GOOD GOLLY, RETURN of the CHAMPIONS MISS MOLLY Winterhawks reload — SEE SPORTS, B10 — SEE LIFE, B1 PortlandTribune THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2013 • TWICE CHOSEN THE NATION’S BEST NONDAILY PAPER • WWW.PORTLANDTRIBUNE.COM • PUBLISHED THURSDAY Parents ■ New Obamacare rules will affect addicted criminals’ treatment — but how? seethe as system stumbles PPS feels the heat from social media, Ainsworth families

By JENNIFER ANDERSON The Tribune

A hailstorm of complaints is raining down on Public Schools. Beach School has been wracked by alienated parents. So has Metropolitan Learning Center, where, on the second day of school, un- “The culture resolved concerns of PPS seems from last to be to year led a sweep poor group of parents to performance hang a ban- of principals ner on the and teachers staff park- ing lot under the fence. They rug.” say the ban- ner — — former ‘GAME CHANGER’ which read Ainsworth parent “MLC par- ents support MLC teach- ers — was a show of unity. Which is why they were TO RESHAPE REHAB shocked to fi nd it removed the next morning, stuffed into a t took Jerome Gilgan three stints in resi- try’s inmates either are addicts or have a his- nearby Dumpster. Story by dential treatment before he started to tory of substance abuse. Things also are ugly at Ain- get a handle on his drug addiction and But fi nding funds to treat convicted offend- sworth Elementary, a generally Peter Korn I his life of crime. ers historically has been a struggle for county quiet, popular, high-performing Photos by Gilgan was one of the lucky ones. He return- community justice programs, which oversee school in Southwest Portland. ing twice to the Volunteers of America men’s probationers and parolees. The same 2010 Parents’ issues with the princi- Adam Wickham center in Northeast Portland because he was study found that only about one in 10 inmates pal and one teacher there that a career criminal considered among those at receives addiction treatment. started three years ago have highest risk to re-offend. Most addicted crimi- That is about to change, big time. escalated as they’ve wound nals in Multnomah County never qualify for In January, the federal Affordable Care Act their way through the district’s Jerome Gilgan even one round of inpatient treatment. will transform the nation’s health care. Medic- complaint process, finally (above), now an The VOA center’s 52 beds are reserved for aid will cover addiction treatment for those reaching a stalemate now at the addiction counselor, Multnomah County men on probation or pa- who cannot afford private health insurance, level of the school board and su- needed three role. Gilgan had a history of arrests for bur- including felons. If handled well, this new fed- perintendent. inpatient stints glary and drug dealing. Like most addicts, he eral funding could permanently change the The parents say the system before he could found a stay at a residential center worked, for Success at the VOA men’s residential facility can face of crime in Portland. In addition, treat- failed them. control his addiction awhile. But each time he’d leave treatment be found on a bulletin board displaying photos ment facilities such as the VOA center, as well PPS has parents work and stop committing and return to addiction and crime. and information from the most recent alumni as local outpatient drug and alcohol counsel- through their teacher and prin- crimes. Starting Gilgan has been clean and sober for 10 meeting. ors, could soon be seeing a fl ood of new pa- cipal fi rst, and then through the January, Medicaid years and works as a certifi ed drug and alco- tients with criminal histories. principal’s direct supervisor, will cover addiction hol counselor at the VOA facility on Northeast Few societal issues are more intertwined Portland police Chief Mike Reese calls the the regional administrator. treatment for low- Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. Just as im- than addiction and crime. A 2010 study by the new Medicaid rules “a game changer.” But at There are six RAs for the income probationers portant, he says, he has not committed a crime National Center on Addiction and Drug Abuse and parolees. in that time. found that more than 80 percent of the coun- See REHAB / Page 2 See PPS / Page 9 Oregon marks ties with India revolutionaries rizing the names of key martyrs Poring through back issues of In Portland, Astoria, like Sohan Singh Bhakna and newspapers, oral histories and Ghadar Party plotted Kanshi Ram, and the name of the other materials, Ogden found boat they took back to India. that several hundred “Punjabis” revolt againt British What the Beaverton resident settled in Oregon towns along didn’t know, until very recently, the Columbia River in the years By STEVE LAW was that Bhakna and Ram hailed before World War I. Then — The Tribune from Portland, and that the Gha- when the Ghadar Party deemed dar Party they helped build was it a ripe time to foment armed When Gurpreet Kaur was forged largely in Portland and insurrection while Britain was growing up in India, she Astoria. In fact, hardly anyone in preoccupied by the war — the learned in middle school the world knew until Portland community largely vanished, about the brave freedom fi ght- historian Johanna “Jo” Ogden mostly to take up arms against ers who formed an overseas started digging into the matter British colonizers back home. revolutionary movement a five years ago and shared her Though the armed revolt was PHOTO BY KESAR SINGH, COURTESY OF THE AMARJIT CHANDAN COLLECTION century ago and then re- fi ndings last summer in the “Or- quashed, the Ghadar Party is re- Sohan Singh Bhakna, second from the right, was arrested and jailed for his role in the Ghadar Party’s turned home to seek the over- egon Historical Quarterly,” a vered in India as an inspirational abortive revolt against British rule in India. The former St. Johns mill worker, a major organizer and leader throw of British colonialism. scholarly journal published by of the party, is shown here in 1938 at Amritsar Railway Station. Kaur recalls dutifully memo- the Oregon Historical Society. See GHADAR / Page 10

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VOA treatment Currently, Multnomah Rehab: County does not pay for addic- facility likely to tion treatment for low- and Other funds needed medium-risk offenders. Medic- see more high- aid will pay starting in January, ■ but Medicaid is unlikely to From page 1 risk offenders cover expensive inpatient treat- In 2008, the Volunteers of ment for those parolees and this point, nobody is certain ex- America men’s residential probationers when they could actly who will get how much facility in Northeast Port- benefit from outpatient drug coverage, how other funds will land had a 71 percent suc- counseling. be offset or affected, and what cess rate treating parolees Alternatively, Stone would strings might be attached. And and probationers consid- like to see a different treatment that’s keeping more than a few ered to be of high and me- model for the growing number administrators up at night. dium risk to commit new of young heroin addicts on pro- “We are scrambling to fi gure crimes. In 2010 the facility bation and parole — a locked this out,” says Jeremiah Strom- allowed in only high-risk facility. berg, Oregon’s assistant direc- men and its success rate Martin says Multnomah tor for community corrections. dropped to 55 percent. County rented space in Wash- For example, at the VOA resi- Greg Stone, program direc- ington County for such a facili- dential facility for high-risk of- tor the VOA center, worries ty about 15 years ago. High-risk fenders, men must stay six that the success rate — basi- probationers and parolees with months to graduate. Gilgan cally the percentage of men serious addictions had to agree says he needed the six months, graduating the six-month pro- to live there for six months, and which gave him time to get be- gram — might drop further as if they decided to leave they yond the need to stop using more of the most diffi cult pro- had to give 24-hour notice. The drugs, and address the underly- bationers and parolees gain notice was key because often, ing psychological issues that Medicaid benefi ts and are sent clients who asked to be re- had led him to commit crimes. to his facility for addiction leased had gotten past their But once Medicaid begins to treatment. crisis and changed their minds pay the bill for treatment at the TRIBUNE PHOTO: ADAM WICKHAM A residential treatment facil- before the 24 hours were up. VOA facility that will change, Larry Jones (left) and Karl Colbert have been living at the VOA residential facility in Northeast Portland for ity, Stone explains, develops a “It worked, people fi nished,” according to Pam Kelly, director more than four months. Group sessions there are aimed at getting beyond addiction to the psychological culture created by its clients, Martin says, adding that there of VOA’s public safety pro- roots of their criminal behaviors. despite the best efforts of staff simply isn’t county money for grams. Kelly says it is likely that to control the environment. such a facility anymore. Ironi- stays will be reduced to one or says, “We’re going to end up possibly, and not have enough The VOA facility lost an advan- cally, Multnomah County cur- two months. with sober criminals. And we outpatient treatment probably,” tage when it could no longer rently has an empty facility That’s because Medicaid pays don’t want clean and sober Parolee treatment Martin says. It’s possible, she accept medium-risk addicts, that some have said could for health care, and federal ad- criminals.” ■ During fi scal 2013, says, that even though more of- according to Stone. serve such a purpose — the ministrators are likely to see In addition, Kelly says, Medic- Multnomah County’s fenders will be covered for inpa- “The people who had a little mothballed Wapato Jail. one or two months of inpatient aid might not pay for second Department of Community tient treatment, the shorter more incentive, who were a lit- On a second alternative, treatment, followed by less ex- and third chances for clients Justice supervised 12,224 stays could move clients in and tle higher functioning, could both Stone, Martin and others pensive outpatient treatment, as who, like Gilgan, have relapsed. parolees and probationers. out quicker, so the demand for come in and stabilize your com- agree — to an extent. If resi- a suffi cient health care solution. Currently, when parolees and Number who received sub- new residential beds might not munity,” Stone says. dential treatment centers are While in the VOA center, in probationers get addiction sidized inpatient alcohol be too great. Again, nobody Last year, 40 percent of the going to be increasingly domi- addition to addiction counsel- treatment in Multnomah Coun- and drug treatment: 604 knows for sure, she says. VOA facility’s residents were nated by high-risk heroin ad- (5 percent) ing, Gilgan re- ty, 74 percent of the But the real kink in the sys- heroin addicts, up from 8.7 dicts, probation officers can ■ Number who received ceived counseling payment comes outpatient alcohol and drug tem, Martin says, is a compo- percent 13 years ago. These help by removing the parolees aimed at changing “We’re not from the county treatment: 1,258 (10 nent of addiction treatment men are less likely to cooper- and probationers who fail to thought patterns general fund. percent) many providers says is critical ate and more likely to chip — cooperate. that contributed going to have About 10 percent is — clean and sober housing once secretly use opiates while Typically parole and proba- to his criminality, enough funded through clients have completed residen- staying at the facility. And tion officers are reluctant to dealing with is- residential state and federal standard. Those that don’t, she tial or outpatient treatment. that, Stone says, makes it kick their clients out of treat- sues such as im- grants, with the points out, are likely to gain in- Agencies such as Central City harder on all the clients. ment for one or two infractions, pulsivity and anti- treatment state picking up surance coverage through one Concern operate large-scale “It creates pure hell and cha- Martin says, because treat- social thinking. In possibly, and not another 8 percent of the other new mechanisms apartment buildings for people os for you. ... You bring one guy ment at a facility like the men’s the last two of the cost and the supported by the Affordable in recovery. Increasingly, demo- in who brings (drugs) in and a residential center is their best months of client have enough city of Portland Care Act. cratically run, drug and alcohol lot of guys jump on board with hope for change. stays the center outpatient paying 8 percent. Currently, few offenders con- free Oxford Houses have be- him,” Stone says. Ideally, Martin says, parole ensures that cli- So potentially, sidered at medium or low risk to come a go-to housing option for Stone isn’t going to get medi- and probation offi cers will re- ents have jobs and treatment when Medicaid re-offend get subsidized addic- those just out of recovery. The um-risk offenders back into his spond quickly with a not overly clean and sober probably.” pays 100 percent of tion treatment outside jail, but demand for both could jump client population. The county is severe sanction, such as a day living situations the treatment cost they also will receive Medicaid next year. primarily interested in lower- or two in jail and then back to lined up before — Ginger Martin, for residents at the coverage. One problem: Low- “I think that’s going to be a ing crime, and the most impact the treatment facility. Proba- they leave. Multnomah County VOA center, Mult- and medium-risk offenders bottleneck,” Martin says. will occur if the most expensive tion and parole offi cers, with Simply treating Department of nomah County don’t have close supervision by Ed Blackburn, executive di- treatment is reserved for ad- already large caseloads, some- addiction doesn’t Community Justice could use the mon- parole and probation officers rector of nonprofi t Central City dicted parolees and probation- how are going to have to fi nd a turn criminals in- ey it saves to ex- who can connect them with ad- Concern, concurs. ers most likely to re-offend, way to more closely monitor to law-abiding citizens, accord- tend the shorter Medicaid-fund- diction treatment. They may Central City Concern oper- says Ginger Martin, deputy di- many of their high-risk offend- ing to Gilgan. ed stays. Or, the county could never know of the opportunity, ates more recovery housing rector for Multnomah County’s ers, Martin says, and that won’t “A lot of times guys, once they use that saved money to pay for or how to access treatment, or than any other agency in Port- Department of Community be easy. stop using, they continue to do clean and sober housing for be convinced they need it, un- land and he says there already Justice. — Peter Korn that criminality because you get those parolees and probation- less Martin’s department makes is a 10-month waiting list for an the same high off the adrenaline ers after their residential stays. some changes. apartment in one of their recov- rush, from how you plan Or, the county could take that Still, the new rules could pro- ery buildings. position of not doing anything.” “It (housing) is new territory (crimes). And most of them, saved money and put it back in- duce a rush of newly insured cli- How much more demand Blackburn is hoping that for a lot of people whose careers that’s just how they survive,” to the general fund. ents with criminal backgrounds could there be once the Afford- Multnomah County and the city have been in the medical fi eld,” Gilgan says. Nobody is quite sure what’s asking for addiction treatment. able Care Act takes effect? “We of Portland put into recovery Blackburn says. “Some of them going to happen with that mon- Ramping up outpatient care don’t know,” Blackburn says. housing some of the money that get it and some of them are still Treating criminal tendencies ey, Martin says. And that’s why won’t be too hard, Martin says. But it could be a great deal, he might be saved when Medicaid struggling with what is the role If Medicaid will not pay for everybody is scrambling — Jan. All that requires, basically, is says, and agencies that deal pays more of the health care of housing in health care trans- treating criminality, additional 1 is fast approaching. that established addiction ser- with both addiction and those in bills for the uninsured. Central formation.” money will have to be found to vices agencies rent offi ce space the housing fi eld have been talk- City Concern has some build- The VOA’s Kelly says every- extend the inpatient stays of pa- Who will qualify? and hire new counseling and ing to city and county offi cials ings that could be converted to body involved needs to get used rolees and probationers, says Also uncertain is how many medical staff. But inpatient care about the issue. recovery housing, he says, but to new thinking, and quickly. Ginger Martin, deputy director parolees and probationers will requires building new facilities, “Here’s my message,” Black- that won’t be cheap, it can’t hap- “We’re on this fast track in for the Multnomah County De- qualify for Medicaid coverage. and that is costly and time-con- burn says. “Don’t wait for an pen overnight, and it will re- Oregon and everyone’s meeting partment of Community Jus- Martin estimates that some- suming, Martin says. exact number. Let’s start build- quire a change in attitude to try and fi gure this all out, but tice, which oversees probation- where between 40 and 60 per- “We’re not going to have ing it. We can’t let a big number among some of the system’s these timelines are kicking in,” ers and parolees. If not, Martin cent will meet the low-income enough residential treatment intimidate us and put us in a players. she says.

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Portland NEWS CONTACTS ADVERTISING CONTACTS CORRECTIONS News tips: Web site: Advertising phone: 503-684-0360 The Portland Tribune strives for accuracy. Please contact (503) 620-7355 [email protected] www.portlandtribune.com J. Brian Monihan, Advertising Sales Vice Managing Editor Kevin Harden at 503-546-5167 or Web site: Tribune Circulation: Main offi ce: President, [email protected] [email protected], if you see an error. www.community-classifi eds.com [email protected] 503-226-6397 Email: West Portland: Laura Davis, 503-546-9896 ■ A story in the Sept. 12 Portland Tribune on Beach School info@community-classifi eds.com Letters to the Editor and Circulation: Closer to home. East Portland: Tamara Hollenbeck, incorrectly stated the number of unfi lled teaching positions. Fax: My View submissions: 503-546-9810 503-546-9894 (503) 620-3433 [email protected] Two jobs were unfi lled until the fi fth day of school. Mailing address: Cheryl DuVal, Manager, Creative services 6605 S.E. Lake Road [email protected] Portland, OR 97222 ©2013 Portland Tribune The Portland Tribune Thursday, September 19, 2013 NEWS A3 Wipes, candidates, marriage, Dr. John gets other things clogging the drain election fever By MARK MASON AND sion, we all become political tions with the chair. lthough Oregon Gov. the lives of many Oregon fami- DAVE ANDERSON pundits with strong opinions ••• John Kitzhaber lies more acrimonious. He For The Tribune about performance. Maybe we has not yet would have been an should start paying attention A Philippines man has en- Aannounced awful Fed Chair.” eaverton has joined a to the other, less sexy deci- dured 19 plastic surgeries in his re-election As the name handful of Washing- sions they make, like how will an effort to look just like Su- plans, a recent says, the ton County cities that we pay for that new bridge, perman. Nose job, jaw realign- email from his PCCC works Bhope to tap the Willa- where is the library money re- Mark&Dave ment, pectoral implants, ab- campaign com- for progres- mette River as a source for ally coming from. It’s the little dominal implants and more mittee shows he sive change. drinking water. Most days, things that make the big dif- UP IN THE AIR seem to be doing the trick. The is thinking about it Green is a former we’re warned not to swim in ference. If we had a nickel ev- 35-year-old man has been ob- — and considers the MoveOn online orga- it. It’s going to take a lot of ery time a politician cheated sessed with the superhero possible Sept. 30 special nizer and Democratic fi lters. on his wife, we’d be able to pay since he was 5. He even plans session of the Legislature to party communications work- the arts tax for the rest of our and seek ... alone. I guess his a procedure to make him taller be critical to his re-election. er. The committee’s other co- lives. imaginary friend called 9-1-1. by implanting metal in his Shortly after the governor’s founder is Stephanie Taylor, That reminds us: We’re No. ••• ••• legs. Mark thinks he’s nuts. offi ce sent an offi cial news re- a former MoveOn and SEIU 2! The Portland Bureau of En- Dave wants to know more lease saying Kitzhaber had organizer. vironmental Services is telling Despite moral lapses, the People who live in down- about the leg implants. told legislative leaders to pre- customers the new “fl ushable” job Jeff Cogen (and before him town Portland are thinner and ••• pare for the special session, Cha-ching! It’s lunchtime wipes are anything butt, er, Ted Wheeler) did as Mult- more fi t than those who live in the John Kitzhaber for Gover- for lucky winners but. Seems they don’t break nomah County chair has made the Portland suburbs. That’s He’s besties with North Ko- nor committee sent an email down as quickly as regular toi- the gig attractive again. Politi- according to the ZIP code- rea dictator (and reported exe- to political supporters titled, Want to have lunch with let paper and are clogging up cal wags are already weighing based BMI map published re- cutioner of his ex-girlfriend) “It’s time to call the question.” Massachusetts’ senior U.S. the sewer pipes. In Washing- prospects of Oregon legisla- cently in the Trib. Owe it to Kim Jong-Un, and now Dennis It argued that higher taxes Sen. Elizabeth Warren? Just ton County (and communities tors who could fi ll the position. the extra steps you take every Rodman says he’s agreed to and PERS are needed to stabi- donate to U.S. Sen. Jeff Merk across the country) hundreds Among the names: Jules Bai- day having to avoid homeless train North Korea’s Olympic lize school budgets. ley’s re-election campaign of gallons of wipes are pulled ley, Shemia Fagin, Alissa Keny camps, panhandlers, skate- basketball team. We know jobs “Thank you again for and you’ve got a from pipes every month. This Guyer and Jackie Dingfelder. boarders on sidewalks, cab- are hard to fi nd in today’s all of your support,” chance to make that is creeping us out big time, so Len Bergstein, president of bies who kick you out mid- economy, but are Americans according to the happen. can we move on now? Remem- Northwest Strategies, reminds fare, gang members who shoot that desperate? Can only campaign email. That’s the latest ber only two things are truly us not to forget the “dynasty” into crowds and the plethora imagine what happens to Rod- “Oregon is on the fundraising twist fl ushable. Three if you include candidates — anyone named of inaccessible streets due to man if the team loses — the right track, but we for Oregon’s junior most of City Hall’s ideas. Kafoury (already leaning in), some kind of construction or fl ickering lights of Pyongyang clearly have unfi n- senator. Just chip in ••• Roberts or Smith (including street fair. And you thought won’t be in tribute to Dennis, ished business. Please between $15 and Jefferson). Would he implode living downtown was hazard- that’s for sure. At least they join me in urging the $2,600 — maybe more WARREN Don’t understand all the again? ous to your health. can attach the electrodes to Legislature to come to- if you really want to do consternation about seclusion ••• ••• Rodman’s piercings. On sec- gether to invest in Ore- lunch — and you’re en- rooms for students with be- ond thought, can we get Miley gon students this year. We tered in a contest to be guests havior disorders. For most We have a new winner. Clint Eastwood’s second Cyrus as his assistant trainer? need to get it done for Ore- at a meal with liberal darling parents, the entire school is a Move over, woman stuck be- wife has fi led for separation ••• gon’s children, for Oregon’s Warren. seclusion room. tween two walls. A Tacoma from the actor and director. economy, for Oregon’s future.” The contest through Act- ••• man had to be rescued after Married 17 years, the East- Despite some local sheriffs’ The email was simply Blue, the online system that getting stuck inside a 20-inch woods have grown apart. She’s protests, blind people in Iowa signed “John.” allows liberal and Democratic Why Jeff Cogen matters? wide chimney. Nothing crimi- seeking the spotlight with her are allowed to carry guns. And candidates and others to set Because when a politician nal. The young man told fi re- own reality show, and he’s we aren’t allowed to text and Merkley fed up up fundraising pages, will give makes a terrible personal deci- fi ghters he was playing hide longing for private conversa- drive? with Summers a winner chosen at random two round-trip coach-class air- Oregon U.S. Sen. Jeff Merk- line tickets from Oregon to ley is getting credited with Washington, D.C., and two derailing Larry Summers’ tickets to a lunch with Sens. appointment as head of the Merkley and Warren. (No Newberg drive-in wins Honda contest Federal Reserve board. Sum- word on whether you get to sit mers told President Obama at the same table as the two The Tribune for the small theater. The projec- was supposed to end Sept. 9, but theaters means saving roman- not to nominate him for the senators.) tors can cost between $50,000 to Honda extended it until Sept. 21, tic proposals, quality time with post after four Democratic Here’s the catch: In Oregon, Newberg’s 99W Drive-In is $70,000. meaning more theaters could friends and family, and nostal- members of the Senate Bank- you can enter the contest one of fi ve drive-in theaters in Honda created Project Drive- receive the digital projectors. gic experiences,” said Alicia ing Committee — including without making a contribu- the nation that will jump into In as a national effort to save as On Saturday, Honda an- Jones, manager of Honda Social Merkley — signaled their op- tion. Go to jeffmerkley.com/ the future with new digital many of America’s remaining nounced winners in addition to Media at American Honda Mo- position. warren/lunch/no-donation. projectors, courtesy of Hon- drive-ins as possible. The project 99W Drive-In, the Saco Drive-In tor Co. “Digital projection will In a news release from the ActBlue warns that contri- da’s Project Drive-In. sought votes online for dozens of in Saco, Maine; the Cherry Bowl help this small business create Progressive Change Campaign butions to Jeff Merkley for Or- Without the digital projector, drive-in theaters across the Drive-In in Honor, Mich.; the priceless memories for decades Committee, co-founder Adam egon are not tax deductible the 60-year-old family-owned country that could receive the Graham Drive-In in Graham, to come.” Green said, “Sen. Merkley’s under federal law. The online drive-in theater could have been new digital projector. Honda will Texas; and the McHenry Out- The Francis family opened the well-known opposition to Lar- company even included a forced to close. Movie distribu- give projectors to fi ve drive-ins door Theater in McHenry, Ill. 99W Drive-in Theatre in August ry Summers likely made a big “Please Leave Us a Tip” sec- tors are ending the use of 35-mil- across the country. The other Oregon drive-in 1953. The nearly 300-car drive-in difference. Summers’ past de- tion on its email fundraising limeter film, and the costly More than 2 million votes hoping to win the contest is the had a single screen until 1983, cisions to deregulate Wall plea so donors could provide switch to digital projection were cast for about 100 theaters Motor Vu Drive-In in Dallas. when the indoor Twin Cinema Street and do the bidding of bucks to help other liberal would have been too expensive across the country. The voting “Saving the 99W Drive-In was built on the property. corporate America have made candidates use the service.

