Feb `16 - The Entertainer Newspaper
Transcription
Feb `16 - The Entertainer Newspaper
PAGE 2 • February 2016 • The Entertainer February 2016 Brew & Bacon Festival builds on last year’s success W — especially if they’re served together? hat’s not to like about brews and bacon And it’s not any convenience-store beer we’re talking about, but true craft brews. The second annual Three Rivers Craft Brew and Bacon Festival will be held for the year this year on Feb. 20 from 6 to 10 p.m. at the Three Rivers Convention Center in Kennewick. Many of the craft brews to be featured have never been available or served in the Tri-Cities. Vendors from all over the Pacific Northwest, California and even the East Coast will be represented at the event. A small selection of wines and distilled beverages will also be available for tasting, including spirits from Kennewick’s River Sands Distillery. Local restaurants will be serving samples of their favorite bacon appetizers and competing for prizes for the best bacon dishes. And entertainment will be provided. Tickets are only $30 if you purchase them in advance at the Toyota Center box office or get them online at ticketmaster.com. They will sell for $35 at the door. Your ticket includes a commemorative tasting glass, four tasting tokens, all of the bacon-themed foods presented by local restaurants and the live entertainment. Tokens for additional tastings can be purchased for $1.50 each. You can also opt for a $75 VIP ticket that includes a commemorative pounder glass, a tee shirt, eight tokens and early admission at 5:30 p.m. VIP tickets are limited, so act quickly to get yours before they’re sold out. Naturally, this is a 21-and-over event, and photo ID is required. The Three Rivers Convention Center reminds you to drink responsibly and to use a taxi service or have a designated driver. Guest rooms are available at the new Spring Hill Suites next to the convention center. Make your reservation and tell them you are with the Craft Brew and Bacon Fest to get a discounted rate. Call (509) 820-3026. For information and links to ticket sales for the second annual Three Rivers Craft Brew and Bacon Festival, visit threeriversconventioncenter.com Organizers of Mom and Baby Expo want to help moms succeed On Feb 27 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., the Mom and Baby Expo will take place at the Three Rivers Convention Center in Kennewick. This annual event is meant to be a one-stop shop for moms and families of young children to see what resources and businesses are available in our area. Vanessa Sanchez-Bell of Bell Productions created this event last year and hopes that it will continue growing each year. As a mom of young children herself, she wanted to create a place where moms can get inspired, engage with one another about their journey through motherhood, and shop not only for their needs but for their children’s needs as well. The expo is a place where moms can go and find support from other moms, and it gives them a chance to break from their normal routines. It will be a fun event with entertainment for both children and parents. There will be two great fashion shows during the event — the babywearing fashion show at 1 p.m. will highlight some cute fashions by Babywearing International of southeastern Washington, and the This Month’s Features Mastersingers concert is Feb.26-28 ... 4 Marcus Whitman Hotel invites lovers .. 4 KHS ‘Madhatters’ will perform ............. 5 Inland NW Orchestra concerts set ...... 5 Capitol Theatre presents Ragtime ..... 6 My Fair Lady to be staged in Elgin. ..... 6 Fry Street Quartet will play in Richland 7 CBC Arts, planetarium schedules ....... 8 RadCon 7 goes boldly to Red Lion ..... 9 Antique Show to be at Southridge ..... 10 Princess Theatre hosts classic farce 11 The Producers coming to Kennewick 11 ‘Fame’ is subject of Walla Walla play 12 Pasco High to hold talent quest ........ 12 Yakima Symphony collaboration set . 13 Young artists to play with symphony 13 Toyota Center hosts The Illusionists 13 Quilting show to celebrate seasons . 15 Walla Walla Diversity Day planned ... 15 Yakima SunDome hosts home show 15 Clover Island Inn invites lovers .......... 16 Beit Immanuel will hold classes ........ 17 Folk Society happenings this month .. 17 Allied Arts exhibits sketches, photos .. 18 High-tech and kids explored in art ..... 18 Just Roses gears up for Valentine’s .. 18 CyberArt 509 has new exhibits ........... 18 Film: Revenant wins, 5th Wave loses 20 Two ‘psychological’ novels reviewed . 21 Benton City dance competition set .... 22 How to do the East Coast Swing ....... 23 Baum’s chocolate indulgences ......... 24 Barnard Griffin takes a top award ...... 24 Brews Taphouse plans ‘barrel’ event 25 Brasserie Four changes hands ......... 25 Special weekend at Columbia Crest . 27 Travel: Cruising ‘down under’ ............ 28 Lake Placid offers more than skiing .. 29 Anthony Lakes’ Spring Break Camp .. 30 WSU students to build solar house ... 31 Fire officals address falls in home .... 32 Help is available for skiers’ thumb .... 32 How to keep face and body healthy ... 33 Globetrotters coming to Kennewick ... 34 TRAC to host Home & Garden Show . 36 Gardening dreams and nightmares .. 37 Calendar Of Events Monthly Entertainment Planner ... 38-39 The Entertainer Staff Publisher/Editor: Dennis Cresswell Graphics/Production: Nathaniel Puthoff Sales: Deborah Ross, Aubrey Langlois Webmaster: Bobby Walters Contact Us At: Moms explore the many exhibitors at last year’s First Annual Mom and Baby Expo. Mom and Baby fashion show at 4 p.m. will highlight some cute fashions for moms and babies that can be found at numerous boutiques in this area. There will be a Kids’ Zone for children and a Dads’ Zone as well. The show is also a great educational platform where parents can attend seminars and classes taught by experts. There will be a car-seat safety class taught by Safe Kids, a toddler nutrition class taught by the Benton-Franklin Health District, a Babywearing 101 class taught by the Babywearing International of southeastern Washington and many more subjects. Vendors and businesses at the expo will be offering many products, services, and resources from health, wellness and beauty products to photography, clothing and birthing options. Area businesses will be offering samples, expo specials and product giveaways during the event. Safe Kids is giving away a car seat. T Advance tickets can be purchased at Swanky Babies in west Pasco or Sassafras Children’s Re-Sale Boutique in Kennewick — or at the door the day of the event. Adult admission is $5 and all the seminars and classes are free with admission. Kids 12 and under are admitted free. For more information and updates, visit momandbabyexpo.com. 9228 W Clearwater Dr., Ste 101 Kennewick, WA 99336 Phone: (509) 783-9256 Fax: (509) 737-9208 www.theentertainernewspaper.com info@theentertainernewspaper.com Distribution 20,000 copies distributed monthly within the Tri-Cities, as well as Prosser, Sunnyside, Toppenish, Walla Walla, Dayton, Pendleton, Hermiston and Umatilla. The Entertainer gladly accepts any article submissions or calendar event listings. Use of submitted material is at the discretion of the Entertainer. The deadline to submit ads and articles is the 20th of every month. Pick up the Entertainer at more than 450 locations in the Tri-Cities, Southeastern Washington and Northern Oregon, including: the libraries in Pasco, West Richland, Kennewick and Walla Walla, Legends Casino, Wildhorse, Arrowhead Truck Plaza, Albertson’s, Starbucks, Circle K stores, 7-Eleven Richland, Sterling’s, Chapala Express, Zip’s, Red Apple, Chico’s Tacos, Brickhouse Pizza, Country Gentleman, Woo’sTeriyaki, Emerald of Siam, Magill’s, Adventures Underground, the Roxy, Richland Red Lion, Lucky Bridge Casino, Columbia Point Golf Club and Dayton Mercantile. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the express written consent of The Entertainer Newspaper. The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 3 PAGE 4 • February 2016 • The Entertainer The Mid-Columbia Mastersinger and Artistic Director Justin Raffa pose on a Tri-Cities hillside in their formal attire. Their next performances are Feb. 25, 27 and 28.. Clarinetist, percussionist to perform with Mastersingers T he Mid-Columbia Mastersingers and Artistic Director Justin Raffa will present an choral performance they’re calling “The Rose Concert,” featuring the Mastersingers with husband-and-wife guest artists Jason Rose on clarinet and Carri Rose on percussion. Performances will be February 26-28. The concert will also feature a display of rose-inspired artwork by local artists. Jason and Carri Rose are wellestablished local music educators and highly-respected performers. They are national board-certified teachers for the Richland School District, and they play together as members of the MidColumbia Symphony. Jason Rose has led the bands and orchestras at Richland High School since 2008, and he is the principal clarinetist of the Mid-Columbia Symphony. Percussionist Carri Rose has been a much-loved music teacher at Lewis and Clark Elementary School since 2006, and is a frequent performer with the Mid-Columbia Mastersingers. Regular Mastersingers audience members will remember her incredible percussion performance in Libby Larsen’s Missa Gaia (Earth Mass) in 2010, and in the Mastersingers’ performance of John Muehleisen’s Eat Your Vegetables-Set 2 in 2013, among many other performances. February’s concert features Muehleisen’s Eat Your Vegetables Set 1, and Bob Chilcott’s The Making of the Drum. The centerpiece of the program is David Maslanka’s A Litany for Courage and the Seasons, a set of six songs for chorus, which will feature SYMPHONY, MASTERSINGERS TO HOLD JOINT FUNDRAISER — BACCHANALIA XVI Save the date for the MidColumbia arts fundraiser, Bacchanalia XVI. The joint fundraiser of the Mid-Columbia Mastersingers and the Mid-Columbia Symphony will be held on Feb. 13 at the Three Rivers Convention Center in Kennewick. It will be a night of music and fun. Musicians will be putting on a production of Oedipus Tex (a 30minute comedic oratorio by P.D.Q. Bach) to go along with your wonderful meal and wine. There will be some other entertainment and games to enjoy before the meal, as well as silent and live auctions. Music for dancing will be provided after the meal and auction. For details, tickets and auction information, visit biddingforgood.com/MCAF. If you would like to donate an auction item, contact the Mid-Columbia Mastersingers at (509) 460-1766 or the Mid-Columbia Symphony at (509) 943-6602 Marcus Whitman Hotel celebrates National Romance Month in style Romance is in the air this month, and you’re thinking about how to make Valentine’s Day special for that special someone. The Marcus Whitman Hotel and Conference Center in Walla Walla is ready to help you make it an unforgettable experience. The Marcus Whitman is a Walla Walla landmark and storied gathering place for the local community and visitors alike. Anchoring historic downtown Walla Walla, the property includes a luxury hotel, expansive modern conference center, seven on-site wine-tasting boutiques and a nationally recognized gourmet restaurant — perfect for a romantic weekend. What could be a better way to treat your special someone than a romantic night at the Marcus Whitman. Their Valentine’s “Hearts” package is available the entire month of February, which includes a luxurious night’s stay, an $80 dining voucher for the award-winning Marc Restaurant, a bottle of sparkling wine and decadent chocolates sent right to your room. Rates start at $233. In addition, throughout the month of February, the Marc Restaurant will feature a special Valentine’s menu. To book a dinner reservation at the Marc, call (509) 525-2200. If you’re engaged, while you’re there for Valentine’s Day, check out the Marcus Whitman facilities as a wedding or reception venue, for catering, for photo settings and many special features that make it the perfect wedding spot. For more information and reservations, call (509) 525-2200 or visit marcuswhitmanhotel.com the guest artists on clarinet and vibraphone. Maslanka, who resides in Missoula, writes for a variety of musical genres, including works for choir, wind ensemble, chamber music and orchestra. Best known for his highly acclaimed wind ensemble compositions, he has published nearly 100 pieces, including nine symphonies, nine concertos and a mass. Performances will be Friday, Feb. 26 at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday, the 27th and 28th at 3 p.m. Performances will be at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Kennewick. A “Behind the Music” talk will be given 30 minutes before each performance. Tickets are $20 in advance or $22 at the door. K-12 students are always admitted free. Advance tickets are available online at Jason Rose MidColumbiaMastersingers.org, in person at the Tri-Cities Academy of Ballet and Music, or by calling (509) 460-1766. The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 5 Inland Northwest Orchestra will play in Enterprise, Hermiston homage to the lovers. The Inland Northwest Orchestra will The Reformation was composed by present two concerts in Oregon in Felix Mendelssohn in 1830 in honor of February, performing Tschaikowsky’s Romeo Et Juliette and Mendelssohn’s the 300th anniversary of the Presentation of the Augsburg Confession. The Symphony No. 5, Op. 107, known as Confession is a key document of The Reformation. Lutheranism and its presentation to The first concert will take place on Emperor Charles V in June 1530 was a Saturday, Feb. 20, at 4 p.m. at Enterlandmark event of the Protestant prise High School in Enterprise. On Reformation. Sunday, Feb. 21, the orchestra will For more information about Inland Photo by Allen Johnson play at Hermiston High School, also at Northwest Musicians, visit 4 p.m. Concerts by musical groups of The talented members of the Kennewick High School Madhatters inlandnorthwestmusicans.com. the Inland Northwest Musicians are always free. Tchaikovshy’s Romeo and Juliet is an orchestral work based on the Shakespeare play — a symphonic poem in sonata form. The music he Kennewick High School Choral musical arrangements, and she sings ranges from chorale-like to agitated and Department will present an original the praises of the pit band. The band is ultimately to the passionate “love made up of five student musicians and theme” signifying the couple’s first production, “Show Biz — Madhatter Style,” on Feb. 18, 19 and 20 at 7 p.m. four adults on keyboards, drums, meeting and the scene at Juliet’s guitar, percussion, saxophone, trumpet balcony. The English horn represents in the school auditorium. and flute.. The department’s “Madhatters” Romeo, while the flutes represent Monte Ingersoll, pastor of the Living Juliet. A final battle theme is played choral group will be taking you on a musical journey that will include some Room Church and a dynamic musical and then the woodwinds play a sweet The Inland Northwest Orchestra of the best music written for television, performer in his own right, will be the master of ceremonies for the show. movies and Broadway. Many of your “Show Biz — Madhatter Style” is favorite songs from Wicked, Grease, High School Musical, Curious George, more than a concert. It’s a highly produced show featuring backdrops, Looney Tunes and other musicals will beautiful sets by Cynthia Holman, be present. For comic relief, the lights and sound by David Harris, and students will also re-enact some of ACT will hold ‘Heart for the Arts’ fundraiser videos produced by Allen Johnson to your favorite 60s and 70s television The Academy of Children’s Theatre will hold its 13th annual major fundraising be displayed throughout the show. commercials. If you’re too young to event, “Heart for the Arts,” on Saturday, Feb. 27, beginning at 5:30 p.m. at the Jessica Small is in charge of tickets, remember them, they’ll still bring a Richland Red Lion. The event will have a Tony Awards theme and will include a programs and projector design. laugh. tribute to ACT alumni and a special guest. There will also be outstanding Tickets are $10 in advance and are The production includes several entertainment, exciting auctions, wonderful cuisine and local wines. The event available from any Madhatters member raises critical funds for ACT, allowing the organization to offer performances, numbers choreographed for the Madhatters by Rebekah Mann. “She is or at the Music Machine and Ted classes, and special programs at an affordable cost for families. Event and table Brown Music. You can also order able to make pretty good dancers out sponsorships are available at a variety of levels at of a bunch of kids who didn’t sign up to tickets by phone by calling Debi Eng academyofchildrenstheatre.org, or by calling (509) 943-6027 or sending email to dance,” said Debi Eng, choir director of at (509) 222-7100 or (509) 460-0459. adele@actstaff.org. Individual tickets are $85 after Feb. 1. They will be $12 at the door. the Madhatters. Eng did all of the Kennewick High Madhatters will present ‘Show Biz’ choral concert T IN BRIEF PAGE 6 • February 2016 • The Entertainer The touring cast of Ragtime will perform at Yakima’s Capitol Theatre in March. Yakima’s Capitol Theatre presents musical Ragtime C oming to the Capitol Theatre in Yakima on March 6 and 7 is the musical Ragtime. Its original production received 13 Tony Award nominations and received the awards for Best Original Score and Best Book of a Musical. In Ragtime, Harlem musicians, Eastern European immigrants and upper-class suburbanites share the stage with historical characters including Harry Houdini and Booker T. Washington. Their compelling stories and lives intertwine, all set in turn-ofthe century New York City and united by their desire and belief in a brighter tomorrow. Audiences will be swept away by this timeless celebration of life. Its award-winning score includes “Wheels of a Dream,” “Back to Before” and the title song, “Ragtime.” The Bloomberg News hailed Ragtime as “explosive, thrilling and nothing short of a masterpiece.” The Hollywood Reporter declared Ragtime to be “one of the best musicals of recent decades.” Ragtime features a book by Terrence McNally, music by Stephen Flaherty and lyrics by Lynn Ahrens. Tony-nominated director and choreographer Marcia Milgrom Dodge leads the effort, supported by Kevin Depinet (scenic design), Mike Baldassari (lighting) and Craig Cassidy (sound). Ragtime is based on E.L. Doctorow’s best-selling 1975 novel, which won the National Book Critics Circle award and sold 4.5 million copies. It became a film in 1981 and a Broadway musical that opened in 1998 and ran for 834 performances. A 2009 revival received rave reviews on Broadway, and Phoenix Entertainment has toured the show throughout North America. The March 6 performance at the Capitol Theatre will be a 3 p.m. matinee, and the March 7 show is an evening performance at 7:30 p.m. For tickets or more information on upcoming events at the Capitol Theatre in Yakima, visit online at capitoltheatre.org or call (509) 853ARTS (2787). Historic Elgin Opera House will stage historic musical You’ll feel as if you “could have danced all night” after seeing My Fair Lady in Elgin, Oregon! The sparkling Broadway hit musical, which opens Feb. 19 and runs through March 12, plays at the historic Elgin Opera House. Set in 1912 London, the story centers on Eliza Doolittle, a Cockney flower girl, and how she is transformed into an upper-class lady. One night in Covent Garden she encounters Henry Higgins, an eccentric professor of language, who then bets that he can transform Eliza into a duchess in six months by changing the way she speaks and dresses. The musical is based on the play Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw. My Fair Lady, by Alan Lerner and Frederick Loewe, was a famous stage success in 1956 and introduced the now-classic songs “I Could Have Danced All Night,” “The Rain in Spain,” and “Wouldn’t it be Loverly”. The Elgin Opera House production showcases the talents of Renee Wells (Eliza), Brent Clapp (Henry Higgins), Terry Hale (Colonel Pickering), Kenn Wheeler (Alfie Doolittle, Eliza’s father), and Devin Frasier (Freddy EynsfordHill, Eliza’s new suitor). My Fair Lady is directed by Michael Frasier, long-time choral and stage director. Choreography is by Beckie Thompson-Hendrickson, master choreographer and dance instructor. The Elgin Opera House is at 104 N. Renee Wells as Eliza Doolittle in the Elgin production of My Fair Lady. 8th St. in Elgin, just 20 miles north of La Grande. It is on the National Register of Historic Places. Other Opera House productions in 2016 include Ring of Fire (the Johnny Cash story), April 29-May 14, and Disney’s The Little Mermaid, Sept. 2-24. Performances of My Fair Lady are at 7:30 p.m. on Feb. 19, 20, 26 and 27 and March 4, 5, 11 and 12. Matinees are on Feb. 20 and 27 and March 5 and 12 at 2:30 p.m. Ticket prices range from $8 to $17 ($12 per ticket for groups of 10 or more). For tickets, visit elginoperahouse.com or call the box office at (541) 663-6324. The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 7 World-famous string quartet will play at Hanford High Fry Street Quartet, formed in Chicago, now resides at Utah State Music Seminar and the Intermountain Suzuki String Institute. Together with physicist and educator Dr. Robert Davies, the n Saturday, Feb. 27, the worldquartet created the Crossroads renowned Fry Street Quartet will Project, an all-encompassing be flying up from their residence home performance that combines at the Caine College of the Arts at Utah poetic lectures, paintings and State University to perform a 7 p.m. music in response to issues of concert at Hanford High School. The global sustainability. Crossconcert is the next offering in the roads: Rising Tide has perHanford High Guest Artist Series. formed dozens of times in three Founded in Chicago in 1997 under countries, has been featured on the mentorship of cellist Marc National Public Radio and has Johnson, this string quartet received been celebrated in a host of rave reviews as prizewinners at the print media. Yellow Springs Competition and the Advance tickets are $15 and Banff International String Quartet are available at Ted Brown Competition. Music and Adventures UnderThe quartet traveled to Israel to ground in Richland. Tickets are participate in the International Encounalso being sold by Richland ters Chamber Music Seminar in 2000, School District band members where they studied with Isaac Stern. in grades 8 through 12, and all Stern invited the quartet to the Isaac proceeds will benefit Richland From left: Rebecca McFaul, Bradley Ottesen, Ann Francis Bayless and Robert Waters. Stern Chamber Music Workshop in music programs. Tickets will be from the address of its first rehearsal New York City and subsequently Music Camp, the Oficina de Musica in $20 at the door. For information, call arranged for the quartet’s Carnegie Hall space in a Chicago neighborhood once Curitiba, Brazil, the Virginia Suzuki (509) 967-6532 or send email to ruled by gangster Al Capone. Compris- Institute, the David Einfeldt Chamber debut in 2001. Kevin.Swisher@rsd.edu. ing the quartet are violinists Robert Since then, the Fry Street Quartet Waters and Rebecca McFaul, cellist has won the Grand Prize at the Anne Francis Bayless and Bradley Fischoff National Chamber Music Otteson on the viola. They have Competition, allowing the group to studied and taught at prestigious serve as cultural ambassadors to the Balkan States, sponsored by Carnegie music schools and played with a Walla Walla Symphony seeks volunteers variety of outstanding orchestras. Hall and the U.S. State Department. Together they form a distinct quartet in The Walla Walla Symphony has a new volunteer program and is seeking Other international appearances the world of classical music. man and women for its marketing, education and development efforts as well as include the ProQuartet Academy at In 2002, at the invitation of Utah for ushering. Benefits of volunteering include one comp ticket per four hours of Pont-Royal, France, the Prague Chamber Festival and Trutnov Autumn State