Aug 22 - Cascadia Weekly
Transcription
Aug 22 - Cascadia Weekly
c a s c a d i a MIDSUMMER NIGHTS Ballet with the Bard, p.15 TOM FREUND: The best songster you’ve never heard of, p.16 Reporting from the heart of Cascadia | 8/16/06 | 1.23 | Free The world of Tom Wood, p. 14 Border Crossings: Peace Arch rally says ‘no’ to war, p. 10 | p.2 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| DO Do IT it 33 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 SLEEP COOL WITH OUR HOT SAVINGS! Newport - Pine Platform Queen Set ... $429.00 Full Set ... $329.00 WITH Heaven Pillow Top Starting at $279.00 10 yr Full Warranty Manhattan - Birch Futon $279.00 with 6” mattress ... $379.00 Timberline - Pine Futon $199.00 with 6” mattress ... $299.00 Denman - Metal Futon $99.00 with 6” mattress ... $199.00 Denali Twin ... $99.00 ea. piece Full ... $119.00 ea. piece Queen ... $129.00 ea. piece King ... $139.00 ea. piece S LEEP M ASTERS I NC Shop Smart, Sleep Better 360-676-4777 4220 Guide Meridian Across from Pro Golf Discount post it plan it | 20 21 SUNDAY MONDAY On Stage Words Hamlet: 2pm, Edgewater Park, Mount Vernon The Comedy of Errors: 8pm, Edgewater Park, Mount Vernon Cinderella Puppet Show: 2pm, Whatcom Museum Paul Piper and Charles W. Luckmann: 7:30pm, Village Books Poetry Night: 8pm, Fantasia Espresso Music The Banana Slug String Band merges eco-education with music, theater, puppetry and audience participation at a free gig Aug. 19 at Bloedel Donovan Park d it Vicki Carr: 4pm and 7pm, Skagit Valley Casino The Eskalators: 4-7pm, Fairhaven Village Green Anna Schaad: 3:30pm, Big Rock Garden Park Words Lynn Dralle: 5pm, Village Books Community Honor Day: 11am-4pm, Maritime Heritage Park Visual Arts Sculpture Walk: 2pm, Big Rock Garden Park Community Bocce Ball: 5pm, Fairhaven Village Green 22 TUESDAY Words Jane Porter: Flirting with Forty, 7:30pm, Village Books, Community Hot Summer Chess Grand Prix: 6pm, Bellingham Public Library Mudfl at Safari: 10am, Breazeale-Padilla Bay Interpretive Center 16 17 18 19 WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY On Stage On Stage On Stage On Stage Community Cat on a Hot Tin Roof: 7:30pm, Underground Theater, WWU Hamlet: 8pm, Edgewater Park, Mount Vernon Good, Bad & Ugly: 8pm, Upfront Theatre Cody Rivers, Volume #10: 8pm, iDiOM Theater The Sound of Music: 7:30pm, Performing Arts Center Hamlet: 8pm, Edgewater Park, Mount Vernon Cody Rivers, Volume #10: 8pm, iDiOM Theater Cat on a Hot Tin Roof: 7:30pm, Underground Theater, WWU Theatresports Competition: 7:30pm and 9:30pm, Upfront Theatre The Sound of Music: 7:30pm, Performing Arts Center, WWU. Open House: 8pm, Anacortes Community Theatre The Comedy of Errors: 8pm, Edgewater Park, Mount Vernon Cody Rivers, Volume #10: 8pm, iDiOM Theater Theatresports Competition: 7:30pm and 9:30pm, Upfront Theatre The Sound of Music: 7:30pm, Performing Arts Center The Comedy of Errors: 2pm, Edgewater Park, Mount Vernon Hamlet: 8pm, Edgewater Park, Mount Vernon Open House: 8pm, Anacortes Community Theatre Farmers Market: 10am3pm, Depot Market Square Northwest Washington Fair: Northwest Washington Fairgrounds, Lynden San Juan Fair: 10am-9pm, Friday Harbor Flotsam Fair: 10am-10pm, Guemes Island Warbird Weekend: 9am-4pm, Heritage Flight Museum “Wines, Vines and Canines”: 4-8pm, Samson Estates Winery, Everson Dance Visual Arts A Midsummer Night’s Dream: 7:30pm, McIntyre Hall, Mt. Vernon Latin Night: 9-11pm, Melody Hall Sudden Valley Arts Group Show: 10am-4pm, Le Rendez- Vous Gallery Music Latin Expression, Yambique: 5:30-9pm, Downtown Sounds Alley Concert Chamber Players: 7:30pm., St. Paul’s Episcopal Church Words Poetry Open Mic: 8pm, Stuart’s at the Market Women Writers’ Support Group: 7pm, Barnes & Noble Kris Saknussemm: 7:30pm, Village Books Community Wednesday Market: 3-7pm, Fairhaven Village Green Northwest Washington Fair: Northwest Washington Fairgrounds, Lynden San Juan Fair: 10am9pm, Friday Harbor Music Duke of Uke: 7pm, Lincoln Theatre, Mount Vernon Gypsy Lou Band: 6-8pm, Elizabeth Park Words Mike McQuaide: 7:30pm, Village Books Community Bellingham Bay History Cruise: 7pm, Squalicum Harbor Northwest Washington Fair: Northwest Washington Fairgrounds, Lynden San Juan Fair: 10am9pm, Friday Harbor Dance Public Dance Party: 9-11pm, U & Me Dance Music Nancy Stewart: Noon, Bellingham Public Library Words Family Story Night: 7pm, Fairhaven Library Community Northwest Washington Fair: Northwest Washington Fairgrounds, Lynden San Juan Fair: 10am9pm, Friday Harbor Flotsam Fair: 10am10pm, Guemes Island Visual Arts Snapshots from France: 12:30pm, Whatcom Museum Send your listings to calendar@ cascadiaweekly.com Music Banana Slug String Band: 7pm, Bloedel Donovan Park Festival Orchestra: 7:30pm, Performing Arts Center, WWU Send your listings to calendar@ cascadiaweekly.com Feel Maggie’s heat for the last time when Cat on a Hot Tin Roof closes its Summer Stock run Aug. 18 at WWU | p.3 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| DO Do IT it 33 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 clip it 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 | p.4 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | LETTERS Letters 4-5 INSIDE letters Contact Cascadia Weekly: Phone/FAX 360.647.8200 table of contents credits letters Editorial Editor & Publisher: Tim Johnson Dext 260 { editor@ cascadiaweekly.com Views & News 4: From Caitac to Nooksack 6: The Gristle gets a LIFT 7: Out on a limb in Sudden Valley 8: Big, Baggy Bellingham, part III 10: AWOL at the Peace Arch Culture ners, Commissioners and Council members that it is imperative this property be added to Bellingham’s UGA. In actuality, just the opposite has been shown. Larry Horowitz has proven and Mark Springer confirms the City has ample land for the next 20year planning period. Our hope is that the Whatcom County decision makers are open to this information and will not be bamboozled by slick presentations, behindthe-scenes “coffee and lunch chats” and tons of legal looking paperwork. News Editor: Emily Weiner Dext 205 {news@ cascadiaweekly.com Arts & Entertainment Editor: Amy Kepferle Dext ext 203 {calendar@ cascadiaweekly.com Music & Film Editor: Carey Ross Dext 204 {music@ cascadiaweekly.com Contributors: t/k 12: The politics of solidarity 14: Allegory in art with Tom Wood Production 15: Shakespeare without words Art Director: Jesse Kinsman {graphics@ cascadiaweekly.com 16: Make a new Freund 17: A legend in Lynden 20: Candy in high school, snakes on planes 23: Crossword, Help Wanted & Buy/Sell/Trade 24: Rentals & Sudoku 25: Rentals & Real Estate 26: Real Estate 27: This Modern World, Mannkind & Troubletown A S C A D Goodwill jackpot Ad Design: Lorraine Chan Send All Advertising Materials To Rear End C —Donna Macomber, Whatcom County I A ©2006 Cascadia Weekly (ISSN 1931-3292) is published each Wednesday by Cascadia Newspaper Company LLC. Direct all correspondence to: Cascadia Weekly PO Box 2833 Bellingham WA 98227-2833 Phone/Fax: 360.647.8200 [email protected] Though Cascadia Weekly is distributed free, please take just one copy. Cascadia Weekly may be distributed only by authorized distributors. Any person removing papers in bulk from our distribution points risks prosecution Submissions: Cascadia Weekly welcomes freelance submissions. Send material to either the News Editor or A&E Editor. Manuscripts will be returned of you include a stamped, self-addressed envelope. To be considered for calendar listings, notice of events must be received in writing no later than noon Wednesday the week prior to publication. Photographs should be clearly labeled and will be returned if accompanied by stamped, self-addressed envelope. Letters Policy: Cascadia Weekly reserves the right to edit letters for length and content. When apprised of them, we correct errors of fact promptly and courteously. 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Postmaster: Send all address changes to Cascadia Weekly, PO Box 2833, Bellingham, WA 98227-2833 [email protected] Advertising Advertising Director: Marc McCoy Dext 250 {marc@ cascadiaweekly.com Account Executives: Kevin Brown Dext 251 {kevin@ cascadiaweekly.com Marisa Papetti Dext 252 {marisa@ cascadiaweekly.com Distribution David Cloutier, Matt Sieg, JW Land & Associates {distro@ cascadiaweekly.com c a s c a d i a MIDSUMMER NIGHTS Ballet with the Bard, p.15 TOM FREUND: The best songster you’ve never heard of, p.16 Reporting from the heart of Cascadia | 8/16/06 | 1.23 | Free The world of Tom Wood, p. 14 Border Crossings: Peace Arch rally says ‘no’ to war, p. 10 Newspaper Advisory Group: Yvonne Cartwright Bianchi, Robert Hall, Seth Murphy, Michael Petryni, David Syre Cover: “Bad Bunny” by Bellingham printmaker Tom Wood. Story, p.14 Visions of Caitac Compliments to Cascadia Weekly on a courageous article regarding Bellingham land supply/Caitac. We purchased our home 40 years ago, next to a 1,000 acre cattle ranch (Wilder Ranch). Over the years beside cattle and hay, they successfully grew corn, peas, carrots, etc. The land is categorized as prime agricultural land by the USDA. When Caitac purchased the farm it was zoned R10. They did not buy the ranch to continue farming. Immediately they submitted an application for a Planned Unit Development (PUD). Spring 2003: Caitac hosted “Visions for Larrabee Springs.” Mayor Asmundson gave the opening remarks. Like most visioning processes, the forum was purportedly to gain information from the community. We attended two meetings. Most of the people in attendance were developers, realtors, Caitac advisors, etc. The first thing that happened, two Huxley students were escorted out of the building because of making polite comments. Mac and I were asked what our thoughts were regarding Larrabee Springs. We told them we wished to retain the rural character. Next week we received two maps. One map, where our house is, was a fire hall and the other map had “tall buildings” in the pasture directly across the road. Needless to say, we informed them we did not think either was appropriate and would not attend any future “visioning” sessions! When the final version of this “Vision for Larrabee Springs” was printed, in the list of participants was a neighbor that had passed away the previous winter! Currently Caitac advisers and lawyers are working extremely hard behind the scenes to “educate/persuade” our County Plan- Thanks to Emily Weiner for her well-researched article re: the Nooksack Tribal Casino. We finally get what appears to be the whole picture viewed with objectivity and no editorializing. My own opinion after reading her piece is that we need to examine honestly what the objections are all about. The Tribe’s contributions to the county should be welcomed and graciously accepted. As they have shared their wealth, maybe we can share our goodwill. —Belle Shalom, Bellingham Says ‘no’ to article Considering your cover article was about “Soldiers who say no to Iraq,” one would think that a thorough journalist would take the time to actually find a real, live soldier to interview, rather than just quoting their lawyers. —Carrie Bergin, Bellingham No toxics ”This is not a question of what it’s going to cost to control mercury, but what it’s going to cost all of us if we don’t control mercury. This is an issue of who you are for: either you are for the mercury producers or you are —Elisabeth Darby Britt, Bellingham Never netherland In the last issue of Cascadia Weekly, Wendy Steffensen claimed that “there has been no definitive answer to whether the lagoon is” an upland or water site. She characterized the lagoon or Aerated Stabilization Basin (ASB) as being in “a nether land.” At the City Planning Commission meeting on March 16 of this year, an official from the Department of Ecology said the following: “Under the Shoreline Act, we consider the ASB filled, even though it’s a lagoon. It’s a wastewater treatment plant, much like a sewage treatment plant. It’s not a water body of the state. It’s uplands.” (I encourage everyone to listen to the Ecology official make this statement at www.bbayf.org/ uplands.mov. You’ll need QuickTime.) Ecology does not have the word “nether” in its lexicon. It does have the word “upland.” Although one can speculate about what might become of the ASB in the future, it is an upland site now. This fact is incontrovertible. On June 8 of this year at the Open House for the People for a Healthy Bay, I sat right next to Steffensen when she told the audience the ASB has mercury concentrations at levels as high as “300 parts per million.” This is simply false. Dan McShane was not trying to “argue” with her on this point. He was simply trying to provide accurate data to the public and elected officials. I suppose the truth is Mr. McShane’s unacknowledged “agenda.” In the July 2004 issue of Whatcom Watch (www.whatcomwatch.org), Wendy Steffensen wrote the following: “RE Sources’ position has been that all contaminated sediments likely to have an adverse effect on the environment (roughly 1,100,000 cubic yards, according to the 2000 and 2002 documents), should be removed from the aquatic environment entirely, using the least disruptive method possible. RE Sources came to this position because caps and CADs are not necessarily long-term solutions. They can be disrupted by vessel traffic, dragging anchors, storm events, tidal action, invertebrate burrowing and even gray whale feeding. “RE Sources also believes that the liable party must be held accountable for the costs of cleanup. If this were to entail hydraulic dredging of the contaminated sediments from the Whatcom Waterway into the lagoon, followed by upland disposal, so be it.” So be it indeed. More recent statements made by Robyn du Pré and Steffensen suggest they no longer hold this “position,” particularly with regard to capping. What has changed? If they do still hold this “position,” I’m delighted. As for who pays for the cleanup, the “law is the law,” to quote Jim Darling, and the only “liable party” now for the Whatcom Waterway site (RCW 70.105D.020) is the Port of Bellingham. (Funny how that worked out for Georgia-Pacific. Cf. “Agreed Order Amendment – Whatcom Waterway RI/FS” at www.ecy.wa.gov/ programs/tcp/sites/whatcom/ww.htm.) Dealing with cleanup responsibly is the sole and solemn obligation of a governmental entity that acquired more than 100 acres of property for $10. —Kevin Cournoyer, Bellingham Dept of Corrections Space in the last Gristle did not permit an accurate detail of Greenways relationships. Greenways Legacy represent volunteers promoting an expansive Greenways acquisition program by means of a 20-year levy. Greenways 2006 promoted a less expansive acquisitions program purchased through a 10-year levy; this proposal was most similar to the actual Greenways III levy approved by voters last spring. Greenways 2006 committee volunteers included Jack Weiss, John Blethen and Del Lowery, named in the column. The purpose of these two committees was to work toward passage of the Greenways III levy. Once passed, the Greenways Advisory Committee formed to make recommendations to City Council for the actual expenditures; the GWAC was recently renamed simply the Greenways Committee. We regret the errors and confusion. ,1-85('%<$872$&&,'(17)$//'()(&7,9(352'8&7" 0,&+$(/+($7+(5/< \HDUV¶ORFDO H[SHULHQFH $77251(< DQ\VL]HFDVH XSIURQWVW\OH QRUWKZHVWGUJ#PKSURFRP DOWHUQDWLYHGLVSXWH UHVROXWLRQ :0DJQROLD6W6WH IUHHFRQVXOWDWLRQ %HOOLQJKDP:$ 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 | p.5 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | LETTERS Letters 4-5 for the children who could be injured by mercury.” —Senator Patrick Leahy, April 1, 1998 Mercury is a toxic, persistent, bioaccumulative pollutant that can interfere with the neurological development of children exposed through fish consumption, and fetuses exposed through their mother’s consumption of fish. Or, in rarer instances, from contact with mercury vapors or contaminated soils through exposure at industrial sites, like the former GP property. Methylmercury bioaccumulates to a greater extent than other forms of mercury. Elimination of methylmercury in living organisms takes place at a very slow rate, resulting in tissue half-lives ranging from months to years. Who would want to live, work or play on a site that remains so contaminated after cleanup that residential living is prohibited on the first floor of certain buildings? Where digging and routine utility maintenance on the property will be prohibited by deed restrictions, due to heavy mercury soil contamination? Who would want to live, work or play on a site where mercury vapor monitors must be installed? Not me! And hopefully not you! More than 6,300 Bellingham residents agree - cleanup comes first! | p.6 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views VIEWS 6-7 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 WHO SAYS THERE ARE NO FREE RIDES? August 13—19, all rides on WTA are FREE. Take a break from the fuel pump and give the bus a try. For help getting where you need to go, call 676-RIDE. Come in and test drive an eon today The Gristle LEVERAGING LIFT: High praise to our state Rep. Kelli Linville (D-Bellingham) for spearheading a special financing tool that’s long been available in 49 states in the sluggard and equity-challenged 50th: tax increment financing. Tax increment financing (TIF) captures the future tax benefits of real estate improvements in a designated area to pay the present cost of those improvements—in a very real and practical way, allowing development to pay for itself. The tool is designed to channel funding toward improvements in distressed or underdeveloped areas where development would not otherwise occur. And if that doesn’t sound like Bellingham’s central waterfront then, reader, you’ve not been paying attention. Cash-strapped cities across Washington have been clamoring for such a financing tool, saying it will boost economic development efforts and infrastructure improvements. Gov. Chris Gregoire signed the tool into being last March at the Bellingham Cruise Terminal—fitting, as Bellingham may be the first of three cities in the state to benefit from this “local infrastructure financing tool,” or LIFT. A downside of LIFT, Linville cautions, is that improvements may tend to displace lower income residents and uses in redeveloped areas. More on that shortly. If managed efficiently, the City of Bellingham could eke from the state up to an additional $1 million per year over the next 25 years (the term of the LIFT) to repay bonds issued to finance waterfront improvements. Here’s how LIFT works: A base value is established for the improvement district—ideally early on (2007), before major improvements occur. In later years (2009-2033), the City can capture up to $1 million per year in local excise and property tax revenues above that base. The state will match that amount to repay bonds for public infrastructure improvements. Bellingham Finance Director Therese Holm explains it is not a new tax, as only increases above the base value may be captured. City Council this week sent forward a draft ordinance to meet the LIFT application deadline of Aug. 25. Because of the looming deadline, the state agreed to accept this draft in advance of official legislation. The City expects to hold a public hearing on an official ordinance Sept. 18. In its haste to meet this deadline, the City made public an array of documents detailing the “wish list”—in the words of Public Works Director Dick McKinley—of possible public infrastructure improvements imagined for the redeveloped waterfront. All told, those improvements top $196 million. Comprising almost half the expense