The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current, October 13, 2016, Page 19, Image 29

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

    OCTOBER 13, 2016 // 19
coa st w eeken d M ARK ETPLACE
Last member of the Bee Gees ofers more
By SCOTT STROUD
ASSOCIATED PRESS
70 Help Wanted
Mailroom
Opportunity to work part-time
(15-25 hours per week)
in our packaging and
distributing department at
The Daily Astorian.
Duties include using
machines to place inserts
into the newspaper, labeling
newspapers and moving the
papers from the press.
Must be able to regularly lift
40 lbs. in a fast paced
environment. Mechanical
aptitude helpful and the ability
to work well with others is
required.
Pre-employment drug test
required.
Pick up an application at
The Daily Astorian,
949 Exchange Street
or send resume and letter
of interest to EO Media
Group, PO Box 2048,
Salem, OR 97308-2048,
fax (503) 371-2935 or e-mail
hr@eomediagroup.com
ADVERTISERS who want quick
results use classified ads regularly.
70 Help Wanted
The Inn at Cannon Beach is
currently hiring for YEAR ROUND
EMPLOYMENT
Come see us - we'll work with your
current schedule
* Evening Front Desk & Audit
(4pm to midnight, flexible schedule)
* Housekeeping
*Housekeeping Supervisor
$300 HIRING BONUS
NEGOTIABLE WAGES
PAID HOLIDAYS
INCENTIVE BONUSES
And more!
Please apply in person at the
Inn at Cannon Beach
(3215 S Hemlock, Cannon Beach)
If you have any questions, please
contact Terri at
terri@innatcannonbeach.com
or call (503) 436-9085
Upbeat, Gregarious Sales Person
For Cannon Beach Jewlery
Store/Gallery.
Part Time,
$12-$15/Hour Starting, DOE.
503-436-1494
105 Business-Sales
Op
Be an Astoria Carrier!
$100 Signing Bonus!
McMenamins Sand Trap is now
hiring servers, line cooks, and
bartenders!
Qualified applicants must
possess the following:
a willingness to learn; an open
and flexible schedule including
days, evenings, weekends,
holidays; an open summertime
schedule; and an enthusiasm
for working in a busy, customer
service-oriented environment.
Previous experience is a plus!
We have seasonal and long term
opportunities. Looking for a
career in the hospitality industry?
We offer opportunities for
growth and great benefits to
eligible employees. Apply online
at www.mcmenamins.com or
pick up a paper application here
at the Sand Trap(or any other
McMenamins location).
Mail to: 430 N. Killingsworth,
Portland, OR, 97217 (Attn: HR); or
fax to 503-221-8749. E.O.E.
T. Paulʼs Urban Cafe and
T. Paulʼs Supper Club
Now accepting applications
for kitchen and waitstaff.
The Daily Astorian is currently
seeking independent
contractors to deliver its paper
and related products in the
Astoria Oregon area. Interested
individuals must have valid
drivers license, reliable vehicle,
and insurance. Routes are
Monday through Friday
afternoons. There are no
collections or weekend deliveries.
Please come in person to
The Daily Astorian office at
949 Exchange St, Astoria OR
97103 to pick up more
information.
If You Live In
Seaside
or Cannon Beach
DIAL
325-3211
FOR A
Daily Astorian
Classified Ad
105 Business-Sales
Op
Looking for Energetic
Smiling Faces
The Daily Astorian Newspaper
is currently seeking highly
motivated independent
contractors for sales and
marketing.
Sell the newspaper at local
events and in store locations
(no phone sales required).
For more information about
this opportunity please call
Heather at 503-325-3211.
210 Apartments,
Unfurnished
View our listings at
www.beachproperty1.com
Beach Property Management
503-738-9068
LOOKING for a new place to live?
The classified ads offer a com-
plete selection of homes, apart-
ments and mobile homes to fit
your needs.
215 Apartments,
Furnished
Cannon Beach, fabulous 2-bed-
room/2-bath, near beach,
no pets/smoking, $1400/mo +
first/last, 1-year, $500 dep,
background/credit check, 503-717-
2030 or 509-540-2326.
590 Automobiles
1989 Jeep YJ
Fuel injected Chevy 350, 4-speed,
auto trans, 3/4 ton ford axles,
Eaton Lockers, much more.
$10,500 or part trade for ?