University and the Caine Founda- non-concert service, and ushers receive a comp ticket to the event at which tion, the Fry Street Quartet arrived in they serve. In addition, volunteers will have the opportunity to learn and practice Festival in the Czech Republic, Logan, Utah, where the group is now important skills such as customer service and teamwork, as well as to connect Kulturvereinigung Oberschützen in the university’s resident string faculty. with like-minded individuals who enjoy symphonic music. For more information Austria and three visits to the Oficina As guest faculty, the quartet has made about the program or to apply, visit the “volunteer” page at wwsymphony.org or de Musica de Curitiba in Brazil. The Fry Street Quartet got its name repeated visits to Madeline Island send email to kristi@wwsymphony.org. O IN BRIEF PAGE 8 • February 2016 • The Entertainer CBC Arts Center events warm up the winter months A By Bill McKay t the Columbia Basin College Arts Center, we are presenting a number of wonderful events this winter for your entertainment and education. Keep reading the Entertainer in the months to come as our Art Center has so much in store for you, our patrons. Lecture Series On Thursday, Feb. 18, at 7 p.m., historian Tames Alan will present “Life in Service at Downton Abbey,” a fascinating lecture about the popular British TV show. Everywhere, it seems, events are featuring “Downton Abbey” are — even our CBC Orchestra concert in December, when the orchestra performed the theme music for the series. Britain’s great estates of the past could not have functioned without an army of both indoor and outdoor servants. Using period images, Alan talks about what it was like to live and work downstairs on an estate such as Downton Abbey before World War I. You’ll learn what was expected of those who entered service, from the complicated hierarchy between upper and lower servants and their duties to the highjinks downstairs that accompanied the long hours of drudgery. As with all her Living History Lectures, a question-and-answer period will follow. This presentation is hosted by the Mid-Columbia Libraries and will be held at the main library on Union in Kennewick. Historian Tames Alan is also an actress who often illustrates her lectures with costuming, as in this “Downton Abbey: presentation. reception to be held on Feb. 23 at 12:30 p.m. This annual exhibit offers an opportunity to see new work created by the CBC Art Department faculty. These gifted faculty members are also working studio artists actively exhibiting in both regional and national exhibitions. This group show demonstrates a wide range of media and artistic practices. Ceramics, drawing, painting, photography and sculpture will be presented by Tracy Walker, Howard Barlow, Zachary Mazur, Victoria Gravenslund, Karen Kurta, Randal Jones, Rachel Smith, Zach Kolden, Ted Neth, James Craig, Morse Clary and Mary Dryburgh. Theatre The Theatre Department will stage the Tennessee Williams play Night of The eagerly anticipated CBC Faculty the Iguana, directed by Ginny Quinley, Art Exhibition will be in the gallery from in the CBC Theatre from Feb. 11 through 13 beginning at 7:30 p.m. The Feb. 22 through March 24, with a Esvelt Gallery show is rated PG for some adult content. Tickets are $12 for adults, $10 for students and seniors, and are available at Adventures Underground, J.D.’s Time Center and the CBC Bookstore. In 1940s Mexico, an odd assortment of people converge at the squalid Costa Verde hotel for various reasons. There are those on vacation, those who seek solace, and those who are down on their luck and have no place else to go. Some of these “lost souls” find companionship and roots with one another, and some find only despair. Night of the Iguana was written by Tennessee Williams and premiered on Broadway in 1961. A 1964 Oscarwinning motion picture based on the play starred Richard Burton, Ava Gardner and Deborah Kerr. Lit Fest The popular Mid-Columbia Literary Festival kicks off with the yearly “About the Book” at 6 p.m on Feb. 2 at Zinful WineBar (See Books and Movies section, page 21). It’s expected to be packed, so you’ll want to get their early. Stay tuned for more from Lit Fest as the season unfolds. Bill McKay is Dean of Arts and Humanities at Columbia Basin College. Orion: Your guide to many stars By Erin Steinert If you can brave the chill in the air, winter is a great time of year for stargazing! An early-setting sun, coupled with an abundance of blazingbright stars, means that clear winter nights are perfect for learning your way around the sky. A familiar seasonal constellation is there to be your celestial guide: Orion. Known as the Hunter in Greek mythology, Orion is easy to find this time of year, dancing across the SouthSoutheastern sky after sunset through- out February. Look for the bright triplet of stars that makes up his belt; they are all very bright, close together, and form a diagonal line. That belt will be the key to finding other nearby stars and constellations. Drawing an imaginary line through Orion’s belt up and to the right will lead you to a V-shaped grouping of stars, dominated by a bright red star called Aldebaran. The V itself is known as the Hyades star cluster, and it forms the face of Taurus the Bull. Glancing to the ‘Stars’ continues on Page 37 CBC PLANETARIUM FEBRUARY MOVIE SCHEDULE Feb. 5: Secret Lives of Stars, 7 p.m.; Black Holes, 8 p.m. Feb. 6: The Zula Patrol, 2 p.m.; The Enchanted Reef, 3 p.m Feb. 12: Supervolcanoes, 7 p.m.; Stars of the Pharaohs, 8 p.m. Feb. 13: Black Holes, 2 p.m.; Secrets of the Sun, 3 p.m. Feb. 19: Secret Lives of Stars, 7 p.m.; .; Oasis in Space, 8 p.m. Feb. 20: Dynamic Earth, 2 p.m.; Cell! Cell! Cell!, 3 p.m. Feb. 26: Supervolcanoes, 7 p.m.; Bad Astronomy, 8 p.m. Feb. 27: Black Holes, 2 p.m.; Two Small Pieces of Glass, 3 p.m. The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 9 IN BRIEF Stacia Gunderson to give genealogy presentation Special RadCon guests Jennifer Brozek and Toby Froud RadCon 7: Boldly going where we never should have gone! H By Elizabeth Vann-Clark ow many times have you watched a movie with apprehension as the lead character explores spooky corridors? Don’t go through that door! This President’s Day weekend, 2,700 fans will crowd the Pasco Red Lion to celebrate the darker side of science fiction, fantasy and horror! The number in attendance at the annual event makes RadCon one of the largest conventions of its type in the Pacific Northwest. Some of the exciting guests we honor this year are short-story and horror writer Jennifer Brozek, awardwinning artist Stephanie Law, media guest and puppetmaster Toby Froud, and “the great Luke Ski,” the famous rap artist and comedy musician of “The Doctor Demento Show.” Evenings are lit up by Ignition, fire artists of the highest caliber. Ignition has developed their show into a living art form that fuses martial arts, dance, and music into a heart-pounding experience. Nightlife this year includes a showing of The Rocky Horror Picture Show, complete with a shadow cast and goodie bags! Annual highlights of the convention include costume contests, board gaming, movies, children’s activities, book-signings and a variety of artistic workshops. Vendors of swords, costumes, books, art and jewelry are available throughout the convention. The art show features Pacific Northwest artists with fantasy and science-fiction themed drawings, oil paints, original comics, stained glass and jewelry. RadCon is proud to support our community with the fourth year of the student art contest. Students submit their art for professional critique and a chance to win cash prizes. Convention registration will be open from noon to 9 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 12. Registration continues through the weekend from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Saturday and 10 to 3 on Sunday. A membership to a weekend of excitement is only $45. For more information, visit the RadCon website at radcon.org. The Tri-City Genealogical Society will meet on Feb. 10 at 7 p.m. at Charbonneau Retirement Community, 8264 W. Grandridge Blvd. in Kennewick. Stacia Gunderson will discuss the importance of symbolism on cemetery headstones, why certain flowers were used on decorative grave markers and the wording patterns that told about the deceased. Gunderson has a bachelor’s degree in history, has worked as an interpreter ranger for both national and state parks, and was the resident pre-Hanford historian for the former CREHST museum. For more information, contact Susan Davis Faulkner at (509) 554-1050 or denmother4@hotmail.com. Tickets on sale for Hunter Hayes concert at fair Tickets are already on sale for the Hunter Hayes concert at the BentonFranklin Fair next August. Hayes is the country-rock and blues artist who has five Grammy nominations to his credit for multi-platinum-selling hit songs such as “Wanted,” “Somebody’s Heartbreak” and “I Want Crazy.” He will perform on Aug. 26 at the fair. Reserved-seat tickets are $15 and are being sold at Kennewick Ranch & Home and the fair office. 2nd comedy fundraiser to feature Dena Blizzard Comedian Dena Blizzard will highlight Walla Walla’s second annual Comedy Night for the Moms’ Network on March 12 at the Gesa Power House Theatre. Doors open at 6 p.m. and the evening events begin with a lip-sync contest at 7. Blizzard will perform her one-woman off-Broadway show, One Funny Mother...And I’m Not Crazy. Reserved-seat tickets for the show and other events are $50, and you can get an $85 VIP ticket that also includes a meet-and-greet with Blizzard after her show with wine by Isenhower Cellars and cuisine by the Olive Marketplace. VIP ticketholders also receive a swag beg of various items. For details visit themomsnetwork.com. Liberty Theater hosts fundraiser for its musicals On Saturday, Feb. 6, at 7 p.m., the Liberty Theater in Dayton will host the third annual “Ebony & Ivories,” a benefit concert and reception to support TVAC Productions, the group responsible for the Liberty’s renowned fall musicals. It will be an evening of music, champagne and chocolate. Enjoy classical and contemporary music performed by the valley’s top musical talents.Tickets are $12 for students and $15 for adults. Admission to the concert and reception includes one complimentary glass of champagne for those 21 and over. Visit libertytheater.org or call (509) 382-1380 for tickets and information about this event or for the theater’s film schedule and other information. PAGE 10 • February 2016 • The Entertainer Spring into vintage, antiques and home décor at Tri-Cities Antique Show, March 11-12 at Southridge J oin your friends at the Tri-Cities own Spring Antique Show–with a Twist of Vintage. The event returns to the Southridge Events Center in Kennewick on Friday and Saturday, March 11 and 12. Show hours on Friday are 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. and on Saturday the show is open all day from 9 to 4. Adult admission is $7 for both days, and kids under 12 years of age are admitted free. Parking is always free and there is plenty of it. The Tri-Cities Antique Show–with a Twist of Vintage is partnering with the Three Rivers Carousel Foundation to produce this annual spring event. With your admission to the Antique Show, you will have an opportunity to ride the You never know what you’ll find when you browse the floor of the Antique Show, but whatever it is, someone collects it! Gesa Carousel of Dreams located just next door. cabin energy, Sue and Herb Johnson The Carousel Café will be providing Antique and Vintage items to take a break from your antiquing lunch, fresh salads, beverages and No matter what your tastes or what have the coolest vintage Western adventure. snacks throughout the show, treasures. Bits, reins, Western art, a you collect, you will find it here. Here Rockabilly Roasting will be open for Rockabilly Roasting Company will is a short list of the Northwest dealers saddle or two and authentic blankets business in the Southridge Events can accent your rustic home. serve gourmet coffee and baked goods who will be here for you to visit. Center with gourmet coffee and sunfor those with a sweet tooth. Randy and Ginny Davis of Do you have a brewpub or outdoor dries — fresh baked goods, for exMcMinnville, Ore., showcase all things ample. patio and are looking to bring an old and awesome. You will see items unusual element to it? Jim Southridge Events Center If you just want to satisfy your sweet more than 100 years old that have a Huttenmeier of the Spokane Valley is This Premier events center has tooth, Real Fudge will be in the show history to them. Randy always has a all about beer signs, beer taps and 30,000 square feet of exhibit space, with their delicious sweet treats. and the Tri-Cities Antique Show will fill trays — all authentic and vintage. Ask treasure that he loves and can share “Specialty fudge is our favorite and we the story with you. Ginny is an avid Jim and you will learn all about beer. every inch of it. Dealers from throughhave a variety of flavors for you to Salts, shuttles, thimbles, exquis- rhinestone collector and has some of out the Northwest will have antiques enjoy,” said Nancy Schultz, owner of the “brightest” pins, bracelets and ite sewing tools, plus a lovely collecand collectibles, vintage jewelry, oak Real Fudge in Mesa. “And we have jewelry you will see around. We all tion of dinnerware and serving pieces furniture, books and stamps, pottery great fun meeting everyone and know the impression that is made will line Ed and Marie Simonson’s and glass, plus “A Twist of Vintage” sharing.” when you wear a real rhinestone pin. space. Ed and Marie travel from with painted (or not) furniture, garden Of course, throughout the show Liberty Lake and can visit about all treasures and home décor. you will find linens for your kitchen, Early Buyer Badges Come to the show and be inspired to things small and elegant. galvanized treasures for your garden, a Cabin Fever? For the Western fan Early Buyer Badges are back. Do add to your home, create a special beautiful piece or two of oak furniture, you want to be first into the show? You space in your garden or find a treasure. and those whose homes have that vintage jewelry and clothing, baskets may purchase your Early Buyer Badge galore, old wood working tools, primiat the Roxy Theatre Antiques in tive furniture and lovely accents for downtown Kennewick. Badges are your own home. available before the opening day of the Antique Show for $15 each. Access to R.O.Y.’s Glass Repair the Events Center and the dealers will Roy Taylor of Real Oldies of Yester- be at 12 noon on Friday, giving you years Antiques will be available at the time to browse and find that treasure Event Center entrance to help you with before the official open of the show at 2 repairing your heirloom glass or pottery p.m. Contact Roxy Theatre Antiques at treasure. “Every piece has a story and (509) 585-2301 to be included. a special challenge,” Roy said. “I have So round up you friends, and shop even been asked to redesign broken stylishly curated vintage finds! Come pieces into something very different, and visit with the experts, ask quesgiving them a new life. Just ask.” You can drop off your item with Roy tions, find a vintage “look” that you love, and then stroll the exhibit floor while he and have some fun with your friends. completes the repair. With great care, With 30,000 square feet filled with dealers from throughout the Northwest, he will remove scratches and chips, glue your glass and pottery, drill holes no matter what you like or collect, you will find it. in glass or pottery, repaint gold and silver trim and repair and rewire lamps. For more information, visit roxytheatreantiques.com or follow the Roxy Theatre Antiques on Facebook. Lunches and treats You can always give the Roxy a call at With the Gesa Carousel of Dreams right next door, you will have a fun spot (509) 585-2301. Your admission to the Antique Show includes a ride on the Carousel of Dreams. The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 11 Classic farce kicks off 2016 for Valley Theater Company V alley Theater Company’s first show of the year will open this month and will include a special matinee performance on Valentine’s Day. See How They Run, by Philip King, is a classic British farce. It will open at the Princess Theatre in Prosser on Feb. 12 and continue with performances on Feb. 13, 14, 19 and 20. The Feb. 14 matinee will begin at 2:30 p.m. and will be preceded by a Valentine’s Day luncheon at 1 p.m. All other performances are at 7:30 p.m. The luncheon and play combination tickets are $35 and must be purchased by Feb. 8, online or at Adventures Underground in Richland or the Sixth Street Art Gallery in Prosser. (There’s a small pass-through fee for online purchases.) They will not be available at the door. You may also attend the matinee at the regular ticket price without attending the luncheon. Play tickets are $12 for adults and $10 for seniors (65 and older) and students. Ticket outlets in addition to and mayhem. Valley Theater Company veteran Rick James directs the show. The characters include an English vicar and his American wife (a former actress), their Cockney maid, an American Army corporal, the church busybody, a Russian spy, a bishop, another vicar and a police sergeant. In the cast are Grandview residents Jenalee Mariotti, Amy Householder and Brian Patterson; Prosser residents Ben Riley, Bryce Rude, Joshua Lansing, Peter Cole and Dean Smith; Mari Page of Benton City; and Rufus Howard of Pasco. VTC also offers opportunities for people who are interested in helping Valley Theater Company cast members rehearse a scene in the classic British farce behind the scenes with everything from See How They Run. From left are Mari Page as Penelope Toop, Bryce Rude as building and painting sets to collecting Corporal Clive Winton and Amy Householder as Miss Skillon. The play will open props, styling hair and doing makeup. Feb. 12 at the Princess Theatre in Prosser and continue on Feb. 13, 14, 19 and 20. Contact Producer Richard Reuther at (509) 375-3531 for more information Adventures Underground and the Sixth See How They Run is set in an about those opportunities. Street Gallery include Patnode’s True English vicarage shortly after the end VTC and the Princess Theatre are Value Hardware in Benton City, Bleyhl of World War II, and the play combines online at ThePrincessTheatre.net. Visit in Grandview, Melange in Sunnyside. mistaken identify and fast-paced Youcan also pay at the theatre door. action, resulting in hilarious confusion the site for information and ticket sales. Touring company of The Producers is coming to Kennewick March 4 A scheming producer and his mousy accountant aim to produce the biggest flop on Broadway in Mel Brooks’ laughout-loud musical The Producers. It was a smash hit on Broadway in 2001, garnering a record-breaking 12 Tony Awards. Now it’s coming to the TriCities, with one performance on March 4 at 7 p.m. in the Windermere Theatre at Toyota Center in Kennewick. The show is based on the Oscarwinning 1968 film of the same name. After the success of the Broadway musical, The Producers made it to film again in 2005 with Nathan Lane, Matthew Broderick and Uma Thurman in the starring roles. Brooks’ side-splitting masterpiece chronicles the misadventures of washed-up Broadway producer Max Bialystock and his mild-mannered accountant Leo Bloom as they scheme to get rich quick by producing the most notorious flop in the history of showbiz. It spoofs the big, old-fashioned Broadway musicals while paying tribute to them at the same time. Hailed as one of the funniest Broadway musicals of all time, The Producers features a rioutous mix of eccentric characters and showstopping songs including “I Wanna Be a Producer,” “When You Got It, Flaunt It” and “Springtime for Hitler.” Written by Mel Brooks and Thomas Meehan, with music and lyrics by Mel Brooks, The Producers features Susan Stroman’s Tony Award-winning direction and choreography recreated on tour by director Nigel West and choreographer Lauren Kladel. To close out the season’s “Broadway” series at Toyota Center, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat is scheduled for a May 10 performance. Tickets for The Producers are available at the Toyota Center box office, all Ticketmaster outlets and online at ticketmaster.com. For telephone orders, call (800) 756-3000. Leo Bloom meets Ulla in The Producers. PAGE 12 • February 2016 • The Entertainer Power House will examine fleeting nature of fame I n 1968, Andy Warhol said “In the future, everyone will be world-famous for 15 minutes.” His prediction of fame’s fleeting nature in our celebritysaturated culture could not have been more true. On Thursday, Feb. 18, at 7 p.m. the Gesa Power House Theatre in Walla Walla will explore the fleeting nature of celebrity in a highly entertaining reading series called “Fame! (they’re not going to live forever).” It’s a highly entertaining series in which intimate, private letters written by some of history’s most famous (and infamous) people are read aloud. Through the personal letters of some of history’s most famous and infamous celebrities, including Warhol himself, the performers examine the high price of fame and how it has evolved and devolved over the years. The show is a funny, poignant and moving experience with live musical accompaniment and a dynamic slide show. Reserved-seat tickets are $28 and are available online or by calling the theatre box office at (509) 529-6500. Members may receive a 20-percent discount. & Brewz. “We are grateful to our new season sponsors,” said Mark Anderson, coowner of the theater. “Their support allows us to continue bringing highquality entertainers to Walla Walla, and their commitment to the community is commendable.” The Gesa Power House Theatre, home of Shakespeare Walla Walla, opened in 2011 when the historic coal gas plant was renovated to become a 300-seat theatre complete with dressing rooms, lobby and lounge area. In 2014, a new business model was adopted, resulting in many more shows and opening up the building for rentals and outside promoters. Today the theatre hosts weddings, meetings and other events, and the community The Gesa Power House Theatre has enjoyed live concerts, staged readings, comedy shows and family 2016 sponsors entertainment. Title sponsors for the 2016 season Ticket sales alone are not able to at Gesa Power House Theatre are support a venue such as this. but Waterbrook Winery, the Browne Walla Walla Valley residents are Family Vineyards and Canoe Ridge strong supporters of the arts, and local Vineyard. Additional support will be businesses have stepped up to ensure provided by KAPP-KVEW TV, the continued world-class entertainment Courtyard Marriott and Wingman Birdz and culture. Sponsorship opportunities are available, and interested organizations may contact Betsy Hadden at events@phtww.com. Memberships If you want to receive early notice and access to ticket sales, you can become a Gesa Power House Theatre member starting at $75 a year, or you can sign up online for the theater’s email list. Visit phtww.com. Members had priority for tickets to “An Evening with Judy Collins” on Feb. 12, which is already sold out. Other February events include the Walla Walla Symphony concert, “From Darkness to Light,” on Feb. 27 and 28, presented as part of the annual “Music 360° Festival,” an initiative that explores the impact of music through different lenses. Featured will be Robert Convery’s Songs of Children, remarks by Richard Kaplan and James Winchell, Hana Szenesh’s Walk to Caesaria and Grigori Frid’s one-act opera, The Diary of Anne Frank. The orchestra, conducted by Yaacov Bergman, will be joined by the Whitman College Chamber Singers and soprano Ani Maldjian. Pasco High Choir and Drama groups team up for talent showcase together the most inspiring talent from Pasco High,” said Wendy Newbury, Pasco High School choral director. The Pasco High School Choir and groups from Pasco High including the “Each talent is so unique and extraorDrama Associated Student Body Tenth Avenue Singers, PHS Jazz Band dinary, the audience will get a fresh