are bridges and roads into the New Whatcom site. “Some of the items on this list are likely,” McKinley explained. “Other items are less likely and may never happen at all. But if you don’t list them, you can’t apply for possible grants to fund them.” Unmoved, stalwart council member Bob Ryan your opinion the gristle By Deck Deckert Chainsaw Massacre Development changing Sudden Valley The chainsaws are It all began when an eight-year building moratorium ended—originally implemented because of an inadequate sewage facility. One of the first signs of what was to come became apparent when the lot next to us, the one that was that not to be built on for many years, was put on the market without our knowledge. We first learned of it when my wife, Alma, saw surveyors in the street and discovered the lot had been sold to a builder who was putting up houses on speculation. The Association never bothered to tell us that the lot that wasn’t to be sold had been sold after all. After a lot of negotiation, we managed to buy it from the builder—for $6,000 more than he had paid for it the week before. An orgy of development began. Hundreds of oversize homes are being built on undersize lots. Trees towering 100 or more feet are crashing down. Some lots have been essentially clear cut, others stripped of their biggest trees while a few saplings were left. col·o·phon (käl f n) n. ee roaring right outside my window, destroying trees that were young when Abraham Lincoln was in the White House. A snarling bulldozer is ripping the soil, uprooting smaller trees near the creek. It’s a sign of “progress.” Three years ago we moved into a house in a forest. We bought an existing home on a double lot in Sudden Valley, a hilly community filled with homes set among huge trees, small streams, waterfalls, parks and nature trails. Homes were hidden between the cedars, Douglas firs, hemlocks, spruce, beech and maples. Rhododendrons, dogwoods and other flowering trees made spring bright with promise. Summer was a hundred shades of green; fall an impressionist painting. Winters were mild, with snow as an occasional seasoning. We had no illusions that the community would never change, but it had been first platted in 1969 and had grown slowly over more than 30 years. The Association itself owned many lots, we were told, that would never be developed. In fact, the lot next to us had a moratorium on it. We were assured that the community, the Association, honored the ecology, revered the forest. When a house was built, 40 percent of the trees would have to be retained. In fact, trees were so respected, we were assured, that we could not remove one without permission. Shortly after we arrived, we needed to take down a dead tree among the 100 or more trees of varying sizes on our steeply sloping lot. Three people came out from the Association that managed our community and solemnly declared that we could take out that one tree. Three years later, our community in a forest is becoming a subdivision with some trees. 1. An inscription placed usually at the end of a book, giving facts about its publication. 2. A publisher’s emblem or trademark placed usually on the title page of a book. Improvements in printing technology have prompted changes in our format. You’ll find a splash more color on a brighter, whiter paper stock. Photographs, too, are brighter and crisper in the new format, and readers should see that quality continue to improve during coming weeks. We decided, along with other changes, to introduce a hipper, more visually interesting body font; we hope you’ll find it easier to read. And—just in case you need someone to hold your hand so you don’t get lost—we’ve added a Table of Contents and a way-finder guide along the outer edge of each page. I also hope you’ll take a moment to fill out the mail-in Reader Survey included in this issue, or complete it online at cascadiaweekly.com/survey. This information helps us more than you know—and we’re willing to bribe you for it: A drawing for a night for two at the Chrysalis Inn, a gift certificate for a terrific tear at Boundary Bay, or a head start on shoes at Fairhaven Runners. It’s our way of saying thanks for reading and supporting independent media. —Tim Johnson, E&P, Cascadia Weekly The Gristle remarked, “I still would like to see where this money comes from, other than city taxpayers.” Aye, there’s the rub. According to development timetables, it may be a dozen years before any meaningful development occurs on the existing GP property. Indeed, the state Department of Ecology is not expected to even begin to assess the land side of the equation until 2009, according to DOE’s Lucy McInerney, who is in charge of cleanup plans for both Whatcom Waterway and the mill site. Recognizing that half the LIFT lifespan might pass before property is developed, the City drew the boundaries to LIFT’s revenue development area (RDA)—the area from which the improvements will be assessed—larger than the 137-acre footprint of the GP site. Portions of Old Town and the Central Business District are now part of the newly defined New Whatcom RDA. This way, even if no significant GP site improvements occur for half of the LIFT’s life, value may still be captured from property improvements in RDA borderlands. That does raise the concern—as Kelli warned—as the City finds motive to allow value increase (i.e., rent hikes) in the RDA fringe to achieve early-year TIF targets, threatening added burden on downtown residents and merchants. No new taxes… but maybe something worse: a probable increase in the costs of doing business downtown. Worse still, the City is restricted from collecting later-year value from core RDA properties by myopic agreements the City signed with the Port of Bellingham. Major tenants sought by these agreements include tax exempt state and federal agencies (WWU, NOAA). While there’s suggested compensation in lieu of taxes for these entities (Interlocal Agreement Article VI, Sec. 27), this compensation will not leverage the LIFT. Worst of all, the City has unduly burdened itself by agreeing at the outset (and contrary to public policy) not to charge New Whatcom developers impact fees for parks, roads, sewer, water and other infrastructure (Article III, Sec. 9 d) and will develop—at taxpayer expense—all parking (Sec 9 e and f). Also contrary to rational public policy, developers are not required to provide parking for their buildings (Sec. 9 f). All told, it means that up to $196 million (less—at most—$25 million from the state) will be stripped from Bellingham taxpayers to fund “waterfront welfare” for millionaires (Article V, Sec. 19). City officials nervously pray the Port—who engineered the asinine interlocal agreement— might chip in their future excise and property tax revenues to help leverage the LIFT, and indeed the Port might. They have similar hopes for the County, but we suspect the County is not nearly so dimwitted as the City of Bellingham in signing agreements that surrender without discussion the opportunity to compel those who benefit most from development to pay the costs of development. If not for this little LIFT by Kelli and the Legislature, Bellingham taxpayers might be knocked fl at. VIEWS 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 | p.7 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views views In the beginning, the extent of the destruction was masked. Cleared building sites were still surrounded by trees. The problem was, of course, the trees were on adjoining, as yet uncleared, lots. When the builders moved on to the next lot, often months later because building was in a hopscotch pattern, the trees magically disappeared. Realtors are now happily touting homes on “sunny lots,” meaning most of the trees have been cleared away. A rich, diverse forest is being replaced with the monoculture of suburban lawns. The forest teemed with animals and birds—deer, Douglas squirrels, raccoons, rabbits, jays, juncos, woodpeckers, thrushes, grosbeaks, chickadees, owls. Some of the animals still remain. Squirrels, for example, have always managed to coexist with humans. But the deer are all becoming more and more scarce; rabbits rarely seen. Birds too are becoming scarcer, some of them disappearing entirely. When something like this happens, as it so depressingly often does, the usual suspects of excuses are trotted out. You can’t expect to be the last person to live in such a beautiful place. Population is increasing, and we have to put the people somewhere. A man can do what he wants to with his own property. You can’t stop progress. That last is the killer. “Progress” is defined only as that which makes the rich elite richer. The builders and developers are getting richer, the rest of us are getting poorer. A unique community built in a forest is disappearing, and is being replaced by another subdivision, a bit more upscale than some, but a cookie-cutter subdivision nevertheless. Something wonderful and precious is disappearing and we are all the poorer for it. “Progress” is another word for destruction. Deck Deckert is a Sudden Valley resident. NEWS 8-11 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 | p.8 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News news local regional “Caitac is understandably pleased with the City Council’s approval of a UGA expansion, given that Caitac spent tremendous resources seeking to obtain just such an outcome.” —Seattle attorney David Bricklin townhouses, houses on smaller lots, small homes on small lots with shared courtyards, garages on alleys, narrower streets for pedestrians and bicyclists, and mixes of housing types and uses in neighborhoods. Many of these, he noted, exist in older neighborhoods but are blocked by current code. Safety Factors BIG BAGGY BELLINGHAM By Tim Johnson Part III: Safety factor and fudge factors The City presses forward, concerned about a looming land supply shortage that requires adding 2,167 acres of county land to Bellingham’s Urban Growth Areas (UGAs). Under the state’s Growth Management Act (GMA), cities are required to periodically review their land supply and recommend additions to their UGAs; these additions are then considered by county governments. Last spring, Bellingham officials asked County counterparts to consider approving all of these acres for incorporation into UGAs. Currently proposed additions include roughly 1,800 acres on either side of the Guide Meridian north of Bellingham, acres largely owned by Caitac U.S.A. Corp., proponents of a planned urban development there, Larrabee Springs. Stakes are high. Vested and successfully built out, Larrabee Springs would reap hundreds of millions of dollars in profits for Caitac, its subsidiaries and agents. “Caitac is understandably pleased with the City Council’s approval of a UGA expansion, given that Caitac spent tremendous resources seeking to obtain just such an outcome,” Seattle attorney David Bricklin commented dryly. Bricklin has observed many of Whatcom County’s GMA challenges. “The administrative record reflects that Caitac also invested a great deal of time and money attempting to influence the City’s land supply analysis, the central planning document driving the City Council’s decision,” he alleged. Yet opposition is considerable as well. If Bellingham is required to add 2,000 acres every five years into the future, the city will be an additional 20,000 acres larger by 2055. To put that into future context, Bellingham would sprawl outward an additional 31 square miles, more than doubling Bellingham’s current size of 26 square miles. Putting it into historical context, UGAs established in 1997 expanded the city’s urban footprint 44 percent. Over the same period, building permits in the City’s mixed-use zones—designed to allow the high densities favored by modern urban planning—were built out to only 40-48 percent of capacity. City officials obeyed what they perceived as their lawful duty to accommodate growth; however, the resulting development was scarcely more dense than Bellingham’s average of four-to-six homes per acre. Observers at the county and state level complain Bellingham failed to encourage infill and did not require developers to achieve the densities established in their zoning. Indeed, they could not. At a recent public hearing, Bellingham Planning Director Tim Stewart told listeners that certain City ordinances make it difficult to promote things like Of course, not all of Bellingham’s land supply woes are actual or imminent. The City’s calculation is fattened up by at least 25 percent as a safety factor. This factor—its size, its necessity—is a matter of fierce debate for, if removed, the City evidently has enough land to accommodate anticipated population growth without expansion of its UGAs or more than minor infill of existing neighborhoods. Without the safety factor, Bellingham’s 2,167 acre shortfall all but evaporates. Representing Caitac, attorney Robert Tull cited recent case law to County Planning Commissioners: “This excess land supply may be called a ‘market factor’… or a ‘safety factor’ or a ‘cushion.’ What a county chooses to call such excess land supply does not matter so much as that such a factor is explicitly quantified and expressed as a percentage of land beyond the minimum necessary to accommodate… projected growth,” [his emphasis]. Tull has filed more than a dozen briefs, memos and letters on this topic from Nov.2005 to July of this year, stressing the importance of safety factors and market hedges in intelligent planning. Not everyone agrees with his conclusions. “Caitac argues that the only proper thing to do in the face of scant information is to dramatically expand Bellingham’s UGA (and, as luck would have it, allow Caitac’s development to proceed),” Bricklin summarized. Ellen Gray of Futurewise agreed. Futurewise is a statewide public interst group working to ensure that local governments manage growth responsibly. “We have told the City previously that the use of both the safety factor and market factor are not appropriate in a UGA capacity analysis where the land use supply can be closely monitored,” such as in five-year review periods adopted by Bellingham. “We think the City is closely monitoring land use and supply needs and has supported its use of these factors and the assumptions underlying them,” Gray argued. Bricklin furthered, “Whatcom County has the discretion whether to apply any safety factor in the first place. Contrary to Caitac’s arguments, Whatcom County should take a precautionary approach in deciding whether to expand Bellingham’s UGA and allow sprawl. Whatcom County is not bound by Horowitz compares the “Net Population Capacity” results from the City’s final version of its land supply analysis (based on a minimum density assumption) with a revised version (based on a maximum density assumption). “The difference in capacity of 8,433 people is a ‘hidden cushion’ and is not disclosed anywhere in the City’s documents,” he alleged. “When City officials provide population ‘capacity’ information, the presumption is that the capacity amount is actually the maximum number of people that can be accommodated,” Horowitz maintained. “If the City’s capacity data is based on something other than maximum, the difference between maximum and the number provided must be fully disclosed. Otherwise it can and will be considered intentionally misleading, based on the actual definition of capacity. “The City has failed to include this ‘difference’ as a component of the safety factor and has therefore understated the true safety factor built into its land supply analysis,” he concluded. “The City overstated the amount of unavailable land in calculating the City’s current land supply, understating the amount of available land by at least 830 acres— and thereby falsely inflating the apparent amount of new growth acreage Bellingham will in fact require,” Hall agreed in his challange. Attorney Bricklin summarized, The City Council recently acquiesced to a major expansion of Bellingham’s growth area, under tremendous pressure from sprawl-promoting development interests. A small army of consultants related to Caitac’s Larrabbee Springs proposal have submitted an overabundance of self-serving argumentation. “Unfortunately, at the end of the day, the City Council’s decision was based on erroneous data and improper assumptions, all of which was compounded by inaccurate analysis, evidencing internal inconsistency with the City’s comprehensive plan,” Bricklin alleged. “If not corrected, the City’s decision will be subject to challenge before the WWGMHB on several levels.” Putting it into perspective, Hall wrote, “If the elected officials in charge of Whatcom County were to today announce a plan to sprawl Bellingham to more than double its present size within our childrens’ lifetimes, it is difficult to believe the public would respond warmly. However, giving in to the demands of well-financed special interests such as Caitac is tantamount to following exactly such a plan. It will inevitably and cumulatively lead to that result.” DIO REA D ITY S E R T IV PERAINGTON UN OSTERN WASH NAT AIRS T WE IC AFF E STUD UBL AND P NEWS RACY NOW WS C IO NE DEMO EECH RAD P S S MUSIC HOW FREE LTY S F NEW SPECIA RS/WEEK O U 40 HO .ORG .KUGS WWW *EWELERYFROM/UR&IRST.ATIONS ,ARGE3ELECTIONOF.ATIVE!MERICANHANDCRAFTED3TERLING3ILVER UI4U)JTUPSJD'BJSIBWFOt#FMMJOHIBNt Summer Special Buy 1 Reg. Buffet & 2 Beverages Get 2nd Buffet at 1/2 Price Please present coupon when ordering. 1 coupon per table. May not be combined with other coupons, Senior discounts, Sundays or holidays. Expires 8/31/06 FREE Kids Meal Ages 4 to 6 Limited to one child only with purchase of regular price adult buffet. One ccoupon per table. May not be combined with other coupons, Senior discount, Sundays or holidays. Expires 8/31/06 Group Special 5 off purchase of $45 or more Save 10% on groups of 4 or more $ 00 Robert Hall is an investor in Cascadia Weekly. 89.3FM Please present coupon when ordering. 