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Jason Isbell s ShoalsFest 2021 Bringing Big Reunions to Ala

Jason Isbell s ShoalsFest 2021 Bringing Big Reunions to Ala
koel.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from koel.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Jason Isbell s ShoalsFest 2021 Bringing Big Reunions to Ala

Jason Isbell s ShoalsFest 2021 Bringing Big Reunions to Ala
keanradio.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from keanradio.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Jason Isbell s ShoalsFest 2021 Bringing Big Reunions to Ala

Jason Isbell s ShoalsFest 2021 Bringing Big Reunions to Ala
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Legendary Satyricon club offered sex, drugs and rock n roll, epitomized a Portland that is gone forever

Legendary Satyricon club offered sex, drugs and rock ’n’ roll, epitomized a Portland that is gone forever Updated Mar 16, 2021; Posted Mar 16, 2021 Hard rock of various kinds thrived at Satyricon in the 1980s and 90s. (Brent Wojahn/The Oregonian) Facebook Share Satyricon was easy to overlook. Its storefront, shoved next to a rundown grocery, faded into the grittiest part of Old Town. Its reputation, however, glowed like the White Stag sign. Portlanders of every age and outlook knew what went on behind its narrow front door or thought they did. The club opened late in 1983 and quickly became the unofficial headquarters of the city’s punk scene. It had a reputation for being a dangerous place, but it wasn’t as simple as that. Satyricon also offered whimsy. One night you might stumble upon a band that dressed “like space-alien aborigines,” as one habitué put it; on another you’d find yourself participating in an earnest Poetry Night.

Portland Restaurant Workers Are Struggling to Survive the Pandemic

After 18 years of working in food service, Shelley Bowers lost her job as a bartender at the Alibi Tiki Lounge when Oregon’s pandemic lockdown started in March. Bowers was okay for the first few months. Between the $1,200 federal stimulus check, her unemployment benefits, and an additional weekly $600 from the CARES Act Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation program, she could cover groceries and rent on her two-bedroom apartment. But the $600 stopped coming in July. Since then, she’s been scraping by with $397 a week in extended unemployment benefits, less than a quarter of her pre-pandemic income. Now, Bowers and around 12 million other Americans are set to lose these extended unemployment benefits they’re living on by the end of December. In Oregon, about 70,000 people may lose their benefits. Congress hasn’t approved any new help for unemployed Americans.

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