invites you to the 2016 Bulldogs Night 1, and the PHS Mariachi Ensemble. take on every act.” Live Talent Showcase on March 4. You, the audience, will pick the top “I have been impressed with the With more variety than ever, the 15- three winners of the night. With grand skills of these students from day one plus acts include the school’s most prizes on the line, the stiff competition and am enthusiastic to be a part of talented singers, dancers, skits, actors ensures a wonderful evening of enterPasco’s performance history,” said and instrumentalists. Headlining the tainment. Heather Johnson, Pasco High School evening’s showcase are the elite music “This exciting showcase brings drama director. “I know every audi- ‘Bulldogs Night Live’ will be held March 4 ence member will find something different to enjoy!” The showcase will be held on Friday, March 4, at 7 p.m. in the Gregson Auditorium at Pasco High School. Tickets are $5 in advance and will be $7 at the door. Advance tickets are available now through PHS Choir and Drama Club students, the Pasco High ASB Office and the PHS Choir and Drama offices. Call (509) 547-5581, ext. 3702 or 3822. The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 13 Mid-Columbia Symphony will celebrate ‘history’ in February Young Artist winners will perform with the symphony orchestra included performances by 18 pianists and violinists from area high schools and middle schools. The Young Artist Competition is held annually to promote and encourage talented student musicians across the region. Young musicians compete in one of nine The fourth concert in the MidColumbia Symphony season will be a divisions, and a jury of regional professional musicians evaluates the comcelebration of history. petitors. Music selections will include The Music duos Planes on Paper, left, and Brothers Mikey and Matty In addition to a chance to play with Doctor Atomic symphony by John the symphony, there are cash prizes at Adams, which premiered in 2005 in San Francisco. The work was inspired stake. The winners will be announced by the stress and anxiety experienced in early February. The final concert of the symphony’s by those at Los Alamos while the season will be a celebration of faith on Trinity test of the first atomic bomb May 21. It will feature the voices of the was being prepared. Mid-Columbia Mastersingers and the Also included is The Billy the Kid he Yakima Symphony Orchestra is received national media attention and Mid-Columbia Boys Choir. Music presenting the work of local paved the way for a cross-country tour. Suite, a ballet piece by Aaron selections include Gloria, with soprano Copland. It is most famous for its songwriters for the first time in its 45The national attention, coupled with Molly Holleran, plus Stravinsky’s incorporation of several cowboy tunes year history. The orchestra will hightheir knowledge of orchestral music, Symphony of Psalms and other faithand American folk songs. light Yakima’s rich local music scene made Navid Eliot and Jennifer Borst an based compositions. The two overall winners of the Midin a collaboration with singerintriguing partnership for the Yakima For information and online ticket Columbia Symphony’s Young Artist songwriter duos Planes on Paper and Symphony to cultivate. purchases, visit competition will perform with the Mikey and Matty on Feb. 27 at 7:30 They will be joined by the 70-piece midcolumbiasymphony.org. orchestra. The competition on Jan. 30 p.m. in the Capitol Theatre in Yakima. symphony orchestra and their friends Planes on Paper has been deand frequent collaborators Mikey abd scribed by publications such as the Matty. It will be an entertaining and Seattle Times and Music Insider as “a exciting first-of-its-kind event for the truly beautiful musical partnership” Yakima Valley. whose music is a “showcase of pure, “Our hope with this partnership and Toyota Center will host The Illusionists Feb. 12 unadulterated song craft.” The Yakima performance is to, first and foremost, What may be the greatest touring magic show ever is coming to the Herald-Republic has hailed brothers put on a special kind of musical Windermere Theatre at Toyota Center on Feb. 12 for one performance at Mikey and Matty Gervais as being “on evening,” said Eliot. “But also to foster 7 p.m.The Illusionists - Live from Broadway is a mind-blowing spectacular par with anything else the Northwest a lasting closeness between the art showcasing the jaw-dropping talents of the most incredible Illusionists on earth. folk scene has produced.” music and pop music communities in The show has shattered box-office records and has dazzled audiences of all In their brief two-year history, our region. It would be wonderful for us ages with a powerful mix of the most outrageous and astonishing acts ever seen Yakima’s own Planes on Paper has to see that the Yakima Symphony on stage. This non-stop show, packed with thrilling and sophisticated magic, is released two highly acclaimed excontinued this partnership in years to part of the 2015-16 Broadway series at Toyota Center. Tickets are available at tended-play recordings of their thought- come, perhaps with other songwriters the Toyota Center box office, all other Ticketmaster outlets and online at ful songwriting, the second of which in central and eastern Washington.” ticketmaster.com. Yakima Symphony Orchestra to collaborate with folk musicians T IN BRIEF PAGE 14 • February 2016 • The Entertainer The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 15 Tri-City Quilters’ show will celebrate seasonal cycle T ri-City Quilters’ Guild will present its 33rd annual show and vendor mall on Friday and Saturday, April 1 and 2, at the Three Rivers Convention Center in Kennewick. Admission is $8; parking is free; food and beverages are available. The theme, “Quilts for All Seasons,” was chosen by chair Rena Christensen. An avid gardener, Rena values the weather changes through the year and uses them as inspiration for the colors and patterns of her quilts. “The seasons also dictate when and how much time I can spend on my sewing hobby; the garden hobby pretty much takes over in the summer,” she said. A special exhibit, “Seasons in the Home,” will depict four cozy corners. Chairs and occasional tables will be fitted out for summer, fall, winter and spring to show how quilters create an environment for their art and needlework activities. whose booth is a familiar fixture at TriCity Quilters’ Guild shows. Dee’s line of patterns is called Deezines. It contains her own designs for raw-edge applique — “without tracing, because I’m lazy” — and Robin’s ideas for knitting, rug hooking and wool applique. Both artists will give free lectures. The featured artist among guild members, Laurel Sutton, is planning her display “to honor the people she has quilted with and for.” “I am a groupie,” she confesses; “I love to find friends to shop and sew and consult with.” Quilts belonging to her family and friends will be retrieved for the show — four wedding quilts made over “Trifecta,” the Tri-City Quilters’ Guild’s a period of two years and a series of 2016 raffle quilt, was designed by Tanya quilts inspired by cars. Finken and assembled by guild members. Perimeter walls will be lined with challenge quilts from Hoffman’s Guest featured artists are Dee travelling exhibit, and from the guild’s Brown and Robin Halliday, associates contest to create a punning title and a at The Quilted Trillium — a shop fun-filled image of a cow or moose. The raffle quilt, “Trifecta,” will go to the owner of the winning ticket at 4 p.m. on Saturday. More than 35 sellers will offer quilting and fiber arts merchandise in the vendor mall. The silent auction will feature similar sorts of previouslyowned items. Many will have “buy now” prices so purchasers will not have to endure the suspense until the end of the show. Tri-City Quilters’ Guild was established to disseminate information about quilt history, patterns, techniques and trends; to contribute to the community by providing comfort quilts to agencies and individuals; and to sponsor activities that encourage quilt creation, quilt collection, quilt appreciation, and the enjoyment of other quilts’ company. Proceeds from the annual show help fund the guild’s activities. For more information about the show or the purchase of raffle tickets, visit www.tcquilters.org Booth space available for annual Walla Walla Diversity Day The Diversity Coalition in Walla Walla is already planning for the 23rd annual Diversity day, a multicultural arts festival to be held in Pioneer Park in Walla Walla on Sunday, Sept. 25. The Diversity Coalition and local colleges and universities celebrate Freedom From Discrimination Month in October with speakers and events emphasizing multiculturalism. After careful consideration, the members of the coalition decided to move the arts festival to the end of September to draw attention to the events that occur in October. As usual, booth space will be available to all groups, organizations and individuals interested in furthering the fundamental purpose of the festival, which is to promote unity and appreciation for the diversity in the area. All booths will reflect diversity themes and include ethnic foods, arts and crafts. Information and interactive booths are welcomed and encouraged. High-quality entertainment will continue to be provided throughout the day, including music and dance performances reflecting the traditions and artistic influences of diverse Home builders will hold annual show at Yakima Valley SunDome The Central Washington Home and Garden Show, sponsored by the Central Washington Home Builders Association and Western Materials, is a place for homeowners and consumers to see what’s new gardening, home improvement and home décor. But it’s also a place where you can enjoy art, wine much more while you learn how ways to improve your home. This year’s show is Feb. 26-28 in the Yakima Valley SunDome in Yakima. The show is fun for kids as well as adults. This year, the show will repeat the popular LEGO building challenge for children ages 5 through 12. Children who enter can win some great prizes. The contest will be held on both Saturday and Sunday, with contestant sign-in beginning at 1 p.m. The building competition begins at 1:30. Categories by age group are 5- to 8-year-olds and 9- to 12-year-olds. Pre-registration is required. A popular attraction for young adults is the tiny home display erected by Yakima Canyon Tiny Homes. You can tour the home all weekend! General admission tickets to the Central Washington Home and Garden Show are $10 ($8 for seniors). Kids 12 and under are admitted free. You can also opt for a “Sip and Shop” ticket to enjoy wine-tasting as you browse The Yakima Valley SunDome is at the State Fair Park in Yakima, and parking is free if you’re attending the show. For more information, visit cwhba.org, and look for updates on Facebook. cultures and nationalities. A wide array of games and activities for youngsters and young adults make the festival an enjoyable experience for the entire family. Vendor applications will be available in May. An audience enjoys the multicultural entertainment at last year’s Diversity Day in Walla Walla. PAGE 16 • February 2016 • The Entertainer Dining in the Crow’s Nest at the Clover Island Inn alwasys comes with a beautiful view of the Columbia River. It’s always good, and always romantic. Spend a romantic evening on the river at Clover Island C rab stuffed halibut, filet mignon barbecue and a cold beverage. Starting and chicken cordon bleu are a few June 15, Thunder on the Island starts of the tasty entrees being offered at the again at 6 p.m. every Wednesday. Crow’s Nest Bar and Grill at the Clover Also on Clover Island, the AC/DC Island Inn this Valentine’s Day weektribute band,Hells Belles, begins the end. Also being offered is an overnight season with a spring concert on May room package that includes a party 29, and Sawyer Brown will close out with local band Soundwall. The packthe summer on Sept. 3. age includes a river-view sleeping Take that special someon to Clover room, $50 credit for the Crow’s Nest, a Island on Saturday night, Feb. 13, for a dance party with Soundwall providing delicious dinner and a night of dancing. the music, and a hot breakfast buffet If you wish, you can opt for the over— all for only $145 per couple. night package and wake up together “We wanted to offer a fun getaway on Valentine’s Day. for couples,” said Amber Martin, Call (509) 586-0541 for infomation director of Sales and Marketing for the and reservations, or visit Clover Island Inn. cloverislandinn.com. Soundwall is a versatile band that plays everything from Red Hot Chili Peppers music to the Rolling Stones. You may recognize a few of the band members; lead singer KC was previously with the Shades and Walt and Tony perform with Groove Principal. The Shades and Groove principal have played before at Clover Island Inn’s Thunder on the Island, part of the outdoor For your Valentine’s Day dinner, the menu at the summer concert series that is free for families to Crow’s Nest will feature crab stuffed halibut and enjoy a local band, fresh other special entrees. IN BRIEF Save this March date for Craft Beer Festival The Tri-Cities on Tap Craft Beer Festival will take place March 19 at the Benton County Fairgrounds. More than a hundred craft beers from at least 50 of America’s best craft breweries will be avaiable for sampling along with food, live music and vendors. There will be two sessions, from 1 to 4 p.m. and 5 to 8 p.m. The cost is $35, which includes a sampling glass. Ticket sales will be limited to 3,000 people, and you must be 21 or older. Visit tricitiesontap.com. West Richland Chamber to hold awards luncheon The West Richland Area Chamber of Commerce will recognize members for their outstanding service to the community at its annual awards luncheon on Feb. 3 at 11:30 a.m. at the Shilo Inn in Richland. Ten awards will be given to members in 2016, including the Business, Volunteer, Chamber Member, and Community Spirit Awards. Organizers promise some “fun” awards as well. Columbia River Catering will supply the meal, and entertainment will be provided by Tapteal Elementary Steel Drum Band. The cost is $30, and chamber members and guests can register online at westrichlandchamber.org. WSU student-made wines available to purchase WSU has a line of student-made wines, called Blended Learning, sold around the state. Learning wines can be purchased at WSU Connections stores, the WSU Brelsford Visitor Center in Pullman, the Walter Clore Wine and Culinary Center in Prosser or by contacting Debbie Schwenson in the WSU viticulture and enology program at (509) 372-7224 or schwenso@wsu.edu. The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 17 Take a journey of discovery to Christianity’s Hebrew roots the covenants, Yeshua’s teachings, iscovery is a joyful experience. the Kingdom of Imagine when Lewis and Clark’s Corps of Discovery realized, right here Heaven, Yeshua’s yoke, repentance, in Tri-Cities, that the Columbia River redemption, Paul, was their final path to the Pacific kosher food, the Ocean! Sabbath, the biblical Biblical discovery is like that, only better. Many in the Tri-Cities’ Christian calendar, the spring and fall holy festivals, community want to know what their the 613 commandconnection is to the Holy Land, the ments, Jewish Jewish people and the Hebrew Scriptures. Discovering this connection is at destiny and Gentile destiny. the heart of Messianic Judaism. Have you wondered why Easter The first believers in Yeshua (Jesus) (March 27 this year) is observed before were torn from Judaism when the Passover (April 23)? How can Yeshua Jewish people were torn from their rise from the dead before the crucifixhomeland in the year 70 CE by the Romans’ horrific destruction of Jerusa- ion? HaYesod will reveal the Bible’s Hebrew calendar, which does not sync lem and the Holy Temple. The war claimed 1.1 million people, leaving the so well with our Gregorian one introduced by Pope Gregory. Since all the landscape ravaged. biblical holy days are portents of future Mark Twain walked the Temple Mount 1,797 years later and described events, it makes sense that we should know the Hebrew calendar. the area as “…given over wholly to Just as the Columbia proved to be weeds…a silent mournful expanse…a Lewis and Clark’s final route to the desolation….” Today, it is amazing how the Jewish Pacific; restoration of the gospel’s Hebraic foundation is becoming that people are at last returning to their final river of connection for believers to homeland as G-d promised. Simultathe land, the people, and the scripneously, Messianic Judaism is a historic restoration leading a rediscov- tures of Israel. Please join us at Beit Immanuel on ery of Yeshua’s Jewish roots, and thereby placing the gospel back on its Saturday mornings beginning Feb. 20 for the HaYesod course, and experiHebraic foundation. ence your own biblical discovery. At Congregation Beit Immanuel in Register by calling (509) 737-7566. Kennewick, I’m proud to lead ChrisCourse information is online at tians and others in discovery of the gospel’s Hebraic foundation through a hayesod.org. professional 10-week course appropriAlan Thietje is a teacher of Messiately titled HaYesod. HaYesod is anic Judaism at Congregation Beit Hebrew meaning “the foundation”. HaYesod examines the topics of the Immanuel, meeting in Kennewick Torah, grace vs. law, animal sacrifices, (beit-immanuel.org). D By Alan Thietje 3 Rivers Folklife Society activities for this month By Micki Perry In February, 3 Rivers Folklife Society will have two singlongs, a coffeehouse and a concert. For directions to venues and further information about 3 Rivers Folklife events, check our website at 3rfs.org or call (509) 528-2215. Singalongs scheduled for Feb. 5 and 13 The First Friday Folkie Free-for-All on Friday, Feb. 5, at 7:30 p.m. takes place at my home at 1011 South Dawes in Kennewick. Whether you call it a hootenanny, a jam, a song circle or a singalong, gathering with friends to make music is a lovely way to spend an evening. If you play an instrument, bring it — or just bring your voice and a snack to share. Call (509) 783-9937 for directions. At the Second Saturday Sea Song Singalong on Saturday, Feb. 13, the singing of mostly sea songs and shanties begins around 7 p.m. at Round Table Pizza on George Washington Way in Richland. Since it is close to Valentine’s Day, expect some love songs as well. Everyone is welcome and there is no cost except for your food and beverages Coffeehouse features Jami Cooper on Feb. 12 The 3 Rivers Coffeehouse will be held on Friday, Feb. 12, at the All Saints Episcopal Church, 1312 Kimbal Ave. in Richland. It will feature local singer and songwriter Jami Cooper. As usual, the coffeehouse will begin at 7:30 p.m. with an open-mic session. Potential performers should arrive early to secure a performance slot. Suggested donation at the door is $8, or $6 for seniors and students. Jami Cooper is a Richland songwriter who has been writing her own songs and performing at local venues most of her life. She even performed for the 3 Rivers Coffeehouse events when she was just a teenager, and she has been at the Tumbleweed Music Festival and more recent coffeehouses during the past few years. Her original music is very eclectic, drawing on blues, jazz, folk, country and rock styles and often weaving in Christian themes. Matt Hammer does Tumbleweed benefit Feb. 20 Local singer and songwriter Matt Hammer will present a concert of mostly original songs on Saturday, Feb. 20, at 7:30 p.m. at the Community Unitarian Universalist Church, 2819 W. Sylvester St. in Pasco. This concert will be a benefit for the Tumbleweed Music Festival that is held on Labor Day weekend. Tickets are available in advance for $14 ($12 for seniors, students and society members) at Bookworm stores Octopus’ Garden in Richland and at the door. Matt is a fairly recent import to the Tri-Cities music scene. He began playing guitar when he was just 8 years old and went on the road as a traveling folksinger right after high school. He even played in the Tri-Cities in the mid-70s at Clinkerdagger’s and Chapter 11, which some of you may remember. In 1976, Matt moved to Alaska, where he stayed for more than 30 years, becoming totally immersed in the Alaska music scene. As a performer, he opened for some prestigious acts: Emmylou Harris, Bonnie Raitt, Hoyt Axton, Jerry Jeff Walker, Steve Goodman and Air Supply. He was also a producer of the Great Alaska Opry, which provided a forum for Alaska’s finest musical talent. Matt’s CD, ”Alaskasongs,” was released in 1998 to critical acclaim. He was also well-known for his songs and videos about Colonel Norman Vaugh, who organized the Iditarod dog-sled races and later climbed Mt Vaughn in Antartica at age 89. Since moving to Kennewick in 2014 to be near family, he often sings with his wife Lona. He has performed at the Tumbleweed Music Festival, the 2015 World Relief Concert, and with Columbia Choral. He is getting to be known in the TriCities music community. In his spare time, he works in his own music studio and mentors up-and coming young performers such as the Adventure Dirt Band. Visit him online at reverbnation/matthammer. PAGE 18 • February 2016 • The Entertainer Urban Sketchers, David Wyatt will show at Allied Arts U rban Sketchers Tri-Cities and nationally recognized aerial photographer David Wyatt will share the exhibit space at the Allied Arts Gallery at the Park in Richland in February. The featured show for the month runs through Feb. 26, and you can meet the artists at a reception on Sunday, Feb. 7, from 1 to 3 p.m. Urban Sketchers was begun in Seattle in 2009 by Seattle Times correspondent Gabi Campanario. Since then, groups have popped up in Paris, New York, San Francisco, Singapore and other places worldwide. More than 100,000 artists are members. Urban Sketchers’ mission is to promote artistic, storytelling and educational sketching, connecting people around the world who draw where they live and travel. Their “manifesto” can be found at urbansketchers.org. The primary emphasis, internationally, is simply “We show the world, one sketch at a time.” In 2011, Jim Bumgarner thought it would be great fun to get Tri-Cities artists into this growing group of worldwide sketchers. He petitioned Campanario, was accepted, and Urban Sketchers Tri-Cities was born. The group started out slowly with only three regular members, but it has grown to approximately 60. They meet every Wednesday morning from 10 to noon at a predetermined place and sketch what they see. The number of sketchers varies each week, but usually includes 18 to 20 who sketch people, places, and events. In the summer they try to stay outside, but in the winter they visit coffee shops, wineries, libraries, grocery stores, Columbia Center or other public buildings. Urban Sketchers Tri-Cities is not a formal group, and there are no dues. They do follow the international guidelines and have some local rules as well. For example, sketchers must bring supplies to draw on and with. Experience is not required, so members range from beginners to experts. Members are 18 years of age and over, but children of members are welcome as long as they come with a parent. “While we are about the sketching and its associated enjoyment, we are also about the socialization that comes with that activity,” said Bumgarner. “The challenge to improve as artists and sketchers never comes to conclusion and it is within that context that we meet, draw, sketch and paint every Wednesday morning while also partaking of the joy of interacting with other people of like-minded interests. Anyone is welcome to join us.” Although you are used to seeing finished pieces at the Gallery at the Park, bear in mind that the Urban Sketchers’ “finished pieces” are their sketches. For the show, embers have printed enlargements of some of their favorite sketches on non-glossy paper and mounted them on foam-cored backings, maintaining “Carousel of Dreams” is a sketch by Urban Skethers member Dave Poynter (LaPoynte). “Wallula the “look” of a sketch. Gap” is a photograph by David Wyatt, winner of the Judge’s Choice Award