Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, June 16, 2010, Page 11, Image 11

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    June 16, 2010
N orm an Sylvester Band - Boogie Cat Norman
Sylvester and his band perform Friday, June 18
at Clyde’s; Friday, June 25 at Tillicum ’s; Sat­
urday, June 26 at 5 p.m. at the Tigard Festival
o f Balloons; Saturday, June 26 at 9 p.m. at
G em ini’s and Sunday, June 27 at the Good in
the Neighborhood celebration.
Prehistoric P redators — Enormous dinosaurs with lifelike
ferocity are represented in an exhibit that continues through
Labor Day at the Oregon Zoo. Visitors will follow a trail
through an ancient rain forest, surrounded by the realistic
animatronic creatures that roar, snarl and move.
W o rk sh o p s C e le b ra te S isterh o o d -- Com m unity resi­
dents are invited to jo in Portland author and activist S.
Renee M itchell and others during a series o f workshops
that will focus on women o f color, healing and expression.
The sessions are on Saturdays, through June 26, from 3
p.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Healing Roots Center, 5432 N.
A lb in a
A v e.
RSVP
at
5 0 3 -2 7 8 -8 2 8 0
or
rem eem itchellspeaks@ yahoo.com .
|JortIanh (Dhseruer
Page II
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Mel Brown Live—Portland jazz giant Mel Brown performs at
Salty’s on the Columbia every Friday and Saturday night.
Known as the “Gentleman o f Jazz,” Brown has a career
spanning over 40 years.
Day of the A frica C hild — As a Rose Festival
sanctioned event, the Day o f the African Child
will offer a day-long celebration on Saturday,
June 19 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the PSU South
Park Blocks and Smith Memorial Union, featur­
ing music, dance lessons, storytelling and an
outdoor African market.
L iv eJazz—Every Friday and Saturday from8p.m. to 11 p.m.,
the Third Degrees Lounge at the River Place Hotel, 1510 S. W.
Harbor Way. No cover or minimum
purchase. For more information, visit
pdxjazz.com.
St.Johns Farm ers M ark et—The St.
Johns Farmers Market takes place
each Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at
St. Johns Plaza through Sept. 25.
About 24 vendors sell fruits, veg­
etables, meat, dairy, honey and more.
P ortland Homes - “At Home in Portland: 1909-1914,” ex­
plores the variety o f architecture during the city’s boom
years between 1900 and 1920. The exhibit runs through July
11 at the Pittock Mansion, 3229 N.W. Pittock Dr.
King F arm ers M ark et - The King Farmers Market is back
each Sunday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. through Oct. 31 at
Northeast Seventh Avenue and Wygant Street, adjacent to
King School Park. Food stamp users can receive up to $ 10 in
matching tokens.
Sam son the I .R ex —A magnificent-foot-long Tyrannosau­
rus rex skeleton, one o f the most fearsome carnivores ever to
walk the face o f the earth is on display at OMSI. The 66-
million-year-old fossil known as Samson is one o f the most
complete Tyrannosaurus rex specimens in existence.
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