Bunch of vagabonds YOUR ONLINE LOCAL In good hands Eclectic band celebrates its DAILY NEWS Wheaton, Cooks give 10th anniversary www.portlandtribune.com State 1-2 punch — See LIFE, B1 Tribune— See SPORTS, B10 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2012 • TWICE CHOSEN THE NATION’S BEST NONDAILY PAPER • WWW.PORTLANDTRIBUNE.COM • PUBLISHED THURSDAY Lovejoy’s SCHOOL’S ARTS city work shines in GO A LITTLE new light Author brings to life ‘WILD’ an overlooked leader in Portland’s history

By STEVE LAW The Tribune

Bubonic plague struck San Francisco in August 1907, and Portland and other Pa- cifi c ports feared they’d be hit next. One month into her job as the nation’s fi rst big-city female public health officer, Esther Pohl Lovejoy moved quickly. Resisting calls to scapegoat Chinatown, Lovejoy enlisted the news media to expose rot- ting piles of garbage and open sewers at Portland waterfront businesses. She led a city crack- down forcing the use of en- closed garbage receptacles and screens to keep rats from stock- piles of wheat and other food- stuffs. And Buckman Arts she enlisted Focus “Lovejoy professional Elementary, a came to rat catchers and offered district-wide believe that residents a magnet school, inter- nickel bounty doesn’t get for every rat extra funding for national they brought their arts focus. health, in, dead or Third-graders social justice alive. enjoy music The plague class on Monday. and an end did spread to TRIBUNE PHOTOS: to war could Seattle that CHRISTOPHER only come fall, but Port- ONSTOTT land was from the spared. work of During ■ Lovejoy’s ten- Portland author Cheryl Strayed lends hand to Buckman program women ure as a pub- engaged in lic health offi - By JENNIFER ANDERSON signed the movie Minn. “I’ve given probably 200 talks, good were walking and being in the constructive cial here, The Tribune rights to portray but none of them have been to chil- wilderness, so I set out on this adven- Portland be- her in a “Wild” dren. ... I thought that keeping the at- ture.” resistance.” came the fi rst Cheryl Strayed was terrifi ed. movie set to film tention of a roomful of elementary- For the fi rst time in any of her pub- — Author Kim city in the na- She wasn’t facing a bear, or a rattle- next summer. school children, they can get easily lic presentations, she showed the chil- Jensen, tion to con- snake, or a scorching or snowy land- But Strayed distracted. What if I’m boring?” dren a slide show of photos, and on Esther Pohl duct govern- scape, as she chronicled in her New wasn’t sure if the Strayed somehow managed to keep brought her backpack and pitched the Lovejoy ment inspec- York Times bestseller, “Wild,” an ac- kids at Buckman the crowd at bay at Buckman, where actual tent she used on the trail back tions of meat count of her 1993 solo journey on 1,100 Arts Focus Ele- she’s sent her second-grade son and in 1993, when she was 26. markets — a miles of the Pacifi c Crest Trail. mentary School fi rst-grade daughter since kindergar- Strayed thinks they got something year before the release of Up- Strayed, a Northeast Portland mom, would think she ten. out of it. After hearing her talk, stu- ton Sinclair’s muckracking was thinking about what she’d say to PHOTO: JONI KABANA was all that cool. Despite the adult-only passages in dents returned to their classes to do book “The Jungle” and passage a bunch of grade-schoolers. CHERYL STRAYED Or if they’d listen. the book, “I actually did tell them a lot illustrated writing projects that will of the Federal Food and Drugs Sure, she was a guest of Oprah this “I’ve talked to of the story,” she says. “I told them my be on display the night of Oct. 29, Act. summer to talk about kicking off the thousands and thousands of people,” mom died and in my sorrow I just when she lends her star power to a Lovejoy went on to become a billionaire’s book club 2.0. 44-year-old Strayed said by phone this didn’t know what to do with myself. pivotal leader in the 1912 cam- Sure, has week from a hotel room in St. Paul, The two things that made me feel See BUCKMAN / Page 2 paign that fi nally granted Ore- gon women the right to vote, after five failed ballot mea- sures. In 1920, she became the fi rst woman to run for Congress in an Oregon general election. And for nearly five decades, North Plains: Stinkin’ plant hurts Lovejoy was a pioneer in inter- national medical aid, inspiring ■ Small By JIM REDDEN Nature’s Needs, a large composting whether the facility can continue owns the Corner Deli less than a groups like Doctors Without The Tribune facility that accepts much of the accepting food waste before the end mile away, says the odors have driv- Borders. shops say Portland’s commercial food waste of the year. A work session on the en customers away. Now Lovejoy, relatively un- many driven Portland’s aggressive com- and residential yard debris mixed issue has been scheduled for Oct. “I’ve seen people drive up out- known in Oregon, is getting her away by posting policies are raising a with residential food waste. It is 23. side, get out of the car, wrinkle due, with the release this stink in North Plains — and crit- just east of North Plans, the small Many residents and business their noses, get back in the cars and month of Kim Jensen’s new bi- compost ics there are afraid the problem community north of Hillsboro along owners charge that offensive odors drive away,” Peterson said last ography, “Oregon’s Doctor to pile stench will spread if other cities adopt Highway 26. frequently waft from the facility week. “They’re not going some- similar policies. The Washington County Board through neighborhoods and com- See LOVEJOY / Page 9 The controversy revolves around of Commissioners must decide mercial areas. Ruth Peterson, who See COMPOST / Page 4 Pssst! What’s inside has real mysterious appeal A couple walks No sign? No problem for pubs, eateries that like plate of fries with O’Connell on passed the this Wednesday evening, learned Moonshine Patio the pull of ‘mystique’ marketing on customers about Moonshine from friends and Bar & Grill now she’s a two or three times a before turning By PETER KORN west 17th Avenue, noticed the light week customer. back around and The Tribune on inside and what looked like an “I think it’s quirky,” Fontaine going in, missing interesting group of patrons out- says of the sign. “It adds to the the store front Megan O’Connell never no- side. charm of the place.” due to a lack of ticed that the sign outside Now a regular at Moonshine, Moonshine — full name Balls signage. Moonshine advertises a busi- O’Connell likes the misleading the Cat’s Moonshine Kitchen & TRIBUNE PHOTO: ness machine company. sign. Lounge — is among a growing CHRISTOPHER She was just driving past the “It feels elite,” she says. ONSTOTT Northwest Portland pub on North- Rebecca Fontaine, enjoying a See SPEAKEASY / Page 5

