hoodrivernews.com Wednesday, March 18, 2020 B3 HOOD RIVER NEWS | Hood River, Ore. HAPPENINGS Happenings is a free service of the Hood River News and may be edited for length. List- ings may also be found online at hoodrivernews.com; click the Events tab. Send items to twalk- er@hoodrivernews.com. Please note: Due to concerns surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic, events may be can- celed that are listed below due to deadline constraints. Calling ahead before attending is rec- ommended. PICK OF THE WEEK REUNIONS • July 24-25 — Hood River High School Class of 1970. For more information, call Marlene Colclesser Clymer at 541-386- 5234 or Julie Jensen Cantrell at 541-386-3867. AUDITIONS • March 20 & 23 — Serious Theater Auditions, “The King, The Final Hours,” 7-8:30 p.m. at Sawyer Hall, Zion Luther- an Church, The Dalles. Parts for young and an old Elvis, Ann Margret, Priscilla Presley, Gladys Presley and Colonel Tom Parker, and a number of small male and female parts. Elvis and Ann Margret roles require singing. Photo courtesy of Wy’east Middle School AVID CHILDREN & TEENS • Family Services Play- groups — For parents and their children ages newborn to 5; for more info contact Elisa Cartwright at 541-296-8118 ext. 210. Tuesdays, 9:30-11 a.m. at Hood River Alliance Church, 2650 Montello Ave. (Contact the church at 541-386-2812 for details.) Wednesdays, Cascade Locks School, 300 WaNaPa, 9:30-11:30 a.m. Info at 541-490- 0659. Fridays, 10-11:30 a.m. at HR Early Childhood Center (former Pine Grove School), bilingual, with developmental specialists available (follows school calendar). • Tu e s d ay s — C h e s s Club, 3:30-5 p.m. at the White Salmon Library. All levels wel- come, all ages, children to adults. Instructional, fun, light- ly competitive and free. • Fridays — Magic Club, 4-5 p.m. at Hood River Hob- bies. Drop-in fee $5. Parents must register the first time. Ages 10-15. Bring cards; loaner decks available. More at www. hoodriverhobbies.com. EXERCISE & MEDITATION • Mondays — Movement and Yoga, 10 a.m. at the FISH Food Bank, 1130 Tucker Road. With Cindy Hurlbert; props provided. Donation class (part of proceeds donated to FISH). All abilities welcome. • Mondays — Meditation & Metta, noon-1 p.m. at Trinity Natural Medicine, 1412 13th St., Suite 200 (new location). With Rev. Kozen Sampson; more at 541-386-2025. • Mon. & Thurs. — Tai Chi, 2:30 p.m. at the Hood River Valley Adult Center. $5 a week, all ages. More at 541- 490-3738. • Wednesdays — Yoga, 10-11 a.m. at the FISH Food Bank. By donation. For all abilities; mats available. Wear loose clothing, bring water. With Christine Shannon. • Wed. & Fri. — Exercise with Arthritis, 1:30-2:15 p.m. at the Hood River Valley Adult Center. • Thursdays — Movement and Yoga, 9 a.m. at the Mt. Hood Town Hall. With instruc- tor Cindy Hurlbert. Pay what you can, all abilities welcome, props provided. Visit www. yogavisual.com for info. • Strong Women Exercise Classes — Strength training program for middle aged and older women. Contact leaders in advance to get the most up to date information: • Mon., Wed. & Fri., 9-10:15 a.m. at the Mt. Hood Town Hall; 541-354-1264. Cost $10/ month or $5/class. • Mon. & Wed., 10-11 a.m. at the Cascade Locks City Hall, 509-699-0842. • Tues. & Thurs., 10-11 a.m. (new, 541-386-3343) at Provi- dence Down Manor. AVID 8 WY’EAST students Gio Elias and Israel Valle on a recent fieldtrip to WAAAM — part of a series of trips that let students shadow community members in jobs that require a college education. Wy’east AVID 7 and AVID 8 students are raising funds to go on a trip to Western Oregon University and the Oregon Coast Aquarium in May; the funding goal must be reached by April 9. Wy’east AVID looks to fund special fieldtrip By TRISHA WALKER News staff writer On May 28, seventh and eighth grade AVID students at Wy’east Middle School are hoping to be on a very special fieldtrip to the Oregon Coast Aquarium and Western Ore- gon University. But to be able to partici- pate, they need to raise about $3,400 by April 9. “Students will have the opportunity to participate in a hands-on experience, possibly see the ocean for the first time, examine tide pools, learn about marine habitat and careers in science and tour a college campus to get a taste of what it’s like to go to college,” said AVID 7 teacher Eugene Strobeck. At the aquarium, students will learn about STEAM ca- reers via staff, including