1 coupon per table. May not be combined with other coupons, Senior discounts, Sundays or holidays. Expires 8/31/06 Mongolian Grill • Sushi Bar • Shrimp Mussels • Crab • Fruit & Dessert Bar Beer and Wine Available 4151 Meridian Street #100 360 752 2228 In Cordata Place, between Cost Cutter and Dairy Queen | p.9 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News NEWS8-11 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 the market safety factors considered by the City of Bellingham, and has absolute discretion to apply some or no market safety factors. Finally,” Bricklin argued, “as a matter of policy, Whatcom County has discretion under the GMA to decide that growth need not be accommodated with ex-urban sprawl.” “The City has applied an impermissibly large safety factor,” downtown developer Robert Hall recently charged in a letter to Bellingham City Council. “Presumably, virtually any level of sprawl can be justified if the assumed margin of error is large enough, which is exactly why the Growth Management Hearings Board strikes down comprehensive plans that adopt excessive safety factors,” Hall wrote. “I didn’t want to challenge Caitac at all,” Hall admitted. “I didn’t want to get into the middle of it; I have other things to do with my time,” explained the largest property owner downtown. Hall noted that other downtown developers harbored similar concerns about decisions on the city’s fringe that pull energy from Bellingham’s urban centers. “But they have projects going forward,” Hall explained. “They can’t afford to get embroiled in a controversy and make enemies with the Planning Department when their proposals are being looked over by them. “There came a point when somebody with knowledge had to stand up to these guys,” Hall said of Caitac. Hall has followed with a more detailed complaint. “It’s not condos versus single family homes,” Hall asserted, denying it is his special interest versus that of Caitac. “Condo sales are outstripping home sales. Many condos are cheaper than houses new or old, which is why first-time homeowners and retirees are buying them, because it’s the only thing they can afford.” “The City’s land supply analysis methodology is fatally flawed,” Hall continued in his letter. “The City’s analysis overstates the impact of critical areas (which reduce land supply), by failing to account for the fact that City code allows for clustering of houses on property containing critical areas. The City’s analysis includes a reduction of land availability for critical area protections, ignoring the effect of City clustering laws, creating a doubledip reduction in the City’s analysis.” Larry Horowitz agreed. Horowitz, together with other citizens, recently filed an additional challenge to the City’s land supply methodology with the Western Washington Growth Management Hearings Board (WWGMHB). Formerly an auditor with Price Waterhouse, an international accounting and consulting firm, Horowitz complains of additional, hidden “fudge factors” in the City’s analysis. | p.10 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | NEWS News 8-11 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 news | national regional Story and photo by Emily Weiner Rally Supports War Resisters Vets of Iraq and Vietnam meet at Peace Arch “Take me with you,” Kyle Snyder said over and over again, only half joking, to U.S. anti-war activists at the end of a picnic and rally on the Canadian side of Peace Arch Park. “I want to be able to visit my home country. I love my country, still.” Snyder, 22, couldn’t board the return buses that had carried hundreds of people from the Veterans for Peace national convention in Seattle to the Canadian border on Aug. 13. Snyder went AWOL from the U.S. Army in April 2005, after serving five months in Iraq. He is one of about 30 deserters from the U.S. military who have applied for refugee status in Canada. The purpose of the Peace Arch gathering was to lend them support. It attracted about 400 people. It was organized by Canadian and U.S. activists—including Ellen Murphy of Bellingham—who oppose the Iraq war and are helping war resisters in their quest for sanctuary in Canada. Snyder wasn’t the only Iraq war resister at the Peace Arch. Two young women, Sarah and Oni, weren’t ready to give their full names or speak publicly about why they’ve left the U.S. military. But after the rally, they told Snyder he had inspired them. Snyder is working in the oil fields of Alberta while waiting for the Canadian government to decide whether to grant him sanctuary. Wearing desert camouflage with the insignia of his unit, the 94th Engineers, Sny- Kyle Snyder (left), who has applied for refugee status in Canada, and Iraq War resister Camilo Mejia, who was jailed after going AWOL from the National Guard. equipment operator because he wanted “to reconstruct Iraqi civilization.” Instead, he ended up a gunner in an escort unit. “I wasn’t supposed to be in combat,” he said. Snyder joined the U.S. Army at age 19, recruited as he was completing a federal Job Corps program. He said he joined for a lot of reasons, none of them patriotism. “I wanted a nice car,” he said. “I was 19 years old. When someone comes up, really professional, I’m going to do anything that man says so I can be a hero.” Another speaker, Fernando Suarez del Solar of San Diego, spoke about his 20year-old son, Jesus, who was killed in Iraq in 2003. “Today I find my son in the faces of the war resisters here,” he said. three U.S. diplomats who resigned in 2003 in protest against the war in Iraq. Wright had also served in the U.S. Army/Army Reserves for 29 years and attained the rank of Colonel. After the rally, she gave Snyder a T-shirt with the words “Veterans for Peace, Camp Casey Chapter, Crawford, TX” on the front and “In Bush’s Backyard” on the back. Vietnam-era war resisters at the gathering also made sure to speak to Snyder after the rally. Jesse Perrier of Boston served time at Leavenworth because “I gave them back their rifle and they put me in prison for two years,” he said. Perrier took Snyder aside and spoke in a quiet, intense voice. “Stay with your convictions,” he said. “The biggest thing is, you’ll look in the mirror and say ‘I did the right thing.’ You’ll have your integrity in life.” Mike Wong lives in San Francisco now, but lived in Canada for five years after deserting the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War. He wanted to assure Snyder that most of Wong’s generation of resisters now have college degrees, professional jobs, homes, families and spouses. “Not only that,” he said, “we’re still activists. We’re still fighting for the right causes. You have a life of glory ahead of you.” An Iraq War resister, Camilo Mejia, who was jailed for nine months after going AWOL from the National Guard, hugged Snyder Learn More War Resisters Support Campaign is online at www.resisters.ca Vets for Peace is online at www.veteransforpeace.org Soldiers, Say No! is online at peacehost.net/ssn der told the crowd, “I feel I was betrayed as a soldier. I feel I was betrayed and lied to by the administration. ” Snyder said he isn’t a conscientious objector. Rather, he believes the Iraq war is illegal under international law. He signed up to be a heavy construction “The biggest thing is, you’ll look in the mirror and say ‘I did the right thing.’ You’ll have your integrity in life.” – Jesse Perrier, Vietnam Deserter He’s concerned that “ninety-nine percent of Latin boys and girls are going into the military for green papers and for college.” He’s been hearing stories that some are denied citizenship even after serving in Iraq. Another speaker was Ann Wright, one of and told him “anything you need, you let me know—if you want information, connections, contacts.” Snyder told Mejia, “I was really moved by you.” Mejia told Snyder, “Seeing you here makes me feel like it wasn’t in vain.” regional local news | Briefs Fuzz Buzz Bay Initiative headed to court Cat killers Bellingham City Council voted unanimously Aug. 14 for the City to ask a court to determine whether the Healthy Bay Initiative will be sent to voters. More than the required 3,652 Bellingham voters signed petitions to put the initiative on the ballot in November. Here’s the wording: A statement issued by the City Council says local governments usually defer oversight of remedial action to the Department of Ecology. The City Council statement concludes: “The initiative misses the point of a best sciencebased comprehensive cleanup based on the plans that the City and Port will be forging for use of the land. City Council is committed to the same healthy cleanup of the land as it has been to date with the Bellingham Bay Pilot Project. Nothing will change.” Comments sought on electronic recycling A public hearing will be held in Everett Aug. 24 on rules to implement the state’s new electronics recycling law, which passed in March 2006. The law is the first in the nation to require manufac- On Aug.. 10, an orange and white tabby was found disemboweled along Old Fairhaven Parkway. On Aug. 1, a grey and white shorthaired cat was found similarly mutilated on 14th and Mill streets. A Whatcom Humane Society veterinarian confirmed both deaths were caused by a person or persons unknown. On Aug. 5, another Southside cat was found dead with wounds that may have been caused by a person or an animal. In 2002, five cats were found mutilated in Fairhaven in a single month. Bomb dogs Every year tons of electronic trash goes unrecycled turers to offer consumerconvenient and comprehensive electronics recycling services, from collection through processing, for computers, computer monitors, laptop and portable computers, and all televisions. Written comments may be submitted until 5pm Sept. 7, by mail to Jay Shepard, Department of Ecology, PO Box 47600, Olympia, WA 98504-7600, or e-mail at wa-recycles-electronics@ ecy.wa.gov. The Everett public hearing is at 7pm Aug. 24, at the Snohomish County PUD Electric Building Headquarters, 2320 California St. Sen. Cantwell supports Lamont U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-WA), issued a statement the day after Ned Lamont defeated U.S. Sen. Joseph Lieberman in Connecticut’s Democratic Party primary: “I congratulate Ned Some great LOCAL TALENT this week! Literature LIVE! at VILLAGE BOOKS 1200 11th St • 671-2626 www.villagebooks.com Lamont on his victory last night. I respect the decision of the Connecticut Democrats in choosing their nominee and I will support him.” Resource database is online A new web site, Community Counts, includes a fast way to find local service organizations and government agencies. The online database is at whatcomcounts. org. Click on local resources in the left-hand column. Whatcom Community Counts is a project of Whatcom Coalition for Healthy Communities. The web site also features statistics that indicate how Whatcom County compares to other communities on a variety of health and quality of life issues, a “promising practices” feature, a community conversation about current issues and reprints of regional news stories. WWU Visitor Center moving Western Washington University Visitors Center is moving south. Starting Aug. 21, campus information and short-term parking passes will be available at the Campus Services building, which is near the corner of Bill McDonald Parkway and 21st Street. Two drive-up kiosks have been installed there with two-way audio and video connections with attendants and pneumatic tubes for receiving maps, parking passes and other paper. Or visitors may park and come into the building. The Visitors Center at the north end of South College Drive—a small brick building with a drive-up window, constructed in 1980—will be demolished to make room for construction of the new Academic Instructional Center. Send tips to [email protected] AUGUST 17 On Aug. 4, the City of Bellingham responded in Whatcom County Superior Court to a lawsuit in which an Alaska state ferry employee says she was bitten by Bellingham’s bomb dog during a routine sweep for explosives. The employee was directing cars at the Bellingham Cruise Terminal onto the M/V Columbia on April 23, 2004. Officer Striker’s handler allegedly closed the tailgate of a vehicle on Striker’s paw, causing pain. The suit claims Striker lashed out at the nearest person, causing more than $11,000 in damage to the ferry worker’s hand. Call Moses On Aug. 8, Bellingham Police responded to a report of a burning bush on Cordata Parkway. Spiritually underwhelmed officers chalked the event up to malicious mischief. Tough times for SUVs On Aug. 12 at 3:20pm, a gas ‘n’ dash was reported at Sunset Shell. On Aug. 6 at 4:34pm, a gas ‘n’ dash was reported at Meridian Shell after prices there soared to $3.29 per gallon. On Aug. 5 at 9:50am, another gas ‘n’ dash was reported on Meridian. On Aug. 5 at 9:11am, a gas ‘n’ dash was reported on Meridian. On Aug. 3 at 10:01am a gas ‘n’ dash was reported at Sunset Shell. On Aug. 1 at 4:47pm, another gas ‘n’ dash was reported at Meridian Shell. Paul Piper & Charles W. Luckmann THURSDAY 7:30p SLIDE SHOW! A great resource for both locals and visitors! On Aug. 11, at the height of a national security red alert—Bellingham’s bomb dog was called to the Blaine Port of Entry by United States Customs inspectors concerned about finding what appeared to be yet another bomb-like object in a suspicious truck at the U.S. border. No explosives were found. Mike McQUAIDE X STORIES The Personal Side of fragile X Syndrome AUGUST 21 MONDAY 7:30p | p.11 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 NEWS 8-11 national WORDS&&Community COMMUNITY 12-13 | p.12 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 words community lectures books By Tim Johnson Days of Rage Civil disobedience and the politics of solidarity Hear WHAT: Author Dan Berger discusses Outlaws of America WHEN: 7:30pm, Fri., Aug. 18 WHERE: Village Books Readings Gallery COST: Free MORE INFO: 671-2626 or villagebooks.com Out of the dark days of the Sixties, one incendiary group above all took their civil war into the comfort of America’s living rooms. The Weather Underground Organization charged out of the radical left intent upon a series of militant actions designed to achieve the revolutionary overthrow of the United States. They distinguished themselves by carrying out a campaign of bombings, jailbreaks and riots that raged into the following decade, until their organization imploded shortly after the U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam in 1975. With their departure also came the general disintegration of the New Left. Author Dan Berger interviewed former Weather Underground members, Black Panthers, Young Lords, and other longtime activists to trace the group’s evolution in relation to the civil rights, Black Power and anti-war movements. Cascadia Weekly: What sparked your interest in the WUO? Dan Berger: When I was a new activist in a conservative region, I was looking for mentors—people who had been around the block politically and could help me find my footing and learn les- sons from the past. One of them was David Gilbert, who was not the first but was the one with whom I developed the closest relationship. David is a former member of Students for a Democratic Society and the Weather Underground, now serving a life sentence for his role as a white ally and getaway driver in a failed and ill-advised Black Liberation Army attempted robbery in 1981. I plied him with questions about his activist history and analysis of the present. What worked, what didn’t work, why did he follow certain paths at certain times—and what does any of this mean today? CW: You write that, “A mythology of the Sixties is unhelpful, even detrimental, to any attempts at understanding what happened, let alone forging progressive movement strategy today.” Why do these mythic stereotypes endure? DB: They endure because they’re an easy—far too easy—way of packaging the story, and a way of keeping the history consigned to an over-and-donewith past rather than informing current geopolitics. If we record “the Sixties” as split into two periods—a long period of hopeful liberalism corrupted by the quick burst of violence from an isolated and uncreative few—it protects the status quo in several ways. It separates the militancy from its mass base and demonizes the radical turn as aberrant and unnecessary. CW: How do the Sixties resonate today? DB: This is a huge question, of course. I think there are several ways the Sixties still resonates, including a succession of insurgent right-wing administrations that have been consistently trying to overturn the “Vietnam Syndrome” (i.e., that U.S. military might can be defeated) through “shock-and-awe” wars of attrition against civilian populations—in Nicaragua and El Salvador and Panama, in Iraq and Afghanistan (and currently supporting similar campaigns by Israel in Palestine and Lebanon). Such campaigns are continuing with the grand jury harassment of former Black Panthers in the Bay Area—and are taking on new forms through the “Green Scare” throughout the Northwest. CW: Clearly, today, Weathermen would be considered terrorists. DB: You’re certainly right that the Weather Underground would be considered terrorists today, although I think it’s important to not resign ourselves to accepting such designations of them or similar groups (then or now). Slapping the “terrorist” label on any presumed enemy has been the Bush administration’s favorite tactic for controlling debate and pushing through a range of repressive policies. It is to our peril if we let them control the debate on this issue, particularly given that it tacitly condones the range of state terrorist actions to fly under the radar. But yes, the fate of clandestine militants would surely differ today. The slew of cases against radical environmentalists in Oregon—what many are calling “the Green Scare”—is an example of this: people facing life in prison for massive property destruction that caused no human injury. The Earth Liberation Front is a different organization than the Weather Underground, but I think we all should be watching these cases carefully, for they could very well prove to be bellwethers for a wider crackdown on any form of dissent. CW: Is revolution even possible in today’s America? DB: Fundamental change is always possible, although there are moments when the opportunities are more ripe or the demands more urgent. History moves in cycles, but it is the persistent organizing that enables sweeping, revolutionary change to occur. The Civil Rights and Black Power revolutions built off decades of patient work in black communities. Our job, as lifelong radical educator Myles Horton said, is to continue working diligently in the more pervasive “valley times” to best take advantage of the “mountain times” when history moves more quickly. WORDS Wed., Aug. 16 SPOKEN WORDS: Attend the poetry-driven Spoken Word Wednesday at 8pm at Stuart’s at the Market, 1530 Cornwall Ave. For more info: 7140800. ZANESVILLE: Kris Saknussemm reads from Zanesville at 7:30pm at Village Books, 1200 11th St. The event is free. For more info: 671-2626. Thurs., Aug. 17 OUTDOORS INFO: Mike McQuaide gives a free slideshow based on his new book Insiders’ Guide to Bellingham and Mount Baker at 7:30pm at Village Books, 1200 11th St. For more info: 671-2626. Fri., Aug. 18 FAMILY STORIES: Attend Family Story Night led by members of the Bellingham Storytelling Guild at 7pm at the Fairhaven Library, 1117 12th St. The event is free. For more info: 714-9631. Sat., Aug. 19 STORIES & SNACKS: Bring the kids to readings from books about modes of transportation and stay for snacks at 11am at Barnes & Noble, 4099 Meridian St. The event is free. For more info: 647-7018. Sun., Aug. 20 MONEYMAKING MADNESS: Lynn Dralle shares tips from her book, More 100 Best Things I’ve Sold on eBay: Money-Making Madness, at 5pm at Village Books, 1200 11th St. The event is free. For more info: 671-2626. Mon., Aug. 21 POETRY NIGHT: Spoken word and acoustic performances can be shared at Poetry Night at 8pm every Monday at Fantasia Espresso, 1332 Cornwall Ave. For more info: 715-1632 or poetrynight.org. X STORIES: Paul Piper and Charles W. Luckmann read from X Stories: A Personal Side of Fragile X Syndrome at 7:30pm at Village Books, 1200 11th St. The event is free. For more info: 671-2626. Tues., Aug. 22 FLIRTING WITH FORTY: Seattle romance writer Jane Porter reads from her latest, Flirting with Forty, at 7:30pm at Village Books, 1200 11th St. The event is free. For more info: 671-2626. Wed., Aug. 23 ACTION-ADVENTURE: Skagit County author Ken Coffman shares excerpts from his newest actionadventure tale, Bad Medicine, at 7:30pm at Village Books, 1200 11th St. The event is free. For more info: 671-2626. COMMUNITY Wed., Aug. 16 WEDNESDAY MARKET: The Wednesday Market is open from 3-7pm on the Fairhaven Village Green (behind Village Books, 1200 11th St.). For more info: 647-2060 or bellinghamfarmers.org. Aug. 16 - Aug. 19 NORTHWEST WASHINGTON FAIR: Live music from the likes of Merle Haggard, a carnival, agricultural displays, vendors and lots of food will be part Thurs., Aug. 17 HISTORY CRUISE: Whatcom Museum’s Richard Vanderway helms the final Bellingham Bay History Cruise of the season at 7pm from Squalicum Harbor. Cost is $10 for museum members, $20 general. For more info: 676-6981 or whatcommuseum.org. VIGIL FOR PEACE: All denominations are welcome at the monthly Prayer Vigil for Peace in the Middle East at 5:30pm at Assumption Catholic Church, 2116 Cornwall Ave. For more info: 733-1380. Aug. 18 - Aug. 19 FLOTSAM FAIR: Blues music, an arts festival and lots more will be part of the Flotsam Fair starting at 6pm Aug. 18 and continuing from 10am-10pm Aug. 19 at Mangan’s Landing on Guemes Island. Entry is free. For more info: (360) 770-8584. GARGANTUAN GARAGE SALE: Lydia Place will hold “the mother of all garage sales” from 9am7pm Aug. 18 and 8am-7pm Aug. 19 at the Sportsplex, 1225 Civic Way. For more info: 671-7663. Sat., Aug. 19 En d FARMERS MARKET: Attend the Bellingham Farmers Market from 10am-3pm every Saturday at the Depot Market Square. For more info: 6472060 or bellinghamfarmers.org. STREET LAW: Get free legal advice and referrals at Street Law from 1-4pm every Saturday through Aug 26 at the corner of Railroad Avenue and Magnolia Street.. For more info: 6716079. MAGNETISM: Learn about the principles of magnetism at today’s “Magnets and Electricity” workshop at 1pm at the American Museum of Radio & Electricity, 1312 Bay St. Entry is $5$10. For more info and to register: 738-3886. WARBIRDS: Take part in “Warbird Weekend” from 9am-4pm at the Heritage Flight Museum at the Bellingham International Airport. Weather permitting, there’ll also be solo and formation flybys. Entry is a suggested $5. For more info: 733-4422 or heritageflight.org. WINES & CANINES: Attend “Wines, Vines, and Canines”, a fundraising auction for Paws With a Cause, from 4-8pm at Samson Estates Winery in Everson. Tickets are $15. For more info: 966-5959. HOME HISTORY: Attend a free workshop dubbed “Researching the History of Your Home or Property” at 8:30am at the Washington State Archives Building, 808 25th St. For more info and to register: 650-2813. 