but there are nights when a particular high note just doesn’t happen, and Tom’s cool with that. Really, though, Tommy is still amazed he gets to sing next to the true original, at all, so Tom Scholz being so cool is bonus! The Microwave Dave Music Education Foundation and Microwave Dave Day by Jane DeNeefe, author of Rocket City Rock and Soul: Huntsville Musicians Remember the 1960s H untsville, Alabama Mayor Tommy Battle has issued a proclamation establishing Sunday June 28, 2015 as “Microwave Dave Day,” and the formation of The Microwave Dave Music Education Foundation. You probably already know Microwave Dave, whether as the radio host of Talkin’ the Blues on WJAB and WLRH, as the lead guitar player of Microwave Dave and the Nukes, as a solo blues artist and digital looping pioneer, or as a key focalizer of the cigar box guitar scene. You might have caught him on Science Friday or even seen him hitting the classical music circuit occasionally. Recently, Dave received an admiring Tweet from author Stephen King, but accolades from the famous cannot replace Dave’s daily bread and butter: repeat bookings. The people of Huntsville have booked Dave for gigs again and again, and he has given back to the community completely, beaming with love at his listeners. It doesn’t matter to Dave whether he can count his audience on one hand or if they fill a stadium; Dave tunes in and connects. His devoted fan Allison Lewis wanted to find a way to thank him and honor his service. She knew others would as well. The planning started out a secret but friends knew Dave would not want an embarrassing surprise - and sure enough, when Dave heard the idea, he was just not okay with it being all about him. He would accept a gig’s fee for playing a gig, but any extra money should benefit the community. Out of this, The Microwave Dave Music Education Foundation was born. The Foundation will support the kind of philanthropy Dave has already been doing on his own for years. The Microwave Dave Day celebration will include a concert to honor Dave for his ongoing social and musical contributions to our community. The concert will be held at A.M. Booth’s Lumberyard downtown from 3 P.M. until 9 P.M. 108 Cleveland Ave NW, Huntsville, AL 35801. This family-friendly event will include many of Huntsville’s finest musicians, culminating in a performance by Huntsville’s rockingest blues band Microwave Dave and the Nukes. At some point the mayor will present Dave Gallaher: beloved blues man, diplomat, teacher and scholar, with a well-deserved key to the city. A $10 donation is requested to cover the costs of the event. All proceeds beyond event expenses will be used to fund The Microwave Dave Music Education Foundation. Please join the Microwave Dave Day Facebook Event Page for updates. Tell your friends! Photo by Dennis Keim. Tommy DeCarlo means we will continue to hear Boston classics on the radio well into my retirement home doddery, that we’ll continue to listen to children sing those always-relevant choruses, and see cover performances of the best of Boston on TV. Most of all, though, it means the Boston-centered strands-a-million pulse will condense right here in downtown Huntsville on June 14 at the VBC Propst Arena! Tommy says the band is jiving well and ready to make the fans proud, and that Huntsville better be prepared… prepared to rock! Follow me on Twitter @colbey_ jr An accelerating rate of attrition holed the Boston ship over the decades, depopulating the crew, the threat of the pulse being short-circuited could have veered the band (and its fans) off course. But, Tommy and other newer members aren’t just finger-plugging empty wall space. In the wake of “Great music that keeps the band alive, provides staying power,” they build anew. “There’s always writing going on, but right now we’re focused on the Life, Love, & Hope tour.” Fans are going to have to wait for what that might mean, but my guess is another pulse extension may loom in the distance. Expect another atomic blast of a resonating intergenerational pulse that will continue through even more time and space and brain. 4 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM #0604015062415 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 THE VALLEY PLANET An Eye for What’s Really Valuable by John Davis P hotographers see differently than we do. They place you in yellow poppy fields and make you believe you are there. Their lens draws in fresh fields of breeze and color. Or, your imagination sparkles as they put you at rest under a gnarled old oak tree. With a camera they capture bursting pinks, reds, and yellows from the pistil of an orchid. When they photograph dogs, or even squirrels, you want to pet them. The same can be said of our natural parks. Greg Lein, the Alabama State Parks director, says, “Finding a place to unwind and enjoy the beautiful natural landscape of Alabama is easy.” Easy indeed. He notes most Alabamians are less than an hour from a state park. Who doesn’t like fishing, camping or canoeing, or just sitting and watching a lake, or a river roll by? Who is so dead of soul they can’t enjoy being in the majesty of a forest? We have it all. Lein adds, “You do not have to break the bank to get outside to have an adventure or just relax in the sun this spring break.” Yes indeed. Caves, waterfalls, hiking trails, the Gulf of Mexico itself, and animals in the wild. We have it all. Or do we? As Governor Bentley says, we are now broke. We are Alabama, welfare bums who get more from the Federal government than we put in. Now, in a discovery that came after the election, we find we are grossly in debt in State funding, too. We’re so broke the governor calls our (Food Diversity Series) by Tom Colbey, Jr. “A Get Fed” budgeting dysfunctional. What to do? One option is to close the state parks, and ‘save’ money. In Arizona, they are confronted with a Navajo nation that wants to monetize the Grand Canyon. They want to build a giganto-Mall on their part of the canyon rim, with a cable car that will ride you to the fast food places down on the Colorado River bank. This billion buck enterprise will be visible from six of the seven overlooks in the Grand Canyon National Park itself. This is not a joke, or satire, either. The god almighty Dollar has spoken. Sacred stillness will be replaced by zany plastic people. “Get your yucks at a Micky D’s and cast your burger bags upon the waters of the Grand Canyon!” will be the new mantra, for all I know. Wonder of ages, meet Walmart. The same rationale is why we are closing the parks. They don’t make money. What gives wealth to the soul cannot make a buck in this state, so they are going to close them. We can’t afford, nor can we manage, to make people happy. The Farmer, the Cowhand, and YOU Should be Friends by Jim Zielinski O ur farmers markets bridge the vast grower/consumer chasm fostered by The Age of Supermarket Chains, shepherding an unwary, convenience-hungry America towards blander and blander tastes and, oftentimes, lower nutritive values. Many area emporia also maintain a benevolent thrust, utilizing profits to assist small business and the needy, while all strive to keep LOCAL money LOCAL. One can’t address every aspect of every market; like puffballs, they materialize overnight. But among other items, expect Fresh Fruits/Veggies; Organic Meat and/or Poultry Products; Cut Flowers; Hand-woven Baskets; Baked Goods; Local Honeys; Artisanal Goat (Chèvre)/Sheep (Brebis) Cheeses and/or Soaps/Lotions…and, always, surprises! CAVEATS: Always shop early for the best selection. Open markets’ comparatively freewheeling nature allows them considerable adaptability. Don’t depend on ending times to be “the time things end”; closing hours tend towards approximations based on that day’s haul, sales, WEATHER, and/or special circumstances. In other words, don’t arrive fashionably late, or you’ll feel like Gary Cooper about forty minutes into High Noon. The manifold payment options vary by vendor… but everybody takes cash!!!! Lastly…for those not on Facebook, or even online, many markets’ heavy reliance on FB is disadvantageous. Contact them directly for specifics. Clip and post this article…that’s why fridges and walls were created. Then catch the “zee’s rocket city bEAT” column for updates and special market events, including live entertainment. Now, leave us wade into the fray, keeping our Runcible Spoons at the ready, and we’ll see you booth-side! DAILY/MULTIPLE DAYS Ayers Farmers Market [2015 Memorial Parkway, SW @ Governor’s Drive, SW; (256) 533- THE VALLEY PLANET Cipher-Inflections at Mango’s Restaurant ll Skin Teeth Nah Laugh” “Close Mouths Nah Once I stopped reading the words, I started feeling them. Eating the food helped. The story of how the food came to be is the hyperkinetic turbulence burn of multiculturalism. It smells like a multiple personality disorder of Euro-flags and Afro-tribes (if schizophrenia had a taste!); it rewired my brain so I could listen to all the voices melting into the chicken. “Moon Ah Run Till Day Ketch Am” The words are English enough to provide major components to the lingo, but there’s a lot happening in the strange cypher-inflections in the middle. Think of the missing center of a multi-thousand piece puzzle just started; after nailing the corners quickly, and feeling uber-brilliant, I won’t make it look like the front box cover for a mentally disabling number of hours. “Tongue Nah Get Teeth But He Ah Bite” The cuisine is Dutch and French and Portuguese and African. Don’t leave out the Spanish because they owned a lot of the geography. It’s a lot of Anglo and Irish and Scottish and Welch because the British owned a healthy chunk of the real estate, also. Because of the British, it’s East Indian, too; it’s a lot of the old world and the best parts of the new world, which means it’s our kind of Indian. It’s black, white, lots of browns. “Hand Wash Hand Mek Hand Come Clean” “One One Dutty Build Dam” At Mango’s eating West Indian cuisine, strange words spirit-loop through my brain like a Bob Marley song that doesn’t quite sound English but remains so comfortable it reminds me of my own tongue. My eyes tell me I’ve seen the buffet before, my mouth tells me I haven’t. The chicken and cabbage and rice and soups are the big puzzle pieces in the corners, but there’s a lot of West Indian flavors in the middle just mango-melting me. “The Same Dog That Brings A Bone Carry A Bone” 5667; http://ayersfarmersmarket.com] Daily, 8:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. It’s Jack-o-Lantern Central, but their Etheridge, TN Amish connection ensures there’s much, much more. If the verbal mulatto on the wall isn’t clue enough, Caribbean cooking was an integrated multicultural experience centuries before “fusion” became a foodie-hipster buzzword, and with the half-planet ethno-stew fermenting in the kitchen, there’s so much going on at the buffet line at Mango’s Restaurant, I’m just going to have go back every week. Decatur Farmers Market [211 First Avenue, SE; (256) 476-5595; www.decaturfarmersmarket. org ] Through November; Spring Times, Monday, Wednesday, Friday, & Saturday, 7:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. Summer extended hours/days, as well as fall hours/closing date, based on demand and produce availability. “Never Cuss The Bridge You Cross” Guntersville Farmers Market [Civitan Park, 1500 Sunset Drive; (256) 571-7590; www.guntersvilleal.org; grover.williams@guntersvilleal. org] through November; Tuesday, Thursday, & Saturday, 7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Doesn’t lakeside shopping sound inviting? Covered facility, off US Highway 431 South @ Lurleen B. Wallace Drive (right @ GSV Chamber of Commerce Welcome Center). Limestone County Farmers Market [409 Green Street West; (256) 233-6400; www.limestonecounty-al.gov/LC_Farmers_Market.html] Closing Date/Times TBA; Tuesday & Friday; 6:30 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. A covered facility, LCFM is open rain or shine (excepting severe weather) till demand or seasonal items prove insufficient. Madison County Farmer’s Market [1022 Cook Avenue, NW; (256) 532-1661; farmersmarket@ madisoncountyal.gov] 2 June – 14 November; Tuesday, Friday, & Saturday, 7:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. …is that which locals referred to as THE Farmers Market for eons, perhaps due to the fact that, as an entity, it dates from the 1800’s! Covered facility. TUESDAY Farmers Market @ Latham United Methodist Church [109 Weatherly Road, SE; (256) 881-4069; http://farmersmarketatlathamumc.org; Facebook; farmersmarketinfo@lathamumc.org] May – October; 3:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. Thanks to the Blakesworthington Nix and Sharon Ryan families, I’m well aware of Latham. Enter via Strong Road. The market, not the families. #0604015062415 With Lauren in the kitchen, Ian upfront, and their daughter Keisha serving, if you need help understanding the words on the wall, ask. If you’re lucky, Lauren may tell you other West Indian proverbs. You get puzzles and culture and intense flavors with that $8.99 buffet. Get the full experience. Though, trying to get into the Mango’s parking lot, I always end up at IHOP or the bookstore, so watch closely. I have a mission of eating odd food or in odd places, or the power combo of odd food in odd places. If you know a place that fits: colbeyisthomas@gmail.com Follow me on Twitter @colbey_ jr Farmers Market @ Meridianville First Baptist Church [175 Monroe Road; (256) 828-1607; www.tuesdayfarmersmarket.com; tuesdaymarketmeridianville@gmail.com] June – August; 4:00 – 7:00 p.m.; 1 – 29 September, 4:00 – 6:00 p.m. Covered facility; supply/weather will dictate whether dates extend into October. NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center Farmers Market [Parking Lot/“Food Truck Corral,” SE Corner of Rideout and Martin Roads, Redstone Arsenal; Bill Mayo, (256) 544-7564] through October; 10:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. NEW location! Arsenal access is required. WEDNESDAY Terry Heights/Hillendale Market @ Meadow Drive Baptist Church [100 Meadow Drive, NW; (256) 337-0663; www.meadowdrivebaptist.org; JSA1957@bellsouth.net] June – October; 4:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m. Bear in mind, THFM is Cash Only! THURSDAY Greene Street Market @ Nativity [304 Eustis Avenue, SE @ Greene Street; (256) 682-4429; www.greenestreetmarket.com; greenestreetmarket@gmail.com] through August, 4:00 – 8:00 p.m.; September, 4:00 – 7:00 p.m.; October, 3:00 – 7:00 p.m. In the vanguard, if not in fact the spearhead, of our local movement. Hosts of the “Tater Toss.” VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 **GSM Store [208 Eustis Avenue, SE; (256) 763-6616; greenestreetmarketstore@gmail.com]: Monday – Friday, 10:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.; Sunday, 9:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. HealthWorks Farmers Market [Plaza Resource Center, 101 Governor’s Drive, SE @ Madison Street; (256) 265-6288] through 1 October, 7:30 a.m. – Noon. Cash/Check Only. SATURDAY Athens Saturday Market [Farmers Market Pavilion, 409 West Green Street; (256) 998-0232; glenn.laurie@gmail.com; www.athenssaturdaymarket.com] 6 June – August, 8:00 a.m. – Noon. Covered facility. Bailey Cove Farmers Market @ St. Thomas Episcopal Church [12200 Bailey Cove Road, SE; (256) 880-0248/0247; http://stthomas-hsv. dioala.org; BCFarmersmarket@gmail.com] June – September, 8:00 a.m. – Noon. Closed on Independence and Labor Day weekends. Madison City Farmers Market @ Trinity Baptist Church [1088 Hughes Road; (256) 656-7841; www.madisoncityfarmersmarket.com; info@madisoncityfarmersmarket.com] 11 April – 26 September, 8:00 a.m. – Noon; 3 October – 21 November, 9:00 a.m. – Noon. No re-sellers all goods are produced within a 100-mile radius. WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 5 tem matched no known organism, and less than 1 percent was human. Weill Cornell Medical College researchers announced in February that they had identified much DNA by swabbing passenger car and station surfaces, finding abundant matches to beetles and flies (and even traces of inactive anthrax and bubonic plague) but that since so few organisms have been fully DNA-”sequenced,” there was no cause for alarm. The lead researcher fondly compared the bacteria-teeming subway to a “rain forest,” deserving “awe and wonder” that “there are all these species” that so far cause humans relatively little harm. by Chuck Shepherd Crime Does Pay When officials in Richmond, California, learned in 2009 that 70 percent of the city’s murders and firearms assaults were directly linked to 17 people, they decided on a bold program: to pay off those 17 to behave themselves. For a budget of about $1.2 million a year, the program offers individual coaching, health care coverage and several hundred dollars a month in stipends to former thugs who stick to their “life map” of personal goals and conflict-resolution training. According to an April report on National Public Radio’s “This American Life,” Richmond is no longer among the most dangerous towns in America, with the murder rate in fact having fallen from its all-time yearly high of 62 to 11 last year. Can’t Possibly Be True One might believe that a 6th-grader, suspended for a whole year after school officials found a “marijuana” leaf in his backpack, might be immediately un-suspended if authorities (after three field tests) found the leaf was neither marijuana nor anything else illegal. Not, however, at Bedford Middle School in Roanoke, Virginia, whose officials said they had acted on gossip that students called the leaf “marijuana,” and therefore under the state schools’ “look-alike-drug” policy, the 6th-grader was just as guilty as if the leaf were real. Formerly a high-achiever student, he has, since last September, suffered panic attacks and is under the care of a pediatric psychiatrist, and his parents filed a federal lawsuit in February. The Job of Researcher Biologist Regine Gries of Canada’s Simon Fraser University devotes every Saturday to letting about 5,000 bedbugs suck blood from her arm -- part of research by Gries and her biologist-husband Gerhard to develop a pheromonebased “trap” that can lure the bugs from infested habitats like bedding. (She estimates having been bitten 200,000 times since the research began, according to a May Wired magazine report.) Regine holds each mesh-topped jar of bugs against her arm for about 10 minutes each (which Gerhard cannot do because he is allergic) -- leading, of course, to hours of itchiness and swelling in the name of progress. The Continuing Crisis The three gentle grammar pedants (one an environmental lawyer calling himself “Agente Punto Final,” i.e., “Agent Period”) devoted to ridding Quito, Ecuador, of poorly written street graffiti, have been patrolling the capital since November 2014, identifying misplaced commas and other atrocities and making sneaky corrective raids with spray paint. Punto Final told The Washington Post in March that he acts out of “moral obligation” -- that “punctuation matters, commas matter, accents matter.” As police take vandalism seriously in Quito, the three must act stealthily, in hoodies and ski masks, with one always standing lookout. Suspicions Confirmed Almost half of the DNA collected from a broad swath of the New York City subway sys- 6 Latest Religious Messages “I’m doing what God wants,” Mike Holpin, 56, told British TV’s Channel 5 in April. “In the Bible, God says go forth and multiply,” said the unemployed former carny who claims to have fathered at least 40 children (now aged from 3 to 37) by 20 different women. Holpin has been married three times, and lives with his fiancee Diane and two kids in the Welsh town of Cwm. “I (will) never stop,” Holpin said. “I’m as fertile as sin...” First Things First (1) A 21-year-old man in Hefei, China, collapsed in May after 14 straight days of Internet gaming, yet when paramedics revived him, the man begged them to leave and put him back in front of the screen. (2) Then, two weeks later in Nanchang, China, a 24-year-old female gamer took only a minutes-long break at an Internet cafe, at 4 a.m., to head to a rest room and give birth -- returning with her blood-covered baby in her arms to resume her place at the mouse pad. (London’s Daily Telegraph, reporting from Beijing in May, estimated that China has 24 million Internet “addicts.”) Undignified Deaths It takes only four of the U.S. Supreme Court justices to accept a case for review, but it takes five to stay an execution. On January 23, the Court accepted the case challenging Oklahoma’s death penalty chemicals, but the lead challenger, Charles Warner, lacking that fifth “stay” vote, had been executed eight days earlier (using the challenged chemicals), during the time the justices were deliberating. (The case, Warner vs. Gross, was immediately renamed Glossip V. Gross, but Richard Glossip himself was scheduled to die on January 28. Then, without explanation, at least one other justice supplied Glossip’s missing fifth vote, and, with one day to spare, his execution was stayed until the challenge to the chemicals is resolved.) Only 17 states have specific laws to protect against “revenge porn” (exposing exlovers’ intimate images online as retaliation for a break-up), but a possible solution in the other states, reported CNN in April, is for the victim to file a “takedown” demand under the federal Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which would subject the avenger to penalties for not removing the images. However, to prove copyright, the victim must file copies of the bawdy images with the U.S. Copyright Office, increasing the victim’s trauma (though an office spokesman told CNN that only the copyright examiner would see them). Recurring Themes Drivers Hit With Their Own Cars Recently: (1) A 64-year-old woman was knocked down by her in-gear minivan in Lake Crystal, Minnesota, as she got out to retrieve something from her house (March). (2) A man in South Centre Township, Pennsylvania, was hospitalized after leaving his idling car to adjust something under the hood and apparently adjusted the wrong thing, sending the car thrusting forward (February). (3) Jamie Vandegraaf, 23, was slammed by his own car as he leaped from the driver’s side (not far enough to clear the door, apparently) to avoid South Portland, Maine, police and U.S. Marshals pursuing him concerning the robbery of a Shaw’s supermarket (April). From the Third-World Press Mohamed Nafiu was arrested in Lagos, Nigeria, in April and charged with robbery after he and his pet baboon intercepted a pedestrian leaving a bank and frightened him into fleeing, leaving his money behind. Police said the versatile baboon had also previously snatched victims’ valuables. WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM Police in eastern South Africa were searching in May for the three women who accosted a man in Kwazakhele Township, near Port Elizabeth, raped him in the back seat of a black BMW, collected his semen in a cooler, and sped away without him. Constable Mncedi Mbombo told the Sowetan Live website, “This is really confusing to us because we have never heard of such a thing before.” Great Art Class! Among the requirements of “Visual Arts 104A” at the University of California, San Diego is that, for the final exam, students would make a presentation while nude, in a darkened room. Professor Ricardo Dominguez (who would also be nude for the finals) told KGTV in May that a nude “gesture” was indeed required (and disclosed to students in the first class) as a “performance of self,” a “standard canvas for performance art and body art.” After an inquiry by KGTV, the department chairman announced that nakedness would not be required for course credit -- even though professor Dominguez said in his 11 years teaching the course, no student had ever complained before. The Litigious Society Sober Driver Pays: Sapearya Sao, then 25 and sober that night in 2013 in Portland, Oregon, was rammed by a drunk hit-and-run driver (Nathan Wisbeck), who later rammed another drunk driver -- but Sao finds himself defending the lawsuit by the two people injured in Wisbeck’s second collision. Sao recently settled the lawsuit brought by that second drunk driver, but still faces a $9.8 million lawsuit brought by the estate of the second drunk driver’s late passenger, which argues that if Sao had not pursued Wisbeck in an attempt to identify him, the second crash would not have occurred. (Of course, that crash also might not have occurred if the second driver -- 0.11 blood alcohol -- had been sober.) Wait, What? British forensic scientist Dr. Brooke Magnanti, 39, has written two best-selling books and inspired a TV series based on her life, but she recently filed a lawsuit accusing her ex-boyfriend of libeling her -- by telling people that she was NOT formerly a prostitute. A major part of Magnanti’s biography is how she paid for university studies through prostitution -- which has supposedly enhanced her marketability. Murder “contracts” are ubiquitous in novels and movies, but an actual murder contract cannot be enforced in American courts. However, a recent “contract” case in Norway (according to the Norwegian newspaper Varden, as reported on Vice.com) came down hard on a hit man who got cold feet. The hit man, who stalled repeatedly, was finally sued by the payer, who won a jury verdict (later set aside) for the unrequited killing. Then, because the hit man had attempted to extort even more money from the payer (to find a substitute killer), the hit man was fined the equivalent of $1,200. Unclear on the Concept About three-fourths of the 1,580 IRS workers found to have deliberately attempted to evade federal income tax during the last 10 years have nonetheless retained their jobs, according to a May report by the agency’s inspector general. Some even received promotions and performance bonuses (although an internal rule, adopted last year, now forbids such bonuses to one adjudged to owe back taxes). Latest Religious Messages The long-time swingers’ club in Nashville, Tennessee (The Social Club), is seeking to relocate to the trendy Madison neighborhood -- but near two churches and an upscale private Christian school in a state that bars sex businesses within 1,000 feet of a church or school. The Social Club’s preferred solution: re-open as the United Fellowship Center and attempt to hold services on Sunday mornings, converting, for example, its “dungeon room” into the “choir room.” While courts are reluctant to examine religious doctrine, they often judge cases on “sincerity of belief.” (Any shrieks of “Oh, God!” “Oh, God!” coming from the on-premises swing club are not expected to carry weight with the judges.) #0604015062415 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 Is This a Great Country or What? Lightly regulated investors’ “hedge funds” (the province of wealthy people and large institutions) failed in 2014 (for the sixth straight year) to outearn ordinary stock index funds following the S&P 500. However, at hedge funds, underperformance seems unpunishable -- as the top 25 fund managers still collectively earned $11.62 billion in fees and salaries (an average of over $464 million each). The best-paid hedge fund manager earned $1.3 billion -- more than 48 times what the highest-paid major league baseball player earned. Bright Ideas Body cameras for police officers is yesterday’s news. At the Sanmenxia canyon rapids in China’s Henan province, the issue is body cameras for lifeguards. The all-female White Swan Women’s Rafting Rescue Team has complained recently about swimmers deliberately throwing themselves into the water so they could scream for help -- in order to fondle the women when they arrived to save them. Attaching cameras to the women’s helmets and legs is expected to deter perverts. Pets With Issues Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: (1) A veterinarian at Brighton (U.K.) Pet Hospital, operating on Garry, age 2, a black-and-white cat with a tumor-like bulge in his abdomen, found instead (and removed) a large collection of shoelaces and hairbands that might soon have cost Garry his life. (2) Benno, the Belgian Malinois, of Mountain Home, Arkansas, has eaten a ridiculous series of items over his four years, but his latest meal, in April, was 23 live rounds of .308- caliber bullets (all swallowed after Benno had partially gnawed them). Among Benno’s other delicacies: a bra, lawn mower air filter, TV remote, styrofoam peanuts, drywall, magnets, and an entire loaf of bread still in the wrapper. Least Competent Snake: Owner Aaron Rouse was feeding his python, Winston, a tasty rat in May, using barbecue tongs, when Winston got hold of the tongs and would not let go. Rouse, of Adelaide, Australia, decided not to engage in a tug-of-war, but when he returned (believing Winston would see no food value in the metal clamps), the tongs had been swallowed and were halfway through the snake’s comically bloated body. After taking X-rays (that of course became Internet attractions), a veterinarian at Adelaide University removed the tongs by surgery. Crime in Florida (1) Daniel Palmer, 26, was arrested in Miami Beach in April only after he returned to the crime scene area to berate his victim, a New York tourist from whom he had snatched a “fake” necklace at gunpoint. Palmer initially got away, but was upset and returned to confront the tourist, who pointed out Palmer’s car to an officer. (2) Ms. Joey Mudd, 34, of Largo was arrested in May, along with her husband, Chad, on charges that they routinely shared marijuana and even cocaine with their daughters, aged 13 and 14. Deputies said Ms. Mudd freely admitted that she used the drugs as incentives to get the girls to do their chores and do well in school. Is This a Great Country or What? There’s hardly a more “generic” song in America than “Happy Birthday to You,” but to this day (until a judge renders a decision in a pending case), Warner/Chappel Music is still trying to make big dollars off of the 16-word ditty (15 original words plus a user-supplied 16th). Its original copyright should have expired, at the latest, in 1921, but amendments to the law and technicalities in interpretation (e.g., did the copyright cover all public uses or just piano arrangements?) bring Warner at least $2 million a year in fees. A federal judge in California is expected to rule soon on whether the song is in fact uncopyrightably “generic” -- 125 years after the Hill sisters (Mildred and Patty) composed it. Send your weird news to WeirdNews at earthlink dot net, and P.O. Box 18737, Tampa, FL 33679. Copyright, Chuck Shepherd THE VALLEY PLANET I t is people’s frailties - much more than their “perfect” actions or their pretense at perfection - that most of us truly love. A poet, whom I know well, was quite “frail” at a poetry reading she gave not long ago. The poet dropped her poems, couldn’t find the poem she wanted to read last, and graciously (?) offered to give the audience time for a sing-a-long while she pulled herself together. One dear young man in the audience tried to help her find the lost poem; other conscripted volunteers went through several stacks. It was a human reading by a discombobulated poet - a well-meaning poet who wanted to give her audience her best. Some would say it was “not her best,” but people most likely learned from it, i.e., how not to run from a reading when they want to, how not to give a poetry-reading, and how to help a sister poet look through reams of paper for a poem the poet later realized had never been there in the first place. Ultimately, after a final poem was read, the audience gave the poet thunderous applause. Why she received such applause, she wasn’t exactly sure. No doubt, some people liked or admired her poetry; others were just happy to get on with their lives - finally. Or perhaps the audience felt they had been “engaged” or entertained in ways neither they nor the poet could have foreseen. Recently, a friend of mine died. He played an important role in my life as the first person to publish a book of poetry for me, and, later, he became my good friend. When I think of him at this moment, it is not of his many polished accomplishments as both poet and publisher. What I remember is that, from time to time, he insisted we go off our diets - diets meant to control both sugar and fat to share a gargantuan dessert called “triple-tripletriple chocolate tall cake.” That cake - served with a cherry on top, plus a side of vanilla ice cream, dribbled with the same warm chocolate sauce that was generously poured over the varying layers of chocolate - turned me into a sociopathic cake eater. I had no conscience at all about taking a “bit” more than he. My friend never complained that I took more than my share - though we both knew it as an unspoken “secret” between us. I loved my friend more than the tripletriple-triple chocolate tall cake. No, I really did - and do. Mostly, I love him for not blatantly pointing out that I was a cake predator. Over the years, we kept meeting for “tall” cake even though his portion was always “short.” When we catch human beings with bright gold safety pins showing on their hemlines, or with their tee-shirts on inside-out, those can be moments of simply a confidential whisper, or they can be much more - a real moment of connection. We may have once done something similar ourselves, such as carrying on a rather lengthy conversation with a piece of spinach entirely covering a front tooth, or we may have worn grossly unmatched socks while giving a PowerPoint presentation to our new boss. Those moments - rather than hurting our opinion of ourselves or making us feel embarrassed or apologetic - have the potential to help us “relax” into the okay-ness of “messing up” or letting down the veneer of perfection, which most of us try to wear. Making a public faux pas is a strange gift, perhaps. However, it is a gift of joining in and allowing others to join in - the absolute giddy absurdity of being human. Cracks in our superficial veneer will happen. We may very well bump heads with a stranger when a pencil falls to the floor, forget ourselves and take two rolls from the platter instead of one, or wrestle with the “push” when we are told, in bright red letters, to “pull.” Little eccentricities, “unpolished” moments, and “goofs” add dimension to us and our lives; contribute to the individual nature of who we are; bring us - sometimes kicking - into the human race; and often bring forth acts of kindness or grace from others. I might as well snatch a little chocolate cake when I can, if I can - and always in memory of