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447950.091813 A4 NEWS The Portland Tribune Thursday, September 19, 2013 PPS seeks mediator; group urges more talks

to the school board and union which they need to see progress Labor talks with leaders. The group’s letter says on in this round of negotiations. teachers union stall members have been watching It is certainly not clear to the ongoing negotiations with in- public what the real and per- as strike threat looms terest, and were “heartened ceived roadblocks are to a suc- that at the end of the Sept. 6 cessful negotiation.” By JENNIFER ANDERSON meeting, there seemed to be a Finally, the group urges both The Tribune willingness on both sides to parties to agree to a fair time- move beyond communication of line to reach settlement, such as After fi ve months of unsuc- their positions and get down to mid-November. cessful negotiations with its business.” “Our students and our com- teachers’ union, Portland The letter continues: “Since munity need you to stay at the Public Schools this week that change of attitude carried table and hammer out a fair asked a state mediator to over into a productive session contract,” according to the help with labor talks. on Sept. 14, we were surprised group’s letter. “We have seen in PPS and the Portland Associ- that at the end of the day, PPS the past examples of both of you ation of Teachers have been indicated it was going to imme- working together for the great- talking since April about issues diately exercise its right to er good. We need you both to of salary, instructional time, move to mediation.” bring that spirit to the table.” health insurance and leave The Our Portland, Our Our Portland, Our Schools is time. Both sides remain far Schools members are urging a mix of parents who’ve been apart on the issues. both parties to negotiate face- active on local and statewide INTRODUCING DEGREE COMPLETION Both sides’ positions are post- to-face, in public. “We think this school issues. Two of the mem- ed at pps.k12.or.us/depart- is important to build trust and bers, Rita Moore and Scott Bai- ments/labor relations/. goodwill, to be transparent to ley, have run for Portland FROM CHARTER COLLEGE. One group of PPS parents the public, and to avoid at all School Board. isn’t in favor of the mediator costs moving towards the impo- The co-chairs are Moore and stepping in. On Tuesday, a day sition of a contract and the pos- Josh Curtis, and members in- %ARNAN!SSOCIATE$EGREEINkVE after PPS made its announce- sibility of a strike,” they say. clude Bailey, Ted Wolf, Rhys ment, a group called Our Port- “We urge both parties to pub- Scholes, Betsy Salter, Mike Ver- months with the credits you already land, Our Schools sent a letter licly identify the key issues on bout and Paul Anthony. HAVE KBOO station manager If you have a certificate or significant coursework in a business, health care, or trades program, you could be in a great position to advance your career with a degree quits as board regroups completion program from Charter College.1 By STEVE LAW About 700 foundation members, which ends Sept. 30, he said. The Tribune who include the nonprofi t sta- The board had given Fitch a Courses are offered online, providing students with the tion’s fi nancial contributors and mandate to change personnel convenience of anytime anywhere education, but with the Embattled KBOO station volunteers, cast ballots in the and other policies, but those pro- manager Lynn Fitch has re- annual board of directors elec- voked a backlash at the alterna- resources of a nearby land campus for in-person support. signed her position, amid tion concluding Sunday, Conser tive station, long a voice for mu- Each program applies credits you have already earned toward signs she was losing support said. The four winners topped sic, news and public affairs pro- from the station’s board of all the other candidates by a gramming not found elsewhere your degree so you can finish in just five months. directors. substantial margin of 180 to 190 on the Portland radio dial. Fitch, who had been on medi- votes, he said. Some of the los- Fitch angered KBOO’s paid cal leave since late July, in- ing candidates had indicated staff members by cutting their Associate of Applied Science Degree in Business Administration formed the board on Sept. 9 that support for the direction the benefi ts and other moves to as- Designed for graduates of a certificate business program or she was resigning, shortly be- station was taking under Fitch’s sert more managerial authority fore she was to return to work, leadership. at the 45-year-old station, which those with 54 credits in coursework. Coursework includes said Board Chairman S.W. The board had promoted has a tradition of participatory personnel training, management and evaluation, customer “Conch” Conser. Fitch several months ago from governance. At one point, Fitch On Sunday, Sept. 15, members development director to station threatened to fi re all the staff service, office software, communication, ethics, sociology, of the KBOO Foundation elected manager, as the station faced in- and make them re-apply for and environmental science. four new board members, all of creasing fi nancial pressures and their jobs. them recommended by a group stagnant listenership. The staff voted 8-0 to unionize called Committee to Keep KBOO The station has about 4,850 on May 30, and they are repre- Associate of Applied Science Degree in Allied Health as KBOO, which had opposed paid members, down about 6 sented by the Communications Designed for those with a certificate in a healthcare field, some of the policies pushed by percent compared to the prior Workers of America, Local 7901. Fitch and her supporters on the year, Conser reported at the The board meets on Monday including medical and dental assisting, medical coding and board. foundation’s annual meeting on and may decide to pick an inter- vocational nursing. You’ll receive training in critical thinking, The new board members are Sunday. The station fell about im station manager, Conser said. Michael Wells, Joe Uris, Jenni- $100,000 short of its fundraising He plans to step down as board problem solving, healthcare policy, plus supervisory and fer Davis and Adin Rogovin. goals for the 2012-13 fi scal year, chair. management skills.

Associate of Applied Science Degree in Applied Technology PDXUPDATE Designed for trade and craft professionals who have completed an HVAC, welding, electrical, plumbing, or other Work starts on new vocational program. You’ll receive training in the professional Cully neighborhood park A rendering shows the new Cully side of the trade including project management, customer Portland Parks & Recreation neighborhood park service, communication, and office software. expects to begin work in the that will be spring on the fi rst neighborhood developed at park in the Cully area. Northeast 52nd Construction of the new between Alberta 2.4-acre park on Northeast 52nd and Wygant between Alberta and Wygant streets. Enroll in an Online Program and Enjoy streets should be finished by spring 2015. COURTESY OF PORTLAND On-Campus Support The Cully Association of PARKS & RECREATION Neighbors is working with the park benches, a nature play area beginner-level skateboard area city on the new park that will including a slide, native trees known as a Skate Dot. 14 bachelor, associate, and certificate serve the diverse neighborhood and plants, climbing boulders, a The project’s design team is led of about 13,000 people. The asso- large grassy lawn, rainwater by Greenworks P.C. Landscape programs in business, health care, criminal ciation also is helping plan the drainage features, parking and Architecture and includes KPFF justice, paralegal, and vocational studies future Thomas Cully Park on curb, street and sidewalk im- Engineering, Reyes Electrical, Northeast 72nd Avenue. provements to allow people to Evergreen Skate Parks, Verde The new park includes a play- walk the park’s perimeter. The Community Youth Engagement ground, picnic shelter, lights, park will also feature a small, and artist Valerie Otani. 4HE#HARTER#OLLEGE!DVANTAGE • 20 programs in Business, Health Care, Information Technology, Criminal Justice, and the Trades •Hands-on curriculum • Instructors with relevant, professional experience Showcase Your Holiday Bazaar • Financial aid available to those that qualify2 • Job placement assistance for all graduates in the Communityy Classifi eds • No out-of-state tuition CLASSES START SOON BazaarBazaar CALL NOW! BOUTIQUE 877.201.2844 OR Highlight your Bazaar chartercollege.edu 2X3 Column with one of our Display Ads affordable line ads with artwork. Also Starting at includes print copy and online posting. $95/week *Call for details & pricing options Charter College Vancouver | 17200 SE Mill Plain Blvd., Suite 100 per region. Your Neighborhood Marketplace Includes print copy 1 See catalog for admissions requirements. 503-620-7355 2

Charter College has applied to the U.S. Department of Education for approval to and online posting. www.community-classifi eds.com 436325.091713 participate in the Federal Student Aid Programs for the Associate of Applied Science in Allied Health and the Associate of Applied Science in Applied Technology. As of this date the approval has not been received. *Full color where available

For information about graduation rates, the median debt of students who completed the 436659.091213 program, and other information, visit CharterCollege.edu The Portland Tribune Thursday, September 19, 2013 NEWS A5 “How mucch wwill nenewew reeplalacacceememeentnt wwindodowowsws ccoostst me?”

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A6 INSIGHT { INSIGHT } The Portland Tribune Thursday, September 19, 2013 Crowded classes require legislative action he school year has begun and If legislators regroup in a special session, hike in the tobacco tax and phasing out teachers throughout Oregon are they should approve more robust PERS some personal exemptions for higher-in- scrambling to fi nd space in their reforms — along with targeted tax in- School come earners. Tclassrooms — and in their heads creases — to relieve class sizes this very districts in Republicans are instinctively resistant — for 30-plus students per class. Perhaps school year. to tax increases, but some party leaders the pressure that’s building within public The measures being discussed could the Portland have signaled they might be willing to act schools will fi nally prompt Oregon legisla- produce hundreds of millions of dollars if the “grand bargain” in the making also tors to make hard choices to free up more for K-12 education, community colleges area and includes substantial PERS savings and tax dollars for K-12 education. and a few other state programs, with most elsewhere breaks that will help small businesses. That outcome is far from certain, but of that money coming from PERS savings. Earlier this week, Kitzhaber brought to- anyone who takes time to observe what’s Normally, the Democrats who control both continue to gether leaders from both parties to try to happening in their local schools should legislative chambers would be eager to feel a fi nancial reach general agreement on a compromise come away motivated add substantial funding to the school bud- that puts the needs of Oregon fi rst. Slow- OUROPINION to do something to re- get, but they also are hypersensitive to squeeze that’s ing the growth of PERS will be a gift to Or- lieve the load. What public employees’ natural desire to pro- egon schools that will keep giving for de- legislators can do is respond positively to tect their pensions. due in large cades. Yes, there will be court challenges, Gov. John Kitzhaber’s call for a Sept. 30 What everyone must understand, how- part to but that’s not a reason to neglect the inevi- special session to approve further PERS ever, is that further delays in PERS re- table need to alter PERS for the long term. reforms and modest revenue measures. forms will mean fewer teachers, larger unsustainable When you consider Oregon’s ballooning In its regular session, the 2013 Legisla- class sizes, more furlough days and con- PERS-related class sizes — already among the largest in ture enacted changes to the Oregon Public tinued fi nancial problems for schools. The the nation — the only rational response is Employees Retirement System that will outlines of a deal include a more rigid cap increases. to take immediate action to help children reduce costs, but it did not go far enough. on cost of living increases for PERS recipi- in school today. That requires movement As a result, school districts in the Port- ents and changes to the money match for- from both Democrats and Republicans, land area and elsewhere continue to feel a mula for inactive PERS members. On the and a recognition that they have a rare fi nancial squeeze that’s due in large part other side of the ledger, various tax ideas opportunity to reverse a downward spiral to unsustainable PERS-related increases. have been discussed, including a 10-cent in Oregon education.

Portland VIEW ● Tribune MY Some Pearl residents just as vulnerable as R2DT campers

FOUNDER Dr. Robert B. Pamplin, Jr.

PRESIDENT Find a better place to relocate homeless J. Mark Garber (safe neighborhood, easy acces- are not necessarily effective in MANAGING EDITOR/ By Barbara Weerth WEB EDITOR sibility to public transportation dealing with the small number Kevin Harden and the necessities of life, i.e. we have sleeping in that area, his is an email sent to grocery stores, post offi ce, etc.) using drugs and alcohol. Be- VICE PRESIDENT City Commissioner and its walkability (sidewalks, cause this is a transient popula- Brian Monihan Amanda Fritz: lack of hills, parks) rating. Addi- tion, I also do not understand T Thank you for taking tionally, we waited months how we are to know who is part CIRCULATION time out of your schedule to visit (years for some) for a vacant of their community and who is MANAGER Station Place Tower Apartments apartment in order to move in just hanging out. None of that Kim Stephens (Northwest Ninth Avenue near here. eases our apprehension. Lovejoy). Therefore, when you tell us Finally, it is my naive under- CREATIVE While you did an admirable that Right 2 Dream Too has no standing that our elected offi - SERVICES MANAGER job of advocating for Right 2 options, those who live here also cials are here to work for all of Cheryl DuVal Dream Too (although I do not fall into that category. We don’t us, not just a small sector of our PUBLISHING SYSTEMS believe it is in their best inter- have the fi nancial resources to society. Decisions should be MANAGER/WEBMASTER est to live under the Lovejoy move, we are physically unable made after gathering as much TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO: JAIME VALDEZ Alvaro Fontán Ramp with the pigeon poop, no to pack and move our belong- information as possible and sunlight and exhaust fumes), it ings, it would be emotionally Pearl District residents say putting the Right 2 Dream Too homeless camp based on the greater good. NEWS WRITERS would have been nice had you hard to leave a community we in their neighborhood without a public process could lead to a legal You admitted you did not Jennifer Anderson, shown some empathy and un- are vested in, and most apart- challenge or a land-use appeal. City offi cials have negotiated a move from check into our neighborhood be- Peter Korn, Steve Law, derstanding toward those of us ments in our price range have the camp’s Old Town site to a parking lot under the Broadway Bridge. fore selecting this site. You also Jim Redden residing here. Many of the waiting lists. stated it is the only site available statements you made regard- Many comments were made Many of us volunteer for various multifamily residences, not one (which seems like an absurdity, FEATURES WRITERS ing the folks at Right 2 Dream that Right 2 Dream Too resi- groups throughout the city, we of us anticipated a homeless considering the size of Portland). Jason Vondersmith, Anne Marie DiStefano Too apply to those of us living dents were good neighbors and take care of our neighborhood camp of transient people. So, since you are advocating here. that we should be good neigh- by picking up trash and watch- According to what you stated, for Right 2 Dream Too, who do SPORTS EDITOR Most of the residents at Sta- bors. Do you think we are not ing out for others, and we take my understanding is that it is we have in a position of authori- Steve Brandon tion Place Tower Apartments good neighbors? Being appre- care of fellow residents who not the same 100 people each ty or power to advocate for us as live on a fi xed income that is hensive because you are moving need help. night and that there are some we, too, are a fragile, vulnerable SPORTSWRITERS well below the norm for the area a homeless camp into our neigh- You also commented that we who come to spend the day. You group of seniors? Kerry Eggers, and live on a month-to-month borhood does not make us bad do not get to choose our neigh- also stated that they police Jason Vondersmith, basis. Many have physical and neighbors. I notice you are not bors. You are right! We do, how- Barbara Weerth moved to Portland Stephen Alexander themselves and would help po- mental disabilities that make liv- moving them into your neigh- ever, get to choose our neighbor- lice the other homeless people in four years ago to be closer to family and chose her new home because it SUSTAINABLE LIFE ing a challenge and safety con- borhood (and what would the re- hoods. And while we knew there the neighborhood because they offered all the things she desired to EDITOR cerns a priority. action of your neighbors be if were vacant lots that would be know one another. Steve Law We have chosen to live here you did?). developed either into some sort I do not understand how that live a productive, safe, secure and because of the environment We, too, are good neighbors. of commercial enterprise or would work because the police independent life. COPY EDITOR Mikel Kelly, Denise Szott ART DIRECTION READERS’LETTERS AND DESIGN Pete Vogel

VISUAL JOURNALISTS Jonathan House Jaime Valdez Agencies have no right to release personal info INSIGHT PAGE EDITOR hy is my driver’s li- the protest is valid. But the move ‘Do it for kids’ hurts loyal opposition. For years a Sept. 3 guest viewpoint, even Keith Klippstein cense information, is temporary and we need to dis- public employees now, I’ve watched each admin- the congressman admits that is including age, cuss what happens when the istration whittle down employ- a bad thing. PRODUCTION Wweight, address, year is up. And the people of the I recently received yet an- ee benefi ts and welch on Oregon’s weak rules permit Michael Beaird, Valerie marital status, etc., being made Pearl directly benefi tted from other e-mail from the offi ce of agreements. So this time when the use of herbicides sprayed Clarke, Chris Fowler, available to anyone for any rea- the area’s homeless problem de- our governor asking me to “do they drag out the whipping by helicopter over thousands of son (Fat? Check your ZIP code, clining the property rates so the it for the kids.” Ever the favor- boy yet again, and ask us to forest acres. These norms are CONTRIBUTOR Sept. 5)? This is private informa- Pearl development could be- ite plea, the governor’s re- fl og him “for the children,” I in- different from federal logging Rob Cullivan tion and the only reason the come possible. quest was followed by the fa- tend to say “no.” practices, which do not rou- WEB SITE state is even given access to it is Instead of spending money vorite solution, “take it out on Jonathan Wexler tinely use herbicides or allow portlandtribune.com to issue a driver’s license to me, and time on a lawsuit, they public employees.” Southwest Portland helicopter spray. Herbicides which I pay them to receive. should champion the cause of I no longer work for the pollute our clean water. Herbi- CIRCULATION At one time you could look up a the homeless and fi nd a perma- state; I did so for 20 years. DeFazio plan doesn’t cides kill soil nutrients. 503-546-9810 license plate number through the nent solution. Moving the popu- During that time I watched all DeFazio excuses the failure state Driver and Motor Vehicle lation is just moving the prob- the fi nancial shenanigans that of his plan to retain federal 6605 S.E. Lake Road protect water quality Portland, OR 97222 Services Division records and get lem, not fi nding a solution. Com- have gone on in Oregon for de- herbicide rules for his nation- 503-226-6397 (NEWS) the owner’s name and address. passion must return to the cades. As a lifelong Democrat, In recent months, Oregonians al forest giveaway by saying This was discontinued as an inva- American consciousness. I can tell you that the party have been treated to a back- that water-quality protections The Portland Tribune sion of privacy. Jeremiah Johnson makes no difference. The slop- and-forth debate about U.S. “would have to come from Sa- These government agencies Northwest Portland piness occurs on both sides of Rep. Peter DeFazio’s (D-Eu- lem.” He means that our state is Portland’s independent have no business releasing any the aisle. gene) plans to increase logging agencies would have to fix the newspaper that is trusted information about citizens with- Prius drivers also I have watched the desir- in Oregon’s federal forests. Oregon Forest Practices Act. to deliver a compelling, out getting written permission in ability of a public position de- What is at stake? It’s our wa- Our neighboring states — forward-thinking and advance. can be cheaters cline steadily. Working with a ter — it’s the future of clean, Washington, Idaho and Califor- accurate living chronicle Ed Barry constant target on your back fl owing drinking water at nia — have forestry laws that about how our citizens, Northwest Portland Regarding your recent article is disheartening at best. So stake. provide no-cut, no-spray zones government and (Cheater!, Aug. 29): Add Prius to when the doctor (Gov. John Polling by the Pew Research to better protect rural commu- businesses live, work Find a solution, not the list of upscale vehicles driven Kitzhaber) asked me if “I’m in Center consistently shows that nities and water quality. Even and play. The Portland by cheaters. At all-way stops, for the schools,” I tried to clean water is what matters Idaho has stronger protections Tribune is dedicated new homeless site these drivers seem to think they write him to say “no,” not at most to Oregonians. That is for water than Oregon. to providing vital are saving the Earth so they the expense of our working one reason why alarm about DeFazio fails to consider that communication and Right 2 Dream Too is a com- have the right to go fi rst. citizens. the congressman’s plan is in- exporting private forestry’s leadership throughout plex and necessary situation for Well, I have news for them. Unfortunately, contacting creasing. penchant for aerial pesticide our community. the whole metro region to dis- Only a reduction of world popu- the governor’s offi ce at his of- DeFazio’s plan allows clear- spraying to once-protected na- cuss and fi nd resolution to lation will save the Earth, so I fi cial website requires opting cut logging on federal forests, tional forests will severely (Handshake spurs deal to relo- agree — they should go fi rst. into his spam list. but that clear-cutting would be harm our clean drinking water. cate R2DT camp, Sept. 5). Bill Warner That tells you how much he regulated only by Oregon’s an- Lisa Arkin The camp had to move, and Lake Oswego cares about hearing from a tiquated state forestry laws. In North Portland

Portland Tribune editorial board Submissions ■ J. Mark Garber – president, Portland Tribune The Portland Tribune welcomes essays on topics of public interest. Submissions should be no longer than and Community Newspapers Inc. 600 words and may be edited. Letters should be no longer than 250 words. Both submissions should include your 503-546-0714; [email protected] name, home address and telephone number for verifi cation purposes. Please send submissions via e-mail: ■ Kevin Harden – managing editor, Portland Tribune [email protected]. You may fax them to 503-546-0727 or send them to “Letters to the Editor,” 503-546-5167; [email protected] Portland Tribune, 6605 S.E. Lake Road, Portland, OR 97222. The Portland Tribune Thursday, September 19, 2013 { INSIGHT } INSIGHT A7 MYVIEW ● Real estate gold rush hurting community diversity, livability Developers changing fabric of neighborhoods By Annette Carter and Frank Granshaw

e are heartsick this morning. At 6:30 a.m., a lovely, Whealthy oak that was at least 150 years old was cut down in the backyard of yet one more house being fl ipped in our neighborhood, the Rose City Park/Alameda/Beau- mont area. Why? Because the original 1,000-square-foot house, recently sold to a developer, was being “remod- eled” (read destroyed and rebuilt) on its 50-by-100-foot lot to create yet an- A large house other monster house, which we not- under so-lovingly call another McMansion. construction in This neighborhood, up to this the Rose City point, has enjoyed a diversity of hous- Park ing. Although it is in a favored loca- neighborhood tion (Grant/Beaumont/Alameda next to a schools), it has smaller, “starter” smaller, one- houses, medium-size houses, and story home is an larger houses, most built around 1920. example of Until now, a family just starting out changes the with modest means could afford to area is facing. buy in our neighborhood. That is Residents of the changing rapidly. neighborhood Many of us in the area are increas- worry that ingly distressed by the speed at “McMansions” which such development is occurring, will overwhelm changing the nature of the neighbor- their area. hood we have lived in and loved for so COURTESY OF many years. FRANK D. GRANSHAW A handful of developers are gob- bling up the smaller houses at a ally for small families to live in so level of fl ipping is a feeding frenzy times the original size), and retrofi t ing to increase on rooftops, sunlight heart-stopping rate. Individual home- much space? The original homes, that reveals both the developers and the houses to be energy effi cient in needs to be protected as a valuable buyers have to compete with develop- lived in for the past 90 years by typi- the city of Portland policies to be the same way that they are building resource, both for homeowners and ers to buy something they can afford, cally larger families of the time, in tone-deaf to the needs of average-in- the big megahouses? In this way we for the city as a whole. and home sellers trying to preserve fact, could have been retrofi tted, kept come homebuyers, and the feel of the could give a larger number of people What to do? We are caught in a the neighborhood are having to pres- the same footprint or slightly larger, neighborhoods that are being affect- real sustainable and affordable choic- gold rush. Developers, encouraged by sure their real estate agents to sell to and been three times as effi cient as a ed. Instead, the city of Portland and es, while preserving our yards as the city’s incentives, fl ip houses and families instead of developers. 5,000-square-foot house with the developers pander to a higher-end “mini-green spaces,” so we are not to- line their pockets at the expense of The result is that many smaller same energy effi ciency. Developers market at the expense of “average” tally engulfed in large structures. the existing community, with its vari- houses (1,200 to 2,000 square feet) are and the City of Portland encourage buyers. And this brings up another point to ous economic levels, and at the ex- being fl ipped and turned into huge this waste; two or three people now We can’t dictate how much space consider — turning small houses into pense of that community’s sustain- houses — some with style, some not, live in a house four times the origi- people take up, any more than we can large monster ones takes away what ability. ranging in size up to 5,000 square nal size. dictate what kind of car they buy. We little green space and sunlight there is We suggest the city revisit solar feet, with up to fi ve bedrooms and This impacts groundwater runoff, can only suggest and encourage, in in a 50-by-100-foot lot, especially for rights; consider limits to house-size three or four baths. tree coverage, solar access and the spirit of sustainability, to look at those who live to the north of it. Gar- increases in fl ipping; encourage devel- Are they being sold to families with green spaces, all of which can impact the impact of the living spaces they dens are being shaded, and the loss is opers to retrofi t existing homes to seven children? No, they are being our city in deeply long-range ways, choose. both fi nancial and emotional. Solar in- make them more energy effi cient; and sold to small families; even empty- which is something the city needs to It does make sense in terms of sus- stallations may be rendered unusable. protect the availability of modestly nesters. They are meeting energy-ef- refocus on. tainability to preserve and encourage Years ago, solar rights were to be priced housing within a community. fi cient standards (LEED homes), so But this is only one part of the housing for downsizing, so we can re- had; now only covenants between on the face of it they use less energy problem. There is a social impact as duce our environmental footprint. neighbors are possible. Shading a so- Annette Carter and Frank Granshaw have than the original homes. well. Where do people live who want Why not create incentives to encour- lar installation is like cutting a power lived on Northeast 50th Avenue for 22 This represents a market trend, smaller, affordable houses? age developers involved in renovation line. The loss is in the thousands of years. They raised a son in the neighbor- one that needs to be looked at care- Not here. They have to look farther to maintain the same physical foot- dollars, considering initial invest- hood and are empty nesters, enjoying be- fully for its impact on diminishing re- and farther away from the amenities print (or increase it to be slightly ments and loss of ongoing savings. ing grandparents and hanging out with the sources. How energy effi cient is it re- of the nearer neighborhoods. This larger, instead of ballooning it to four Since solar installations are only go- neighbors. PortlandTribune Puzzles

