Corporation for Public Community Newspapers

Corporation for Public Community Newspapers What stories are NOT being told in your community? CPCN is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that links ideas, writers, software, data, and newspapers.

11/29/2021

Bar Tales from Neverland
by Kristi Thisselle

I tell my customers, "Behind the bar is my stage, and I can be as entertaining as I want." However, I’m their audience, watching their life stories unfold with plots sometimes as bizarre as fiction.

A rainy day in 1997 slowed down our remodel job. The crew started drinking coffee and playing pool in the morning. As a customer ate breakfast, he observed us goofing off. We were just doing the usual things people in their forties do—--throw food at each other, write on each other with magic markers, sing and dance to the jukebox.

The customer said, "What are you doing hanging out with these guys?" After a moment’s reflection, I replied, "Don’t you know? This is Neverland. Larry is Peter Pan. These are the lost boys and I’m Wendy. We’ll never grow up."

We did grow older and slowed down a little. The shenanigans are shorter or no longer include some of us. We still have our memories of fun times and good people.

We could have written the lyrics to the song, "I Love This Bar." Places like this aren’t just bars and people like us have always gathered at places like this.

People like Steve. He was caring and giving, sometimes annoying. I learned a little patience from years of listening to "Bailey-isms."

"You never liked me, even as a child," whenever I told him to get a life. "Are you sure we weren’t married before?" when I told him what to do. "Would you like to be my next ex-wife?" is what he said to a lot of women.

Steve was one of our joke tellers. He loved exchanging jokes with June and alwyas begged her to marry him, even though he was 35 years younger. He knew a lot of words to old coffeeshop songs, since he used to play guitar or banjo and sing in them back East.

As a meteorologist, he was the butt of all our weather jokes.
When we said, "What a beautiful day," he always said, "Thank you."
When the weather was bad, we blamed him. He had many "Baileyisms" about that too. He was thorough. He’d call me in Alberton, then down the line until he found out how far the fog crept.

Steve always offered people in need a place to stay. He put up with one roommate’s bad habits for so long we called him a saint. He was my hero whenever he gave an obnoxious regular a ride home and didn’t bring him back.

He was another good guy who died unexpectedly. We in Neverland know he never grew up, even though he was in his fifties. Memories and stories of Steve can remind us to help one another, make people laugh, and try to bring sunshine.

Steve, we know today’s bad weather really is not your fault.

---Clark Fork Chronicle, 2005

Award-winning expedition leader Thomas Holden learned how to stay warm and dry at 19,341 feet on Mount Kilimanjaro. Now ...
10/23/2020

Award-winning expedition leader Thomas Holden learned how to stay warm and dry at 19,341 feet on Mount Kilimanjaro. Now he is applying those same lessons to help Oregon’s most vulnerable citizens. With the Pacific Northwest winter rapidly approaching, we need your help to produce 1,200 Kilimanjaro Expedition Tents. To help, please see: https://whitebirdclinic.org/donate/

Thomas, what would you say to your colleagues in Tanzania who helped design this tent, which will now help vulnerable people here in Eugene?

News Support the Kilimanjaro Expedition Tent Project 5 days ago Eugene News Award-winning expedition leader Thomas Holden learned how to stay warm and dry at 19,341 feet on Mount Kilimanjaro. Now he is applying those same lessons to help Oregon’s most vulnerable citizens. With the Pacific Northwes...

09/17/2019

https://publicnewspapers.azurewebsites.net

CPCN pioneered the concept of public newspapers in 1996 - community news created collaboratively by citizens, promoting the individual potential necessary for self-governance and civic life.

from the CPCN Special Projects committee: Journo Duty.  Based on jury duty; we ask local citizens to serve as journalist...
08/10/2019

from the CPCN Special Projects committee: Journo Duty. Based on jury duty; we ask local citizens to serve as journalists for a day and share the most important story happening right here right now.

Address

4785 Fox Hollow Road
Eugene, OR
97405

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Corporation for Public Community Newspapers posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Corporation for Public Community Newspapers:

Share