The nugget. (Sisters, Or.) 1994-current, March 08, 2017, Page 28, Image 28

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    28
Wednesday, March 8, 2017 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon
C L A S S I F I E D S
Weeding • Pruning • Raking
•Hauling • Weed-Whacking
Bruce Berryhill, 541-420-3730
Easy Green Landscape
Maintenance • 541-699-7404
paul@eazy-green.com
Metolius Lawn Maintenance
Cleanup, lawn care, pruning,
hauling, etc. 541-508-9672
A&E BROTHERS
LAWN MAINTENANCE
Thatching • Aerating • Gutters
Weedwacking etc. – Lic. & Ins.
541-279-0139 • 541-306-0761
THE GARDEN ANGEL
Landscape Maintenance
and Irrigation
LCB #9352 • 541-549-2882
“Your Garden’s Best Friend”
701 Domestic Services
"CLEANING QUEEN"
Serving the Sisters area!
Call Maria at 541-213-0775
manager-recruitment. EOE.
CORNERS and CREVICES
Residential
One day per Housekeeping
541-923-3093
14 Years Local Experience
www.cornersandcrevices.com
– CUSTOM HOUSE CARE –
TLC for your Home, Business
or Rental Cleaning in Sisters,
Black Butte Ranch &
surrounding
levels, pay DOE. Email areas. Let us sparkle
your home for a fresh start!
Call to schedule an immaculate
home cleaning. Lic-Bonded-Ins.
Refs Avail. Call Emilee Stoery,
541-588-0345 or email
customhousecare@earthlink.net
BLAKE & SON – Commercial,
Home & Rentals Cleaning
WINDOW CLEANING!
Lic. & Bonded • 541-549-0897
~ I and I Crystal Cleaning ~
Have your home and business
crystal clean! with the best rates
in town. Now accepting new
clients, so call today to schedule.
Licensed & Bonded, Refs.
541-977-1051
SCIENCE: Contests will
include catapults and
mousetrap cars
Continued from page 3
Physics and fascinating dem-
onstrations to put some won-
der in your life.
The Rijke’s tube turns heat
into sound by creating a self-
amplifying standing wave.
It’s not only entertaining, but
it’s an excellent example of
resonance, oscillation, and
amplitude. There’s also the
Rubens’ tube that has a stand-
ing wave flame tube making
it look like a giant birthday
cake that shows the relation-
ship between sound waves
and sound pressure. If you’ve
been to science museums you
may have seen a mesmerizing
pendulum wave demonstration
with balls swinging back and
forth as if they were one entity
that changes.
801 Classes & Training
A D V E R T I S E H E R E !
Do you offer lessons, workshops
or classes for... YOGA?
PIANO? DRUMS? TENNIS?
POTTERY? PAINTING?
Use the "Classes & Training"
classified category to let folks
know! Just $2/line the first week,
$1.50/line on repeat weeks, and
$1/line week #10 & beyond.
And it goes online at
no additional charge!
Call Monday before noon to
place at 541-549-9941.
802 Help Wanted
The City of Sisters seeks a City
Manager who is an established
leader and understands all aspects
of municipal government. For
details,
application
position
materials, and instructions on
how to apply, please visit www.
jensen-strategies.com/municipal-
manager-recruitment. EOE.
CAREGIVER: One day per
week. Call 541-598-4527.
MONTE'S ELECTRIC is now
hiring experienced Journeyman
Electrician. Hiring Bonus &
Benefits! Call 541-719-1316.
Black Butte Painting is hiring
for the season. All experience
levels, pay DOE. Email
blackbuttepainting@gmail.com
Sno Cap Drive In: Short-order
Cooks (experience preferred) and
Counter Help (will train). Come
in person to fill out an app/drop
off résumé, 380 W. Cascade Ave.
The Garden Angel is now
filling landscape care positions.