CROSSWORD by Eugene Shaffer SOLUTIONS

Answer:

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THE TINY HAIR HAIR TINY THE Cryptoquip solution: Cryptoquip A8 NEWS The Portland Tribune Thursday, September 19, 2013

A LIST OF A FEW OF THE CHARITIES YOU CAN SUPPORT! Help BEAVERTON • Police Activities League • Community Action Organization • Vision Action Network • Westside Cultural Alliance

New and improved? YOUR ONLINE LOCAL Lotsa Hugs Revamped Blazers’ lineup DAILY NEWS Portland band has the sparks optimism for West race www.portlandtribune.com tonic for winter blues Portland— SPORTS, B8 Tribune— LIFE, B3 CANBY THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2011 • TICE CHOSEN THE NATION’S BEST NONDAILY PAPER • WWW.PORTLANDTRIBUNE.COM • PUBLISHED THURSDAY

Will Levenson • Canby Education Foundation • Canby Rotary (left) and Travis Williams, executive these director of Willamette Riverkeeper, organized July 31’s Big Float event on the Willamette River. Foundation They hope to change the way Portlanders relate to the river, which is safer for swimming now that the city’s Big Pipe sewage overflow project is completed. TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER ONSTOTT County shelves CLACKAMAS AND OREGON CITY library district • Children’s Center • Clackamas Women’s Supporters still THAT’S SO PORTLAND hope to convince ii f charities Services • Salvation Army • Clackamas Emergency Services Foundation

ESTACADA • Estacada Food Bank

FOREST GROVE get • Forest Grove Family Resource Center FREE • Forest Grove Loaves and Fishes • West Tuality Habitat for Humanity • Hospice and Palliative Care Partners • Virginia Garcia Foundation

GRESHAM advertising • Snow Cap Charities • My Father’s House • My Sister’s House

HILLSBORO • Hillsboro Schools Foundation • Boys & Girls Club of Hillsboro • Tuality Healthcare Founda- here! tion • Bonnie L. Hays Small Animal Shelter LAKE OSWEGO • Lake Oswego Schools Foundation • Lake Oswego Meals Network • Oswego Heritage House • Sparrow Food Pantry

MADRAS SERVING CENTRAL OREGON SINCE 1881 • Kids Club of Jefferson County • Jefferson Central Oregonian OUR GOAL: OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF CROOK COUNTY County Historical Society • United Fund (For- 50 CENTS PRINEVILLE, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY 3, 2013 VOL. CXXXI — NO. 43 Bill may force concussion safety education merly United Way) ■ SB 721 would require injuries surface, people have sport. ratcheted up efforts to protect ath- Oregon Senator Doug Whitsett youth sports coaches and letes who suffer concussions. (R-Dist. 28) was one of just two officials to detect and The Oregon Senate is trying to lawmakers who opposed the bill respond to concussions, further that effort and recently amid civil liability concerns. passed a bill with overwhelming “I think that concussions are a which could make them support that would require youth real concern,” he said. “My legally liable to civil suits sports leagues to recognize and concern, the way that bill is respond to possible concussions. written, is there are no violations However, some worry that the or any criminal act (citations) for Jason Chaney law could leave youth sports not following the rules of the new Central Oregonian LON AUSTIN/CENTRAL OREGONIAN coaches and other officials open to law. The civil liability to me would If Senate Bill 721 passes, youth sports organizations such as As more and more reports of potentially expensive lawsuits, and just be wide open . . . The bill is Bend Parks and Recreation youth football, would be required health complications due to head deter them from continuing the See SB 721, page A8 to detect and respond to concussions. School Raise $100,000 IN MOLALLA district budget • Molalla River Education Foundation • Molalla season begins ■ The district hopes Service center Food Bank for the best, plans for the worst as do FREE ADVERTISING The last time the cattle drive was held during Crooked River Roundup week was in 2011. A committee of local leaders have revived this and other events that have historically taken place during the week leading up the Roundup. NEWBERG • Chehalem Youth & Family Services • F.I.S.H. (Friends In Service to Humanity) • Faith In for local charities! Action

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Bonner has 16 years of experience in the classroom, with two years of substitute teaching in the Bend-La Pine School District, five years as an instructor at Ochoco As your community newspaper, we know the vital role that Elementary, and nine years at Crook County Middle School. • SMART • Oregon Heat • Children’s Cancer

Phone: Fax: non-profi t groups play in our daily lives -- from promoting the Association • Self Enhancement, Inc • Sunshine Division • All Hands Raised • Home Builders arts and protecting the environment to nurturing our children Foundation and feeding our neighbors. PRINEVILLE • Crook County Foundation • Crook County We also know how United Fund • Crook County Holiday Partner- ship many of our small busi- SANDY nesses are already sup- • Guide Dogs For The Blind • Sandy Commu- porting these efforts. 25% nity Action Center • Oral Hull Foundation That’s why the Pamplin MATCH SCAPPOOSE AND ST HELENS • Columbia Pacifi c Food Bank • Scappoose Media Group is proud to Senior Center – Meals on Wheels • St. Helens WILL SUPPORT Senior Center – Meals on Wheels • Amani announce a new advertis- Center • Women’s Resource Center • CASA for LOCAL Kids ing program designed CHARITIES SHERWOOD to support both our local • CAT Adoption Team • Friends of the Tualatin businesses and local chari- River

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SEPTEMBER 2012 • ONLINE AT SWCOMMCONNECTION.COM • NO. 233 • FREE Glass half full sonville Community Sharing

Local author publishes e-memoir about life, death and love promote their efforts and good work next year. By DREW DAKESSIAN Th e Connection Chastity Glass is beautiful. Her blonde hair falls in waves, just barely grazing her tanned shoulders. She wears glasses, sometimes, and her un- lined face is rarely without a small, comforting smile. She looks like she could be a surfer, or possibly a librarian. What sets her apart from the scores of other blonde, tan WOODBURN and happy 30-somethings from California is a poem tat- tooed on her right forearm: “i am scared of being scared… and so, I am not even if i am.” As your local newspaper, we are truly invested in the She was 27 years old, living in Hollywood and recently dumped when she met Anthony Glass, a handsome video • Boys & Girls Club of Woodburn • Relay For editor who worked at her offi ce. Th ey were instantly attract- ed to each other, exchanging poetic and increasingly fl irta- tious emails and quickly falling in love. Just a few months after they started dating, their love story, a story of what she calls “that young 20s love when you start making plans,” was unexpectedly and indelibly altered. He was diagnosed with stage III colon cancer. When he told her, she didn’t think twice about whether to Life of the Woodburn Area • Woodburn Proud stay with him: they were in this together. “Wh n Anth n in thr h tr tm nt ld strength and vitality of each of the communities that we serve.

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Canby Herald Central Oregonian – Prineville Gresham Outlook • Sandy Post Molalla Pioneer The Bee – SE Portland Woodburn Independent (503) 266-6831 (541) 447-6205 • Estacada News Estacada News (503) 829-2301 (503) 232-2326 (503) 981-3441 • BOOM! Forest Grove News-Times (503) 665-2181 Newberg Graphic The Spotlight – Scappoose • Hillsboro Tribune (503) 538-2181 and St. Helens (503) 357-3181 Madras Pioneer (503) 543-6387 (541) 475-2275 449407.091913 The Portland Tribune Thursday, September 19, 2013 NEWS A9 PPS: Ombudsman helped settle Samantha Faye Anne Fox complaints, but job has been cut July 15, 1989 - August 30, 2013

■ From page 1 amantha Faye Anne Fox, age 24, of Clackamas, Oregon, passed away Friday, August 30th, 2013. Born July district’s 78 schools. S15th, 1989 in Elkhart, Indiana, Samantha is survived At Ainsworth, parents met by her mother, Kathleen Fox of Elkhart, her siblings, Misty with Regional Administrator Fox of Elkhart, Tessa Gray of Vandalia, Michigan, Chandra Sascha Perrins but came away Fox and Tyler Fox of Elkhart, nieces Kegan and Tatum Gray, angrier. nephews Caden Sheets, Keaton Gray, Nathaniel and Ezekiel “He insulted parents by doo- Fox, and Gabriel Mota. Also surviving are her grandparents dling and writing his grocery who raised her, Donald and Janet Dalton of Bristol, Indiana, list while parents described great-grandmother Dorothy Church, Aunts Jana Beth J. Dalton- painful details of bullying by Dorsey, Darlene Brown, Sherry Fox, Uncles Anthony W. both a teacher and principal,” Dalton, Chester Fox Jr., and Roger Fox, as well as her cousins says Kim Sordyl, an Ainsworth parent who’s been a mouth- Alexandria Dalton, Janet Lee Price, Emily Price, Amy Otis, piece for fellow parents who Crystal Keller, Michelle Brown, Nichole Brown, Casey Fox, fear retaliation. “He made it Devin Brown, Jennifer Smithson, and Christy Fales. clear that he was in power and Her father Donald W. Dalton II, grandparents Elizabeth and did not want to be bothered by Chester Fox Sr., great-grandparents George A. and Della Dalton, these issues.” great-grandfather Joseph C. Church, Uncle David Fox, and Aunt All of this begs the question: Angela Sweetay all preceded her in death. Why so many complaints? Is Samantha, a 2008 graduate of Elkhart Central High School there more discontent with where she was active with the band, playing the trombone and school leadership lately than at was in the flag corps. Sam was outgoing, adventurous and any other point in time? Or does ambitious, but most of all she was brave. A few years after it just appear that way because graduation she left Indiana, drove across the United States parents feel they have no other by herself to Vancouver, Washington, and enrolled in a flight recourse than to speak to the media? attendant program. After completing the program she moved Perrins, in his third year as a TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER ONSTOTT to Portland Oregon and obtained a job at BCD Travel as a regional administrator, says an- Mary Krogh, former Portland Public Schools ombudsman, talked in 2011 with a district administrator about Corporate Travel Agent. ecdotally it seems like the num- how to improve communication with parents. Samantha was known for her infectious smile and lively ber of complaints hasn’t personality. She loved meeting new people and could make changed dramatically but the friends everywhere she went. She was passionate about animals intensity level has increased. Glone, a trained mediator and pal there in the mid-1990s. former administrators to con- and adored her guinea pigs, Chip and Rocky. Samantha loved He says the rise of social media district veteran of 23 years. One former Ainsworth par- duct outside investigations of visiting places and seeing sites all over. She loved to travel. —watchdog blogs and Facebook McGlone says his job is basic ent, who did not want to be iden- principals. She loved Walt Disney World and watching Disney movies. groups — has played a big part customer service, critical to tified, says the district’s com- Those districts include Reyn- She enjoyed reading several books at a time, expanding her in fanning the fl ames and “cre- maintaining public trust: plaint process amounts to “lip olds, Parkrose, Hillsboro, Sa- knowledge, and challenging herself. She was recently accepted ating a one-dimensional picture “When you don’t take time to service.” lem-Keizer, Seattle Public to Portland State University where she planned to pursue a of what’s happening.” make that connection with your “The culture of PPS seems to Schools and Vancouver Public As for Ainsworth, Perrins customer — your parents, stu- be to sweep poor performance of Schools. teaching degree. After graduation she planned to travel to China says his meetings with parents dents — you can’t go to them principals and teachers under For two recent cases in the and teach English with her dear friend, Sarah Detlef. were “respectful,” and he didn’t and ask for them to vote for the rug because most parents Reynolds district that required A memorial service was held on September 7th, 2013 ask many questions because he your levy. It’s a partnership.” have only one year of contact such reviews, “we didn’t con- at Chapel Hill Funeral Home in Osceola, Indiana. In her felt his primary job was to listen. with most teachers, and parents sider hiring anyone internal memory, donations may be made to any Humane Society. Formally, PPS doesn’t have a Internal review write it off as ‘My kid is bound to because of preconceived no- Online condolences may be sent to the family at www. way of tracking parent com- As recently as last month, have a bad teacher once in a tions that there would be bias chapelhillmemorial.com. plaints, since it cut its short- PPS Superintendent Carole while,’ ” the parent says. against the complainant or lived ombudsman position last Smith recommended to the At the Aug. 7 school board complainee,” says spokeswom- year. school board that they review, meeting, board member Steve an Andrea Watson. In place for the 2011-12 school clarify and streamline the dis- Buel questioned this practice of Even for appearances alone, year before falling victim to trict’s student/parent complaint hiring former PPS principals to she adds, “They’ve ruled out budget cuts, the PPS ombuds- procedure policy. investigate cases anyone who’s been here before.” man was an effort to be a fi rst On Aug. 7, involving their for- Watson says it’s district prac- point of contact for parents for Smith was deliver- “The community mer colleagues. tice to hire someone with expe- concerns about everything ing a recommen- “Even if he’s rience in the area of the com- from teachers and principals to dation that came has some George Washing- plaint, such as an attorney, special education, accessing from a recent in- responsibility ton and Abraham private investigator or forensic See programs, harassment and vestigation into Lincoln rolled into accountant. bullying. several com- for the one ... the appear- Seattle uses the Seattle Eth- The social worker who held plaints at Ain- conditions ance of bias is way ics and Elections Commission that post, Mary Krogh, had sworth School. too strong,” Buel or outside attorney investiga- Community started a parent complaint da- The review had going on.” told his fellow tors. Hillsboro uses its human tabase so trends could be rec- risen to “Level 3,” — Scott Nine, Institute board members. resources department and con- ognized and addressed, which meaning it was a for Democratic Education “It just looks bad,” fers with legal counsel. fell to the wayside after she review of the in- in America executive he said, casting the Parkrose has never had a se- was laid off. ternal review that director and PPS parent only no vote rious complaint, but if it did, Su- Classifieds She had drafted a more had already taken against accepting perintendent Karen Gray says, user-friendly manual for the place by Perrins, Hamilton’s report. a veteran at the district would parent complaint process so av- the regional administrator. “I don’t like looking bad as a not be hired. “It could not hap- enues of recourse would be ac- To conduct the investigation, district.” pen,” she says. “I think that it is cessible rather than mystifying. PPS had hired Peter Hamilton, Superintendent Smith said not a good idea.” That work also hasn’t moved a PPS teacher, principal and ad- it’s standard practice, that Ham- forward. ministrator of 32 years who is a ilton is one of a number of peo- Asking too much? In all, Krogh had taken about school leadership consultant. ple who do investigation servic- When it comes to principals online! 200 complaints during the Since retiring from Lincoln es when requested, and would landing in the crosshairs of school year, resolving the bulk High in 2006, he’s performed a do so again in the future. school complaints, people some- of them by opening the lines of variety of duties for PPS, both She said one advantage of us- times forget to consider the con- communication, she says. on a contract and as a tempo- ing someone retired from the text outside their neighborhood “I had a sense of when things rary employee. system is so they’ll “under- school. needed to be escalated quickly,” Despite the fact that his re- standing what they’re seeing.” So says Scott Nine, a PPS par- says Krogh, who recently part- view at Ainsworth did fi nd some The other, Smith said, “is fa- ent and executive director of the nered with her North Portland policy violations of the original miliarity with what an investi- nonprofit Institute for Demo- neighbor and attorney, Kenya review, Ainsworth parent gation entails and professional- cratic Education in America, Budd, to start their own consult- Sordyl questions how any PPS ism around how you conduct which aims to reinvent educa- ing firm, Collaborative Solu- veteran can conduct an unbi- one, which Peter is familiar tion through collaboration tions, to teach parents how to ased investigation. She also with. So it’s very specifi c who around social justice issues. problem-solve in schools. says Hamilton told parents in we would go to ... once we have He says the new era of public Perrins, the regional adminis- meetings that he had no experi- those people, we would contin- education forces principals to trator, is an advocate for prob- ence in harassment investiga- ue to use them.” navigate economic, environ- lem-solving through having con- tions, which were the basis of The discussion lasted less mental and technological chal- versations, “to try and work on the original complaints. than 10 minutes, as board co- lenges, along with the impact of avoiding the polarizing behav- Around 20 parents had fi led chairman Matt Morton dis- No Child Left Behind, Race to ior. ... Those kind of interactions Level 2 complaints this past missed Buel’s concerns as the Top and Oregon’s achieve- almost always work,” he says. spring, at least fi ve fi led Level 3 “character assassination.” ment compacts. Other districts have started complaints, and three filed Board member Tom Koehler Add to that the high public realizing the benefi ts of an om- complaints with the Oregon asked if hiring district adminis- expectations for savviness in budsman as a vehicle for sys- Teacher Standards and Prac- trators is common practice at political, social, communica- temwide improvement. tices Commission. The com- other districts. Smith said she tions, fi nance, strategy, manage- Seattle Public Schools hired plaints alleged harassment of didn’t know, but would look ment and educational leader- an ombudsman two years ago, students by a teacher, the prin- into it. ship skills, and most principals who worked with school staff on cipal’s failure to address them, lack about two thirds of the con- telephone and email etiquette, and threats of retaliation from Outside investigators tent and skills they need to em- problem-solving and de-escalat- the principal against their chil- The Tribune has looked ploy, he says. Fresh new ing situations. dren if the parents followed into it, and found that it’s hardly “The community has some A school district ombudsman through with complaints. the practice at other school dis- responsibility for the conditions “can kind of neutralize a lot of Hamilton was, in fact, a for- tricts. going on,” Nine says. “From classifieds issues that can otherwise get mer supervisor and colleague to The Tribune made requests afar it’s easy to spot some pat- escalated beyond the school to Ainsworth Principal Cindy Ro- of 10 school districts in Oregon terns and tensions. They’re not the media, the administration, by, having served as principal at and Washington. Six out of 10 all about the principals and the the school board,” says Seattle East-West Sylvan Middle School responded by this week, all of district. It’s about how we han- every day Schools ombudsman Ron Mc- while she was assistant princi- them saying they do not hire dle confl ict.”

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9/11 attacks Ghadar: Indians found work in the mills spurred research on ■ From page 1 growing up here. The Hammond Ghadar Party Un-welcome mat Lumber Co. in force in the long struggle for in- Immigrants largely from the Astoria Johanna “Jo” Ogden dependence. Punjab region of British-held In- employed many says her inspiration for de- Ogden likens the Ghadar Par- dia began arriving here after of the Punjabis voting fi ve years of unpaid ty to the Black Panther Party, the 1906, Ogden says, spurred by job who joined the work to the Ghadar Party small, militant group that in- opportunities and racist restric- Ghadar Party. In story comes from the spired African-Americans and tions enacted in Canada and else- the foreground Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on others, more because of what where where the Indians had the World Trade Center. is a section of they stood for than settled. In 1907, several “When I saw those towers homes where their concrete hundred white workers go down, you knew nothing they lived, then achievements. Centenary rioted against Indian good was going to come Thanks to Ogden’s celebration and other Asian immi- known as “Hindu from it,” she says. People Alley.” fi ve years of research, ■ Astoria holds a grants in Bellingham, once viewed as neighbors people are rediscover- two-day celebration Wash. Violent out- PHOTOS COURTESY OF would be seen as enemies, ing Oregon’s role in of the centennial of breaks against Indians JOHANNA “JO” OGDEN she predicted. “I was look- India’s early liberation the Ghadar Party spread to Vancouver, volving more than 200 attendees, ing for a way to talk of that, struggle, and the long- founding there, on British Columbia, other Ogden says. how people become the ‘oth- Oct. 4 and 5. forgotten community Washington towns, and Those laid the groundwork for er.’ ” ■ The program, here that helped plant called Ghadar’s Alaska, Ogden says. the formal meeting on May 30, She sought advice from the seeds. Roots and Oregon, seemingly a 1913, in Astoria, attended by del- Kambiz GhaneaBassiri, a “It’s a huge part of Meaning, will fea- safer haven, saw an in- egates from the various Punjabi Reed College professor who our legacy,” Kaur ture panel discus- fl ux of Punjabis in 1908, communities. It was there that wrote “A History of Islam in says. “They were in- sions, fi lm screen- many of them fleeing the offi cial program of the Gha- America.” He suggested she spired by the Ameri- ings, walking tours violence elsewhere, dar Party and newspaper of the look into the Sikhs in the can values to go make and other events. she says. Many found same name were proposed and Northwest and the Ghadar ■ For more infor- a run at freedom.” mation: jobs in mill towns along approved, Ogden says. Party, something he knew Next month, Asto- www. asto- the Columbia River, From its beginnings in Ore- little about but enough to riaghadar100.org ria will honor the cen- from The Dalles to gon, the movement spread to know it was under-re- tennial of the Ghadar Portland to Astoria. chapters worldwide, and a searched. Party’s formation with a two-day Community leaders here, in- weekly newspaper was pro- Even most Indian histo- celebration, dedicating a plaque cluding politicians and Harvey duced in San Francisco in four rians ignore Oregon’s role near the former Finnish Socialist Scott, influential editor of The Stanford University professor Har St. Johns labor contractor Kanshi languages: Urdu, Punjabi, Hindi in the movement, saying it Hall where the party was formal- Oregonian newspaper, railed Dyal was the leading public face of Ram, a key organizer of the and English. got started in San Francis- ly created. against the violence, she says, the Ghadar Party, and came to Ghadar Party, was executed in The movement arose during co. Wikipedia makes no Kaur and other local members viewing the male newcomers Portland during pivotal meetings India for his role in the aborted a powerful worldwide upsurge mention of Oregon in its of the Indian community plan to from India as an important to plan the future party. revolt. of nationalism, Ogden notes. references, though it cites attend. She says it’s an inspiring source of labor. The Punjabis here, despite feel- the leadership role of tale to share with Indian children Then on March 24, 1910, 300 men moved on Punjabi workers Though there wound up being ing the heat of oppression and Bhakna. in St. Johns, then an independent only one person convicted, the racism, were still freer than Ogden scoured the ar- city north of Portland, ransack- fi ght-back was a turning point for back home, and inspired by the chives of the St. Johns and ing their homes and beating and the Punjabi community here, Og- American story of overthrowing Astoria newspapers, and robbing the men. “Up until then,” den says. New activist leaders British imperialism by violent found references to Sikh Ogden says, “Oregon had been emerged, including mill worker means. wrestlers, the St. Johns riots this fairly peaceable place.” Sohan Singh Bhakna and labor The Ghadar Party united peo- and ensuing events. She AIKIDO But something happened here contractor Kanshi Ram. The two ple of the Hindu, Muslim and found hundreds of names in that differed from past riots men from St. Johns networked Sikh faiths, and intellectuals like phone directories of the day, against the Punjabis. with Har Dyal, a Stanford profes- Dyal and workers in the mills. made easier because Sikh “They were driven out of town sor who became the leading pub- Their strategy was simple, Og- men typically go by the sur- Free Introduction to Aikido at night, and went and got the lic face and voice of the move- den says. They wanted to inspire name Singh and Sikh women Saturday September 28, 10:15 am D.A. and brought him back to ment, and with British Columbia Ghadr, or mutiny, among Sikh the surname Kaur. town,” Ogden says. Victims activist and newspaper publisher troops, whose loyalty to the Brit- Ogden unearthed an im- pointed out their attackers in the G.D. Kumar. Kumar’s paper had ish had helped ward off a major portant part of history that Aikido 101: Principles of Balance presence of the Multnomah called on the Sikhs in India to rebellion in 1857. was unknown before, says County district attorney, and a rise up against British rule. A “They were basically going to Oregon Historical Quarterly Fall term $192 grand jury was empaneled to relatively small religious com- go convince the Sikh troops to Editor Eliza Canty-Jones. It punish rioters. Some 190 subpoe- munity in India, Sikhs constitut- turn their guns around,” Ogden raises many contemporary Enroll: [email protected] nas were issued, and the St. ed a disproportionally large says. “That was their military issues, Canty-Jones says. Johns mill owner that employed share of the Indian army and the and political strategy.” “What does it mean to be an

MultnomahAikikai.Blogspot.com MULTNOMAH AIKIKAI, 6415 SW MACADAM AVE PORTLAND many of the Punjabi men rose to settler communities in Oregon. A year after the party’s found- American? And to have self- their defense. ing, Britain became entangled in rule?”