“Pamplin Media Group’s pledge is to deliver Portland Tribune Experts expect ■ Oregon’s timber industry should see growth as national housing starts pick up, say balanced news that refl ects the stories of our experts who spoke Wednesday morning. Search word: timber. communities. Thank you for reading our housing to help ” Online Read it fi rst at portlandtribune.com newspapers. timber rebound — DR. ROBERT B. PAMPLIN, JR. OWNER & NEIGHBOR A2 NEWS The Portland Tribune Thursday, October 18, 2012 Buckman: Arts magnet, but no extra funds ■ From page 1 fundraiser called “The Arts Have Strayed plans Strayed.” “My 7-year-old son wrote a poem based on an anecdote she told about ‘Wild’ vacation a chipmunk,” says Sarah Bowen In her pre-”Wild” success, Cheryl Shea, a Buckman mother of three, a Strayed could usually be found at fellow writer and co-founder of the any of her favorite Portland stomp- blog “Another Mother Runner.” ing grounds — Powell’s Books on Hawthorne, Broadway Books, Lau- Starving artists relhurst and Mt. Tabor Park. It was Bowen Shea who came up These days, she’s in and out of with the idea for the fundraiser, town, and still surprised when people and Strayed was quick to agree. recognize her on the street. Recently, As her readers know, Strayed — she was in a parking lot in Northwest who gained a cult following for her Portland when a man pulled his car “Dear Sugar” advice columns on a up next to her and rolled down his blog called The Rumpus — infuses window. “He says, ‘Hey Cheryl, how her life with the arts. you doing?’ “ she says. “I said, ‘Oh, I’m “I’ve wanted to be writer since I great, how are you?’ I said, ‘I’ve for- was a little kid,” she says. “For me gotten your name,’ just assumed I it was those teachers that talked knew him. He said, ‘Oh, we’ve never about artists and writers, shared met. Congratulations for your suc- those lives with me — that was the cess. We’re all so proud of you.’ “ first spark in me that I could be a Usually, Strayed says, people will writer too.” just say, “I loved your book.” When it came to her own chil- Then there was her recent trip to dren, Strayed says she and her hus- Minnesota. In the airport, a woman band — filmmaker Brian Lindstrom stood next to her holding a copy of TRIBUNE PHOTOS: CHRISTOPHER ONSTOTT — sought an arts-rich public educa- “Wild.” Strayed saw it and wondered if A third-grade class sings along with music teacher Regina Pirruccello. Buckman’s Foundation is raising money to protect tion for that reason. she should say anything. She fi nally teaching positions. As their son, Carver, was about introduced herself, and signed the to enter kindergarten three years woman’s book. ago, they lived in the South Tabor glory that way. For the next six weeks or so, Strayed neighborhood but tried to get into “It goes back to the arts educa- will keep juggling travel and family. Buckman through the district-wide tion I received,” she says. “My Just before Thanksgiving, she’s lottery. mother never went out of her way planning to take a six-week hiatus When their son didn’t get in, the to make sure we went to the best from her book tour: a family vacation family decided to rent the South schools. I had an art teacher, a mu- to Australia, Laos, Cambodia and Thai- Tabor home and move into the sic class, a librarian, a library. land. Buckman neighborhood so he Now these things are considered “It’s the gift I’m going to give to my- could enroll there. A few months extra.” self and my family for all that we’ve ago, they moved from inner South- It’s ironic, she adds, that Buck- sacrifi ced this past year,” Strayed says. east to inner Northeast, still in the man has to be labeled as an arts “My schedule has been positively in- school’s boundaries. magnet school: “I don’t think my sane.” Private school wasn’t an option, kids are being immersed in the She’ll pull her kids out of school for Strayed says, because both she arts. I think they’re getting a basic 2 1/2 weeks (plus all of the no-school and Lindstrom are big public arts education that every kid in days) during the holiday season as school believers, having come the world should receive.” they travel — with no set agenda or from working-class backgrounds reservations. and being products of public A school resource “I just want to walk along the beach- schools. Portlanders will vote Nov. 6 on a es, see the villages and jungles,” she Also, until the re- general election ballot says. “Just play cards, eat good food, cent success of measure that would savor each others’ company in a for- “Wild,” she says it “If I can use my provide arts funding eign place.” was never a financial for schools and arts or- Artwork lines the hallways and lockers at Buckman, where fi rst-grader Sasha They’ll be overseas until the new reality: “We’re both voice to bring ganizations. The an- Greenway puts away her bag before lunch. An Oct. 29 event features bestselling year, spending Christmas at a starving artists.” something to the nual flat tax of $35 for author Cheryl Strayed, a Buckman parent. friend’s house in Chiang Mai, Thai- At Buckman, every income-earning land, and making sure to let Santa Strayed says, her kids school, I’m resident comes with Buckman one. Given Cheryl’s im- about myself at this point. I’ve had know to leave their presents at their love to draw, dance really happy to much support and crit- mense success and popularity — as enough of me. But if I can use my Portland house, per her kids’ in- and perform in plays. icism; Strayed, not sur- well as her generous spirit — it was voice to bring something to the structions. Buckman students do it.” prisingly, is a big sup- a logical step to turn to her as a re- school, I’m really happy to do it.” Strayed says she’d also like to do get four classes in the porter. source we could mine to raise The event will feature a reading some writing on the trip, perhaps in arts each week: six — Cheryl Strayed, Buckman Principal funds.” and discussion with Strayed, who preparation for her next projects — a weeks each of visual author Brian Anderson says Anderson echoes that thought. also wrote two other books: “Tiny novel she started before “Wild” that art, drama, music and the school does not re- “We’re looking at how to sustain Beautiful Things” and “Torch.” she wants to return to, and another dance. There’s also one period in ceive any extra funds for its arts the program if we do lose one of The 6 p.m. gathering is an hour- memoir. which the art teachers bring art designation.In fact, like all Port- those teachers in upcoming years,” long event for up to 60 people at For now, she’s enjoying every mo- into the classroom. land schools faced with budget cuts Anderson says. “It was a wakeup ENSO Urban Winery, three blocks ment of the fame. The school is less affluent than this year, he says he was forced to call.” from the school. It’ll include food “I obviously have this big thing that people assume: 40 percent of stu- eliminate two full-time art teacher The Buckman Foundation will from Meat Cheese Bread and happened to me, and I think that as a dents are eligible for free- or re- positions, in visual arts and dance. use the proceeds from the Oct. 29 sweets from Sweetpea. Tickets are writer — to be plugging along for so duced-price meals. Fifty-seven The community rallied in the event to stave off future cuts. A $100 per person. long and have this response — I want percent of the students live in the spring, and the foundation came up third of the funds will go to the At 7:30 p.m., Strayed will share to rise to the moment,” she says. “This Buckman catchment area; the rest with the funds to restore both posi- Portland Schools Equity Fund. excerpts from her books in the is a really hard, intense year, and it come from across the district. tions. “When they asked me to do this, Buckman cafetorium, followed by a won’t always be this way. It’s like rid- Strayed also cherishes the com- That process, Bowen Shea says, I said if you think it’ll bring money discussion and book signing. Tick- ing a rocketship.” munity’s high value on the arts — “lit a fire under our feet to organize in, I’m happy to do it,” Strayed ets are $30 per person; both events — Jennifer Anderson she wishes all public schools had events that would reach the wider says. “I hope it’ll be a success. I’m are a package deal of $120, avail- the means to return to their past Portland community, not just the really over hearing myself talk able at theartshavestrayed.org.

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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 info@community-classifi eds.com Letters to the Editor and Circulation: Closer to home. East Portland: Tamara Hollenbeck, Fax: My View submissions: 503-546-9810 503-546-9894 (503) 620-3433 [email protected] Mailing address: Cheryl DuVal, Manager, Creative services 6605 S.E. Lake Road [email protected] Portland, OR 97222 ©2012 Portland Tribune The Portland Tribune Thursday, October 18, 2012 NEWS A3 IN CHARACTER A conversation with an interesting Portlander

who grew up with an over- an online dating website. We failure, but in fact, it was a great AlmaKevin AveryStampfl Rubenstein ee controlling and protective can’t even schedule a date be- learning experience because I mother and who also was in cause he’s too busy training got him to realize your body By PETER KORN the military and was pretty for some Turboman and he does react to change and we The Tribune much trained to not offend a can’t get me in between a don’t like change, but change is woman in any way. He’s al- 5-mile run and a protein eat- good. He had to realize, “This is Alma Avery Rubenstein is most afraid to engage and ing session. what women do to me.” working on a one-woman make eye contact. I have to re- All his pictures are him on Tribune: How much does show and book tentatively ti- parent him. bikes, and I said to him, I all this cost? Cutline goes tled, “Pain and suffering: dat- Tribune: How old is this asked him, “Could this be why Rubenstein: here.$175 Cutline an hour ing and depression.” But take guy? you’re still single?” I said to for a coaching goessession. right here.And our word for it, the Southeast Rubenstein: Forty-two. him, “Dude, put the bike my prices are goingCutline up. goes Portland resident is much Tribune: Re-parent? down.” Tribune: Worsthere. client? Cutline more fun than that title sug- Rubenstein: We were out I had one guy, I went out Rubenstein: goesI had right a here.man gests. Her professional name in the field doing our exercise with him in the field so he take me to smallCutline claims goes court is Date Doctor Alma, organiz- ... could approach women ... because I made himhere. shaveCutline his er of Portland speed dating Tribune: Calisthenics? Tribune: Wait, wait. Just beard. He wantedgoes to rightappeal here. to events, flirting seminars and Rubenstein: No. Practicing where are you in this scenar- younger women,Cutline but he goes had a dating coach at large. flirting and looking at women. io? Lurking a few feet away? white Santa Claushere. beard. Cutline Portland Tribune: Rubenstein: Tribune: When The first woman I could final- I’m every- So goeswhy right was here. he you host a speed dating night, ly get him to do something, where. Sometimes I’ll work unhappy? Rubenstein: TRIBUNE PHOTO: do you get more men or wom- she looks down really fast and as their wing person, some- XXXXI should have en? he’s thinking, “Alma, are you times I’ll pretend I’m their known; when I first met him Alma Avery Rubenstein: sure you know what you’re co-worker, sometimes their he said he was suing his ther- I design it to have the same doing?” sister. Sometimes we’ll walk apist. amount. Portland women, they say in and I’ll say, “Who do you Tribune: He got dates? Tribune: How do you do they want love, romance, dat- find attractive? I’m waiting Rubenstein: He did, but that? ing, sex, but they won’t put outside. You’re not leaving nobody made him happy. The Rubenstein: Very creative- their money where their until they get your phone judge totally laughed. ly. I’ll flirt with whichever sex mouths are. You need to be number.” Tribune: Best line you’ve I have to, to make it right. open to be flirted with. Tribune: The one guy? heard at speed dating? Tribune: You’ve worked in People say New Yorkers are Rubenstein: He was so Rubenstein: Do you think Seattle, Los Angeles and New rude. No, New Yorkers feel, nervous he threw up at the these pants make me look fat? York. How do Portland singles you know what they’re think- restaurant. Tribune: Oh, come on. rate? ing. Here it’s more repressed. Tribune: With the woman Rubenstein: That was Rubenstein: I hate to say Portlanders will put their bik- of his dreams watching? coming from a guy that I it, but Portland needs help, ing career over their potential Rubenstein: He made it to coached. He’s putting a little TRIBUNE PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER ONSTOTT men and women. I’m current- mating career. the restroom. He thought that flirt into it, and women love to Alma Avery Rubenstein, aka Date Doctor, organizes Portland speed ly working with a guy client I met this Portland guy on had made him even more of a laugh. dating events, fl irting seminars, and serves as a dating coach at large. FRI.-SAT.-SUN. ONLY • At All George Morlan Plumbing Portland Area Locations