stud- ies and research in marine biology, ecology and habitat restoration. They will also stay Hood River. Free parking, store activities, more. • Thru March — PERIOD@ HRV Fundraiser at Slopeswell Cider. Community tap of One Breath Kombucha; $3 for every tap will go to PERIOD@HRV to supply menstrual products to FISH, Helping Hands and the Warming Shelter. • March 18 — Colette Trav- el Meeting, 10 a.m. at the Best Western Plus Hood River Inn. Trips for 2020-2021. Benefits the Providence Hood River Memorial Hospital Founda- tion. Info at 541-386-3177 or 503-490-3177. • March 18 — Tobac- co Education and Support Group, 4-5:30 p.m. at Provi- dence Hood River Memori- al Hospital, classrooms 1-2. Eight-weeks (session seven), free sessions, snacks provided, all welcome. More at 541-387- 1353 or 541-993-2210. • March 19 — Persistent Pain, noon-1 p.m. at MCMC Outpatient Therapy at Nichols Landing. Free series of eight presentations led by different healthcare professionals. At- tend the entire series or join at any time. Register at 541- 296-7319. • March 19 — Night Out for Education, 4 p.m. to close, at Beneventi’s, Everybody’s, Harvest Market, Henri’s and Pioneer Pizza, White Salmon/ COMMUNITY EVENTS Bingen. Fundraiser for White • Wednesdays thru May Salmon valley Education — Locals Wednesday Down- Foundation; 5 percent net sales town, 3-6 p.m. in downtown go to WSVEF. • March 19 — Hood River Blazing Fast Internet! ADD TO YOUR PACKAGE FOR ONLY 19 . 99 $ /mo. where available 2-YEAR TV PRICE GUARANTEE America’s Top 120 Package MO. 190 CHANNELS Including Local Channels! CALL TODAY - For $100 Gift Card Promo Code: DISH100 for 12 Mos. 1-866-373-9175 Offer ends 7/15/20. All offers require credit qualification, 24-month commitment with early termination fee and eAutoPay. Prices include Hopper Duo for qualifying customers. Hopper, Hopper w/Sling or Hopper 3 $5/mo. more. Upfront fees may apply based on credit qualification. overnight in the shark tunnel, “a once in a lifetime oppor- tunity to see the underwater world in an environment that acts differently than with the sun or lights on,” said Stro- beck. And at WOU, students will visit with staff and students to learn about the application process and what majors and minors are offered, as well as see the campus and its class- rooms, libraries and other facilities. There will also be a question and answer session with a current first-generation college student. More than half of the students in Wy’east’s AVID program are from low in- come families. The cost is $80 per student, and as of press time, the program’s Donors Chose fundraiser site — www.donorschoose.org/ classroom/6868196 — had received funding from 45 donors ranging from $5 to $500. However, $3,432 is still Republicans Meeting, 5:30 p.m. at China Gorge. Meets every third Thursday of the month. • March 19 — Harmony of the Gorge Women’s Cho- rus, 6:30-9 p.m. at Valley Chris- tian. Four-part harmony, no need to read music. Call 541- 490-2481 for info. • March 19 — Wind-Mas- ters Men’s Chorus, 6:30-9 p.m. at Valley Christian, 975 Indian Creek Road. Four-part har- mony, no need to read music, lessons provided. Call 541-490- 6680 for info. • March 21 — Hood River Indoor Farmers’ Market, 10-1 p.m. at May Street Elementary cafeteria/commons. First and third Saturday of the month. Free parking. • March 24 — Mommy Wellness, noon at MCMC Outpatient Therapy, Nichols Landing. Free. “Kegel, bladder health and exercise; infant massage.” Register at 541-296- 7319 or visit mcmc.net. • March 25 — Tobac- needed, and must be raised Both AVID 7 and AVID 8 by April 9 in order for the students have gone on re- students to receive any of the cent fieldtrips in the Gorge donated money. area. AVID 7 students learned about composting at Dirt AVID students learn Hugger, located in Dalles- skills, meet community port. Co-founder Pierce Louis AVID — Advancement Via helped students with their Individual Determination — own composting project, that is an elective college prep of eliminating food waste class for students in grades and developing proper soil 7-12 in the Hood River County composition for the school’s School District. At the middle community garden. school level, students focus AVID 8 students have been on organization, self-advoca- visiting various businesses to cy, public speaking and crit- shadow community members ical thinking. At Wy’east, the with careers that require a program is taught