Page 4 The Skanner Portland & Seattle March 6, 2019 News Events & Announcements Community Calendar 2019 Visit us at a store near you Portland Metro SATURDAY, MARCH 9 METAPHYSICAL-WELLNESS FAIR: Enjoy 50+ readers, healers and vendors including psychics, dream readings, astrology, jewelry, and more. Free Q & A with practitioners from 12-1 p.m. The event is from 12-8 p.m. at 4525 SE Stark St. Free admission, snacks provided. Sessions at individual stations for a fee. SATURDAY & SUNDAY, MARCH 9- 10 CFA CAT SHOW: Over 200 pedigreed cats and household pets will gather at our CFA cat show to compete for top awards. Guests can visit with exhibitors to learn more about their favorite breeds, find a breeder with kittens for sale in the near future or do some shopping for cat grooming supplies and toys. $5 adults, $10 for families, $4 for seniors. Double Tree at Lloyd Center, 1000 NE Multnomah St. SUNDAY, MARCH 10 GET IT ON PAPER -- 20 YEARS OF STREET ROOTS: The opening of Central Library’s exhibition charting the two-decade history of Street Roots, one of the most important publications in Port- land history, with appearances from the paper’s leadership, its vendors, and its supporters. Opening reception at 2 p.m., Mult- nomah County Central Library, 801 SW 10th Ave. MY REAL PORTLAND - THE PODCAST: Watch the live taping of season two premiere episode. Host Joseph Lyons has invited three Portland originals – a comedian, a musician, and a profes- sor – for an evening of live performance, conversation, and fun. Audience members will have the chance to compete in a game with Portland-based trivia. Happy hour begins at 5:30 p.m. at The Jade Lounge, 2342 SE Ankeny St. MONDAY, MARCH 11 MITCHELL S. JACKSON AND JUDGE ADRIENNE NELSON: The award-winning author of The Residue Years returns with Sur- vival Math, taking readers to the drug-ravaged Portland neigh- borhood of his youth and examining the cultural factors that forced him and his family to this place. Jackson will be joined in conversation by Oregon Supreme Court Justice Adrienne Nelson. 7:30 p.m. at Powell’s City of Books, 1005 W Burnside. THURSDAY, MARCH 14 THE NO PLAY COMMUNITY NIGHT: The No Play by John Henry Redwood conveys the racially divided world of Halifax, North Carolina in 1949 during the apex of the Jim Crow era. The title is derived from many “No” signs that dotted the southern land- scape during that despotic era in American. Community night price $14, Interstate Firehouse Cultural Center, 5340 North In- terstate Avenue. SATURDAY, MARCH 16 ESTATE PLANNING 101: Join Oregon Historical Society board See Community Calendar on page 5 PHOTOS BY BEN BRINK COURTESY OF PORTLAND PARKS & RECREATION brought to you by Parks & Rec Presents the 2019 Portlanders Stand with Refugees & Immigrants Celebration Portland Parks & Recreation (PP&R) presents the third annual Portlanders Stand with Refugees & Immigrants celebration on Friday, March 15 at PP&R’s Southwest Community Center. All are welcome to the vibrant, multicultural community gathering to celebrate and welcome people new to Portland and the United States. Enjoy free admission for music, dancing, and camaraderie. Food vendors will be on site (food is for purchase). This event takes place from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. March 15, 6820 SW 45th Ave. For more information visit https://www.facebook.com/events/321364395387938/. Portland News Briefs PCCEP Steering Committee to Meet March 12 The public is invite to the Portland Committee on Community-Engaged Policing (PCCEP) - Steering Committee for its March meeting on Tuesday, March 12th, 2019 from 5:30pm-7:00pm at The PCCEP Office, 525 NE Oregon Street, Suite 250 in Portland. (The PC- CEP office is located inside the East West College of the Healing Arts building on the corner of NE Oregon Street and NE 6th Avenue. The Portland Streetcar lines A and B, MAX Light Rail lines Red, Blue and Green -- at 7th Avenue MAX station -- and the #6 bus line all stop nearby, there is street pre-paid parking in the neighborhood.) The draft agenda is online at https://www.portlan- doregon.gov/pccep/article/714170 and meeting de- tails are available at https://www.portlandoregon. gov/pccep/article/714153. PCCEP welcomes input from community members, who can share ideas during the public comment peri- ods of the March 12 meeting. Members of the public also provide your feedback to the PCCEP prior to the meeting by emailing your input to PCCEPinfo@portlandoregon.gov. Your feed- back will be shared with PCCEP members prior to the March 12th meeting. Visit the PCCEP website to learn more at https:// w w w.portlandoregon. gov/pccep/77238. To help ensure equal access to our programs, services, and activities, the City of Portland will reasonably modify pol- icies/procedures and provide auxiliary aids/ services to persons with disabilities. If there are ways the city can help you more fully participate in this process, please contact Claudia Claudio at clau- dia.claudio@portlan- doregon.gov. To learn more about submitting an ADA Ac- commodation form, click here. Childcare is available upon request. In order to arrange for childcare, please email claudia.claudio@ portlandoregon.gov at least four days prior to the meeting. Oregon Shakespeare Festival’s 2019 Season Opens March 8 Ashland -- The Tony Award–winning Oregon Shake- speare Festival (OSF) will launch its 84th year and Bill Rauch’s final season as artistic director with preview performances beginning on March 1. The 2019 sea- son officially kicks off Friday night, March 8, in the Angus Bowmer Theatre with Shakespeare’s “As You Like It” (director, Rosa Joshi). On Saturday afternoon, “Cambodian Rock Band” (director, Chay Yew) opens in the Thomas Theatre, and “Hairspray—The Broadway Musical” (director, Christopher Liam Moore) opens that evening in the Angus Bowmer Theatre. On Sun- day afternoon, the drama by Southern Oregon–based playwright Octavio Solis, “Mother Road” (director, Bill Rauch), will see its world premiere in the Angus Bowmer Theatre. The 2019 season is dedicated to the memory of Paul Allen, and all those who have chosen to make a differ- ence in the world through their generosity. When Paul and his sister Jody Allen were young, each year their parents would pack them up and make the road trip from Seattle to Ashland to watch Shakespeare classics performed in front of a rapt au- dience. In the intervening years, the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation has supported multiple OSF programs and helped construct both the Thomas Theatre and the current iteration of OSF’s flagship Allen Elizabe- than Theatre. The full 2019 playbill includes: “As You Like It,” “Mother Road,” “Hairspray—The Broadway Musical” and “Indecent” in the Angus Bow- mer Theatre; “Cambodian Rock Band,” “Between Two Knees” and “How to Catch Creation” in the intimate Thomas Theatre; and “Macbeth,” “Alice in Wonder- land” and “All’s Well That Ends Well” in the outdoor Allen Elizabethan Theatre. “La Comedia of Errors,” a bilingual (Spanish and English) adaptation of one of Shakespeare’s zaniest comedies, will be performed at a variety of show times an in a variety of spaces, including OSF’s Thomas Theatre and Hay-Patton Re- hearsal Center, and in local communities. The 2019 Green Show season will run Wednesday to Saturday evenings at 6:45pm from June 7 to Septem- ber 28. Updates of the exciting engagements and innova- tions planned for this unique performance experi- ence will be announced throughout the season. See Briefs on page 5