These are old prescription beach walking glasses
Not sunglasses. Email me if you find them.
cward784@gmail.
Apartment, Home, Office
Thorough, efficient cleaning on the North Coast
Using safe, plant based cleaning products
Restoring beauty to your personal environment
Suzanne
Email: zinnmarie@gmail.com

It’s the second Saturday of the month – which means it’s Community Game Night! This Saturday, September 9th at 6PM at Rising Hearts Studio. Come play games with your neighbors and friends – this is a free event, open to ALL! Bring your own favorite game to share, or play one of ours! Community puzzle table is also always up. Call or text (503) 800-1092 for info or questions
Hope to see you there!
Blessings!
Rising Hearts Studio
35840 7th St
Downtown Nehalem, Hwy 101
Nehalem, OR 97131
(503) 800-1092
‘Lifting the community with education and services that promote healing on all levels’



Using the training learned in the classroom and during CERT exercises, members can assist their community or workplace following an emergency event when professional responders are not immediately available to help.

No experience is required! We all have to start somewhere; this is a great place to do it!
More audition details at www.riverbendplayers.org/
AUDITION DATES: Wednesday, September 6th, from 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm Thursday, September 7th, from 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm
AUDITION LOCATION: NCRD Performing Arts Center, 36155 9th Street, Nehalem, OR
REHEARSALS BEGIN: Monday, September 11th, 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
REHEARSAL SCHEDULE: Mondays and Wednesdays, 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm, Sundays 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm
PARENTAL WARNING: “You’ll shoot your eye out.”

Four new shows lined up for the coming year in March, June, September, and December.
Details Friday!
–

We gather and sing to heal ourselves and our community…we train to sing for those at the thresholds of life and death.
Whatever level you feel called to participate, we welcome your quiet energy…your resounding spirit…your soothing voice.
For more information:
Email oquinnhomestead@gmail.com
Text/call: 503-440-7861
We currently gather (in person) once per month on 2nd Tuesdays, 6:00-6:45pm to practice giving/receiving healing through song, learning from the Threshold Choir Repertoire (in both English and Spanish).
For those who wish to stay later to sing with the St. Catherine’s Community *Song Circle*, they begin at 7pm, and all are welcome.
Let us Sing!
2nd Tuesdays 6-8pm
St. Catherine’s Church in Nehalem, Oregon
*The Song Circle is not the same as the St. Catherine’s Church Choir

Prepare Your Neighborhood, GoBag and WaSH volunteers are ready to answer your questions. See you there!

Make sure you and your family are prepared.

Email for details: ryanjpedersen@gmail.com
or call 503-887-0332







Call me at: 503-505-8833 or email me: audene.artist@gmail.com I am in Nehalem.
Audene



Call or email. Audene 503-505-8833 or audene.artist @gmail.com (In Nehalem)






USA: Most Citizens in 3rd World Conditions
By:Yossarian Johnson, The Intellectualist 30 January 2019
A study by an MIT economist shows that the United States of America has regressed materially to a third-world nation for most of its citizens.
America divided: This concept increasingly graces political discourse in the U.S., pitting left against right, conservative thought against the liberal agenda. But for decades, [U.S.] Americans have been rearranging along another divide, one just as stark if not far more significant—a chasm once bridged by a flourishing middle class.
Peter Temin, Professor Emeritus of Economics at MIT, believes the ongoing death of “middle America” has sparked the emergence of two countries within one, the hallmark of developing nations.
In his new book, The Vanishing Middle Class: Prejudice and Power in a Dual Economy, Temin paints a bleak picture where one country has a bounty of resources and power, and the other toils day after day with minimal access to the long-coveted “American dream.”
In his view, the United States is shifting toward an economic and political makeup more similar to developing nations than the wealthy, economically stable nation it has long been.
Temin applied W. Arthur Lewis’s economic model, designed to understand the workings of developing countries, to the United States in an effort to document how inequality has grown in [U.S.] America.
The parallels are unsettling. As noted by the Institute for New Economic Thinking: In the Lewis model of a dual economy, much of the low-wage sector has little influence over public policy. The high-income sector will keep wages down in the other sector to provide cheap labor for its businesses. Social control is used to keep the low-wage sector from challenging the policies favored by the high-income sector.
The primary goal of the richest members of the high-income sector is to lower taxes. Social and economic mobility is low.
Temin describes multiple contributing factors in the nation’s arrival at this place, from exchanging the War on Poverty for the War on Drugs to money in politics and systemic racism. He outlines the ways in which racial prejudice continues to lurk below the surface, allowing politicians to appeal to the age old “desire to preserve the inferior status of Blacks,” encouraging white low-wage workers to accept their lesser place in society.
“We have a structure that predetermines winners and losers. We are not getting the benefits of all the people who could contribute to the growth of the economy, to advances in medicine or science which could improve the quality of life for everyone, including some of the rich people,” he laments.
The antidote, as prescribed by Temin, is likely a tough sell in today’s political climate.
Expanding education, updating infrastructure, forgiving mortgage and student loan debt, and overall working to boost social mobility for all [U.S.] Americans are bound to be seen as too liberal by many policy makers.