in the 2014 Members can do what they wish with their own Professional Aerial Photographers' Association Annual Print Competition . work, but the Urban Sketchers manifesto requires tion. “David has demonstrated not just ings. In the Tri-Cities he brings topreserving the sketch as a sketch. the technical competencies and gether his two passions — flying and Members will also display some of creative flare associated with his aerial photography — to share his aerial their sketchbooks. photography; he is a wonderful role perspectives on the Mid-Columbia. For more information about the model and leader in the business.” In 2015, Wyatt received his Master group, visit USKTriCities on The gallery is open Tuesday through Aerial Photographer designation from Facebook. the Professional Aerial Photographers Friday from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and Saturday from 10 to 5 at the entrance Association. “Becoming a Master to Howard Amon Park, 89 Lee Blvd. in Aerial Photographer is the hallmark David Wyatt’s photos Richland. achievement in our profession,” said Award-winning aerial photographer For information, call (509) 943-9815. Chuck Boyle, president of the associaDavid Wyatt has been a resident of the Tri-Cities for 24 years and a pilot for more than 25 years. He is the owner of Loftics Aerial Photography in Kennewick. Wyatt gained an early appreciation for beauty in nature and an interest in aviation while growing up in southeast Alaska. The mountains, forests and glaciers of Juneau sparked a lifelong love of the outdoors and beauty in our surround- The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 19 Cyber Art 509 has exhibits in Kennewick, Benton City A Joe Batt sculpture expresses how kids interact in the age of smart phones. Art at WSU Richland campus looks at high-tech and kids A n exhibit called “In the Cloud,” showing the impact of technology on daily life through sculptures of children, will run through Feb. 26 at Washington State University Tri-Cities. The works will be on display in room 102 of the Consolidated Information Center on the WSU Richland campus. Artist Joe Batt’s work wryly questions the pervasive role of digital media in daily life, said Peter Christenson, WSU Tri-Cities assistant professor of fine arts and Art Center curator. “There’s a lovely, but haunting, juxtaposition embedded in the ceramic figurines themselves — handmade clay dolls clenching a variety of electron- ics,” he said. “They are unique and approachable, yet eerily disconnected and impassive like the technology they embrace.” In recent years, Batt said, he has observed himself and nearly everyone he knows interacting with electronic devices at an escalating pace. “Though it might be impossible to understand the impact of these real changes, this new body of work is my way of beginning to creatively process and, to a degree, question them,” he said. “I chose children as the main characters because I feel that the unknown impact of the digital age is effectively conveyed through them.” This Valentine’s Day, say it with roses! There’s no better way to say “I love Wormington, who started the business you” on Valentine’s Day with his wife Connie in 1989. “Our method ensures the than with roses, either freshest product shipped delivered in style or direct to us within two to given in person with a three days.” hug and a kiss. For information or teleJust Roses, phone orders, call (509) Flowers and More 783-ROSE (7673). For online makes roses ordering, visit www.jroses.com. more affordable than you thought possible, and their locations in Pasco and Kennewick are gearing up for those special Valentine’s deliveries starting on Feb. 10. Valentine’s specials this month include the “Key to My Heart Special” and “The Works.” The first consists of long-stemmed red roses in a beautiful keepsake vase. “The Works” is a little bit of everything including the stunning vase, long-stemmed roses, beautiful fragrant rose petals, tempting chocolates and an adorable stuffed white bear. And the package is topped with an 18-inch Valentine’s Day foil balloon. It’s a gift she’ll always remember. But your choices are not limited at Just Roses. You can choose from a variety of other designed flower arrangements, green plants, chocolate truffles, wines and special gift items, ordered online or picked up in person at one of their stores. Just Roses was founded on the idea of providing the freshest roses at affordable prices. “Many years of experience and personally visiting flower farms all over the country helped us to understand the shipping and ordering processes,” said Sanford Cyber Art 509, an online cooperative of Tri-Cities artists, has installed three new art exhibits that will hang through February. The venues are: Tucannon Cellars, 40504 Demoss Road in Benton City. The tasting room is open from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays and from 11 to 5 on Thursdays and Sundays. Grill on Gage, 8524 W. Gage Boulevard in Kennewick. View the display from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays and 11 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays. Blessed on First, 120 W. First Avenue in Kennewick, open Tuesday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and 10 to 3 on Saturday. Alice Beckstrom is showing her glass art. The two-dimensional works include photographs, acrylic paintings, oil paintings, and watercolors by Barb Sutton, Barb Thrall, Claire Hastings, Danny Paterson, Dave Poynter (LaPoynte), Ed David, Greg Ashby, Jan Taylor, Laura Turo, Maggie Remington, Maja Shaw, Margo Fox, Marsha Wyatt, Pam Spence, Pat Fleming, Patricia Fleming, Sophie Calvey and Terry Matson. Jan Taylor has an individual show at Wenaha Gallery in Dayton through Feb. 6. The exhibits are free and open to all ages. For more information about the artists and the exhibits at Cyber Art 509, visit them on Facebook ant at cyberart509.com. To join Cyber Art 509 or arrange to have their art displayed in your business, call (509) 628-1795. IN BRIEF Stacia Gunderson will address Genealogy group The Tri-City Genealogical Society will meet on Feb. 10 at 7 p.m. at Charbonneau Retirement Community, 8264 W. Grandridge Blvd. in Kennewick. Stacia Gunderson will discuss the importance of symbolism on cemetery headstones, why certain flowers were used on grave markers and the wording patterns that told about the deceased. Gunderson has a bachelor’s degree in history, has worked as an interpreter for national and state parks, and was the resident pre-Hanford historian for the former CREHST museum. For information, contact Susan Davis Faulkner at (509) 554-1050 or denmother4@hotmail.com Airline CEO will speak at Regional Chamber lunch The Tri-City Regional Chamber of Commerce will host “Lunch with Brad Tilden, CEO of Alaska Air Group” at the Three Rivers Convention Center in Kennewick on Thursday, Feb. 25. Tilden will discuss Alaska Airlines’ service, technology and vision for air travel in the Pacific Northwest. Cost to attend is $22 for chamber members and $32 for nonmembers. Register by Feb. 19 at tricityregionalchamber.com or contact Jillian Marquez at (509) 491-3234. PAGE 20 • February 2016 • The Entertainer The Revenant is aggressively raw and powerful! L By Aubrey Langlois eonardo DiCaprio has done it again. He has brought us a gritty, blowyou-out-of-your-theater-seat performance. For more than two decades he has been known for such performances, but he refreshingly hasn’t forgotten to keep his humility and dashing charm. The Revenant, released nationwide in early January, is an extraordinary tale — a starkly engaging adaptation of Michael Punke’s historical novel of the same name. It is American folklore that shares its roots, its wonder and heroics with the legends of Davy Crockett, Daniel Boone and Calamity Jane. As always in such unprovable tales, there has been much conjecture about the real-life 1800s fur trapper named Hugh Glass. Yet no one seems to deny the mauling he endured at the paws of a giant mother grizzly — nor, close to death, his abandonment on a mountain by his trapping companions. DiCaprio breathes genuine life into the role of Glass, and masterfully constructs his relationship with his counter actor, Tom Hardy, who excelled as the slimy, money-hungry John Fitzgerald. The acting chemistry is explosive, and the stark emotion among the entire Fitzgerald, who murdered his halfblood Pawnee son, Hawk (Forrest Goodluck). There are none more deserving of film awards than the actors, writers, and director of this epic narrative. They took some of Michael Punke’s historical adaptations of the reverent tall tales about Glass and brought them to the screen with brilliant detail that awes the eyes, tantalizes the mind and tears at the heartstrings without mercy. It is refreshing to see a wellrounded script, coupled with the acting talent that keeps the audience at rapt attention from beginning to end. This movie forces onlookers to feel. Bring a battle-hardened heart, or be ready to ache with every Leonardo DiCaprio as the frontiersman and fur trapper Hugh Glass in The Revenant. bloody wound, every traumatic loss and backstabbing betrayal. This is a cast is electrifying, especially with the choices by director Alejandro G. film to be seen, experienced and felt. facially expressive Will Poulter as Jim Inarritu. He painted a dark and dingy It is worth the extravagant budget Bridger and Domhnall film canvas, leaving no stone unturned used to make it, and it deserves to Gleeson (Bill in the historical aspects. Any history be remembered. True or not, the Weasley in the Harry aficionado will find few, if any, inaccura- story is a fantastic and nail-biting Potter films), who cies. tale that is true to our country’s was made for the part The Revenant is raw and gripping. It earlier, wilder years. of Captain Andrew pulls no punches in its blood and gore The legend of Hugh Glass is a Henry. — from the terrifying bear attack and generational tale that should be told The well-written the skirmishes with fur traders and as often as it can be, much like Davy storyline is enriched by fascinating Native Americans to Glass’s phoenixCrockett and the Alamo, in order to camera angles in fast-moving action like rebirth after the ravages of a fever preserve the rich history of our scenes, and stellar environmental — all in order to chase down country. Alien invasion movie The 5th Wave is a colossal flop By Aubrey Langlois There are numerous ways to decimate the human race efficiently — nuclear fallout, a massive flood, a debilitating plague or the occasional alien invasion with brain-wrapping, worm-like monsters that seem to have been directly ripped off from the old 80s sci-fi flicks like Alien. Apparently, all one need do to complete a full-scale alien assault on a global scale is to trick the world’s teenagers into defeating the enemy for you. The brilliance behind the idea is fascinating in the wellwritten young-adult novel by Rick Yancy, but when Sony adapted it to the big screen, there were several hitches in the execution. In the movie The 5th Wave, Chloe Moretz plays an awkward teen, Cassiopeia Sullivan, struggling with her typical high-school life and young female problems. She has a crush on a cute boy, has inappropriate conversations with her best girlfriend, and is loved by her family — mother, father and little brother Sam (Zachary Arthur). When Cassie is thrust into making some rather unsavory, humanitydefying choices after the occurrence of these multiple alien waves, — cataclysmic disasters that wipe out the weakest links in the human race — she feels herself losing her humanity, which she comments about in her narrated journal throughout the film. There are many questions that stem from this adapted storyline. There are gaping plot holes and lackluster writing on the part of the writers and producers, who then force-fed a horrible script to the actors. The cast made a valiant effort to work with what they were given. But not even Chloe Moretz, Nick Robinson (Ben Parish–Zombie), Alex Roe (Evan Walker) or the extraordinarily talented Liev Schreiber (Colonel Vosch) could wake up the audience after they snoozed through the movie’s largely uneventful scenes. Nor could a ridiculous amount of randomly placed explosives near the ending...in a militarized base...with soldiers everywhere...by children! Figure out that plot hole. The picture does not do justice to the novel or pay due respect to the novelist who invented the elaborate idea. One wonders about possible sequels, as the book is part of a trilogy. With what feels like a dying stream of young-adult novels making it to cinema, it’s disappointing that it is this dystopian world and alien invasion idea that couldn’t get momentum. It was not for lack of trying on the part of the actors or the originator of this brainchild. Simply put The 5th Wave suffers from poor writing, mediocre effects and pointless plot holes. It is without any genuine substance or interest that would draw the audience in. If there was ever a reason to boycott a film, there are plenty with this one — not only the shameless bandwagoning, The performances of Chloe Moretz and other cast members could not save the movie The Fifth Wave. It failed to deliver on the premise of the popular young-adult novel. but doing it so poorly when the YA minutes of your life that you will never formula is so cliché and easy to follow. get back, don’t consider paying to see For the sake of the hour and 45 this film. BATTELLE FILM CLUB MOVIE SCHEDULE After some reshuffling of dates, the Battelle Film Club has finalized its schedule of movie screenings from now through May. After the January Entertainer went to press, Life Itself, the 2014 documentary about the life of film critic Roger Ebert, was rescheduled to be shown on March 4 You don’t have to be a Battelle employee or club member to attend for a $4 admission price for adults or $2 for children.. All screenings are on Fridays at 7:30 p.m. in the Battelle Auditorium in north Richland. Here’s the schedule: Feb. 5 — Slow West (2015), a western action movie Feb. 19 — Fill the Void (2012), a romantic drama March 4 — Life Itself (2014), a documentary about Roger Ebert April 15 — Paprika (2006), animated science fiction April 29 — The Woman with 5 Elephants (2009), a documentary May 6 — The 100 Year Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared (2013), an adventure comedy For complete information about the club and synopses of all the films on the schedule, visit tricityfilmclub.org. The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 21 Grouch is transformed in this study of aging Out of Sorts, by Aurelie Valognes, Translated by Wendeline A. Hardenberg, Amazon Crossing, 2014 F By JoDean Jordan erdinand Brun has had it with women! Every one he’s ever loved has left him. His mother had the nerve to die in childbirth, his grandmother died not long after, and his wife left him for the mailman. His daughter moved far away, and even his beloved dog Daisy is not long for this world. Worst of all, his dictator-like neighbor and apartment-house concierge, Mrs. Suarez, seems out to get him removed from his home. He wasn’t always a grumpy old man, but the women in his life have made him that way. The question now is, should he go on living at all? His reclusive life is bleak, pessimistic, and one could even say alarming. It’s so alarming that his worried daughter tells him that if he doesn’t prove himself competent, tidy, safe and fit, she’s going to move him into a retirement home. Mrs. Suarez would like nothing more. Ferdinand has lived as a hermit for years, and the last place he wants to go is a retirement home, even at age 83. It’s now Ferdinand Brun versus Mrs. Suarez, the one entrusted to report back to his daughter on his progress. Does he have the power to meet his daughter’s requests and keep a spotless apartment full of fresh food, despite the fact that he’s never cleaned in his life? Can he be pleasant to his neighbors and keep appointments with the dreaded Mrs. Suarez? Or is none of it worth the effort? Enter Juliette, his 10-year-old quickwitted neighbor who, despite his frown and closed door, is drawn to the man that she knows Ferdinand can be. Juliette joins forces with Beatrice, a vibrant, outgoing 93-year-old neighbor. Together they come to Ferdinand’s rescue with their lively outlook on life. They breathe new life into a grouchy old man. There is hope after all, and at 83 this may be the new beginning Ferdinand was looking for. Out of Sorts takes place in a small French town. It follows an unusual pace as it works through Ferdinand’s thoughts and feelings as he’s breaking down on the inside. Many unusual events take place that move along quickly in the life of an 83-year-old man, and it’s easy to see why he’s worn down and ready to quit. The events work as mini-stories and subplots that, at times, seem not to fit into the overall story. The author paints a picture of a stagnant, old-fashioned man interacting with quick-moving people who are in tune with modern-day life, no matter their age. Ferdinand is caught between gossiping, petty old women, a nasty apartment concierge, a precocious 10year-old girl, his daughter whom he never talks to, and a 93-year old former lawyer who is smarter than all of them put together. It’s because of the variety of women in his life that he begins to see that they’re not all the same and shouldn’t be held accountable for the mistakes of the women who have let him down. This book was a bit hard to swallow at times. Some of the relationships and side stories seem a bit unbelievable and forced in order to move the plot along. However, the book shows a very interesting contrast between young and old, and reveals that it’s not necessarily your chronological age that matters, but rather the age that you feel in your heart that is true. This novel can be purchased in paperback from Amazon for $8.78 or downloaded to a Kindle for $5.99. Mysterious event drives this psychological thriller time she sets foot outside her door? What makes this book even more of a thriller is that the reader doesn’t know the answer to the most important By JoDean Jordan question of all: What in the world did Leah Mills lives every day of her life Leah do in her past? thinking of the one horrific day that The plot jumps back and forth changed her future forever. Because of between her modern-day life of parathat day she lives alone in a tiny noia and isolation, and a seemingly London flat. Because of this horrible normal high-school lifestyle wherein nightmare of a day, Leah works in a she had good friends and a crush on a public library where silence is apprecimysterious boy, whom she desperately ated and she can do her job, making wanted to impress so he’d like her hushed, fleeting connections with back. She changes from a gregarious, preoccupied customers. No one knows successful teen into a woman her her, no one knows what she’s done, former self wouldn’t even recognize. and no one is interested in finding out. There is indeed a mystery there. Her life is predictable and generic, and And it’s not just one surrounding the she shuns any variation from her enigma plaguing her adult life but, routine. more importantly, one that reveals how That’s exactly how Leah wants it. she got there in the first place. Unfortunately a person can’t live in There are areas of the book that lag there that she discovers more quesparanoid solitude forever. When a man with tedium and too much normalcy to tions than answers. It seems that named Julian starts to show an move the plot along, but perhaps this some crimes are never meant to be interest in her via a book-lovers’ chat is the author’s way of keeping the forgiven and some people don’t deserve room, she can’t believe that he might reader on the edge so he or she to forget their past. be the key to a bit of normalcy. doesn’t know when the momentous The Girl With No Past is indeed a Unfortunately, letters begin to arrive on events are to occur. Overall, it’s well psychological thriller that leaves the her doorstep reminding her of the written and easily can be considered reader asking the same questions as anniversary of the event that haunts her an entertaining and suspenseful pagethe main character. Who is out to get daily. turner. her? What do they want? Why is her Emails follow that remind her that This novel can be purchased in world falling apart? What is behind her she doesn’t have a right to happiness paperback from Amazon for $9.27 or new friendships? Why do strange and should live her life in shame and downloaded to a Kindle for $2.99. events keep happening to her every isolation as she deserves. Can she trust Julian, and should she attempt a friendship with the highly entertaining woman who works alongside her at the library? She dares to think so and finds her voice enough to bravely respond to the emails and claim her right to live a Lit Fest 2016 to open Feb. 2 at Zinful Wine Bar life she wants. Lit Fest, the Tri-Cities’ annual celebration of authors, will open with a The question is…can she? Not when night of book reviews on Tuesday, Feb. 2. Seven local book enthusiasts will she ventures again into the world and take part in “About the Book” at 6 p.m. at Zinful Wine Bar in downtown strange things happen to her time and Kennewick. Talking about admired novels and nonfiction books will be assistant time again. They may not be coincieditor Kristina Lord of the Tri-City Herald; Martin Valadez, educator and health dences, and she might be targeted by director; Merry Leow, a retired Battelle editor; Dr. Joshua Miller of Northwest someone who wants to see her suffer. Orthopedics; John Swope, a chemical engineer; Carol Berry, a literacy advoWith no choice, Leah journeys to cate; and Matt Taylor, a retired Herald editor. Lit Fest committee member Ed the one place she swore she’d never Frost will emcee the event. Lit Fest events are free to the public, and the next return — her childhood home. It is “About the Book” session will take place in June. Movies New Releases Playing in Theaters February 2016 5th Hail, Caesar! The Choice Pride & Prejudice & Zombies 12th Deadpool How to Be Single Zoolander 2 19th Race THe Witch Viral 26th Eddie the Eagle Gods of Egypt Triple 9 March 2016 4th Desierto London Has Fallen Whiskey Tango Foxtrot Zootopia 11th 10 Cloverfield Lane The Other Side of the Door The Young Messiah 18th The Divergent Series: Allegiant Midnight Special 25th Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2 The Girl With No Past, by Kathryn Croft, Bookouture, 2015 IN BRIEF Releases New DVD Releases February 2016 2nd Bridge of Spies The Last Witch Hunter Rock the Kasbah Suffragette 9th MI-5 Love the Coopers Crimson Peak Spectre 16th Black Mass Steve Jobs The 33 Criminal Activities 23rd I Smile Back The Good Dinosaur Spotlight My All American Diablo March 2016 1st The Night Before The Danish Girl Room 8th The Peanuts Movie Victor Frankenstein 15th Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Road Chip Concussion 22nd Hunger Games: Mockingjay 2 Daddy's Home The Letters 29th Exposed Forsaken PAGE 22 • February 2016 • The Entertainer Benton City fundraiser mimics TV dance competitions to encourage the audience to keep their votes coming in. Though most will be performing conventional ballroom dances, there will also be belly dancing and tap-dance exhibitions. Talented young singer Annie Garcia will also be performing during the show. ans of television’s “Dancing With The Revitalization Committee was the Stars” can have a front-row seat formed when Brenda Trammel, owner of and cast a live vote for their favorite the Enchanted Acres Alpaca Ranch, couple in a local competition planned stirred up enthusiasm for bringing some for March 12 in Benton City. The color and a fresh look to Benton City‘s admission price of $15 will include downtown area. The committee has wine and micro-brew tasting, lots of worked with the Benton City Economic hors d’ oeuvres and a silent auction. Development Council to identify A passion for ballroom dancing and potential partners and projects. The a desire to promote revitalization and committee hopes to bring a sense of economic development in her commuBenton City’s “railroad