by Strobeck college education, including and, for eighth graders, coor- Alpine Veterinary Hospital, Hood River County Court- dinator Steffanie Olson. It’s been a busy year. house, WAAAM, Farmer’s “AVID is built upon rigor- Irrigation and the Hood River ous academic expectations News. that support each learner Coming up, AVID 8 stu- in getting most out of their dents are scheduled to shad- learning at school,” Strobeck ow a Hood River Valley High said. “Learners meet weekly School AVID student “to help Cornell Note and Tutorial ex- the transition into that pro- pectations during the school gram be more successful,” day.” Strobeck said. co Education and Support Group, 4-5:30 p.m. at Provi- dence Hood River Memori- al Hospital, classrooms 1-2. Eight-weeks (last session), free sessions, snacks provided, all welcome. More at 541-387- 1353 or 541-993-2210. • March 26 — Hood River Art Club, 10-1 p.m. at the FISH Food Bank meeting room, Tucker Road. Open to public. All levels and mediums. Bring project, lunch, supplies and $1 for coffee & misc. More info at www.hoodriverartclub.com, on Facebook, or HoodRiver- ArtClub@yahoo.com. • March 26 — Persistent Pain, noon-1 p.m. at MCMC Outpatient Therapy at Nichols Landing. Free series of eight presentations led by different healthcare professionals. At- tend the entire series or join at any time. Register at 541- 296-7319. • March 26 — Harmony of the Gorge Women’s Cho- rus, 6:30-9 p.m. at Valley Chris- tian. 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Imagine The Difference You Can Make DONATE YOUR CAR 1-844-533-9173 FREE TOWING TAX DEDUCTIBLE • March 28 — Wild Bill’s Bingo at the Elks Lodge, 7 p.m. Fundraiser for Elks scholarship programs. Open to the com- munity. $1,000 Blackout game each week. Hosted by the Elks and the Mid-Columbia Knights of Columbus. • March 30 — Signups Due for Good Neighbor Satur- day. Volunteer to help with outside chores for elderly community members on May 9 from 8-noon. More at 541- 387-6404 or Brittany.willson@ providence.org. • March 31 — Mommy Wellness, noon at MCMC Out- patient Therapy, Nichols Land- ing. Free. “Baby sign language.” Register at 541-296-7319 or visit mcmc.net. • April 1 — We l l n e s s Wednesday at Rite Aid. For seniors; free BMI and blood pressure checks, free sam- ples, walk-in vaccinations, more. First Wednesday of each month during regular business hours. • April 2 — Persistent Pain, noon-1 p.m. at MCMC Outpatient Therapy at Nichols Landing. Free series of eight presentations led by different healthcare professionals. At- tend the entire series or join at any time. Register at 541- 296-7319. • April 2 — Hood River Soil & Water Conservation Dis- trict Board Meeting, 4-6 p.m. at OSU Extension. All welcome. More at hoodriverswcd.org/ meetings. • April 2 — SMART Sip in the Gorge, 5:30 p.m. at the Hood River Hotel. Wine, beer, other drinks and small bites from local restaurants. SMART fundraiser. Tickets $25 at smart.ejoinme.org/Sipin- theGorge2020. • April 2 — Hood River Li- brary Book Club: The Highest Tide, 6:30-8 p.m. at the Hood River Library Meeting Room. Part of Hood River County Reads. More at hoodriverli- brary.org. • April 2 — Harmony of the Gorge Women’s Chorus, 6:30- 9 p.m. at Valley Christian. Four-part harmony, no need to read music. Call 541-490-2481 for info. • April 2 — Wind-Masters Men’s Chorus, 6:30-9 p.m. at Valley Christian, 975 Indian Creek Road. Four-part harmo- ny, no need to read music. • April 4 — Hood River Indoor Farmers’ Market, 10-1 p.m. at May Street Elementary cafeteria/commons. First and third Saturday of the month. Free parking. • April 4 — Warming of the Gorge and the Impact on Mountains, Mammals, and Humans, 2 p.m. at the Hood River Library Reading Room. With Bill Weiler and Darryl Lloyd. Part of Hood River County Reads. • April 7 — Mommy Well- ness, noon at MCMC Outpa- tient Therapy, Nichols Land- ing. Free. • April 8 — Alzheimer’s Support Group, 2:30-3:30 p.m. at the Hood River Valley Adult Center, 2010 Sterling Place, Hood River. • April 9 — Hood River County Democrats Meeting, 6 p.m. at the Hood River County Library. More at hoodriver- democrats.org. There’s no cost to you! (888) 651-5669 ! We’re paid by our partner communities One solution for oxygen at home, away, and for travel Introducing the INOGEN ONE – It’s oxygen therapy on your terms No more tanks to refi ll. No more deliveries. 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