my good friend who never called me out on it. This article is dedicated to J. William Chambers, Alabama poet, publisher, and friend, 1932-2015. Zee’s Rocket City bEAT by Jim Zielinski Dessert Theatre presents Kilroy Was Here, a “musical salute to the 1940’s G.I. Joes and Jills,” running 5 – 13 June at the Pope John Paul II Catholic High School Theatre [7301 Madison Pike], with Dinner or Café Matinée (Dessert Only) options. Call for menu/tickets. uzzah! Blue Plate Café will finally open its Rosie’s Shopping Plaza branch [7540 Memorial Parkway, SW, Suite E (**formerly Victoria’s Café, transmogrified into “Follow Me Food Truck,” (256) 650-1018**)]. I truly like the good ol’ Italian Sausage and Sauce on Star Market’s Terry’s Pizzas. But I’d LOVE them if they also had the original, chewy, REAL cheese. This doesn’t stretch, it breaks. … WHAT?!?! We understand the delay was occasioned by The City…again… Permit(s), due Julyish, appeared Decemberish, by which time most would be hanging themselves by the chimney, with care. Given this state of affairs, it’s a wonder we still have any mom-and-pop trade. Yoicks! Signor Emanuel Ravelli reminds us to call on the embedded Chef Wil the Palate [2211 Seminole Drive, SW; (256) 617-6052; http://chefwill.yolasite.com] en route to that paean to short films, the 34th Annual Black Maria (mah-RYE-ah) Film + Video Festival [www.blackmariafilmfestival.org] $10 admission; 7:30 p.m., Friday, 12 June; Lowe Mill’s Flying Monkey Theatre. H Speaking of mom-pop debuts, Mullins Restaurant [607 Andrew Jackson Way, NE] is RE-reopening under new-ER management! It seems we’ll again nosh on Broasted Chicken, “dry” Chili Dogs, and down-home Brekkie… Moreover, new selections will augment time-honored ones. Things bode well. Having (repeatedly) sampled the Coconut Cream Pie, I can relate it’s on par with Miss Ann Burdette’s creations for the Fanning and Mullins families lo, those decades ago. We wish Mark and Cindy Schrimsher good luck. Or maybe…break an egg? Keeping to Makeovers: a rebooted Hamburglar, the Golden Arches’ larcenous Arch-Enemy, looms…but an aboveboard brigand; no Sid and Marty Krofft groupie, he. Biggest Crime: Not Stealing the McRib. Rumors that Jonah Hill is portraying The Evil Grimace were dispelled once paramedics dislodged the begnawed ham hock blocking his trachea. Incidentally, if you don’t grasp the irony in christening him “Jonah,” you owe the Gideons an apology. The beef-thief’s reemergence spotlights Mickey D’s, bolstered in no small measure by Special Sauce connoisseur James Franco’s op-ed-like Washington Post piece extolling his somewhat wilted salad days manning the counter. Can the Francwrangler be far behind? Dr. Anarcho’s Rx for Old Stuff That Don’t Suck: B.B. King - Blues and rock lovers the world over mourn the passing of blues legend B.B. King. R iley B. King (September 16, 1925 – May 14, 2015), better known by his stage name B.B. King, was an American Hall of Fame blues singer, songwriter and guitarist. Rolling Stone ranked King number 6 on its 2011 list of the 100 greatest guitarists of all time (previously ranked number 3 in the 2003 edition of the same list). He was ranked No. 17 in Gibson’s “Top 50 Guitarists of All Time.” According to Edward M. Komara, King “introduced a sophisticated style of soloing based on fluid string bending and shimmering vibrato that would influence virtually every electric blues guitarist that followed.” King was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987. He was considered one of the most influential blues musicians of all time, earning the nickname “The King of the Blues,” and one of the “Three Kings of the Blues Guitar” (along with Albert King and Freddie King). King was also known for performing tirelessly throughout his musical career, appearing at more than 200 concerts per year on average into his 70s. In 1956, he reportedly appeared at 342 shows. THE VALLEY PLANET Alackaday! Sadly, The Foyer [600 Jordan Lane, NW, Suite 2; http://thefoyerhuntsville.com] closes on Saturday, 6 June. In 1990, King was awarded the National Medal of Arts by President George H.W. Bush. In 2006, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President George W. Bush. He is widely regarded as one of the most influential blues guitarists of all time, inspiring countless other electric blues and blues rock guitarists. King died at the age of eighty nine from diabetes complications in Las Vegas, Nevada on May 14th, 2015. (Wikipedia) I am kicking myself for not seeing King when he recently appeared in Huntsville. Even then, I knew it was likely my last chance to do so. I hope you weren’t equally stupid and took that final chance to see a musician that had more influence on rock music than Elvis. #0604015062415 Thanh Hung Asian Market’s [Spencer Square Shopping Center, 8760 Madison Boulevard, Suite B; (256) 464-0944; asiainalabama.com] unrestrained expansion only serves to make a grand thing, grander. You’ll find extraordinary offerings, e.g., Pickled Mimosa, Crab Extract, and murderously mammoth Jackfruit; familiar merch, including a metric ton of microwaveable soups; and must haves, like Indonesian coffee- and tea-based pastilles. If your wok’s in rehab, your wasabi’s apoplectic, and your hoisin sauce is now technically a wine, you must needs visit. Prepare to be overwhelmed. And to maddeningly run out of mad money. Farmers Market @ Latham UMC [109 Weatherly Road, SE; (256) 881-4069; http://farmersmarketatlathamumc.org] Kids’ Events, Tuesdays: “OldFashioned Games” (9 June); “Favorite/Least-Favorite Veggie Game” (16 June). Madison City Farmers Market @ Trinity Baptist Church [1088 Hughes Road; (256) 656-7841; www.madisoncityfarmersmarket.com] Live Music, Saturdays: Harpist, Steve Todd Miller (6 June); Old Friends Band (13 June); Todd Steve returns (20 June). Athens Saturday Market [Farmers Market Pavilion, 409 West Green Street; (256) 998-0232; www.athenssaturdaymarket.com] “Kids’ Day” (20 June). Aren’t you disturbed to discover Cinnamon Toast Crunch is cannibalistic? …Though I’d take fiendish delight were the Chik-fil-A and California cattle to follow suit. “Just desserts!” scream ratite industry concerns. Day Trips: Can the 21st Annual RC Cola and MoonPie Festival [(931) 389-9663; www.bellbucklechamber. com; info@BellBuckleChamber.com] truly be nigh? Can, and ‘tis! On Saturday, 20 June, you’ll find downtown Bell Buckle, TN awash in chocolate, carbonation, and a sugar surplus enabling the Cavity Creeps to fully trounce the legacy of Bucky Beaver, if not Jack LaLanne. RC remains “pop” royalty, and everyone loves a good MoonPie or twelve, but be warned…this bacchanal might make it difficult to distinguish Glycemic Index numbers from those of the Scoville Scale. Lesson Learned: roasting workaday garlic produces a mild spread. For some, roasting the already mild Elephant Garlic defeats both the purpose of the procedure and the pachydermatous bulb, itself…the flavor is nearly eradicated, rather than ameliorated. Given, some may like that, but as Bing once told Bob - in reference to anyone enjoying the latter’s singing - “Some people like to wear their shoes in the pool.” Huntsville Community Chorus [Long Avenue; (256) 533-6606; www.thechorus.org] Dinner/ VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 7 Sci-Fi Review: Doctor Who – Shada And More Than 30 Years In The TARDIS by Matthew Kresal I n 1979, Douglas Adams was working as the script editor on Doctor Who. Having written or co-written two stories for the series (including the fan favorite City Of Death) and on the brink of his own creation, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, becoming a worldwide success, Adams wrote his Doctor Who swansong: Shada. The story was partially filmed before a BBC strike led to the story being left uncompleted and thus never shown (though a novelization of the story was released in 2012 as readers may recall from its review). It has finally been released on DVD. This DVD release contains the version put together in 1992 for its VHS release. It features scenes filmed at the time with an older Tom Baker (who played the Doctor at the time when Shada was made) filling in missing scenes with narration. Even in this form, Shada comes across well. The performances are strong across the board (with special mention being made of Denis Carey as retired Time Lord Professor Chronotis) with a sour note coming only from Victoria Burgoyne’s Clare. Adams script is taut, tense, and of course full of wit and fun. Baker, for his part, narrates the story’s missing parts expertly, giving us an inkling of what Shada could have been. It is a testament to his power as an actor that the story works as well as it does in an uncompleted form. 30 Years In The TARDIS. With its combination of archive footage (which includes rare footage of first Doctor William Hartnell at a 1966 air show as well as outtakes and spoofs) , interviews and more, this documentary looks at not just the series itself but also why it ran so long (and hints at its eventual return). While perhaps not as informative as many of the documentaries now found on numerous Doctor Who DVDs, if one is looking for a good documentary on the original series as a whole then this documentary is perhaps the single best place to look. All told, this is one of the strongest Doctor Who DVDs yet released. The reconstruction of Shada, even with a few flaws, nevertheless gives fans the chance to at least glimpse what does exist of the story while More Than 30 Years In The TARDIS celebrates the show’s first three decades in style. As a result, it’s a worthy addition to any fans DVD shelf. That’s not to say that it isn’t without faults. As with Doctor Who stories of the era, there are special effects that don’t quite work though some of the more questionable ones date not from 1979 but from 1992. There’s also the score that is not only totally out of pace with the story itself but frankly isn’t very good either. Still, this version works well under the circumstances. Lifelong Learning has a Home at The University of Alabama in Huntsville Excerpts from an article by Linda McAllister I t might be the best kept secret in the Tennessee Valley, but if you’re over 50 and retired, semi-retired, or still working, once you’ve learned about it, you’ll be hooked. Cited in national publications and other media, the “robust lifelong learning program at the University of Alabama [in Huntsville]” accounts for the 2013 ranking of Huntsville as number 8 on the listing of the top 20 places to retire. The lifelong learning program at UAH is called, The Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (or OLLI) at UAH. The goal of the UAH program is to provide lifelong learning opportunities for adults 50+ who want to learn for the sheer joy of it—without tests, grades, or mandatory assignments. For others, the program has provided the opportunity for social interaction, filling a huge void in their lives. Members report that this program has “improved the quality of their lives,” or reduced their loneliness, or opened a “whole new world” of knowledge. More than 50 stimulating courses are offered during each of three annual terms on a variety of subjects for members. In addition, summer courses provide opportunities to update computer skills and be introduced to new technology. Quality courses are offered in foreign languages, literature, art history, nature, finance and economics, health and psychology, civics and history, math and science, religion, and hands-on learning—with no tests, grades, or mandatory homework. Though these quality courses are the primary focus for OLLI, numerous cultural, social and other special events are planned through- out the year. OLLI members enjoy travel in neighboring states as well as abroad, banquets, picnics, and dances, industrial tours, “popcorn-and-a-movie events,” as well as plays, chorale concerts, and museum tours. Weekly Bonus lectures and travelogues are popular, and diverse Member Interest Groups include Hiking and a Stock Market Study Club As one OLLI member has commented, “OLLI provides an opportunity to be part of a community of people like us – no matter what kind of “us” we are. It provides a source of new and old friends, a chance to satisfy and stimulate our quest to understand our world, a chance to once again use our skills that we acquired during our careers and a chance to develop new ones. OLLI provides a way to enhance our relevance to life.” The cost of participation in the program is low in order to make it accessible to people from all walks of life. On July 15, OLLI at UAH is starting a membership campaign to share information about OLLI throughout North Alabama and to encourage new members to take advantage of the program. Actress, songwriter, author, and activist Naomi Judd, a member of the OLLI at Vanderbilt, will make a special presentation at the Jackson Center to help our campaign get underway. We hope that many new members in the community will join us for the event, and to enjoy all the benefits of being an OLLI at UAH participant. This release is also noteworthy for including the thirteenth anniversary documentary More Than W elcome to the Jazz Lounge. This session will focus on acclaimed jazz bassist Ben Williams. I was really looking forward to his new album, which is now out, “Coming Of Age.” Ben Williams is a native of Washington, D.C. This 30-year-old musician crosses between straight ahead, funk, and gospel-influenced jazz. He graduated from the Duke Ellington School Of Music before studying with renowned bassist Rodney Whitaker, while earning a B.A. in jazz studies at Michigan State University. Ben is an in-demand sideman, and has performed with an impressive list of artists including, Roy Hargrove, Wynton Marsalis, Terence Blanchard, and others. He is also a regular member of Stefon Harris’ hip-hop-influenced “Blackout” ensemble, and leads his own group. In 2009, Ben won the prestigious Thelonious Monk International Jazz Competition, and subsequently signed a recording deal with Concord Records. Two years later, he released his debut solo album, “State Of Art”. Ben Williams delivers his sophomore album, “Coming Of Age” on CD and vinyl via Concord Jazz. There are 11 tracks, with 9 original compositions by Ben. The rare vinyl addition offers 8 pieces from the CD’s repertoire, including a free download of all 11 tracks. Continuing to implore the common elements of jazz, hip-hop, rock, and soul, this bandleader embarks on a bolder journey with this album, which showcases his impeccable talent for acoustic and electric bass, and reflects on his new outlook as a seasoned musician. Ben cites his winning the 2009 Monk Institute Competition as a turning point in his musical journey, “My career as a bandleader and composer started from the moment I won. I had this opportunity to say something – and an obligation, too.” Special guests on “Coming Of Age” include renowned jazz trumpeter Christian Scott on the cover of Lianne La Havas’ “Lost And Found” with a string quartet, vibraphonist Stefon Harris on an original song “The Color Of My Dreams,” and emcee/poet W. Ellington Felton who leads the listener through “Toy Soldiers (reprise)”. Ben also reconnects with American soul singer Goapele for a second collaboration with the anthem “Voice Of Freedom (for Mandela).” Ben’s band, Sound Effect, is comprised of Marcus Strickland (tenor and soprano saxophone), Matthew Stevens (guitar), Christian Sands (piano and Fender Rhodes), Masayuki “Big Yuki” Hirano (synths and Fender Rhodes), John Davis (drums, and Elienne Charles (percussion). If you haven’t experienced the music of this extraordinarily talented gentleman, you can check out his debut album, “State Of Art,” as well as this new release, “Coming Of Age.” They would make nice additions to your jazz collection. By the way, Ben Williams’ upcoming tour dates include venues around New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Washington D.C., Maryland, and California, with other dates to be announced. That’s it for this session of the Jazz Lounge. Remember, you can always reach me at: teekynyc@ yahoo.com. It is always a pleasure receiving your emails! Until next time, stay cool, & keep it jazzy! 8 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM #0604015062415 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 THE VALLEY PLANET An Afternoon With July 15 | 12:30 – 2:00 pm | Jackson Center Join us for lunch and a motivational talk by Naomi Judd. To transcend hardship and create breakthroughs in her life, Naomi Judd has used her indomitable spirit, first in the music business and later in her health. She made music history and charmed Hollywood, but her story is far more than a heartwarming rags-to-riches tale. It is a quintessentially American lesson in perseverance and the life-altering power of positive thinking. Register Today! 