McKenzie’s Annual 4th of July
Now isyour chance to save on the
Quality outdoor gear you want.
Valley River Center
2nd Level Up Escalator
541 343-2300
l imited to stock thru July 4th
Watch for our upcoming on-line store.
A
Musique Gourntet
Catering to the Discriminating Collector
SALE
through July 16th
Save
20-30%
CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED CLASSICAL MUSIC, OPERA,
BROADWAY & FILM SCORES ON COMPACT DISC
F'm'poarl Bulldins 343-9000
207 E. 5th Avenue (entrance on F>earl)
OPEN 7 DAYS Free Parking Qi
To earn a 4*00
in Brewology
all you need to
know is
STEELHEAD*
□ 9 Award-Winning Micro-Brews
□ Soups, Salads n Ribs n Fresh Pizza
□ Sandwiches n Pastes n Bnrgers
□ Spirits n Home-Made Roolbeer
TAKE A BREW HOME IN STEELHEAD'S BOX O' BEER
Steelhead Brewing Company
199 Bast 5th Avenue Eugene, OR Phone 686-2739
Eugene, OR - Burlingame, CA - Fisherman’s Wharf, San Francisco, CA - Irvine, CA
Fourth of July Calendar
1:00 p.m. — Freedom Festival (mu
sic & entertainment stage, food court,
beer garden, children’s activities, fire
works at dusk), Lane County Fair
grounds. $5 adults, $3 children under
12, free for children under 6.
1:30 p.m. — Oregon Bach Festival
(Green Eggs and Ham), Hult Center:
Silva Concert Hall, One Eugene Center.
$4.
6:00 p.m. — Eugene Symphonic
Band hosts Canadian Band, Washbur
ne Park, 20th and Agate Streets. Free.
6:35 p.m. — Emeralds vs. Canadi
ans: Fireworks Extravaganza (single-A
Baseball), Civic Stadium, 19th and
Willamette Streets. Tickets $4.50 to
$7.
Vineyard
continued from page 5
“A standard will be set and
those artists who do not meet the
base standard won’t get in,”
Chadd said.
Next year an anonymous jury
will view slides sent in by the
artists, and the participants will
be chosen accordingly.
“If only 35 artists meet the
standard, then only 35 artists
will be in the show,” Chadd said.
Chadd has participated in the
event-on and off for the past sev
eral years and said he will be in
volved this year with the hope
that “it will be the starting point
of a new era in ‘Art in the Vine
yard.’ * .
“The show will be showcasing
quality art, so if you want to see
good art in Eugene, come out and
see it,” Chadd said. For one
artist, Art in the Vineyard ended
up being more than just an annu
al trip to Eugene. Nature photog
rapher Adrienne Adam faced the
jury to be in the show three years
ago, got accepted and has partici
pated ever since. With hopes of
finding a medium between the
110 degree Leavenworth, Wash.,
summers and freezing winters,
Adam moved to Eugene last No
vember.
“I always thought that it was
so nice down here, so the last
time I was down I decided I
might as well stop saying how
nice it is and just move down
here,” Adam said.
She has been taking photo
graphs of nature for nine years
now.
“I started with the scenic, and
in the last four years I have fo
cused on the details of the
scene,” she said. “I take the scene
and focus one part of it to capture
its essence ... the nucleus of the
scene.”
Adam finds this detail in
something like tree bark where
I am trying to help
them build the event by
not making it a strictly
musical event, but a seri
ous art show, for real
artists with fine arts and
crafts. The name is ‘Art in
the Vineyard, ’ not music
in the vineyard.
Michael Chadd
sculptor and advisor
for Art in the Vineyard
there is geometry of nature.
“What makes my heart sing is
the repetition of pattern and tex
ture in nature,” she said.
As an artist, Adam says she
has found Art in the Vineyard to
be extremely successful for her
self.
“And successfulness is not di
rectly correlated with revenue,”
Adam said. “It has to do with
how people respond to my work
— you can see it on their faces.”
During the show she will also
showcase photographs she has
taken on a recent trip to China.
“They contain a lot of pattern
and texture but also aspects of
human involvement, which is a
new element for me to add,”
Adam said.
Along with art for the home,
the festival will also highlight
garden art. Forty artists will be
representing a wide variety of
creations for the garden. Hand
crafted arbors and trellises, stone
and metal sculpture, water foun
tains, stepping stones, birdhous
es and plants are just a few exam
ples of what can be expected in
this realm of the show.
Children are also invited to en
joy a variety of different forms of
entertainment.
“There is going to be a youth
stage with storytelling, music
and dancing as well as a youth
art arena,” Pavelec said.
The arena will feature face
painting, interactive clay activi
ties and a friendship chain of sil
houettes. Children under the age
of 12 will be admitted free.
Main stage entertainment will
begin Friday afternoon and go
until Sunday night. Acts range
from the popular Northwest
band The Satin Love Orchestra,
with their “disco with an edge
sound,” to the West Coast
Rhythm Kings with their jump
swing blues to Henry Cooper’s
blues guitars sounds to the Port
land band Ponticello, which
combines gypsy, bluegrass and
Celtic flavors. Admission is $5
per day and $8 for all three days.
Festivities will take place from
11:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.
For more information call the
Maude Kerns Art Center at 345
1571 or visit www.atv.2000.org.
Hardesty
continued from page S
ows, hikers follow the trail up a
few steep switchbacks. On the
top of these, it is easy to
bushwack to the base of the 50
foot Sawtooth Rock, which has a
shallow cave in its base.
From the end of the switch
backs follows the last portion of
the trail to Hardesty Mountain.
The last two miles to the lookout
point at Hardesty Mountain is
mostly well maintained. Howev
er, the very last part up to the
point has not been cleared this
year and from the look of it, not
last year either.
From the lookout point atop
the 4,266-foot Hardesty Moun
tain the entire valley opens up
for those who fought their way
there: the Calapooya Mountains
to the south (with Bohemia
Mountain being the tallest),
Mount Hood in the north and Di
amond Peak to the south.
The Hardesty Mountain hike is
an out-and-back, but with a shut
tle, hikers can take the Lower
Trail for a five-mile plunge of
3,300 feet to the Goodman Creek
parking area (just before milepost
21) on Highway 58.
iturai. Fiber Clothinc: flax
TENCEL W> OG COTTON S HEMP
RAYON ■ KNITS W> LINEN ^
— poppi*/ -
^/4n&4olia
Lunch
Monday through Saturday
Dinner
7 Nights a Week
992 Willamette
Eugene, Or 97401
343-9661
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