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The com- plaints the next month, the manager Jon Thomas admits mission must now decide previous high. the facility had diffi culty con- whether or not to extend the The DEQ conducted on-site trolling odors in the past, espe- food waste permit — and if so, inspections on Jan. 11 and 12, cially last December, shortly for how long. fi nding numerous violations of after it began accepting Port- A grassroots group called its composting permit. It sent land’s resident yard debris and Stop the Stink is fi ghting the Recology a “Warning Letter food waste. The Oregon De- extension. It has collected let- With an Opportunity to Cor- partment of Environmental ters in opposition from many rect” on Feb. 1, 2012. Among Quality even cited the facility North Plains business owners other things, the letter ex- for numerous violations of its and about 500 signatures on a pressed concerns about uncov- state composting license in petition calling for it to be de- ered piles of material, stand- February. nied. ing water and poor drainage. But Thomas says Recology, Co-founder Marilyn Schulz, Much work has clearly been the large recycling and re- an area farmer, says the fi ght is done to comply with the letter source recovery company that a regional issue. Some other during the past 18 months. In operates the facility, has spent cities have begun adopting vol- addition to the paving, a drain- millions on upgrades to reduce untary commercial food waste age system has been installed the problems. Recently com- recovery programs, including in the high-moisture area and pleted work includes paving the Beaverton, Gresham, Tigard wind breaks have been built. ground where the composting and Lake Oswego. Schulz be- PAMPLIN MEDIA GROUP : CHASE ALLGOOD Still, when the material is occurs to better control mois- lieves they are the first step Corner Bistro owner Ruth Peterson says the odor from the nearby composting plant has driven customers turned during the composting ture and installing odor abate- towards adopting mandatory away from her North Plains restaurant. process, musty odors are re- ment features, including large commercial and residential leased with large clouds of landscaped earthen berms. programs like those in Port- steam — which Thomas says is “We believe we’ve made land. couraging residents to mix food impact on neighbors as is prac- ture’s Needs. natural. great progress in recent “If other government go this waste with the yard debris that tical. But the city (of Portland) According to Rawson, her months,” Thomas said last route, they’ll have to site addi- has been composted for years itself has no ability to direct agency’s goal is to assure the Environmental benefi ts week. tional composting facilities like — Adams says Portland does where the compost goes or how odors are consistent with a Spiering insists he is not That’s not what the monthly Nature’s Needs throughout the not determine where the mate- it is managed,” Adams says. properly managed composting against composting or even Na- odor complaint log maintained region,” says Schulz. rial goes. It is delivered to Met- DEQ offi cials say it is impos- operation. ture’s Need. He just believes by North Plains shows, howev- ro transfer stations and then sible to completely eliminate In fact, other companies did the facility is too close to a pop- er. The log shows odor com- Stop the Stink taken to facilities with DEQ odors during the composting composting on the site before ulation center. plaints jumping from a low of 54 Portland Mayor Sam Adams permits. In Washington Coun- process, however. Recology leased it in 2009, and “I know a composting facility in June to 94 in July and an all- says his city is not to blame for ty, they must also be approved “The materials to be compos- there were odor problems then, is going to smell,” Spierling time high of 280 in September. the controversy. Although his by the county commission. ted have odors, the composting too. says. “That’s just the nature of Part of that increase could city has aggressively pushed “We have a strong interest in process produces odors, and “Bad smells would come the business. But that’s why be because of increased public composting — including en- protecting quality of life the finished material has from there in the past,” says they shouldn’t be located on throughout the region, and we odors,” says Stephanie Rawson, Tony Spiering, a Stop the Stink the outskirts of a city. They want to see the Nature’s Needs the DEQ solid waste compli- co-founder who owns Valley need to be as far away from facility operated with as little ance specialist assigned to Na- Machine, a precision manufac- people as possible.” turing company just down the Schulz agrees, and says the road from Nature’s Need. location issue is going become BANK OWNED REAL ESTATE Spiering, Peterson, Schulz increasingly important in com- TIMED ONLINE INTERNET AUCTION and others all agree the odors ing years. Schulz believes other Your have gotten stronger and more cities want to follow Portland’s ENDS NOV. 14TH - 1PM PST frequent in recent years, how- lead on composting. But if they ever. Despite the attention fo- do, Schulz says, the volume of Lifestyle *** 28 Properties in 5 States *** cused on Portland’s food waste, commercial and residential that may be because Nature’s food waste will increase so Continues Pre-Auction Offers Encouraged - Brokers Invited Needs is handling a far larger much that additional compost- SWC of N 10th Ave & Holladay St. - Portland: quantity of material than any of ing facilities will have to be cit- 5-Vacant Contiguous Lots on 3.9 Acres - General Industrial the previous owners. Recology ed. is the seventh largest recycling “It doesn’t make sense to site Here. 20508 SW Roy Rogers Rd., Sherwood, 115, 116, 117-Condos: Unit 117=Finished Condo, Units 115 & 116=Shell Condition and resource recovery compa- them far out of the region, 23013 Canyon View Loop - Res. Lot –Bend, No Reserve! ny in the country. where emissions from trucks Thomas admits the facility hauling the material reduces SEE WEBSITE FOR INFO. 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Mail to: Portland Tribune – Circulation PO Box 22109 Portland, OR 97269, 503-620-9797 [email protected] 406629.071212 09PT The Portland Tribune Thursday, October 18, 2012 NEWS A5 Speakeasy: Marketers warn of backlash ■ From page 1 number of Portland establish- ments run by people who seem- ingly never took Marketing 101 in college. Or so it would appear, since the dozen or so bars and restaurants either don’t have ap- plicable signs outside or have put up barely noticeable emblems. Marketing experts say that re- tail shops need to get the word out, especially to passersby on the street. They say you want Patrons enter Gil’s Speakeasy The entrance people to come, you have to give through a door, featuring a classic to Portland’s them a reason. 1920’s era peephole, just below newest hip wine That’s apparently not the case street level in Southeast Portland. bar and in Portland, when you’re dealing restaurant with a crowd that likes to be in Sauvage is the know. newed cachet. hidden inside an There’s marketability in mys- “There seems to be a push for offi ce building on tery, too. that pre-prohibition cocktail,” Gil- Southeast Sixth Gil’s Speakeasy on Southeast huly says. “People are kind of em- Avenue, despite Taylor Street was the first in bracing that underground type of their listed town to go the no-sign route, ac- mentality, I guess.” address on Ash cording to owner Brett Gilhuly. The mystique beer Street around The Speakeasy opened in Prohi- the corner. bition-era 1939, when all the plac- With high-priced marketing TRIBUNE PHOTOS: es that served alcohol had to stay consultants doing everything CHRISTOPHER hidden. they can to gain an edge in this ONSTOTT “If you could fi nd it you were media-saturated era, the no- more than welcome to come in, sign approach taps into a num- broad-based appeals and to- fact, he says that cross-border ing signs, according to Beitel- Moonshine opened a little more and if you couldn’t, find some- ber of valued marketing ideas, ward what she calls market seg- store virtually lived off its sales spacher, as a way to get the than a year ago, and the deci- thing else,” Gilhuly says of the says Debra Stephens, Universi- mentation — appealing to a spe- of Coors to Oregon customers. word out about an establish- sion was made to keep the old attitude back in the days when ty of Portland marketing profes- cifi c group of consumers. “It was definitely the mys- ment. But that might only work sign “because it’s super cool and serving alcohol was illegal. sor. Of course, an establishment tique beer,” Dickinson says. “It for a while, she adds. it looks good.” Gilhuly has owned Speakeasy “Exclusivity. If you know based on attracting only those was a reason for a party, (bring- “Eventually, these customers Business has grown so fast in for only eight years and says when about it then you’re in the know. who are in the know by exten- ing) a case of Coors back to Or- will lose interest, and for the the past year that adding a sign he took over the bar he never gave You’re cool or whatever the op- sion might leave out groups of egon.” restaurants to stay available, hasn’t seemed necessary. a thought to the lack of a sign. erative word is,” Stephens says. people who aren’t in the know. No sign, Dickinson surmises, they will have to advertise,” Maybe, Meacham says, adver- Nowadays, he sees people walk by “It would also give people a But Stephens says the no-sign can play into that same irratio- she predicts. “Trends are tising to a larger audience and get curious about what’s in- sense of being special because approach is pretty much doing nal attraction. “If you’re trying trends because they don’t last would take away one of Moon- side, which he fi gures is a plus. they know something and they what everybody else does when to create some kind of mystery, forever.” shine’s appeals. As for the trend, Gilhuly says can bring their friends to it and they try to target a narrow de- (no sign) is a good way to do it,” But for now, says Sepal “I like to be tucked away in he’s noticed it too, with Whiskey also it reminds them of Prohibi- mographic, just more overtly. he says. Meacham, co-owner of Moon- my little neighborhood bar, and Room, Dig a Pony, Sauvage and tion. It gives a sense of forbid- “This is what market segmen- shine, the no-sign strategy that’s what we are trying to rep- longtime dessert haven Rimsky- denness, secrets. That appeals tation is and does,” Stephens Tucked away seems to be working just fi ne. resent here,” she says. Korsakoffee among the no-sign to people, too.” says. “You have to decide who Lauren Beitelspacher, Port- establishments. The distant past The current marketing trend, you’re going to target.” land State University market- has, apparently, assumed a re- Stephens says, is away from “It makes all kind of sense,” ing professor, says there could says Dan Dickinson, director of be a danger in creating an air of VETERANS advertising management at exclusivity. Portland State University, about “Think about those people STOP PAYING RENT! the no-sign approach. who stop listening to a band 0 Down/0 Closing Dickinson says companies once the band becomes popu- You can use your VA Loan benefit more than once! are always trying to develop lar,” Beitelspacher says. “Lis- 90% Cash-out Debt Consolidation refinance available mystique around their products, teners feel like the band sold • $417,000 — max. amt. often unsuccessfully. out and they don’t want to lis- Call Tom Fitkin ML-1018 For years, he says, Coors beer ten to them anymore.” • Bankruptcies OK VA Loan Specialist managed it in a big way by not Beitelspacher sees the same Chapter 7 - 2 years after discharge 697-7214 Office making its suds available in phenomenon occurring regu- Chapter 13 - Today 703-5227 Mobile most states, including Oregon. larly with new restaurants. Cus- www.oswegomortgage.com Dickinson remembers driving tomers, she says, like a restau- 384986.020311 PT to California to a little store just rant they feel they discovered. across the state border in the Social media in many ways 1970s to load up on Coors. In substitutes for the disappear- See A popular hipster hangout on East Burnside, Rontom has attracted large weekend crowds despite not having any identifying signage. online