town” history to nity sparked Benton City Mayor Linda Mayor Linda Lehman and Glenn Hernando of Tri-Cities DanceSport of Washington Lehman’s idea for “Benton City Thinks will be performing and International Waltz at “Benton City Thinks We Can Dance.” the design process. “Benton City Thinks We Can Dance” We Can Dance.” It’s being held as a The event is a fundraiser to benefit Benton City’s Downtown Revitalization Project. will be held on March 12 at the St. fundraiser for Benton City’s RevitalizaFrancis Xavier Cabrini Catholic Church tion Committee, with proceeds going “You can have a lot of fun, vote for your Goodman and Bruno Tonioli — will assembly hall, 1000 Horn Drive in toward creating a harmonious and favorite local ‘stars’ and benefit Benton critique the competitors, but the Benton City. The event will open with a welcoming downtown. Proceeds will City’s downtown revitalization efforts at winners will be determined by which social hour beginning at 6 p.m. with couple garners the most financial provide paint, awnings and flower the same time,” she said. wine and microbrew tasting and an support from the audience. Emcees boxes, refurbished benches and solar The competition will follow the opportunity to peruse the silent aucplaying the roles of TV emcee Tom lighting. The Revitalization Committee format of “Dancing with the Stars” by tion. The dance program will begin at 7 Bergeron and his lovely assistant will offers financial incentives to downtown pairing community leaders with p.m. and the evening will conclude with keep the action going. businesses that follow their newly experienced dancers to compete for open dancing until 11. In addition to organizing the event, developed Style Guide and Color the coveted mirror-ball trophy. The Tickets are $15 in advance, $20 at Mayor Lehman and her partner Glenn Palette. three people who portray the TV the door and will include hors d’oeuvres Hernando of the Tri-Cities DanceSport Lehman is excited about the dance. judges — Carrie Ann Inaba, Len of Washington will perform an Interna- and beverage scrip. Additional wine and beer will be available for purchase by tional-style waltz exhibition between competition rounds. Both are members the glass. Tickets are available at Benton City businesses including Quail of the Tri-Cities DanceSport Team, for Crossing, Hair It Is, Maeleena’s Salon which Hernando is artistic director. Care, Carrousel Day Care and Other team members will perform the Branches & Vines, as well as by phone role of the “pros” by teaching the at (509) 713-5836 or online. Visit “stars” to dance, partnering them and bentoncityedc.org and click on “Revitaldoing exhibition dances. ization Project.” The stars will be representatives of Tickets will be sold at the door if not different segments of the Benton City sold out. Seating is limited, and the community including city government, last event had standing room only, so churches, wineries, Benton REA and get your tickets early and mark your the Latino community. Some friendly calendars for March 12! rivalry among the groups is expected If you like ‘Dancing With the Stars,’ you will love this event! F IN BRIEF VIDA Guitar Quartet will perform Feb. 15 Community concerts of the Tri-Cities will hold its next concert — a performance by the VIDA Guitar Quartet — on Monday, Feb. 15, at 7:30 p.m. at the Faith Assembly Auditorium in Pasco. This renowned group comprises four guitarists of exceptional artistry who share a passion for chamber music. They have performed on some of North America’s most prestigious stages including the Long Island Guitar Festival and the Allegro Guitar Series in Dallas, Fort Worth and Las Vegas. Single tickets will be available at the door for $25, ($15 for students). A subscription for the three remaining concerts of the season is available for $40 and $10, respectively. The final two concerts will feature the Repertory Dance Theatre on March 17 at Richland High School and the Male Ensemble Northwest on April 9 at Faith Assembly. For more information, call (509) 547-6243 or visit communityconcertstc.org. The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 23 The East Coast Swing is a lively, popular dance! Kennewick offering swing classes in February, March T By Beth Trost-Hayter he East Coast Swing is one of our favorite swing dances, and it’s classified as a beginner-level starter dance. It’s danced to medium-tempo music, giving it a “middle of the road” rhythm — a style that’s neither fast nor slow. The dance has some specific patterns that only relate to it — in other words, the patterns (or figures) work best in East Coast Swing where they would not work well with singlestep or double-step swing. East Coast is a triple-step, side-to-side pattern, with a rock step. Footwork for the gentleman (leader) is left, right, left (counted 1 and 2), then right, left, right, (3 and 4), then back left, forward right, a rock step (counted 5 and 6). Footwork for the lady (follower) is the same, but starting with her right foot. I like this online description in which I have made a few alterations for clarity: “The dance was created by dance studios including the Arthur Murray studios in the 1940s, based on the Lindy Hop. “The Lindy Hop was felt by dance studios to be both too difficult and too unstructured to teach to beginning dancers, but there was market demand for training in swing dancing. “The dance studios had initially dismissed the Lindy Hop in particular as a fad. East Coast Swing is a rhythm dance that has both six- and Sherry Haws and Richard Shetlar dance the East Coast Swing at the Kennewick Senior Center, The dance will be taught there in February and March. eight-beat patterns. The name East Coast Swing was coined initially to distinguish the dance from the street form and the new variant used in the competitive ballroom arena (as well as to distinguish it from the West Coast Swing, which was developed in California.)” I tell my students to be sure to learn all the different styles of swing dances so they do not have to sit out a dance because they don’t know a version that will fit the tempo of the music being played. We teach the following swing dances: East Coast Swing, Four Count Swing, Hustle Swing, Jitterbug and West Coast Swing. Each has its own set of figures that fit the tempo. Here’s more of the online description: “While based on Lindy Hop, East Coast Swing does have clear distinctions. It is a standardized form of dance developed first for instructional purposes in the Arthur Murray studios, and then later codified to allow for a medium of comparison for competitive ballroom dancers. “It can be said that there is no right or wrong way to dance it; however, certain styles of the dance are considered correct ‘form’ within the technical elements documented and governed by the National Dance Council of America.” February and March are the months to learn East Coast Swing with our teachers. Classes will be held on Monday nights at 7:30 p.m., Feb. 1-29 and March 7-28. The classes are offered by Kennewick Parks and Recreation and are held at the Kennewick Senior Center, for all ages. To register, call (509) 585-4293. Beth Trost-Hayter teaches Ballroom, swing, Latin and country dancing and can be reached at (509) 586-7609 or via e-mail:to bethtrost@yahoo.com. Visit her online at her website, www.dancebybethtrost.com. TIM TEBOW FOUNDATION CELEBRATES SPECIAL-NEEDS PEOPLE The “Night to Shine” is a national prom-night experience for people with special needs, ages 16 and older, organized by the Tim Tebow Foundation. Nationally, more than 200 churches in the U.S. and seven other countires will hold a “Night to Shine” on one night, Feb. 12. Volunteers and special guests are making this night possible around the world. PAGE 24 • February 2016 • The Entertainer Baum’s Chocolates — a local favorite since 1981 F or sweet treats in the Tri-Cities, Baum’s has been a tradition in the Richland area since 1981, when it was founded as Baum’s Candies. Customers who couldn’t get enough of Baum’s gourmet chocolates followed them when they moved from Richland to West Richland, and they can now find Baum’s in Kennewick as well. For some customers, a visit to Baum’s is a nostalgia trip, and now they’re sharing their childhood memories with children and grandchildren. Now known as Baum’s House of Chocolates and Gourmet Popcorn, the company continues to create its famous candies with the finest ingredients and craftsmanship. They were featured as the area’s number-one choice in “The Chocolate Lover’s Guide to the Pacific Northwest.” In a kitchen next to the West Richland showroom, everything is made from scratch using more than 90 chocolate recipes. Owner Mindy Sandlin-Sheppick credits Andy, Baum’s chocolatier for the past 25 years, with creating their delectable chocolate candies. Mindy and her husband Don also own Let’s Party in Kennewick. To open a second Baum’s location in Valentine’s treats from Baum’s House of Chocolate and Gourmet Popcorn, whether heart-shaped or not, are sinfully delicious. Kennewick, it was an easy matter of breaking down a wall to the space next door. The new location is on Edison near Clearwater Avenue in Kennewick. Baum’s does many holiday custom orders for businesses, with custom printing of packaging to personalize gifts for their customers. Their Let’s Party store, which carries all kinds of party supplies, is a natural fit for packaging Baum’s products. And if they don’t have what you want, Baum’s may do a custom order of a candy for you. A woman from Gig Harbor told of her experience in this Washington wine honored at largest U.S. wine competition Barnard Griffin Winery of Richland earned the title of Best Rosé at the 31st annual San Francisco Chronicle Wine Competition, held each year in Cloverdale, in northern Sonoma County, California. The competition drew a record 7,162 entries. More than 70 wine professionals spent four days evaluating the wines, culminating in a sweepstakes tasting of the 70 top wines. Named “Best Rosé” was Barnard Griffin’s 2015 Rosé of Photo by Andy Perdue Sangiovese. Winemaker Rob Griffin and his winning rosé Winemaker Rob Griffin’s Rosé of Sangiovese is consistently one of the A couple of judges at the San best rosés in the country, earning a Francisco Chronicle Wine Competition gold medal or better in the competition commented on the wine’s bright color, for 10 of the past 11 years and winning wondering if it came naturally. That the top trophy at least three times. caused Griffin to chuckle. “That Griffin produced about 15,000 cases electric pink is part of what Sangiovese from the 2015 vintage. gives you,” he said. “We’re using the Barnard Griffin uses several vineright grapes. There’s nothing phony in yards for its rosé, led by Balcom and the color.” Moe. “It’s superior fruit,” Griffin said. Barnard Griffin retails the wine for “We know what we want to do before $14, and it will be released around we do it. Most rosés are made as an Valentine’s Day. Last year, he pushed afterthought. We sit down well ahead production of his 2014 rosé to more of time to figure out what we want to than 11,000 cases, yet it sold out by do.” July — faster than it ever has. online testimonial: “I was looking for some peanut brittle to bring to my father who was recovering in the hospital. I hadn’t had any luck until I called Baum’s. They were actually out of peanut brittle but told me they would make a batch specifically for me. I received a call within a couple of hours and picked up the best peanut brittle I have ever had.” And that’s not the only positive testimonial for Baum’s. On websites that post reviews of products and businesses, there are many rave reviews for Baum’s Chocolates . For Valentine’s Day you can find heart-shaped everything — custom boxes in a variety of sizes, heartshaped candies, liquor truffles, custom gift basket and more. They are known for their homemade toffee, and their chocolate-covered strawberries and cherries are to die for. Give your loved one a gift this Valentine’s Day. Shop where you know you’ll get something unique and delicious. Stop by at 4033 Van Giesen in West Richland or 513 N. Edison in Kennewick, or call (509) 967-9340. The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 25 Brews Taphouse plans its second barrel-aged beer event A s if beer wasn’t good enough already, brewers have taken the malt, hops, water, and yeast combination to the next level by borrowing a practice from the spirit and wine industries — barrel aging! Barrel-aged beer has become known as the holy grail of beer, producing flavors that cannot be replicated or experienced elsewhere, and Brews Taphouse and Growler Fills in Pasco is having an event to celebrate these rare beers. Brews is hosting its second annual Barrels @ Brews Feb. 26-28. “If you’ve never had a barrel-aged beer, this will change your mind on what beer can be!” said owner Mark Garrett. Having a couple of barrel-aged beers on tap anywhere is rare, but Mark and his team at Brews Taphouse have managed to pull together 28 barrel-aged beers of all different types — IPA aged in gin barrels, sour ale aged in Jameson Whiskey barrels, saison in chardonnay barrels, and Imperial stouts in bourbon barrels — and that’s just listing a few. These beers are very rare and often only released one time, according to Garrett. “These beers demonstrate the creativity of the breweries that produce them,” he said. “Brewers challenge the orthodoxy and create some insane beers!” Not only will Brews have a tap list full of rare beers, but they’ve invited Kim’s Got Smoke BBQ to come from Yakima for the event. Kim’s is often seen at Bale Breaker Brewery over the summer and offers amazing dishes such as smoked prime rib, whole turkey legs and weighty pulled-pork nachos. “Kim’s never disappoints!” shouted a patron at Brews when he overheard our Mark Garrett, owner of Brews Taphouse, knows beer better than almost anyone, and he’s always willing to chat with a customer about any of the beers he offers. Behind him are dozens of taps and an extensive tap list that is constantly changing. conversation with Garrett. “I came both said another gentleman, raising his days last year and the beer, food, beer. music and people were all awesome,” Barrels @ Brews starts at 3 p.m. Friday, Feb. 26, and continues through the weekend. Garrett and his team are taking over the alley at the side of their building and pitching a heated tent to make sure there’s plenty of seating. Wondering how you could coax an early taste of some of these rare beers? “Only our Black Card members get early access to a few of the best beers,” Garrett said, smiling. “And that’s not until the Thursday before the event. Sorry.” Want to be part of that crowd? It’s easy — just ask anyone on the staff and pay only $35 for a one-year Black Card membership, which gives you special privileges at Brews. Brews is locally owned and has the Tri-Cities best tap list, containing 40 craft beers and ciders that always rotate. There are different beers every time you visit. Brews focuses entirely on craft beers and is “all about the beer.” Join them for a pint or growler fill at 5426 Road 68 in Pasco, next to Walgreen’s. Walla Walla’s Brasserie Four under new ownership Brasserie Four, a locals favorite and nationally recognized Walla Walla restaurant serving French cuisine, is being sold by chef and owner Hannah MacDonald to Jamie Guerin, owner and chef of Whitehouse-Crawford. The transfer will take place early this month, and both parties have said that diners are likely to see very little change. Guerin and MacDonald describe the transition as a logical and welcome next step in the evolution of the restaurant. The staff, many of whom have been with the restaurant for five years or more, will stay on. And MacDonald herself will be present for the first few months to help where needed. Brasserie Four opened in 2008 in the downtown storefront at 4 East Main Street where the former Grapefields was located. When Grapefields closed, MacDonald and four of her staffers opened Brasserie Four in 2008. Brasserie Four is open Tuesday through Saturday for dinner, and Friday and Saturday for lunch. It closes during the first week of February each year. Call (509) 529-2011 for reservations. You can preview the menu at brasseriefour.com. Brasserie Four in downtown Walla Walla PAGE 26 • February 2016 • The Entertainer The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 27 The tasting room at Columbia Crest Winery Give your sweetheart a Valentine’s Day visit to Columbia Crest Winery Mountain) and the 2011 Reserve Coyote Canyon Vineyard Syrah (Horse Heaven Hills). All wines will be paired with an assortment of chocolates. f you want a fun, inexpensive get This is an entirely complimentary away with someone special for event. On Saturday, Feb. 13, enjoy live Valentine’s Day weekend, show your love by indulging him or her with a trip music by Tri-Cities musician Eddie Manzanares from 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. to Columbia Crest Winery. Manzanares is a masterful guitarist While you’re there, you’ll both be with more than 20 years playing a indulged with the finest red wines and chocolates. And you’ll be relaxing in a combination of Latin jazz, bossa nova and rumba flamenca. Originally from beautiful setting surrounded by vineMexico, Manzanares has performed for yards and overlooking the Columbia audiences, large and small, in Mexico, River in Paterson. You will be treated to complimentary South America, France, Italy, Spain, Germany, Switzerland, Japan, South tastings of Columbia Crest’s wineryexclusive Reserve Korea, Canada, and the Caribbean as well as the United States. red wines — the Columbia Crest is just an hour’s 2011 Reserve Four Feathers Block 8 drive from the Tri-Cities. Drive south Merlot (Columbia as if you’re going to Umatilla, but Valley AVA), 2011 before reaching the bridge to Oregon, Reserve Cabernet take exit 31 onto Washington Highway 14 West and continue to Paterson. Sauvignon (CoTurn right on Columbia Drive. lumbia Valley), For more about Columbia Crest and 2011 Reserve its products or to shop online, visit Cabernet Eddie Manzanares Sauvignon (Red columbiacrest.com. Indulge yourselves with red wine and chocolates Feb. 13-14 I PAGE 28 • February 2016 • The Entertainer Celebrity cruise includes parts of Australia, New Zealand that make for gorgeous photos. A few of the passengers chose to disembark s I write, I am aboard the Celebrity and spend the night in Queenstown, Solstice as an on-board hostess and if I hadn’t been there before I would cruising from Sydney, Australia, to have wanted to do so myself because Auckland, New Zealand. Travel Leadit’s a beautiful place. ers and our partner companies includOur first New Zealand stop was ing Vacations.com, Cruise Holidays Dunedin, which has an interesting mix and Results Travel participate in a of Scottish and native Maori culture. It’s program called Distinctive Voyages, a also a place to see wildlife from free gift to our clients that includes the penguins to albatrosses. We chose a hostess, a cocktail party and a two-hour harbor tour. complimentary shore excursion. In Wellington, the capital of New We flew from Seattle on Jan. 1, Zealand, I hosted our Distinctive bound for Sydney, and arrived two days Voyages shore excursion, highlighted later after crossing the International by a ride up to Mount Victoria for a Date Line, and stayed for two nights in panorama of Wellington Harbor and Sydney before the cruise. Sydney is a Cook Strait. We did a cable-car trip fun city with lots to do. Near the hotel with more great views and drive-by was an area called the Rocks, full of visits to the Parliament and other old colorful convict history and great pubs. government buildings. Our last stop Touring should include the Harbor was at Old St. Paul’s Church which Bridge, the Opera House, Darling The view of Wellington, the capital of New Zealand, from Mount Victoria. dates back to the mid-1900s. I loved Harbor and more. There’s also the Blue Wellington and its history. It was a Mountains outside of Sydney for in the summer. I’ve been on it twice Murano, and Silk Harvest, an Asian great day. wildlife, ziplines and other adventures restaurant. There is a spa, a fitness before, and there is so much to like In Tauranga we explored more of the that we didn’t have time for. about this ship. We are enjoying center and entertainment. The Solstice Maori culture. This populated area and having scenic views from a veranda offers all the things you would expect the Bay of Plenty offer sailing, fishing The ship to find on a great cruise ship. And the cabin. And I love the specialty dining and dolphin-watching. Salt-water pools that includes a Tuscan Steak House, good news is that it’s summer down The Celebrity Solstice is the same and extinct volcanoes also make it an an Italian fine dining restaurant called here, so the weather has been great. ship that sails from Seattle to Alaska interesting area to visit. As I write this, our last official stop will be tomorrow at the Bay of Islands, Melbourne, Australia Our first stop was Melbourne, which with 146 Islands dotting the area. We look forward to the natural beauty, has it all from fashion to wine and so many wineries and gorgeous beaches. much more. One of the most popular things to do in Melbourne is the trolley It’s truly New Zealand’s treasure, and a big wine area known for Cloudy Bay tour, which includes lunch on colonial trolleys as you cruise around the city. and Sauvignon Blanc. We will take a Melbourne is a wonderful city full of old winery tour stop at a famous chocolate world charm combined with high-rises factory. buildings and commerce. Although this is my fourth trip to My New Zealand ‘family’ Australia I’d never been to Tasmania. It Once off the ship, we’ll be staying in is a bit off the beaten path and not part Auckland for five more days with my of what most would consider your New Zealand “family.” A decade ago, basic Australia tour. This stop was very George and I hosted a young lady from interesting as we arrived on a Saturday New Zealand. Why we were, at our and enjoyed wandering through the age, willing to take on a 15-year-old I Saturday market and the downtown truly don’t know. But years later she is area. Hobart is the capital of Tasmania still very much in my life, and her family and home to 200,000 people. Austrais my family. They are so far away that lians love Americans and its one place I don’t know how many more times we in the world you can truly feel at ease. can visit, so I plan to make the most of this opportunity. On the agenda are sun and sea, a bit of golf, lots of local wine New Zealand After we sailed from Hobart we went and laughter. After that we say goodbye to summer and return to the cold Triacross the Tasman Sea to New Cites. Thanks for sharing my journey. Zealand, our primary destination. We cruised some beautiful places includSondra Wilson is president of Travel ing Milford, Doubtful, and Dusky Leaders, which is now celebrating its Sound. The scenery is breathtaking 34th year of business in the Tri-Cities. and reminds me of Alaska, with fjords A By Sondra Wilson UPCOMING TRAVEL LEADERS EVENTS Her are two travel-related events to put on your calendar: Travel Leaders will host Viking’s Michael Weldon for the Viking River and Ocean Cruise Night on Feb. 16 at 6 p.m. at the Clover Island Inn in Kennewick. An Australia and New Zealand Night on March 8 at 6 p.m. at the Clover Island Inn will feature Travel 2 (formerly Qantas Vacations) with a special visit from the New Zealand Tourist Board. This will be a great opportunity to find out more about visiting the “land down under.” For either or both events, RSVP to Jan at (509) 943-4686 or jan@travelleaders247.com. The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 29 There’s more to Lake Placid than skiing T By Steve Bergsman Creators Syndicate he Lake Placid paradoxes are numerous: The town, which can be found in the Adirondack Park region of upstate New York, is world-famous for having hosted two winter Olympics, one of only three locations around the globe to have doubled-down on Olympics fever (the others were St. Moritz, Switzerland, and Innsbruck, Austria), yet