430448.090113 SWCC 430448.090113 Plotting revolution in St. Johns war with Germany, and support- That issue of the journal At a March 12, 1912, meeting at ers were urged to return home to sold out, and additional cop- Ram’s house in St. Johns, activ- fi ght. Hundreds from this area ies were printed. PUBLIC NOTICES ists formed the Hindustani Asso- did, Ogden says, perhaps a high- Ogden, who went back to View legals online at: ciation of America, naming er share of the Oregon Punjabi school mid-career to study http://publicnotices.portlandtribune.com Bhakna as president and Ram as population than any of the com- history, still makes her living treasurer. munities in British Columbia, as a legal assistant because PUBLIC AND LEGAL NOTICES Two weeks later, when Dyal Washington and California. jobs as historians are hard to These notices give information concerning actions planned and came to town, the movement But the revolt was a failure, come by. But she won the implemented by attorneys, fi nancial institutions and government took a crucial turn at a second and most of the rebels were Joel Palmer Award for 2013, agencies. They are intended to keep you and every citizen fully informed. Portland meeting at Ram’s house. Work- jailed or killed, she says. an honor for the historical Space-reservation deadline for all legal notices is Thursday 10 am 832 NE Broadway ers overruled Dyal’s more timid Bhakna was imprisoned and quarterly’s top article from Trib Info Box 0813 Trib one week prior to publication. Please call Louise Faxon at (503) 546-0752 503-783-3393 proposal and approved a call for sentenced to life, though he was the prior year. And a pub- or e-mail [email protected] to book your notice. Indian workers to “gird their Milwaukie freed in 1930 and went on to ma- lisher has asked Ogden to 17064 SE McLoughlin Blvd. loins to liberate India and work ny more years of activism with turn her work into a book. 503-653-7076 on revolutionary lines.” They de- the labor movement and Com- The folks in Astoria cided a new political party and munist Party of India. Ram was planned a two-day event Tualatin press were needed, based in San tried and hung in 1915. built on her fi ndings, and in- 8970 SW Tualatin Sherwood Rd 503-885-7800 Francisco. The seeds of Ghadar, Dyal, threatened with deporta- vited her to speak. roughly translated as “mutiny” tion in the United States, left for And Ogden was invited to SIMPLE CREMATION $$$545495 or “uprising,” were sown. Europe and recanted his revolu- speak next March in India, Traditional Funeral $$1,9751,475 With Bhakna and Ram playing tionary views. where she’ll travel for the $ key organizing roles, meetings They didn’t succeed, Ogden fi rst time. Immediate Burial $550500 were held among Punjabi work- says, but they inspired others. — Steve Law No Hidden Costs, Guaranteed Privately Owned Cremation Facility ers in other mill towns — Bridal “I think it’s a good thing when www.ANewTradition.com Veil, Linnton and Winans — in- people dare to dream,” she says. 412210.012413 VETERANS STOP PAYING RENT! 0 Down/0 Closing You can use your VA Loan benefit more than once! 100% Cash-out Debt Consolidation refinance available • $417,000 - max. amt., non-jumbo Call Tom Fitkin VA Loan Specialist • Jumbo financing available up to $650,000 697-7214 Office 703-5227 Mobile

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TRIBUNE PHOTO: JAIME VALDEZ A resident who gave his name as Clarence stands outside Right 2 Dream Too, which City Commissioner Amanda Fritz says would have been judged in compliance with city code—if property owners had gone through the city’s permitting process. Legality of ‘Dreamers’ CAREER EDUCATION camp still uncertain * IS ALL IT TAKES! 13 MONTHS Owner of original city for ruling the campground fi cials who criticized the lack of illegal. public participation in the nego- Burnside homeless Wright says when Right 2 tiations that yielded last week’s PRACTICAL Dream Too began erecting agreement, Fritz says, “It will site awaits city offer tents on his property 18 months be a very public process.” ago, Bureau of Development Wright, in the meantime, is LIFE’S By PETER KORN Services offi cials came to tell waiting for a promised outside NURSING GOOD! The Tribune him he needed to follow proce- appraisal of his property, hav- dures to learn if the camp- ing been told the city will make 100% healthcare education As far as the city of Port- ground would be declared le- an offer to buy his vacant lot in for employment! land is concerned, that fl ap gal. But Wright says he never conjunction with the Right 2 about Right 2 Dream Too had the sense that city offi cials Dream Too move. Wright says • Medical Offi ce Administration Day & Evening! was just a big misunder- were going to approve the he paid $1 million for the lot • Medical Assistant Day & Evening! standing. The homeless campground. about 30 years ago and will • Dental Assistant Day & Evening! campground/rest area on an “I don’t think there was a take $2 million for it now. • Surgical Technology Old Town private lot would person involved in the process Wright is curious about what • Practical Nursing have been legal, says city who had any intention of allow- happens if a Pearl District ap- • Respiratory Therapy (AAS) Commissioner Amanda ing that to be an illegal camp- peal holds up the move of Right Fritz, if Right 2 Dream Too site for homeless use,” Wright 2 Dream Too from his property. Oregon state had obtained proper approv- says. “They were looking for a He wonders if, now that the median annual FREE BROCHURE CALL TODAY! als from the Portland Bureau way to stamp it out of exis- city fines have been erased, salary for a of Development Services tence.” should the campground stay, PRACTICAL before its tents went up in Now, Fritz is hoping Right 2 would the city begin fi ning him 888.464.7725 October 2011. Dream Too at its new site will again? NURSE The distinction is especially be declared legal. She says the Wright says if the city is $47,360!† WWW.CONCORDE4ME.COM important this week, because fact that the new site is on pub- doesn’t offer him enough for last week the Pearl District lic property and the old site his property within the next Neighborhood Association vot- was private property shouldn’t few weeks, he’s got plans for ACCREDITED MEMBER, ACCSC. ed to commit $10,000 to a fund matter. the site. The new agreement FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE TO 447958.091813 to pursue legal action against “We’re going to be holding bars him from putting up an- THOSE WHO QUALIFY. the city of Portland to stop ourselves to exactly the stan- other overnight homeless VA APPROVED FOR ELIGIBLE Right 2 Dream Too’s move. dards that we asked for on the campground, but Wright says VETERANS. Fritz brokered a deal last week current site,” she says. “The this time he won’t offer over- to move the homeless camp- city has to comply with its own night accommodations. 1425 NE Irving St., Portland, OR 972322 ground to a city-owned parking laws just like any private (prop- “If they lowball me, I am go- *Program lengths vary. For more information about our graduation rates, the median debt of students who completed the program, and other important information, please visit our website at lot beneath the Broadway erty) user.” ing to put in a day-use facility www.concorde.edu/disclosures. †Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates (State Cross-Industry Estimates), May 2012. Bridge ramp, which is next to a In answer to Pearl District of- for the homeless,” he says. Pearl District affordable hous- ing building for senior citizens. 13-11158_CON_ad_ORPDX-CN_PN_TAKES-LG_5x6_K_[01].indd 1 9/10/2013 11:59:10 AM Pearl District officials say siting Right 2 Dream Too in their neighborhood was not subjected to the normal public process, and may not meet zon- ing requirements. They say if the campground was consid- ered illegal by the city at its lo- cation next to the Chinatown Music Lessons Gate on Northwest Fourth Av- enue and Burnside Street, it should be considered illegal for Kids & Adults! under the Broadway Bridge. So, if the move goes through, OktoberfestOktoberfest the neighborhood offi cials plan either a land-use appeal or a lawsuit in circuit court. presented by Erasing city fi nes Fritz told the Tribune this week that the campground on Burnside would have been de- clared legal if the property Food owners had asked beforehand German Food for the proper approvals. That’s not the way Burnside Paulaner Beer property owner Michael Wright remembers the pro- ,IVEä-USICäsä6ENDORS cess. Wright and property co- owners were fi ned more than Kids Activities $20,000 for hosting the home- 436957.091813 less rent-free. The deal to move Right 2 Dream Too includes erasing those fines, with Wright and Right 2 Dream Too dropping a lawsuit against the

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By JIM REDDEN “The decision was made to The Tribune support the development, which had been in the works A little-noticed jog in the for many years,” says Rick Eastside Portland Streetcar Gustafson, director of opera- alignment is poised to pay tions for Portland Streetcar and big dividends for the Lloyd a principal at the Shiels Obletz District. Johnsen consulting fi rm. Few people outside of street- Fourteen men in matching car and Lloyd District planning hardhats threw symbolic shov- circles noticed els of dirt in the air when a decision at the ground- was made to run “This project is breaking. They in- a portion of the cluded Mayor eastside line about returning Charlie Hales and along Northeast that human representatives of Seventh Avenue. various public The jog took it scale to the agencies and pri- east several Lloyd District.” vate businesses blocks from the — John Chamberlain, involved in the front doors of the American Asset Trust project. COURTESY OF GBD ARCHITECTS Oregon Conven- “Place-making Artist’s rendering shows Lloyd District superblock project along Eastside Portland Streetcar line. tion Center on takes a lot of part- Northeast Martin Luther King ners,” Hales said. “It’s not just Jr. Boulevard. The alignment dry planning, but real architec- will be replaced with three new quartered in San Diego, is be- can Asset Trust’s president water storage and gray water established a station between ture and real buildings. That’s buildings over underground hind the project. It bought the and chief executive officer, recycling. A self-funded Eco- Multnomah and Holladay why this project will succeed.” parking garages. One will be 21 area from Ashforth Pacifi c, an agrees. District was also formed in the streets, next to four combined stories, another will be six sto- office building construction “Portland is a city of neigh- area in 2011 to help with the blocks that include the Lloyd New commercial space ries and the other will be fi ve and management company. Ac- borhoods,” Chamberlain said environmental features. 700 Building and a number of The project is called “Hassa- stories. The three new build- cording to Gustafson, Execu- at the groundbreaking ceremo- “An Eco-District shows how parking garages. The new sta- lo on Eighth,” a name dreamt ings will house 657 residential tive Vice President Henry Ash- ny. “This project is about re- buildings can work together to tion was also within a block of up by the Wieden+Kennedy ad units and 58,000 square feet of forth was deeply involved in turning that human scale to the create sustainable neighbor- an existing MAX station on agency. Hassalo refers not only new commercial and retail future plans for the district and Lloyd District.” hoods, not just existing in isola- Holladay. to the adjacent street but also a space. The project will also ret- the streetcar alignment. To help achieve that goal, the tion, and represents the future Now the wisdom of that famous steamboat that was rofi t 240,000 square feet of ex- “There have been plans to new Northeast Eighth Avenue of green design and develop- alignment is clear. Ground was based in Portland. Eighth is the isting commercial, retail and revitalize the corridor between will be pedestrian-only to en- ment,” Chamberlain says. broken Tuesday morning on avenue that will be re-estab- associated space in the blocks. Seventh and Ninth avenues for courage walking. Contractor Turner Construc- the largest single mixed-use lished though the “superblock” The project is expected to 20 years or more. The goal has tion estimates that the project development in Portland histo- where the project will be built. cost more than $200 million. always been to turn the Lloyd An Eco-District will create 2,400 construction ry. The catalyst is the proximity The parking garages have American Asset Trust, a real District from a separated, auto- The project is being designed jobs. of the Portland Streetcar and already been demolished. They estate investment trust head- dependent part of town into a by GBD Architects. It includes American Asset Trust is al- walkable urban center. This green features, such as systems ready making plans to rede- project will start that transfor- to reduce energy use 25 per- velop several adjacent super- mation,” says Gustafson. cent compared to similar build- blocks it also bought from Ash- Small Guitars for Lucida John Chamberlain, Ameri- ings, solar water heating, rain- forth Pacifi c in the future. 3/4 and 1/2 Size Classical Guitar Small People $59.99

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436683.091713 THE SHORT LIST Check out our Live Music! listings — Page 2 MISC. Rose City Comic Con Several notable guests, including “Flash Gordon” Sam Jones and David Giuntoli of “Grimm,” highlight the Portland festival, Portland!Life which also features plenty of programming — from artist appearances to workshops. SECTION B THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2013 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 21, 10 a.m.- 5 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 22, Oregon Convention Center, 777 N.E. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., rosecitycomiccon.com, $30 two-day pass, $20 Saturday, $15 Sunday, $5 children (3 to 10) Portland Polish Festival Some 15,000 people attend the event in Portland’s Polish neighborhood that fea- tures Polish delicacies (kielbasa and piero- gis, for example), a beer garden, and a lineup of music and dance. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 21, noon-6 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 22, St. Stanislaus Church/Polish Library, 3900 N. Interstate Ave., portlandpolonia.org, free MUSIC Oregon Symphony The Symphony and Portland Japanese Garden are teaming up to celebrate the garden’s 50th birthday. Conductor Carlos Kalmar programmed a special concert to open the symphony’s classical concert sea- son, featuring “From Me Flows What You Call Time” by Japanese composer Toru Takemitsu and Rimsky-Korsakov’s “Sche- herazade,” based on the tales from “One Thousand and One Nights.” 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 21, 8 p.m. Mon- PHOTOS COURTESY OF FEAST PORTLAND Delicious and diverse food are the draw at Feast Portland, a second-year food fair that features dinners and other events around the city. Go to feastportland. day, Sept. 23, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, 1037 S.W. Broadway, orsymphony. com for complete info. org, starting at $22 Molly Ringwald The woman synonymous with 16-year-old girls and movies CITY SETS THE TABLE such as “Pretty In Pink” and celebrating the entirety of the “The Breakfast Story by Jason Vondersmith gastronomic scene of Oregon,” Club” has grown Thelin says. up and branched Welch, a out and is going ortland can lay claim as New Yorker “Portland is on tour to sup- the birthplace and who moved the capital port her latest childhood home of here three album, “Except of the COURTESY OF CONCORD MUSIC GROUP PJames Beard, the late, years ago and Sometimes.” Actress Molly Ringwald great American chef — born runs food PR culinary 7 p.m. Friday, has a new album here back in ‘03, as in 1903. fi rm Little Sept. 27, New- (“Except Sometimes”) But, mostly, our city has be- Green Pickle, heartland. mark Theatre, and she sings in come known for many other says there is 1111 S.W. Broad- People in the Portland, Sept. 27 at things epicurean and gastro- very little to way, portland5. industry like Newmark Theatre. nomic, especially in recent not like about com/newmark- years. Portland’s coming here theatre/events/ Yes, gastronomic. It’s a word scene. She because of molly-ringwal, $33.50-$54 a food professional used in talk- calls it the ing about Portland and Feast “never-never what Portland, a four-day event held The Oregon Bounty Grand Tasting, Friday and Saturday at Pioneer land of food Portland STAGE in the city (Thursday, Sept. 19 Courthouse Square, will be the big public draw at Feast Portland, with and drink.” through Sunday, Sept. 22), in- activities such as cooking demonstrations (above) and wine tasting (below). “There’s a represents.” cluding in its living room, Pio- unique align- — Mike Thelin, ‘Lucky Stiff’ neer Courthouse Square. ing of the Feast Portland Broadway Rose Theatre puts on the Mike Thelin, owner of Bolted culinary competitions, and beer Portland last year, highlighting stars that murder-mystery musical farce based on Services, which runs culinary and breweries, and has a pio- everything that makes eating happened in the novel “The Man Who Broke the Bank events, says Portland ranks as neering spirit during a heyday and drinking here the ultimate Portland, that doesn’t happen at Monte Carlo” by Michael Butterworth. one of the premier cities in the of food and beverages. experience. anywhere,” she says. “There 7:30 p.m. Thursdays-Fridays, 2 p.m. and country for food and food sourc- Hence, he and business part- “We wanted to do something 7:30 p.m. Saturdays, 2 p.m. Sundays, Sept. es, wine and wineries, chef and ner Carrie Welch started Feast that sort of had ‘all of the above,’ See FEAST / Page 3 19-Oct. 13, Broadway Rose New Stage, 12850 S.W. Grant Ave., Tigard, broadway- rose.org, starting at $30 Live Wire! Radio The next two stage/radio shows run con- currently with festivals — Sept. 21, XOXO Festival (sold out, 2013.xoxofest.com); Oct. 5, Wordstock. The Sept. 21 show features artist/author Molly Crabapple (who’ll be at XOXO Festival), chef Christina Tosi, come- dian Todd Barry, humorist Jonathan Coul- ton and musical group Ramona Falls. 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 21, Alberta Rose Theatre, 3000 N.E. Alberta St., livewireradio.org, $20, $25 day of show ‘Varsity Cheerleader Werewolves’ As part of Rose City Comic Con, Steve Coker and the folks at StageWorks Ink put on “Varsity Cheerleader Werewolves LIVE From Outer Space,” and then move it to Post 5 Theatre in October. It had a success- ful run at Funhouse Lounge in April. Tasha Danner, a former member of “The New Mickey Mouse Club,” stars. 5 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 21, Oregon Con- vention Center, Oct. 3-6, Oct. 10-12, Post 5 Theatre, 850 N.E. 81st Ave., brownpaper- tickets.com, $10-$12 Sea Otter Awareness Week The Oregon Zoo plays host to a week of events for otter lovers. All day, Sept. 22-28 (2:30 p.m. keeper talks, and otters Thelma and Eddie train- ing), Oregon Zoo, 4001 S.W. Canyon Road, oregonzoo.org, regular admission Aspen Sante Fe Ballet White Bird kicks off its 16th season with the return of fan favorites, an 11-member Quench your company that will perform a unique pro- gram featuring choreographers Cayetano Soto, Jiri Kylian and Norbert de la Cruz III. From humble beginnings, Aspen Sante Fe Ballet has become synonymous with multi- thirst for beer, talented dancers, global choreographers and groundbreaking vision. 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 25, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, 1037 S.W. Broad- Oregon history way, whitebird.org, $26-$64 ‘The Price Is Right Live’ monthly nights of topical education The hit interactive stage show gives con- Oregon Encyclopedia, at McMenamins’ Mission Theater, packed house Sept. 9 for a lecture on testants pulled from the audience the chance Edgefi eld in Troutdale, and another the “1912 Homosexual Controversy.” COURTESY OF OREGON ENCYCLOPEDIA to win appliances, vacations and even new McMenamins team up establishment in Bend. The next two lectures at the Mis- Former Oregon labor boss David Beck cars by playing the show’s classic games. for lecture series The Oregon Encyclopedia’s next sion, 1624 N.W. Glisan St., are also — who made the cover of Time 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 25, Keller Au- history night will feature William juicy topics: “Teamster Boss: Dave magazine (above) and worked with ditorium, 222 S.W. Clay St., portland5.com, By JASON VONDERSMITH Robbins, an Oregon State University Beck and Labor Racketeering in Or- Jimmy Hoffa (above, left) — will be $25.99-$46.49 The Tribune professor and OE editorial board egon” (Oct. 7) and “Remembering the subject of Oregon Encyclopedia member, who will talk about forest Mulugeta Seraw: Portland’s Legacy event Oct. 7 at Mission Theater. Jim Breuer It turns out, you can go back to fi res in the state in “Season of Smoke of Racism and Combating White Su- Comedy Central named him one of the school again, without the pres- and Fire,” Sept. 24, at Edgefield’s premacy” (Nov. 4). 100 greatest stand-up comedians of all sure of grades and with the ability Power Station Theater, 2126 S.W. These are not just tales about the events and time periods that helped time, and he’s known for his role on “Satur- to eat a burger and drink a beer Halsey St., Troutdale. history of Oregon that you can read shape the state. Lecturers and panel- day Night Live.” while learning. The OE, funded by Oregon Hu- in textbooks, although one recent ists give the history nights credibility 8 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 25, Aladdin The- The Oregon Encyclopedia contin- manities, also has instituted a “A Edgefi eld night focused on Lewis and — “A Century of Oregon History” ater, 3017 S.E. Milwaukie Ave., aladdin- ues to educate. The online resource Century of Oregon History” series at Clark’s time in the Columbia Gorge. theater.com, $30 about most things Oregon organizes the Mission. The series began with a They cover issues and little-known See HISTORY / Page 3 B2 LIFE Portland!Life The Portland Tribune Thursday, September 19, 2013

soundtrack of the TV show great aunt Doris Bailey’s dia- LiveMusic! “Sons of Anarchy” (which also Alabama native Bits&Pieces ry. The second version is has featured other Battleme Matthew Houck, called “Reaching for the By ROB CULLIVAN tunes as well as a cover of Neil who plays under Moon.” Bailey lived in Port- Young’s “Hey Hey, My My”). By JASON VONDERSMITH land in the 1920s and attended Pamplin Media Group moniker The Tribune Meanwhile check out his video Phosphorescent, the Hollywood regularly, in- for the falsetto-fl avored mid- brings his unique cluding in 1926 when it Sept. 19 tempo rocker “Touch” on bat- indie rock to Women’s disc golf opened. tleme.tv — dang if Drenik For info: hollywoodtheatre. Wren is it Hawthorne doesn’t look like an early 1970s Theatre, Sept. The 2013 U.S. Women’s Disc org. She’s been a Montessori Pete Townsend! 26. Golf Championships will be teacher by day, and apparently Battleme, The Grizzled held Friday through Sunday, Imago’s plans Might, Miracle Falls, 9 p.m. Fri- COURTESY OF a torch singer by night. She’s DUSDIN CONDREN Sept. 20 to 22, at Pier Park and Portland’s Jeni Wren, who day, Sept. 20, Bunk Bar, 1028 Blue Lake Park in Troutdale. Imago Theatre, after taking kicks off a monthly residency at S.E. Water Ave. $10. Info: 503- but a more grungy Buddy Holly vored single “Waveforms” that It’s one of fi ve major champi- a break the past season, will Secret Society Ballroom with 894-9708, bunkbar.com. had he owned a head shop. could have been pulled off a onships held by the Profes- return in December with this party to celebrate the re- ■ Colleen Green: That shy mid-’70s Paul McCartney record. sional Disc Golf Association. “Frogz,” its signature work lease of her blue-eyed neo-soul Sept. 21 girl who sat next to you in math Islands, Bear Mountain, 9 It’ll be the fi rst major held in (Dec. 13 to Jan. 5). But there album “North Star.” The single class. You knew she was really p.m. Sunday, Sept. 22, Doug Fir the Northwest and will feature are also some new produc- “Release” would sit nicely next Seven deadly dins cool but never quite fi t in at Lounge, 830 E. Burnside St. $14, about 130 disc golfers. tions as well, including “The to any number of slow jams on The Burgerama Caravan of school till senior year when she $15. Info: 503-231-9663, dougfi r For info: pdga.com. Caretaker,” with Allen Nause, an urban radio station’s playlist, Stars Tour features a number of played her upbeat laptop pop- lounge.com. former artistic director of Art- and Wren — a member of the cinematic post-punk rockers rock at the talent show and ev- Dance championship ists Repertory Theatre in the popular band Shy Girls — plans that we will try to sum up by eryone went wild. It was then Sept. 26 lead (Feb. 27 to March 23). In to deliver her new single as well noting the single they sent us you kicked yourself for never Amateurs and spectators addition, the group will launch as other songs by taking the and how it sounds: asking her out because you Glowing reviews are encouraged to participate a new, family-friendly dance stage with an 11-piece horn- ■ The Growlers: “One Mil- knew then it was too late. Alabama native Matthew in the Northwest Dancesport theater company, “The Elas- fl avored band. lion Lovers” — countrifi ed ga- Burgerama Caravan of Stars Houck performs with his Championships, a ballroom tics,” which performs May 2 to Jeni Wren, Ancient Heat, rage rock meets “Barbarella.” Tour, 7 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 21, band under the moniker dance competition as part of June 1. Chance Hayden, Ian James, 8:30 ■ The Cosmonauts: “Shak- Wonder Ballroom, 128 N.E. Rus- Phosphorescent. Considered National Ballroom Week in For info: imagotheatre.com. p.m. Thursday, Sept. 19, Secret er” — chiming psychedelic ga- sell St. $15 in advance, $18 day by some to be a latter-day Gram October. Society Ballroom, 116 N.E. Rus- rage rock meets “The Basket- of show. All ages. Info: 503-284- Parsons, he’s also clearly in The USA Dance Portland Springwater Corridor sell St. $10 in advance, $15 day ball Diaries.” 8686, wonderballroom.com. debt to Willie Nelson (for whom Chapter will play host to the repairs of show. Info: 503-493-3600, ■ Gap Dream: “Chill Spot” he recorded a tribute album) as event Oct. 12 and 13 at the secretsociety.net. — That bored guy selling pret- Sept. 22 well as U2, although Bono’s Ainsworth Event Center, 1512 Portland Parks & Recre- zels in the mall kiosk invents voice never trembled as nicely S.W. Morrison St. (info: NW- ation plans repairs on the Sept. 20 dance steps on the escalator Out to sea as this good ole boy’s. BallroomCompetition.org). Springwater Corridor Trail, during his break while he lis- Originally from Montreal, Like a lot of indie folk rockers just south of the Ross Island Son of Anarchy tens to Michael Jackson’s “Billie L.A. pop-art-rock band Islands these days, Houck uses sound Climbing classic Bridge, starting in late Sep- Guitarist-singer Matt Drenik, Jean” as sung by Gary Numan. has featured a rotating cast of effects and technology to get in tember. There’ll be limited clo- a former member of the hard ■ Together Pangea: “River” characters since they formed in touch with all these things for The American Alpine Club, sures (9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday rock band Lions, moved to Port- — the opening song for a cult 2005, with principal songwriter which there are no free apps, Northwest Region, will hold through Friday, leaving com- land from Austin in 2010, and documentary on the Violent Nick Thornburn the constant like heart and soul. Armed with its second annual event, Crag- muting hours intact) as crews now leads Battleme, which in- Femmes. force, dabbling in everything compelling tunes like “Wolves” gin’ Classic, Oct. 12 and 13 at work to restore eroded areas. cludes Eric J on bass and Zach The other three bands were from dancehall and song hall to and “Song for Zula,” Houck is Smith Rock, in Terrebonne, For info: portlandoregon.gov/ R on drums (surnames un- too blissed out to send us sin- electro-pop and orchestral rock. staking out his own place in the between Madras and Bend. parks. known). Inspired by everyone gles, but we think they sound You can hear Squeeze, Split Enz, great American songbook. There’ll also be a showing of from Elliott Smith and Jeff like this: Ben Folds and Arcade Fire in Phosphorescent, Indians, 7 “Reel Rock 8,” an outdoor par- Designers unite Tweedy to David Bowie and ■ La Luz: Every cool early this fi ne outfi t, which respects p.m. Thursday, Sept. 26, Haw- ty, vendor fair, clinics for be- Zeppelin, Drenik is carving a 1960s girl group surfi ng on rain- your intelligence, but clearly thorne Theatre, 1507 S.E. 39th ginning to advanced climbers, The Portland Design Festi- name out in the indie rock bow-colored waves of joy. likes having fun. The band’s lat- Ave. $16 in advance, $20 day of and a fun run. For info: ameri- val, put on by The Center for world, getting his fi ne folk song ■ White Fang: A less gritty est record “Ski Mask” features show. All ages. Info: 503-233- canalpineclub.org. Architecture and the Ameri- “Burn this Town” placed on the Creedence Clearwater Revival the infectious Caribbean-fl a- 7100, hawthornetheatre.com. can Institute of Architects, Delayed ‘Mistakes’ will take place Oct. 3 to 18 around the city. Graphic de- Due to an actor leaving for a sign, film, architecture and family emergency, Artists urban planning are some of Repertory Theatre’s produc- the design disciplines fea- tion of “Mistakes Were Made” tured. The festival kicks off has been delayed a week, and during First Thursday, Oct. is now set to open Sept. 28. Al- 3, in the Pearl District. For so, director Michael Mendel- info: PortlandDesignFestival. son has stepped in to play the org. lead role, and Damaso Rodri- guez, Artists Rep artistic di- Movie time rector, will help direct it. “Mistakes Were Made” was Upcoming big-screen re- written by accaimed play- leases: wright and TV writer Craig Sept. 20: “Prisoners”; “Bat- TH Wright. tle of the Year 3D”; “The Pa- 14 ANNUAL tience Stone” Up in lights Oct. 4: “Runner Runner”; NORTHWEST “Gravity” The Hollywood Theatre has Oct. 11: “Machete Kills”; turned on the lights of its new “The Summit” marquee. As part of the Holly- Oct. 18: “Carrie”; “The Fifth wood’s Kickstarter campaign Estate” to pay for the marquee, author Oct. 25: “The Counselor”; QUILTING Julia Park-Tracey, and “The “Jackass Presents: Bad Doris Diaries” will curate a Grandpa”; “Paranormal Activ- 1920s Hollywood glam night ity: The Marked Ones” with a special reading and Nov. 1: “Enders Game”; screening of the silent fi lm “Last Vegas” “Wings,” 6:30 p.m. Sept. 25. Nov. 8: “Thor: The Dark EXPO The reading will be of her World” Decorative Painting Expo Raindrop Chapter September 18-22,2013

OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Painting Demonstrations Learn to Paint! Make it and Take it! Free Admission and Parking! Holiday Inn Airport Hotel Exhibit Hall 8439 NE Columbia Blvd; Portland, OR Friday, Sept. 20th 9 to 6 Saturday, Sept. 21st 9 to 5 436689.091113 Sunday, Sept. 22nd 9 to 2 www.raindropchapter

2013 SEWING & CREATIVE ARTS FESTIVAL

SEPTEMBER 19, 20 & 21, 2013 THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY LET’S PORTLAND EXPO CENTER • PORTLAND, OREGON Explore CLASSES | SPECIAL EXHIBITS | SHOPPING GENERAL ADMISSION $10 A DAY | NATIONAL INSTRUCTORS 503-224-3900 www.nwquiltingexpo.com 448866.091913 portlandspirit.com 426851.062713 The Portland Tribune Thursday, September 19, 2013 Portland!Life LIFE B3 Feast: Four days, 43 events and 40 chefs ■ From page 1 Tasting, a smorgasbord of ac- we’re all about. ... Oregon, and tivity noon to 5 p.m. Friday Portland, is the capital of the and Saturday at Pioneer culinary heartland. People in are farmers markets in virtu- Courthouse Square ($60 per the industry like coming here ally every neighborhood, with person, all-inclusive). A free because of what Portland rep- farms being only 20 to 30 min- event featuring Whole Foods resents.” utes away. It’s quicker to get will be held from 11 a.m. to 2 Thelin grew up in Scap- here, fresher. Being close to p.m. Saturday at Director poose, but he’s a fourth-gener- the 45th parallel, it allows the Park. See feastportland.com ation Oregonian whose family wine country to for complete in- lived in Portland. be as good as it formation. It’s hard to quantify the is. There are ap- Chefs are the Chefs are the start of a food scene, or defi ne ples, pears and rock stars of to- it, he says, but Portland’s iden- hazelnuts, and rock stars of day’s food scene, tity can certainly be grounded it’s accessible to today’s food but they come to in such trend-setters as Cathy people in the Portland to find Whims at (and now city. ... We feel scene, but they out what the buzz Nostrana), Vitaly Paley, Capri- like Portland and come to has been about in al Pence and Greg Higgins at Oregon is pretty recent years, their own restaurants and Co- exceptional for Portland to fi nd Welch says. In ry Schreiber at . All the bounty of in- out what the her own testimo- of them, Thelin says, “gastro- gredients you nial, Welch said nomically speaking, planted can get here, and buzz has been she was moving the seed for what’s happening the talent of our about in recent from New York today,” including helping chefs. City, and she re- emerging stars such as Rucker “And, I’m going years. members a com- COURTESY OF FEAST PORTLAND of and Adam Sap- New Yorker on ment made by a Feast Portland lures top chefs from around the country, and from the city, with many drawn by what makes pington of Country Cat. you and saying that Portland person at a Brooklyn bar. Portland’s culinary scene thrive. It sure helps to have bounty for seafood dishes (above) close by. Good chefs, nearby bounty, is affordable for good food.” “Don’t be nervous,” the man an independent pioneer spirit, About 40 chefs will attend said. “You’re going to a better al, which, like most of the big Naomi Pomeroy), also is sold ed to attend. a national food scene that has Feast Portland, which has place.” events, sold out. The popular out. “We get about 30 percent (of exploded ... food in Portland gained popularity, and many There are 43 events in the dinner series, featuring nota- Despite this being only its people) from out of town,” continues to get better and events already have sold out. four days of Feast Portland, all ble chefs from around the second year, the event has be- Thelin says. “A lot of folks better. The big event for John Q. Pub- done a la carte — a highlight country and some of our own come hugely popular, and from the industry want to “It’s all come together into a lic is the Oregon Bounty Grand being the Sandwich Invitation- (Gabriel Rucker, Jenn Louis, about 10,000 people are expect- come to Portland to see what powerful cocktail,” Thelin says. History: Online encyclopedia teaches about state

department, Oregon Historical cans and Latinos in Oregon, tinue to be published.” ■ From page 1 Society and Oregon Council of and one on Chinese has been The history nights are an Teachers of English collaborat- started. She says more stan- educational offshoot, with ex- nights feature three panelists. ed on coming up with the idea dard entries, such as those perts hosting the events — not The Mission Theater history for the online encyclopedia. The about the Oregon Trail or just some guy off the street. nights take place the fi rst Mon- OE started publishing entries in Lewis and Clark, need to be They actually were born from day of each month, and at Edge- 2007, and now has about 1,200 written or expanded upon. The OE’s travels around the fi eld they are the last Tuesday entries about signifi cant Ore- Unlike Wikipedia, the OE re- state, holding several commu- of the month. The gon people, places, quires authors to send entries nity meetings to solicit entry lectures are free events, institu- through an editorial process, and author suggestions for the and open to mi- “The speakers tions, etc. — in- with peer review and fact- online site. Many authors in nors. Tania Hyatt- are very cluding some you checking. “You can’t just go in The OE also serve as history Evenson, commu- might not have and change things,” she says. night speakers. nity relations and approachable. heard of — by Funding has come from the “The speakers are very ap- editorial coordina- We usually get a some 500 authors Oregon Heritage Commission, proachable,” Hyatt-Evenson tor for The Ore- in Oregon, ar- Oregon Cultural Trust and Or- COURTESY OF OREGON ENCYCLOPEDIA says. “We usually get a lot of gon Encyclopedia, lot of great ranged from A to egon State Library. The racially-charged death of Mulugeta Seraw (left) will be the focus great questions at the end. Peo- says there are questions at the Z. Content in- “We have about 1,200 entries, of Oregon Encyclopedia’s issue night Nov. 4 at Mission Theater, ple want to learn. bookings for the cludes entries of and we had the original goal of featuring educator/presenter Walidah Imarisha (right). “It’s been a very good suc- history nights end. People 1,000 words and 3,000 to 5,000,” Hyatt-Evenson cess. Unfortunately, we have to through spring want to learn. interpretive es- says. “It’s a project that could 10 more years. It’s mostly vol- much as we can. Hopefully, we turn people away sometimes 2014. says of 1,000 to go on for, I don’t know, fi ve or unteer, and we’re publishing as continue to be funded and con- (because of seating capacity).” At Edgefield, It’s been a very 3,000 words. It also “we have a really good success.” features photo- devoted audi- graphs, historical — Tania Hyatt-Evenson, ence,” Hyatt- documents and www.legacyhealth.org Oregon Encyclopedia Evenson says. She teacher lesson community relations and says the Lewis plans. editorial coordinator and Clark/Colum- The web ad- bia Gorge lecture dress is Orego- fi lled the room, and talks on Or- nEncyclopedia.org. egon geological history, such as “We could post thousands My friends, the Great Missoula Flood, also more,” says have been popular. At the Mis- “We want to provide general sion, the “1912 Homosexual and definitive information Controversy” night proved to about the state of Oregon ... for my fans... be popular. Another subject students, researchers, informa- that drew in people was “Port- tion seekers. It’s defi nitely an land Xanadu,” about the rise educational outreach.” and fall of the Hoyt Hotel. Recent entries include an es- my legacy. The OE started its partner- say on Japanese-Americans in ship with McMenamins in 2010, Oregon. Hyatt-Evenson says about fi ve years after the Port- there needs to be a similar es- land State University history say done on African-Ameri- This is my biggest rival. (She’s nice.)

These are my biggest fans. (They’re nuts.)

Here is the doctor from Randall Children’s Hospital who fixed my broken ankle. (She’s really nice.)

This is what I did three months later. (Go team!)

This is me...

And this is my legacy. AD-0929 ©2013

Legacy Health is your locally owned health care partner.

Be active, play safe and stay healthy with Randall Children’s Hospital at AD-0928 ©2013 Legacy Emanuel.

Our legacy is yours. 428446.091813

437486.091813 www.facebook.com/legacychild www.legacyhealth.org/kidsonly B4 LIFE The Portland Tribune Thursday, September 19, 2013

Place your ad by calling (503) 620-SELL (7355) www.Community-Classifieds.com

Your Neighborhood Marketplace

Community Firewood/ Musical Instruments/ Pets & Supplies Calendar Heating Supplies Entertainment

CURED, SEASONED: JUPITER, Alto Sax, with PLACEMENT INFORMATION PORTLAND NW: Oak, Maple, Ash, Cherry, case and all accessories. AUSTRALIAN PACIFICA Alder & Fir. $185-$300 per $400.00. | (503) 760-2151 LABRADOODLES Telephone: (503) 620-SELL (7355) WAREHOUSE SALE cord (Multiple cord dis- 3135 NW Industrial St counts). Delivery available. Fax: (503) 620-3433 Call 503-913-2457. PIANO, Kholer-Campbell OLAF DECIDES HE NEEDS A NEW HOME AND Oct 4: 12-4 Good condition, includes TRIES FAXING HIMSELF. E-Mail: Oct 5th & 6th: 10-4 bench. U-Haul. $300. Your favorite candles, FIR FIREWOOD Steve, (503)538-2887 OUR SUPER-FRIENDLY DEAF AND DECLAWED [email protected] perfumes, bath & body Seasoned 2 years, split, MIDDLE-AGED GUY IS TAKING MATTERS INTO HIS are up to 90% off!!! clean,dry and rot free. OWN PAWS. Address: $190.00 per cord. Sporting Goods *Cash & major cards OK Adorable, scruffy, 6606 SE Lake Road, Portland, OR 97269 503-829-8799 message or TO GET A PERSONALLY ‘SIGNED’ PICTURE FROM 503-312-7403 cell number 12-week-old boy has a OLAF (AND MEET THIS GREAT CAT IN Lost & Found very calm, sweet, playful HILLSBORO) PLEASE CALL CAT’S CRADLE RES- Office Hours: 8 am - 5 pm CUE AT 503-320-6079 OR EMAIL HIS FOSTER MOM SEASONED: Price per ALBANY temperment. Cayenne is AT [email protected]. cord: Fir, $200. Alder, Rifle and Pistol Club potty trained to the doggy $210/. Mix of both, $210. 2013 FALL door, knows ‘’sit’’ & FOUND: A great way to Single cord, $10 more. advertise!!!! Free Deliver in the greater GUN SHOW ‘’down’’. He is a great Call Sherry at Gresham, Estacada & Sept 21st & 22nd ‘’go Community Classifieds, Sandy areas. Call 503.637.3433 At the Linn County anywhere, loves every- WISH SOMEONE HAPPY BIRTHDAY 503-546-0755 Fairgrounds CONGRATULATE NEW PARENTS (I-5 Exit 234) one’’, kinda guy! SUMMER Discount Furniture/ • Free Parking TELL SOMEONE YOU LOVE THEM Price - $800. Personals • 420 Tables of Guns MICKEY & MINNIE: We’re PUT YOUR HAPPY AD HERE Home Furnishings & Free standard, Australian Mickey and Minnie and we MONIQUE: My name is Ammo Labradoodle? - Check out need you! We’re little kit- Monique, and I am quite unique! I am a torti-point DINING ROOM SET: Saturday 9am - 5pm our Guardian Home pro- tens who need a home. ➊ ➊ You will always have love Siamese mix with plushy ADOPTION: Pecan, hutch, table w/4 Sunday 9am - 4pm gram on on our Web soft fur and a sweet and Affectionate, Artistic, chairs & 2 leafs, very good surround you with us Admission $5.00 site. around. You won’t need a quiet demeanor. I would Adventurous, Financially condition, $350/OBO. love a quieter home with Secure Family awaits 1st King City area. trailsendlabradoodles.com TV because we’re live en- (503) 522-5210 tertainment that will bring people who wish me to lay FOR ONLY $25 baby. Expenses paid. Call 503-968-7919. (541) 491-3755 on their lap and brush me. ➊ Beth 1-800-990-7667➊ facebook.com/trailsendlabradoodles joy to your life. Did we Call Sherry at Community Classifieds [email protected] mention the acrobatic feats Doesn’t that sound lovely? ENTERTAINMENT CTR, we can do? If you’re ready I’m calm and cuddly. I will 503-546-0755 be more than happy to 6x6, dark cherry wood, RIFLES: 300 Weatherby for love and laughter, call $125 OBO. Wurlitzer Or- us! Please call keep your feet warm at Magnum w/2.5 8 power night, and you will happily gan, 3 keyboards, with mu- scope, 3 boxes of shells, To place your 503-292-6628 option 3 or Help Wanted sic books. $600 OBO Community Classified visit our website: dote on me! I’m waiting for $800/firm. 7 MM Mag, 700 your visit at Animal Aid’s (503)656-7694 ADL, Liepold 4 power advertisement, www.animalaidpdx.org for Job Opportunities call 503-620-SELL(7355). more information. Show & Tell Saturday from scope, $350/firm. Sandy 12PM to 4PM. Please call area. Call 503-668-4008. 503-292-6628 option 3 or ATTN: 29 Serious People HOSPITAL BED: With new mattress - $100. visit our website: to Work From Anywhere Business www.animalaidpdx.org for using a computer. Up to more information. $1,500-$5,000 PT/FT. Opportunities QUEEN BED SET: Water- APPAREL/JEWELRY www.ValleyIncomeOnline.com fall bdrm set with 2 end ta- Help bles, mirror vanity & bench. $350 | (971)400-0966 Wanted Drivers - Whether you ATTENTION have experience or need READERS training, we offer unbeata- WE BUY GOLD FAX CDL DRIVERS: Due to the quantity and Marble topped coffee table, $25/hr., tanker endorse- ble career opportunities. $25; 2 cherry wood curio Sterling Flatware -Silver-Pocket Watches Your classified ad : Trainee, Company Driver, variety of business op- ment needed. Contact portunity listings we re- cabinets, $100 each; 2 vin- Casey at (701)651-4296. LEASE OPERATOR, tage dressers, matching, (503) 620-3433 LEASE TRAINERS ceive, it is impossible for The Jewelry Buyer us to verify every oppor- highboy and lowboy, $300 (877)369-7104 for both; (503) 330-4595 20th N.E. Sandy PDX 503-239-6900 24 Hours per day CUSTOMER SERVICE www.centraltruckdrivingjobs.com tunity advertisement. Readers respond to Entry level customer serv- www.jewelrybuyerportland.com For personal ice and marketing reps for business opportunity Food/Meat/Produce DRIVERS: We value our ads at their own risk. If NEW BOX spring assistance, call expanding Lake Oswego and pillow top mattress. (503) 620-SELL(7355) co. No exp necessary. drivers as our most IM- in doubt about a partic- M-Fri. 9:30-5 Sat 10-4 PORTANT ASSET!! YOU ular offer, check with the Never slept on. community-classifieds.com $450 per week per written New Englander, queen. agreement. Call for inter- make us successful!! Top Better Business Bureau, Pay, Benefits Package! 503-226-3981 or the $275.00 view: (503) 305-8205 (503) 912-1972 BLUEBERRIES ! CDL-A Required. Join our Consumer Protection U-Pick $1.50 /lb team NOW! Agency, 503-378-4320, ▲▲▲ 1-888-414-4467 BEFORE investing any Lawnmowers www.GOHANEY.com Ordered “Fresh Picked’’ money. 10 lbs for $22, or 100 lbs. for $200. GORDON TRUCKING- ▲▲▲ CDL-A Drivers Needed! Learn What Most People $$ Reduced Prices $$ Sweet Blueberries for JANITORIAL Dedicated and OTR Posi- Will NEVER Know AL’S MOWERS Juicing or Drying - OFFICE tions Now Open! $1,000 About Making $$$ Online Guaranteed used Gas, $1.00 /lb CLEANERS SIGN ON BONUS. Con- www.onlytrustresults.com Hand & Electric mowers. ▲▲▲ sistent Miles, Time Off! Full Trade-Ins Welcome! PLUMS, PEARS Part-time Fall Special ~ $39.95 BEAVERTON: WEST LINN Benefits, 401k, EOE, Re- & APPLES LARGE GARAGE SALE SAUVIE ISLAND/ NE PORTLAND cruiters Available 7 Loans Tune-ups! U-Pick: 80¢ /lb NW Portland • 97231 8 ARTIST AUTUMN ART 20-25 Hours/Week Call 503-771-7202 FRI & SAT: 9am-3pm days/week! 866-435-8590. Ordered “Fresh-Picked”: Cynthia Fischborn SALE SERVICEMASTER 8828 SE Division Street $1 /lb 8205 SW 152nd Ave 19672 SUN CIRCLE ▲▲▲ ESTATE SALE 503-657-3998 Help Wanted Crafters’ delights, fabric, (off Carriage Way) It is illegal for companies Miscellaneous for 503-651-2622 home decor, dishes. 17426 NW Lucy Sales Opportunities doing business by phone to Saturday, 8-4p Fundraising for leukemia SATURDAY ONLY: 9-4 Reeder Road Fabric art, textiles, jewelry, Journeyman Electrician promise you a loan and Sale www.canby.com/morningshade Lymphoma Society Residential/Commercial. ask you to pay for it before Sat 10-3 • Sun 11-3 photography, pottery, oil WANTED: LIFE AGENTS; 2 floors packed — paintings, beautiful Fax resume: 503-981-4643 Earn $500 a Day; Great they deliver. For more in- BBQ Grill: BORING: worth the drive! treasures! Agent Benefits; Commis- formation, call toll-free Gas w/lid, 2 side burners, Coins, jewelry, orig sions Paid Daily; Liberal 1-877-FTC HELP. A public stone briquets & starter, CANBY: ESTATE/MOVING SALE art/prints, duck decoys, Underwriting; Leads, service message from smoker pan, tank, $100. U-PICK TOMATOES FRI/SAT & SUN: 8-5 new dining set, old & NEED HELP Leads, Leads LIFE INSUR- Community Classifieds and .35 /pound WEST LINN Call Nancy, 503-538-4397 28495 SE Haley Rd newer fishing, tools, MULTI-FAMILY SALE WITH YOUR ANCE, LICENSE RE- the Federal Trade Com- U-PICK PUMPKINS beds, desks, small col- QUIRED. Call mission. $2.50 Each (Between Hwy 26 & lectibles, antq mantel & 22791 SW ULSKY RD CLASSIFIED 1-888-713-6020 GENERATOR: Chicago, 6825 S ARNDT ROAD 282nd Ave) table clocks, tall case (Follow signs off SW 5.5Hp, 2400W - $200/OBO Household items, Queen clock, clockmaking Borland/SW Miken) AD? HALLOWEEN DECOR: (503)266-5601 Bed, Oak Dining Table, tools & supplies, quilts, Inside/Outside & window Wheels, TVs, Tools. nice kitchen, camping, FRI-SAT: 9-3 decorations. Make offer. Too Much to List!!! Delfts collection & so Furniture, clothes, glass- Call Mindy! ware, Trek bike, light Spanning 3 decades. CASALE FARMS much more! CAMPING GEAR: See pics at: fixtures and lots more. 503-546-0760 Pickling Cukes (by order), Forest Grove: for ad rates, general Make Offer!! Dill, Garlic, Beets, (503)936-6925 MOVING SALE www.estatesale-finder.c information or help Cabbage, Red Potatoes, WEST LINN: writing your ad in any one Beans, Yukon Gold, Basil, Air Conditioning Unit Floor om/cynthiafischborn.htm of our Slicing Cukes, Tomatoes, Model $250.00, Tower CUL-DE-SAC SALE Community Newspaper Announcements/ Miscellaneous Cauliflower & Broccoli. Heater $15.00, Floor 503-544-7493 FRI: 9-5 & SAT: 9-3 Publications Heater $15.00, Overstuffed House is alarmed Notices Wanted Open 9am-5pm Swivel Chair $125.00, 2010 Conestoga Lane and get the RESULTS Furn, Mtn bike, antiques, Queen Bed mattress, box, you want! (Closed Sunday) pwr washer, artwork, misc. $10,000 REWARD Appliances 13116 NE Denbrook Rd frame $225.00, microwave If you know right situation CASH for DIABETIC countertop 700 W 1.5 TIGARD: mjohnson@ of criminal harassment Aurora, OR Cube $25.00, Dirt Devil DOWNSIZING SALE commnewspapers.com TEST STRIPS 503-678-0291 WEST LINN: against an old lady in Port- Help those in need. Vacuum Upright $50.00. FRI: 9-5 & SAT: 8-4 land neighborhood Call for appointment MULTI-FAMILY SALE BLENDER/FOOD PRO- Paying up to $30 per 13610 SW Aerie Drive (Montavilla), You can col- box. Free pickup. (702) 655-2121. FRI & SAT: 9am-5pm lect by giving police infor- CESSOR: 7-speed Cui- PICKLING CUKES (off of Gaarde) 2610 Coeur D’Alene Dr sinart, 40 oz. jar, 3 cup Call Sharon: Antiques, furn, collectibles; mation that leads to arrest 5 0 3. 6 7 9. 3 6 0 5 Tile tables w/chairs, for a legal use of privacy bowl, never used. $65 WINTER SQUASH GRESHAM: Lenox, Lladro, Arnatale, (503) 491-9060 children’s, clothing, holi- Need a new employee? invasive equipment. Pri- ESTATE SALE hshold, jewelry, Christmas. day, area rugs, Steinbach vacy invasive equipment RED & YUKON GOLD SAT & SUN: 8am-4pm Quality - Priced to Sell! nutcrackers, giftware, more Advertise it in the must have been used for 1 SIDE BY SIDE refrigerator Potatoes - .40/ pound 35161 SE Bluff Road classifieds. Call now! year. Only 1 reward for pri- COIN COLLECTOR vacy invasion. Reward freezer, GE, white, works Cash paid for older U.S. 1,000 + sqft of antiques, Call 503-620-7355 may be split. Information great. $300. or Foreign coins & Jew- SONNEN FARM retro & current items. PORTLAND NW: must be given to police (503) 990-1043 elry. (503)407-7269 (503) 982-9570 only. (503)545-6163 8644 BROADACRES RD GRESHAM: WHIRLPOOL stackable AURORA, OR MOVING SALE! Washer/Dryer. $600. 3029 SE Willow Pkwy $5,000 REWARD (503)366-0605 NEWSPAPER If you know right situation COMIC BOOKS WANTED SUPER SWEET CORN FRI, 8- 5p & SAT, 9- 3p INSERTER of a criminal harassment Private collector seeks Yellow or white. Other gar- Franciscan dinnerware Pacifica Warehouse Sale OPERATORS against an old lady in Port- Bazaars/Flea comics from the ‘40s-’70s. den vegetables also avail. (apple pattern), also china land neighborhood Appraisals given, cash pd. Schlechter Farms & other really nice items. October 4th: Noon-4pm & Seeking experienced (503) 528-1297 Muller newspaper inserter (Montavilla), you can col- Markets 10143 86th Ave NE operators for part-time lect by giving police infor- Brooks, OR LAKE OSWEGO October 5th & 6th: 10am-4pm positions at the Outlook in mation that leads to arrest LIFELONG COLLECTOR (S on Hwy 99E, left on DOWNSIZING SALE 3135 NW Industrial Street Gresham. These posi- for stalking. Only 1 reward ADVERTISE YOUR pays cash for GERMAN & Waconda Rd, follow signs) tions will be day-time, for 1 stalking arrest. Re- HOLIDAY SALE JAPANESE war relics. 503-792-3328 14412 MEADOW Portland, OR 97210 usually only one day a ward may be split. Informa- Helmets, swords, flags etc. GRASS ST. tion must be given to police IN OUR (503)288-2462 | Portland week, and will involve BAZAAR BOUTIQUE! Horses FRI: 9-4 SAT: 9-1 working 10-12 hours. only. Big downsizing sale: Golf Your favorite candles, perfumes, bath Must be able to stand for Stereo equipment clubs, bikes, fitness stuff, long periods, and lift Community glassware, housewares, and body are up to 90% off! 30-pounds. Please send speakers amp etc, ham BAGGED books, TV, clothes and *Cash & Major Credit cards accepted. resumes to Paul Wagner, Calendar shortwave antique radios much more! [email protected] vacuum tubes. Indigenous FINES/SHAVINGS or to PO Box 747, and tribal carvings and $5.85 per bag. Delivery Gresham, OR 97030. No «BEAVERTON★ masks. Old signs and ad- and quantity discounts phone calls, please. DOLL SALE & SHOW vertising. Beer memora- available. Call Today for bilia. Always buying K Bar D Enterprises Saturday, Sept 21st Heathkit, Marantz, McIn- (503) 806-0955 9am to 3pm Pricing and Options! tosh, JBL, Altec, EV, Berry Patch PLANT MANAGER Beaverton Elks Lodge dynaco, etc/ + unique An Enclosed Trailer mfg in Mindy • 503-546-0760 collections/collectibles Hay/Straw/Feed 3500 SW 104th Ave 503-244-6261 the Salem, Oregon area is Entry: $3 per person [email protected] seeking a plant manager. (Children under 5 free). The candidate must be en- Door Prizes!!! Wanted small older Fourth cutting alfalfa, fine ergetic, have manufactur- Crawler (bulldozer), any ing experience & must be 503-816-3966 SANDY FLEA stem, no weeds, 60# ba- model/condition running or les, delivery available willing to relocate. Position MARKET not or related equipment, is salary plus bonus, $230/ton. | (503)550-4515 MAJOR Coin Auction Sun, 211 NE Roberts Skidsteer farm tractor. Any 401(k), health ins & pd vac. Sept 22, 1 pm, Salem Downtown Gresham old small track machines. Comfort Suites 630 Haw- Also wanted old gas BOX #110 Vendors Wanted! Week- thorne Ave. SE. Gold, sil- pumps, advertising signs, c/o COMMUNITY CLSSFD end, Weekly & Monthly ver dollar, dealer lots, vending machines, ciga- STORAGE PO BOX 22109 Rates. Indoor Swap-meet slabs, type. Catalogue: rette, candy slot machines. PORTLAND OR 97269 with New, Used, Antiques, MontesInc.com. Crafts, Electronics, Movies, Any old novelty items.’37 PROBLEMS?? 503-769-7183 Books and much more! CHEVY PARTS Call Open 5 days a week, Private Party Cash. (360) 204-1017 Community Classifieds Thurs through Mon, and place a REGULATORY ANALYST 10-am-8 pm. Come Join Us. Have your Marketplace ad to sell Under general supervision, compiles and analyzes Musical Instruments/ your overstock items - Company data to enable the completion and timely Yard/Garage Sale Here! submittal of forecasts, coordination and reporting of cost, 503-849-4819 Entertainment FAST pricing and conservation analysis, along with other -Reasonable Rates reports required by various industry and regulatory Fender Acoustic Guitar: - Quality Readers agencies. Minimum Qualifications: Must possess a Cemetery Lots New, only $79.95 ~ while -Quick Results working knowledge of business principles and theory at a they last!. Come try one at level normally acquired through the completion of a Portland’s homegrown four-year degree in economics, finance, business, music store: Call (503) 620-7355 engineering, accounting or related field and five years CEMETERY PLOTS: Portland Music Company www.community- econometric or forecasting experience. 2 adjacent in Columbia 5 Portland area locations To apply, please visit jobs.mdu.com Memorial, Scappoose, OR. 503-226-3719 classifieds.com $2,000/both. 971.255.1356 www.portlandmusiccompany.com

