SIUSLAW NEWS ❚ SATURDAY, MAY 16, 2015 Zumba, Bollywood Fusion on boardwalk Rhody Day “Zumba” and “Bollywood Fusion” on the Port of Siuslaw Boardwalk will be happening Saturday, May 16. Join the free fitness party starting at 1 p.m. S t u d i o F l o r e n c e . c o m ’s local Zumba fitness mentor, Dori Wolfe, and her instructor guests, the MiHZFiTZ from Medford and Brooke Toy from North Bend, will lead a high 3 A STEP opens new fish cleaning facility energy aerobic fun workout. At 2 p.m., Eileen Angilletta, a Bollywood Fus- ion instructor at Studio Florence.com will be sharing some of the fun and exciting moves from her exotic and beautiful classes. Both instructors will be available before and after each exhibition to answer your questions. CITY LIGHTS CINEMAS 1930 Hwy 101 • Florence, OR 97439 Showtimes: May 15-21, 2015 $9 Regular/$8 Senior or Student/$7.50 Matinee/ $7 Child/$6.50 Member The Age of Adaline - 110 min (PG-13) - “[Harrison] Ford, in a perfor- mance as affecting as any he’s ever given, lifts this romance in ways we never see coming.” Tribune News Fri: 12:30, 3:30, 6:10, 8:40 | Sat: 2:10, 4:35, 7:05, 9:35 | Sun, Mon: 1:30, 4:10, 6:40 Tue: 12:30, 3:00, 7:30 | Wed: 1:00, 3:30, 8:35 | Thu: 12:30, 3:00, 5:30 Avengers: Age of Ultron 2D - 141 min (PG-13) – “A whole summer of fi reworks packed into one movie. It doesn’t just go to 11, it starts there.” Rolling Stone Daily Except Fri, Sat: 1:00, 4:00, 6:50 | Fri, Sat: 12:00, 3:00, 6:00, 9:00 Ex Machina - 108 min (R) – SORR Y – Forced Cancellation – Final Shows 5/15 NEW: Mad Max: Fury Road - 120 min (R) – “There is nothing easy or predictable about what George Miller delivers with Mad Max: Fury Road, a stone-cold action master class, beautiful and brainy and startling in the ways it throws off the current defi nition of the blockbuster.” Hitfl ix Daily Except Fri, Sat: 1:20, 4:10, 7:00 | Fri, Sat: 12:20, 3:10, 6:20, 9:10 NEW: Pitch Perfect 2 - 115 min (PG-13) – “Reprising the kind of musical performances, campus hijinks, stinging humor and sassy sisterhood put in place by its eminently likeable predecessor, it remixes the elements and comes up with something even slicker and sharper.” HR Fri: 12:10, 3:20, 6:10, 8:50 | Sat: 11:40am, 3:45, 6:30, 9:10 | Sun, Mon: 1:10, 3:50, 6:30 Tue: 2:30, 5:00, 7:40 | Wed: 12:50, 3:20, 6:00 | Thu: 1:10, 4:10, 8:00 Special Events: The Hard Problem - 120 min – NT Live from writer Tom Stoppard, direc- tor Nicholas Hytner Sat: 12:00 | Wed: 6:00 - “Stimulating. Absorbing. A rich, ideas-packed work.” Observer In Country - 80 min – Filmed in Oregon – fascinating doc on Vietnam War re-enactors Tue: 12:30, 5:30 – True Story Tuesday Siuslaw High School’s DynaMics & Jazz Band - See local stars on the Chaplin Stage! Thu: 7:00 – Tickets only $5 Members/$7 Non-Members - $2 of each ticket goes to SHS WWW.CITYLIGHTSCINEMAS.COM PHOTO BY BECKY GOEHRING Salmon Trout Enhancement Program (STEP) president Ron Caputo officiated over the ribbon cutting ceremony for the new six-station fish cleaning facility Saturday, located at the Port of Siuslaw parking lot. Funds for the project came from a $20,380 grant from the recreation and enhancement board of the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. STEP members raised $6,480 in labor and materials for the project. Pictured: David Huntington, Port of Siuslaw com- missioner; Ron Caputo, Port of Siuslaw board president; Bill Hennig, STEP project co-coordinator; Craig Brandt, STEP project co-coordinator, and Nancy Rickard, Port of Siuslaw commissioner. Before you purchase that home, is it safe? Is your home or business structurally sound and safe from fire, wind or other natural disasters? Before you purchased or sold your property did you visit Florence City Hall to see if the structures were constructed to code? Protect your investment and the safety of others, ensure your property meets building safety and fire prevention codes. May is Building Safety Month and the theme is Resilient Communities Start with Building Codes. The goal of Building Safety Month is to raise public aware- ness of critical safety issues from structural to fire preven- tion, plumbing and mechanical systems, and energy efficiency. The City of Florence is a Building Safety Month sup- porter and continues to work with the community to ensure public safety. All Florence property own- ers are encouraged to partici- pate and learn about the essen- tial building safety work of the City of Florence. Educational materials are available for families, businesses, schools and the community at large including children's activity books; and brochures about mold prevention, disaster pre- paredness, green building and flood cleanup. Among the 57,000 mem- bers of the International Code Council that created Building Safety Month are code officials, plan reviewers, fire inspectors, architects, builders, engineers, contrac- tors and others in the con- struction industry, including staffers in the City of Florence who work to ensure the safety of the buildings where we live, work, learn, worship and play. For more information, call Eric Rines from the City of Florence Building Department at 541-997-2141 to find out if your building was constructed to code or to see if your proj- ect requires a permit for work. Building safety impacts everyone. Summer Twilight registration ends May 22 The end of regular school Twilight Indian Education will be Thursday, June 4, only to begin gearing up for another active summer school pro- gram. On Monday, June 15, at 8 a.m., the doors at the elemen- tary south building will open for the beginning of the four- week, four-day summer school program that will end each day at 2 p.m. Classes offered, include reading, math and writing, in addition to art classes with Kim Pickell, STEM/STEAM classes, Karuk language class and a American Indian culture class each day. The last day will be Thursday, July 9. Enrollment for students in this free summer school pro- gram ends May 22 in order to have transportation available on the first week of summer school. For anyone who misses that enrollment date, arranging transportation takes 3 to 4 days from receipt of registration forms. Student can still attend the first week, but transporta- tion will not be available until the second week. Registration forms can be picked up in the Siuslaw Elementary School office or at the Twilight Indian Education after school program in the south building from 3 to 5 p.m. For more information, con- tact Lynn Anderson at 541- 997-5458. FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY MAY 16 MAY 17 MAY 18 MAY 19 MAY 20 MAY 21 MAY 22 Sunshine, Patchy Clouds Clouds an Sun Cloudy Cloudy, Possible Showers Times of Clouds and Sun Times of Clouds and Sun Times of Clouds and Sun 59°F 46°F 60°F 50°F 59°F 52°F 59°F 50°F 62°F 49°F 62°F 50°F 56°F 46°F Paul Potter - Owner WEDNESDAY THURSDAY We are wishing everyone a safe and fun-filled Rhododendron Festival Weekend! WRITTEN WARRANTY ON ALL REPAIRS NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY NAPA CAR CARE CENTER CALL 541-997-5049 4515 HWY 101 NORTH