its busy tourist season is the summer. About 70 percent of Lake Placid’s tourists arrive in warmer weather, despite the region boasting an Olympic ski mountain, Olympic skating oval and, of course, the ice rink where the greatest American hockey victory took place, the Miracle on Ice, when the United States upset the mighty Russian hockey team in 1980. I’ve been to most of the major ski towns in North America, stretching from Banff and Whistler in Canada down to New Mexico, and Lake Placid is the most proletarian-looking of them all. The one thing almost all ski locations have in common, whether they’re in pricey Vail, chic Lake Tahoe or funky Telluride is second-rate restaurants. It’s hard to get a good meal in an overpriced ski town. However, in down-home Lake Placid, I had the best meals I ever had in a ski town, from the Breakfast Club with its pancakes topped with Adirondack berry compote and the Prince Edward Island mussels, or salmon over leeks at Lisa G’s to the tender smoked brisket (lean or marbled) at Smoke Signals. I was pleasantly shocked at how good the food was. Finally, the town is called Lake Placid, but I spent a couple of days there and I never saw the actual lake. The famed Olympic hamlet is built on the edges of Mirror Lake, which is frozen over in the winter and groomed for dozens of activities from hockey to speed skating. There is even a toboggan run built at the edge of the frozen lake, and it’s here that I’ll begin my story, because tobogganing was the first activity I did in the town. My wife and I drove from Connecticut and arrived midafternoon on a frigid Wednesday; the temperature sat below double digits. After sundown, I put on my coldweather ski attire and wandered over to Mirror Lake, where an elevated platform had been constructed and Photo by Steve Bergsman Fat-tire biking through the woods is a popular sport in Lake Placid, New York. now was lit up like a Christmas tree. The toboggan platform was reconstructed from an old ski jump owned by a private club that in a bygone era was a major presence in the town. As I wandered closer I could see a healthy crowd of people, many families with school-age children pulling toboggans about the incline. I peered up to see two runs side by side. Each run was an inset with wooden borders so each toboggan would stay in its own chute, and the base of each run was an absolute, smooth-as-glass ribbon of ice. I pulled over the guy in charge and asked how fast the toboggans go. He scratched his exposed and scruffy chin and said when you get toward the bottom you are doing close to 30 miles an hour. I had to try it. So here it was, a dark night with the temperature quickly heading to subzero and there were about 60 people, mostly families or teenagers on their own, cavorting on the icy toboggan run as if it were midday at Disneyland. I joined the crowd, grasping the cord of my toboggan. I pulled it slowly up the side path alongside the runs and waited my turn at the top. The toboggans, which are for rent, can seat up to four ‘Placid’ continues on Page 31 PAGE 30 • February 2016 • The Entertainer Anthony Lakes will hold annual Spring Break Camp in March . A nthony Lakes Mountain Resort will again hold its popular annual Spring Break Camp for ages 7 to 18. This year’s camp will be held March 20-25. This five-day, all-inclusive camp is open to the first 100 skiers or riders who sign up. The cost is just $80, which includes five consecutive days of lift tickets plus lessons and rental equipment if needed. Spring Break Camp focuses on health, physical activity and fun. It helps kids wotj physical fitness, social interaction, self-confidence, balance and a better appreciation of winter activities. To register, visit anthonylakes.com, fill out the registration packet. Email it to chelsea@anthonylakes.com or send it by postal mail to Anthony Lakes Mountain Resort, 47500 Anthony Lakes Highway, North Powder, OR 97867. If you have questions or concerns. contact Chelsea McLagan at (541) 856-3277, ext. 12, or chelsea@anthonylakes.com. Taste of Nordic Back by popular demand at Anthony Lakes is the Taste of Nordic and Poker Ski on Sunday, March 20. Participants ski or snowshoe the beautiful Anthony Lakes Nordic system and enjoy local craft food and drink along the way. Skiers have the option of collecting a poker hand along the way. Take your friends and family for this family-friendly event that features amazing local cuisine and beverages and a stunning Nordic system. Snow cat trips Anthony Lakes is ready to roll with its snow-cat trips. With the highest base elevation in Oregon at 7,100 feet, the resort boasts the best powder snow and amazing scenery. There’is no better way to experience, fresh, untracked powder. To book a seat on a cat tour, send email chelsea@anthonylakes.com. Happy fresh-powder skiers pause for photos on a snow-cat trip at Anthony Lakes. The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 31 Aiming for the sun: WSU chosen to vie for solar prize W ashington State University students will design and build a solar home during the next two years as part of the U.S. Department of Energy’s Solar Decathlon competition. For the first time, the contest will include $2 million in prize money. WSU was one of 16 college teams from across the world chosen to participate in the 2017 competition, which requires students to plan and build a 600- to 1,000-square-foot home that receives all of its energy from the sun. Darrin Griechen, a faculty member in the School of Design and Construction, is leading the effort for WSU. The competition aims to increase public awareness of solar energy and inspire innovative solutions in ecological design. “Our students will be working on our most critical challenges in smart and sustainable living while also gaining tremendous hands-on experience at designing and building for the future,” said Phil Gruen, director of the school. ‘Placid’ Continues from Page 29 people, but I was on my own. I was snuggly almost warm with my ski parka exposed to the elements. Unfortunately, as it turned out the parka still had a lift ticket attached to the zipper, which, with the zip pulled up, was just under my chin. I got pushed off the platform, the toboggan rocketed downward and the lift ticket flapped up in my face. My hands were holding the toboggan’s “WSU remains focused on our landgrant mission of training our students to solve these most important and real problems for the world.” WSU has a long history and expertise in electric power, advanced materials and smart systems. The team has had preliminary discussions about locating the home permanently within Spokane’s University District — a test area for Spokane’s larger “smart city” initiative. Initial construction of the house is expected to be near WSU’s new PACCAR Clean Technology Building on the Pullman campus. “We are perfectly positioned to design, engineer and build a home within this smart paradigm,” said Griechen. WSU students from a wide variety of disciplines — including architecture, interior design, landscape architecture, construction management, mechanical engineering, civil engineering, electrical engineering, computer science, communications, business and English — may participate in the project. Student teams will participate in 10 events in the competition. The home will be judged on architecture, affordability, market appeal, comfort and energy use. The teams must commute with an electric vehicle using energy from their solar-powered home. cord and there was nothing I could do. For the few seconds I was at peak speed down the chute I was almost blinded with the lift ticket firmly stuck to my glasses by g-force pressure. Obscured vision turned out to be my biggest misadventure in Lake Placid. The next morning I met Dan Cash, a local mountain-bike enthusiast, who was going to guide me on a fat-tire bike excursion through Henry’s Wood, just on the outskirts of town. When I awoke the temperature was -10, but at the start of our excursion it has risen to zero, which Cash assured me was perfect for our ride. Now Henry’s Wood is a wonderful forest cut with fine trails for backcountry skiing, snowshoeing and even fat-tire biking, but the first part of it is a ridge, which is a hard climb in zero weather on low-pressure tires. I worked hard on the trail, building up a nice sweat underneath my layers of clothes. My heavy breath rose up and condensed on my glasses, which then froze in the zero degree temperature. Even though I’ve worn glasses since I was 10 years old, I had to pull them off and ride the single-track back down the ridge sans spectacles. The only time I had clear vision all day, it was the one activity too many for me. In the afternoon, a young skater named Christie agreed to show me the finer points of speed-skating on the oval of Mirror Lake. Having ice-skated just once in the past 40 years, I really didn’t have what it took to even muster a stride. The only clear vision I had all day was of me falling on my behind. Christie was a good teacher and I survived this most dangerous of my Lake Placid activities, but there was no Olympic speed skating in my future. It was time to close the day and head for another fine meal at an unheralded Lake Placid eatery. This is the second time WSU students have participated in the solar-energy event. In 2005, students displayed their solar home on the National Mall in Washinton, D.C., where these visitors took a close look at it on a not-so-sunny day. PAGE 32 • February 2016 • The Entertainer Fire officials offer home injury-prevention program A ccording to the Centers for Dis ease Control, more than a third of adults over 65 years of age fall each year. Falls can lead to hip fractures and even traumatic brain injuries, and they are the leading cause of fatal and non-fatal injuries in older adults. But most falls are preventable. That’s why Benton County Fire District 4 has launched a program to reduce injury from slips and falls. Firefighters and EMTs — emergency medical technicians — are visiting residents’ homes at their request and performing comprehensive evaluations of the exterior and interior. The inspections take about an hour. Once the survey is complete, the firefighter/EMT will sit down with the homeowner and review a list of recommendations to reduce the risk of injury from a fall. “We provide a comprehensive inspection into each area to identify potential risks,” said Lieutenant Kevin Gaidos. “However, homeowners can request that we not survey a specific area or room if privacy is a concern.” This initiative is the first step in the launch of the district’s own medical emergency prevention program called “FD CARES” (Fire Department Com- schools, homes and area businesses, and now helping to reduce injuries. The area serves some 17,000 people with about 50 volunteer and career firefighters, EMTs and paramedics. Last year they responded to 1,322 emergency calls, 835 of them medical emergencies. Sixteen percent of those medical calls were due to slip and falls. If you would like to schedule a complimentary fall-prevention inspection, contact Lieutenant Gaidos at (509) 967-2945 or kgaidos@bcfd4.org. For more information about Benton County Fire District 4, visit www.bcfd4.org. SLIPS AND FALLS Lt. Kevin Gaidos of Benton County Fire District 4 reviews recommendations with homeowner Annie Goodwin. The free inspections are meant to help you avoid falls. munity Assistance, Referral and Educational Services) to reduce calls to 911 and lower health-care costs. The fire district, which covers 52 square miles including West Richland, Is a painful thumb putting a damper on your skiing? By Claire Hara, OTR/L Every skier has had his or her share of falling while going down the slopes. Some falls may be harmless, whereas others may result in a common injury called skier’s thumb. Skier’s thumb occurs when the person falls while holding onto a ski pole or falls on hard snow. The force transfers to your thumb, possibly stretching or rupturing a ligament that helps stabilize your thumb during movement. The severity can range from a small ligament tear, which can be treated with hand therapy, to a comThere are newer ski-pole designs and products plete rupture that requires such as this wrist and hand guard that can help surgery. prevent skier’s thumb.. Symptoms of skier’s thumb include: your thumb. Pain at the base of the thumb Hand therapists may also use a near the web space variety of modalities such as ultra Swelling of the thumb sound, electrical stimulation and low Weak grasp level laser therapy to abate the Pain while moving the thumb pain.Ignoring your injury may result in In most cases, conservative treatchronic pain and joint instability. ments can be used. I am a hand If you suspect you have skier’s therapist, which is an occupational or thumb, contact your physician and physical therapist who focuses on see if you can be treated for the pain hand and arm problems. by a hand therapist before ski season A hand therapist will help relieve your pain by giving you a splint to wear is over. during the day or night, or both. Claire Hara is an occupational The hand therapist also develops an therapist specializing in hand and arm individualized exercise program to safely strengthen and regain motion in therapy at Therapy Solutions. was originally formed just to put out fires. Now a large part of what it does is prevention-related, including safety inspections, educating the community about fire prevention through local One out of 5 falls causes a serious injury. Each year, 2.5 million seniors are treated in ERs for injuries from falls. More than 700,000 are hospitalized annually because of falls. More than 95 percent of hip fractures are caused by falls. Falls are the most common cause of brain injuries. Annual medical costs due to falls are $34 billion, adjusted for inflation. The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 33 HEALTH IN BRIEF ‘Detox water’ is not healthier than your tap water Assorted health personalities are touting the toxin-flushing abilities of water infused with fruits or vegetables, sometimes dubbed “detox water.” But does it do something ordinary water doesn’t? “More water makes the body’s job of flushing toxins easier, but I can get that water from my tap,” said Thomas Brenna, a Cornell University nutrition and chemistry professor. Water helps the liver and kidneys filter toxins. Adding minimal fruits or vegetables (there’s not enough of them to really add nutritional value) doesn’t give the water any added oomph. It does, though, add to the price tag. For better health, interact socially while young Staff members of Synergy MedAesthetics demonstrated Botox treatments and other services at the Tri-Cities Women’s Expo in October. At left is Rene Janke, director of Aesthetic Services. Synergy, not surgery, is your key to looking and feeling good L ooking our best and feeling fit and healthy are goals we all share, and there is synergy in caring for both the face and the body. That’s the goal of Synergy MedAesthetics, established in 2012 and now located at 3500 Zintel Way in the Southridge area of Kennewick. Synergy MedAesthetics specializes in the most advanced nonsurgical cosmetic and bodysculpting treatments available. Under the medical direction of Doctors T. Kent Vye and Robert Johnson, the professional staff offers services and expertise normally found only in major metropolitan areas. There is no longer the need to travel to Seattle or Portland for Botox, Juvederm or non-surgical i-Lipo or TriPollar procedures to sculpt the body and smooth the skin. Laser hair removal, medical-grade chemical peels and other services are performed safely and effectively. To receive a complimentary consultation and learn how you can become the absolute best aesthetic version of yourself, call : (509) 222-8022. The more social ties you have early in life, the better your health will be at both the beginning and end of it, according to University of North Carolina researchers, who looked at links between social relationships and concrete measures of well-being, such as abdominal obesity, high blood pressure and inflammation. Data were taken from four national representative surveys of the U.S. population. They found that the sheer size of a young person’s social network generally encouraged behaviors that promoted a healthy life, early and late. Social isolation as a teen increased the risk of inflammation (linked to myriad diseases including cancer) as much as physical inactivity. Night-shift workers tend to be drowsy drivers Night shifts and stick shifts don’t mix well. Researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital asked study participants to participate in a daytime test-drive after working a night shift. More than 37 percent of the bleary-eyed drivers nearly crashed. The same workers took the test drive again after a good night’s sleep. Result: Zero near-crashes. The study has major public health implications. More than 9.5 million Americans work overnight or in rotating shifts.Between 2009 and 2013, a drowsy driver was involved in 21 percent of fatal crashes and 13 percent of crashes causing severe injury. Sex education inadequate in many places If sexual health depends upon knowledge, a lot of kids these days may be in trouble. A new federal study reports that fewer than half of U.S. high schools and only one-fifth of middle schools teach all 16 topics of sexual health recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. State-by-state percentages ranged across the board, from a low of 21 percent of high schools mandating courses in Arizona to 90 percent in New Jersey. (Only New York and New Hampshire were also above the 75 percent mark.) The proportion of middle schools requiring all 16 topics ranged from 4 percent (again in Arizona) to 46 percent in North Carolina. PAGE 34 • February 2016 • The Entertainer Harlem Globetrotters’ 90th Anniversary Tour is coming to Toyota Center in Kennewick this month Team’s Great Assist program is helping local communities C elebrating 90 years of providing smiles, sportsmanship and service to millions of people worldwide, the world-famous Harlem Globetrotters will bring their unrivaled family show to Toyota Center in Kennewick on Sunday, Feb. 21, at 3 p.m., on their Anniversary World Tour that began in December. Known worldwide as the “Ambassadors of Goodwill,” the Globetrotters have also announced their Great Assist program that will be part of tour. Stars of the team will leave a mark in communities across North America with acts of goodwill during the tour to 260 cities. You can nominate a worthwhile cause by visiting GreatAssist.com. In addition to fulfilling fan requests, the team is bringing their bullying prevention program on the tour, and they will talk to youth about character, education and physical fitness. On the court, the Globetrotters’ 90year celebration will feature some of the greatest athletes and entertainers on the planet. With a star-studded roster featuring Big Easy Lofton, Ant Atkinson, Hi-Lite Bruton, Thunder Law, Bull Bullard and Cheese Chisholm — plus female stars TNT Maddox and Sweet J Ekworomadu* — the Globetrotters’ one-of-a-kind show is unrivaled in the world of family entertainment. Of course, the roster is subject to change with any particular game. Every game,however, will showcase incredible ball-handling wizardry, rimrattling dunks, trick shots, hilarious comedy and unequaled fan interaction. After the game, Globetrotter stars will sign autographs and take photos with fans. Throughout their history, the Original Harlem Globetrotters have showcased their iconic talents in 122 countries and territories on six continents, often The famous Harlem Globetrotter’ Thunder Law”flies” to the basket , while Bull Bullard takes tthe easy way to the top. breaking down cultural and societal barriers while providing fans with their first-ever basketball experience. Proud inductees of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, the Globetrotters have entertained hundreds of millions of fans — among them popes, kings, queens, and presidents. The lineup of stars has included some of the greatest players ever, including stars such as Wilt Chamberlain, Marques Haynes, Curly Neal, and Connie Hawkins, to name a few. Their reach is so universal that the whole world mourned when legendary Globetrotters star Meadowlark Lemon died this past December. Tickets start at $20 and are now available at all Ticketmaster outlets and ticketmaster.com, at the Toyota Center box office, or by phone at (509) 453-7139. Information on ticket discounts for scouting and other groups can be found at harlemglobetrotters.com. Tri-City Americans sign Bantam Draft players Bjorklund, Sawchuk The Tri-City Americans hockey team has signed 2015 Bantam Draft pick Paycen Bjorklund and 2914 pick Riley Sawchuk to standard WHL player agreements. Bjorklund was taken in the second round (25th overall) in the 2015 Bantam Draft, and Sawchuk was taken in the sixth round (116th overall) in the 2014 Bantam Draft. Ams General Manager Bob Tory praised both players. “Paycen is a dynamic skater with good offensive upside,” he said . “We are happy that Paycen and his family have chosen the WHL and the Tri-City Americans in pursuit of his hockey future.” Sawchuk, said Tory, is “a dynamic offensive player who has continued to improve each season since he was selected in the sixth round of the 2014 Bantam Draft.” He is currently playing for the Prince Albert Mintos AAA Midget team. Bjorklund, a native of Grande Prairie, Alberta, currently plays for the Grande Peace Storm of the Alberta Major Bantam Hockey League. Last season he played 23 games, scoring 37 goals and 18 assists. The Americans are back in their home arena at Toyota Center for much of February, with home games on Feb. 2, 5, 6, 19, 23, 26 and 27. Tickets are available at all Ticketmaster locations, the Toyota Center box office and online at ticketmaster.com. The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 35 It’s a critical offseason for the Seattle Seahawks T By ‘Philly’ Robb Francis he Seattle Seahawks’ season came to an end earlier than fans would have liked after they fell to the Carolina Panthers in the divisional round of the NFC playoffs. As had happened a number of times this season, the Seahawks surrendered a large early lead but mounted a valiant second-half comeback. Many times in the past their comebacks have succeeded, but this time they just gave up too many points in the first half. Now that their offseason has officially begun, the Seahawks have some significant personnel issues to deal with before they make another run for the top in Super Bowl 51. As free agency approaches, the Seahawks have a league-low 38 players signed for the coming season. Without addressing the players eligible for free agency that they would like to keep in blue and green, they have roughly $29.1 million in cap space to address holes via the draft and bring in players from other teams. These are the key players for the Seahawks and how they may affect the cap: Marshawn Lynch – The man affectionately known as “Beast Mode” is due $9 million in salary plus a $2.5 million roster bonus for an $11.5 million cap hit. Lynch will be 30 and is coming off the first significant injury of his career — a sports hernia that required abdominal surgery, costing him half the season. If the Seahawks cut Lynch before June 1, they will save $6.5 million on the cap. If they wait until after June 1, they’ll save $5 million. Unless Lynch is willing to renegotiate his deal to lower the cap number, it’s likely the Seahawks will thank him for his help in winning Super Bowl XLVIII and turn to undrafted free agent Thomas Rawls to lead the running game. Rawls averaged more than 5½ yards per carry and had just shy of 850 on the ground in 12 games before his season came to an end due to injury. Rawls will make about $11 million less than Lynch in 2016. Russell Okung – The sixth overall pick in the 2010 draft just completed his rookie contract and is put up career numbers this season. The only other team in the NFL to consistently do more with less at the wide receiver position than Seattle is New England. They have two receivers on the roster who have