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oregonsbir.com Visit our Facebook page to win a chance to attend the event! 403204.091312 A6 INSIGHT { INSIGHT } The Portland Tribune Thursday, October 18, 2012 Voters should support change Put Nolan on council he campaign for Portland mayor — with all its twists, turns and mini-scandals — has likely dis- to police, fi re retirement fund tracted voters from the other contested city race Ton the Nov. 6 ballot. ortland property tax- calculation would be based on regular workers compensation Commissioner Amanda Fritz, who was elected four years payers can save $47 a police offi cer’s or fi refi ghter’s system for their fi rst six ago to Council Position 1, faces a vigorous challenge from million during the next actual salary for the year pre- months of employment. state Rep. Mary Nolan. The two candidates don’t differ much P25 years if voters agree ceding retirement. Members of Portland’s City Council re- when it comes to political philosophy, but we believe Nolan in the November general elec- the retirement program no ferred Measure 26-145 to the has the potential to be the more effective commissioner. tion to sensible changes to the longer would be allowed to in- voters with the backing of Dan Fritz and Nolan ran against three lesser-known candi- city’s pension and disability clude retroactive wages. Nor Saltzman, the commissioner dates in the May primary, and Nolan was able to keep Fritz program for police offi cers and would the fact that some years assigned to oversee the Fire below the 50 percent level needed to win outright in May. fi refi ghters. contain 27 pay periods — in- and Police Disability and Re- Now that the two top candidates are facing each other in a BackOUR inOPINION 2006, the city’s voters stead of 26 — be allowed to in- tirement Fund. The police and runoff, we hope voters will take a second approved signifi cant reforms fl uence the pension amount. fi re unions have said these look at Nolan, who is among the most quali- to put a halt to documented Another change that strikes type of changes shouldn’t be fi ed people to run for city commissioner in abuses of the Portland Fire us as more than fair is estab- decided by voters, but instead recent years. and Police Disability and Re- lishing an eligibility period of through collective bargaining. Early in her career, Nolan managed two tirement Fund. Now, they are six months for the disability In our view, however, Port- city bureaus, including the Bureau of Envi- being asked to consider a nar- program. land’s system of funding the ronmental Services. She also has been a rower set of reforms to ensure Under the current system, disability and retirement fund successful small-business owner and a lead- that police offi cers and fi re- newly hired police offi cers or — through direct taxation of NOLAN er in the Legislature. fi ghters get the pensions they fi refi ghters can claim lifetime property owners — means that We have taken issue with some of Nolan’s have earned — but not more benefi ts for injuries even if voters have a vital interest in choices in Salem, but her legislative colleagues describe than they are due. they were still in training — controlling excessive costs her as someone who can be moved by logic and facts. The biggest change being and even if their disabilities while also treating retired or Fritz, on the other hand, always has had strong grass- proposed by the city’s Measure don’t prevent them from earn- disabled employees with fair- roots support in Portland, but we don’t believe she has 26-145 would affect how retire- ing a living in other occupa- ness. For that reason, we be- been the City Hall watchdog that her constituents might ment benefi ts are calculated. If tions. This measure would put lieve voters should approve have expected. The City Council could use a problem solv- the measure is approved, this new recruits into the state’s Measure 26-145. er like Mary Nolan. Voters should give her their support.

Portland ● Tribune MYVIEW Path to PPS bond plan is paved with bad judgment

FOUNDER Dr. Robert B. Pamplin, Jr. Focus on education, not new schools PRESIDENT statewide high school construc- J. Mark Garber By Teresa McGuire and tion costs of $220 to $240 per A Portland Public square foot. Schools bond MANAGING EDITOR/ Kelsey Green Grout If we look at the reported capac- measure on the WEB EDITOR general election Kevin Harden ity of the nine PPS high schools, ortland Public Schools is they are under-enrolled by more ballot will fi x school buildings, but some VICE PRESIDENT on a misguided mission to than 5,300 students. PPS has 72 Brian Monihan pass a construction bond buildings at the elementary level worry that it won’t Pof almost a half billion dol- with an under-enrollment of more improve education CIRCULATION lars, the largest in its history. than 10,000 students. Our schools for students. MANAGER And it’s only the beginning. can handle 15,000 more students Kim Stephens This bond is planned to be the in the buildings we already have TRIBUNE PHOTO: fi rst of seven, totaling more than open. That’s not even including CHRISTOPHER ONSTOTT CREATIVE $3.35 billion, which could last for the 17 PPS buildings sitting idle SERVICES MANAGER 32 years — assuming all seven are like Marshall and Smith Elemen- Cheryl DuVal passed by you, the voters. tary. This means we will all pay, PPS has a “targeted enrollment” PUBLISHING SYSTEMS homeowners and renters alike. number for its various schools: MANAGER/WEBMASTER Alvaro Fontán It’s an assumption school dis- 1,400 students at the high school trict offi cials have made. In their level and 500 at the K-5, K-8 and NEWS WRITERS world, to vote against a school middle school levels. Five of our Jennifer Anderson, bond is practically un-American. high schools are below this Peter Korn, Steve Law, In the real world, sometimes 1,400-student target, three of them Jim Redden you have to say no. signifi cantly. Twenty-two elemen- PPS needs a history lesson. The tary or middle schools are below can students have a 50 percent or This bond will have no effect on If school leaders could not ob- FEATURES WRITERS last construction bond passed in 415 students, well below the target lower graduation rate. Fifteen of the 2013 Public Employee Retire- tain better results after the last Jason Vondersmith, 1995. The actual construction con- of 500. Portland’s schools rank in the bot- ment System cost increase, and bond, what guarantee is given Anne Marie DiStefano tinued until fi ve years ago. That How many excess buildings do tom 15 percent statewide in terms we narrowly avoided cutting 110 that they can manage this gargan- SPORTS EDITOR bond was targeted for earthquake we need? of student achievement, student teachers this fall. Why in the mid- tuan project? We cannot afford to Steve Brandon and fi re safety, maintenance and A Portland State University en- academic growth and for high dle of a deep recession has PPS fail our children. Without a cost- upkeep, handicapped accessibility rollment study predicts that dur- school graduation rates. not planned ahead for the inevita- effective 21st Century education SPORTSWRITERS and computer upgrades. ing the next 15 years we may have The number of instructional ble reduced revenue? plan to deal with the dismal 62 Kerry Eggers, Every high school in the district student numbers increase as little days is among the lowest in the Poor long-term planning has percent graduation rate, families Jason Vondersmith, except Wilson High School had as 2,000 students, or as much as nation — 169.5 days this calendar led to the elimination of the dis- will not move to Portland and our Stephen Alexander seismic improvements. Seismic 8,000. year, with a possible loss of an ad- trict’s three most recently con- economy will suffer. work was completed at Franklin, ditional nine school days next structed high schools (Marshall, Portland’s children need a SUSTAINABLE LIFE Grant and Roosevelt, which are An ‘arrogant process’ year. Adams and Jackson). We cannot school district that will implement EDITOR Steve Law now proposed for rebuild in this During the 1995 campaign, sup- Having a nice, modern building afford to waste funding on poor a 21st Century education plan bond. Marshall High School had porters said passing the bond doesn’t guarantee an education. judgment and poor planning. with an emphasis on improved ed- COPY EDITOR almost $7 million poured into its would enhance the vitality of Port- Rosa Parks, the newest Portland School district administrators ucational achievement and gradu- Mikel Kelly campus — and is now closed. land. school, built in 2006, ranks in the will point to what they call “long- ation rates, not a focus on build- This bond proposes to spend In 2012, Portland cannot call it- bottom 5 percent of Title 1 range facilities planning,” but this ings. ART DIRECTION $70 million at Roosevelt, $85 mil- self a great city when PPS has a schools. was an arrogant process. It was a AND DESIGN lion at Franklin and $95 million at graduation rate of 62 percent; If this bond passes, will we have series of public meetings where Teresa McGuire and Kelsey Green Pete Vogel Grant. The construction costs per English language learners have gleaming new buildings with too input from outsiders was not al- Grout are part of Restore Education Be- square foot of $306, $346 and $389, only a 36 percent graduation rate; few teachers and students ware- ways welcome and that were at fore Buildings, restoreeducationbefore- VISUAL JOURNALIST are astronomical compared to Black, Hispanic and Native Ameri- housed in study halls? times poorly attended. buildings.com. AND PHOTO EDITOR Christopher Onstott

INSIGHT PAGE EDITOR Keith Klippstein MYVIEW ● Budget woes could put our libraries in a deep hole PRODUCTION Michael Beaird, Valerie Clarke, Chris Fowler,

CONTRIBUTOR Rob Cullivan Library district ends inconsistent funding

WEB SITE region. And when hours are cut kids to read. search for a new or better job; will not create a new layer of portlandtribune.com By Brian Wilson back, so are activities we count  The library’s School Corps how to interview and write a re- government: the Multnomah on for kids, students, families, program connects students and sume. County Commission remains the CIRCULATION  503-546-9810 ur libraries are well- job-seekers, senior citizens and educators with the resources of Library books are sent to library district’s governing body. loved and an essential more. the public library — directly senior citizens and the home- It will also retain the account- 6605 S.E. Lake Road Portland, OR 97222 part of what makes ours Even the budget for new books serving 48,000 students in the last bound — more than 200,000 a ability and good value we have 503-226-6397 (NEWS) Oa great community. But and materials has been reduced. year. year. always gotten from our libraries. even more remarkable is that The library must make period-  Library staff create materi- Services this important need a Our library system currently re- they are so well-used: the second- ic cuts to hours and services be- als, gather books and provide stable source of funding and that ceives annual fi nancial audits The Portland Tribune busiest in the entire nation — of cause it relies on temporary support to more than 1,500 indi- is exactly what a local Library and periodic performance audits is Portland’s independent any size city — after only New funding. The roller-coaster sys- vidual teachers. District would provide. Passing from the independently elected newspaper that is trusted York City. tem of funding available to the li-  The library serves 26,000 in- Measure 26-143 would restore auditor, and so will the library to deliver a compelling, But as central as they are to brary means we don’t know from dividual children and parents at the library hours and staff need- district. And three independent forward-thinking and our day-to-day lives, our libraries year to year what hours and ser- risk for low literacy, and assists ed for services, programs and bodies will continue to review accurate living chronicle are subject to the instability that vices we will have. in preparing children to start activities in all 19 libraries. Just the library budget. about how our citizens, comes from a system of tempo- Those services make a real dif- school ready to learn. as important, it provides perma- It’s a straightforward choice: government and rary and unpredictable funding. ference:  The libraries provide home- nent, reliable funding for a per- Creating a library district will businesses live, work Finally, we have a chance to do  More than 17,000 different li- work help after school to stu- manent, important service used provide stable, dedicated fund- and play. The Portland something about it. brary classes and events were dents, giving them a safe and by the entire community. ing and will both restore the Tribune is dedicated Right now if you show up at held for youth each year. And structured place to go. Funds for the library district cuts and prevent them into the to providing vital the library most evenings, it’s more than 255,000 youth partici-  The library is one of the sole will replace the current library future. communication and closed. On Monday, the library is pated in library programs. sources of computers for those levy so we won’t pay that any- So please vote yes, so our li- leadership throughout closed all day. Hours of service  Library story times served who don’t have them at home, more. The typical homeowner brary can be there for all of us. our community. are down to 44 a week, from 57 a nearly 120,000 young children and provides classes for how to will pay an additional $49 a year week. We have the shortest last year. use them. above what they already pay for Brian Wilson is committee chairman hours of any public library sys-  Parents are offered classes  Job seekers get important libraries. for the Libraries Yes campaign sup- tem in the four-county Portland to show them how to teach their help from the libraries — how to Approving the library district porting Measure 26-143.