256.824.6010 or Osher.uah.edu/NaomiJudd $40 – Includes Lunch and a 2015/16 Annual Membership for OLLI at UAH – A vibrant learning community of adults 50+ THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA IN HUNTSVILLE PUB/DATE: VP 6.04.15 SIZE: 5.104 x 6.533 COST: $228.75 TOPIC: Naomi judd DUE: CREATED:____________________ PROOFED: ___________________ DIRECTOR: ___________________ KMC: ________________________ HURRY, TICKETS MOVING FAST! SUN • JUNE 14 7:30 PM VBC VON BRAUN CENTER Tickets: VBC Box Office • Ticketmaster.com 1 800-745-3000 • All Ticketmaster outlets THE VALLEY PLANET #0604015062415 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 9 MVP SPIRITS, Open Mic NICK’S RISTORANTE, Josh Allison THE BRICKHOUSE, Dave Anderson VOODOO LOUNGE, Dr. Whateva W���� E����bo�� El�� G�e�! Thursday, June 4 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Dave Anderson BLUE PANTS BREWERY, 45 Surprise FURNITURE FACTORY, Big Daddy Kingfish GUADALAJARA GRILL (DECATUR), DJ Jammin Jeff HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Tara HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), Microwave Dave & The Nukes JUNO, John Miller LONE GOOSE, Traci Traci Music Communion MADISON STATION BAR & GRILL, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke PINCHI’S 2, Hitmaster D Karaoke SPORTS PAGE, 5ive O’clock Charlie THE BRICK DELI, Shannon Woods THE BRICKHOUSE, Cheryl Lewellyn THE DOCKS (SCOTTSBORO), Trey Browder THE HOT SPOT, Bike Night w/ Live Music ENTERTAINMENT FRI SAT FRI SAT FRI SAT FRI SAT 06/05 - FUZZY GOUDA 06/06 - STEADY ROLLERS 06/12 - DAMN SKIPPY 06/13 - MR. 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WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 256.603.1978 THE STEM AND STEIN, Abigail Lee VOODOO LOUNGE, Open Mic Friday, June 5 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Snake Doctors BISHOP’S WEST, Hitmaster D Karaoke (8 - 12pm) DIAMONDS (SEE AD PG.10), Fuzzy Gouda EL HERRADURA, Edgar FURNITURE FACTORY, Black Eyed Susan HARD DOCK CAFE (DECATUR), Crush HICKORY HOUSE, Karaoke HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Peter and the Wolfe HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), 45 Surprise JEFFERESON STREET PUB, Matt Bennett JUNO, Ron Simmons Trio LEEANN’S, Emily Joseph Band LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey LONE GOOSE, Tony Perdue and the Devastators MAC’S SPORTSBAR (ATHENS), Tequila Falls MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke MVP SPIRITS, Gus Hergert SAMMY T’S, DJ Keibot, DJ Josh P, and DJ Whirl STRAIGHT TO ALE, Matthew Frantz SUDS GRILL AND GROGG, Karaoke w/ Carol THE BRICK DELI, Shaken Not Stirred THE BRICKHOUSE, Josh Allison THE HOT SPOT, Karaoke THE STEM AND STEIN, Seducing Alice VOODOO LOUNGE, Kings Haze YELLOWHAMMER BREWERY, Dawg Haus Saturday, June 6 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Chris Simmons BLUE PANTS BREWERY, Seducing Alice CD’S PUB, Hitmaster D Karaoke DIAMONDS (SEE AD PG.10), Steady Rollers HICKORY HOUSE, Karaoke HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Peter and the Wolfe HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), Festival Expressions JUNO, John Miller Trio LAS TROJAS, Edgar LEEANN’S, Emily Joseph Band LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke LONE GOOSE, Twickenham Sam MAC’S SPORTSBAR (ATHENS), Blue Handle Band MADISON STATION BAR & GRILL, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke MVP SPIRITS, Christian Lee SAMMY T’S, DJ Keibot, DJ Josh P, and DJ Whirl SPORTS PAGE, Liberty in Embers THE BRICK DELI, Trick Zipper THE BRICKHOUSE, JESSE THE STEM AND STEIN, Jim Cavender YELLOWHAMMER BREWERY, James Irvin Sunday, June 7 AMERICAN LEGION POST 176, Karaoke EAGLES (DECATUR), Hitmaster D Karaoke MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke THE BRICKHOUSE, Chaka Boom VOODOO LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ DJ Brandon Monday, June 8 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Robby Eichman COPPERTOP, Karaoke w/ DJ Wes FURNITURE FACTORY, Open Jam w/ Andrew Johnson and Clay O’Dell MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke VOODOO LOUNGE, Josh Allison Tuesday, June 9 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Gus Hergert ENVY ENTERTAINMENT & RESTAURANT, The Silvery Moon Band FURNITURE FACTORY, Karaoke w/ Super Lou HOPPER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Tara HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), Tim Cannon JUNO, Dave McConnell, Sinatra Review MAC’S SPORTSBAR (ATHENS), Hitmaster D Karaoke MADISON STATION BAR & GRILL, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff MOODY MONDAYS, Open Mic MVP SPIRITS, Josh Allison SPORTS PAGE, Chelvis and the Bean THE HOT SPOT, Karaoke VOODOO LOUNGE, Dave Anderson AMERICAN LEGION POST 176, Karaoke Wednesday, June 10 AMERICAN LEGION POST 176, Karaoke BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Microwave Dave BISHOP’S WEST, Hitmaster D Karaoke HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), Lisa Bustler JEFFERESON STREET PUB, Karaoke JUNO, Pete Harrison LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey LOWE MILL (FLYING MONKEY), Tim Kaiser MADISON STATION BAR & GRILL, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke #0604015062415 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 Thursday, June 11 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Dave Anderson BLUE PANTS BREWERY, Brent Byrd GUADALAJARA GRILL (DECATUR), DJ Jammin Jeff HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Tara HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), Ron Ethridge JUNO, Alex Shor MADISON STATION BAR & GRILL, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke MVP SPIRITS, Daniel Yalowitz PINCHI’S 2, Hitmaster D Karaoke SPORTS PAGE, 5ive O’clock Charlie THE BRICK DELI, Tim Cannon THE BRICKHOUSE, Travis Black THE DOCKS (SCOTTSBORO), Trey Browder THE HOT SPOT, Bike Night w/ Live Music VOODOO LOUNGE, Open Mic Friday, June 12 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Milltown BISHOP’S WEST, Hitmaster D Karaoke BLUE PANTS BREWERY, The Robertsons DIAMONDS (SEE AD PG.10), Damn Skippy EL HERRADURA, Edgar HICKORY HOUSE, Karaoke HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Peter and the Wolfe HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), Forlorn Stranger JEFFERESON STREET PUB, Wes Loper JUNO, Dave McConnell with Ron Simmons LEEANN’S, Groove LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey LONE GOOSE, 5ive O’clock Charlie MADISON STATION BAR & GRILL, Kozmic Mama MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke MVP SPIRITS, Trick Zipper SAMMY T’S, DJ Keibot, DJ Josh P, and DJ Whirl SUDS GRILL AND GROGG, Karaoke w/ Carol THE BRICK DELI, Rollin in the Hay THE BRICKHOUSE, Josh Allison THE HOT SPOT, Karaoke VOODOO LOUNGE, Dawn Osborne Trio YELLOWHAMMER BREWERY, Gus Hergert/ Banditos Album Release Show Saturday, June 13 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Dave Anderson CD’S PUB, Hitmaster D Karaoke DIAMONDS (SEE AD PG.10), Mr. Crowley HICKORY HOUSE, Karaoke HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Peter and the Wolfe HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), Dirt Circus JUNO, Pete Harrison Trio LAS TROJAS, Edgar LEEANN’S, Tom Cat & Bark the Dog LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke LONE GOOSE, Them Damn Dogs LOWE MILL (FLYING MONKEY), The Dean Martinis MADISON STATION BAR & GRILL, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke NICK’S RISTORANTE, Dave McConnell as Sinatra SAMMY T’S, DJ Keibot, DJ Josh P, and DJ Whirl THE BREW STOOGES, Drew Richter THE BRICK DELI, Natchez Trace VOODOO LOUNGE, Ant and Andrew Sharpe YELLOWHAMMER BREWERY, Cox & Coffee Live Music Sunday, June 14 AMERICAN LEGION POST 176, Karaoke EAGLES (DECATUR), Hitmaster D Karaoke MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke THE BRICKHOUSE, Chaka Boom VOODOO LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ DJ Brandon Monday, June 15 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Robby Eichman COPPERTOP, Karaoke w/ DJ Wes FURNITURE FACTORY, Open Jam w/ Andrew Johnson and Clay O’Dell MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke VOODOO LOUNGE, James Irvin Tuesday, June 16 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Gus Hergert ENVY ENTERTAINMENT & RESTAURANT, The Silvery Moon Band FURNITURE FACTORY, Karaoke w/ Super Lou HOPPER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Tara HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), Alex Dietrich JUNO, Dave McConnell Sinatra Review MAC’S SPORTSBAR (ATHENS), Hitmaster D Karaoke MADISON STATION BAR & GRILL, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff MOODY MONDAYS, Open Mic MVP SPIRITS, Josh Allison SPORTS PAGE, Chelvis and the Bean THE HOT SPOT, Karaoke VOODOO LOUNGE, Dave Anderson music cont. on pg. 11 THE VALLEY PLANET music cont. from pg. 10 Wednesday, June 17 AMERICAN LEGION POST 176, Karaoke BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Microwave Dave BISHOP’S WEST, Hitmaster D Karaoke HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), Gus Hergert JEFFERESON STREET PUB, Karaoke JUNO, Pete Harrison LEEANN’S, Love Child LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey MADISON STATION BAR & GRILL, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke MVP SPIRITS, Open Mic NICK’S RISTORANTE, Josh Allison THE BRICKHOUSE, Dave Anderson VOODOO LOUNGE, Dr. Whateva Thursday, June 18 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Dave Anderson BLUE PANTS BREWERY, Seducing Alice Acoustic GUADALAJARA GRILL (DECATUR), DJ Jammin Jeff HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Tara JUNO, Alex Shor LONE GOOSE, Traci Traci Music Communion MADISON STATION BAR & GRILL, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke MVP SPIRITS, Tim Cannon PINCHI’S 2, Hitmaster D Karaoke SPORTS PAGE, 5ive O’clock Charlie THE BRICK DELI, Michael Barber THE DOCKS (SCOTTSBORO), Trey Browder THE HOT SPOT, Bike Night w/ Live Music THE STEM AND STEIN, Falcon Punch VOODOO LOUNGE, Open Mic Friday, June 19 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Red Headed Step Child BISHOP’S WEST, Hitmaster D Karaoke DIAMONDS (SEE AD PG.10), Drivin Under EL HERRADURA, Edgar HICKORY HOUSE, Karaoke HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Peter and the Wolfe HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), The Robertsons JUNO, John Miller LEEANN’S, Crush LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey LONE GOOSE, Buck’ol up MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke MVP SPIRITS, Matt Carroll SAMMY T’S, DJ Keibot, DJ Josh P, and DJ Whirl STRAIGHT TO ALE, 45 Surprise SUDS GRILL AND GROGG, Karaoke w/ Carol THE BRICK DELI, 3 Hour Tour THE BRICKHOUSE, Josh Allison THE HOT SPOT, Karaoke YELLOWHAMMER BREWERY, Denim Jaw Bones Saturday, June 20 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Lisa Bustler CD’S PUB, Hitmaster D Karaoke DIAMONDS (SEE AD PG.10), Dizzy Trip GOOD PEOPLE BREWERY (BIRMINGHAM), Happenin Fest HICKORY HOUSE, Karaoke HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Peter and the Wolfe HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), Charlie Howell & Southbound JEFFERESON STREET PUB, Swinging Dixie JUNO, Roberta Silva with Keith Taylor LAS TROJAS, Edgar LEEANN’S, Real Deal LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke LONE GOOSE, Steady Rollers LOWE MILL (FLYING MONKEY), Folk Off MADISON STATION BAR & GRILL, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke MVP SPIRITS, Christian Lee SAMMY T’S, DJ Keibot, DJ Josh P, and DJ Whirl THE BRICK DELI, DJ K Good THE BRICKHOUSE, Brian Holder YELLOWHAMMER BREWERY, Sound and Shape Sunday, June 21 AMERICAN LEGION POST 176, Karaoke EAGLES (DECATUR), Hitmaster D Karaoke MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke THE BRICKHOUSE, Chaka Boom VOODOO LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ DJ Brandon Monday, June 22 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Robby Eichman COPPERTOP, Karaoke with DJ Wes FURNITURE FACTORY, Open Jam w/ Andrew Johnson and Clay O’Dell MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke VOODOO LOUNGE, Josh Allison Tuesday, June 23 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Gus Hergert ENVY ENTERTAINMENT & RESTAURANT, The Harlequin Jazz Band FURNITURE FACTORY, Karaoke w/ Super Lou HOPPER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Tara HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), Donnie Cox JUNO, Dave McConnell Sinatra Review MAC’S SPORTSBAR (ATHENS), Hitmaster D Karaoke MOODY MONDAYS, Open Mic SPORTS PAGE, Chelvis and the Bean THE HOT SPOT, Karaoke VOODOO LOUNGE, Dave Anderson Wednesday, June 24 AMERICAN LEGION POST 176, Karaoke BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Microwave Dave BISHOP’S WEST, Hitmaster D Karaoke HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), Tim Cannon JEFFERESON STREET PUB, Karaoke JUNO, Pete Harrison LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey MADISON STATION BAR & GRILL, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke MVP SPIRITS, Open Mic NICK’S RISTORANTE, Josh Allison THE BRICKHOUSE, Chaka Boom VOODOO LOUNGE, Dr. Whateva Thursday, June 25 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Dave Anderson GUADALAJARA GRILL (DECATUR), DJ Jammin Jeff HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Tara HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), O’Dell Duo LONE GOOSE, Traci Traci Music Communion MADISON STATION BAR & GRILL, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke MVP SPIRITS, Dawn Osborne PINCHI’S 2, Hitmaster D Karaoke SPORTS PAGE, 5ive O’clock Charlie THE BRICK DELI, The Wheelers Acoustic THE DOCKS (SCOTTSBORO), Trey Browder THE HOT SPOT, Bike Night w/ Live Music VOODOO LOUNGE, Open Mic Hump Day at Humphrey’s Every Wednesday! Friday, June 26 11TH FRAME, Saving Abel BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Bourbon & Shamrocks BISHOP’S EAST, Blue Handle Band BISHOP’S WEST, Hitmaster D Karaoke COPPERTOP, Those Crosstown Rivals DIAMONDS (SEE AD PG.10), Space Donkeys EL HERRADURA, Edgar HICKORY HOUSE, Karaoke HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Peter and the Wolfe HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), Steady Rollers LEEANN’S, Kozmic Mama LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey LONE GOOSE, Will George MAC’S SPORTSBAR (ATHENS), Hot Rod Otis MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke MVP SPIRITS, Drivin Under SAMMY T’S, DJ Keibot, DJ Josh P, and DJ Whirl STRAIGHT TO ALE, The Robertsons SUDS GRILL AND GROGG, Karaoke w/ Carol THE BRICK DELI, Permagroove THE BRICKHOUSE, Josh Allison THE HOT SPOT, Karaoke VOODOO LOUNGE, 5ive O’clock Charlie YELLOWHAMMER BREWERY, Blake Nix Saturday, June 27 BANDITO SOUTHSIDE, Dave Anderson CD’S PUB, Hitmaster D Karaoke DIAMONDS (SEE AD PG.10), Bucked Up HICKORY HOUSE, Karaoke HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Peter and the Wolfe HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.11), Pyrite Parachute LAS TROJAS, Edgar LEEANN’S, Sweet Root LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke LONE GOOSE, Moon Pie LOWE MILL, Dixie Danger Fest MADISON STATION BAR & GRILL, Damn Skippy Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke MVP SPIRITS, Local Orbit NICK’S RISTORANTE, Dave McConnell as Sinatra SAMMY T’S, DJ Keibot, DJ Josh P, and DJ Whirl THE BRICK DELI, 5ive O’clock Charlie YELLOWHAMMER BREWERY, Tap Room Music Tour Sunday, June 28 AMERICAN LEGION POST 176, Karaoke EAGLES (DECATUR), Hitmaster D Karaoke MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke THE BRICKHOUSE, Chaka Boom VOODOO LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ DJ Brandon THE END! THE VALLEY PLANET #0604015062415 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 11 CALENDAR OF EVENTS COMPUTER CAMP Join a Vibrant Learning Community For Adults 50+ Have fun this summer while improving your computer skills! Something for everyone! OLLI has designed summer courses to entertain you, to enable your creativity, to challenge you, and best of all, to make your summer enjoyable and fun! Learn how to sell on eBay, create your own greeting cards, ask Google everything (and get the right answer), edit photos, or step up to Windows 8. Not sure you are ready? Start with learning basic computer skills. June 3 – 6 Disney on Ice: Frozen will be at the VBC Arena. 