been drafted with one of the two, Paul Richardson, usually hurt and the other, Tyler Lockette, finishing a promising rookie campaign. Kearse has already said he wants to set up his family with this contract and a hometown discount isn’t in the cards for the Seahawks. While he had a career year, Kearse’s career numbers are that of a number-four receiver in the NFL. If he thinks someone will overpay him like the Lions did for Golden Tate, more power to him. The Seahawks can find another unrestricted free agent to fill Kearse’s spot. Let him test the market and see what happens. Marshawn Lynch: Is he too expensive for Brandon Mebane – This gapthe Seahawks to keep? filling defensive tackle is set to hit the market after making $5 million this an unrestricted free agent. Even past season. Mebane has had some though Okung has a penchant for false injury issues the past couple of years, starts and a holding call here and but when he is healthy he is huge on there, the tackle position is one that is that defensive front. sorely needed in the NFL, and good The Seahawks have already decided left tackles are even harder to find. they will not pick up Bruce Irvin’s fifthOkung will have no shortage of year option, so there is money there to suitors believing they are one offensive keep Mebane. Depth was an issue this lineman away from the Super Bowl. past season for the Seahawks, and Last year the franchise number on depending on Mebane’s demands he offensive linemen was just under $13 could put himself out of the Seahawks’ million. It will probably go over $13 price range, but he is a guy who million for 2016, meaning that is what Okung will make if the Seahawks use the franchise tag to keep their left tackle while attempting to hammer out a new long-term deal. Like him or hate him, Okung is the most experienced member of the line, and while they made great progress over the season, the Seahawks don’t need another shake-up on Russell Wilson’s blind side. Okung needs to stay in Seattle, especially when Center Lemuel Jeanpierre and right guard J.R. Sweezy are also unrestricted free agents. The line is going to be crucial this offseason for the Seahawks. Jermaine Kearse – Kearse has played his high-school, college and professional football in Seattle. He made around $2.3 million last year and IN BRIEF Adult drop-in volleyball held Thursdays in Pasco From now through May 12, Pasco Recreation Services is sponsoring adult drop-in volleyball on Thursday nights from 7 to 9:30 p.m. at McLoughlin Middle School, 2803 N. Rd. 88 in west Pasco. The fee is $2 per person, per evening, and you must be at least 18 years of age to even enter the site. Drop-in volleyball provides an.informal way for adults to participate in the sport, and it’s all for fun. Players will be randomly placed on teams, and it’s a great way to make friends as you exercise and have fun. For more information, call Pasco Recreation Services at (509) 545-3456. Teams sought for JA bowling tournament The 20th annual bowling tournament to benefit Junior Achievement will be held Feb. 29 through March 5 at Atomic Bowl in Richland. This year’s theme is “Americana Bowl 2016..” Funds raised through the event support JA’s in-school programs that serve more than 11,000 students in Washington state. It’s great fun for a worthy cause. To register a team or find out about joining one, call (509) 783-7222, ext. 108, or vist jawashingtonsewa.org. While you’re there, you can also explore becoming a classroom volunteer for Junior Achievement and helping prepare teens for their lives and careers. Training is provided, and the next training session for volunteers is on Feb. 2 at the Red Lion Coumbia Center in Kennewick. should be kept. His ability to plug offensive linemen has been a key to Michael Bennett’s and Cliff Avril’s production. Jon Ryan and Deshawn Shead – Ryan is one of the best punters in the game, and I’m sure he would prefer to stay in Seattle — meaning keeping him shouldn’t be difficult unless another team makes Ryan an obscene offer he can’t refuse. Deshawn Shead showed a lot when pressed into starting duty in the secondary. He is an exclusive-right free agent, meaning the Seahawks have to make Shead a contract offer by the free-agency deadline or he becomes unrestricted. Shead has shown the ability to play not just corner but also safety in this defense, and if the Seahawks have to make a difficult decision on Kam Chancellor and the threat of another holdout, Shead becomes vital to keep in the fold. For years to come, the Seahawks have the potential to compete for another title. The number of players the team has who are able to explore free agency, along with their decisions as to who stays and who leaves, could have more impact on that potential than the next offseason or even the following one. If the brain trust of Schneider and Carroll ever needed to nail an offseason, personnel- wise, it’s this one. PAGE 36 • February 2016 • The Entertainer Home & Garden Show has something for every home! T he 2016 Regional Home and Garden Show, presented by the Home Builders Association of TriCities, is scheduled for Feb. 19-21 at the TRAC Center in Pasco. With more than 200 exhibitors, there will be something for every taste in indoor and outdoor products and services. The show occupies the entire facility with an exhibition hall full of booths and a garden area in the Ranch & Home Arena featuring life-size, fully landscaped exhibits. Whether your interest lies in new construction, gardening, landscaping, interior decorating, remodeling — or you just want to see the spectacular and unique exhibits — this year’s Home and Garden Show has something that will interest you and enhance your home. The HBA is bringing back the Wine Walk, sponsored by Wine Press Northwest. This special two-night event premiered in 2013 and will take place again this year on Feb. 19 and 20. There are 250 tickets available at the door for each night at a cost of $15 each. Ticket-holders will receive a oneounce sample of up to eight different wines from Barnard Griffin Winery. Tomatoes and Peppers,” “Remodeling on a Budget” and many other subjects. To help you plan your visit, a seminar schedule is included in the Regional Home and Garden Show special section to will be distributed in the TriCity Herald on Feb. 19. The Blue Mountain Flower Club will again host their standard flower show, displaying their amazing green thumbs and flower-arranging skills throughout the weekend. This year’s theme is “Mysteries Abound.” More than 12,000 people attended last year’s Regional Home and Garden Show, and the Home Builders Association expects even more this year. “Area residents look forward to the Regional Home and Garden Show all year long,” said Jeff Losey, executive director of the Home Builders Association. The Rock Placing Company and Heritage Professional Landscaping designed this “People are looking for ways to ingarden exhibit at last year’s Regional Home and Garden Show. crease the comfort and value of their homes, and this show is a terrific They will also receive a commemoraactivities. opportunity to research products, tive wine glass and free readmission to Educational seminars during the projects and services all in a single the show all weekend. weekend are free with your paid location.” Parents and children are invited to admission and are held in the iDream Premier sponsor for the show is check out the Kidstruction Zone, Mattress Seminar Room near the main Rick’s Custom Fencing and Decking, sponsored by the National Association entrance of the TRAC facility. Past of Women in Construction. Kids can seminar topics have included “Granite ‘Home’ continues on Page 37 participate in crafts and other fun vs. Quartz Countertops,” “Growing The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 37 A gardener’s February dreams and nightmares By Micki Perry Let’s hope the groundhog doesn’t see his shadow this month, because I’m dreaming of an early spring. We’ve had a pretty mild winter with hardly enough snow to make a snowball, let alone a snowman. But lots of rain has made the ground moist and verdant. The ground isn’t even frozen, so every day that it’s not cold or wet I want to go out and putter in the garden. On sunny days I catch up on all the garden chores I couldn’t finish before winter set in. I have spent the last few sunny days pulling up tomato plants, asparagus foliage and sunflowers, and cutting back hollyhocks in my vegetable garden. I have a huge pile to take to he dump. Dealing with the leaves I didn’t get all of my leaves mulched before that surprise snowstorm in November. I did get most of them mowed off the lawn, but there were still piles of leaves in dirt areas that I hoped to mow into mulch. They have been too wet and soggy, so I have left them in place and will deal with them when and if they ever dry out. Right now they are keeping down the weeds that are sprouting up everywhere that there’s bare ground.. This spring will probably seem like fall, with lots of leafraking going on. An easier way to deal with leaves — especially those on the lawn — is to wait until a dry day when the lawn and leaves aren’t too wet, and then just mow them up. If you have a compost heap, save those shredded leaves to add as brown stuff every time you add green stuff to the heap. The secret of making compost is a balance of green and brown materials. Be thankful you will have a ready supply of chopped-up leaves to augment those lush green glass clippings and the ready supply of weeds. them sprouting up too soon, just cover them with a little mulch (those chopped-up leaves) and don’t worry about them. The iris beds February is a great time to clean up the iris beds if you didn’t do it earlier. Just pull off everything that’s not green. If you accidentally pull up the whole tuber, just stick it in the ground (not too deep) wherever you want it to be. It may not bloom this year, but then again it might. Irises are very forgiving. I hardly ever thin mine until I run out of room to put anything else into the bed. I’ve thinned and planted them in the early spring and they didn’t seem to mind. I always divide Siberian iris in February — also Visitors to the 2015 Regional Home & Garden Show look over information on peonies. I got my original plants in the energy-saving windows from Perfection Glass, one of hundreds of exhibitors. month of February when a friend 7 p.m. on Friday and Saturday and 10 divided his. to 4 on Sunday. For more information, visit hbatc.com and click on “events.” Garden dreams Cold February days are a good time for garden dreams. It’s a great time to plan this year’s garden and peruse the catalogues (or websites) for wonderful new stuff. I love to curl up in a comfy chair in front of the fire and read gardening books and magazines. I look out the window and it still looks pretty bleak and dull, but I can dream about what it will look like in just a few more months. This year I am dreaming about my front entry garden. I’m thinking how nice it will be to have a cottage-style garden right outside my living room window. I’m dreaming about those tulips and daffodils and grape hyacinths, irises and peonies I planted in freezing October and how beautiful they will be this spring. Primroses along the front path will be a perfect touch. They are already available in the entrance at Fred Meyer! I haven’t bought any yet, but I will soon. That’s one dream to make a reality in February. ‘Home’ Continues from Page 36 with media sponsorship from 98.3 The Key, the Tri-City Herald and KNDU TV. Admission is $6 for adults, and children ages 12 and under are admitted free. Anyone that brings a nonperishable food item for the Salvation Army food pantry will receive a dollar off of the admission price. Admission is good for the entire weekend. Parking is free and a free car-to-entrance shuttle service is available. The J & J Kelly Construction, Inc. exhibit The hours for the 2016 Regional Home and Garden Show are 10 a.m. to at the last year’s Home & Garden Show. ‘Stars’ star, can be found in the upper left portion of this constellation (making up Orion’s right shoulder). It is the ninthbrightest star, and is so large that, Continues from Page 8 were it placed where our sun is now, it would engulf all of the inner planets out right of this, you will see a smaller to Jupiter! group of stars that resembles a tiny After getting some practice using dipper. This is no dipper, but rather the Orion as your guide, let us guide you Pleiades star cluster (also known as around the rest of the sky during one the Seven Sisters, although you many of our public shows. Public shows at only see five or six stars with the naked eye). This open cluster contains the planetarium run every Friday at 7 hundreds of luminous, relatively young and 8 p.m., and Saturdays at 2 and 3 p.m. Tickets for all events and memblue stars. berships can be purchased online Go back to Orion’s belt and draw another line through, this time heading befpe show time. If seats are available, you may obtain tickets at the door. down and to the left. You should find Speaking of weeds... Visit columbiabasin.edu/planet for Garden nighmares an extremely bright, white star known One of my favorite February pasWhat about the garden nightmares I as Sirius. This star is hard to miss, as more information. times is going out to look for green Erin Steinert is a planetarium alluded to earlier? Mine actually it is the brightest star in the night sky. sprouting things — and, yes, some of happened on an icy day in January outreach specialist at Columbia The star gets its name from the Greek them are weeds. At this time of year I Basin College. when someone lost control of his car word for “glowing” and is found in the even welcome the chickweed growing on 10th Avenue in Kennewick and took constellation Canis in my containers because it’s green. out 18 feet of my wooden fence. Major, Orion’s huntingLittle grassy weeds are easy to pull Since it was a hit-and-run, nobody’s dog companion. In when they are small and the ground is insurance is covering the replacement reality, Sirius is damp. If it’s not too cold, I love to pull and my homeowner’s deductible is so actually two stars up oregano and lemon balm (they are high that my insurance doesn’t cover it orbiting each other at weeds in my garden), but I usually either. For me, replacing that fence for a distance of about 8.6 leave most of the lunaria (also known the second time is a nightmare. light years from our as honesty, silver dollar, or money So dream your garden dreams, but Sun. plant) that come up everywhere. be prepared for some garden nightOrion himself is I love them because they are mares too, even if it’s a minor inconve- home to several biennials, which means that they nience like raking up autumn leaves in brilliant stars, includbloom their second year. Last year’s spring. ing Rigel, a triple-star plants will have beautiful purple blooms Happy February! May all your system that makes up about the time my daffodils, forsythia garden dreams (and none of your the leg we see on the and grape hyacinths are blooming, nightmares) come true! right of the hunter (or, while this year’s sprouts will be a sort Orion’s left leg, since of ground cover/filler until I pull them up he is depicted as Micki Perry produces folk music to make room for other things. facing toward us). concerts and The Tumbleweed Music To me, yellow and purple are Rigel is the seventh beautiful complementary colors. I also Festival for Three Rivers Folklife brightest star in the have some purple and yellow crocuses Society., She has been a gardener all night sky, making it that I hope will bloom this month. And I her life and has been a Master rather easy to spot. go out looking for daffodil and tulip tips Gardener since 1997though she is The stars in Orion form a nearly perfect figure of a Betelgeuse, a daznow retired. in February. If you are worried about hunter with a bow. zling red supergiant PAGE 38 • February 2016 • The Entertainer To enter a Calendar of Events item, visit www.theentertainernewspaper.com and look for the link on the home page PERFORMING ARTS, CONT. MUSIC & NIGHTLIFE TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Mar Mar 1 2 3 3 3 4 4 4 5 5 6 6 8 9 10 10 10 11 11 11 12 12 13 13 14 15 16 17 17 17 18 18 18 19 19 19 20 20 22 23 24 24 25 25 25 26 26 27 27 29 1 19 Jam night with Vaughn Jensen, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............................ 8 Karaoke Contest Prelims, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ...................................... 9 Mary Lou and Stevie Show - Retro-Pop, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............ 5 Jazz jam with Kelin Kreider, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ................................. 8 Wednesday Nigh Circle Open Mic, Am. Legion Post 34 (509) 205-0330), Pasco ................... 6 Geeks Who Drink - Pub Trivia, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............................ 8 Wabi Sabi - Jazz Fusion, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................... 10 Steve Carver - Jazz Piano, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................. 5 Fruition - Newgrass Favorites from Portland, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ..... 9 Dan Myers Musical Mystery Tour, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ...................... 5 Kenny Day - R&B/Soul, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ........................................ 5 Tuck Foster & the Mossrites - Blues, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................. 9 Jam night with Vaughn Jensen, Emera;d of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ........................... 8 Karaoke Contest Prelims, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ...................................... 9 Mary Lou and Stevie Show - Retro-Pop, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............ 5 Jazz jam with Kelin Kreider, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ................................. 8 Wednesday Nigh Circle Open Mic, Am. Legion Post 34 (509) 205-0330), Pasco ................... 6 Geeks Who Drink - Pub Trivia, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............................ 8 Wabi Sabi - Jazz Fusion, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................... 10 Steve Carver - Jazz Piano, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................. 5 Steve Haberman, Brandy Larsen - Jazz, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ........... 5 Kevin Selfe & the Tornadoes - Blues from Seattle, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328) .............. 9 Michael LeFevre - Classical Guitar Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ..................... 5 Trio Subtonic - Jazz Fusion from Portland , Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ........ 9 Ballroom Dancing, live swing music, Pasco Eagles (509-946-6276), Pasco ........................... 1 Jam night with Vaughn Jensen, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............................ 8 Karaoke Contest Prelims, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ...................................... 9 Mary Lou and Stevie Show - Retro-Pop, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............ 5 Jazz jam with Kelin Kreider, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ................................. 8 Wednesday Nigh Circle Open Mic, Am. Legion Post 34 (509) 205-0330), Pasco ................... 6 Geeks Who Drink - Pub Trivia, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............................ 8 Wabi Sabi - Jazz Fusion, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................... 10 Steve Carver - Jazz Piano, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................. 5 Otis Heat - Alt Funk from Portland, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ....................... 9 Justin King - Acoustic Singer/Songwriter, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ........... 5 Ballroom Dancing, Easy Swing Dance Band, Community Ctr (509-946-5385), Richland ...... 1 Humphrey, Hartman and Cameron - String Trio, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328) .................. 5 Mystery Machines, Savage Henrys, VHS, Fraudulence, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328) .. 9 Jam night with Vaughn Jensen, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............................ 8 Karaoke Contest Prelims, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ...................................... 9 Mary Lou and Stevie Show - Retro-Pop, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............ 5 Jazz jam with Kelin Kreider, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ................................. 8 Geeks Who Drink - Pub Trivia, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ............................ 8 Wabi Sabi - Jazz Fusion, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................... 10 Steve Carver - Jazz Piano, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .................................. 5 Cindy McKay - Songs from an Angel, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ................ 5 Hopeless Jack w/Strengthen What Remains, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ..... 9 Wil Blades, Skerik, Andy Coe, Simon Lott - Jazz Fusion, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328) . 9 Three Rivers Saxtette - Saxophone Quartet, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ..... 5 Jam night with Vaughn Jensen , Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland .......................... 8 Karaoke Contest Prelims, Emerald of Siam (509-946-9328), Richland ...................................... 9 Blistered Earth w/Volcanos On The Sun - Metallica Tribute, Emerald of Siam, Richland ....... 9 pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Mar Mar Mar 12- 20 VTC’s ‘See How They Run’, Princess Theatre (ThePrincessTheatre.net), Prosser .......... 7:30 12, 13, 19, 20 ‘Holes’, ACT Theatre (509-943-6027), Richland ............................................................... 7 13, 20 ‘Holes’, ACT Theatre (509-943-6027), Richland ........................................................................... 3 14 Luncheon * Play ‘See How They Run’, Princess Th. (ThePrincessTheatre.net), Prosser .... 1 18 Tames Alan ‘Downton Abbey’ lecture, MC Library on Union (509-542-5531), Kennewick ..... 7 18 “Fame!” - Letters of famous read aloud , Gesa Power House Theatre (509-529-6500) .......... 7 18, 19 , 20 ‘Show Biz Madhatter Style’, Kennewick HS Auditorium (509-222-7100 ), Kenn. ........... 7 19- Mar 1 ‘My Fair Lady’, Elgin Opera House (541-663-6324), Elgin, OR ...................................... 7:30 25- 28 Wintergrass, Hyatt Regency (253-428-8056), Bellevue ............................................................... 9 4 ‘The Producers’, Toyota Center (ticketmaster.com), Kennewick ............................................... 7 6 Musical ‘Ragtime’, Capitol Theatre (509-853-2787), Yakima ....................................................... 3 7 Musical ‘Ragtime’, the Capitol Theatre (509-853-2787), Yakima ........................................... 7:30 SPECIAL EVENTS TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS Feb 2 Lit Fest ‘About the Book’, Zinful Wine Bar (509-586-6100), Kennewick ..................................... 6 Feb 12- 14 RadCon 7, Red Lion (radcon.org), Pasco ..................................................................................... 9 Feb 12-14 Red Wine & Chocolate, Willow Crest Winery (509) 786-7999, Prosser .................................. 11 Feb 13 Second Saturday at WAAAM, Air & Auto Museum (541-308-1600), Hood River, OR ............. 9 Feb 13 Bacchanalia XVI Fundraiser, 3 Rivers Convention Ctr (509-460-1766), Kennewick ............... 6 Feb 18 ‘Life in Service at Downton Abbey’, Tames Alan, MC Library on Union (509-542-5531) ........ 7 Feb 19- 21 41st Annual AAUW Book Sale, Marcus Whitman Hotel (509-522-5240), Walla Walla .............. 