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,” Portland 503-546-5167; [email protected] Tribune, 6605 S.E. Lake Road, Portland, OR 97222. The Portland Tribune Thursday, October 18, 2012 { INSIGHT } INSIGHT A7

READERS’LETTERS White ‘privilege’ is not always what it seems

Verenice Gutierrez, princi- ally works to people who Honor Timberline, other love letter to Timber- pal at Harvey Scott K-8 School, aren’t listening anyway. line, but as we all know, ac- doesn’t have a clue how racist Gerhard Magnus stop bike park tion speaks louder than she sounds — and she’s a Port- Northwest Portland Every Oregonian needs to words. land Public Schools educator extend a thank you to Jon Tul- Dennis Chaney (“Schools beat the drum for lis for penning the essay cele- Northeast Portland equity,” Sept. 6). I will not en- Math team runs into brating the 75th anniversary Chairman of the dorse the system that created discrimination of Timberline Lodge (“Tim- Friends of Mount Hood her by voting yes on a half- berline Lodge still a jewel 75 billion dollar school bond. Regarding the story, years later,” Sept. 27). If I were a black parent and “Schools beat the drum for eq- He perfectly explained why Library district could afford it, I would be uity” (Sept. 6), about Harvey Timberline is held in such maintains a treasure looking around at private Scott School principal Vereni- high esteem, and why we are school options in Portland. ce Gutierrez supporting the To come all responsible for the preser- Young, black males are capa- formation of a black and Lati- vation and protection of our Thanks to the Tribune for ble of intellectual achieve- no drum class: historic mountain home. its insightful endorsement of ment. They don’t need more In 2005, when I served as At the end of his essay, the library district (“Say yes to stereotypes about their musi- chair of the mathematics de- Tullis even testified to his school bond, library district,” cal ability. partment at Benson Polytech- personal belief in the histor- Oct. 4). Here’s an assignment for nic High School, my principal, ic meaningfulness of the Voting yes for the library Gutierrez: Go talk to some Christie Plinski, called me into lodge. district will reverse the ero- white skinheads about why her office and asked what I TRIBUNE PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER ONSTOTT It is our hope that this a sig- sion of resources for one of our they are the way they are. would recommend as a means Schwinn bikes are the draw for members of club Belligerante in nal that RLK and Co. is with- most treasured civic assets Don’t be surprised if you fi nd for improving the achieve- Northeast Portland that attracts a racially diverse crowd. Letter drawing its proposal for a and provide dedicated and out that “white privilege” isn’t ment of African-American stu- writers say it’s time to have a good conversation about racial commercial gravity flow stable funding for years to all it’s cracked up to be. dents of Benson in mathemat- relations. mountain bike park at the come. Pamela Fitzsimmons ics. lodge since such an enter- I am voting yes for our li- Southeast Portland I told her that I would spon- prise is the antithesis of ev- braries, yes for an educated sor a math club specifically observation. commission. Whites see rac- erything Tullis wrote. and inspired Multnomah designed to address African My concern is that the topic ism as acts of commission Here is a small sampling of County, and yes for our collec- Looking for racism? accomplishments in mathe- addressed the entire issue of — what you have actually do- what we know about the pro- tive future. You’ll fi nd it matics. race talk and racism in Port- ne; while people of color see posed pay-to-ride bike Tom Mattox It would have the title, the land as though it is exclusively racism as acts of omission park:The elk that have used Northwest Portland African Math Club, and any- a black/white problem. There — what you failed to do. Timberline for their summer Of course, Principal Verenice one could join, but it would be was no mention of Latinos, As Thomas Kochman says in habitat for hundreds of years Gutierrez fi nds racism in the designed to highlight the un- Asians, American Indians and “Black and White Styles of Con- will be displaced in order that School bonds build PB&J (“Schools beat the drum doubted accomplishments of other people of color groups. fl ict” (Chicago), “Whites start people can recreate with their better future for equity,” Sept. 6), she’s look- African mathematicians. Diversity in Portland has be- from a premise that a situation bicycles. ing for racism. (I have an master’s degree come synonymous with is not racist until we prove it is. The miles of bike trails will I believe in a good quality When you are constantly in the history of science in ad- “black.” When organizations Blacks start from a premise annually release tons of sedi- public education for the youth looking for evidence of some- dition to my master’s degree want to increase their diversi- that the situation is until you ment into the watershed that of Portland. thing, you will fi nd it, whether in mathematics.) ty, they hire blacks, not Lati- prove it’s not.” is the source of Still Creek An essential fi rst step is to it is real or not. My principal refused, not nos, Asians or others. The ma- Thus, whites would rather do and the West Fork of the ensure we’re providing safe Yevgeni Stepanov once but several times, to ap- jority of minority positions in nothing when confronted with Salmon River, and also intro- and high quality buildings for Pleasanton, Calif. prove such a method of im- City Hall have gone to African- a “perceived” racist situation duce invasive noxious plants them to learn in. proving African-American Americans; the same goes than take action, so as to not be that will replace the wildflow- Children deserve buildings students’ access to mathemat- with Portland Community Col- regarded as racist. er meadows with a monocul- that are seismically safe, with Discussion of racism ics. lege. This is why there is an im- ture of weeds unless con- roofs that don’t leak, and with falls fl at She told me it would be con- Yet, African Americans passe in dialogue. Thus, no ac- trolled by herbicides. properly heated and lighted trary to nondiscriminatory comprise less than 2 percent of tion is taken, because “doing The “inspired alpine set- classrooms where they will Since white people are the regulations and laws. the population of Oregon, nothing” makes me non-racist. ting” of the “iconic” lodge will want to learn. ones responsible for almost all I leave the reader to draw while Latinos are at 12 per- Yet, in taking no action, the be sacrificed for an adventure Portland’s future genera- of the effects of racism in this his or her own conclusion. cent. Blacks are 6 percent of “bystander” has merely gone park atmosphere on a daily tions deserve educational fa- country, maybe they should be Michael Meo the population of Portland; La- along with the status quo and basis, and also to be a venue cilities with science labs that having this annual “Why can’t Northeast Portland tinos are 9 percent. The major- silently supported the prevail- for the touring Pro-Am race contribute to skills for a 21st we talk about race?” (Sept. 6) ity/minority population group ing discrimination and racist circuit. (Google “mountain century economy and jobs. It’s discussion amongst them- in Portland is Latino. policies and behaviors. bike parks” to view educa- time to end the era of divest- selves to figure out how to Racial dialogue None of this came out in the But, as Ben Franklin remind- tional videos of these parks in ment in public education in this solve a problem they created takes more than talk article. We are not going to ed us, “Justice will not be action.) state. in the fi rst place. move forward in this city if served until those who are un- If the core belief of RLK and Portland voters have the op- The minoritized groups on I greatly enjoyed the Tri- racism is seen simply as a affected are as outraged as Co. is to “honor the Lodge’s portunity to reverse that trend the receiving end of institu- bune article, “Why can’t we black/white problem. those who are.” original rustic charm,” then it by voting yes on Measure 26- tionalized racial bias must be talk about race?” (Sept. 6). A big reason “why we can’t Welcome to the conversation. will cancel this misguided ad- 144. getting really sick and tired of However, I have a concern re- talk about race” is due to the Caleb Rosado venture. Brian Hoop explaining how the world re- garding it and one important problem of omission versus Newberg We can all appreciate an- Northwest Portland PortlandTribune Puzzles