20-60% OFF Summer Styles Sale Continues! Historic Fairhaven 7 3 4 . 7 8 0 3 Sun., Aug. 20 HONOR DAY: Acknowledge and honor the many contributions made by American Indians as part of Honor Day from 11am-5pm at Maritime Heritage Park. Speakers, music, a Great Circle Ceremony, vendors and storytellers will contribute to the free event. For more info: 647888- or honorday.org. mer Sale! m u of S Send your band listings to [email protected] (or we will send U.S.S. Horsewhip to your house) WORDS&&Community COMMUNITY 12-13 | p.13 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 of the Northwest Washington Fair through Aug. 19 at Lynden’s NW Washington Fairgrounds. Entry is $8 for general admission. For more info: 354-4111 or northwestwashingtonfair.org. SAN JUAN FAIR: Head to Friday Harbor from 10am-9pm for the San Juan County Fair. Music, a tractor pull, rabbit races and more will be part of the festivities. Entry is $5-$10. For more info: (360) 378-4310. ART 14 | p.14 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 visual galleries openings profiles By Amy Kepferle Bad Bunnies and Venezia Bouquets The allegorical world of Tom Wood When longtime Bellingham printmaker and painter Tom Woods and I make plans to meet at a local coffee shop to discuss what’s behind his art and he doesn’t show up, I’m not too surprised. Creative geniuses are allowed a bit of leeway, and I spend a pleasant hour reading The Stranger, making life lists and downing beefy cups of coffee on the chance I got the time wrong. When I return to the office and call to check on his whereabouts, Woods is immediately apologetic. He lost track of time in his studio, he says, and it wasn’t until he sat down to lunch that he realized he’d forgotten our get-together. If you’ve been in Bellingham any amount of time, it’s likely you’ve seen Woods’ work. This month alone, he’s in group shows at both Fairhaven’s Lucia Douglas Gallery and downtown’s Blue Horse Gallery. The 54-year-old artist’s work often merges allegory within the context of the natural world. Prints such as “Bad Bunny” (see right) and “Venezia Bouquet” (a Venezian street performer holds a gargantuan bouquet complete with flowers, bees, instruments, angels and turrets) make it clear that while Woods’ retains a sense of the playful, he’s also a master of detail. His art has been called “fanciful and marvelous,” “intimate and compelling” and “cryptic.” I agree with all those things, but wonder where in the heck the images come from. “A lot of it comes from my own subconscious,” Woods explains. “Europe has a real tradition of myth and allegory that I can draw from. More Info WHAT: Works by printmaker Tom Wood WHEN: Through August WHERE: Lucia Douglas Gallery, 1415 13th St. Blue Horse Gallery, 301 W. Holly St. COST: Free MORE INFO: 671-2305 or 733-5361 I also feel like my work is connected to the area and my lifestyle.” The current exhibit at Lucia Douglas, “Northwest Printmakers in Florence,” is the product of Woods’ and gallery owner Linda Gardner’s efforts to bring artists to Italy’s Il Bisonte School for the Study of Graphic Arts. The 12 artists in attendance spent April of this year working on intaglio printmaking—works etched and printed from copper plates—and experimenting with mono-print techniques. “People worked really well together,” Woods says. “I got three prints made, which is a lot for me.” Woods can afford to take his time. He’s been a full time artist for more than 20 years, and his art is his work. He’s homegrown, too, having come to Western Washington University in 1973 and starting art school here in Bellingham. His advice for aspiring full-time artists? Don’t get in debt. “We live within our means,” he notes. “It’s common with artists who make a living doing art to live more simply than other people. We have a comfortable living now, but it took a long time. You have to be pretty practical to make a living as an artist. It’s more than a full-time job. “Actually, it’s more of a lifestyle than a job.” ONGOING EXHIBITS ALLIED ARTS: Paintings and pottery by Nancy Leshinsky and Lynn Dee will be featured through August at Allied Arts, 1418 Cornwall Ave. For more info: 676-8548 or alliedarts.com. BELLINGHAM RAILWAY MUSEUM: The museum is open to the public from noon-5pm Tuesdays and Thurs.-Sat. at 1320 Commercial St. For more info: 393-7540. BLUE HORSE GALLERY: “The Blue Horse Artists” exhibit can be seen through August at the Blue Horse Gallery, 301 W. Holly St. Tom Schlotterback, Tom Wood, Rachel Foreman, Helen Dorn, Lanny Little, and Tracy Powell are among the artists being displayed. For more info: 671-2305. BOUNDARY BAY: Peruse “Salmon at the Bay” through Aug. 26 at Boundary Bay Brewery, 1107 Railroad Ave. Bid on the pieces throughout the month to benefit the Nooksack Salmon Enhancement Association. For more info: 715-0283. IVERSON OPENING: Attend an opening of Mark Iverson’s latest works from 6-9pm at La Conner’s Café Culture, 109 E. Commercial St. The exhibit will be on display through Aug. 24. For more info: (360) 421-0985. FIREHOUSE ART: Pamela Willett’s “Photos of Nepal” are on display through Aug. 31 at the Firehouse Performing Arts Center, 1314 Harris Ave. For more info: 676-5387. HANDPRINT ARTS: See works from more than 50 local artists at Handprint Arts, 1611 N. State St. For more info: 647-9087 or handprintarts.org. INSIGHTS GALLERY: New paintings by Anne Schreivogl can be seen through Aug. 31 at Insights Gallery in Anacortes. For more info: (360) 5888044 or insightsgallery.com. LYNDEN PIONEER MUSEUM: “Putting Old Dobbin Out to Pasture,” an exhibit featuring buggies, antique cars and photos, shows through April 2007 at the Lynden Pioneer Museum, 217 Front St. Entry is $3-$5. For more info: 354-3675. LUCIA DOUGLAS: “Pacific Northwest Printmakers in Florence” shows through Sept. 9 at Lucia Douglas Gallery, 1415 13th St. Heidi Epstein, Thomas Wood, Tom Sherwood, Gerald Purdy, Dana Mattson, and Courtney Lang are among the contributing artists. For more info: 733-5361 or luciadouglas.com. MINDPORT GALLERY: View paintings by Alan Weydert, Kathleen Harris, and Dawn Kimberling at the “Three Views” exhibit through Aug. 20 at Mindport Gallery, 210 W. Holly St. For more info: 647-5614 or mindport.org. MoNA: “All in the Painted View” presents the Northwest landscape through the eyes of various artists through Oct. 8 at La Conner’s Museum of Northwest Art, 121 S. First St. The Benaroya Glass Gallery will also feature a tribute to legendary artist Italo Scanga. For more info: (360) 466-4446. MOUNT BAKERY: Works by Robert Finnigan can be seen through August at the Mount Bakery, 308 W. Champion St. For more info: 715-1772. VIKING UNION: Haida and Apache artist Andrew Morrison’s “Beyond Words” can be seen through Aug. 18 at WWU’s Viking Union Gallery. For more info: 650-6534 or onestaa.com. WHATCOM MUSEUM: “Contrasting Objectives: Fifteen Pacific Northwest Photographers” and “Bert Huntoon and the Mount Baker Lodge” are currently showing at the Whatcom Museum of History & Art, 121 Prospect St. For more info: 676-6981 or whatcommuseum.org. OPENINGS/EVENTS Aug. 16 - Aug. 20 FARM FOR LIFE: Peruse the “Farming for Life” agricultural photo display from 10am-10pm today through Aug. 20 at Lynden’s Northwest Washington Fairgrounds as part of the NW Washington Fair. For more info: (360) 354-1337 or wcfarmfriends.com. Thurs., Aug. 17 PROJECT LABYRINTH: If you’re interested in creating a permanent outdoor labyrinth, meet with Project Labyrinth at 6:30 pm to discuss the particulars at Fairhaven Park’s upper level. For more info: 715-1244. Fri., Aug. 18 PERSNICKITY OPENING: Drop by the grand opening of Persnickity Designs Studio Boutique from 5-9pm at 114 W. Magnolia St. For more info: 2010107 or persnickitydesign.com. Sat., Aug. 19 SUDDEN VALLEY ARTS: Attend the Sudden Valley Arts Group Show and Sale from 10am-4pm at Le Rendez-Vous Gallery, 202 E. Holly St. Fiber art, clothing, jewelry, photography and more will be available for purchase. For more info: 527-1137. Sun., Aug. 20 PARK WALK: Marilyn Boysen leads a Big Rock Park docent walk focusing on the permanent sculptures at the venue at 2pm at Big Rock Garden Park, 2900 Sylvan St. Entry is free. For more info: 676-6985. Tues., Aug. 22 FRENCH SHOTS: John Lieberherr presents “Snapshots from France” at 12:30pm at the Whatcom Museum of History & Art, 121 Prospect St. The event is free, and you can bring your lunch along. For more info: 676-6981. theater dance profiles ON STAGE By Amy Kepferle Aug. 16 - Aug. 18 A Midsummer Night’s Ballet Fairies, magic and mistaken identity Forget everything you thought you knew about William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. When Northwest Ballet Theatre presents the Bard’s classic story of mistaken identity and magical hijinks in the forest, you won’t have to interpret the dialogue between Hippolyta, queen of the Amazons, and Oberon, king of the fairies. Instead, the timeless tale of romance and comedy will be explained through dance. “The story will be told by movement set to music,” furthers John Bishop, NW Ballet’s Artistic Director. “There’s no dialogue, but it’s pretty easy to understand through the choreography. People have actually told me they enjoy the ballet version of it more because it’s easier to follow the drama through the dancers.” Bishop says this is the third year the eight-year-old company— which also has studios at its original base in Anacortes—will be highlighting the whimsical play, but notes it’s the first since he took over the roomy space at Bellingham’s Pacific Dance Company following the death of PDC’s Eleise Kerman. Dancers of varying ages from Whatcom and Skagit counties who have taken part in Bishop’s six-week Northwest Ballet School summer dance intensive will make up the bulk of the Midsummer cast, with more seasoned dancers at the helm. Bishop will also be in on the fun when he takes on the role of the aforementioned Oberon. He says last summer they had an accomplished dancer from Russia playing the part of the mischievous fairy king, but he couldn’t make it this year. “I’ll do it,” says the 48-year-old Bishop, who started his dancing career at the age of 16 with the Milwaukee Ballet. “It will likely be my last one…I keep saying that.” Because of the looser nature of A Midsummer Night’s Dream CAT ON A ROOF: Tennessee Williams’ Cat on a Hot Tin Roof finishes its run at 7:30pm Aug. 16 and 18 at WWU’s Underground Theater as part of Summer Stock. Tickets are $6-$10. For more info: 650-6146. Aug. 16 - Aug. 20 HAMLET: Shakespeare Northwest performs the dramatic Hamlet at 8pm Aug. 16, 17 and 19 and at 2pm Aug. 20 at Mount Vernon’s Edgewater Park. Tickets are $12. For more info: (877) 7546284 or shakesnw.org. Thurs., Aug.17 atre, 918 M Ave. Tickets are $14. For more info: (360) 293-6829 or acttheatre.com. Aug. 18 - Aug. 19 THEATRESPORTS SUPREME: Upfront Theatresports Championships kick off this weekend with 7:30pm and 9:30pm shows at the Upfront Theatre, 1208 Bay St. Championships continue through Aug. 26. Tickets are $8-$10. For more info: 733-8855 or theupfront.com. Aug. 18 - Aug. 20 BARD COMEDY: Shakespeare Northwest stages The Comedy of Errors at 8pm Aug. 18 and 20 and 2pm Aug. 19 at Mount Vernon’s Edgewater Park. Tickets are $12. For more info: (877) 754-6284 or shakesnw.org. Sun., Aug. 20 PUPPET SHOW: Seattle’s Carter Family Marionettes bring their puppet-friendly version of Cinderella to the stage at 2pm at the Whatcom Museum, 121 Prospect St. Entry is $3-$4. For more info: 676-6981 or whatcommusuem.org. Mon., Aug. 21 AUDITIONS: Adults, teens and kids are invited to audition for the Barn Theatre’s musical version of Heidi at 7pm at the Dance Barn, gate 2, Sudden Valley. For more info: 671-5970. DANCE Thurs., Aug. 17 LATIN NIGHT: DJ LucyBella heads the new Coco Loco Latin Night at 9pm at Wild Buffalo, 208 W. Holly St. Salsa, merengue and reggaeton dancing will be part of the package. Entry is free. For more info: 752-0848 or wildbuffalo.net. Fri., Aug. 18 DANCE PARTY: Join along in a Public Dance Party from 9-11pm at U & Me Dance, 1027 N. Forest St. Entry is $5-$10. For more info: 676-0292 or uandmedance.com. Sat., Aug. 19 LATIN NIGHT: All are welcome at tonight’s “South of the Border” Latin Night from 9-11pm at Melody Hall, 4071 Home Rd. Arrive at 8pm for Rhumba lessons. Entry is $7. For more info: 734-5676. GOOD, BAD & UGLY: Sketch comedy, stand-up and improv can be experienced at The Good, the Bad & the Ugly at 8pm every Thursday at the Upfront Theatre, 1208 Bay St. Entry is a paltry $5. For more info: 733-8855 or theupfront.com. AWAKEN YOUR CREATIVITY: Sheila Goldsmith leads a free introductory improv class titled “Awakening Your Creativity” at 7pm at Mindport Exhibits, 210 W. Holly St. For more info and to register: 756-0756. Aug. 17 - Aug. 19 CODY CONTINUED: The Cody Rivers show has added on another weekend of showings of Volume #10 at 8pm at iDiOM Theater, 1418 Cornwall Ave. Tickets are $5 Thursdays, $10 otherwise. Reservations are recommended. For more info: 201-5464 or idiomtheater.com SOUND OF MUSIC: Rodgers and Hammerstein’s version of The Sound of Music shows as part of WWU’s Summer Stock season at 7:30pm Aug. 17 and 19 at the Performing Arts Center. Tickets are $8-$10. For more info: 650-6146. OPEN HOUSE: New playwright Tom Donahoe’s comedic Open House shows at 7:30pm Thurs. and 8pm Fri.-Sat. at the Anacortes Community The- A naughty nun finds love with a stern captain when the Summer Stock version of The Sound of Music finishes its run Aug. 17 and 19 at the Performing Arts Center | p.15 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 ON Stage STAGE 15 stage compared to other full-length ballets, Bishop says there’s wiggle room to upgrade and tweak things as they plan the ballet each summer. He adds that the choreography isn’t set in stone, and says sometimes it’s the youngest dancers who grab the limelight. “Little fairies can steal the show,” Bishop laughs. “They charm the audience. But there’s also a lot of drama, romance and spells being cast. When those things come together, it’s very humorous.” But lest you think the one-time showing of NBT’s seasonal production is simply a summer recital ensuring everybody gets a slice of stage time, think again. “We have some very unique and talented people doing the lead roles,” Bishop emphasizes. “They’re as good if not better than a lot of the people I worked with in my professional career. At this time in their lives, they’re doing it because they love it. If you’ve been in a company for a number of years, you don’t see that freshness and joy to just be out there on stage, making people happy. “It’s not a recital. It’s a different thing. You’ll come away with the feeling you’ve seen a professional production.” | p.16 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music MUSIC 16-17 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 Rumor Has It music previews reviews By Carey Ross Tom Freund Someone you should get to know Tom Freund, when he’s not making albums and touring, likes to spend his spare time collaborating with Ben Harper, jamming with Graham Parker, and singing duets with Victoria Williams. When it comes time for him to work on his own musical projects, he enlists the likes of Ben Peeler (The Wallflowers), Michael Jerome (Blind Boys of Alabama), and WHO: Tom Freund X’s D.J. Bonebrake to help him out. WHEN: 9pm, Sat. The question then becomes: If Freund is so well known Aug. 19 among musicians, how come you’ve never heard of him? WHERE: Green The answer seems to be, simply, that Freund is a song- Frog Café Acoustic writer’s songwriter. Like many amazing but virtually un- Tavern, 902 N. known songwriters, Freund’s work is often namechecked by State St. other, more famous, musicians—Brit rocker Graham Parker MORE INFO: called Freund one of the two “best singer/songwriters op- tomfreund.com erating today”—but, as far as the mainstream public is concerned, Freund is not exactly front-and-center on most people’s radar. Freund, a New York City native, first began brushing with fame in 1992, when he hooked up with the then-unknown Ben Harper in Live Harper’s hometown of Claremont, Calif. The two hit it off, both musically and otherwise, and went on to record the vinyl-only, limited-run album Pleasure and Pain together. Almost immediately thereafter, Harper signed with Virgin Records and has gone on to fame, fortune and millions of albums sold. These days, although Freund and Harper still hook up and jam out, their circumstances have changed a bit, with copies of Pleasure and Pain selling for more than $500 each—a tidy sum, even if collectors aren’t buying it specifically to hear Freund’s contribution. It would be unwise, however, to judge Freund by his more famous collaborators. Far from sounding like a Ben Harper knockoff, Freund has fashioned and honed a style all his own. Whereas Harper envelops you in the warm blanket of his soulful voice, Freund’s vocals are made of slightly rougher stuff. His gravelly, whiskey-soaked voice is the sound of pure Americana, and on each of his three critically acclaimed full-length albums, it becomes clear that this is a man more comfortable living life on the back roads than in the fast lane. That said, Freund’s musical stylings can be a bit tough to pin down. Sure, his voice is reminiscent of that other, more well known Tom, Tom Waits, and he shares a similar knack for innovative arrangements with the leg- WHILE YOU’RE casting about for something to do this weekend, you should consider rocking out for a good cause. The cause in question: a benefit for Dave Byrum, father of local musician Jamie Byrum, who you may recognize from his stints in Dolphin and Black Breath. Dave is a musician in his own right, along with being an allages advocate, By Carey Ross talented artist and all-around good guy. Apparently, Dave also has a bit of a dicey ticker, as he found out recently after suffering a heart attack. He’s recovering, but the whole health debacle has left him with some seriously sizey medical bills. Dave, like most of us who earn a living in this town doing something we find rewarding, is without health insurance. Clearly he needs our help. Fortunately, he had the good luck to give birth to Jamie, who has sprung into action, organizing a benefit to take place Sat. Aug. 19 at the Nightlight Lounge. Both of Jamie’s bands—Black Breath and the reunited Dolphin—will play the show, as will the Dandelion Junk Queens, Malakai, and Andrew Jackson Jihad. The benefit kicks off at 8pm with food catered by Cap Hansen’s and the music starts at 10pm. Suggested donation is $7—but you’d pay that anyway just to see Dolphin again, right? Speaking of things you’re going to be only too willing to pay for, Merchbot, the website that brought you meat wristbands and broccoli T-shirts, is opening a downtown store soon. The mastermind behind all this kooky kitsch is, as many of you are aware, Django Bohren of the more locally well-known Seatthole Shirts. Django has long been a supporter of all things having to do with local music, so I expect to see the Bellingham music community well represented among Merch-bot’s customer base. If you have been paying attention the past week, you probably already know this piece of not-so-breaking news, but it’s exciting enough that it bears repeating: hip-hop group Blackalicious will pay the Nightlight Lounge a visit later this month. The last-minute show takes place Aug. 27 and is one of only two North American dates the group will play this summer. Tickets are on sale at ticketweb.com as we speak. I don’t have to tell you to buy them early because this show will surely sell the hell out. Skagit Valley Casino Resort, 5984 N. Darrk Lane. Tickets are $45. For more info: (877) 275-2448. ESKALATORS: Ska fusion by the Eskalators can be heard at a free concert from 4-7pm at the Fairhaven Village Green. For more info: 5922413. CELTIC FUSION: Hear Celtic and blues fusion when Anna Schaad performs at 3:30pm at Big Rock Garden Park, 2900 Sylvan St. Entry is free. For more info: 676-6985. Merle Haggard Our coffee monkeys are trained. 