256-533-1953. Healthy Huntsville & Free Rocket City Yoga Week - Yoga for Athletes will be at Big Spring Park from 5 - 6pm. Thursday, June 4 The exhibit, Dinosaurs Alive! will be at the Imagination Place Children’s Museum now through August 3. $8. www.culruralarts.com, 256-543-2787. There will be an AUSA Young Professionals Gathering will be from 5 - 8pm at Yellowhammer Brewery. Open to the public. www.yellowhammerbrewery.com. There will be a Summer Computer Camp at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. $60 for first course and $50 for each additional and OLLI Membership is required. Camps begin in June and run through July 31st. Osher.uah.edu/ComputerCamp, 256-824-6010. (See ad pg.12) There will be a Book Club Meeting from 6 – 8pm in Studio 131 of Lowe Mill. Jennifer@jenniferpinkley. com, www.lowemill.net. Beginning Wheel Throwing will be in DesignbyHart Pottery Studio 2009 of Lowe Mill from 6 - 7:30pm. $90. It will be every Thursday in June. www.lowemill.net. Texas Hold’em Tournament for door prizes (Huntsville High Wrestling Fundraiser) will be at Straight to Ale Brewery from 7 - 9pm. $20. www.straighttoale.com. $60 for first course | $50 for each additional OLLI Membership is required. The Madison Gazebo Concerts will have the US Army Materiel Command Band / Winslow Davis at the Gazebo in downtown Madison at 6:30pm. Free. http://artsmadison.org/gazebo-concerts. REGISTER TODAY! Osher.uah.edu/ComputerCamp or 256.824.6010 Rocket City Yoga Week - Yogo @ Yoga Fire will be from 11am - 12pm. yogafirehsv.com. There will be a Quilting Demonstration with Artist Guadalupe Lanning Robinson at the Huntsville Museum of Art from 5:30 - 7pm. www.hsvmuseum.org. The Sound of Summer Jam Session will be on the Westside Square from 5 - 8pm every Thursday through August. www.downtownhuntsville.org. The Time Travel Adventure Exhibit will be at the Burritt Museum through September 20th and the exhibit: From Cotton to the Cosmos will be on display through September 6th. www.burrittonthemountain.com. THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA IN HUNTSVILLE June 4 – 6 Putt-Putt in the Library will be at the HuntsvilleMadison Library will be open Thursday 9am - 9pm and Friday and Saturday 9am - 6pm Free. www.hmcpl.org. Friday, June 5 Alright Bayou Comedy is a standup comedy show every 1st, 3rd, and 5th Friday at 8pm at Tim’s Cajun Kitchen. $5. Indie Singer/Songwriter Matthew Frantz will be at Straight to Ale at 6pm. www.straighttoale.com. The Art Walk will be on the Historic Square in Huntsville from 5 - 8pm. www.downtownhuntsville.org. The Huntsville-Madison County Library will have the Summer Reading Kick-Off. “Every Hero Has a Story,” Puppet Show at 2pm. Free. www.hmcpl.org. Rocket City Yoga Week - Yoga & Chocolate!, will be at the Lowe Mill from 5:30 - 8pm. www.lowemill.net. First Fridays Book Club will be from 6 - 8pm the first Friday of every month in Jennifer Pinkley’s Studio 131 of Lowe Mill. www.lowemill.net. Friday Night Art Walk will be in Downtown Historic Square from 5 – 8pm. “Loosen the Bible Belt” Tour for Humanity will be from 8 - 9:30pm in the Flying Monkey. $15. www.flyingmonkeyarts.org. There will be a Watercolor Class with Yuri Ozaki from 5:30 - 7:30pm in Studio 307 of Lowe Mill. $30. Every Friday in June. www.lowemill.net. The 2015 “Spring Burst” Guided Hike Series – Insect Safari Wade Mountain Night Hike: will be from 8:30 10:30pm. www.landtrustnal.org. HealthWorks Farmers Market will be from 7:30 - 12pm at Plaza Resource Center at Huntsville Hospital. The 2015 Spring Golf Classic will be at the Decatur Country Club. www.dcc.org. The US Space & Rocket Center will have the exhibit The Robot Zoo now through September 13. www.rocketcenter.com. PUB/DATE: VP 6.04.15 Downtown Live will be at Historic Square in downtown Huntsville from 5 - 8pm. Free. Green SIZE:The 5.104 x Street 6.533Market will be every Thursday in downtown Huntsville. Free. COST: $228.75 Thursday Night Bike Rides will be from 4 - 8pm meeting at the Camp Green Street Market Downtown. It TOPIC: Summer will be every Thursday through October. Free. DUE: The Butterfly House Garden is now open at the Huntsville Botanical Gardens. www.hsvbg.org, CREATED: ____________________ 256-830-4447. The Huntsville Museum of Art will have the exhibits, PROOFED: ___________________ Dori DeCamillis now through June 14th, John James Audubon: Quadrupeds of North America now through June 27th ___________________ and the Huntsville Photographic Society: DIRECTOR: th 2015 Members’ Showcase through September 20 . www.hsvmuseum.org. KMC: ________________________ The Shirts-n-Skirts square dance club will have dancing on the 1st & 3rd Thursdays of the month at the Dance Factory on Freeman Ave. then on the 2nd & 4th Thursdays at the Athens Recreation Center on Hwy 31. 256-423-4141, www.shirts-n-skirts.com. The Huntsville Botanical Gardens will have the exhibit Nature Connects Lego Bricks through July 26. www.hsvbg.org, 256-830-4447. Thursday Night Swing will be at the Flying Monkey Theatre from 6:30 – 10pm (every Thursday.) www.flyingmonkeyarts.org, www.huntsvilleswing.com. Duos and Solos Square Dance Club will be offering lessons to couples and singles every Thursday at 6:30pm at the Tom Bevill Enrichment Center in Rainsville, AL. www.duosandsolos.com. Harmony Park Animal Safari will have self-guided tours daily 10am until sundown. 877-726-4625. 431 Clouds Cove Rd. $8 Stein and Dine will be at the US Space & Rocket Center Biergarten every Thursday from 4:30 - 7:30pm. www.rocketcenter.com. Kind Society will host the Society Ciphers and DJ ATwist at 8pm. It will also be June 19th. https://www.facebook.com/officialkindsociety. June 5 - 7 Lyrique Music Productions presents, 13 the Musical at the VBC Playhouse. $20-$25. http://www.lyriquemusicproductions.org. Sean Starwars Woodcut Workshop will be Friday6:30 - 9:30pm, Saturday- 10 - 2pm and 4 - 8pm and Sunday noon - 4pm. $150 at the Green Pea Press Studio 122 of Lowe Mill. www.lowemill.net. Saturday, June 6 There will be a Contra Dance in the gym of Faith Presbyterian Church from 7:30 - 10:30pm. There will be live music by Fiddlin’ in the Parlor and calling by Jane Ewing. $8 and $6 for students. Children under 12 are free. 256-837-0656. http://www.secontra.com/NACDS.html Rocket City Yoga Week - Yoga in the Park will be at Big Spring Park from 9 - 10:30am. Free. Healthy Huntsville & Free Rocket City Yoga Week - Ales & Asanas (Yoga & Beer) will be at Rocket Republic Brewing Company, 289 Production Avenue in Madison from 2 - 4pm. There will be a Book Swap at EarlyWorks Museum Complex from 10am - 2pm. Free. www.earlyworks.com. Dixie Derby Girls vs. Little Chattanooga Bout will be at 2pm at Skate Odyssey. www.dixiederbygirls.com. Cruise In will be in Downtown Athens. Bring your hot rod, motorcycle, truck or unique vehicle and park on the square to share your love of automobiles with other enthusiast from 3 - 6pm. There will be a Family Fun Festival & Expo at the VBC South Hall from 10am - 8pm. Free. Gentle Yoga will be at the Huntsville-Madison Library from 11:30am - 12:45 pm. It will be every Thursday in June. Free. www.hmcpl.org. Heritage Days will be at Rogersville Town Hall and Heritage Park 54 in Rogersville, AL from 3 - 9pm. 256247-5466, www.RogersvilleAlabama.com. Rocket City Yoga Week - Bends & Brews (Yoga & Beer) will be from 4 - 6pm at The Brew Stooges, 109 Maple Avenue. Free. www.brewtrail.com. The City of Guntersville will have a Crush Wine Festival along the lakeside with City Harbor Crush. There will be over 150 wines to taste, live music, food events cont. on pg. 13 12 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM #0604015062415 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 THE VALLEY PLANET events cont. from pg. 12 Huntsville Madison Library will have Free Health Screenings from 9:30am - 12pm. www.hmcpl.org. trucks, a grape stomping area and more. The North town Merchants will be hosting artists and craft vendors. http://www.homegrown.events,TheArtsFact oryMVAC@gmail.com, 256-202-3725. The Arts Council presents the Concert in the Park, Christian Lynn and The Beasley Brothers, starting at 6:30pm at Big Spring Park. Free. www.artshuntsville.org. The 11th Annual Charity Car Show will be at Milton Frank Stadium from 9am - 2pm. Free. Putting League and Bag Tag will be at Yellowhammer Brewing from 6 - 8:30pm. It will be every other Monday. www.yellowhammerbrewery.com. The Artist Market will be every Saturday from 12 – 4pm at the Flying Monkey. Free. www.flyingmonkeyarts.org. The Bessie K. Russell Library presents Vision Board, Part 2 – dream it, see it, and design it-at 2pm. Free. 256-859-9050, www.hmcpl.org. The Madison City Farmers Market will be from 8am noon at 1008 Hughes Road in Madison. It will be every Saturday through October. 256-656-7841. Saturday Fitness Classes in Big Spring Park East will be every Saturday through August 29th from 10 - 11am. A New Leash on Life will have dogs and cats available for adoption every Saturday from 12 – 4pm at Pet Smart on Carl T. Jones. www.anewleash.org. There will be a Planetarium Show every Saturday night at 7:30pm at the Planetarium. www.vbas.org. Picking and Grinning will be every Saturday from 6 – 9pm at the New Hope Senior Center on Church Street. 256- 723-2208. The 18th Annual Freedom Creek Festival will be at Cookieman’s Place on Hwy 17, 1438 Wilder Circle in Aliceville, AL from 11:00am - 8pm. www.freedomcreek.org. Vets with Vettes & Corvette owner’s Car Show will be at Milton Frank Stadium Parking Lot from 9am 2pm. Free. 256-828-5351. Music in the Park at Village of Providence will have Roxy Roca at 7pm. The 2nd Annual Huntsville Mom Prom will be at UAH University Center from 7 - 11pm. http://www.huntsvillemomprom.com. Just For Me Dance Dorothy The Dinosaur’s Pajama Birthday Party and Interactive Dance Recital will be at Just For Me Dance, 1432 Freeman Avenue, Athens from 10:30am - noon. 256-998-6382, fmeaux66@gmail.com. Digital Painting will be from 10am - 12pm in Studio 318 of Lowe Mill. $49. This is an ongoing course that requires a monthly subscription. It will be every Saturday in June. 256-652-6180, www.lowemill.net. Turntable Tour 2 with Sean Starwars will be from 12 - 6pm in the First Floor Connector of Lowe Mill. Free. www.lowemill.net. There will be a Silk Painting Class from 12 - 6pm in Studio 2008 of Lowe Mill. $47. www.lowemill.net. Straight to Ale will have a Dixie Derby Girls After Party at 7pm. www.straighttoale.com. The North Alabama Sickle Cell Foundation Walka-Thon will be at Big Spring Park at 9am. 256-5362723, www.sicklecellna.org. Sunday, June 7 The Film Co-op Monthly Workshop will be from 2 - 4pm at the Film Co-op Studio 251 of the Flying Monkey Arts. www.flyingmonkeyarts.org. Huntsville’s First Annual Downtown Cheese Festival will be from 3 - 7pm at the Historic Roundhouse. http://huntsvillecheesefestival.com. The Hidden Garden Tour will be in various homes/ gardens in downtown Huntsville from 1 – 5pm. Together We Stand Dinner and a Show will be at the Limestone County Event Center in Athens at 6:30pm. 256-998-0048. Monday, June 8 There will be a Women’s Ride (every Monday) at 5:30pm. Meet at the MSSP Biker’s Parking Lot. 256-585-0905. The Women’s World Cup Viewing Party will be at Straight to Ale Brewery at 6:30pm. It will also be June 12th and June 16th. www.straighttoale.com. The Paul Stroud Concerts by the River will have Papa Rox at 6pm at Rhodes Ferry Park. Free. www.decaturparks.com. Your Yoga with Casey Beginner’s class will be in studio # 258 at Lowe Mill. Fee. It will be every Monday and Wednesday in May from 6 - 7pm. casey@ youryogahuntsville.com. www.lowemill.net. Maggie Meyer’s will have Comedy Open Mic Night hosted by Matthew Tate every Monday at 8pm. www.maggiemeyersirishpub.com. Live Trivia will be every Monday at Straight to Ale Brewery. www.straighttoale.com. THE VALLEY PLANET June 8 – 12 There will be a Recycled Art Camp from 9am - 1pm daily, in Studio 314 of Lowe Mill. Ages 7- 16. $250. 256-322-0184, www.lowemill.net. Tuesday, June 9 Latham United Methodist Church will have a Farmers’ Market every Tuesday from 3 - 7pm, now through October. http://downtoearthcrier.blogspot.com. Nicks Ristorante will have Trivia every Tuesday night from 6 - 8pm. www.nicksristorante.com. Game Night will be every Tuesday from 6 - 9:30pm at Straight to Ale Brewery. www.straighttoale.com. St. Jude Children’s Hospital Fundraiser will be at Yellowhammer Brewing from 5 - 8pm. www.yellowhammerbrewery.com. Basic Genealogy Classes will be in the Special Collections Department at the Huntsville-Madison Library every Tuesday at 6pm. Free. 256-532-5969, www.hmcpl.org. The 34th Annual Black Maria Film Festival will be from 7:30 - 9:30pm in the Flying Monkey Theatre. $10. www.flyingmonkeyarts.org. The Rocket City Pride 2015 Kick-Off Party hosted by the Dream Dolls will be at Club Safari. at 9:30pm. free2be.org/pride/ (See ad pg.12) West Coast Swing presented by Rocket Westies will be at Flying Monkey Arts Theater every Tuesday at 7pm. $10. www.RocketWesties.com There will be a Flag Day Ceremony and Celebration in the Ballroom Sandridge Center at Athens State University. Free. 256-233-8185 How to Do Things: Beaded Kumi Himo Bracelet from 3:30 - 8:30pm at the Downtown Huntsville Library. $3. 256-532-2362, www.hmcpl.org. June 12 – 13 KidzBlitz LIVE! will be at Capshaw Baptist Church in Harvest, AL. Kindergarten to 6th grade. Friday night 6pm and Saturday at 12pm. - 5pm. 256-232-7763 www.capshaw.org. Wednesday, June 10 Every Wednesday there will be a Bike Ride at 5:30pm starting at Bicycles Etc. www.bicyclesetc.us. Dine & Dash will begin at 5:15pm- 8:30pm in the Clinton Street Parking Garage in downtown Huntsville. The Trolley will take you to five different downtown establishments. It will be every 2nd Wednesday through October. 256-850-3231. The Huntsville Polish-American Culture Club will meet Wednesdays from 7 - 9pm at the Good Shepherd Church. 256-653-4450, carlwoida@knology.net. Comedy Open Mic Night will be every Wednesday at Copper Top in Huntsville. 256 -536-1150. The Singles & Doubles Square Dance Club will meet each Wednesday night at Berachah Gym from 6 – 8:45pm. 256-881-5720. The Business of Art will be from 12:30 - 1:30pm in Studio 2008 of Lowe Mill. miriam@coachmiriam.com, www.lowemill.net. Intro to Letterpress will be from 6 - 8pm in the Green Pea Press Studio 122 of Lowe Mill. It will also be on June 17th and 22nd. $70 Green Pea Press Members, $80 Non-members. www.lowemill.net. Thursday, June 11 The Madison Gazebo Concerts will have the Max Russell / Tres Locos at the Gazebo in downtown Madison at 6:30pm. Free. http://artsmadison.org/gazebo-concerts. The Tennessee Valley Civil War Round Table will host Richard Bailey from the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. It will be at the Elks Club at 6:30pm. Free. 256- 278-5533. There will be a Cornhole Tournament with Huntsville Sports League at Straight to Ale Brewery at 7pm. www.playhuntsville.com, www.stratightoale.com. June 11 – 12 The John Stallworth Celebrity Golf Tournament will be at the Hampton Cove Golf Course. The pairings party will be Thursday and the tournament will begin Friday at 8am. http://johnstallworth.com/golf-tournament. June 11 - 14 Lyrique Music Productions presents 13 the Musical at the VBC Playhouse. $20-$25. www.lyriquemusicproductions.org. The Bonnaroo Music Festival will be in Manchester, TN. www.bonnaroo.com. Friday, June 12 City Lights and Stars Concert Series will have Karen Johns and Company at Burritt on the Mountain. Gates open at 6:30pm, music at 7:30pm. www.burrittonthemountain.com. Downtown Open, Huntsville’s Miniature Golf Trail, will be open June 12th - 28th. It includes more than 20 holes. Open all day. Free. Movies in the Park, Maleficent will be at around sundown at Big Spring Park. Food trucks, facepainting, and vendors will be setting up at 5pm. Free. www.historichuntsville.org/movies-in-the-park. #0604015062415 Saturday, June 13 The Huntsville Bead Society will meet the 2nd Saturday of the month at the Crestwood Women’s Center at 10am. Facebook-huntsville bead society. downtown Huntsville-Madison Library. www.hmcpl.org. June 13 – 14 The North Alabama Feline Fanciers present the 9th Annual Championship and Household Pet Cat Show from 9am - 5:30pm Friday and 9am – 1pm on Saturday at the Jaycee’s Building. $5. facebook.com/challengershouseofficial. Sunday, June 14 There will be a Docent-led Public Tour of Encounters: Dori DeCamillis from 2 - 4pm at the Huntsville Museum of Art. www.hsvmuseum.org. Art N’ Soul Society of Expression White Linen Party with a splash of Pomegranate at the Bob Harrison Senior Center in Huntsville. Learning to Fly Yoga Workshop will be from 10am 12pm in Your Yoga Studio 258 of the Flying Monkey Arts. $35. www.flyingmonkeyarts.org. There will be a Concert by the Madison Community Band will be at Bridge Street Town Centre at 6pm. Free. www.bridgestreethuntsville.com. Vacation Bible School in the Park will be at John Barnes Park Ardmore Ridge Road in Ardmore, TN from 4 - 6pm. Free. www.maysmemorial.org. Huntsville’s Largest Family Picnic will be right before the Grotto Light Concert at Big Spring Park. This picnic will have live music, kids’ activities and giveaways. The picnic will be from 4- 6pm and the Grotto Light Concert will be from 6 - 8pm. www.downtownhuntsville.org. The Tennessee Valley Jazz Society, WJAB 90.9FM and Focus Live Martini Bar & Grill celebrates “Jazz Fall for the Arts” with “Talking all that Jazz.” It is every 2nd and 4th Sunday from 6 - 9pm at Focus Live Martini Bar & Grill. http://tvjs.webs.com. (See ad pg.8) The 2015 Heart of Dixie Romance Reader’s Luncheon will be hosted at the Westin Hotel – Bridgestreet at 2pm. Pre-registration required. www.heartofdixie.org. The Rashad Moore Youth Football Camp and Community Day Celebration will be at Johnson High School. The camp will be from 8am - 3pm and the Community Day will be from 3 - 8pm. www.huntsvilleurbannetwork.com. The 18th Annual Kappa Alpha Psi Golf Tournament will be at the Huntsville Municipal Golf Course at 7:30am. $80. Monday, June 15 The Paul Stroud Concerts by the River will have Bimini Road at 6pm at Rhodes Ferry Park. Free. www.decaturparks.com. The Arts Council presents the Concert in the Park with Ashlyn Maine and JED Eye starting at 6:30pm at Big Spring Park. Free. www.artshuntsville.org. June 15 – 18 The SonTreasure Island VBS will be at Mays Memorial Baptist Church in Toney, AL, from 6 - 8pm. www.maysmemorial.org. There will be a Car Boot Sale from 12 - 4pm in the East Field of Lowe Mill. www.lowemill.net. Tuesday, June 16 Our Town: Smart 911 will be at the Center for Lifelong Learning at 121 South Marion Street in Athens from 2:30 - 3:30pm. $5. 