Call 503-440-2290
ERROR AND CANCELLATIONS
Please read your ad on the first
day. If you see an error, The Daily
Astorian will gladly re-run your ad
correctly. We accept responsibility
for the first incorrect insertion,
and then only to the extent of a
corrected insertion or refund of
the price paid. To cancel or cor-
rect an ad, call 503-325-3211 or
1-800-781-3211.
If anyone had said the
Bee Gees’ music would
stand the test of time, most
serious music people would
have scoffed.
Rulers of the disco era,
the fraternal purveyors of
nine #1 hits, including “Stay-
in’ Alive” and “Night Fever,”
seemed destined to have their
songs trotted out for nostalgic
purposes only — on Oldies
Night, say, in the lounge of
the airport Holiday Inn.
But then Al Green cov-
ered “How Can You Mend
a Broken Heart” so well no
one else had to sing it again.
And songs like “How Deep
Is Your Love” showed stay-
ing power with their delicate
sense of melody.
But this is 2016, and the
new release up for consid-
eration is “In the Now.” It
comes from the last surviving
Bee Gee, Barry Gibb, who
soldiers on without his late
brothers, Robin and Maurice.
Gibb, who did a nostalgia
tour a few years ago, is do-
ing something braver now:
offering original music. The
songs, co-written with his
two sons, are sometimes
corny and too wordy.
But Gibb still has a
striking sense of melody, and
there are poignant lyrics here
— most notably on songs
that are themselves nostal-
gia trips, like “End of the
Rainbow” and “Home Truth
Song.” Gibb seems to honor
his brothers on that one when
he sings: “We stand together
in a one-man show.”
Will the new songs hold
up? Hey, no predictions here.
A lot of us were wrong
the irst time.
Bruce Springsteen talks
depression, family and
his new memoir
By JOCELYN GECKER
ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) —
Bruce Springsteen credits
his music with helping him
navigate depression and says
playing marathon shows un-
til he was exhausted helped
chase away the blues.
The legendary rock star
spoke to a sold-out crowd
in San Francisco Oct. 5
in a one-hour, 20-minute
on-stage interview as part
of a nationwide tour for his
best-selling new autobiogra-
phy “Born To Run.”
“The Boss” has a story-
teller’s knack for recounting
the past in vivid detail,
with quick wit and humor.
He discussed the labored
process of writing the book,
which took seven years, his
troubled relationship with
his father, sweet memories
of raising his children with
wife and longtime backup
singer, Patti Scialfa, and his
history with depression, as
he does in the book.
“I think music was the
way that I medicated myself
in the beginning. It was the
irst thing that centered me
and chased away the blues,”
Springsteen said, seated
in an armchair beside his
interviewer on stage at the
historic Nourse Theater.
“I found that the experi-
ence of playing cleared my
mind and gave me a brief
moment of respite from the
things that tended to disturb
me,” he said. “I found out that
exhaustion was my friend.
Because if I got myself tired
enough, I was simply too tired
to be depressed.”
Dressed in his uniform
of jeans and a black leath-
er jacket, Springsteen is a
youthful 67. The only visible
nods to his age: A slightly re-
ceding hairline and a need for
reading glasses — he calls
them “cheaters” — when
asked to read from his book.
He joked about the
seven-year writing process
for his 508-page book:
“Yeah, that sounds like I did
a lot more work than I did,”
drawing laughter.
He wrote when it moved
him, dictating one section at
a time to an assistant, “who
would put it in the comput-
er.” He edited and rewrote
until he igured, “Well, that’s
as good as I can do without
somebody’s help.”
PHOTO BY GREG ALLEN/INVISION/AP,
Bruce Springsteen
The father of three said
he tried to keep his stardom
away from home.
“There wasn’t any memo-
rabilia around the house, we
didn’t have any of that stuff
out. We had some guitars
and a piano,” Springsteen
said. “We never made a big
deal of it in the house.”
Well into their teens, his
children were “relatively
unfamiliar with most of the
work I’d done,” he said,
“which is very normal. I
mean, I wasn’t out there
looking for three more fans,”
pausing for laughter.
“Your job is you’re sup-
posed to be their audience.
They’re not supposed to be
yours,” Springsteen said.
The book “Born to Run”
came out in late September
and has risen to the top of
best-seller lists. But Spring-
steen doubts he’s got a
sequel in him: “I think this is
my swan song. I can’t imag-
ine writing another one.”