300 W. Champion Street, Downtown 738-DROP MUSIC MISCELLANY Wed., Aug. 16 XXXUIFTQJDFIVUDPN SUMMER SOUNDS: Latin Expression and Yambique will provide the tunes at the final Downtown Sounds Summer Alley Concert of the season from 5:30-9pm in the alley between Mindport and Wild Buffalo. For more info: 527-8710. FESTIVAL OFFERING: Bellingham Festival of Music’s Chamber Players perform at 7:30pm at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, 2117 Walnut St. Tickets are $22-$25. For more info: 734-6080 or mountbakertheatre.com. /PX4FSWJOH 5FB'SBQQFT Thurs., Aug. 17 DUKE OF UKE: See 98-year-old ukulele legend Bill Tapia—the “Duke of Uke”—at 7pm at Mount Vernon’s Lincoln Theatre, 712 S. First St. Tickets are $18. For more info: (877) 754-6284 or lincolntheatre.org. GYPSY LOU: British rock by the Gypsy Lou Band can be heard at a free concert from 6-8pm at Elizabeth Park. For more info: 739-3660. Fri., Aug. 18 MOTHER GOOSE: Nancy Stewart sings Mother Goose songs and more at noon on the Bellingham Public Library’s lawn, 210 Central Ave. Entry is free. For more info: 676-6985. Sat., Aug. 19 SLUGS & STRINGS: The Banana Slug String Band presents a concert and community event focusing on the environment—specifically Lake Whatcom—at 7pm at Bloedel Donovan Park, 2214 Electric Ave. Entry is free. For more info: 676-6961. BYRUM BENEFIT: Black Breath, Dolphin, Malakai, Dandelion Junk Queens, and Andrew Jackson Jihad perform to help all-ages music supporter Dave Byrum pay medical bills starting at 8pm at the Nightlight Lounge, 211 E. Chestnut St. Suggested donation for the benefit is $7. For more info: 527-1531 or nightlightlounge.com. FESTIVAL FAREWELL: The Festival of Music ends its run with the Festival Orchestra performing the overture to The Barber of Seville at 7:30pm at the Performing Arts Center. Tickets are $22-$25. For more info: 734-6080 or bellinghamfestival.org. Sun., Aug. 20 VICKI CARR: Grammy Award-winning singer Vicki Carr performs at 4pm and 7pm at Bow’s Johnny Cash is often considered country music’s biggest outlaw. But, the truth is, when it comes hard living, Cash looks like a mildly rebellious schoolboy when compared with country’s true badass, Merle Haggard. While Cash was performing his now-legendary concert at San Quentin State Prison, Haggard was watching him play—not as another performer, but as an inmate of the maximum-security prison, where he ran a gambling racket and rudimentary brewery from his cell. But committing a string of semi-serious crimes does not a musical legend make. The other part of Haggard’s story has to do with his legacy as a country music pioneer. Haggard, eschewing the silky-smooth variety of country popular at the time, instead drew from the hardcore honky tonk of his youth, almost single-handedly ushering in the era of amplified country. However, it should be noted the musician also has four decades worth of undeniably solid—and sometimes controversial—songwriting under his belt. See Haggard perform such hits as “Mama Tried” and “Okie from Musgokee” at 8pm Aug. 18 at the Northwest Washington Fair in Lynden (I’m sure I don’t need to point out the humor in country’s biggest outlaw playing in Whatcom County’s most law-abiding locale). Tickets are $10-$20 and, I’m told, a select few are still available. For more info: nwwafair.com. –Carey Ross 5SZPOFPGPVSUFBTIPU PSJDFEBUPVSUFBCBS 0WFSUFBT 0WFSTQJDFTIFSCT BOETQJDFCMFOET # PGGZPVSFOUJSF QVSDIBTF XJUIDPVQPOPOMZ .PO4BU]4VO$MPTFE 8,FMMPHH3E#FMMJOHIBN | p.17 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music MUSIC 16-17 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 endary musician. Lyrically speaking, on the surface, Freund’s songs seem simple enough. However, upon further listening, it becomes clear that this is a man, who chooses his words carefully, crafting layered songs rich in meaning. Although Freund toils in relative obscurity, there is one arena in which he has made his mark. During a time when music television plays everything but music, primetime dramas like The O.C. and Veronica Mars are the new proving grounds for songs by up-and-coming musicians. Freund’s songs have been featured on such shows as One Tree Hill and Las Vegas, and have appeared on several movie soundtracks. So, maybe you have heard the music of Tom Freund, but you just don’t know it. VENUE 18-19 | p.18 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 HAPPY HOUR wed august 16 Eve Kerber’s Goin’ to Africa Party thurs august 17 Prozac Mountain Boys fri august 18 Finding James & Soul Wagon sat august 19 Tom Freund sun august 20 OPEN JAM NITE tues August 22 Jean Mann 902 State St. #104 11 NW Beers on Tap | Free Peanuts We sell beer to go! 4 -6 PM WEEKDAYS Born here, raised here, live here... BELLINGHAM’S LOCAL TAVERN SHOWS START AT 9:30 PM, 21+ Boundary Bay Brewery Chiribin’s 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 WEDNESDAY THURSDAY Clinton Fearon, Yogoman Burning Band Robert Blake (early), Sideways (late) Jam Night/Open Mic The Farewell, The Moondoggies Fairhaven Pub & Martini Bar No-Fi Soul Rebellion, The Cops, Tall Birds Black Eyes and Neckties /Aug. 19/ Fantasia Commodore Ballroom Downtown Sounds FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY The Contra, Strait A Students Byron Lee and the Dragonaires Wolf Parade The Retros Comedy MONDAY TUESDAY Lucas Hicks and Friends Scot Ranney’s Jazz Jam Karaoke w/Poops The Jim Beam Medicine Show Open Mic w/Chuck D feat. Krista Stahl College Night Latin Expression, Yambique Karaoke Spaceband Fantasia Espresso & Tea Full Frontal Assault, Black Eyes and Neckties, Scatha Poetry Night Luna Tart Photo by Hollie Huthman Green Frog Cafe Acoustic Tavern Main Street Bar & Grill Nightlight Lounge Holmes Brothers Rockfish Grill Rogue Hero The Royal Rumors Cabaret Finding James Tom Freund Open Mic w/Chuck D feat. Street Named James Tony and the Tigers Tony and the Tigers Karaoke Karaoke Black Breath, Dolphin, Malaki, Dandelion Junk Queens, Andrew Jackson Jihad Don Caballero, Zombi Full Frontal Assault, The Wastelanders, Sweaty Sweaters ’80s Night Pacific Northwest Ambient Music Night Poppe’s Lounge Richard’s on Richards Prozac Mountain Boys Jean Mann Dandelion Junk Queens / Aug. 19 / Nightlight Lounge Manchester Manchester Homestyle Firkin Fridays Christopher Gross Ensemble Plain to Paris, Amish Warfare The All Nighters, Lone Bird Legal Limit, Brunette Sweat, Neon Nights Live Jazz Karaoke w/DJ Komodore Silver Mt. Zion ‘80s Night DJ Flex, DJ Izzy B Ladies Night Party Night w/DJ Flex Betty Desire Show w/DJ Velveteen Bump w/DJ Dougee Full Out w/DJ Scooter and DJ Q-bnza Bang w/DJ Marcus Purnell Jimmy Wright Band Jimmy Wright Band Jimmy Wright Band The Hitmen The Hitmen Vicki Carr (Pacific Showroom) Karen Fitzgerald Paul Sorensen & David Carlson Tritones Silver Reef Casino Skagit Valley Casino Resort Skylark’s Gadjo Gypsies Stuart’s at the Market Spoken Word Wednesdays The Wild Buffalo Acoustic Oasis Open Mic feat. 2 x 4 Marimba Mondays w/Marcus Casey Conner Happy Hour w/Alfredo Barranco and Ed Solem (early) DJ Lucy Bella (late) Bump Kitchen Back Beat Revival Weekly Blues Invitational Jam feat. Gypsy Lou Szeptvolgi Archer Ale House 1212 10th St.• 647-7002 | Bay Street Coffeehouse 1302 Bay St.• 734-3868 | Boundary Bay Brewing Co. 1107 Railroad Ave • 647-5593 | Commodore Ballroom 868 Granville St., Vancouver • (604) 739-4550 | Department of Safety 1011 12th St. Anacortes • (360) 293-8361 | Fairhaven Pub & Martini Bar 1114 Harris Ave. • 671-6745 | Main Street Bar & Grill 2004 Main St., Ferndale • 384-2982 | Nightlight Lounge 211 E. Chestnut St • 527-1531 | Pickford Dream Space 1318 Bay St. | Poppe’s Bistro & Lounge 714 Lakeway Dr. • 671-1011 | Richard’s on Richards 1036 Richards St. Vancouver • (604) 687-6794 | Rockfish Grill 320 Commercial Ave. Anacortes • (360) 588-1720 | The Rogue Hero 1313 N. State St. • 756-0069 | The Royal 208 E. Holly St. • 738-3701 | Rumors Cabaret 1119 Railroad Ave. • 671-1849 | Silver Reef Casino 4876 Haxton Way, Ferndale • 383-0777 | Skagit Valley Casino Resort 5984 N Darrk Ln, Bow • (360) 724-7777 | Skylark’s Hidden Cafe 1300 11th St. • 715-3642 | Stanwood Hotel Tavern 26926 102nd Ave. NW • (360) 629-2888 | State Street Depot 1327 N State St. • 647-9670 | .Wild Buffalo 208 W. Holly St. • www.wildbuffalo.net | To get your live music listings included in this esteemed newsprint, send pertinent info to [email protected]. Deadlines are always at 5 pm Friday. | p.19 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 VENUE 18-19 See below for venue addresses and phone numbers | p.20 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film FILM 20-22 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 DVD: Inside Man film reviews film times Reviewed by Rob Thomas Strangers with Candy The best Afterschool Special ever If Steve Martin was right, and “comedy is not pretty,” then Amy Sedaris’ Jerri Blank must be the funniest character on the planet. Sedaris, a perfectly pleasant-looking woman in real life, transforms herself into a lipstick-smeared grotesque to play Jerri, a wigged-out ex-con, ex-junkie and ex-prostitute who believes that, at age 47, it’s time for a do-over. With her ill-fitting ‘80s refugee clothes, jutting overbite and Big Boy hair swoop, Jerri is like all teenagers’ worst nightmare about how they’ll look in 30 years. The core joke of the subversive and very funny Strangers With Candy, the film version of the Comedy Central series, is that Jerri is completely and utterly oblivious to the heebie-jeebies she inspires in everyone around her and her own inability to “reinvent” herself. “Can people really change?” her opening narration asks rhetorically, as we see fl ashbacks of Jerri knifing a fellow prison inmate. “Yup,” she offhandedly answers. I guess that settles that. The movie serves as sort of a prequel to the series, introducing us to Jerri as she’s released from prison and on her way home. She finds out that her mother is dead, and her father, traumatized by his wife’s death and Jerri’s general failure as a human being, has lapsed into a coma for the last few years. The one thing that might snap him out of it, the family doctor (Ian Holm) tells her, is if she can somehow redeem herself. For Jerri, that means rewinding the clock to high school, before she dropped out and everything went bad. But there’s nothing more dangerous than good intentions, and Jerri moves through high school like a mascara-covered wrecking ball, angering her teachers and making the fresh-faced young students uncomfortable with racial slurs and unwelcome sexual come-ons. The film’s thin plot follows the arc of an ABC “Afterschool Special,” as Jerri must make several moral decisions as she and her new friends try to win the school science fair. She makes the wrong choice every single time, selling out her pals and ruining the project, and then somehow salvaging a “life lesson” from the wreckage. The screenplay, by Sedaris with Stephen Colbert and Paul Dinello, is so clever and dark that some of the lines just sandbag you with the depth of their political incorrectness. Colbert is fantastic as the self-absorbed school science teacher, a born-again Christian who refers to the Bible as a “science text.” But the movie belongs to the fearless Sedaris for a crazed, utterly committed performance. Sedaris is at that level of fame where she’s probably getting offers to play things like Diane Lane’s wisecracking best friend in the romantic comedy of the month. It’s gratifying to see she’s dodging those vanilla roles and pursuing her own, weird path. What makes Spike Lee’s thriller so compelling? Aside from its stellar cast (Denzel Washington, Clive Owen, and Jodie Foster all shine) and taut script, the reason Inside Man works so well is because Lee manages to avoid veering off into “Spike Lee Joint” territory. While Lee sprinkles in some familiar themes (racial profiling, gangsta rap culture) and relies on familiar camera techniques, for the most part, Inside Man stays true to its heist flick roots, letting the plot’s myriad twists and turns hold the audience’s attention, rather than relying on pontification or gimmickry. As the story of “the perfect crime” winds its way to a thrilling climax, Lee allows the tension to build through an ingenious combination of dialogue, score and camerawork, keeping his film visually and aurally stimulating without overpowering the material. Washington and Owen dive headfirst into their respective roles as cop and robber, and Foster injects an icy sensuality into her briskly paced scenes. While not as moving as Do the Right Thing or Get on the Bus, nor as grand as Malcom X, Inside Man provides further proof that Spike Lee is one of the truly great American filmmakers. Special features include commentary by Lee and a making-of featurette. (Movie +++++) Rated R • 2 hrs. 9 min. (Universal) –Reviewed by Kasey Anderson DVD: Don’t Come Knocking Those who subscribe to the belief that a whole is greater than the sum of its parts probably haven’t seen Wim Wenders’ vapid, meandering rumination on parenthood and mortality. How Wenders managed to assemble a cast that includes Sam Shephard, Jessica Lange, and Tim Roth and still churn out such drivel is mind-boggling. The film follows Howard Spence (Shephard), a past-his-prime actor, who splits from the set of his latest Hollywood Western in search of his estranged son and, of course, his own identity. Think Jim Jarmusch’s Broken Flowers without any of the humor, warmth or intelligence. Instead of any meaningful interaction, we get Spence’s reprobate son plucking a guitar and singing an insipid song about his long-lost dad (“Who is Howard? / Where is Howard?”). Shephard penned the screenplay, so he has only himself to blame for the atrocious dialogue and razor-thin character development. Wenders doesn’t help matters, using film-school camera tricks to try and liven up a film that was dead on arrival. For all of his soul-searching and realization, there’s no sympathy to Howard (or, for that matter, any character in the film) and, as such, absolutely no reason to care one whit about who or where Howard is, was or will ever be. The special features, like the film’s redeeming moments, are few and far between. (Movie +) Unrated • 1 hr. 51 min. (Sony) –Reviewed by Kasey Anderson film times | film By Rachel Leibrock Snakes on a Plane Believe the hype? It started off as just another sure-to-be-bad B-movie. So how did Snakes on a Plane turn into the most anticipated film of the summer? You can thank a cheeky movie title, the blogosphere and, of course, hundreds of snakes for the season’s biggest pop culture phenomenon. Snakes on a Plane, is a movie about—well, the title says it all: Snakes. On. A. Plane. Directed by David Ellis (Cellular) and starring Samuel L. Jackson, it’s the story of an FBI agent (Jackson) transporting an important witness from Hawaii to Los Angelas. The mobster the witness will implicate tries to prevent his testimony by loading cartons of poisonous snakes onto the plane and arranging for them to open in mid-flight over the Pacific. Hissing, biting and screaming ensue. Sounds like simple B-movie fare. But the hype surrounding Snakes on a Plane escalated into a full-scale rattle before the film even finished shooting. As such, some experts say, it could forever change the ways movies are made and marketed. The urban legend goes something like this: Jackson signed on to do Snakes at least in part because he liked the film’s campy title. He balked when the studio tried to change the title to a yawn-inducing Pacific Air 121. Then interest was sparked among movie buffs in August 2005 after screenwriter Josh Friedman (War of the Worlds) used his blog to praise the film. Friedman wrote: “It’s a concept, it’s a poster and a logline and whatever else you need it to be.” It was just a matter of megabytes before Internet dwellers caught on and SoaP (as it’s commonly referred to in the blogosphere) became the hot topic on numerous forums and blogs. And, in an unprecedented case of life imitating the Internet, the film’s studio, New Line Cinema, responded to fan requests by allowing Ellis to amp the CO-WRITTEN BY AND STARRING STEPHEN COLBERT (THE COLBERT REPORT) THE COMEDY SMASH movie’s rating from PG-13 to R. Now your SoaP dollar gets you more violence, more gore and more swearing—including Jackson’s already-infamous declaration, “I’ve had it with these motherfkin snakes on this motherfkin plane.” Now, like The Blair Witch Project before it, Snakes on a Plane is considered revolutionary for the way it has used the Internet. But unlike that 1999 film, which garnered buzz through a Web campaign that tried to get viewers to believe that the horror story it told was true, the Snakes push came via a mostly fan-driven approach. In this era of YouTube and incessant e-mail forwards, Snakes on a Plane may be the first mainstream movie to truly capitalize on the Web’s viral nature. And while the Snakes buzz may be impossible to duplicate in another film, this example of viral marketing could very well change the very nature of filmmaking. The multi-million dollar question, of course, is: Will Snakes on a Plane’s Internet success translate into big real-world dollars? Only time—and box office returns— will tell. Drivers Wanted. Fri-Thr, Aug 18-24 @ 4:40 & 9:15 PM USA • 2006 • 97 min • In English • Rated R Sat-Sun, Aug 