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IF RABBITS HAVE TO TO HAVE RABBITS IF Cryptoquip solution: Cryptoquip A8 NEWS The Portland Tribune Thursday, October 18, 2012 A few changes are in Resignations hasten order after deadline food council demise t is a sign of how volatile the Portland Now all those “hoping we could get some ment should be formed that is mayor’s race has become. Jefferson contributions add up City/county group kind of attention.” independent of local govern- Smith’s page in the Voter’s Pamphlet could be reformed They did, he says. “It was ment. Ilists endorsements from several organi- Sources was too quick last issue to say that dissolved.” “I understand that FPC zations and elected officials that no longer Clackamas County Chair Charlotte Lehan is as independent body The group has been less ef- members have frequently ex- support him. Smith didn’t mean to fool any- losing the fundraising race to challenger John fective in recent years, and pressed a desire to engage in one. Ludlow. By STEVE LAW pressed the city and county to activities such as direct en- They withdrew their endorsements after Although Ludlow outraised Lehan in the pri- The Tribune get “closer to the ground,” Mc- dorsements and grassroots ad- the page was submitted and the Voter’s mary election, she has so far outraised him in Intyre says. Among other vocacy, autonomy in selecting Pamphlet went to press. the general election $125,000 to $88,000. Foodies may be a victim of ideas, members wanted the members and establishing The endorsements were with- The most recent fi lings also show Le- their own success in steering group to tackle guidelines, raising drawn after a more complete ver- han has more than $48,000 in the food policy issues to the top food insecurity, funds, and manag- sion the 1993 incident in which bank compared to less than of the agenda in Portland. but it took years The group has ing projects,” Ad- Smith hit a young woman in $16,000 reported by Ludlow. For the past decade, the Food of fighting the been less ams wrote. “I also the face in Eugene finally A big reason for the Policy Council, a joint city/ city and county to understand that emerged. change is the lack of general county panel, has elevated the get people on the effective in most local food Groups listed in the Voter’s election contribution to Lud- profi le of community gardens, panel who had ex- recent years, policy councils Pamphlet that no longer endorse low from the Oregon Transfor- farmers markets and other perienced food around the coun- Smith include the Portland Police mation PAC. food issues in the city, so much insecurity, Mc- and pressed the try are indepen- Association, the Portland Firefighters The Republican-oriented political so that the advisory panel has Intyre says. city and county dent bodies and Association, state Rep. Carolyn Tomei, action committee gave him more than been a model for other commu- Michael Arm- able to take on Multnomah County Commissioner Diane $115,000 in the primary election but only about nities around the nation. strong, deputy di- to get “closer to these roles.” McKeel and the Mothers’ PAC, which advo- $27,000 since then. Ludlow has very few other But now the Food Policy rector of the Port- the ground.” No matter what cates on behalf of families. large supporters, who include brothers Tom Council is in limbo, or maybe land Bureau of — David McIntyre, happens, food pol- The timing also affected the page submitted and Chris Maletis and the Oregon Small Busi- already dissolved depending Planning and Sus- Food Policy Council icies have become by Charlie Hales, the other candidate for may- ness Association, a PAC primarily supported on who you talk to. tainability, says the co-chair more institution- or. by conservative donor and Nevada resident David McIntyre says he and city and county re- alized in city and It does not include general election en- Loren Parks. fellow Food Policy Council co- tain their commit- county work, dorsements from the Portland Tribune and In contrast, Lehan has been steadily pulling in chair, Anita Yapp, “had all ment to sustainability and food Armstrong says. Food issues because they were made too large contributions from a growing number of kinds of concerns and frustra- issues, but there is soul-search- got considerable attention in late. labor, environmental and Realtor organizations. tions” with the group and then ing going on among Food Policy the newly adopted Portland resigned together in August, Council members about how best Plan, he says. to continue their work. Multnomah County passed a “I think it’s a great conversa- Food Action Plan in late 2010 PAID ADVERTISEMENT tion,” he says. “It’s not like we and has hosted annual food set out to disband it at all.” summits. The county also has However, that appears to be agreed to sell surplus property what’s occurred. at the western foot of the Mor- Portland Mayor Sam Adams rison Bridge for the James sent Food Policy Council mem- Beard Public Market, a planned bers a thank-you letter on Oct. year-round emporium of local- 10, suggesting that a replace- ly produced food and drink. PUBLIC NOTICES View legals online at: http://publicnotices.portlandtribune.com PUBLIC AND LEGAL NOTICES These notices give information concerning actions planned and implemented by attorneys, financial institutions and government agencies. They are intended to keep you and every citizen fully informed.

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LegalsBannerInfo e-mail [email protected] to book your notice. SUMMONS (CITATION JUDICIAL) CASE NUMBER: (Numero del Caso) 30-2012-00564772-CU-BC-CJC NOTICE TO DEFENDANT (AVISO AL DEMANDADO): JOAN JEONGHUI KOO, dba Young’s Beauty Supply, an Oregon homeowners have been targeted with a new individual; EDWARD K. YOO, an individual; and DOES 1 through 20, inclusive tax on the sale or transfer of real estate, a new tax YOU ARE BEING SUED BY PLAINTIFF (LO ESTA DEMANDANDO EL DEMANDANTE): WILSHIRE STATE that some have made a legislative priority. BANK, a California Banking Corporation NOTICE! You have been sued. The court may decide against you without your being heard unless you respond within 30 days. Read the information below. A YES vote on Measure 79 will stop You have 30 CALENDAR DAYS after this summons and legal SDSHUVDUHVHUYHGRQ\RXWR¿OHDZULWWHQUHVSRQVHDWWKLVFRXUW another tax on your home. and have a copy served on the plaintiff. A letter or phone call will not protect you. Your written response must be in proper legal form if you want the court to hear your case. There may EHDFRXUWIRUPWKDW\RXFDQXVHIRU\RXUUHVSRQVH

503-656-2410 399077.082312 PT working as a clerk at a down- Era. She campaigned for chil- gon centennial of women’s suf- pncmortgage.com/darrylwoods town department store, smug- dren’s health, meat inspections frage. 1800 Blankenship Rd. Suite 448 gling in “Gray’s Anatomy” to and a crackdown on spitting in When longtime Portland suf- West Linn, OR 97068 study during quiet spells at the the streets as a way to counter frage leader Abigail Scott Duni- store. One day she was caught tuberculosis. way became ill in 2012, Lovejoy NMLS #577081 by a supervisor, who was Portland’s progressive may- took a leading role in what was shocked to fi nd a dead man’s or, Democrat Harry Lane, fi rst Oregon’s sixth and fi nal ballot ACHIEVEMENT and PNC are registered marks of The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. (“PNC”). PNC Mortgage is a division bones, used for her studies, hid- appointed Lovejoy to the Port- measure for suffrage. of PNC Bank, National Association, a subsidiary of PNC. All loans are provided by PNC Bank, National Association and are subject to credit approval and property appraisal. ©2012 The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. All rights reserved. Member FDIC MORT PDF 0712-009-103605

Bring the Jobs Home! Do you want to see America again become the industrial powerhouse, the light and hope of the world? Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, FDR, Truman, Eisenhower and JFK all sup- ported pro-American trade policies. Why? Because, Supply and Demand is the iron law of economics. A surplus of labor always produces mass misery; a shortage of labor always brings mass prosperity. With full em- ployment, employers must compete for your skills, driving wages and benefits up. Business also benefits because well-paid workers spend more money, thereby creating more business opportunities. I pledge to: end off shoring, end outsourcing, restore tariffs, sup- VOTE port cheap and abundant energy, Ronald Green and support the Constitution with For U.S. Congress

emphasis on the First, Second and 3rd District 338938.101812 Fourth Amendments. For More Information go to ronaldgreen3rddistrict.com 277077.101612

402919.101012 A10 NEWS The Portland Tribune Thursday, October 18, 2012 Frequent BATHROOM TRIPS? Hayden terminal not Bell Ezee Flow Herbal Tea #4a healthy for neighbors Men Natural nutritional support for urinary ease & comfort. Relief within 3-5 days from dribbling, discomfort, urgency, poor flow. Instead Port disputes fi ndings of getting up many times most need to get up only once or not at all each as residents worry night. For many years a favorite for mature men. Good sleep helps to have more energy all next day. Also blood flows more easily where it counts about development for better sex life. Thousands of satisfied repeat customers. No side effects. We have literally hundreds of testimonials. By STEVE LAW The Tribune I was skeptical. I bought a box and it worked as advertised. Within a week I had relief. Howard Toy, 69, Henderson, NV  It’s heaven to sleep through the night. For many years I had 6-7 sleep interruptions every night. The Port of Portland’s Had urgent trips to the bathroom day and night with discomforts. I enjoy my new proposed marine terminals life. Angus Pike, Oshawa, ON  I am truly amazed and relieved. After 2 on west Hayden Island are weeks I no longer have to get up during the night. I’m enjoying a normal sex likely to increase already- life again. I hope a lot of men with a pride issue give this tea a shot. It’s difficult toxic air pollution and re- duce home property values to express how delighted I am. Clarence A. Rehrig, 58, Allentown, PA  Know on the populated east side the truth. This is my third year of drinking the Ezee Flow Tea. I highly of the island, according to recommend it. A real life saver. Thomas M. Thurston, Forsyth, GA.  suffering with incontinence, UTIs ask for Women a draft health analysis re- Bladder Control Tea for Women #4b. Guaranteed relief within days.No need to make claims. Bell relays 100% truthful leased this week. user’s free speech. No money is paid for it. No questions asked guarantee. The report by Multnomah County Health Department and two local health nonprof- its, was commissioned to pro- TRIBUNE PHOTO: CHRISTOPHER ONSTOTT Blood Pressure vide more data about how ma- New health analysis shows industrial development of west Hayden rine terminals on the largely Island will come with a cost to public health on the east side of the undeveloped western side of island. the island will affect some Formulation 2,300 residents of the eastern ture development. land proposal, says he hadn’t Dr. C. Hammoud M.H., PhD, recommends this natural, effective fish peptide product to half. Hayden Island residents considered before that the nutritionally support the body’s normal blood pressure function. *A science-backed herbal The report also cites health and environmentalists say development would lower phytonutrient. Promotes flexible, relaxed blood vessels in healthy persons. *A one-of-a-kind benefits associated with the the report provides more fod- property values at his mobile formula that offers unprecedented nutritional support for your overall health and well-being. *We port proposal, including new der to reject city annexation home community and at have thousands of repeat customers. Blood pressure is a focal point of cardiovascular wellness. public recreation of some 800 acres nearby floating homes. That *Achieve your balance and maintain your balance and a healthy range. access to the west of port-owned could make people unwilling Bell Blood Pressure Formulation helped me feel great. Thank you for this wonderful side of Hayden Is- “One of the property, which to buy into the community, product. William Oliver, Portsmouth, VA  I have been taking Bell #26 now for one year. land, and hun- would lay the he says, causing empty #26 My mom and brother started taking it as well. Even my pastor is on it now. Thanks! Mary Earl, dreds of family- tricky parts of groundwork for homes that will mar commu- Longview, TX  I started to take Bell Blood Pressure Formulation Formulation #26. After about 30 days my blood wage jobs likely this project is future marine nity life. pressure was normal. My doctor was very happy with me. Irene Surridge, 67, Owen Sound, ON  A friend recommended to provide health terminals there. That means the port’s proj- Bell BP Formulation! When a friend had good results I decided to try it. After taking Bell Blood Pressure Formulation #26. insurance bene- that the people “I’m excited ect conflicts with the city’s It made a difference in my life. Milton Perdomo, 68, Rego Park, NY. No need to make claims. Bell relays 100% fits. who benefi t and because it gives oft-stated goals of preserving truthful user’s free speech. No money is paid for it. No questions asked guarantee. A variety of us a chance to affordable housing, says Bob studies have been the people who get ourselves Sallinger, conservation direc- done to examine it impacts are heard,” says Tom tor for the Portland Audubon land-use, eco- Dana, who lives Society. nomic and envi- not the same in a mobile home Port of Portland staff say ronmental con- people.” park near the the health report overstated CLEAR SKIN siderations of re- proposed devel- the impact on air quality be- — Eric Engstrom, Dr. C. Hammoud, Master Herbalist, PhD, guarantees satisfaction. placing a forested principal planner for city opment that in- cause it used numbers based Helps to maintain healthy skin from the inside simply by cleansing the blood, instead of attacking part of the island of Portland cludes 440 mobile on an 840-acre industrial de- the skin from the outside with creams or washes. * This makes sense. Usually you can see how with marine in- homes and 160 velopment, when the city has it benefits your skin within days. * Many people wrote they were surprised how fast it worked. dustrial termi- recreational ve- proposed limiting the devel- Lots of testimonials from pleased users on our Bell website. There is absolutely no risk for nals. This is the first look at hicles. opment to 300 acres. trying Dr. Hammoud’s product. how the project could affect “The air toxics level cur- The report also didn’t take Last couple of years I tried everything. Results with Bell Skin Disorders #60 were the health of nearby resi- rently is 20 times the state into account 2010 Environ- unbelievable. I have beautiful skin again. Thanks for giving back my self-esteem. Nelisa Royer, dents. benchmark for cancer preven- mental Protection Agency re- 28, Doral, FL My mom bought Bell #60. I was skeptical. It did work quickly and better Port of Portland officials tion,” Dana says. “This’ll tri- quirements that will slash fu- than anything else. Christopher Seraphin, 14, Brooklyn, NY.  It worked. I no longer have say the health report relies on ple that. That’s crazy.” ture diesel emissions from flawed data and thus over- Dana, an alternate member rail locomotives and marine to hide at home, because I was ashamed to be seen. Agnes Casillas, 60, New York, NY Can #60 states the potential air quality of the city’s advisory commit- vessels, according to Sam Ru- wear again dresses that are backless. My skin looks fantastic. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. Yvette Maclean, and other impacts from its fu- tee for the west Hayden Is- da, the port’s chief commer- 40, Lodi, CA I was trying everything for years and nothing worked. I felt physical and emotional pain having to hide. cial officer. Finally I found your Bell #60. I’m so grateful and impressed about how fast it worked with amazing results. Eulalia Isabel Technical experts will re- Sanchez Martin, 30, Brampton, ON Skeptics can call everybody. All are real people like you or your friends. view the draft report Mon- day, and the port hopes to get changes made that will more accurately reflect the proj- ect’s impact, says Susie Lah- sene, the port’s transporta- SNORING? tion and land use policy man- As recommended by Dr. Gifford-Jones M. D. ager. The health analysis clearly Here is proof that snoring can be corrupting your health and your marriage. Three out of 10 shows there are health bene-