COMMUNITY CLASSIFIEDS ✵ YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD MARKETPLACE ✵ 503-620-SELL (7355) ✵ 8:30AM - 5:00PM ✵ WWW.COMMUNITY-CLASSIFIEDS.COM The Portland Tribune Thursday, September 19, 2013 LIFE B5 Pets & Supplies Pets & Supplies Homes for Sale Apartments for Rent Boats/Motors/ Mini Vans & RVs & Travel Sport Utility Supplies Passenger Vans Trailers Vehicles

PORTLAND NE: HILLSBORO: Van: 20’ AIRSTREAM Globe Modern Downtown Trotter Twin, 1965: Travel Hillsboro Apartment. Trailer, original owner, like W/D in unit. Free new, MINT! $22,000. Pics Water/Sewer/Garbage, on request. Call for details: across from MAX. *Income 503-543-2263. Restrictions Apply. City Center Apts, SEA RAY, 175, 3.0 XL, ‘96 Mordecai and Rigby are 160 SE Washington St. 30’ SOUTHWIND tabby brothers with beauti- 503.693.9095 Five Series Bowrider. FORD, ‘89 Econoline MOTORHOME 1991: ful tiger markings about MONTAVILLA BEAUTY! Good condition, runs great, FORD BRONCO XLT Turpin is a big sweetie, MOVE-IN READY Gslcitycenter.com This beautiful boat is an 18 Less than 80K original mi- 4-1/2 months old. Wonder- les, runs & drives great! low mileage, who loves to cuddle! He’s 2BD, 1BA (updated), 1800 ft., Mercruiser w/ 3.0 1978: ful together and full of fun $1,500 $6,000/OBO. Original, stock. and crazy play. Intellegent FIV+, but don’t let that sqft, hrdwd flrs, 2 frplcs, MCMINNVILLE: 503-658-3997 brkfst nook, large family Litre/XL motor. Bimini top, Motorcycle: $7,500/obo. and inquisitive and just the scare you off - it only Sunflower Park Apts., 503-693-6327. right amount of spunk to room downstairs, plus 267 NE May Lane, AM/FM, CD, Radio Depth have fun in a gently busy means that this lovebug plenty of extra space, McMinnville, OR behind Finder. Great for wake ovrszd sngl garage w/auto home. Contact Cat’s can’t go outside or live with the Virginia Garcia Clinic & boarding, fishing, tube rid- Trucks & Cradle Rescue at Door Opener & Work- within a block from the 503-312-4296 for informa- non-FIV+ cats. Turpin can bench, Carport, Gas heat, Chemeketa Comm College ing or just for fun!! Trailers tion on where and when be a bit nervous in new sit- Vinyl storm windows. Fncd 2 & 3bdrm, 2ba units avail, Used approx. 474 hours. bkyrd, w/lrg Patio & Gar- $5,000 you can meet these beauti- uations, but once he W/D in unit, pet-friendly, ful cats. Cat’s Cradle Res- den area. W/D & refriger- deck/patio. (503)883-2065 (971)400-0966 cue is a no-kill 503(c)(3) warms up, don’t think that ator incl. Friendly area. non-profit that finds Great he’ll ever let you go! Stop (971)221-1423 HONDA, Rebel, 1996 Homes for Great (Oregon) www.HomesByOwner.com/47102 MILWAUKIE: All inclusive, Cars For Sale Great condition, low miles. TOY HAULER, 1985, Cats by CAT’s Sherwood shelter RMLS.com Listing #13364979 studio, 1bd & 2bd apts. $2,000 | 971-400-0966 white, needs 5th wheel to see this affectionate fe- Short-term agreements towing, 3 extra tires. $800. available, 55+ Community. Woodburn - (503)981-3104 line: 14175 SW Galbreath AUDI TT 225 QUATTRO, WEST LINN: For more information Drive 503-925-8903 call (503)659-0552. 2002. 135k mi, very clean. Motorcycles catadoptionteam.org / $8,000. PS, PW, CC, ABS, WINNEBAGO BRAVE Winter premium package Scooters/ATVs FREIGHTLINER, FLD, ‘94 Monday—Friday, 11 am-7 2001. Vortex V8m 47576 PORTLAND NW: (503) 798-2168 mi. NOW REDUCED TO Good truck to start a busi- pm and Satur- 1 Bed: $700 2 Bed: $895! $34K. Superslide, l shaped Free Water/Sewer/Garb! ness with. Runs excellent! day—Sunday, 10 am-6 pm CADILLAC, El Dorado, kit, great for short or long 990K miles, 450hp Detroit, Spacious open floor plans 1991, 2 dr, V8. White term travel. Completely include full size W/D. Pro- $2,500, FG (503)357-8963 outiftted. Factory checkup 9 spd - Great Condition! fessional on-site mgmt. 2010. Onan generator with $5,776 /OBO Lush landscaping, Outdoor less than 500 hours. Call (503)868-9554 Pool, Year round spa, CHEVY Cavalier 1997: for more info (503) Brand new! Single-level LARGE Patio w/storage. Very clean, 114K mi, 4dr, 368-5281. Can email pics. Utility Trucks MR LUCKY: Ready to plus bonus on half-acre in *Income and Student AT, no accidents, clean ti- meet the love of your life? West Linn. Spacious 3,226 Restriction Apply. tle, $2,950. MERCEDES HARLEY DAVIDSON, & Vans Feeling lucky? Well so SF home with 3 bed, 3 *Pets Welcome! E500 4Matic, 2006: low mi- Heritage Springer, 2001 To place your does Mr. Lucky. He’s a bath, and 3-car. Huge Westridge Meadows les, fully loaded sport mod- 31K mi., new brakes, charming terrier/ Dachs- master suite, gourmet 18476 NW Chemeketa Ln Community Classified Acreage/Lots el, $16,900. 503-887-2639 levers, grips, tires. advertisement, hund mix with a bounce in kitchen, formal dining room 503-439-9098 Regular service. his step and an eagerness with butler’s pantry & pre- www.gslwestridge.com call 503-620-SELL(7355). to please. Joy and com- mium choices throughout. CHEVY Tahoe, 2003, One Asking $9,500 / OBO panionship are right $595,000 owner. Tow package, 3rd (503)533-0225 Sport Utility around the corner, you just PUBLISHER’S Call Will, 503-505-9496. ❃ ❃ ❃ ❃ row seating., 142K miles need to meet Mr. Lucky. NOTICE www.garrettecustomhomes.com Taupe, $6,500. OBO. Very Vehicles Please call 503-292-6628 Show Your Apt good condition. Kawasaki GPZ 750 option 3 or visit: Rentals in (503) 639-7241 1991 GMC www.animalaidpdx.org for Manufactured For sale a 1982 GPZ 750 FORD E250 CUSTOM more information. SUBURBAN: VAN: 2001. Camp, travel, Community with 25K+ miles, good rub- Homes/Lots CLASSIC & SMOOTH GMC factory new engine play and work. Back bench Classifieds ber, rebuilt carburetors, w/only 60K miles on it in- converts into a bed, win- AURORA The rental market is new battery and new intake stalled 2007. Newer tires, dows all around, 5 that Single-wide 2 bedroom/1 moving again! electric trailer brakes All boots. Runs really well, fun w/hitch, cruise control, sun open. new tags. $10,500 real estate advertised bath, with adjoining 145 sq Call Sherry Carsten bluetooth, CD mp3 sound ft family room, 114 sq ft at- to ride and still has plenty of visor, 3rd seat & CD herein is subject to the 503-546-0755 player. Well maintained. system, auto locks, 47,100 Federal Fair Housing tached shop, 121 sq ft sec- SAAB 900S 1990: Extra life in it. Has stock perfor- ond bedroom & 100 sq ft for information, rates, $2,000. miles. Act, which makes it ille- special promotions or for clean, low miles (119,123), mance pipes and fairing, Call or text, 541-729-3086. (503) 524-4862 gal to advertise any pref- laundry/storage room w/ separate water heater. Cov- help in writing an ad. 16 valve, 5 spd, sun/moon erence, limitation or dis- We can help! center stand, oil cooler and ered 10x44 RV/carport, roof, maroon leather int, Al- crimination based on [email protected] comes with pro shop man- race, color, religion, sex, new Energy Guard win- pine CDM 9803 radio CD, handicap, familial status dows, recently recondi- ual. Photos available via tioned electric furnace, auto antenna, A/C (Cold), or national origin, or in- email. Asking $1,400. Call Nothing ever fazes Totoro! tention to make any wood stove, kitchen appli- TUALATIN: cruise, TLC records, metal- He’s a soft and tolerant such preferences, limi- ances. Semi-furnished lic original finish, dark tint Gary at 503-538-3633 or senior who will do great w/loveseat, end tables, & tations or discrimination. side glass, rear seats con- 971-832-0978 or email me with kids of all ages. Even State law forbids dis- chairs in living room,a better, Totoro will be happy crimination in the sale, queen sized bed & dresser vert to 6ft haul/RV camp- [email protected]. to purr all day long – he’s rental or advertising of in main bedroom & dining ing. Recent Parelli tires. A just looking for a warm lap table & chairs in family real estate based on pleasure to drive! All fac- to call home. This calm cat factors in addition to room, 50 x 100 fenced lot. To place your tory original, mostly ga- would love to snuggle with those protected under New membrane roof on Community Classified you for many years to federal law. Oregon rear side of building. Out- 1 bdrm: $697- $710 raged. $3,295. Call Ran- advertisement, come! Totoro is chilling out side has new paint. Asking State law forbids dis- 2 bdrm: $845-$915 & som Byers, 503-581-4500. call 503-620-SELL(7355). at Tualatin’s PetSmart – crimination based on $73,000. 3 bdrm: $975-$1020. stop by for a visit: 7029 marital status. We will Call 503-266-9753 for Free W/S/G! Full size W/D SW Nyberg St. not knowingly accept more info. Ask for Cheri or in every apt. Pool, hot tub, MAZDA Miata MX5 GT Pickups 503-692-5769 any advertising for real Mary. fitness center & clubhouse. 2007: 6p, brilliant black ex- catadoptionteam.org Sat- estate which is in viola- Professional on-site mgmt. terior, tan leather interior, urday and Sunday, 12 tion of the law. All per- Beautiful, quiet, residential 40K mi, excellent cond. pm-4 pm sons are hereby in- BORING: neighborhood. $15,500. 503-653-7751. CHEVY Tahoe LS 1999: formed that all dwellings 14’ X 66’ Mobile home, in Call Today!!! 4x4, 5.7L, Automatic, 174K advertised are available rural Family park. Fea- Wood Ridge Apartments miles, $4,200/OBO. New- PUPPIES: tures include 3 bdrms, 2 11999 SW Tualatin Rd berg area. Call after 5pm, on an equal opportunity MUSTANG FORD JACK RUSSELL TERRI- basis. ba, lrg porch, lrg covered 503-691-9085 503-852-6075. ERS, 1 male, 4 female, carport, upgraded kitchen, www.gslwoodridge.com CONVERTIBLE. 1967, : tri-colored. Born 8/2/13. vinyl windows, new front & Very nice, runs like a clock. $350 per puppy. storm door, wood stove, Red with white top. FORD F-100, Fleetside, 541-544-2330 living area & telephone. Business/Office $25,000. Excellent 1966, Auto Tran, V-8, 352 Commercial (503)663-9465 | $12,500 upholstery. engine, & it runs too! Space for Rent Original wheels. Interested Owned by mechanic. PUREBRED GERMAN Property parties only! $1400. SHEPHERDS, born 7/6/13 CANBY: 2 homes, LAKE OSWEGO: (503) 366-1788 (503)656-7694 WELCHES-97067: 3 bdrm, 2 ba, 5200 Meadows Executive will be ready to take home PRICED TO SELL Office Suites 9/14/13. If you are inter- Call Elaine 503-348-482 All-inclusive offices, virtual ested in a puppy, please JandMHomes.com offices & conference call asap for the pick of the rooms. Many packages to litter. There is a $150.00 choose from! DONALD Mention this ad for non-refundable deposit. North Marion Schools SPECIAL rate on our Questions - 503-314-6546 1680 sq ft, 3 dbdrm, 2006 double offices. Call Jamie, THE INN BETWEEN 503-726-5999 Service Directory Silvercrest. RESTAURANT & BAR MUST SEE www.5200meadows.com 67858 E. Hwy. 26 503-348-8482 Home & Professional Services 3,300sf on 1/4 acre. JandMHomes.com Includes Land, For assistance in placing Business & Building. YOUR CLASSIFIED Newly remodeled with a FAIRVIEW ADVERTISEMENT, Building & Electrical Landscape Beer Garden Premier Community please call $249K/OBO SILENT CREEK the experts at Remodeling Maintenance 503-358-3715 Nice, 3 bdrm, 2 ba, fresh Community Classifieds paint, new carpet, and [email protected] 503-620-SELL (7355) DeKorte Electric, Inc. YEAR AROUND Sam is a kitten ready for wood flooring, 1396 sq ft. community-classifieds.com James Kramer Call us for Fast, Skilled, SERVICE Priced at $39,900, another anything! Shoelace? Reliable Electrical Service Complete clean-ups! Homes for Sale home coming soon. Call Const. Work 24 Hours a Day! Top •Mowings $20 & up. Pounce! Feather? It will Ann 503-577-4396 Houses for Rent Locally since 1974! Rated Angie’s List Service •Trimming •Pruning: JandMHomes.com never escape! Ball? Al- Kitchen, bath, walls, Provider. CCB#159954 Hedges, shrubs, fruit & ready in Sam’s clutches! AURORA: ceilings, additions, 503-288-2211. ornamental & trees. •Thatch •Aerate •Bed work Got anything else? If NEW MODELS ARE counters, cabinets, Attorneys/Legal decks, drywall, tile, •Fertilize •Bark you’re looking for a playful HERE Fences The Sterling Collection Services granite, windows and •Maintenance programs and adventurous bundle of All upgraded on display doors, etc. Affordable rates! in OREGON CITY Call Dave, (503) 753-1838 cuteness, then Sam’s your DIVORCE $155. Complete Reasonable. JandMHomes.com CCB#11518. Jim FENCES & DECKS guy. He can keep up with 503-722-4500 preparation. Includes chil- GARCIA dren, custody, support, 503-201-0969, New/repair. Pressure any kid or dog, and once Washing, Concrete & sod MAINTENANCE, LLC ESTACADA property and bills division. 503-625-5092. Mowing, weeding, trim- his kitten energy is worn $127,900 No court appearances. Di- jameskramerconstruction.com removal . CCB# 118609, CLEAN & Move-In Ready! MANUFAC- ASK ABOUT OUR NO 503-734-7172 ming, blackberries, haul- out for the day, expect an vorced in 1-5 wks possible. ing, year-round mainte- 1992 mfg home on its own DEPOSIT OPTION 503-772-5295 affectionate napping lot. 3BD, Den is possible TURED HOME Beautiful 1, 2 & 3 bdrm, nance. One-time clean- LOANS paralegalalternatives.com Chimney Services Handyman/ ups for all seasons. E-mail: buddy. Interested in this lit- 4th, 2BA. Popular split laundry hook-up, kitchen [email protected] bdrm plan. New carpet & Purchases or refinance appliances. Storage Handywoman [email protected] tle guy’s huge personality? Paint. Nice oversize Gar- great rates and service shed. Includes water 503-774-2237 Stop by CAT’s Sherwood age, large Deck, under- ColonialHomeLoan.com and sewer! Sewing/Alterations ground sprinklers. Low Colonial NMLS#258798 BIRDS CHIMNEY HANDYMAN MATTERS MOW •CUT •EDGE shelter: 14175 SW Sec 8 OK Locally owned, nationally taxes, unlimited water use Tim NMLS#291396 [email protected] SERVICE •LEAF CLEANUP •MORE! Galbreath Drive at $96/qtr. HOA only $56 503-722-3997 1-800-CHIMNEY recognized. Specializing in Average Price, $30. (503) email for details small to medium jobs 503-925-8903 per year. Easy half-hour Cleaning & Repairs 550-8871 / 503-708-8770. commute to Portland or 503-630-4300 SEWING AND #191473 503-653-4999 WestPortland.HandymanMatters.com catadoptionteam.org Mon- Salem. This home quali- ALTERNATIONS. Call CCB# 155449 Nancy @ (503) 258-7930 503-621-0700 YARD DEBRIS HAULING day—Friday, 11 am-7 pm fies for VA zero down fi- •Rototilling •Trimming nancing or FHA 3.5% and Saturday—Sunday, 10 Rooms to Rent •Bark Dust •Gravel •Yard down. View Virtual Tour: Cleaning/Organizing Hauling Maintenance. Free est, am-6 pm http://www.visualtour.com/sh WrightChoiceHomes.com Business Directory ads 7 days. (503) 626-9806. ow.asp?t=3151152 Marybeth Kostrikin work! Call today! ABR CDPE CNE GRI PORTLAND-NE: Painting & Papering Realtor (NE Glisan & 157th Ave) (503)706-1263 Cell Rooms to rent, $500/mo. Call 503-620-SELL FATHER AND SON (503)914-9985 HAULING [email protected] (Call 503-620-7355) KENT’S PAINTING !~VIDEO’S~! ‘’Fast, Honest, Reliable & Hardworking’’ Fine qual, int/ext, free est OREGON CITY Pictures & details ccb #48303. 503-257-7130 EQUESTRIAN HOME: Oregon’s friendliest and Debi’s PROFESSIONAL Junk, Yard & Building Most informative website HOUSECLEANING Debris; Attic, Garage & Huge selection of Non-Toxic Products. Rental Clean-outs. Plumbing & Sociables is a popular, MANUFACTURED & Mature, Honest & Rick, (503) 705-6057 MOBILE HOMES. Reliable! Drainage extra-toed lady who hap- Family Owned Since 1992 Due to Economy, pens to be a volunteer fa- 503-652-9446 I Need WORK! All Jobs, Large & Small wrightchoicehomes.com Boats/Motors/ 503.590.2467 Senior Discount vorite. It’s certainly easy to Gerry Dean’s CCB#194308 503-867-3859 tell how much Sociables Well-located home 5 mins. Closet space cramped? Supplies Cleanup likes people – she hardly from shopping mall & easy Sell those items today OREGON GREEN CLEAN (503) 244-4882 stops purring when her BOAT FOR SALE Building & “Green” House Cleaning half-hour to PDX with barn in the classifieds. 18’3’’ CHAPARRAL Regular & 1-Time Service CPRplumbing humans are around! Given & arena just steps from MODEL 183SS Remodeling (503) 608-0407 Call now! oregongreenclean.com Landscape the opportunity, Sociables your house. Save board- Like new……less that 170 Call 503-620-SELL hours. Always stored in will be a wonderful addition Maintenance ing costs, gas & time! 3 bd, boat garage - on boat lift JAMES F. to your family: she’s 2 baths on main level Volvo model 4.3 GL SX WIEDEMANN Concrete/Paving friendly, affectionate, and (190) engine. Snap in car- CONSTRUCTION PLUS upper level studio pet Bucket seat in lieu of sweet. If you’d like to be Remodeling, Windows, ** AFFORDABLE ** has bdrm & full bath with lounge, Bow rider. Cruise & Doors, Decks, Quality Maintenance & (503) 867-3859 Sociables’ new best friend, package 35 gal. fuel ca- Fences, Sheds. 20 yrs CONCRETE FLATWORK separate entrance. Main- pacity. Canvas cover and Cleanups www.CPRplumbing.info give her some catnip along tenance free white vinyl pri- exp. L/I/B CCB Everything Concrete TURF TENDERS Senior Discount bow cover. Two tone Gel - #102031. Excavation/Retaining Wall vacy fencing, lrg fncd yard, White/Blue. No trailer. (503) 667-4253 CCB#194308 with some attention and pull-thru parking for trailers 5 0 3 - 7 8 4 - 6 6 9 1 ccb#158471 503.297.6271 she won’t want you to Boat has never been any- www.PDXconcrete.com & RV hookup. 2.27 ac with Apartments for Rent where except in Lake Os- leave! Come and see for pasture, sm. creek & pond. wego. $12,000. Contact: yourself at CAT’s Sher- $379,900. Roy Goecks 503-636-2186 RMLS#13599402. [email protected] ROOFING & GUTTERS wood shelter: 14175 SW CONCRETE/PAVING Virtual tour: BEAVERTON: Galbreath Drive www.visualtour.com/show.a 503-925-8903 sp?t=3147611&prt=10003 Marybeth Kostrikin catadoptionteam.org Mon- ABR CDPE CNE GRI day—Friday, 11 am-7 pm Realtor (503)706-1263 Cell and Saturday—Sunday, 10 [email protected] am-6 pm CONTRACTORS NW 26608.080113 CL Decorative Etched or Stamped & Beyond Sell it today Independent Senior Living REINELL, 1992, 17’, •Pools •Decks •Patios •Retaining structural walls End of Summer Special! TEACUP YORKIE PUPS: In/Out, Open bow, Ski, •Driveways in the Apartments from $1,711 Fish, fits 7’ wide slip. Lake Since 1978 Tails docked, have papers, September Only CCB#31044 8-weeks, parents on site. Classifieds. Peaceful Location! Oswego Tags. Mechani- 503-760-2997 Mother weighs 5lbs, father *all inclusive, 3 meals a cally excellent, vinyl is www.cnw-inc.com day. Join us for a meal weighs 3½ lbs, $800/ea. Call 503-620-SELL and check it out! tired, trailer included. Call 503-619-6630. (503-620-7355) 503-643-5418 $1,995 | 503-636-3054