256-233-8262. S.N.A.P. will have dogs available for adoption June 13 and 27, July 11 and 25, Aug 8 and 22 from 10am to 1pm at Pet Smart 6275 University Dr NW 35, Westside Centre, Huntsville, AL 35806. www.snapalabama.org, helpsnap@yahoo.com. Dancing with the Library Stars II with the Moondust Big Band & the Huntsville Swing Dance Society, Round Two of our big band dance contest will be at 6:30pm at the Huntsville-Madison Downtown Library. Free. www.hmcpl.org. The Decatur-Athens Alumni Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity 2015 Father~Daughter Gala will be at the Best Western Plus in Madison. www.kapsimad.com. Wednesday, June 17 Lowe Mill Out Loud! Featuring Sara Bowen will be from 6 - 7:30pm in the Classroom Studio 2008 of Lowe Mill. Free. www.lowemill.net. Taste the Spirit of Madison Family Fun Festival will be at the Insanity Complex, 100 Skate Park Drive from 11am - 10pm. There will be BBQ cook off challenge, bazaar shopping, live music and more. www.madisonchamber.net. The Huntsville Ski Club is offering 8 ski trips at group rates for the 2015-16 season. Attend the monthly meeting at 7pm and get the details! Open to the Public. (See ad pg.13) Core Strength Transformer Yoga Workshop will be from 10am - 12pm in Your Yoga Studio 258 of the Flying Monkey Arts. $35. www.flyingmonkeyarts.org. The Annual Alabama Children’s Classic Bass Tournament will be at Lakepoint State Park on Lake Eufaula. Early entry fee is $120. The tournament will start at safe light and weigh in begins at 2pm. www.AlabamaChildrensClassic.org. Indoor Football Alabama Hammers vs. Lehigh Valley will be at the VBC Arena at 7pm. 256- 551-2222. Saturday Scientist-The Past Comes Alive: Making Fossils will be at the US Space & Rocket Center at 11:30am. www.rocketcenter.com. The Friends of the Library will present the annual Blooming Book Sale from 10am - 4pm at the VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 Thursday, June 18 The Madison Gazebo Concerts will have The Beasley Brothers at the Gazebo in downtown Madison at 6:30pm. http://artsmadison.org/gazebo-concerts. Friday, June 19 There will be a Palette Pitstop: Craft Beer and Wine Bar at the Huntsville Museum of Art in conjunction with Downtown Huntsville’s Street Food from 6 - 9pm. www.hsvmuseum.org. Jim Parker’s Songwriters Series will be at the VBC Playhouse from 6 - 10pm. It will feature Steve Seskin, Tony Arata, Jesse Terry and Jim Parker with special guest, Nicole Johnson. www.jimparkermusic.com/main.html. 3rd Friday in Downtown Decatur will be from 5 - 9pm. Enjoy dining, shopping, music, artists and vendors. http://www.decaturdowntown.org. events cont. on pg. 14 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 13 events cont. from pg. 13 The North Alabama NSBE Professionals Golf Tournament will be at Sunset Landing Golf Course. Registration and Announcements will begin at 11am. www.nsbe-northalabamaae.com. There will be a Food Truck Rally/ Street Food Gathering from 6 - 9pm on Church Street in downtown Huntsville. Free. www.downtownhuntsville.org. June 19 - 20 The Elkmont Lions Club Smokin’ Railroad Street Barbecue will be in Downtown Elkmont, AL. Live Music will start at 6:30 pm Friday; and Saturday at 8am. www.elkmontlionsclub.com. June 19 – 21 Oklahoma! will be at the Main Stage Theatre Friday and Saturday at 7:30pm and Sunday at 2:30pm. Ticket prices start at $18. http://www.imphuntsville.org. Saturday, June 20 There will be a Drop-In & CREATE Saturday: Artful Expressions at the Huntsville Museum of Art from 11am - 1pm. www.hsvmuseum.org. The Happenin Fest will be at Good People Brewery in Birmingham from 2pm – midnight. http://www.goodpeoplebrewing.com. The Stewart Standouts 2nd Annual Youth Football Camp hosted by Denver Broncos’ and Huntsville Native Darian Stewart will be at Milton Frank Stadium from 8am - noon. Ages 7 - 15. Free. Register on line, www. StewartStandouts.org. The Huntsville-Madison Downtown Library will have a Scrabble Tournament at 11am. Fee is $3. www.hmcpl.org. There will be a Contra Dance in the gym of Faith Presbyterian Church from 7:30 - 10:30pm. There will be live music by Ed and Elsie and calling by Nancy Harden. $8 and $6 for students. Children under 12 are free. 256-837-0656. http://www.secontra.com/ NACDS.html NASA on the Square will be in Downtown Huntsville from 10am - 2pm. There will be exhibits, food trucks, music and more. www.downtownhuntsville.org. Bubble Ball or Bust will be at Big Spring Park from 9:30am – 4pm. $40. http://www.downtownhuntsville.org. Thursday, June 25 Susie’s Beach Fest will be at A.M. Booth’s Lumberyard. This is a concert fundraiser featuring a mini-beach, music by CBCB, food trucks, beach cocktails and artwork. $15. www.susiesbeachfest.eventbrite.com. The Madison Gazebo Concerts will have Microwave Dave at the Gazebo in downtown Madison at 6:30pm. Free. http://artsmadison.org/gazebo-concerts. June 25 - 27 The Athens Lions Club Kiddie Carnival, located at 309 East Forrest Street, Athens, AL will open every Thursday, Friday & Saturday night, 6:30 - 9:30pm except July 4th, through August 1st. www.visitathensal.com. June 25 – 28 Oklahoma!, will be at the Main Stage Theatre Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 7:30pm and Sunday at 2:30pm .Ticket prices start at $18. http://www.imphuntsville.org. Friday, June 26 Jazz-N-June Concert featuring Alabama A&M’s James Blair and friends, with Gary Motley (pianist), Regi Wooten (guitarist), J.D. Blair (the Groove Regulator) will be at the Ernest Knight Reception Center at 7pm. $20. 256-604-8172, www.jazznjune.org, www.tvjs. webs.com. The Art Walk will be on the Historic Square in Huntsville from 5 - 8pm. www.downtownhuntsville.org. The Paranormal Study Center will host: Angelique (Angel) Moselle “Messages from Your Heart” at the Hilton Garden Inn at 6:30pm. $10. www.ParapsychologyStudyGroup.com. Saturday, June 27 There will be a Teen Fashion Show, Fundraiser, Expo & After-Party at the Design Lab (2nd floor) at Lincoln Mill from 6 - 10pm. $10. www.thebric.info The Exhibit Connections: Diane Fox and Beauvais Lyons opens today at 11am at the Huntsville Museum of Art. www.hsvmuseum.org. DIY Mineral Make-Up will be from 6 - 8:30pm in Studio 266 of Lowe Mill. $65. soaptreasures@outlook. com, www.lowemill.net. The 5 Points BLOK Party will be held on the ground of KindSociety located at 403 Pratt Avenue from 1 9pm. 5PointsBLOK@gmail.com. Sunday, June 21 Miss Spirit of America will be at the Princess Theatre from 7 - 9pm. www.princesstheatre.org. Beer Quest will be at Sci-Quest from 5 - 9pm. There will be games, food trucks, cornhole tournament and scientific demos. www.sci-quest.org. The 4th Annual Rocket City Pride Community Festival & Equality Pride Parade will be at the Historic Roundhouse Depot from 12 – 9pm, the Pride Parade will be at 4:30pm. Free. free2be.org/pride/ (See ad pg.12) Kappa Alpha Psi Huntsville Alumni Chapter Black & White Ball will be at the Huntsville Marriott at 7pm. $65. 256-425-2027, The Tennessee Valley Jazz Society’s 29th Annual JazzN-June Festival will be at various locations. June 22nd - 28th. For details go to http://tvjs.webs.com. The Arts Council presents the Concert in the Park with The U.S. Army Material Command Band starting at 6:30pm at Big Spring Park. Free. www.artshuntsville.org. June 22 – 26 Youth Studio: Summer Break will be from 1 - 3pm in Green Pea Press Studio 122 of Lowe Mill. $120. Ages 8 - 12. www.lowemill.net, contact info@greenpeapress.com. Children’s Art Camp Sampler will be from 9am - 1pm in Studio 314 of Lowe Mill. $250. www.lowemill.net. WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM June 23 - 24 The 2015 U.S. Army Soldier Show Tour will be at Redstone Arsenal on Tuesday and Wednesday night from 7 - 10pm. www.armymwr.com. (See ad pg.9) Writer’s Group will be from 3 - 5pm in Studio 131 of Lowe Mill. Free. www.lowemill.net. Monday, June 22 The Paul Stroud Concerts by the River will have Jeff Whitlow at 6pm at Rhodes Ferry Park. Free. www.decaturparks.com. 14 The Alabama A&M Boys and Girls Basketball Camp will be at the Elmore Gym from 8am - 4pm Monday - Thursday and 8am - noon on Friday. $125. 2nd - 12th grades. 256-372-8240. #0604015062415 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 The Taproom Music Tour will be at Yellowhammer Brewery from 6 – 9pm. $5. www.yellowhammerbrewery.com. The Bessie K. Russell Library presents a Jazz-Inspired Painting Class at 11am. 256-859-9050, www.hmcpl.org. The Breakfast Edition Street Food Gathering will be in Downtown Huntsville on the Northside Square from 7 - 10pm. www.downtownhuntsville.org. Sunday, June 28 The Huntsville Museum of Art will have a Colored Pencil and Reclaimed Materials Demonstration with Artist Susie Garrett from 1 - 3pm. www.hsvmuseum.org. The Huntsville Museum of Art will have a Gallery Walk with Connections Artist Dian Fox and Beanvais Lyons from 2 - 4pm. www.hsvmuseum.org. THE END!! THE VALLEY PLANET FREE WILL ASTROLOGY June 4 - June 24 © Copyright 2015 Rob Brezsny ARIES (March 21-April 19): The Persian scholar Avicenna was so well-rounded in his knowledge that he wrote two different encyclopedias. Even as a teenager he was obsessed with learning all he could. He got especially consumed with trying to master Aristotle’s Metaphysics, which did not easily yield its secrets to him. He read it 40 times, memorizing every word. When he finally understood it, he was so excited he celebrated by giving out money and gifts to destitute strangers. I suspect you will soon be having an equivalent breakthrough, Aries. At last you will grasp a truth that has eluded you for a long time. Congratulations in advance! TAURUS (April 20-May 20): When it’s rush hour in Tokyo, unwieldy crowds of commuters board the trains and subways. They often need help at squeezing in. Railway workers known as oshiya, or pushers, provide the necessary force. Wearing crisp uniforms, white gloves, and neat hats, they cram the last stragglers into each car. I foresee the possibility of you being called on to perform a metaphorical version of the service these pushers provide. Is there a polite and respectful way for you to be indelicate? Could you bring lighthearted tact to bear as you seek an outcome that requires everyone to compromise? GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Nobel Prize-winning physicists Wolfgang Pauli and Niels Bohr were both amused at how counterintuitive their innovative theories seemed. Once Pauli was lecturing a group of eminent scientists about a radical new hypotheses. Bohr got out of his seat in the audience and walked up to the front to interrupt his colleague. “We all agree that your theory is crazy,” Bohr told Pauli. “The question that divides us is whether it is crazy enough to have a chance of being correct. My own feeling is that it is not crazy enough.” Pauli defended himself. “It is crazy enough!” he said. But Bohr was insistent. “It’s not crazy enough!” he argued. I’m going to pose a comparable query to you, Gemini. Are your new ideas crazy enough to be true? Make sure that they are. CANCER (June 21-July 22): It seems you’ve wandered into an awkward phase of your cycle. Missed connections have aroused confusion. Disjointed events have led to weirdness. I’ve got a suggestion for how you might be able to restore clarity and confidence: Make a foray into a sacred border area and risk imaginative acts of heroism. Does that sound too cryptic or spooky? How about if I say it like this: Go on an unpredictable journey that will free your trapped vitality, or try a mysterious experiment that will awaken your sleeping magic. P.S. For best results, ask for help every step of the way. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Gesamtkunstwerk is a German word that can be translated as “total art work” or “all-embracing art form.” It refers to a creative masterpiece that makes use of several genres. The 19th-century composer Richard Wagner had this in mind when he produced his opera cycle The Ring of the Nibelung, which included orchestral music, singing, theater, and literature. I’m invoking the spirit of Gesamtkunstwerk for your use, Leo. The coming weeks will be an excellent time to synthesize and coordinate all the things you do best, and express them with a flourish. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Defender was a popular video game that young people played in video arcades during the 1980s. Fifteen-year-old Steve Juraszek was profiled in Time magazine after he racked up a record-breaking 16 million points while playing the game for 16 hours straight. But when his high school principal found out that Juraszek had skipped classes to be at the arcade, he was suspended. I’m wondering if there may soon be a similar development in your own life, Virgo. Will you have to pay a price for your success? You should at least be prepared to risk an acceptable loss in order to accomplish an important goal. THE VALLEY PLANET LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): People I meet are sometimes taken aback by how many probing questions I ask them. Recently an acquaintance said to me, “Why don’t you feel driven to talk about yourself all the time, like everyone else?” I told him the truth: “Being curious is just the way I was made. Maybe it’s because of my Mercury in Gemini, or my seventh-house sun, or my three planets in Libra.” I suspect that you are due to go through a phase similar to the mode I’m in all the time. If it doesn’t happen naturally, I suggest you coax it out. You need to be extra inquisitive. You’ll benefit from digging as deeply as you dare. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): I love to watch an evolved Scorpio get his or her needs met by helping other people get their needs met. It’s thrilling to behold the paradoxical Scorpio assets in action: the combination of manipulativeness and generosity; the animal magnetism working in service to the greater good; the resourceful willpower that carries out hidden agendas and complex strategies designed to make the world a better place. I fully expect to see a lot of this crazy wisdom from you in the coming weeks. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “Would that life were like the shadow cast by a wall or a tree,” says the Talmud. “But it is like the shadow of a bird in flight.” That’s a lyrical sentiment, but I don’t agree with it. I’ve come to prefer the shimmering dance over the static stance. The evershifting play of light and dark is more interesting to me than the illusion of stability. I’m more at home in the unpredictable flow than the solid block of certainty. What about you, Sagittarius? I suggest that in the immediate future you cultivate an appreciation for the joys and challenges of the shimmering dance. Kellye McCormick, Owner Master Esthetician Licensed Barber CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The core of your horoscope comes from the poem “A Color of the Sky” by Tony Hoagland. Imagine that you are the “I” who is saying the following: “What I thought was an end turned out to be a middle. What I thought was a brick wall turned out to be a tunnel. What I thought was an injustice turned out to be a color of the sky.” Please understand, Capricorn, that speaking these words might not make total sense to you yet. You may have to take them on faith until you gather further evidence. But I urge you to speak them anyway. Doing so will help generate the transformations you need in order to make them come true. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Lessons in luck are coming your way. Will they help you attract more luck? Maybe. Will they show you how to make better use of your luck? Maybe. A lot depends on your ability to understand and love the paradox of luck. I’ve assembled a few enigmatic teachings to prepare you. 1. “Luck is believing you’re lucky.” - Tennessee Williams. 2. “It is a great piece of skill to know how to guide your luck even while waiting for it.” - Baltasar Gracián. 3. “Sometimes not getting what you want is a brilliant stroke of luck.” - Lorii Myers. 4. “The harder I work, the luckier I get.” - Samuel Goldwyn. 5. “You’ve got to try your luck at least once a day, because you could be going around lucky all day and not even know it.” - Jimmy Dean. 6. “Go and wake up your luck.” - Persian proverb. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): The word “boudoir” means a woman’s bedroom. But hundreds of years ago, it had a more specific definition. It was a room where a well-bred girl was sent when she was pouting. It’s derived from the French verb bouder, which means “to sulk.” If it were in my power, Pisces, I would send you to the sulking room right now. In fact, I would encourage you to sulk. In my opinion, a good long sulk would be just the right prescription for you. It would trigger brainstorms about how to change the soggy, foggy conditions that warranted your sulking in the first place. Homework: I dare you to bestow a blessing on a person you’ve considered to be beneath you. Testify at FreeWillAstrology.com #0604015062415 Melissa Steelman Master Hair Design Color Specialist Lesley Williams Color Specialist, Hair Stylist Unusual Place for Entertainment! by John Davis H untsville/Madison County should be proud of its community spirit symbolized by its many excellent libraries and their thought provoking projects. Andrew Carnegie, the captain of industry who worked with towns all across the world to build libraries, knew that merit and hard work brought about great accomplishments. He insisted that the public library would be open to all, even those “working boys” who otherwise would have no access to books. With books they got ideas, and those ideas could then be developed, modified, and shared in that same public forum. His ideas led to open stacks in libraries, where the very concept of ‘browsing’ was introduced. How many of us today learned about other, totally unknown subjects, places, and people because we spent time in a library, just browsing? How many of us heard our first public presentation there, or engaged in a discussion? I know I learned that I was not alone in my ideas, nor that my ideas were always right, when I could test my thinking there. A public center of discussion reminds me of the great era of coffee shops when our forefathers, in colonial times, gathered in such houses to debate, discuss, and explore ideas of the day. I’m not afraid of public forums, and I’m proud of a city that has the wisdom to share this idea. VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 15 Marley From The Darkside W hile cruising through the kitchen, I came upon an unattended rice crispy treat. It was a beautiful specimen, quite possibly the finest treat ever produced by human hands. I suppose you humans are good for some things after all. I settled on to this treat, like Eddie Van Halen jumps on a guitar solo, I shredded it. Shortly after consuming this marshmallowy morsel, I started to feel a familiar, yet strange feeling come over me. The next thing I know, I’m running through a meadow, heading towards a lake, when I noticed a sweet blue and yellow boat, that seemed to be inviting me to take a ride. What the hell, why not. I jumped on board and off we went. Not long after leaving the weather got kind of rough, and the boat turned into a black and white, and apparently evil version of its former self. Nice, I dig the new look, and then we hit land. As I got off the boat, and headed ashore, I noticed that everything here seemed to be alive. Trees spoke, rocks spoke, and then a big yellow dragon came out of the forest, offering his assistance in helping me return to whence I came. Who asked you? I replied, and quickly severed his big dumb head, from his big dumb shoulders. The trees and rocks, the birds and bees, every living thing on this living island began to freak the f*** out. Then a scrawny little annoying boy appeared. “Oh no, not Puffnstuff”,he wailed, and before this little b*st*rd could utter another word, I relieved him of his tongue, then his eyes, then I basically pulled a Leather Face on him, then turning my rage on the rest of these singing and dancing, talking weirdos. Not long after my killing spree another inhabitant of this island showed up on the scene. AHA- Pet Store Disappointment By Mark Hauer T he other day I went into a new pet store after an interview. So new it still had that fresh retail smell of paint and still pee-free industrial carpet. I walked in and just felt this pall of depression. Two people were “working.” By that I mean staring into space - obviously bored out of their minds at 10:30 am - they could barely summon the energy to attempt to smile and mumble a resentful “hello.” A good ol’ boy from the HAHAHAHAHA, this lady shrieked, “Did you stock room nearly collided with me. He was busy do this?” she asked, “ Yep” I replied, then she tapping at his phone with the befuddled energy of told me how this Puffnstuff and Jimmy had been a chimp out of his depth, glowering, and with his harassing her for quite some time, burning feath- bottom lip hanging loose. ers off her Vulture, and tearing down her spiders webs. “I can’t believe I didn’t think of this, I’ve “Jeez! Whatchit!” he said, without looking up. always used some stupid spell that never seems to work.” I then explained to her why most witches “Dude, “ I said. “ Takes a while getting used to have cats. “You see Witcheepoo, the evil doesn’t opposable thumbs. Keep it up. You’ll get the hang come from the witch, it comes from the cat, dump of it.” these losers and get yourself a real sidekick.” “Huh? Whachu-say?” And shuffled toward an“Will do,” she replied, then she showed me why other set of doors. “F#*#ing weirdo.” she had been after this talking flute that the human, had kept in his pocket, that is until I removed Normally I don’t go into pet stores. There is just said pocket, leaving only a bloody rag of a shirt, something depressing about them. I don’t mind in its place. Witcheepoo then picked up Freddy the fish. But the birds always look stressed. And the Flute, and POOF he was now Noah the never the mammals all look... sad. Both ferrets were ending Blunt. “I like your style girl”, I said to the asleep, sprawled bonelessly on the bottom of witch, then we put the fire to Noah, creating an their wooden and Plexiglas enclosure. The gerbils ark of smoke, flooding the room.” Then, to my and hamsters were asleep, or chewing their food surprise, my human was standing over me, inquir- pellets slowly, staring ahead as stoically as Clint ing as to the whereabouts of a missing rice crispy Eastwood trying to remember his lines. The mice treat. “I can’t help ya dude, but feel free to drop were gathered into protective knots. And the rats me a line at marleyhatesyouall@yahoo.com and napped or sniffed the air, perhaps stretched and we can discuss it. then curled up again. None of the exercise wheels were in use. Would I be wrong in suggesting these You can’t do a little, cause a little’s not poor animals had inherited the southern disdain enough…….Meow for needless exercise? Unchained Maladies pit bull owners than sane people. At this point the following stats point a mauled finger the Pit Bull’s way. by Ricky Thomason I Report: U.S. Dog Bite Fatalities January 2006 to December 2008. A 2009 report issued by DogsBite.org shows that 19 dog breeds contributed to 88 deaths in the 3-year period of 2006 to 2008. Pit Bulls accounted for 59% followed by Rottweilers with 14%. n defense of the much maligned, misunderstood, gentle as a lamb Pit Bull: I am the first to admit that statistics and numbers can be manipulated for and against anything, or any cause. For instance, take the number of cars on the road by make. If there are more of one make (Brand “X”) than any of the others it stands to reason the number of crashes and injuries / fatalities may appear to condemn “Brand X” for being the deadliest vehicle on the road. It’s not until you take the numbers of accidents, injuries and fatalities by percentage of the numbers for every make that you get a clearer picture of what brand is the deadliest. I have listened to both sides of the great Pit Bull debate to the point of throwing up. I decided to research and determine for myself the answer to the following question. Do Pit Bulls deserve their reputation as vicious “attack” dogs? As in the automobile example above, one should consider the most popular breeds of dogs in America by numbers weighed against the number of attacks by breed that the stats constitute evidence. According to Time Magazine Online the ten most popular breeds of dogs are, in ascending order. #10) Rottweiler. # 9) Dachshund. #8) Poodle. #7) Boxer. #6 English Bulldog. #5) Yorkshire Terrier. #4) Golden Retriever. #3 Beagle. #2) German Shepherd. #1) Labrador. I was surprised that the American Pit Bull (a.k.a. Staffordshire Terrier) did not appear on the list. In the neighborhood where we live there are more 16 Remember, the Pit Bull was absent from the list and the Rottweiler barely made the cut at #10. Of the 88 fatal dog attacks recorded by DogsBite. org, pit bull type dogs were responsible for 59% (52). That is measured against all other breeds combined. Put in real life perspective rather than just numbers that is equivalent to a pit bull killing a U.S. citizen every 21 days during this 3-year period. The data also shows that pit bulls commit the vast majority of off-property attacks that result in death. Only 18% (16) of the attacks occurred off owner property, yet the 16 pit bulls were responsible for 81%. That suggests that if you own pit bulls or other potentially dangerous dogs you should do so responsibly. Keep them inside a tall, securely fenced enclosure, and some people do so. However, a standard 4’ chain link, backyard fence is a mere suggestion to pit bulls, German Shepherds, Rottweilers, and other large breeds. I am a witness. I provoked a few into a fence jumping frenzy by merely walking by on the public sidewalk. A five-year review of dog-bite injuries from the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, published in 2009 in the journal Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, found that almost 51 percent of the attacks were from pit bulls, almost 9 percent were WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM All the rodents were inexpensively priced. They were trailer park cheap. I always liked rats. So I went up to the near-somnolent cashier and asked her if anybody actually handled the rodents. tal embrace. I mean tight enough the eyes pop a half inch from the sockets and the idiot sh*ts his pants. When I was a kid in high school I raised rats in biology class. And I admit I had a kind of squeamish fascination watching our boa constrictor feed. But that was a child’s fascination with the darker side of nature, that nasty side of MY nature that actually enjoyed destruction, the power of setting into motion the demise of a fellow creature. What does it say about the adults who still enjoy this illusory power? “Yeah, it is sad.” I agreed. I dunno about you, but I suspect quite a few of my old bosses and teachers might have been among this group of exotic animal enthusiasts. Or maybe I’m just getting soft-hearted in my old age. I mean I sometimes feel bad these days when I tell someone to go to hell or kiss my a**. I guess I was a little near to the huge bird enclosure as I was walking out. Rather, I paused to read the sign next to the birds. I’m a compulsive reader. “Don’t get too close to the birds” the sign read in print small enough YOU HAD to stand next to the bird enclosure to read it. “It causes stress.” That’s good to know, I thought. The glass was covered by the greasy hand prints of bird-stressers. Not mine, though. I hurried out the door. “No. Sad to say they are just there to be food.” She wrinkled her nose and shrugged. “Have a nice day,” followed me as I left. Or perhaps it was a chorus of yawns. Yes, I know: “circle of life,” and all that. But there was just that small part of me that kinda hoped one of these days one of those snakes grew freakishly big one year and gave its owner a near fa- “Well, there’s a reliable disappointment.” (Quote by Harvey Pekar in American Splendor) from Rottweilers and 6 percent were from mixes of those two breeds. remained unharmed. Doubtless, there are cases where this and similar stories are true. In other words, almost two-thirds of the hospital’s dog-attack injuries involved just two breeds, Pit Bulls and Rottweiler’s. And a 2011 study from the Annals of Surgery revealed that “attacks by pit bulls are associated with higher morbidity rates, higher hospital charges and a higher risk of death than are attacks by other breeds of dogs.” I would be remiss if I did not include the opinion of TV’s “Dog Whisperer” Cesar Milan. He whispers “Pit bulls have a strong desire to please and will do anything for their family or friends. Pit bull owners are courageous, full of vitality, and are constantly looking out for those they love. They enjoy being around children and make excellent parents and grandparents. There is no better babysitter than a pit bull.” The authors of that 2011 study go on to say, “Strict regulation of pit bulls may substantially reduce the U.S. mortality rates related to dog bites.” Obviously, he is talking about pit bull owners who have more sense than their dog and therefore able to train them, an increasingly rare occurrence. Far too often, the owners are irresponsible and have little more control over their beasts than I do the ocean tides. Many of us have visited dog owners and had their dogs jump all over us while beaming owners sat and grinned like foolish children in an “aren’t our puppies cute” manner. I marvel at the number of dogs that pass my house dragging their people on a daily walk. Yes, they are cute, and we love dogs – but we’d love them more if they were under some semblance of control. Criticize peoples’ children all you want, but you dare not say a damned thing about their dogs and other pets. If you do, more than likely you will hear some version of, “This is the dog’s home – not yours.” This piece is certain to garner a lot of mail from rabid pit bull owners with heartwarmingly foolish tales about their pit bull being so gentle they would place their newborn baby’s head in the dog’s mouth and leave them alone - and the baby #0604015062415 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 One has to wonder if the tales of usual gentleness are true why the owners go Daffy Duck nuts over the very idea of ordinances and laws that would not affect their well-behaved dogs. It’s only the owners with the “loaded and ready to go off at any time” dogs that need be concerned. After looking at the deal closely, I have to ask once more if Pit Bulls deserve their reputation as vicious “attack” dogs. I concluded, not always, but an overwhelming amount of evidence suggests many times, they do. Let’s not single the poor, pitiful Pit Bull out; the ordinances should apply to Rottweilers and German Shepherds as well. You may now attack, dawg, THE VALLEY PLANET ReLit: Smokin’ Good Reads Worth A ReKindle: “Big Bad Love” by Larry Brown T hough Larry Brown has passed from this vale of tears he is immortal so long as his books remain available. I had the pleasure of working with the former Oxford MS firefighter a decade ago for two weeks at the Breadloaf Writer’s Conference in Killington, VT. A Tale of Many Cities T he great city of Anniston, Alabama, decided years ago to plant thousands of broadleaf trees on a grand reception boulevard. They wanted to show visitors and residents what is valuable: walkable streets, memorable architecture, and in Autumn, natural color. Chattanooga welcomes tourists with a protected parking area, and then free shuttle rides to all its famed attractions and restaurants. St. Louis took a sad, neglected Soulard neighborhood, and sold the properties for one dollar each with the stipulation that buyers would upgrade those places. Now that neighborhood is one of the star attractions of upscale brick row houses, lofts, restaurants, and taverns. It attracts young and future oriented people to its many welcoming gathering places and pocket parks. Brown’s “Dirty Work” remains one of my alltime faves and he was an acknowledged master of the short story and later proved equally adept at the novel form. Many writers say that they find short stories to be a more challenging endeavor than novels. The reasoning is that the author has more time to establish characters and plot in the novel. Short stories are a study in the economy of words; you don’t have many so you can’t waste any. Brown is/was “Grit Lit” at its best. I listed “Big Bad Love” as a starting point, but wholeheartedly urge you to check out any and all of his works. “Big Bad Love” was made into a movie and I saw it on “on Demand.’ He lived and played hard and the world is a lesser place without him. Review by Ricky Thomason Raleigh, North Carolina, links its university to the rest of the city with walkways that wend through the campus and town. They pass by memorials, through manicured lawns and gardens. These lead to art, sports, festivals, and cultural events. All the city’s neighborhoods are linked by a free shuttle which carries the visitor to different hubs of entertainment, shopping, and culture. Arlington, Virginia, has taken its location along the Potomac River as inspiration to build walkways, a shopping and restaurant district, and small parks where none existed before to take advantage of the now delightful views. This type vision has been multiplied in San Antonio. That city took the small river flowing through it to create ‘Riverwalk’, a true shopping, cultural, and enjoyment district which ties the town together. With this vision, San Antonio transformed dusty, dead neighborhoods and turned them into a true national attraction. Decatur took the Princess Theater, and renewed this movie house of the 1930’s, creating a cultural hub, a place to come for entertainment and refreshment of body and soul. Auntie Jen’s Animal Crazy I dedicate this article to the endangered elephant. Too many live heartbroken in captivity. Too many are killed every day for their ivory. If this sentient species is to survive, we must stand up for them now. F or Mother’s Day, I wanted to choose a gift that would uplift my mom’s heart. The obvious choice was to do something to help an endangered species in her honour. refuge created specifically for African and Asian elephants. This accredited non-profit is a sanctuary for special needs elephants who have been retired from zoos and circuses. At that moment, an action alert came from the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust. Founded in 1977, the DSWT is “dedicated to the protection and conservation of wildlife and habitats in Kenya. Best known for the rescue and hand-rearing of milk-dependent orphaned baby elephants and rhinos, so that they can return to the wild when grown, the DSWT also manages anti-poaching teams, mobile veterinary units and community outreach programs.” The Elephant Sanctuary provides a number of ways you can help, from “adopting” elephants to shopping at their extensive online gift shop. June 21 will mark the first Father’s Day since my dad departed. To help elephants and his legacy live on, I adopted an elephant named Sissy from the Elephant Sanctuary in his memory. I went on to explore their website and found you can “foster” the elephants, rhinos and giraffes that reside at their sanctuary. What better way to honour my mom on Mother’s Day than to foster an orphaned elephant? I read through the profiles and chose Roi, an orphaned little girl who was found next to her dead mother, a victim of poaching. Without rescue, milk-dependent Roi would not have lasted long. Thanks to the DSWT, Roi is now reported to be very playful, attached to her keepers, and genuinely happy. Their foster program is fully digital, so I can electronically keep up with Roi’s progress while my entire donation goes to her care. To learn more, visit the DSWT online at sheldrickwildlifetrust.org and like them on Facebook at facebook.com/thedswt. Please also check out the Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee. Established in 1995, the Elephant Sanctuary is the U.S.’s largest natural habitat THE VALLEY PLANET run small stores. Then there are places that put no stock in manufacturing, having voted time and again for those who have run our textiles and labor intensive jobs out of town. We begin to look like everywhere else in the US. Malls to the right of us, strip malls to the left of us, folly and blunder. Who, really, is proud of the miles long strip mall called Highway 72? As this is a true sanctuary, the facility is not open to the general public. However, you can virtually visit via their “Elecams” at elephants.com and get updates at facebook.com/ElephantSanctuaryTN. Another non-profit leader in the fight to save elephants that I highly endorse is International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW). Visit them at ifaw.org and scroll to “protecting elephants” to learn how you can combat the ivory trade. In May, musicians Slash and Myles Kennedy teamed up with IFAW to raise awareness via the release of their song “Beneath the Savage Sun,” a story written from the point of view of an elephant who has lost a loved one. As their press release states, “Elephants show emotions like love and joy. They can express empathy. They are loyal to their families and devoted to their young. They grieve in some of the same ways we do: it’s not uncommon that they’ll keep weeklong vigils over fallen family members, then later revisit their bones. When an estimated 25,000 to 50,000 elephants are killed each year for their ivory, those who survive must #0604015062415 Each of these ideas can be applied here in Huntsville, Madison, and Athens. To do so requires seeing each city as a whole, not already existing, inviolate neighborhoods. Trees, shuttles, waterways, entertainment, large and small business support equals progress. We should never have to ask why our young leave our cities. Is it because we have no vision that includes them, their dreams and abilities, to be special in the world? We boast our business friendliness. Yet, do we not rather mean corporate friendly cities? Huntsville has begun great efforts toward encouraging small, imaginative, privately be in nearly constant mourning . . . We know that many of you love your guitars with ivory bridges and pianos with ivory keys, but we need you to think about where things came from and what are your ethics when buying and selling them?” If you aren’t in a position to donate money to help elephants, you can spread the word through social media posts. Like IFAW on Facebook at facebook. com/ifaw. I also suggest 96 Elephants at facebook. com/96Elephants and Save the Elephants at facebook.com/savetheelephants.kenya. Another action you can take to help elephants that’s free: Boycott circuses that use animals. It breaks my heart every time I hear someone has taken their kids or grandkids to the circus. What’s more devastating is the pain and isolation an elephant suffers when he or she is taken from family and natural habitat and violently forced to perform, often for many lonely decades. Please remember that we live in a supply-and-demand world. What we choose to demand will be supplied. Instead of encouraging the next generation to demand elephants perform, let’s encourage them to get involved in demanding elephants be respected and protected before it’s too late. We can be so much better. I can imagine cities linked by broadleaf trees along manicured avenues and winding creekways. Those waterways are lined with interconnected small businesses, galleries, and restaurants. There is outdoor seating to enjoy the passing streams from well-kept gardens. I see true welcoming avenues on roads which lead naturally to our seats of government, a pedestrian zone for visitors, and a large population of lofts over the businesses downtown. I imagine shuttles that carry the visitor to all the live theater, outstanding restaurants, festivals, concerts, museums, and parks our cities have to offer. Our educational and sporting events will be known across the land as the place to be, and something to be a part of. We can do this; we just need the vision and the will. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if our children decided to open a business here, rather than work as a clerk in Walmart? Wouldn’t it be grand if the ancient symbol of the owl, wise, foresighted, and thoughtful, was our model? Recycle. Different. by John Davis S o I went to the Athens Earthday event, never realizing the absolutely intriguing story I’d find there. At this show, free and open to the public, I met a couple of representatives of Custom Polymers, PET, of Athens, Alabama. They literally changed my viewpoint on recycling. These guys were pleasant, enthusiastic, and told the most astounding story... but first some background on me, and maybe you, and recycling. I often doubted the utility of recycling. What a pain to drop off just a couple of plastic bottles, cans, and whatnot. These guys changed my appreciation of recycling in general, and enlightened me on what they do specifically. They gave a simple, but powerful, demonstration. You know the plastic bottle we all drink from these days? They held up a single empty plastic bottle. Then they showed what it looked like pulverized, and turned into tiny pellets. Then they showed how those pellets could be formed into a simple tube, about two inches long. This tube could then be shipped at minimal cost, and then ‘grown again’ as a complete bottle at its destination. Or...and this is where it got amazing, these pellets could be turned into components in clothes, in hand bags, or in fleece materials. My list could go on, but you get the point. Their work ethic says it best: Recycle. Different. It’s not just part of our logo, it’s the way we do business. What makes us different from our competitors starts with a team of experienced professionals who care about what we do. We enjoy the people we work with, and we embrace our environmental responsibility. We at Custom Polymers PET, LLC are passionate about what we do. We make a superior product for our customers, generate business for our suppliers, benefit our economic community, create a livelihood for our employees, and make a positive impact on the environment. Custom Polymers PET, LLC is committed to making a difference and we challenge you to find a recycler more collaborative, reliable, or trustworthy. These are just some of the things that make us different and have allowed us as a part of Custom Polymers to become the 4th largest plastic recycle in North America. Check these guys out. And recycle. Like me on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ AuntieJenValleyPlanet. VOLUME 13 ISSUE 8 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 17 events cont. from pg. 17 Looking for a music comedy side kick. I change words in songs but, I need a guitar player or Keys. call Fred 256-653-3503 Send in your random encounters today. It’s FREE!! We are putting all the categories together since it seems like there are always more jeers than anything else!! But just to give you an idea of what the To Yuno from Yunohoos are about… I Saw you: but you didn’t catch my name, You saw me or you think you were seen: Cheers: Pay your respect to those who deserve it and of course Jeers: Frustrated? Tell us all about it. Thankfully, we don’t know who you are! To send in your FREE ad 1. Keep your word limit to 40 words. No names, just initials if you want. 2. Meet the deadline. 3. Get it to us: Put “To Yuno from Yunohoo” in the subject line of the email and send to classifieds@valleyplanet.com. 15” Hartke Transporter Bass Guitar Cabinet for Sale. Comes with Eminence Alpha A-15 speaker inside. Large enough to play with a loud band but light enough for convenient transport. $150 256 431-5130 K.C. – You’ll soon meet a band that knows nothing of sunshine. Once Friend, turned Acquaintance. Charvel Model One, made in Japan Mid 80’s. One Humbucker, one volume knob, Rock Maple neck, Glossy Red finish, Spring fulcrum Trem, Charvel Hardshell Case,Simple, Classy, Hard to find in Very good Condition, Serious Only $325 call Mark 256-722-9250 PK – That’s my brother you are talking about. Enough is more than enough. Yes, it’s me. RT The Valley Planet Music Exchange is FREE to any individual (not businesses) looking to buy, sell, trade or find bandmates. You get a headline and 3 lines of text for FREE! Please call (256) 533-4613 or email your ads to classifieds@valleyplanet.com. Hofner Model 4910 bought in West Germany 1984. Excellent condition and hard shell case. Loads of music books, tuners, etc. $650 firm. Serious? email chuckebryant@yahoo.com Professional musician seeking to rent space for live music rehearsal, price and terms negotiable. References available upon request. Chris 256-541-9118 Multi-inst’ist/vocalist seeks guitarist/harmonicist/singer named Danny, 65, from Madison. Call/text Joe at 256-617-1395. Guitarist/Keyboardist/Singer seeks another guitarist and/or keyboardist, as well as a bassist who’s quick on the uptake. Ideally, should sing (well). Have drummer. For multiple different projects: Wedding/corporate gig band (covers, ‘60s-‘10s); jazz/blues/fusion; originals in ALL styles. Call/text Joe at 256-617-1395. Speaker For Sale, Used 50 inch tall, 25 inch wide and 16 inch deep. Black with wheels. $110. 256 606-5152, Decatur. The Single Guy: Communi-Date by Aaron Hurd Ladies, what’s the deal? A s you know, this article is all about communicating with each other about dating and our concerns and unanswered questions. I write these few words every three weeks in black and white as a way we all (boys and girls) can help “clear the air,” be honest, and, basically, share “real talk” about both sexes in this game of love. Once in a while, I open up and share what bothers me. I just lay it out there to vent and in the process maybe it educates some ladies as to what a least one single dude thinks…maybe more, but they won’t tell you… In return, once in a blue moon the ladies email me and share some knowledge (although, you ladies take your secrets to the grave - been around long enough to learn that). Nonetheless, we are all in the same search for that special someone. If we can shed some light on the game in the meantime then we are doing each other a favor and saving time and getting a peak at the other sex’s way of thinking. Basically what I am saying is, take notes - this could help! In this issue, I am going to touch on two things that I just don’t get and I think ladies would be better off if they just don’t do it. Or at least play it smart. Shall we start? First head scratcher - Why you sending me pictures? Look, I am the first guy to try and get a girl I am feeling to send me a picture, a selfie, a sexy lil’ something just for me - I love it. However, did you notice the three important words in that first sentence? Let me tell you, they were “I”, “Try”, and “FEELING”…..I TRY to get a girl I am FEELING to send me a picture. PERIOD. Let me tell you a story….. I started talking to this nice girl on-line; we met up and had a nice night out. She was fun and cool, but I did not feel the spark so I knew it was not going to go anywhere deeper than friendship. She texted for a while, we chatted, I was friendly and cool. Then she randomly started sending me “selfies” What’s wrong with that? Nothing, if I ASKED for them! Her text was a selfie in front of a mirror (guys-she was clothed-I know you’re 18 wondering Ha-ha) with a text, “Would love to hang out again soon - we should meet for a drink this week or next?” I replied, “Yes for sure, when I find some time… pretty busy next few weeks” (I was trying to be nice). See something wrong with my reply? I did…so my guilt got to me and 45 minutes later I wrote, “Nice picture by the way!” Yes, 45 minutes later! Call me smooth! JW – Hot Hot Hot! Yunohoo L: Hope you recover quickly from your surgery – we are rooting for you! T Congrats and thanks to the DPD for catching a number of thugs that have been terrorizing the SW side. It’s a good start. If we’re lucky the adult gets a nice ride on the express trolley to hell and the triplets a place to perform for the next 30 years. River City Residents It is official: VHS has gone to hell. It sucks more than Big O. Get your monitoring service from anyone but them. I have never seen such abominably poor customer service from any company that wants to stay in business. Screw them from N. Alabama I clearly did not think the picture was very amusing or sexy. In fact, because I was not into her it just reassured me she is not my type…the picture was not her best. And again, I did not ask for it! Why did she send it? I am guessing for a compliment, and this, ladies, brings me to issue number two. It was date number 2 and we had a fun time, at the end of the night I told her to text me when she got home to let me know she made it safe. This is what I got. “I’m home thanks for a great night!” I replied “Fun night for sure. Glad you made it sleep tight!” That should have been it! I get a text back, “Can I ask you a random question?” This is never good…I am automatically thinking, “Arghhh here we go!” I sigh and text back “sure!” she writes back, “Never mind, good night” then 30 minutes later I get, “Do you find me attractive?” Hmmmm if I did….. Not anymore! I couldn’t be mean so I wrote, “Yes of course” but honestly I’m done with her. Don’t Do This!!! Ladies, be honest, there is nothing attractive when you date an insecure dude, right? Well, news flash, WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM R – What are you, some kind of beast. MG S, I really miss you. I still love you. The emotional distance is going to end our relationship. Please take us seriously. B N: you still out there taking men for anything you can get your hands on b****? FY Cops: Can you please stop everyone from running the four way stop at Adams and Lowe and gunning it? People with driveways, kids riding bikes and joggers are taking their lives in their own hands! Concerned GS – Do you still think every boss’s butt has a wormhole just for you? 1 of 5 BB – You will be missed by more than Lucille. Blues Fans J, hoped Nashville went OK. R&L L – Cats can be hard to keep in a hat. Nothing can prepare you for the meet and greet. DrA To whoever hit and ran my parked car on Beirne Ave on Monday, Karma… L – You have to stop that merry-go-round and come by or eat wings with us at MO’s. R&L2 Ladies: For Crissakes, can anyone tell me why it is suddenly in style to have surgery to make your lips so huge that someone could stick you to the wall like a plumber’s helper? Looks like it would be like kissing the mouth of a mayonnaise jar. Wondering REGIONAL CONCERTS Why you fishing for compliments? There is nothing more unattractive to me than an insecure woman. Listen, I get it - we are all insecure! The older I get the more I seem to lose my confidence, especially the longer I am single. It does not help the ego at all. I have written articles on this more than once - I’ve been there. However, the last thing I am going to do is show my insecurities to a potential mate or interest. Insecure behind the scenes is one thing but DO NOT show your cards to your crush no matter what! Here is another story from another date I went on. LGT – Forever means forever you know? Don’t forget. Me it is the same for us fellas. Insecurity is not sexy at all! STOP fishing for a compliment. If he likes you at some point he will let you know - and it might not be in just two dates. Be patient, hide the insecurity, and avoid the insecure questions and comments…PLEASE I beg you! I had to get that off my chest, and ladies feel free to write me and tell me what we are doing wrong. Maybe we can avoid the pit falls and at least “up our game” to make dating what it is supposed to be - FUN! What’s your experience good or bad? What’s working, what’s not? Email me at aaronthesingleguy@gmail.com. But don’t send a selfie unless I ask! 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