couples are considering divorce because of snoring says a major magazine article. You are not 328040.101112 fits as well as health burdens alone! An official survey says 48% of all people snore. 75% are affected, if you add non- associated with the develop- snoring husbands that have snoring wives or vice versa. Snoring is caused by slack muscles ment. in the throat. A common complaint is that people feel that they are not well rested in the morning. “One of the tricky parts of Many people wrote they are now sleeping like a babies. Their partners are delighted. This natural health product Sound Sleep #23 usually helps the first night. No side effects. this project,” says Eric Eng- strom, principal planner for College professor had lack of good sleeps with many interruptions for last 8 years the city, “is that the people #23 that made her tired during the day. Within 3 days taking Bell Sound Sleep #23 the terrible snoring who benefit and the people stopped. I wake up feeling refreshed and energized. I can concentrate in a focused, happy manner. I feel delighted with this who it impacts are not the natural product. Dr. Anele E. Heiges, 77, New York, NY  A life changing product. The very first night I took the capsules same people.” and every night after I had a restful and wonderful sleep. It has been a God send and blessing. I am by nature a skeptic. The money-back guarantee convinced me to try it. Jimmy Pay, 53, Gardendale, AC 3 Years on Bell Sound Sleep #23. My wife and I are entirely satisfied. Snoring episodes have completely disappeared. This has improved our lives enormously. Leo Fortin, 60, St-Georges, QC  Basically you saved my husband’s life. For the last 5 years my husband had very bad National Association for College Admission Counseling nights. Bell #23 was nothing short of a miracle. I have my husband back. No more snoring. No more napping during the FREE! day. I am telling all our friends. Bonnie Johnson, 64, Wichita, KS  My life changed. Sleep now 7-8 hours. I am a retired college professor and author of books. I have no more need to nap during the day. Nothing I tried helped until I started Bell Sound Sleep. I am so delighted with this product I would like to make motivational speeches to help others. Carmen V. Caruso, 66, Ann Arbor, MI On the Bell Website we list phone numbers or email addresses of actual users of this product and all other Bell products. Most are delighted to talk about their relief. Natural Superior HAIR Recommended by Dr. C. Hammoud, Ph.D. for fuller, thicker hair for men and women. Promotes stronger, shinier, healthier hair. Unique combination of ingredients make it a guaranteed superior product. Helps to rejuvenate your hair for a fuller and thicker appearance. Meet with more than 275 Feeds the roots of the hair by supplying them with the best hair nutrient ever discovered. Pleased users wrote us: colleges and universities at… Hair issues were noticeably reduced with first bottle! I tried many things that didn’t #77 work. After having good results with another Bell product, I was happy to see that Bell now has Super advanced this product. It worked well. Thanks! Cheryl Quick, 79, Naperuille, IL  I was skeptical! After formula #77 throwing my money away for years on other products and supplements I was skeptical. Your Portland Has been used Natural Superior Hair Formula #77 is worth every penny. I referred it to others I see who could successfully for many benefit from it. Very pleased. Richard Rawls, 51, Houston, TX years KING SIZE - 2 *These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product National College Fair months supply is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. AVAILABLE IN PORTLAND: Lloyd Center Pharmacy 438 East Burnside; The Way Herb Shop 1516 NE 111th Ave.; Herbal Health Center 829 SE 182nd #101.; General Nutrition Centers 7545 SW. Barnes Rd. Suite Friday, October 26 116; General Nutrition Centers 527 South West Alder St.;Super Supplements 1016 W. Burnside St.; Health Basics 4326 South East Woodstock PMB 465.MCMINNVILLE: Parkway Natural Foods 1351 NE. Hwy. 99W. OREGON CITY: Hippocrates Secrets S 19142 Molalla Ave.CLACKAMAS: Super Supplements 9919 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. SE Sunnyside Rd. SILVERTON: Silverton Pill Box 302 N. 1st. St. CANBY: Vitamin Plaza 121 North Grant St.ALSO AVAILABLE IN EUGENE: Evergreen Nutrition 1653 Willamette St.; Gregory Kahn DC PC. 642 Lincoln St. (541-342-3001).FLORENCE: The Herb Jar 2285 Hwy. 101 Ste. L.; Better Living Saturday, October 27 Center 85134 Highway 101. SPRINGFIELD: Wynant's Family Health Foods 722 South A St. To scan the QR code, LEBANON: Lebanon Pill Box 185 Main St.ENTERPRISE: Hone Chiropractic 68623 Eden Lane 541- you must download 398-2278. NORTH BEND: Bailey's Health Food Center 2235 Newmark St.BROOKINGS: The 1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. a QR scanner App. Health Shop 604 Railroad AvenueGOLD BEACH: Health Gallery Nutrition Center 29820 Ellensburg Ave. The QR code links to www.gotomyncf.com GRANTS PASS: R & D Labs 4488 Williams Hwy. LA GRANDE: Nature's Pantry Natural Foods 1907 4th St. In other towns try your local health food stores first. If they don’t have it and don’t want to Oregon Convention Center order it for you, order on our website or call us with Visa or Mastercard. S & H $9.95. www.BellLifestyle.com 1-800-333-7995 Portland, OR Bell uses the power of nature to To register visit www.gotomyncf.com help put life back into your lifestyle 402825.101012 BREAD & BREW: IMPROVISATIONAL STYLE AT MARKET — Page B2 THE SHORT LIST MISC. “FrightTown” It’s three haunted houses at Veterans Memorial Coliseum’s Exhibit Hall, co-produced by 1031 Community Theatre. Last year’s monster-fi lled darkness maze, “The Black Box,” returns Portland!Life with new monsters, new rooms and an all-new fi nale, and “Bar- SECTION B THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2012 on Von Goolo’s Museum of Hor- rors” revs up with overhauled trademark rooms. Through Oct. 31, Veterans Me- morial Coliseum, rosequarter. com, frighttown.com, $20 Distillers conference ■ Klezmer-manics bang out a decade of joy in one big shindig The eighth annual Great American Distillers Festival is a celebration of American spirits, with vendor product tastings, handcrafted cocktails and take- home recipes. Distillers will dis- play the unique qualities of rum, bourbon, whiskey, vodka and gin. 5 p.m. Friday, Oct. 19, 1 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 20, Tiffany Cen- ter, 1410 S.W. Morrison St., dis- tillersfestival.com, $15-$25, $25- $40 two-day pass “Flow State” Warren Miller Entertainment presents its 63rd annual winter sports feature fi lm and U.S. tour, which stops in Portland. Hosted by Jonny Moseley. The fi lm fea- tures sites in Norway, Austria, California, Switzerland, Japan and beyond. 5 and 9 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 20, 6 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 21, Bagdad Theater, 3702 S.E. Hawthorne Blvd., cascadetickets.com, 7:30 p.m. Friday, Oct. 26, Concert Hall, 1037 S.W. Broadway, ticketswest. com, $18-$20 Portland Cocktail Week The craft cocktail culture is celebrated with a gathering of bartenders, cocktail luminaries and industry enthusiasts for classes and tastings. More than 25 bars and restaurants are par- ticipating. Sunday-Thursday, Oct. 21-25, various locations (headquarters Jupiter Hotel), portlandcocktail- week.com (check for info) Sister Helen Prejean The bestselling author of “Dead Man Walking” and hu- man rights activist will speak in Portland. 4 p.m. Monday, Oct. 22, Chiles Center/University of Portland, COURTESY OF BEN Z. MUND PHOTOGRAPHY 5000 N. Willamette Blvd., 503- Vagabond Opera has released four albums and toured throughout the United States and Europe. Band leader Eric Stern says he draw infl uences from many genres, 943-7702. starting from a foundation of Eastern European klezmer. VAGABOND OPERA STAGE “Mother Courage and Her Children” Theatre Vertigo kicks off its 15th season with Bertolt Brecht’s passionate and pro- Rolls On found statement against war, set in 17th century Europe, trans- lated by Tony Kushner and di- rected by Third Rail vet John Steinkamp. 