COMMUNITY CLASSIFIEDS ✵ YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD MARKETPLACE ✵ 503-620-SELL (7355) ✵ 8:30AM - 5:00PM ✵ WWW.COMMUNITY-CLASSIFIEDS.COM B6 SPORTS The Portland Tribune Thursday, September 19, 2013

SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE ©2013 WORLD RESERVE MONETARY EXCHANGE INC. 8000 FREEDOM AVE., N. CANTON OH 44720 2013 OREGON DISTRIBUTION NOTICE: SSB2856

PORTLAND AREA RESIDENTS CASH IN: Pictured above and protected by armed guards are the Overstuffed Money Bags containing 10 indi- vidual Vault Bags full of money that everyone is trying to get. That’s because each Vault Bag is known to contain over 100 U.S. Gov’t issued coins some dating back to the early 1900s. State zip codes determine who gets free Silver coins Vault Bags loaded with U.S. Gov’t issued coins are up for grabs as thousands of U.S. residents stand to miss the deadline to claim the money; now any resident of Oregon who finds their zip code listed below gets to claim the bags of money for themselves and keep any valuable coins found inside by covering the Vault Bag fee within the next 2 days OREGON - The phone lines are ringing off the hook. FREE: WALKING LIBERTY VALUABLE: That’s because for the next 2 days Vault RED BOOK COLLECTOR 90% PURE Bags containing valuable U.S. Gov’t issued VALUE $15 to $325 SILVER coins are actually being handed over to Portland area residents who find their zip code listed in today’s publication. “Now that the bags of money are up for grabs Oregon residents are claiming as many as they can get before they’re all gone. That’s because after the Vault Bags were loaded with over 100 U.S. Gov’t is- sued coins the bags were sealed for good. But, we do know that some of the coins date clear back to the early 1900s, includ- ing: Silver, scarce, highly collectible, and currently circulating U.S. Gov’t issued nickels, dimes and quarter dollars, so there’s no telling what you’ll find until you sort through all the coins,” said Timothy J. Shissler, Chief Numismatist for the private World Reserve. The only thing residents need to do is find their zip code on the Distribution List printed in today’s publication. If their zip code is on the list, they need to immediate- ly call the National Claim Hotline before the 2-day order deadline ends. Everyone who does is being given the 90% pure Silver Walking Liberty coin for free just by covering the fee for each Vault Bag loaded with over 100 U.S. Gov’t issued coins for only $99 each as long as they call ENLARGED TO SHOW before the deadline ends. DETAIL. YEAR VARIES Since this advertising announcement 1916-1947 can’t stop dealers and collectors from hoarding any of the valuable coins they can get their hands on, the World Reserve How to claim the bags of U.S. Gov’t issued coins: Read the important information had to set a strict limit of ten Vault Bags listed below about claiming the Vault Bags. Then call the National Claim Hotline before the 2-day deadline per resident. “Coin values always fluctuate and there ends at: 1-888-282-6742 are never any guarantees, but those who get in on this now will be the really smart Who gets to claim the bags of money: Thousands of U.S. residents stand to miss the deadline to claim the money. Now Portland ones. Just think what some of these coins area residents who find the first two digits of their zip code listed in today’s publication and beat the 2-day deadline get to claim the could be worth someday,” said Shissler. bags of money for themselves and keep all the U.S. Gov’t issued coins found inside. Each Vault Bag is loaded in part with highly sought after collector coins dating I keep calling and can’t get through: That’s because each Vault Bag is guaranteed to contain a free Silver Walking Liberty coin clear back to the 1900s including a 90% pure Silver Walking Liberty Half Dollar, and just that one coin alone could be worth $15-$325 in collector value. So thousands of residents are calling to claim as many Vault an Eisenhower Dollar, some of the last ever Bags as they can get before they’re all gone. In fact, since the Vault Bag fee is just $99 everyone is claiming as many bags as they can minted U.S. Dollars, Kennedy Half Dollars, before the deadline ends. So if lines are busy keep trying, all calls will be answered. Silver Mercury Dimes, rarely seen Liber- ty ‘V’ Nickels, nearly 100 year old Buffalo How much are the Vault Bags worth: Coin values always fluctuate and there are never any guarantees, but here’s why Oregon Nickels and a big scoop of unsearched cur- residents are claiming as many Vault Bags as they can get before they’re all gone. After the Vault Bags were loaded with over 100 U.S. rently circulating U.S. Gov’t issued nickels, dimes and quarter dollars. Gov’t issued coins including: Silver, scarce, highly collectible, and a big scoop of unsearched currently circulating U.S. Gov’t issued “We’re bracing for all the calls because coins the bags were sealed for good. But we do know that some of the coins date back to the 1900s. That means there’s no telling there are just hours left for residents to get what you’ll find until you sort through all the coins. So you better believe at just $99 the Vault Bag fee is a real steal since the free Silver the Silver Walking Liberty coin free,” he Walking Liberty coin alone could be worth from $15 to $325 in collector value. said. So, Portland area residents lucky enough Are the Silver Walking Liberty coins really Free: Yes. All Portland area residents who beat the 2-day deadline are instantly being to find their zip code listed in today’s publi- cation need to immediately call the Nation- awarded a Silver Walking Liberty coin issued by the U.S. Gov’t between 1916-1947 free with each Vault Bag they claim. al Claim Hotlines before the 2-day deadline ends to get the Silver Walking Liberty coin Why is the Vault Bag fee so low: Because thousands of U.S. residents have missed the deadline to claim the money the World free. If lines are busy keep trying, all calls Reserve has re-allocated Vault Bags that will be scheduled to be sent out in the next 2 days. That means the money is up for grabs will be answered. N and now any resident who finds the first two digits of their zip code on the Distribution List below gets to claim the bags of money for themselves and keep all the U.S. Gov’t issued coins found inside. Each Vault Bag fee is set at $149 for residents who miss the 2 day deadline, but for those who beat the 2-day deadline the Vault Bag fee is just $99 as long as they call the National Claim Hotline before the deadline ends at: 1-888-282-6742. UNITED STATES ZIP CODE DISTRIBUTION LIST

Alabama Colorado Hawaii Kansas Massachusetts Montana New Mexico Oklahoma South Dakota Virginia 35, 36 80, 81 96 66, 67 01, 02, 05 59 87, 88 73, 74 57 20, 22, 23, 24 New York Oregon Tennessee Washington Alaska Connecticut Idaho Kentucky Michigan Nebraska 98, 99 99 06 83 40, 41, 42 48, 49 68, 69 00, 10, 11, 12 97 37, 38 13, 14 West Virginia Pennsylvania Texas Arizona Delaware Illinois Louisiana Minnesota Nevada 24, 25, 26 North Carolina 15, 16, 17, 75, 76, 77 85, 86 19 60, 61, 62 70, 71 55, 56 88, 89 Wisconsin 27, 28 18, 19 78, 79, 88 447711.091913 N LOADED WITH OVER 100 COINS: The 53, 54 phone lines are ringing off the hook. That’s Arkansas Florida Indiana Maine Mississippi New Hampshire North Dakota Rhode Island Utah 71, 72 32, 33, 34 46, 47 03, 04 38, 39 03 Wyoming because thousands of sealed Vault Bags each 58 02 84 82, 83 loaded with over 100 U.S. Gov’t issued coins California Georgia Iowa Maryland Missouri New Jersey Ohio South Carolina Vermont Washington DC some dating back to the early 1900s including: N/A 30, 31, 39 50, 51, 52 20, 21 63, 64, 65 07, 08 41, 43, 44, 45 29 N/A 20 Silver, scarce, highly collectible, and currently

circulating coins are being handed over to Port- P6463A OF17342R-1 land area residents.

THE WORLD RESERVE MONETARY EXCHANGE, INC. IS NOT AFFILIATED WITH THE U.S. MINT, U.S. GOV’T, A BANK OR ANY GOV’T AGENCY. IF FOR ANY REASON WITHIN 10 DAYS (OR 30 DAYS FOR NV SSB2856 RESIDENTS) OF RECEIVING YOUR PRODUCT YOU ARE DISSATISFIED WITH YOUR PURCHASE, RETURN THE ENTIRE PRODUCT FOR A REFUND LESS SHIPPING AND RETURN POSTAGE. NO RETURNS IF SEAL IS BROKEN. INSURED MAIL IS STRONGLY RECOMMENDED. THE WORLD RESERVE IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR LOST RETURN SHIPMENTS. The Portland Tribune Thursday, September 19, 2013 SPORTS B7 UO: Huskies fi rst Pac-12 test PDXSports ■ revamped Husky Stadium, with Friday, Sept. 20 the Big Sky season with a home From page 10 QB Keith Price leading an expe- match against Sacramento State, rienced team that hasn’t beaten College men’s soccer: Oregon 7 p.m., Stott Center. ... Lewis & Ducks have many more oppo- UO in years. A losable game, State plays at the University of Clark plays at Whitworth, 7 p.m. ... nents to conquer. Things sure given the circumstances. Portland, 6 p.m., Merlo Field. Concordia visits Oregon Tech, 7 look good. Outscoring Nicholls ■ Oct. 19, Washington State p.m., for a CCC match. ... Warner State, Virginia and Tennessee a (2-1) — The Cougs beat USC, not Friday, Sept. 20 Pacifi c is at Southern Oregon in combined 184-24 can only be de- with good passing offense but CCC play, 7 p.m. scribed as awesome, and eerily with good defense. The Cougs Winterhawks: Defending College women’s soccer: The similar to the 2010 Ducks’ non- usually play decently against Western Hockey League champi- L&C Pioneers play host to league conquests of New Mexico, Oregon; Mike Leach might on Portland opens the 2013-14 Whitworth in their second Tennessee and Portland State by make it interesting. season at home. The Hawks take Northwest Conference game of a combined 189-13. The ‘10 Ducks ■ Oct. 26, UCLA (2-0) — The on Prince George at 7 p.m. at the year, 10 a.m. played for the national title. Bruins upset the Ducks? Could Moda Center. College men’s soccer: Coach Mark Helfrich, the guy happen. Good depth, winning Timbers: Portland hasn’t lost Concordia is at Northwest who took over from program mentality, stars on both sides of a home MLS match since March Christian in Eugene for a Cascade mastermind Chip Kelly, still ball (QB Brett Hundley, LB An- 9 versus Montreal. Tonight’s foe, Collegiate Conference game, 7 sees room for improvement. TRIBUNE PHOTO: JAIME VALDEZ thony Barr). A watershed mo- the Colorado Rapids, are in the p.m. ... Warner Pacifi c’s CCC “Everything,” he says in a Tight end Johnny Mundt of the No. 2-ranked Oregon Ducks keeps a ment for the UCLAns. tight battle with Portland and six matchup is a home date, at one-word answer about how the Tennessee defender out of reach during last week’s UO victory. ■ Nov. 7, at Stanford (2-0) — other teams for the fi ve playoff David Douglas High, versus Ducks can improve, before list- The most anticipated Pac-12 spots to come in the Western Corban, 6:30 p.m. ing answers about throwing- downs. No Kelly, no problem. weekend before facing the Pac- showdown. Can the Ducks get Conference. Kickoff is 7 p.m. at Timbers Reserves: Portland’s and-catching, protection, foot- The Ducks are averaging 672 12 schedule. revenge for last year’s 17-14 OT Jeld-Wen Field (NBC Sports). backup squad welcomes the work and angles, kickoff cover- yards per game — dominating “We want to go undefeated,” loss? Does Stanford have the O- Prep football: Grant plays for Colorado Rapids Reserves to Jeld- age, penalties and tackling. with offense differently. Ekpre-Olomu says. “But schools line and D-line horses and skill the fi rst time on its new artifi cial Wen Field, 7 p.m. The defense has allowed sev- The Ducks dictated games look really competitive this players to beat the speedy turf fi eld, taking on Barlow at 4 en points — against Tennessee with rushing under Kelly. Can year; a lot more balance than Ducks? So many unknown cir- p.m. In 7 p.m. games, Canby is Sunday, Sept. 22 — while the outcomes were still they do the same with passing? the past couple years.” cumstances for a game almost at Lincoln, Roosevelt goes to being contested. “Most definitely,” receiver A quick look at UO’s Pac-12 two months from now. Wilson, Cleveland plays at Portland Triathlon: The event “They’ve played well, but not Josh Huff says. “When teams slate, with records entering this ■ Nov. 16, Utah (2-1) — QB Jefferson, Madison and Benson starts at 7:30 p.m., at Cathedral perfect by any stretch,” Hel- key on the run and put guys in weekend and what circum- Travis Wilson leads Dennis Er- meet at Marshall, Redmond Park in North Portland. frich says. “Going forward, dif- the box, it gives us receivers to stances the Ducks might find ickson-coached offense, but comes to Franklin, Central 5K Run-Walk: The Portland ferent teams will present dif- feed on. It means they don’t re- themselves in against each OSU scored 51 points against Catholic goes to Jesuit, La Salle Parks & Recreation-sponsored ferent challenges. As long as spect our receivers, and we take team: Utes. The Ducks probably could plays host to Banks, and series continues with a $5 event we take it — boring — one that personally. ■ Sept. 28, Cal (1-2) — Expect do the same. Portland Christian is at Rainier. at Sellwood Park. game at a time ...” “We’re way much more bal- a home rout, with possibly 60 ■ Nov. 23, at Arizona (3-0) — College women’s soccer: Horse racing: Post time is Cornerback Ifo Ekpre-Olomu anced than we were before.” points. The Bears’ passing at- Another losable game, on pa- Concordia plays host to Carroll 1:45 p.m. at Portland Meadows. says: “We have a great defense, “Our offensive staff has been tack, led by freshman QB Jared per. Coach Rich Rodriguez College, 7 p.m., Tuominen Yard, College women’s soccer: The and sometimes we’re over- really solid,” adds Helfrich, cit- Goff, might do some damage, might have the ‘Cats ready in in the weekend Cavalier Cup. Portland Pilots play at San Diego looked. We’re prepared to go ing coordinator/playcaller Scott but not enough. the desert. Who knows the The 3:30 p.m. game pits State, noon. ... PSU takes on against anybody in the coun- Frost. “Guys are working hard ■ Oct. 5, at Colorado (2-0) — status of the Ducks by late Southern Oregon against Trinity USF, 1 p.m., Hillsboro Stadium ... try.” and players are playing with Assuming the game’s played November? Lutheran. Whitman plays at Lewis & Clark, The offense has run well with confi dence. We know on differ- after Boulder fl ooding, the Buffs ■ Nov. 29, Oregon State (2-1) College volleyball: Lewis & noon. ... The Cavalier Cup at De’Anthony Thomas and QB ent levels we’ll be tested differ- are better under coach Mike — The Sean Mannion-led Beavs Clark opens its Northwest Concordia has the host Cavs fac- Marcus Mariota. The Ducks lit ently down the road.” MacIntyre, but not better to would be hard-pressed to end Conference season on the road ing Trinity Lutheran at 4:30 p.m., up the Eugene sky against Ten- So, the Ducks romped stay within four TDs of Oregon. their fi ve-game Civil War losing against Whitman, 7 p.m. ... with Carroll-Southern Oregon at 1 nessee, with Mariota going 23 of through three nonleague ■ Oct. 12, at Washington (2-0) streak, unless circumstances Concordia continues Cascade p.m. 33 for 456 yards and four touch- games, and now enjoy a bye — OK, things get interesting at have led to Ducks’ demise. Collegiate Conference play with a road match at Southern Oregon, Monday, Sept. 23 7 p.m. ... Warner Pacifi c has a CCC game at Oregon Tech, 7 p.m. College volleyball: Eastern Disc golf: The U.S. women’s Washington visits Portland State, OSU: championships are today 7 p.m., Stott Center. Mullaney has knack for getting ball through Sunday at Pier Park and Blue Lake Park, with 18 holes Tuesday, Sept. 24 ■ ing to single-high man and cheat every time. We knew what kind points it, he always comes down each day. From page 10 the safety toward him. I just had of a player he was. It was great with it. He’s willing to get in Winterhawks: The Hawks are to make plays.” for him to be able to thrive in that there to break up a pass if there’s Saturday, Sept. 21 back at Moda Center to take on two games, but had a breakout That Mullaney did doesn’t sur- situation.” a bad ball. I’d take him in a jump the Tri-City Americans, 7 p.m. performance at Utah. His leaping prise his teammates. Mannion remembers hearing ball against anyone.” College football: Oregon has grab of a Sean Mannion aerial on “None of us where surprised about Mullaney’s video-game It’s reminiscent of the way a bye before launching its Pac- Wednesday, Sept. 25 fourth-and-nine from the OSU 22 with the numbers Mullaney put numbers as a senior in high Mike Hass once played. 12 season Sept. 28 at home late in regulation “was the play up,” junior defensive end Dylan school — a state-record 122 re- “He can definitely be pretty against California. ... Oregon Prep cross country: PIL of the game,” Mannion says. Wynn says. “His fi rst year (when ceptions for 1,709 yards and 20 good, especially with Cooks on State goes to San Diego State teams compete in a relay meet Suddenly, Mullaney is a house- he redshirted as a true fresh- touchdowns. In a quarterfinal the other side,” Hass says. Mul- for a 4:30 p.m. nonconference at Pier Park, 4 p.m. hold name in Beaver Nation. man), we’d seen him on scout state playoff game, Mullaney laney “is not going to have deal game (CBS Sports). ... Portland Horse racing: First post at “I’m speechless,” Mullaney team ‘Mossing’ our defense ...” grabbed a school-record 19 catch- with any double-teams. But the State goes to UC Davis for a Portland Meadows is 1:45 p.m. says of the reaction to his perfor- Say what? es for 303 yards and three TDs. way he catches the ball, he’s go- nonconference game, 6 p.m. ... College women’s soccer: The mance. “Our coaches gave me a “Like Randy Moss,” Wynn “There were all these rum- ing to make defenses be more Winterhawks: Portland travels fi rst of two Oregon-Oregon State chance to make plays, and I made says. “It’s like, when (a defender) blings about him when he got honest.” to the ShoWare Center in Kent, games is 7:30 p.m. in Corvallis them. It’s a great feeling. has the jump on the ball and the here, and he proved to be every Hass still regularly attends Wash., for a 7 p.m. WHL game (Pac-12). “We knew as the season goes receiver is behind you, but he bit the legend,” Mannion says. games in Corvallis. against the Seattle Thunderbirds. College volleyball: Concordia on, (defenders) are going to key goes up and grabs it over you. “He plays the ball like no one else “I hope to meet him when I’m College volleyball: PSU begins is at Western Oregon, 7 p.m. off Brandin and help over to his “Richard’s vertical is ridicu- I’ve seen. The way he goes up for down there sometime,” Hass side. We saw (the Utes) were go- lous and his hands are on point any 50-50 ball ... he always high- says. 448869.091913 B8 SPORTS The Portland Tribune Thursday, September 19, 2013 Offense leads the way Hawks: Loss of draft picks at Portland State again alters team building strategy ■ they’re going to be each and every 40.5 points per game in 2010, 28 From page 10 Passing attack off play.” in 2011 and 36 in 2012. So far this ■ Portland State faces an odd year, Portland State is giving up 20 mains up in the air. The Pitts- to good start, with situation this week when it travels to per game. burgh Penguins could keep their run game as support face 0-3 UC Davis. Although the “We still have a long way to go,” 19-year-old, 2012 first-round Aggies also are a Big Sky team, the Burton says, “but they’re starting to draft pick through the start of By STEPHEN ALEXANDER 6 p.m. Saturday game will not count come into their own and understand the NHL season. Or, he could be The Tribune in the conference standings. a little more about how we’re going sent back. ■ Portland State’s run game has to play.” Even with Pouliot, defense Quarterback Kieran Mc- been a good complement to the air “Finally we have some consis- and goaltending will be the key Donagh, a sophomore from attack. DJ Adams and Shaquille tency,” middle linebacker Jaycob areas for Portland, which will be Vancouver’s Skyview High, is Richard have split time, Shoemaker says. “The guys shooting for its fourth consecu- off to terrifi c start for 2-1 with Adams totaling 283 up front, it starts with them. tive WHL Western Conference Portland State. He has com- yards and fi ve touchdowns They’re getting after it every title and back-to-back league ti- pleted 41 of 70 passes for 855 on 48 carries and Richard play. If they keep doing that, tles. Brendan Burke replaces all- yards, with fi ve touchdowns netting 215 yards and two the sky is the limit for us.” time record-holder Mac Carruth and one interception — TDs on 25 carries. VOLLEYBALL: The Viks in goal, and the defense has been despite not playing for large “We’re a good one-two open Big Sky play at Stott rebuilt with the addition of over- portions of the Vikings’ open- punch. We can switch Center with matches age Garrett Haar and Anton er against Eastern Oregon things up and give us a Saturday against Cederholm to go with returnees TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO: JONATHAN HOUSE and last week’s game against change of pace,” Richard Viking Sacramento State and Hanson, Shaun McPherson and Dominic Turgeon, looking to pass the puck in a game last season, is one Humboldt State. says. “We understand that Monday versus Eastern Layne Viveiros, and rookie of several Portland Winterhawks forwards returning from the 2012-13 “He’s really, really, really the person who has the Washington. PSU went 3-7 Keoni Texeira. WHL championship squad. good,” PSU coach Nigel Burton hot hand is going to be in Watch in nonconference play, Sac On paper, it would appear im- says. “The best part is I don’t the game. It keeps us State was 5-6 and EWU perative that Pouliot returns to tied for the WHL scoring title who led the Hawks to the Memo- think he’s satisfi ed with the way fresher, and we’re ready to go when- 3-8. The Vikings have been picked make something special out of last season and combined for 19- rial Cup in Johnston’s absence, he played last week (21 of 31 for ever we get in there.” by the Big Sky coaches to defend Portland’s D-corps. Three good 33-52 in the WHL playoffs. predicted greatness for them. He 377 yards and two touchdowns ■ Ball security has been a prob- their regular-season title. EWU was players — Troy Rutkowski, Ty- They’ll team together with a says Turgeon, the son of former in a 43-6 home win).” lem for the Vikings. PSU already has tabbed for sixth in the 11-team ler Wotherspoon, Seth Jones — new third member of the line. It NHL player Pierre Turgeon, ■ Eleven Vikings have caught a lost nine fumbles. league; Sac State was sixth in the departed. At least everyone ex- could be overage newcomer could be a 100-point scorer in the pass. “If you’re turning the ball over, preseason vote. pects Jones, the fourth pick of Shane McColgan, who’s out until WHL. “We have a lot of weapons,” that’s bad stuff,” Burton says. “You SOCCER: The PSU women are last June’s NHL draft, to play for late October at the earliest Unfortunately for Turgeon, he McDonagh says. “We have guys all can’t put the ball on the ground.” 3-4-0 going into Sunday’s 1 p.m. Nashville. (wrist). It could be second-year starts the season injured, as well over making plays. That’s what we “We’re going to make the adjust- match at Hillsboro Stadium with “Mike (Johnston) is a great player Paul Bittner, who played — his right foot. But, he’ll play at need to see. I’m very confi dent (in ments,” McDonagh says. San Francisco (5-2-0). Junior Eryn coach, and he has things planned with Petan and Leipsic last sea- some point, and probably team the receivers). I worked with them all ■ Throughout Burton’s three- Brown from Camas, Wash., leads out either way,” Hanson says. son at times. It could be some- with Bittner and Iverson. summer and all fall camp. We’ve got year-plus tenure, defense has been the Viks with 13 points (fi ve goals, “It’d be nice to have (Pouliot) body else, depending on how “I think Paul’s a great player, some timing, and I know where a weak link. The Vikings allowed three assists). back — great guy, great player. things shake out. improved a ton since he got here. But, if he shows what he has at “I sort of see that spot being He’s defi nitely a goal scorer, has Penguins camp and makes the shared by a couple people,” a great shot,” Turgeon says. team, we’re happy for him. Johnston says, “and we’ll see “Keegan’s got a good shot, too, “The two new kids, from what what chemistry evolves be- and he likes to get in there and we saw in preseason, will be re- tween Petan, Leipsic and the get big hits and into scrums. ally solid for us,” he adds, of other person.” “I’m more of a playmaker. I Haar and Cederholm. And, Tex- Johnston says he wants to defi nitely feel like I’m ready to eira, an offensive defenseman start the season with the veteran take a pretty big role.” (like Pouliot) from Fontana, Ca- second line of Chase De Leo, Oli- Add second-year player Alex lif., could be in the mix. ver Bjorkstrand and Taylor Leier Schoenborn and Price and pos- “It’s amazing to be here, but intact. sibly Aldridge to the forward it’s tough, though, because there McColgan played for Kelowna lines, and Portland has some fi ne are a lot of great players out before being traded to Saskatoon talent. there, and I have to earn my way last year and playing in the Me- “Who knows what (coaches) into the lineup,” Texeira says. morial Cup with the host team. are going to do with the lines,” Johnston, who returns to the McColgan grew up around John- says De Leo, who’s NHL draft-el- bench and the general manag- ston in Southern California, as igible in 2014. “It really doesn’t er’s chair after being suspended best friends with the coach’s son, matter.” by the WHL for most of last sea- Adam, when Johnston served as Interestingly, about half the son, says defense and goaltend- assistant coach with the Los An- players on the Winterhawks’ ing will be “the measuring stick geles Kings. He has 84 goals and roster come from the United of how we do, how quickly our 184 assists for 268 points in 281 States. The Hawks have clearly defense adjusts and adapts.” career WHL games. The num- recruited in the U.S. more and, He adds: “There are so many bers could go way up, if he teams with bantam draft picks taken new defensemen, even regular with Petan and Leipsic. away by WHL penalties, it’s im- guys having to play more min- “They’re two very highly perative for them to comb as utes — Hanson, McPherson, Vi- skilled guys in our league and many areas as possible. veiros. If we get Pouliot back, it’ll CHL itself,” McColgan says. “It’d Time was the Hawks and oth- definitely help our group. We be awesome to play with those er WHL teams had one or two have Cederholm and Haar, who guys. We’d be a small line, but U.S. kids on the team. are brand-new. And, we have a our feistiness and competitive- “We don’t really talk about it,” PCC Community Ed offers hundreds of non-credit lot of people playing in new roles ness will make up for it.” says De Leo, who’s from South- classes throughout the district and online. — power play and penalty kill — But his time on the Hawks will ern California. “We’re happy to that they haven’t done before.” have to wait, until his wrist have the talented guys we have. Start exploring your options today! The Hawks lost scorer Ty Rat- heals. McColgan says he hurt his After you get here, we’re all pret- tie and grinder Taylor Peters to wrist on a punching bag during ty much brothers.” the pros from the forward lines, offseason training. While the Hawks rank the www.pcc.edu/communityed and Joey Baker retired. But ev- The Hawks have depth galore highest in the CHL among West- erybody else returns — a sum of at forward. Adam de Champlain, ern Hockey League teams, John- 504 (213 goals, 291 assists) points Presten Kopeck and Joe Mahon ston says the likes of Kelowna, worth of firepower. Portland return as veterans, and promis- Calgary, Prince Albert and Swift plans to keep one rookie forward ing second-year players Dominic Current should be formidable. (Ethan Price) and maybe a sec- Turgeon, Bittner and Keegan He holds out judgment on the ond (Steven Aldridge). Iverson could make big jumps Hawks, until he knows the status Petan (46 goals-74 assists-120 this year. Travis Green, the for- of Pouliot and how well defense- 428385.091213 points) and Leipsic (49-71-120) mer assistant coach and GM men and goaltenders play. Tribune’sATHLETESoftheWEEK