19-20 @ 2:30 PM HELD OVER! DON’T MISS IT! USA • 2005 • 78 min • In English • Unrated FINAL WEEK WITH EVENING SHOWS! Fri-Thr, Aug 18-24 @ 7 PM USA • 2006 • 100 min • In English • Rated PG Little Miss Sunshine starts August 25. Don’t miss the indie hit of the summer! OUR CIRCULATION KEEPS GROWING! Earn $$ working just a few hours each week delivering the area’s most popular newsweekly. Must have a vehicle and proof of insurance. Send application to CW @ POB 2833 Bellingham, WA 98227-2833 or online at cascadiaweekly.com | p.21 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film FILM 20-22 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 reviews | p.22 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film FILM 20-22 20-22 | Classifieds 23-27 Film Times STARTING FRIDAY By Carey Ross Accepted: A high school slacker can’t get into college, so he invents his own. Other slackers enroll. Slacker shenanigans take place. + (PG-13 • 1 hr. 30 min.) Sunset Square 12:35 | 2:50 | 5:05 | 7:15 | 9:25 An Inconvenient Truth: Former Vice President Al Gore addresses the “myth” of global warming using an army of frightening facts and sobering statistics. ++++ (PG • 1 hr. 35 min.) Pickford 7:00 Barnyard: The Original Party Animals: More animated animal antics, this time centering around Otis, a “carefree party cow,” who is thrust out of the party scene and forced to become the leader of the pack. +++ (PG • 1 hr. 23 min.) Sunset Square 12:30 | 2:45 | 4:55 | 7:20 | 9:30 Take Our Reader Survey Please take a moment to complete the mail-in reader response card in this issue, or go online at cascadiaweekly.com/survey/ Your responses will help us tailor future content to match reader interests. And yes, your responses also help us generate key data our advertisers require to make informed marketing decisions... and their decisions help keep your Weekly FREE! Fill out the form and we’ll enter your name* into a special prize drawing: FIRST PRIZE: One romatic night at the Chrysalis Inn and Spa in a deluxe bay view room with Swedish massage for two. SECOND PRIZE: $100 gift certificate at Boundary Bay Brewery and Bistro. THIRD PRIZE: $50 gift certificate at Fairhaven Runners. OTHER PRIZES: Free passes to the Pickford Cinema while supplies last. Prizes are our gift to you for helping us collect this important information. * Your privacy is very important. Data gathered by Applied Rearch Northwest is confidential. We collect your name and contact information for prize award purposes only. Commune: A documentary about 40 years in the life of the Black Bear Commune, featuring revealing archival footage combined with insightful present-day interviews. +++ (Unrated • 1 hr. 18 min.) Pickford Cinema Sat. & Sun. @ 2:30 The Descent: A group of attractive 20something women descends into a cave and are killed, one by one, with escalating gore by bloodthirsty cave-dwellers. +++ (R • 1 hr. 33 min.) Sunset Square 12:15 | 2:35 | 5:00 | 7:30 | 10:00 John Tucker Must Die: Three high school girls all find out they share the same boyfriend and, instead of turning on each other, they decide to ruin his life. + (PG-13 • 1 hr. 27 min.) Sunset Square 4:00 | 10:10 Material Girls: The ladies Duff, Hilary and Haylie, star as sibs in this riches-to-ragsto-riches comedy about two cosmetics heiresses who must save the family company after scandal leaves it teetering on the brink of collapse. ++ (PG • 1 hr. 37 min.) Sunset Square 12:40 | 3:00 | 5:15 | 7:35 | 9:55 Miami Vice: Crockett and Tubbs have traded their trademark pastel garb for black on black—always good in the Miami heat—but the lifestyle is still just as decadent and the criminals as colorful in Michael Mann’s big-screen adaptation of his small-screen trendsetter. +++ (R • 2 hrs. 12 min.) Sunset Square 1:00 | 7:05 Monster House: Animated flick about three kids who realize that the house down the street is haunted—and angry enough to want to eat everyone in sight. They vow to destroy it before it destroys the neighborhood. ++ (PG • 1 hr. 31 min.) Bellis Fair 12:30 | 2:55 | 5:20 Oliver!: Classic 1968 musical about a plucky orphan who runs away from the orphanage and hooks up a with a group of boys trained to be pickpockets by an elderly mentor. ++++ (G • 2 hrs. 33 min.) Bellingham Public Library Sat. @ dusk Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest: Johnny Depp reprises his role as troublemaking buccaneer Jack Sparrow. Expect swashbuckling aplenty when Davy Jones shows up to lay claim to Sparrow’s soul. +++ (PG-13 • 2 hrs. 25 min.) Sehome 12:15 | 3:30 | 6:55 | 10:15 Pulse: Kristen Bell takes a break from solving whodunits on Veronica Mars to take on a big-screen mystery about a mysterious force that transmits itself to unsuspecting college students via e-mail. +++ (PG-13 • 1 hr. 30 min.) Sunset Square 12:20 | 2:30 | 4:45 | 7:10 | 9:35 Sideways: I don’t mind saying that overlooking Paul Giamatti for a Best Actor Oscar nomination for his portrayal of Miles, a wine-lover on a road trip in the midst of a midlife crisis, was a shocking crime, even for the generally clueless Academy. ++ +++ (R • 2 hrs. 3 min.) Boundary Bay Beer Garden Thurs. @ dusk Snakes on a Plane: See review on previous page. ++ (R • 1 hr. 46 min.) Bellis Fair 1:45 | 2:20 | 4:20 | 4:55 | 7:00 | 7:30 | 9:35 | 10:05 Step Up: A boy with mildly criminal tendencies and a penchant for dancing meets a ballerina in need of a partner. + (PG-13 • 1 hr. 38 min.) Bellis Fair 1:50 | 4:25 | 7:10 | 9:45 Strangers with Candy: See review on previous page. +++ (R • 1 hr. 37 min.) Pickford 4:40 | 9:15 Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby: Will Ferrell turns his attention toward the comedic goldmine of NASCAR with predictably hilarious results. +++ (PG-13 • 1 hr. 50 min.) Bellis Fair 1:55 | 4:35 | 7:20 | 7:50 | 10:00 | 10:30 Whale Rider: This 2002 film gave a us a glimpse into the culture and history of New Zealand’s Maori people, and introduced us to the powerhouse acting force of Keisha Castle-Hughes. Historical folk by the Wanderers opens the show. ++++ (PG-13 • 1 hr. 41 min.) Fairhaven Village Green Sat. @ 7:15 World Trade Center: Oliver Stone puts his politics aside and makes a film about Sept. 11 that is, by all accounts, touching and inspirational. ++++ (PG-13 • 2 hrs. 5 min.) Sehome 12:00 | 12:30 | 3:15 | 3:45 | 6:40 | 7:15 | 9:45 | 10:25 Zoom: Tim Allen stars as a former superhero who is called upon to shape the future generation of superheros at a private academy for the abnormally gifted. Sort of like X-Men meets Home Improvement. ++ (PG • 1 hr. 23 min.) Bellis Fair 12:40 | 3:00 | 5:20 | 7:40 | 10:10 classifieds jobs 100 Jobs Help Wanted OFFICE ASSISTANT The Upfront Theatre is looking for a motivated, organized, upbeat individual with office, computer and customer service skills. Office Assistant will be responsible for data entry, ticket sales, receptionist duties, and project work. This is a 20-25 hour per week position Pay $8-10 DOE. Close Date: August 28th, 2006 Please submit a resume and cover letter by mail or fax to: Attn: Tim Eisner, The Upfront Theatre 1208 Bay St. Bellingham, WA 98225 FAX - (360) 733-8199 Regional Sales Rep Local Bellingham Snowboard Apparel Company is seeking a Regional Sales Rep. Must be willing and committed to traveling extensively around the Washington Region and have own dependable transportation. This is a commission-based position with added bonuses. Experience in sales and the snowboard industry is strongly recommended. This job is based on a 10% commission of sales base plus bonuses for new clients as well as gasoline compensation. This is a contract worker position. Serious enquiries only, please. Email: nakedmail@ onemountainclothing.com services 100 Jobs 000 Crossword buy sell trade 000 Crossword ADVERTISING Company needs Sales Reps. &/or Sales Managers for restaurant placed display ads. Up to 50% commission, gas/cell allowance. Quality telemarketing leads provided. Some travel. 1(800)436-4506. WELLNESS for life. Lose weight now, ask me how. Herbalife Independent Distributor. Call me for all-natural Health Products or Business Opportunity. 1(888)254-3350. 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From 1-5 Northbound take the Samish Way exit, take a left onto Samish Way, go straight through the light, just after the Park & Ride, take a right onto Ashley, take first left onto Consolidation. New complex on left. email: [email protected] Adoption Adoption: Fulltime Mom, devoted Dad, adventurous fun loving, nurturing, financially secure home awaits your precious baby. Expenses paid, Amy & Doug, 1(800)569-3081. DRIVER: Take care of your family. Join ours. Top of line equipment, consistent miles, regional and dedicated runs. 1(866)400-5658; www. SwiftTruckingJobs.com CONSTRUCTION Inspectors for Roads & Bridges. Minimum 5 years experience. Familiar with WSDOT specs and standards. Competitive pay and benefits. Email resume to frank.spears@ atkn.com 100 Jobs 200 Services $ELECTRICIAN $ top pay! Now hiring Lic. Journeyman electricians. Call today toll free 1(866)574-1881. EOE or visit us at www.wirejob.com. LOOMIX(r) Feed supplements is seeking dealers. 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It’s all at Covenant Transport! Call today: 1(866)684-2519. EOE. Business Opportunities CONSTRUCTION Estimating Assistant: Industry leading supplier needs highly organized person to create materials bids and proposals, takeoffs, and submittals. Must have a working knowledge of the construction industry. Fax resume to (425)334-0595. rentals To place an ad classifieds.cascadiaweekly.com Building Supplies By Matt Jones “Five-Letter Shuffle”—mix it up. Across Down 1 Mumbai princes 6 Track form 10 Mad scientist’s hangout 13 Deck out 14 Shows off the goods 16 Yell at some sporting events 17 ANAGRAM #1 20 Health measure, for short 21 Sitcom in the summer, sometimes 22 Fungus that can affect wheat crops 23 ANAGRAM #2 (with 47across) 25 Functional start? 26 “This tastes like ___!” 27 Sure winners 31 They rush to accidents (abbr.) 34 ANAGRAM #3 (2 wds.) 36 Eerie Edgar 37 It may be revealed by a short top 39 AFL-___ 40 ANAGRAM #4 42 Little noise at the dog park 43 Winter melons 44 Queue after B 46 Before, in poetry 47 See 23-across 52 He returns in “Clerks II” 54 Boston hockey player 55 Type of “moment” of inspiration 56 ANAGRAM #5 59 Some dashes 60 “The Wild Swans at Coole” poet 61 “___ lift?” 62 ___ Moines 63 Ash or aspen, for example 64 Tennis star Ivanisevic, whose name is also an anagram of the other 5 anagrams 1 Teacher of the Torah 2 Rhett Butler’s last words 3 “I did it for ___” 4 Comedian Barker of “The Marijuana-Logues” 5 Does drugs, maybe 6 “The Marriage of Figaro,” e.g. 7 Type of protection 8 Church agreement 9 Audiophile’s collection, briefly 10 For a while now 11 To boot 12 Salad ingredient that stains 15 High-tailed it out of there 18 Beer bash fixtures 19 “It’s down to either me ___” 24 Dorm leaders, for short 27 Segment of late-night comedy shows 28 Mansion man 29 Manicurist’s target 30 Cease and desist 31 Of historical dimensions 32 Conservative commentator Charen 33 What masseurs work on 34 Blackberries and Palm Pilots 35 Noted 54-across 37 Bulldog voiced by Robert Smigel in “Little Nicky” 38 Beer variety, for short 41 Keep an ___ the ground 42 Word that may follow “hell” 44 ___ Bar (energy food brand) 45 Home to an American airbase during the Vietnam War 47 Pissed 48 Person with a bedside manner 49 Restaurant critic, e.g. 50 Valerie Harper sitcom of the 1970s 51 Type of wrap 52 Provided the party entertainment, perhaps 53 Tip-top 54 Boo-Boo, for one 57 Kinky interest, slangily 58 Jeffrey Skilling’s position, once BAMBOO DESIGNER Flooring, 2317 sqft, sell all or part. New $5.99 sqft, sacrifice only $2.50 sqft. Project cancelled. Email if you can? [email protected]. Just moved, live locally, (206)6864774; (360)850-4311. Financial LOCAL private investor loans money on real estate equity. I loan on houses, raw land, commercial property and property development. Call Eric at 1(800)563-3005, www.fossmortgage.com. REAL ESTATE loans want to make home improvements, refinance, purchase, cash-out? Credit problems workable. Free approval. Competitive rates. 9-9, 7 days. Primewest Financial, since 1987. 1(800)676-0550. STOP foreclosure! Stop bankruptcy! Save your home! Bad credit? No problem! No minimum credit score required. Call Matt at Park Place Financial, 1(206)3690182. Mind Body Spirit Last Week’s Puzzle i5IFCFTUNBTTBHF *FWFSIBEw +/BEFBV /BUJPOBM-JD." To place an ad, visit cascadiaweekly.com Kitchen appliances Frigidare dishwasher $50, 40” GE electric range $40, and Admiral 21.6 cu ft sideby-side refrigerator with ice maker $75. 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(206)686-4774; 1(360)8504311 400 Rentals Rentals: WWU Perfect for the returning student or single Available September 1st; A smaller, clean and bright, one bedroom, one bath, one of a kind flat in a Victorian building. •The rent is 485.00 per month, single occupancy. W/S/G/Heat paid. NONSMOKERS and NO PETS, please. •Magnolia Court is located in the 500 block of East Magnolia between Garden and High streets. It is a short walk from dowtown, on the bus line, and about eight blocks to WWU. •Call or email for more information or a showing. (360)671-1992 / [email protected] I have included some exterior photos of Magnolia Court Open House: Brand New 2 and 3 Bedroom Apartments Near WWU Park & Ride Open House! New apartment complex now renting 2 and 3 bedroom units starting at $775. Open house hours are 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday and 3 p.m. - 7 p.m. Monday - Friday. Walking distance from WWU Park WWU-2 blocks to campus-brand new home Brand new, 7 bedroom house. Stainless steel appliances, washer/dryer. All rooms have internet/phone, cable. Be the first to live in this perfect college rental. Off-street parking for 7 cars. Won’t last long. First months rent and deposit of $750 moves you in. Available to view anytime. Call first 360.255.1615. Cute house, walking distance to WWU park’n ride shuttle 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Cute bungalow on cul-du-sac. Storage shed. Great back deck. Washer/Dryer/Propane heat. Small dog or cat okay. Within walking distance to WWU Park’n Ride. Off street parking for 2 cars. No smoking. Available August 1, 2006. Contact: Bonnie Ebenal at 360-319-1375. Condo Walk to WWU, 2br furnished, 9 mo lease, $650, Very quiet, n/s or pets, 380-3379 Huge 1 bedroom walk to WWU, downtown Giant 750 sq. ft. one bedroom. Old Victorian duplex on Sehome Hill with Pergo floors, a jetted tub big enough for two. Sunroom, island kitchen with gas Jenn-air stove, gas fireplace, veiw of bay and city, organic garden and much more. $800 deposit call 360.510.6225 Spacious, one-level home, close to grocery, wwu, and on busline. 5 bedroom, 2 baths. Wood burning fireplace & electric heat. Two car garage. Washer/dryer. No dishwasher. No smoking. Walk to WWU and Haggens Grocery. Spacious floor plan. Will consider cat or small dog. Available Sept. 1, 2006. Rental application available online at http://www. ebenalpropertyrentals.com/ rent_applic.htm Contact: Bonnie Ebenal at 360-3191375 or Erika Andersen at 360-941-4105. Great location! Close to grocery, bus line and WWU. 3 bedrooms, 1.5 bath. Quiet location, yet a block to many amenities. Walk to Sehome | p.23 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifi eds 23-27 CLASSIFIEDS 23-27 broadcast classifieds CLASSIFIEDS 23-27 | p.24 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifi eds 23-27 broadcast jobs 400 Rentals Haggens Grocery. On bus line to WWU (1 mile from WWU). Two car attached garage, with plenty of parking and large yard. Gas heat and gas hot water. Washer/Dryer. No smoking. Will consider cat or small dog. Available Sept. 1, 2006. Rental application available online at http://www.ebenalpropertyrentals.com/rent_applic. htm Contact: Bonnie Ebenal at 360-319-1375 or Erika Andersen at 360-941-4105. 4 bedroom house for rent on Southside 4 bedroom 1.5 bath house with huge yard, W/D, D/W. Walking distance to WWU. Call 360-820-0399. Rooms for Rent Rooms are available at a house with a hot tub and a pool table. It’s a ten minute walk to classes off red square and about the same distance to the downtown area. Rent for the rooms vary around 300. Bills last month were 35 a person for internet, cable, heat, and electricity. email: anon192736370@cascadiaweekly. com 1 Bedrm/1 Bath nr WWU Cute and clean, 1 bedroom/1 bath apartment near WWU at well maintained apt. complex. Owner pays W,S,G. Close to shopping, on bus line. Two story building w/ample parking, coin operated laundry facilities, locking mail boxes, full time maintenance, groundskeeping, office staff, and security. $425 security deposit plus $30 application fee. May contact rental agent M-F from 10:30-5:30 at 360.734.5863. Rentals: Bellingham 2 bedroom townhouse near bike/walk greenway Vaulted ceilings, 1 1/2 bath, 1 car garage and gas fireplace. Cable, water, sewer and W/D included. $1000/month and minimum 1 year lease. Sorry, no pets and no smoking. Call (425)268-8057 if interested. York District Funky & Doggy Rental September 1st-Room for rent in 4 bdroom house---$325 per month plus utilities---Large room w/ walk in closet--- Need to sign One year Lease-Washer/ Dryer, Internet, No cable---Share Fridge and one bathroom---Lots of room for Organic Gardening! :-P Two blocks from Nelson’s market--5 mins walk downtown---on WTA line to WWU (5 mins) About you; please be non smoking, non republican and easy-going... Oh, and gotta love animals cuz we have 3 dogs!! (sorry, no more pets :-(... About us; brother and sister and one other dude-two students, one restaurant slave To see place call 756-0362 and ask fer Graeme or Gilly One Room in a Beautiful, Old House One room is available in a lovely, old (i.e. built in 1892) house near the services rentals 400 Rentals intersection of Broadway and Meridian (near Wilson’s Furniture). The new lease (one year) begins September 1. We’re looking for a clean, cool individual. I am 26, work full-time, and see the house as a sanctuary. The other two roommates are 42 (a teacher in training) and 21 (a student). We like to chill with others and don’t mind others doing so respectfully, but we don’t want roommates with designs on regular parties. We share all the chores and utilities, so a sense of group obligation and financial reliability are required qualities. No dogs or cats. Other than that, just call (305-1324). We can chat and get a sense of one another. Features: --10-15 minute walk to downtown (I walk to work downtown every day). --A few blocks from Haggen’s, right next to a bus stop, near Fountain Drugs and the Asian markets. --Large yard with open space, fruit trees, flowers, and plenty of space for gardening. --Big kitchen that allows for a couple people to prepare food at the same time while others can hang out. --Washer and dryer --Lots of interior space Rent is $370. Give me a call at 305-1324 if you’re interested. Kevin De Liban 3 blocks from downtown Fairhaven I need a mature and reliable person to live in my house. This person will be responsible to make sure the other two bedrooms stay rented. One is already rented, so I have two rooms available at the moment, but that can change. The person in charge will be able to select their housematesThe three housemates will divide gas and electricity bills. I will pay water/sewer and garbage (collected every two weeks). The full rent is $875 + gas and electricity. I normally rent rooms for $350 apiece + a share of the utilites. No animals of any kind in the main house. No smoking of any kind in the house or cabin. This is a great quiet neighborhood, arguably the best in Bellingham. It’s right off the interurban trail. Contact Mike @ 469-9645199 after 10 a.m. or email him at pestolover@yahoo. com Room for Rent in 3 br Condo Room for rent in new upscale 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo. Located conveniently near two I-5 freeway enterances, this ground floor unit is inhabited by 2 college students. Unit has upgraded appliances including dishwasher & full washer/dryer, granite counter tops, radiant heat, gas fireplace, 2 patios and clubhouse access w/ exercise room. The room itself has a fullsize hanging closet, and built-in lighting. Rent include all utilities. For further information, please contact Sam @ (360) 739-2008. Small House Park at cor- To place an ad classifieds.cascadiaweekly.com real estate 000 Sudoku buy sell trade 100 Sudoku bulletin board 200 Sudoku 400 Rentals 400 Rentals 400 Rentals located upstairs are the two bedrooms and the large bathroom with shower and a old clawfoot tub to soak in after skiing at Mount Baker. First/last and Damage Deposit-WSG Pd. Call Steve @ (206) 683-1913 (9am-8pm) Available Sept. 1 (or earlier if requested) Nice area for barbecues. Nice neighbors. E-mail for walk - through. Bus leaves every 30 minutes to WWU. E-mail & I’ll e-mail pix. $675.00 or $700.00 with new carpet. No dogs, cats, ferrets or rabbits. Some caged animals ok (just ask)& 10 gallon aquariums. I’m the current tenant. If you like it after the walk-thru, then you may apply at the rental agency Chukanut property management. E-mail and you can arrange a time to see it Saturday or Sunday. No smoking inside - outside is okay. One year lease. Ask about getting September’s month free rent with signed 1 year lease*. * certain qualifications/restrictions apply email: anon-192880676@ cascadiaweekly.com place. Secured underground parking, community room and exercise room. Ideal for non smoking professionals, no pets. $1350 per month. Call (360) 671-5310 or e-mail [email protected] Outstanding Bay View Amazing bay view from almost every room. Spacious, well maintained 4 bedroom home with vaulted ceilings, family room, rec room and main floor master. Almost 1/2 acre of nicely landscaped grounds with circular driveway. Bellingham’s most prestigious neighborhood. Call Sherry for your private showing. 