Inquire at 541-549-2882 or
thegardenangel@gmail.com
Sisters Mainline Station is
currently hiring for F/T and P/T
Cashiers and Gas Attendants.
Summer bonus available, 401k
after one year! Apply in person
at Railway & Hwy. 20.
Once The World of Physics
has piqued your senses, head
over to the astronomy exhibits
and demos. The very popular
planetarium will be offering
glimpses of the night sky. Sis-
ters Astronomy Club is featur-
ing an adiabatic cloud cham-
ber and an exhibit on solar
eclipses. Sunriver Observa-
tory will show off some rocket
science and a sun telescope.
The Design, Construct,
Compete Contests will take
over the high school gym with
elementary school students
competing for the greatest
distance run with their mouse-
trap cars, and middle and high
school students will take you
back to Greek and Roman
artillery as they have a fierce
competition with catapults.
To find out more about the
science fair visit www.sisters
scienceclub.org. If you’d like
to volunteer to help at the sci-
ence fair email Barbara Bott at
bottb1@gmail.com.
AMERICANA: Instructors
once were students
in Sisters program
Continued from page 3
now, through teaching, she
is able to validate students’
experiences and songs as
art and help them to find the
value in truly listening.
“The tone is set at the
beginning: Everyone cares,
everyone is going to treat
each other with compassion,
respect and love,” said Curtis.
She feels like she comes back
here and is with “her people.”
Curtis is now exploring
what she is going to next in
her musical career. She is
working in Portland as a lob-
byist with the Oregon legis-
lature. She has been playing
house concerts in and around
Portland as a solo act and
plans to continue on with her
work and songwriting.
Smith has come back over
the years to attend as well as
instruct at camp.
“It always feels like going
home, to the best part of
home,” said Smith of coming
back for camp.
It wasn’t long ago that
Smith was a student and
he notices how much the
academy has progressed and
how different camp is every
year.
Smith noted that, as a
student he received support
from the Americana Project
and the community to play
music, and he saw that he had
“permission” to express him-
self. He wants youth here to
have that same permission to
explore and think about life
differently.
“I, and all the instructors
get just as much out camp as
the students,” Smith said.
He noted that it brings
them back to center and
refreshes them, just as much
as the students. The instruc-
tors are all inspired by the stu-
dents’ work and the program.
“I try to help students
learn how their own brain
works and how to work out-
side the regular norms and
try to figure out what those
are in your own head, and
how to rephrase things and
to find language or tactics for
creating art specific to that
person,” Slater said. “That
comes from the place of the
Americana Project giving me
permission to do that work.”
Smith now is living and
working in Portland. He has
been working with Oregon
State Parks and the Oregon
Coast Visitors Association on
a concept album for the 50th
anniversary of the Oregon
Beach Bill, which made all the
Oregon beaches public prop-
erty. He’s been living in state
park cabins in residency for
the past two months and has
been writing about the coast
and what it means to him.
“It’s a really meaning-
ful place for me, especially
when it’s storming,” he said.
“I love it, and I’ve been in my
own space and trying to write
about this environmental bill,
and also about the special
space.”
The Weather Machine and
Smith have been recording
his songs and the album is
expected to come out this fall.
The Weather Machine
will be playing as part of the
Mt. Bachelor Apres Ski Bash
on Friday, March 17, along-
side the Moon Mountain
Ramblers.
The event is at Crow’s Feet
Commons, 875 NW Brooks
St. in downtown Bend at 6
p.m. The music is free and
open to all ages.
CUSTOM HOMES • RESIDENTIAL BUILDING PROJECTS
John P. Pierce
541-549-9764
CCB# 159020 CCB# 16891
Becke W. P ierce
Arne J. P ierce
General Contracting LLC
541-647-0384
General Contracting LLC
541-668-0883
CCB# 190689
CCB# 208020
Serving the Sisters Area Since 1976
Strictly Quality
This ad sponsored by The Nugget Newspaper in support of Deschutes Land Trust.