PRO Oregon HIGH SCHOOL

MARCUS MARIOTA, football ELLA DONAGHU, Grant cross country Timbers — Sophomore QB passed for — Sophomore battled Camas junior Alexa 456 yards (23 of 33) and four Efraimson all the way, then pulled ahead DIEGO VALERI — One off the TDs and ran for another score in the fi nal 50 meters to win the Pier Parkk team lead in season goals (7) as the No. 2 Ducks trounced Invitational by .10 and in 17:28.53, the after his tying goal in a 1-1 Tennessee 59-14. fastest time this season by an Oregon draw at Chivas USA. runner.

Oregon State IAN STEVENS, Madison cross country — Senior COLLEGE SEAN MANNION, football transfer from Reynolds won — Junior QB passed for 443 the Hood River Invitational bbyy yards (27 of 44) and fi ve TDs, more than 16 seconds, clock-ck- Portland State including the game-winner in ing 16:07.96, fi fth on the A5A OT, as the Beavers won at list this season. KASEY CLOSS, football Utah 51-48. — Junior WR had PSU’s fi rst AIDAN MARCUS, Franklin foot-ot- 200-yard receiving game since ball — Senior QB ran for twoo 2008 (10 catches, 205 yards, Concordia TDs and passed for two TDss one TD) in a 43-6 victory over as the host Quakers knockeded Humboldt State. LINDSAY MANGAN, volleyball off defending PIL 5A champp ELLA DONAGHU — Senior setter led No. 23 Wilson 24-6. He was 11 of 23 GRANT CROSS COUNTRY Cavs to three wins and 3-0 passing for 151 yards and ran 13 times fforor Portland league start (10-2 overall), 43 yards. raising her season average to LUCY STEVENS, Oregon 11.3 assists per set. KASEEN MCCLENDON, Jefferson MICHAEL ESCOBAR, soccer Episcopal volleyball — Senior football — Senior RB-LB had MB/DS was Oktoberfest — Junior MF totaled one goal 10 carries for 124 yards, plus and three assists as the Pilots Tournament MVP, and her fi ve nine tackles in the Demos’ kills per set and strong serving beat Seattle 2-1 and Air Force 18-9 PIL 5A victory at 4-0. have helped the 3A Aardvarks Madison. go unbeaten this season.

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PORTLAND STATE VIKINGS YOUR TOWN. YOUR PAPER. GREAT FOOD. GREAT VALUE. GOVIKS.COM Beaverton • Tanasbourne • Oregon City • West Linn 336137.091813 The Portland Tribune Thursday, September 19, 2013 SPORTS B9 Steady, solid play is ticket for Timbers’ Harrington

channel. When he steps into the dent in what I’m doing and my Experience, years attack, he can help us keep pos- skills.” with Sporting KC session and at times bring some Harrington, a North Carolina things in the fi nal third. alum, has adapted to Portland’s hone defender’s game “He’s been around the block. possession-oriented system, He’s played a lot of minutes in which can leave the back line BY STEPHEN ALEXANDER MLS, a lot of games.” vulnerable at times. The Tribune Harrington, 6-0 and 170 “The system fi ts me,” he says. pounds, came to Portland from “In Kansas City, we played a sim- For fi ve years, defender Mi- Kansas City last offseason in ex- ilar style. That made the transi- chael Harrington was a main- change for allocation money. tion easy for me.” UPCOMING EVENTS stay on the back line for the “I was very excited,” Har- Although he is only 27, Har- Kansas City Wizards/Sporting rington says. “I had a good run in rington’s experience allowed him Kansas City. From 2007 to Kansas City. I loved my team- to step into a leadership role with 2011, he played in 138 matches mates and coaches there. They the Timbers. and made 119 starts. In 2012, really helped me get better and COURTESY OF JOHN LARIVIERE “Toward the end of my run in though, Harrington fell out of become a good solid player in Portland Timbers defender Kansas City, I felt like even favor with Kansas City and ap- this league. Michael Harrington gives the back though I wasn’t playing, I was peared in only 11 games. “And it’s great that I was able line some welcome consistency still becoming a bit of a leader That experience helped Har- to come here and get a shot to and experience. with the experience I had ac- rington develop the consistency get back on the fi eld. It was a quired,” he says. that has made him a mainstay blessing that I was able to come eight-month MLS season. The Timbers are coming down SEP 22 with the Portland Timbers. here and have the opportunity to “It’s experience, knowing how the homestretch and are trying 6(3 “You know that with one bad play for Caleb and a great group to take care of your body, what to make the MLS playoffs. Port- game your job can be in jeopar- of teammates.” you need to eat and drink, and land has six regular-season dy,” Harrington says. “This is a Harrington has started all but how much sleep you need, and games remaining, starting with results-based business. It’s ‘what one match this season (he all those things really factor into Friday’s 7 p.m. home game have you done for me lately,’ and missed the June 23 game against whether you’re able to sustain against Colorado. lately is the game at hand.” the Colorado Rapids because of yourself,” he says. “It’s important to not let suc- Timbers coach Caleb Porter injury). He has one assist and Harrington also says Porter’s cess early in the season affect says he likes how steady Har- has been a shutdown defender faith in him has been critical to what you’re going to do this rington has been this season. on a back line that features a his success. weekend,” Harrington says. “It “I’d rather have a guy who’s a great deal of youth and turnover, “Caleb has given me a lot of gives you confi dence, but you al- 6 or 7 out of 10 every game than a with other defenders battling confidence,” Harrington says. ways have to have that hunger guy who’s an 8 one game and injuries. “He’s shown that he believes in and awareness that this game 2&7 OCT 22 then a 2 or 3,” Porter says. “Mi- Harrington admits he has had me and trusts me. That’s big for coming up is the most important. chael is pretty much a 6 or 7 ev- to adjust so he is ready again to me as a player. It helps me go in, That mentality and preparation ery game. He defends well in his play every week during the week in week out, and be confi - is what breeds consistency.”

James, who turns 24 next of attack. so long. We can all help each Eggers: month, entered training camp The 6-1, 235-pound Dixon, 25 other out.” in July 3 on the depth chart at and in his fourth season with James would like to stay with tailback behind Gore, who the 49ers, also is in the mix as a the 49ers. rushed for 1,214 yards a year tailback along the lines of Gore. “It’s a good organization,” he ago with a 4.7-yard average, Word is that coach Jim Har- said. “A really good team, really 129 129 Ex-Duck and Hunter (371, 5.2), who baugh, offensive coordinator good coaches. Everybody goes was coming back from Achil- Greg Roman and running backs out and competes week in and les’ tendon surgery. James, coach Tom Rathman see James week out. I wouldn’t trade it for Connect with us! rotating with reserves Antho- as a situational back and kick- anything.” wants to facebook.com/ ny Dixon and Jewel Hampton off return specialist with poten- Mention of the Ducks’ 3-0 rose.quarter.pdx in the preseason, gained just tial, but question whether he start and No. 2 national ranking 55 yards on 24 carries before has the size or durability to car- brought a smile to James’ face. @Rosequarter be in mix getting hurt against the ry the ball 20 to 25 times a “My favorite team out there,” rosequarterblog.com Chargers. game. he said. “I talk to those guys all pinterest.com/rosequarter ■ The 5-9, 215-pound Gore, a “I can do everything,” James the time. I’m sure they’re tex- 447712.091913 From page 10 starter in San Francisco since said. “If I didn’t think I could do ting me right now.” Rose Garden Area/ his second season in 2006, is in everything, then I shouldn’t be Offering their condolences Memorial Coliseum said. “One thing you can’t coach his 10th campaign at 30, an age here.” about the Seattle game, per- is experience. I’ve been on the when running backs normally Does James regard himself haps. And wishes for health fi eld, and that will help me out a begin to slow down. The 5-7, as the heir apparent to Gore? and opportunities to play in the 7LFNHWV216$/(12:DW5RVH4XDUWHU%R[2IÀFHDOOSDUWLFLSDWLQJSafeway/ lot moving forward. More than 200-pound Hunter, 24 and in his “Me, Kendall, whoever else weeks ahead. 7LFNHWV:HVWRXWOHWV5RVH4XDUWHUFRPRUE\FDOOLQJ526(   anything, I learned from Frank third season, is much like is here,” he said. “We can )RUPRUHLQIRSOHDVHYLVLW5RVH4XDUWHUFRP and some of the other guys how James, shifty and speedy as op- share the load. I don’t think it’s [email protected] to be a professional.” posed to Gore’s punishing style one guy, the NFL season being Twitter: @kerryeggers 449606.091813 SportsPortlandTribune.comTribune PAGE B8 PortlandTribune THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2013 SteveBrandon KerryEggers

SCORESHEET ON SPORTS Kickoff James for a waits to worthy play role shrine for 49ers round the town ... SEATTLE — ■ The project to aMichael James renovate the tennis dressed quietly in a Acourts at Southeast downtrodden visitors’ Portland’s Berkeley Park is off Llocker room at Century- to a very good start. Link Field on Sunday night, You might even say it’s hope- pulling on a T-shirt, sweats and fully on its way to “Game. Set. Nikes while grabbing his Rovello.” green-and-yel- That was a familiar phrase low Duck neck during the ca- rest for the reer of Alex fl ight home. Rovello, the Winterhawks forward James had Cleveland High Chase De Leo hoists the played no part and University Ed Chynoweth Cup after in San Francis- of Oregon Portland’s Western co’s 29-3 loss to standout who Hockey League title Seattle, watch- was 21 when victory last season. ing the action he died in a COURTESY OF ANDY DEVLIN/ from the side- JAMES May 11 cliff EDMONTON OIL KINGS lines, hands ROVELLO diving accident tucked into a near Eugene. gray hooded 49ers’ sweatshirt. On Sunday, friends, former “That’s a good team,” James teammates, coaches — includ- said of the Seahawks. “They ing U of O players and coaches ■ came in and competed. We Nils Schyllander and Jonas Pii- Defense, goaltending keys for defending WHL champs shot ourselves in the foot with bor — and others came to the too many mistakes. Anytime park for the Alex Rovello Me- he standard has been set for make it (to the Memorial Cup). We you play a good team like that morial kickoff event. the Portland Winterhawks, have a locker room of great guys and and give them momentum, it’s It was the kind of low-key, who have been a Western winners, and we all want to get back tough to overcome.” fun gathering that the person- Hawks THockey League playoff staple there. We’re going to be driven to get The former Oregon standout able Rovello would have loved. the past four seasons, have reached back there. We want to win the Memo- has been inactive in San Fran- His father, Jim, served as disc the Memorial Cup and have played for rial Cup.” cisco’s fi rst two regular-season jockey and unoffi cial emcee, the junior hockey championship last Portland starts the year ranked No. games after suffering a while his mother, Geri, greeted spring. 1 in the WHL and sprained medial collateral liga- people as they arrived, and ev- To take the next STORY BY No. 3 in the Canadi- ment of his left knee during the eryone enjoyed a little tennis or ready to step means win- an Hockey League. 49ers’ fi nal just the opportunity to socialize ning the Memorial JASON VONDERSMITH The season starts preseason More online and remember Alex. Cup, and the Win- Sept. 20 at the Moda game at San Read other The event brought further at- terhawks, given Center against Diego on Kerry Eggers tention to the need for improve- some positive play from defensemen Prince George, continues at Seattle on Aug. 30. columns during ments at the courts where Alex and goalies to go with stellar forwards, Sept. 21, and with Kelowna at the Moda “I’m get- the week at portland learned the game. City Com- chase could fi nd themselves vying for the ti- Center on Sept. 24. The Winterhawks ting close,” tribune.com missioner Amanda Fritz talked tle again. should have most of their players avail- James said about how the project is bring- “One of our mottos in recent years able — with the likes of Nic Petan and after Sun- ing people together in Alex’s has been, ‘championship habits,’ ” Brendan Leipsic returning from NHL day’s game. “There’s a strong memory. Auction items includ- veteran defenseman Josh Hanson training camps — although the status possibility I’ll play” in San ed UO shirts signed by John the Cup says. “We really built that with work of defenseman Derrick Pouliot re- Francisco’s next game, Sunday McEnroe, Roger Federer, Rafa- ethic and compete level. against Indianapolis. el Nadal and others, and an An- “Everyone in the room expects to See HAWKS / Page 8 It had to be hard to watch dre Agassi-signed copy of his from the sidelines, I said to autobiography, “Open.” James, when your team is get- A recent city parks tourna- ting pummeled as the 49ers did ment in Alex’s name raised Sunday against their NFC West $5,550 in donations, helping or- rivals in a colossal early-sea- ganizers generate about one- son game. third of the needed $175,000 to Hass sees himself “You want to be out with fi x the Berkeley Park surfaces, your teammates playing,” collapsing fence and more. James said with a shrug. “But “It’s time to turn these courts when you get injured, all you into a shrine for this legend of in OSU’s Mullaney can do is sit out and get your- our community,” said Derin self ready to play again.” Hibbs, who was Rovello’s youth as big and strong as Mike was, James’ rookie season in 2012 tennis coach in Eastmoreland. Beavers sophomore but he has those kind of hands. was a mixed bag. Playing in the “We are so grateful to the “Mike was pretty good run- Super Bowl was “a big thrill,” community for the overwhelm- complements Cooks ning after the catch. He had a he said. But the 5-9, 195-pound ing support and compassion in receiving corps great fi rst step, like a basketball second-round draft pick, play- they have provided,” the Rovel- player. Once he had the ball, de- ing behind tailbacks Frank los said after the Berkeley Park By KERRY EGGERS fenders would get an arm on him Gore and Kendall Hunter, was gathering. “Their presence The Tribune and then fall off of him, and he’d inactive for the fi rst dozen reg- Sunday meant the world to us. be out of there.” ular-season games before mak- We are so appreciative.” CORVALLIS — The compar- Like Hass, Riley says, Mul- ing his debut against Miami To donate or learn more, go isons are natural. White kid, laney is “super competitive.” and carrying eight times for 30 to alexrovellomemorial.org. great hands, makes big catches. “He wants the ball coming to yards. ■ The prep football season is Even Mike Hass thinks Rich- him, and he goes out and gets “It was hard,” James said. “I taking shape, with Roosevelt ard Mullaney reminds him a lit- the ball,” the OSU mentor says. didn’t want to sit out three or the clear favorite in the PIL 5A. tle bit of himself. “He has made some really tough four months. I wanted to be out The Roughriders have athletic “Oh, yeah,” says Hass, the 2005 catches for us.” there every snap. But you have skill players, big backs and a Fred Biletnikoff Award winner For Mul- to learn the system. I’d never huge line. Junior QB Kimane as the nation’s outstanding re- laney, who even seen an NFL game (live) Domane hit 13 of 17 passes for ceiver as a senior at Oregon snared seven until I got here. It was some- 286 yards and TDs of 24, 71 and State. “I like him. He’s a nice passes for 142 thing I had to learn how to do.” 29 yards in last week’s 48-26 complement to (Brandin) Cooks. yards and a James fi nished with 125 home win over Cleveland, and (The Beavers) really need that.” touchdown yards in 27 attempts (4.6-yard he ran 5 yards for another score. What impresses Hass about against the average), and had a 62-yard The rest of the league looks Mullaney, the 6-3, 195-pound Utes, compari- kickoff return that set up the competitive. Franklin beat de- sophomore whose contributions sons with Hass winning touchdown in a 41-34 fending champ Wilson 24-6 last were crucial to Oregon State’s MULLANEY are “humbling.” victory over New England. He week as the Quakers celebrated TRIBUNE PHOTO: JAIME VALDEZ 51-48 overtime victory over Utah “I never got then seemed to carve a niche their 100th anniversary. Jeffer- Oregon Ducks receiver Josh Huff hurdles a Tennessee defender in the last Saturday? to see him play, but I’ve seen for himself in the playoffs. son’s revival under new coach 59-14 win last week at Autzen Stadium. “I like how he goes up and gets some clips here and there,” says The native Texan carried Kerry Cameron continued with the ball,” says Hass, 30, now liv- Mullaney, a Thousand Oaks, Ca- three times for 21 yards in a 45- an 18-9 win at Madison. Cleve- ing in Sherwood and working as lif., native. “It’s crazy to be com- 31 divisional victory over land is averaging 280 passing a football glove developer for pared to such an amazing player Green Bay. In San Francisco’s yards and 30 points per game. Another Duck Pac-12 Nike. “Doesn’t matter where it’s like that.” 28-24 win over Atlanta in the ■ Portland Christian (3-0) thrown, he’s going to go and try Mullaney doesn’t possess NFC championship game, has its sights on a return to the to make a play on it. He’s not blazing speed, but like Hass, he James ran fi ve times for 34 2A title game under coach Cal title? It’s theirs to lose scared to go up there and go for fi nds a way to get open. yards, including a 15-yard Szueber, who is four wins shy the ball.” “I’d say I have deceptive scamper — his fi rst career of 100 in his career. or even the other team — the Mullaney is taller but thinner speed,” Mullaney says. “It creeps touchdown — to get the 49ers Paul Pepelaskov (middle UO has formidable Oregon Ducks should be in than was Hass, who played at 6-1 up on people.” started after the Falcons had linebacker-guard) and Chris the running for the Pac-12 title. and 210 and ranks No. 1 on the Mullaney was a fi ne basket- jumped to a 17-0 lead. Debusman (MLB-fullback) arsenal, led by its Forget about the national ti- Oregon State career list for re- ball player in high school and In the Super Bowl loss to have helped the Royals out- offense and passing tle. Enjoy the ride. Circum- ceiving yardage (3,924), tied for was a good enough athlete to re- Baltimore, James gained 10 score opponents 94-27, with Pe- stances in the form of bad kicks, first in touchdown receptions turn punts (17.0-yard average) yards on three attempts. The pelaskov averaging more than By JASON VONDERSMITH Matt Barkley passes, and an (20) and third in receptions (220). and kickoffs (23.5) as a senior. opportunities for playing time 40 yards per punt, as well. QB The Tribune athletic Stanford defense have Mullaney possesses some of the “People always thought I was over the fi nal six weeks of the Steven Mumford and wide re- derailed national title drives the same abilities and intangibles, a little less athletic than I was, season, though, left him confi - ceiver Nathan Mumford, re- EUGENE — Barring un- past two seasons. though, that made Hass great. too,” Hass notes. dent about 2013. turning all-staters, also help foreseen circumstances — The college football season “People want to compare Mullaney caught four passes “Any time you can get reps lead a team with 12 seniors, and circumstances could be being only three weeks old, the Richie to Mike,” says OSU coach in each of Oregon State’s first in a game, you gain from it,” he many of whom have been start- anything, such as injuries or Mike Riley, who coached Hass ing for three years. breakdowns or internal stuff See UO / Page 7 his fi nal three seasons. “He’s not See OSU / Page 7 See EGGERS / Page 9