360-739-8888 How to Sudoku: Arrange the digits 1-9 in such a way that each digit occurs only once in each row, only once in each column, and only once in each box. Try it! ner of Mill and 17th St (one block over from Harris, and 5 blocks up from 12th). Small 1+ bebroom House. 5 Blocks to Fairhaven. Secluded, Convenient. Temporary (6mo 1yr) Rental. W/D Dishwasher, Large Deck and Fenced yard, Cat door and Dog door. Available Early to Mid September. $790/mo. References. Maia 360 752-1166 CONDO FOR RENT Cute, well maintained 1 bdrm/1 bth ground floor condo with washer/dryer & dishwasher. Complex is on trail system and has a private beach on Lake Whatcom. Cats okay. $550/month. First/Last/$250 damage deposit due upon lease signing. Available August 31st. Call 360-220-3296 to view. (Alabama Hill/Lake Whatcom) email: see below Apartment in private home on South Side 1 Bedroom/ 1 Bath apartment with seperate entrance attached to private home. Close to trails, bus line, and WWU. Cute and clean with Pergo wood floors and carpet, and a bay window. Approx. 550 sq. feet. Large yard. Rent includes WSG, power, and internet. Renter responsible for filling propane tank for stove and oven. Option to sublet from Sept. to June with partial furniture (bed, couch, table, and chairs). No smokers/ No Pets. Available Sept. 1st. First and last month’s rent plus $300.00 deposit. 360 - 393 - 3081 Geneva Neighborhood Apartment Large apartment with 2 oversized bedrooms 1 bath an open floor plan, additional storage room, W/D on site, no smoking, all utilities paid including gas, electric, basic cable and wireless internet. $1000.00 month $900.00 deposit contact Tara @ 360-319-7704 Share Chuckanut Bay View Home: Short lease Do you need a short lease in a comfortable setting? Now until November or December? Busy and active professional woman desires to share home with graduate student or responsible adult for short term. Private bedroom and bathroom. Share kitchen and living areas. Home is located on interurban bike trail for easy commute or recreation. Lovely setting, yard, and deck with spectacular views of San Juan Islands and sunsets. Cat on premises. email: [email protected] Apartment near Broadway Park Broadway Terrace. Nice 2 bedroom upper floor apartment available Sept 1st. Just one block to Gorgeous Broadway park. Big picture window, well kept older building with mature landscaping. Water Sewer Garbage paid. free tv cable included!! Absolutely no smokers or pets!!!! 675/mon 675 deposit one year leases. 676-0458 1234 Grant St “B” Rent $550. Deposit $500. WSG paid. Availability: August. 2 bed, 1 bath duplex, small yard, gas heat, near WWU, no smoking, no pets. Windermere Management by Ebright Wight, LLC 4601 Eliza Ave, Bellingham 98226 (360)7337944 (360)733-7969 Fax properties@ebrightwight. com www.ebrightwight.com 9:00 to 5:00 Monday-Friday Room For Rent In Fairhaven Room for rent in my apt, shared with myself a 23yo college gal. Only Utility is heating. Free cable, W/d on site, close to WWU and Busline. Has a view of B’ham Bay. looking for prefertably a female to rent for 1yr lease and a damage deposit. Can email me or call (360) 510-5528 Open House on New Apartment Complex - Now Renting! Open House! New apartment complex now renting 2 and 3 bedroom units starting at $775. Open house hours are 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday and 3 p.m. - 7 p.m. Monday - Friday. Walking distance from WWU Park & Ride. Deluxe units w/ washer and dryer in unit, gas fireplaces, decks and/or patios dishwashers, microwave and more! Directions: From I-5 southbound take the Samish Way exit, take a left onto Samish Way, take a left at light, take a right just after the Park & Ride on Ashley, take first left onto Consolidation. New complex on left. From 1-5 Northbound take the Samish Way exit, take a left onto Samish Way, go straight through the light, just after the Park & Ride, take a right onto Ashley, take first left onto Consolidation. New complex on left. email: [email protected] Clean-Quite-And well Maintained Located on a dead end culdesac with alley access to a 2 car-attached carport. Fenced front yard witn sun decks off the front door, the master bedroom upstairs and a large deck in back. Electric heat and a woodstove which cuts your utility bill in half will keep you warm and comfortable during the cold winter nights. 2209 Lincoln St. Bellingham House Large 2 car Garage 2209 Lincoln Street, Bellingham, WA 98225 NO SMOKING NO PETS (sorry we are not making any exceptions) Available: End of August 2006/Sept 1st $895. per month. W/S/G Paid by landlord 2 nice sized Bedrooms 1 Bathroom 2 Door Garage/Shop in back. Shop benches and cupboards in garage. Large Parking area in back with alley access. Gas Heat Washer/Dryer/Dishwasher included Updated house with new vinyl windows, newer paint, counter tops, insulation, roof, appliances and more! Nice new flooring being installed end of August 2006 Little garden area in back Great central Bellingham Location (near bus lines, schools, and walking to many great Bellingham stores.) Great neighbors First/Last/Deposit (payment arrangements may be considered for last months rent.) 1 year lease Feel free to drive by and take a look at the house. 360-392-1903 360-9615533 House is located near Hardware Sales and King Street Dairy Queen. North on Lincoln from Stampadoodle and Paper Zone, past the new Doggy Daycare. brand new 1bd apt. Take over remaining 9 months of year lease in this apt. with approved credit check from Apex properties and you get my damage deposit ($575) for free. It is a brand new 1Bd. with garden courtyard and wilderness views, granite countertops, contemporary maple cabinets, laminate wood floors, carpet in bedroom, stacked closet washer\dryer in apt., dish washer, microwave, oven, fridge all new, beautiful bathroom, reserved parking space. This is a great apt. for a great price. No pets. If you see it in person, you will want to live here and you can keep the damage deposit. Call me at 360-715-1383 for directions. Free Sept. Rent- Southside duplex 2 bedroom duplex, washer, dryer, dishwasher, large storage area, yard - lawn care included, 1 bathroom, about 5 parking spaces, 675.00 + utilities. Large 2 Bedroom Nice Residental Area 2 Bedroom 1 Bath upper unit in 8 plex Close to downtown and Meridian in a quiet residental area. Remodeled Bath. Water, Sewer, and Garbage Paid. Laundry Room. Off street parking for tenants only. NO SMOKING NO PETS. Call 360-734-4321 for showing. Townhome on greenway Vaulted ceilings Raised beds for gardening Cable Washer/ dryer 1 1/2 bath 1 car garage Gas fireplace Minimum 1 year lease No pets and no smoking Call (425)268-8057 Charming Sunnyland flat (duplex unit) near downtown Two bedroom lower duplex apt for rent, available September 1 or shortly after. Rent $800, deposit $400, month to month (no lease required). No application fee, local owners. Water, sewer, garbage paid by landlord (a $75 value). Gas heat and range. Washer and dryer on premises. Charming downstairs apartment in 1920s era house with large front porch and back deck. It makes for a good shared space with roommate. Front bedroom off living room, back bedroom off deck with separate entrance. One bathroom with shower and laundry area, dining area, updated kitchen with side entrance. Parking area off alley, small landscaped yard maintained by owner. Small pet consideredLocated just off Alabama Street near Cornwall in a nice Bellingham residential neighborhood (Sunnyland). Close to Bellingham HS and Assumption Catholic church. Convenient to downtown, on bus line. Call Jean at 360-738-9542 to view inside by appointment, or email response. Luxury Condo 2 bdrm./2 bath, 4th floor luxury condo in a highly desirable location. Granite counters, stainless steel sink, upgraded cabinets, black appliances (stove, side by side fridge, and dishwasher). Complete with full size washer and dryer, radiant heat and fire- Great Studio Cabin I have a really great studio cabin for rent. I am looking to rent to a quiet person ideally a student. The cabin is located just off North Shore near the Britton Road (10 minute drive to WWU and 15 minute drive to WCC). Rent is $550 per month everything is included except propane. The cabin has 2 large rooms, 1 bathroom, a new propane fireplace and newly refinished hardwood floors. Washer and dryer on site. Length of lease negotiable. 1st and last month’s rent plus a $150 refundable deposit due at move in. Available for move in now. Sorry no pets...well, maybe a fish or bird but no dogs or cats! If you are interested in taking a look, please email me and I would be happy to show you the place. email: [email protected] Rentals: Birch Bay Birch Bay Cottage Cozy Birch Bay Cottage with Knotty Pine Interior, new carpets, double pane windows and a fireplace for those cool evenings. Vaulted ceiling, large yard, attached carport, with storage shed. The backyard features a covered patio and a “”bunkhouse”” for the kids or over night guests. Wooded park with trails and the bay nearby. Pets considered Only $750.00 month Call 360-3719080 to view. Application and infornation on our website outstandingrentalhomes.com (Birch Bay) email: [email protected] Rentals: Lynden Farm Cottage -avail. Sept. 20th Looking for responsible, quiet, friendly person to rent my country cottage (small 1bd/1bth). Located next to my house on my peaceful farm, between Bellingham & Lynden with easy Vancouver BC access. Contribute to tending and share the surplus of a big vegetable garden, flowers galore & fruit, while enjoying stunning views of Mt. Baker and tranquil sunsets. Includes endless country roads for biking, great neighbors/community and beautiful big yard (perhaps a homemade berry pie, every so often!) Includes utilities, secure covered parking and storage available, furnished or unfurnished. Sorry no pets (This is a no smoking/no drugs environment). Available around Sept. 20th. $550.00/ mth. (+ security deposit & last mth’s). 302 Ten Mile Road, Lynden Washington 360-398-1372 jobs 000 By Rob Brezsny Crossword services 000 Crossword Free Will Astrology ARIES (March 21-April 19): I was at an airport bookstore. A businessman near me plucked Chuck Palahniuk’s Haunted from the shelf and said to his companion, “I’ve heard this book makes some people actually vomit. Listen to this passage.” He read it aloud. It was about a guy who eats ten freeze-dried turkey dinners, and dies when his stomach literally explodes. Moments after reciting this gruesome tale, the businessman collapsed and went into convulsions. I knelt down and cradled his head. A saleswoman called paramedics, and 15 minutes later he was fine. “That never happened to me before,” he said. “I don’t have epilepsy. It must have been a reaction to what I read.” The moral of the story, Aries: Words will have potent effects on you in the coming days. You should therefore surround yourself not with Palahniuk-type curses but with good news and uplifting stories and people who dispense articulate blessings. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): I heard a guy on the radio tell the following story. He and his wife stopped to enjoy a sunset. After a few minutes, they noticed that its breathtaking beauty remained static; the scene wasn’t evolving. Upon further investigation, they registered the embarrassing fact that they had actually been admiring an image on a billboard. Make sure a similar event doesn’t happen to you, Taurus. Avoid getting hooked on substitutes, stand-ins, or simulacrums. Insist on the real thing. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In her song “Deeper Well,” Emmylou Harris says she’s “looking for the water from a deeper well.” Make that your assignment, Gemini. And if you’re feeling brave, extend your search to an even more challenging quest: what Harris refers to as searching for a “holier grail.” According to my reading of the omens, your biggest, brightest dream isn’t as big and bright as it could be. Raise your standards. CANCER (June 21-July 22): The omens suggest that you’re most likely to be happy and healthy in the coming weeks if you treat the whole world as your classroom. Thank God, then, that you won’t suffer anytime soon from sophophobia (a fear of learning) or optophobia (fear of opening one’s eyes). It’s my duty to inform you, however, that you could experience politicophobia (fear of politicians) or myxophobia (fear of slime). Ironically, that would be quite lucky, because it’s crucial that you avoid manipulative power-brokers and mud-slinging know-it-alls who might confuse you about the educational experiences you need to pursue. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “Raising kids is like making pancakes,” muses Brian Copeland in his show Not a Genuine Black Man. “You always mess up the first one.” A similar idea might apply to a certain multi-pronged project you’ve been working on, Leo. I’m not saying you should abandon or throw away your initial effort. On the contrary, like rookie parents whose inexperience has slightly tweaked their first-born, you should be thorough in trying to undo your mistakes. But I also suggest that you immediately get started on the next creation in the series, being sure you’ve learned all you can from the consequences of your earlier ignorance. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): My old philosophy professor Norman O. Brown would periodically interrupt his lectures, tilt his head upward as if tuning into the whisper of some heavenly voice, and announce in a mischievous tone, “It’s time for your irregular reminder: We’re already living after the end of the world. No need to fret anymore.” The implication was that the worst had already happened. We had already lost most of the cultural riches that had given humans meaning for centuries. All that was going to be taken from us had already been taken. On the bright side, that meant we were utterly free to reinvent ourselves. Living amidst the emptiness, we had nowhere to go but up. What rentals To place an ad classifieds.cascadiaweekly.com real estate buy sell trade remained was alienating, but it was also fresh. Use these 000 100 ideas as seeds for your meditations, Virgo. You can apply Crossword Jobs them to both your personal life and the world at large. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Novelist Jeanette Winterson told a TV interviewer about her mother’s strongest belief: “You can be happy, or else you can be like normal people.” This idea applies to you right now, Libra—maybe more than you realize. From what I can tell, you’re at a crossroads in your relationship with happiness. You could go either way, and it’s mostly up to you: Will you tame your urges for wild joy, repress your instincts to follow your lyrically crazy heart, and surrender to the dull insanity of the maddening crowd? Or would you prefer the scarier, more eccentric and action-packed route that will constantly push you to enlarge your capacity to feel good? SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Sculptor Luis Jiminez was renowned for making large pieces with political themes that incited controversy. In “The Barfly,” created during the Vietnam War, he depicted the Statue of Liberty as a drunken floozy. “Vaquero” shows a Mexican cowboy riding a bucking stallion and waving a gun. It not only satirizes the pretentious statues of military leaders on horses that are often found in parks; it’s also a reminder that the original cowboys of the American West were Mexicans. “It’s not my job to censor myself,” Jimenez said. “An artist’s job is to constantly test the boundaries.” Whether or not you’re an artist yourself, Scorpio, your next assignment is aligned with Jiminez’s approach: Don’t censor yourself as you test the boundaries. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): There are now as many people working at Wal-Mart stores as there are high-school teachers. Can anything be done to change this depressing state of affairs? Well, it so happens that the time is ripe for you Sagittarians to cultivate your skill at sharing what you know. It’s also an excellent phase to cultivate your ability to inspire and energize your fellow humans. So if just one percent of you use this pregnant moment as a springboard to launch careers as high-school educators, Wal-Mart employees would no longer outnumber you and your heroic colleagues. And even if you personally decide not to go in that direction, I hope you at least think more about what you have to teach the world, and take steps to give your gifts more aggressively. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Philosopher Robert Anton Wilson said that “the universe acts like a chess game in which the player on the other side remains invisible to us. By analyzing the moves, we can form an image of the intellect behind them.” The coming weeks will be an excellent time for you to gain insights into that other chess player, Capricorn. You will have an extraordinary capacity for setting aside your own subjective mind-chatter and seeing the objective truth. You’ll also be more skilled than usual at understanding what’s going on in the shadows and darkness. The hidden world is whispering secrets in codes you can crack. