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Local ColorRainbows Festival brightens Heritage Square ParkMichele Laudig, Maidi Terry, Kim TomsPublished on October 02, 2003Sun 10/5 At the center of the action is the Festival Garden, where the drag performer Barbra Seville hosts a lineup of local entertainers, including the Grand Canyon Men's Chorus and Arizona Women in Tune. Hamill describes the festival's 185 exhibitors as "a good cross-section of the gay and lesbian and non-gay and lesbian community, including businesses, non-profits and other organizations." The food court boasts a variety of treats as well. It all happens at Heritage Square Park from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, October 5. For details visit www.rainbowsfestival.com. - Michele Laudig Community Fabric Witness the beauty of the AIDS Memorial Quilt 10/4-10/22 Road's Scholars The Declaration of Independence comes to the Valley 10/4-10/12 Beer Gardeners Oktoberfest serves up celebration 10/3-10/5 This year, Kinderfest offers more than a dozen attractions for children. For starters, Liebchen can string beads, run the obstacle course, and wolf down pie for prizes. Adults must visit the Bavarian beer garden serving up bratwurst, strudel and beers of the world. Proceeds from Oktoberfest food and drink sales benefit Tempe's Sister Cites Program, which last year provided wheelchairs in Macedonia and water wells in Mali. More than 2,000 volunteers make such good deeds possible. Local artist Lisa Morley is the official Ice Queen who lugs frozen largess to vendors like the "sno-cone people, the roasted corn people, the beer garden people." Important job. "Indeed. That's why I developed the royal wave and the crown," she says. Queen Lisa has volunteered for "years and years," since the festival was held at "little red picnic tables at Tempe Beach Park." Now, more than 200,000 revelers pack the park each year. Join them from 5 p.m. to midnight Friday, 10 a.m. to midnight Saturday and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. For more information, see http://community.tempe.gov/sister/oktoberfest/oktob.html or call 480-491-FEST. - Kim Toms Cinematic Self-Portrait Documentarian turns the camera on herself Tue 10/7 Friedrich is known for treating her subjects with honesty and grace in her characteristic black-and-white films. Now, facing ongoing surgical attempts to correct her own medical problems, Friedrich is becoming her own subject. Her latest film, Odds of Recovery, explores her own perspective on the issues of women's health and the effects of illness on the mind and personal relationships. The work incorporates medical textbooks, operating room transcripts, conversations with medical staff, and a segment involving the attempts she made to learn t'ai chi. The overwhelming message: Friedrich is not giving up -- and how fortunate we are for that. Friedrich's film will be shown at Modified Arts on Tuesday, October 7, at 6 and 8 p.m. Call 602-462-5516 or visit www.modified.org for more information. - Maidi Terry Getting Lit Writing workshops get underway ONGOING
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