9 Feb 19- 21 HBA Tri-Cities Home & Garden Show, TRAC (hbatc.com), Pasco ......................................... 10 Feb 20 Craft Brew and Bacon Fest, 3 Rivers Conv. Ctr (threeriversconventioncenter.com), Kenn .. 6 Feb 22- Mar 24 Faculty Art Exhibit - Mixed Media, CBC Esvelt Gallery (509-542-5531), Pasco ............. 8 Feb 27 Mom & Baby Expo, Three Rivers Convention Center (509-222-9157), Kennewick ............. 10 Feb 27 ACT’s ‘Heart for the Arts’, Red Lion (509-943-6027), Richland .............................................. 5:30 Mar 2 Senior Health Resource Fair, Bethel Church, 600 Shockley Rd (509-628-0150), Richland ... 9 Mar 11 Tri-Cities Spring Antique Show, Southridge Events Center (509-585-2301), Kennewick ........ 2 Mar 12 Second Saturday at WAAAM, Air & Auto Museum (541-308-1600), Hood River, OR ............. 9 Mar 12 Tri-Cities Spring Antique Show, Southridge Events Center (509-585-2301), Kennewick ........ 9 Apr 8- 10 Feast Walla Walla & Guitar Fest, 509-529-8755 (Downtown), Walla Walla Apr 9 Second Saturday at WAAAM, Air & Auto Museum (541-308-1600), Hood River, OR ............. 9 Apr 16 Patriot Route 66 Car Show, Liberty Christian Sch., 2200 Williams (509-946-0602), Rchland 9 Apr 16 3rd Annual Route 66 Show & Shine, Liberty Christian Schoo (509-946-0602), Richland ........ 9 Apr 16 Mid-Columbia Patriot Auction, Red Lion Hotel (509-946-0602), Pasco ...................................... 5 Apr 30 Jenny’s Hope Super Pet Adoption, East Columbia Park (jennyshopetricities@gmail.com) .. 10 May 6 Plant, Tool & Bake Sale, Master Gardeners, Library on Union (509) 783-8898, Kennewick .. 2 May 7 Group Health Inland Empire Century, Columbia Park (509-586-6836), Kennewick ............. 6:30 May 14 Second Saturday at WAAAM, Air & Auto Museum (541-308-1600), Hood River, OR ............. 9 Jun 4 “Corvettes on the Columbia” Car Show, Columbia Park (509-713-3289), Kennewick ...... 9:30 Jul 9 WAAAM Traffic Jam, Car Show & Swap Meet , (541-308-1600), Hood River, OR ................ 8 Jul 11 Second Saturday at WAAAM, Air & Auto Museum (541-308-1600), Hood River, OR ............. 9 Aug 13 Second Saturday at WAAAM, Air & Auto Museum (541-308-1600), Hood River, OR ............. 9 Sep 9- 10 Wheelin’ Walla Walla, Downtown (509-529-8755), Walla Walla .................................................. 9 Sep 10- 11 Annual Hood River Fly-In, 600 Air Museum Road (541-308-1600), Hood River, OR ............. 8 Sep 17 Model A Day at WAAAM, Air & Auto Museum (541-308-1600), Hood River, OR .................. 10 Oct 8 Second Saturday at WAAAM, Air & Auto Museum (541-308-1600), Hood River, OR ............. 9 Nov 12 Second Saturday at WAAAM, Air & Auto Museum (541-308-1600), Hood River, OR ............. 9 TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS COMEDY TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS Omar Tarango, Jokers Comedy Club (509-943-1173), Richland ............................................... 8 Andy Beningo, Jokers Comedy Club (509-943-1173), Richland ................................................ 8 Rich Williams, Jokers Comedy Club (509-943-1173), Richland ................................................ 8 Todd Armstrong/Andrew Rivers, Jokers Comedy Club (509-943-1173), Richland ................. 8 “One Funny Mother” - Dena Blizzard, Gesa Power House (509-529-6500), Walla Walla ....... 7 am am am pm am pm am am am am am am am am am am am TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS Feb 4 Michael LeFevre, classical guitar, St. Paul’s Episcopal. (509-529-1083), Walla Walla ... 12:15 pm Feb 12 An Evening With Judy Collins, Gesa Power House (509-529-6500.), Walla Walla .................. 7 pm Feb 15 Community Concerts, Vida Guitar Quartet, Faith Assembly (509-205-5848), Pasco ......... 7:30 pm Feb 20 Inland NW Orchestra - Tschaikowsky & Mendelssohn, Enterprise HS (541-289-4696), Ore . 4 pm Feb 20 Matt Hammer, Community Uunitarian Church (509-528-2215, 3rfs.org), Pasco ................. 7:30 pm Feb 21 Inland NW Orchestra - Tschaikowsky & Mendelssohn, Hermiston HS (541-289-4696) .......... 4 pm Feb 27 Fry Street Quartet, Hanford High Auditorium (509-967-6532 ), Richland .................................... 7 pm Feb 27, 28 Walla Walla Symphony: ‘Diary of Anne Frank’, Power House Theatre (509-529-8020) .......... 3 pm Mar 4 ‘Bulldogs Night Live’ Talent Show, PHS Auditoriium (509-547-5581, ext. 3702), Pasco ......... 7 pm Mar 11 Boz Scaggs, Capiol Theatre (capitoltheatre.org), Yakima ............................................................ 6 pm Mar 12 MC Symphony, ‘History’, Richland HS Auditorium (509-943-6602), Richland .................... 7:30 pm Mar 13 David Crosby, Capitol Theatre (capitoltheatre.org), Yakima ................................................... 7:30 pm Mar 17 Community Concerts, Repertory Dance Theatre, Richland HS Aud.(509-205-5848) ......... 7:30 pm Mar 26 Guest Artist Soiree Series No. 2, Reid Campus Center (509-529-8020 ), Walla Walla ....... 7:30 pm Mar 29 Madeleine Peyroux, Gesa Power House Theatre (509-529-6500, Walla Walla ...................... 7 pm) Apr 6 Walla Walla Symphony: Classics in Concert, Cordiner Hall (509-529-8020), Walla Walla ..... 7 pm Apr 9 Community Concerts, Male Ensemble Northwest, Faith Assembly (509-205-5848) ......... 7:30 pm 4- 6 11- 13 18- 20 25- 27 12 pm am am am pm pm am am pm am am pm am pm am am CLASSES AND ACTIVITIES CONCERTS Feb Feb Feb Feb Mar pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm am pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm PERFORMING ARTS TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS Feb 3, 5 , 6 ‘The Little Mermaid’, Hanford HS Auditorium (hanforddrama.org), Richland ......................... 7:30 pm Feb 11- 13 CBC’s ‘Night of the Iguana’, CBC Theatre (509-542-5531), Pasco ....................................... 7:30 pm Feb 12- 20 Holes, ACT Theatre (academyofchildrenstheatre.org), Richland ................................................ 7 pm Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb Feb 1 1 1 1- 29 2 2 2, 4 3 3 3 4 4 4 6 8 9 9 9, 11 10 11 11 11 12 13, 14 14 17 17 18 18 20 20 20 20 20 Painted Valentines with Alcohol Inks, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ................ 6:15 Being or Choosing an Executor , Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ......................... 7 Forensic Science-Death Scene Investigation, Benton Co. Coroner’s Ofc (509-222-5080 ... 6:30 Belly Dance - American Tribal Style, Mondays, TC Academy of Ballet (509-430-1656) ... 7:15 Frugal Living, Horse Heaven Hills MS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ..................................... 6:30 Yoga for Scoliosis & Back Care, weekly, Yoga Community (509 521-4287), Kennewick ...... 6 Excel Projects: Using Your Spreadsheet to Keep Track, Kennewick HS (509-222-5080 ... 6:30 Photographing the Floods, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .................................. 6:30 Spring Pruning & Preparation, Ridge View Elementary (509-222-5080), Kennewick .............. 7 Wine-Watercolors, Chris Blevins ‘Branch of Hearts’, Goose Ridge Winery (509-396-7347) ... 6 Stir Fry for the Beginner, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .................................... 6:30 Learn to Knit , Kennewick HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ................................................... 6:30 Gentle Yoga, recurring weekly, Yoga Community (509 521-4287), Kennewick ..................... 10 Begin Weekly All Levels Yoga , Yoga Community (509 521-4287) .......................................... 9 Unlocking Social Security, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ............................... 6:30 European River Cruising, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ................................. 6:30 Traditional Jewish Cuisine, Kennewick HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ............................ 6:30 Excel Projects: Adding Power to Your Spreadsheets, Kennewick HS (509-222-5080) ...... 6:30 Perpetual Edibles, Ridge View Elementary (509-222-5080), Kennewick .................................. 7 Chain Maille Jewelry-Shaggy Loops Earrings, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kenn ......... 6:30 5 Spice Stewed Beef, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ......................................... 6:30 1-Bag Travel Packing, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ........................................... 6 Glass Beadmaking, db Studio at Barnard Griffin Winery (509-627-0266), Richland ............... 10 Facebook for Beginners, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ......................................... 6 Tri-City Accordion Social, Lord of Life Lutheran Church (503-806-1992), Kennewick ............. 2 Herbs, Ridge View Elementary (509-222-5080), Kennewick ..................................................... 7 Credit 101:Understanding Your Credit Score, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ..... 6 Lurou Fan & Fish Ball Soup, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .............................. 6:30 Chain Maille Jewelry-Helm Earrings, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ............... 6:30 Intro to Fly Casting, Kennewick HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .............................................. 9 Spring/Summer-Decorative Blocks, Kennewick HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .................... 9 Intro to Organic Gardening, Kennewick HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .................................. 1 Low Maintenance Gardening, Kennewick HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .............................. 2 To Bee or Not to Bee-Backyard Beekeeping, Kennewick HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .... 9 pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm am am pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm am pm pm pm pm pm pm am am pm pm am ‘Calendar of Events’ continues on Page 39 The Entertainer • February 2016 • PAGE 39 ‘Calendar of Events’ Continues from Page 38 CLASSES & ACTIVITIES, CONT. CLASSES & ACTIVITIES, CONT. TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS Learn to Crochet, Kennewick HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ............................................. 6:30 pm Feb 24 Tomatoes and Peppers, Ridge View Elementary (509-222-5080), Kennewick ........................ 7 pm Feb 25 Moo Shu Pork & Tofu Miso Soup, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ..................... 6:30 pm Mar 3 Sophisticated Sticky Rice, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ................................. 6:30 pm Mar 3, 21 , 31 Learn to Crochet, Kennewick HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ...................................... 6:30 pm Mar 7, 17 Learn to Knit, Kennewick HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ..................................................... 6:30 pm Mar 8 Supper Norwegian Style, 509-222-5080 (509-222-5080), Kennewick ....................................... 6 pm Mar 10 Chain Maille Jewelry-European 4-1 Earrimgs, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick 6:30 pm Mar 10 1-Bag Travel Packing, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ........................................... 6 pm Mar 15- May 10 Russian III, Tuesdays, Kennewick HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ......................... 6:30 pm Mar 16 Fit it! For Woment: Sprinkler Repair, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ................. 6:30 pm Mar 16 Myths & Truths about Estate Planning, Probate, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kenn .......... 7 pm Mar 17 Oriental Torn Cotton Paper Art-Cherry Blossoms, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kenn ..... 6:30 pm Mar 17 Oriental Torn Cotton Paper Art, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .......................... 6:30 pm Mar 17 Chain Maille Jewelry-Japanese 12-2 Earrings, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kenn ......... 6:30 pm Mar 22 Cupcake Creations, Kamiakin HS (509-222-508), Kennewick ................................................... 6 pm Mar 23 Being or Choosing an Executor, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .......................... 7 pm Mar 24 Take Exceptional Photos, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ................................... 6:30 pm Mar 24- May 19 Beginning Spanish II, Thursdays, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ................. 7 pm Mar 25- Msy 20 Beginning Guitar, Fridays, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ........................ 6:30 pm Mar 26 Let’s Fish, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ............................................................... 10 am Mar 26 Watercolors with Suzi, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ........................................... 10 am Mar 26 Learn to Sew, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ........................................................... 9 am Mar 26 Beekeeping is Easy, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ................................................ 9 am Mar 26 Make Beehives for Next to Nothing , Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ............ 12:30 pm Mar 26 Raising Backyard Chickens, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .................................. 1 pm Mar 26 Pure Sweet Honey, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .................................................. 3 pm Mar 26 Aviation History in the Tri-Cities, Bergstrom Aircraft, Inc. (509-222-5080), Pasco ................... 9 am Apr 12 Oil Painting for Beginners, Eastgate Elementary (509-222-5080), Kennewick .......................... 6 pm Apr 12 Unlocking Social Security, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ............................... 6:30 pm Apr 13 Birds Eye view of Ice Age Floods, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ................... 6:30 pm Apr 13, 20 Introduction to Knapping, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ........................................ 6 pm Apr 14 Pan Sauces/Cooking for Two, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .......................... 6:30 pm Apr 14 Chain Maille Jewelry-Captive Inverted Bracelet, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kenn ...... 6:30 pm Apr 18 Forensic Science-Death Scene Investigation, Benton Co. Coroner’s Ofc (509-222-5080) . 6:30 pm Apr 20 Credit 101: Understanding Your Credit Score, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .... 6 pm Apr 21 Wine & Watercolors, Chris Blevins - ‘Guitar’, Market Vineyards (509-430-8633), Richland ... 6 pm Apr 23 Fly Tying, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ............................................................... 9 am Apr 23 No Fear Pressure Canning, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ............................ 12 Noon Apr 23 Watercolor Paiting: Butterfly & Peacock Feather, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kenn ........ 10 am Apr 23 Learn to Sew-Pajama Pants, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ................................ 9 am Apr 23 Explore Badger Mountain, Dallas Road Parking Lot (509-222-5080), Richland ...................... 10 am Apr 26 Travel to Ireland, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ............................................... 6:30 pm Apr 27 Vegetable Gardening, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ............................................. 7 pm Apr 28 Quick Pasta Sauces, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .......................................... 6:30 May 2 Myths & Truths about Estate Planning, Probate, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kenn .......... 7 May 4 Wine & Watercolors, Chris Blevins ‘Dandelion Poof’, Goose Ridge Winery (509-396-7347) ... 6 May 5 Organizing Photos on Your Computer, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ................... 6 May 5 A Trip to Asia, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick ...................................................... 6:30 May 7 Housed Hanford Buit-Tour 1, South Richland, (509-222-5080), Richland ................................... 9 May 9 Being or Choosing an Executor, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .......................... 7 May 10 Oriental Torn Cotton Paper Art-Grapes & Cherries, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kenn ... 6:30 May 11 Discover Iceland, Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .............................................. 6:30 May 12 Oriental torn Cotton Paper Art-Country Sightseeing, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kenn .. 6:30 May 14 Houses Hanford Built-Tour 2, The Gold Coast , (509-222-5080), Richland ............................... 9 May 19 Oriental Torn Cotton Paper Art-Summer Bouquet, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kenn ...... 6:30 May 19, 26 Chain Maille Jewelry-Full Persian Bracelet, Kamiakin HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .... 6:30 May 21 Houses Hanford Built-Tour 3, Central Richland, (509-222-5080), Richland ............................... 9 May 25 Fix it! For Women: Switch it Up! , Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .................. 6:30 May 25 Voice-Overs: Now is Your Time , Southridge HS (509-222-5080), Kennewick .................. 6:30 Jun 2 Wine & Watercolors, Chris Blevins - ‘Sunflower’ , Market Vineyards (509-430-8633 ............. )6 HOROSCOPES change everything. Put yourself in joy’s way by doing more of what makes you happy! LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Remember when your travels allowed you to study an area of interest in great depth? This knowledge is so much a part of you that you take it for granted. Don’t assume that what you know is common knowledge; it’s not. Someone new will help you understand the specialness of all you have to teach. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). There will be conflict. It’s inevitable. Try to avoid it by turning and running in the other direction and you’ll only come up against another type of conflict, equally as troubling. Therefore, it behooves you to be brave instead. Face the unsettling truths. You’ll come out of it better, stronger and more fortunate, too! SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Someone will treat you like you’re special, flattering and indulging you. He or she will try to service your needs and cater to your wants. Is there an ulterior motive here? Well, let’s just say there are reasons. Know what they are so you can determine Feb 22 rather than later. CANCER (June 22-July 22). Relationships can be byproducts of HOLIDAY MATHIS daily life, i.e., the natural result of your efforts to get what you need. But what ARIES (March 21-April 19). The plan if you took things one step further? won’t match the reality. Know this. Accept it. What if you raised your awareness Embrace it. Then keep the plan anyway. and your expectation of interpersonal When you try your best to execute it, connections? With greater brilliance happens. You’ll get closer than consciousness, they become works you ever would have if you had, say, tried to of art. wing it. You have good instincts, but they LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Your instinct are even better with a road map. is to inspire, encourage and cheer. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). The bad That is why you can’t even heartbreak of yesterday has evaporated like comprehend why anyone would do a wan ghost. And here is the most beautiful otherwise. Comprehend or not, steer part about that: It feels as though the whole clear of those who are not actively thing never happened, or maybe like it participating in your success and the happened to someone else in a movie you success of those close to you. Also watched long ago. Even better, your spirit is note that apathy can be worse than lighter and brighter for the loss. active discouragement. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). There will be VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You do a dreamlike quality early this month. You’ll love that moment when the sun feel as though you’re floating from one breaks through the clouds and turns fantasy to the next, but this is real life. It’s a the whole world golden. Just know heightened reality, to be sure, but a reality that you really don’t have to wait for the nonetheless. Therefore, all consequences heavens to open up in order to feel will need to be dealt with. Do it sooner revitalized. One moment of joy can Sudoku pm pm pm pm pm am pm pm pm pm am pm pm am pm pm pm SPORTS TRI-CITIES & SURROUNDING AREAS Feb 1- Mar Feb 2 Feb 5 Feb 6 Feb 19 Feb 20 Feb 21 Feb 23 Feb 26 Feb 27 Mar 5 Mar 6 Mar 8 Mar 11 Mar 12 Mar 13 Mar 18 Mar 19 May 7 12 Adult Drop-in volleyball, McLoughlin Middle School (509-545-3456), Pasco ......................... 7 Tri-City Americans vs. Kamloops, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick ............ 7:05 Tri-City Americans vs. Victoria, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick ................ 7:05 Tri-City Americans vs. Spokane, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick .............. 7:05 Tri-City Americans vs. Everett, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick ................. 7:05 Tri-Cities Fever vs. Spokane, Toyota Center (tricitiesfever.com), Kennewick ................... 7:05 Harlem Globetrotters, Toyota Center (509-453-7139), Kennewick ............................................. 4 Tri-City Americans vs. Prince George, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick .... 7:05 Tri-City Americans vs. Seattle, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick .................. 7:05 Tri-City Americans vs. Prince George, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick .... 7:05 Tri-Cities Fever vs. Billings, Toyota Center (tricitiesfever.com), Kennewick ...................... 7:05 Tri-City Americans vs. Seattle, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick .................. 5:05 Tri-City Americans vs. Kamloops, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick ............ 7:05 Tri-Cities Fever vs. Cedar Rapids, Toyota Center (tricitiesfever.com), Kennewick .......... 7:05 Tri-City Americans vs. Everett, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick ................. 7:05 Tri-City Americans vs. Kelowna, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick .............. 5:05 Tri-City Americans vs. Seattle, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick .................. 7:05 Tri-City Americans vs. Spokane, Toyota Center (amshockey.com), Kennewick .............. 7:05 Group Health Inland Empire Century , Kiwanis Bldg, Col. Park (509-586-6836), Kenn ..... 6:30 pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm pm am the true cost of all this attention. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Ennui is dangerous. Go where things are interesting or make them more interesting right away. Otherwise, your bank account (or worse — your personal life) could suffer. Don’t be fooled; you can’t scratch this itch by buying things or flirting with people. This is not a material problem; it’s a spiritual one. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Your success formula is simple. Mostly it has to do with identifying an unmet need and either finding or creating the solution that will satisfy it. There is one more part of this worth mentioning, though: Often people don’t want what they need. They have to be led to that. You’re charismatic. You’ll find a way. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Sometimes your intentions are pure and the results don’t reflect it. Sometimes you benefit from the very actions that were meant to thwart your progress. In any case, the cause and effect will not balance out in the expected way. Your mind is open and creative enough to make good of whatever you’re dealt. PAGE 40 • February 2016 • The Entertainer