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): It’s time for you to fall in love, Aquarius—though not necessarily with a person. You could swoon with infatuation for a place where your heart feels free, for example. You could dive into new music that liberates you from your past, or give yourself with abandon to a fascinating task that brings out the best in you. You might lose your heart to a mind-expanding mentor, a mysterious animal, or a thrilling fight for justice. It really doesn’t matter exactly how or what you fall in love with, Aquarius, as long as it incites you to break open the doors of perception. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Last week’s symbol was a boot kicking with futility at a closed door that was locked in response to your kicking; it bespoke a frustrated strength that provoked even greater resistance. This week’s symbol will be dramatically different: bare feet climbing a rope ladder to a dance floor on a roof where a telescope is trained on the planet Jupiter. In this new phase, there will still be obstacles for you to overcome. But the emphasis will be on craft and agility rather than force and instinct. And this time around the most grounded part of you will find lots of luck and slack. bulletin board 400 Rentals Falls 2 Bd 1Bth mobile home 800 sf double wide mobile home, resently remodeled, big back yard. pergo flooring. Avalible in one week. Deposit $600 360 201 1487 Eugene Rentals: Skagit Home for rent 3BD/1BA 1700 sqft house for rent. Commercial or residential use. Available August 1st, new carpet, flooring, doors, electrical, gas heater, water heater. $1200.00 per month, $1000.00/deposit, nonsmoking only. screening fee 206-459-5441 Rentals Wanted Wanted to rent Mature, stable woman seeking room/yurt/travel trailer? to rent, can pay up to $200 per month. Sublet or LT housesitting also a possibility? Possible trades for all or partial rent? (I’m a Massage Therapist). I have no pets, non-smoker, I like my privacy and will respect yours. Excellent references. Jessica (360) 738-4121. Small House (rent to own?) I am looking for a small house to rent in the Mt Vernon area. Sedro-Woolley, Clearlake, or ? Coming to the area for a job in September. I have a older large goofy dog. If a rent to own situation, I will entertain having a house that is perhaps less than perfect. Some sort of garage or outbuilding is prefered. In fact, If you only have the garage or outbuilding, I have a RV that I could live in for a while. Send me an email, and tell me what you might have that would work for me. (Sedro-Woolley) email: anon193483167@cascadiaweekly. com Apt, House or Cabin Looking for a cozy apt. small house or cabin to rent by Jan.1. Mature (young at heart ) 54 year old woman with 2 well-behaved, clean felines. I am a non-smoker/drinker. No drugs. Quiet, clean, enjoy gardening, outdoors. I work in Mukilteo and would eventually like to move up north. Perhaps a rent-to-buy situation, take over mortgage; negotiable/creative financing. Please contact through email and we will communicate via reg. email and phone. email: [email protected] Student and dog need place I need a place starting september 1, earlier if possible. I am in my 4th year of college at wwu with no car, so i need to be close to a bus or to campus. i have an 8 year old lab too. Im looking for a room, studio, loft, apt or whatever. Would be willing to exchange housing for childcare. I have 2 years nanny experience. Im on orcas island now, but come to bham 400 Rentals 400 Rentals 400 Rentals Need a house- NOW Me and my boyfriend are looking for a 2 or 3 bedroom house. Our price range is about $1000 or less. We also have a small house trained dog who is very well behaved. We need a place to move into by sept.1. e-mail Breanne at [email protected] druggies. Looking for a balanced individual with little or no baggage who is looking for a nice situation with a nice roomate. Utilities include elec. and gas. Internet and cable TV are optional. Free phone usage within continental U.S. No deposit. Available immediately. Call Michael @ 933-4487. tuesdays and wednesdays. no contact phone, only email. email: [email protected] Female Professional needs home!!!! Stable professional female needs a home to rent in Bellingham, WA. Condo, House, Mobile??? Preferable northern area. Would like 2bd 2ba with a garage. Non smoker, no drugs, no pets no BS. Must be quiet with low crime area... Hoping for the counrty??? I even own my own stainless steel appliances and lawn care equipment. Looking for a very long term stable home. I guarantee your home will be cared for as if it were mine and I would be leaving it in better condition than I found it. Please dont rent to me if you plan to sell. email: anon193315853@cascadiaweekly. com Female, 19, Looking for room in house/apt Hey, my name is Kim and I am a 19 year old female attending Western. I am looking for a room in a house or apartment hopefully near WWU. I am clean, active and easygoing. I like mountain biking, camping, hiking, and kayaking. I love to have fun, but am respectful of other’s things, time, and space. I would love to bring my black lab Mollie to school with me (but do not have to) so a place that allows dogs would be great! Please email me if you have a place like this, or are just looking for a roommate. email: kimstanford@hotmail. com bedroom W/bath/ clean,quiet & serene Mature gentelman wishes to share his 2 bedroom home with a responable clean & tidy indivdual woman or man near Sedro Woolley. Home has new floor covering thruout.Has large modern ki tchen,laundry,Satellite T.V.in all areas Including covered deck,HI Speed internet.NO DRUGS,no in house smoking lite drinking O.K..$285.00 per month including utillities plus 150.00 Refundable damage deposit.Available Sept.1st . call 425-238-0471 or 360856-2514. Small dog house trained O.K. 1ST MONTH RENT FREE!! TAKE OVER LEASE! Take over our lease and get the first months rent free! The lease ends April 30th 2007 for this spacious 2 bdr 1ba one level duplex. Minutes from Barkley Village and Lake Whatcom. Walk to the grocery store on one of the two trails. W/D in unit. Vaulted ceilings, fireplace, off- street parking. Large patio with large backyard with creek views. Quite neighborhood close to busline and 10 minutes from WWU. W/S paid. Need someone to take over lease- moving out of town in September. Our loss is your gain! 2527 Superior St #2 email: anon-192702482@ cascadiaweekly.com Roommates Wanted Roommate Wanted to share a 2 bedroom apartment in Happy Valley. Close to WWU and near busline. 312.50 a month plus electricity. Must be a WWU student. Please call Caitlin @ 360-510-7245 Share a cool and cozy house in Lakeway We have a room available right away for $435 a month, which includes utilities, plus a $100 refundable deposit, month to month, for the next one to three months. The house is on a dead end street, plenty of parking and on the bus line. It has three decks and it’s pretty much in the woods with a creek running through it. Within walking distance to trails and Whatcom Falls Park. Your room has french doors that open onto the back deck with a view facing the beautiful ravine. Digital cable, wireless internet, house phone with free U.S. long distance. Washer and dryer facilities inside the house as well. NO PETS please (no exceptions on this, landlord won’t allow them). Live with three laid back, respectful roomates. Room would be great for someone looking to save money for a couple of months or a student new to the area. Call or email. 360-656-6051 Gay/Bi friendly male housemate wanted Looking for laid back, responsible, employed male to share house near Ferndale. Large yard, view of Mt Baker. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, 1 shared bath, room available is approx. 10’ x 14’. Bedrooms are on opposite sides of house. Sharing house with one other settled gay male, and one very aloof cat. Not into drama, codependent, deceitful or manipulating individuals, alcoholics, or 2 Bedroom Apt. to share with great roommate WWU junior/girl needs 1 roommate to share sunny 2 bedroom apartment 2 blocks north of WWU. Rent is $375 plus 1/2 of elec/gas. (Water/ sewer/garbage is paid.) This is a newer 6-unit apartment building, reserved off-street parking. An easy walk to campus. Wired for highspeed internet access and cable. Laundry facilities on-site. The apartment is currently occupied by different renters, but the manager showed me another of the units that had been prepared for new renters. It was cleaned, including carpet, repainted and looked practically new. I am confident that this apartment will be in equally clean and great condition. I’m easy going, but not a big partier. Clean, but not excessive. Non-smoker. The apartment is available September 1. email: anon-193167992@ cascadiaweekly.com Room For Rent in large LGBT-friendly house US: We are a diverse and independent group (2 guys, 1 gal, and a trannyboi, ages 21-35, no kids, one cat, two students) seeking a compatible, communicative roommate. THE ROOM: Available now $300/ mo + $75 flat-rate utilities FREE WIRELESS INTERNET included w/rent! This room has it’s own sink & toilet THE HOUSE: Front & back yard with gardening potential Near bus lines and downtown Bellingham Washer/Dryer 5 bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms No cable TV (we like it that way) Smoking is outside only Plenty of parking Cool landlord Please leave a detailed message telling us something about yourself and what you are looking for in a living situation: 360-224-4669 Looking For The Best Roommates In Town????? Sweet 3bdrm House. Two of | p.25 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifi eds 23-27 CLASSIFIEDS 23-27 classifieds broadcast classifieds CLASSIFIEDS 23-27 | p.26 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifi eds 23-27 broadcast jobs 000 Crossword the best people you’ll ever live with. One dog.(not the annoying yappy kind)Seeking A fun mature person, male or Female, to live with us. Nearish downtownish. Would prefer lease through june of ‘07(neg.) or more. 1/3 util. No creepy old guys please. email: anon-192650314@ cascadiaweekly.com 500 Real Estate Houses: Bellingham Must Sell before Bubble Burst (Fairhaven) Eastern craftsman quality 3 BD, plenty of space for outhouse toilet. Exquisite details. Sophisticated & huge gourment kitchen to cook freedom fry. Special bonus room for orgy party. I would like to see this house before bubble burst. Don’t buy overpriced houses. Buyer market is emarging. email: anon-193611908@ cascadiaweekly.com Keith Cook 739-5600 Price Just Reduced 3 BD, 1.5 BA, 1368 SQFT craftsman style home on 1.72 acres. Beautiful tile & hardwood flooring, fireplace, attached garage. Restored to better than new condition. $375,000 3bdr,2ba S. Lake Samish home on 6 acres. Very private. Completely remodeled, 1400 sq ft,Huge covered porches, woodstove, french doors throughout. Lots of light and sun year round. Very clean inside and out. NO PETS! $1000 deposit/ $1000 per mo. Call (360) 752-1299. Keith Cook 739-5600 Gorgeous New Construction Elegant 5 BD, 3.5 BA, 3090 SQFT home on ¼ acre in highly residential upscale neighborhood. Beautiful master suites on both main and 2nd floor. $619,900 Walk to Two Parks! MoveIn Ready Tastefully updated home near Whatcom Falls Park and Bloedel-Donovan Park, 3 br, 1.75 ba, 1824 square feet. NEW: windows, garage, driveway, granite counters, new carpet in family room, new appliances, new light fixtures, freshly painted & More! Large bedrooms, lots of closet space. Light and bright inside. All appliances included. Solid exterior cedar siding. Large fenced services 500 Real Estate backyard, BIG deck. Great schools! Geneva Elementary, Kulshan Middle, Sehome High School. Quiet, charming neighborhood. This home is in excellent condition! Anne Inman, Realtor, The Muljat Group, 360-201-2918, www. AnneInman.com, email: anne@muljatgroup. 99 Sudden Valley Drive (Gate 3) Unique 1,800 square foot home on double lot on greenbelt; 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, living room (with woodstove) and family room, utility room, indoor cedar-lined sauna (not currently operational); 3 new decks including a large one on the main floor - great for entertaining; new roof. This a great family home with separate spaces on 3 levels. Easy commute to Bellingham for work or school. 206/853-2330 Gorgeous Home & Views Beautiful Northwest Contemporary Home in unique gated community. Majestic views of the Bay and Islands situated on 20 acres of low maintenance natural landscaping. This 3200+ sf like-new custom home features an open floor plan with gourmet kitchen and tasteful built-in bookshelves. Perfect for entertaining, a must see! For more information, please call Bryant Davis with RE/MAX Whatcom County at 360-815-1262. (Chuckanut Drive) email: bryantdavis@ nwhomes.net Incredible Mid-County Estate With Mt. Baker View Stunning ultra-custom home with spectacular Mt. Baker view. Enticing, open floor plan is packed with features: Brazilian cherry and slate flooring; gorgeous custom cherry cabinetry; honed granite counters; enormous main-floor master suite; pond with bridge and waterfall; RV parking and so much more. Private setting on lush 4.79 acres in one of the county’s prettiest locations, next to Shuksan Golf Club and a quick drive to Bham, Lynden or Ferndale. Wow factor 10! Full details and photo tour at http://www. BellinghamGuide.com. Kirk Ghio (360) 739-6248 The Muljat Group Realtors Bellingham rambler with big yard and RV parking Here’s that hard to find rambler, and at this price it’s going to go fast. Great corner lot has a big, fenced yard with large deck and storage shed, play fort, sprinkler system, plus side yard parking for RV, boat or 5+ cars. House is in very good condition with living/dining rooms, tiled family room, 2 car garage, new range, vinyl windows, and new roof in 2004. Gas fireplace heats house with supplemental baseboards. Excellent southside schools. Trails through woods at end of street. Full details and photo tour at http://www.BellinghamGuide.com. Kirk Ghio (360) rentals To place an ad classifieds.cascadiaweekly.com real estate 500 Real Estate buy sell trade 500 Real Estate 739-6248 The Muljat Group Realtors. Houses: Ferndale Country Living just Minutes from the City FIVE plus acres in ideal location! Spacious Home is Remodeled with new Mother-in-Law Suite. Marvelous Living Room with Mt Baker View. Formal Dining, Kitchen Eating Space. Level Acreage with 30x50 Barn, 30x40 Shop, Fruit Trees, Pond, Extra Storage Shed. The list goes on! Bring your horses, hobbies, and enjoy the peace this property has to offer. MUST SEE!! Call Jane@360-371-2151. Houses: Maple Falls Like New Manufactured Home 3 BR, 2 BA manufactured home in excellent condition Open floor plan, vaulted ceilings and skylights Washer, dryer, range, & refrigerator Furniture negotiable Large front deck, wooded lot Mt. Baker School District Keith Cook - ABR, CRS, SRES Associate Broker RE/MAX Whatcom County Inc. (360) 739-5600 http:// www.buyermax.com Beautiful Mt. Baker 4 BD, 3 BA, 2600 SQFT home on double lot. Vaulted ceilings, skylights, walk-in closet, 3 car garage, huge master suite, fully fenced with a gated entry. Mt. Baker school district. Keith Cook - ABR, CRS, SRES Associate Broker RE/MAX Whatcom County Inc. (360) 739-5600 http:// www.buyermax.com 2 bedroom mobile home on lot 2 bedroom mobile home on secluded lot in cul-de-sac. New carpet, paint and plenty of parking, with propane furnace & hot water heater. 1st month’s rent & small damage deposit. Call Richard (360) 599-2232 or e-mail to: [email protected] Houses: Whatcom 2 Bedroom/ 2 Bath 24 x 40 Manufactured home NEW I have a brand new 24 x 40 2 bed/2 bath. Straight from the factory manufactured home. GREAT VALUE!! Call 360 3548577 Ask for PAUL Liberty Park Model for sale Liberty Park Model For Sale... BRAND NEW!! Call 360 354-8577 ask for PAUL For Sale By Owner, 1.25 acres, territorial Mt. views For sale by owner, 3 Bedroom, 2 Full Bath home, large master bedroom and bath, walk in closet, open floor plan, nice kitchen with lots of cupboards space, located on sunny 1.25 acres flat well drained useable lot, mostly Keith Cook 739-5600 Silver Beach Building Lot 1/3 acre building site sloped with sunny southwest exposure. Possible Bay & pleasant territorial views. Bellingham Schools. $149,900 Swann Home Inspections experienced • licensed • insured visit our website for details: SwannHomeInspections.com Call Jerry 319-7776 bulletin board 500 Real Estate 500 Real Estate cleared with some big trees, very nice territorial mountain views. Located in Northwest Washington north of Seattle, between Burlington and Bellingham, only 5 minutes to freeway, quick and easy commute north or south. e-mail [email protected] or Call (360) 724-3277 survey and geologic report. Test holes were dug and found no rock to complicate excavation. Easy to build with all city utilities in the street. Sale includes plans for a 3500 sq. ft. house that have been engineered and are ready to submit for permit. Details at BellinghamGuide.com. Kirk Ghio (360) 739-6248 Property for Sale Marine View Building Site Gorgeous, panoramic views from the highest lot in Parkhurst II. This lot is adjacent to Samish Highlands, where comparable view parcels are currently selling for $650,000. Seller has topo 500 Real Estate Property wanted Wanted small buildable acreage on hwy 9 Looking for buildable acreage anywhere around hwy 9 around 1 up to 5 acres for stick built house. Interested party seeking within distance or the general vicinity of hwy 9. Susan London All Pro 360.220.2913 Interfaith Forum Free Representing Home Buyers Let me show you any home available in Whatcom County Sally Webb #360.224.1270 600 Bulletin Board group for sharing religious/ metaphysical experiences without trying to convert others.Meets sunday evenings 7pm Bay Street Coffee House first meeting Sept. 10th ph. 360-223-2552 Lost & Found NECKLACE FOUND Large triangle cut piece of Jasper. Big beads and a little silver mermaid charm. Found in Fairhaven. email me and I will mail it to you. marisa@ cascadiaweekly.com Send your classifeds to classifieds@ cascadiaweekly.com Best Sex Ever! "Best sex ever!" That's what people are saying after accessorizing their love lives with products from Love Zone. 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Get a FREE Vibrating Egg with any purchase over $25 A $10 Value with this Coupon limit one per customer expires 8/31/06 BELLINGHAM 4227 Meridian St (360) 738-0737 SOUTH EVERETT 9740 Evergreen Way (425) 423-9719 MARYSVILLE 9501 State Ave (360) 651-2840 SEATTLE - BALLARD 7750 15th Ave NW (206) 782-3763 SEATTLE - AURORA 10333 Aurora Ave N (206) 526-2105 www.thelovezone.com PAID ADVERTISEMENT CP99-0010 tmw mannkind troubletown “Hold on a sec! This park is totally noisy!” Food To Bank On Featured Mentor Farmer Steve Powers of Big Sky Garden Food To Bank On is generously volunteering his time and 15-plus years of farming experience to help a new Whatcom County farm get established. Help us say thanks! Look for Big Sky Garden’s FRESH salad mix at the Community Food Co-op and Terra Organica. Food To Bank On is a project of: grows new farms and feeds the hungry by connecting brand-new farms with markets, training and mentorship while providing fresh veggies to area food banks. For more information about the program, or if you are a farmer who would like to apply for the 2007 season, contact COMMUNITY FOOD CO-OP Sustainable Connections 360 647-6902 or [email protected] | p.27 | Cascadia Weekly #1.23 | 8.16.06| Do it 3 | Letters 4-5 | Views 6-7 | News 8-11 | Words & Community 12-13 | Art 14 | On Stage 15 | Music 16-17 | Venues 18-19 | Film 20-22 | Classifi eds 23-27 CLASSIFIEDS 23-27 end