7:30 p.m. Thursdays-Satur- By JASON VONDERSMITH Nearly 10 years later it’s still going drug of music. We’ve gone to a place in the days, through Nov. 17, Theater! The Tribune strong, a band built on klezmer music and past two or three years where we’ve Theatre!, 3430 S.E. Belmont St., evolving into an eclectic group with belly learned from every music from around the theatrevertigo.org, $15 t was born Oct. 31, 2002, at Bella dancers and cabaret stars. world, that we use as tools and colors for Faccia Pizzeria on Northeast Al- Vagabond Opera will put on its sixth an- our palette. We’re more interested in creat- “Duck For President” I berta Street. nual Transylvania Voodoo Ball while also ing our original music. A lot of people say Why not, right? Oregon Chil- Dressed as a giant oven mitt, celebrating its 10-year anniversary, it’s Eastern Euro cabaret. It’s obviously not dren’s Theatre’s election pro- Robin Jackson walked in and no- Wednesday, Oct. 31, at Star Theater. It a rock band. We’re not a jazz band. We’re duction pits the Duck against ticed Eric Stern, an player wear- should be a heck of a party, given the fun not an opera company, although sometimes Farmer Brown for president. ing a top hat with bats on it. Not real bats, nature of Vagabond Opera, with its cos- we think as opera, with our voice still tak- 2 p.m. Saturdays-Sundays, 5 but paper-mache, Stern says now. tumes and range of music that can be hard ing shape. So, hopefully it’s a unique thing. p.m. Saturdays, through Nov. 4, Vagabond Opera had already come to life to defi ne. It’s defi nitely an ensemble project, even Newmark Theatre, 1111 S.W. through the creativity of Stern and friends, Trained in opera and schooled in East- though I lead it.” Broadway, ticketmaster.com, but it solidifi ed itself when he and Jackson ern European Jewish klezmer, Stern says The six-person group (including four $18-$30 adults, $15-$26 children met at the pizza place and later jammed Vagabond Opera has been perfectly at singers, featuring 15 languages) has together. home in Portland, which he calls “a labora- changed characters during the years, but “BloodyVox: Fresh Blood” “We could tell immediately we were sim- tory of music.” BodyVox celebrates the com- patico,” Stern says. He adds: “Klezmer is such a gateway See OPERA / Page 4 pany’s favorite holiday frightful fun, a Halloween classic with debuts of new choreography and fi lm elements from Jamey Hampton and Ashley Roland, artistic directors. 7:30 p.m. Thursdays-Saturdays and Halloween, 2 p.m. Saturdays, Oct. 18-Nov. 3, BodyVox Dance Center, 1201 N.W. 17th Ave., Author digs into bodyvox.com, starting at $36 mystery of archaeology MUSIC Portland Gay Men’s Chorus release date for his fourth and fi nal “Parallel Ops” The group, opening its 33rd R.J. Archer sees fascinating book, “The Teachers,” but it’ll still be in the works season, puts on its “Classical well into 2013. So, clearly, he’s counting on our Matinee” with the theme “Love plots in underwater sites lives not changing forever on Dec. 21. and Marriage.” 3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 21, Kaul By JASON VONDERSMITH A nice niche Auditorium/Reed College, 3203 The Tribune A technical writer and computer consultant by S.E. Woodstock Blvd., pdxgmc. trade while living in the Portland area for four de- org, starting at $17 Author R.J. “Dick” Archer admits to being cades, the 66-year-old Archer has delved into fi c- “a conspiracy theory fan.” tion writing in recent years, and moved to La Paz, Tony Lucca After all, his two series of books, “Seeds of Civi- Mexico, upon retirement three years ago. A big fan of NBC’s “The lization” and “Parallel Ops,” examine mysterious He has always been fascinated by the oceans, Voice?” The Season 2 winner archaeological fi nds and explore the possibility of being a diver and snorkeler — so, the Baja penin- and former Mickey Mouse Club ancient civilizations — in a fi ctionalized manner. sula of Mexico is a comfortable and convenient member alongside Christina But even he seriously doubts that things will place to call home. He lives there with his wife Aguilera and Britney Spears change on Dec. 21, 2012. (and publicist/marketer/designer), Marty, and will perform in Portland. He and The Mayan calendar supposedly ends then, and their children and grandchildren also live in the Diego Boneta (“Rock of Ages”) the fantastical among us believe our lives will be country. are part of the same record com- dramatically altered. He has carved out a nice niche for himself, as an pany, 222 Records, and Lucca Archer laughs. author bent on furthering the discussion of who will be joined by Tigard’s Justin “I really don’t believe that, and neither do the inhabited the planet thousands of years ago, Hopkins, another contestant on Maya,” he says. “A lot of articles have been written where they went and what they left behind — a “The Voice,” at Alberta Rose. TRIBUNE PHOTO: ALVARO FONTAN by college-educated Maya, who say we made all version of “Ancient Aliens,” the popular series on 8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 24, Al- Retired and living in La Paz, Mexico, author R.J. Archer remains that up. I don’t think the poles will shift and the The History Channel. The oceans hold many an- berta Rose Theatre, 3000 N.E. fascinated with the topic of ancient civilizations. He has penned seven Earth will tip over.” Alberta St., albertarosetheatre. books, with an eighth planned for 2013 release. Archer had originally targeted Dec. 21 as the See ARCHER / Page 2 com, $15, $17 day of show B2 LIFE Portland!Life The Portland Tribune Thursday, October, 18, 2012 Playful Market doesn’t mess with success hat kind of with sausage, broccoli rabe and food is it?” creme fraiche. Roast chicken. I get this Grilled hangar steak with aru- “Wquestion ev- gula pesto. ery time I mention Market, the It all sounds good, and for the new restaurant in the old Ca- most part the kitchen delivers rafe Bistro space. And I’m not with an improvisational style sure how to answer. that I would call Pacifi c North- BREAD Words like “market-driven,” west bistro — playful, but stop- “Continental,” and “contempo- well short of jokey. &BREW rary” look OK in print, but they Fried cheese curds, for in- don’t carry much meaning. It’s stance, are taken out of casual better just to take a look at the Friday mode and dressed in A biweekly restaurant menu: cocktail attire of crisp, airy tem- or bar review Prawns with bacon and Brus- pura. The curds are a creamy, sels sprouts. House-made pasta elastic mozzarella, mingled with mild, bright green padron pep- pers to keep things interesting. For something more seasonal, there’s a changing crostini selec- tion. Lately, they’ve been topped with either pears or beets. Slices of poached pear worked surprisingly well with brittle TRIBUNE PHOTOS: CHRISTOPHER ONSTOTT chips of prosciutto, cleansing The newly redesigned Market restaurant in Southwest Portland features a friendly staff and a rotating arugula, and candied walnuts. It menu by executive chef Troy Furuta. was a play of sweet and bitter, right down to the dressing, a burnt honey gastrique. and after 8 p.m. every day, you Oddly enough, the beet cros- can sit in the bar and have a sur- tini were the ones that were too prisingly fl avorful chicken burg- sweet — the sugar in golden er with mushrooms and Swiss beets overwhelmed a layer of cheese for $5. Add waffl e fries mild house-made ricotta. and a cocktail and your night- In all cases, though, the bread on-the-town restaurant be- was crisped and chewy, not over- Market’s happy comes an after-work hangout. toasted. Bread to start a meal hour dish of Cocktails are stylish classics was also handled with care. It roasted beets, with little extra touches. was charred just enough to add There’s fresh nutmeg atop a house-made some fl avor, with a subtle gleam Holland gin punch, and a saz- ricotta, toasted of butter, served in a cute little erac becomes exotic and spicy almonds and cast iron pan. with the addition of sriracha It was followed by Market’s watercress on a hot sauce. My favorite was the homey version of surf and turf: a crostini. Brooklyn cocktail, a bitter, for- rack of pork with two roly-poly ple, too: ice cream, sorbet, cus- But the restaurant is warm gotten cousin of the Manhat- prawns. They were united in a tard. and glowing, with an ivy-draped tan. It’s a vintage recipe, a sign rustic serving dish with savory roof, Parisian café chairs along that Market knows when to in- pork fried rice, with many Stylishly classic cocktails the sidewalk, and candles fl ick- novate and when to leave well chunks of tender, meaty mush- The chef is Troy Furuta, who ering inside. Periodically, events enough alone. room. To one side was a creamy has worked at at the Keller Auditorium bring version of a Mexican salsa verde, and Ping. Behind the venture is swarms of theater-goers to the Market Restaurant, 11 a.m.-2:30 which tasted of tomatillos, green ChefStable, the great and pow- vicinity, and Market appears p.m. Monday, 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Tues- chiles, and salt — mostly salt, erful wizard behind many of ready to oblige them. day-Friday, 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. Satur- unfortunately. Portland’s most high-profile With the exception of its day, closed Sunday, 200 S.W. Mar- Overall, it was a satisfying, restaurants. They’ve taken a Google-baffl ing name, it’s user ket St., 503-248-0004, market-pdx. self-contained meal, eclectic gamble, here, on a diffi cult lo- friendly, with free valet parking com, entrees $22-$26 without feeling over-thought. cation in a bleak part of down- after 5 p.m. and substantial hap- OREGON HUMANE SOCIETY The menu is quite concise, offer- town that always feels about 10 py hour discounts, both before portlandtribunefood@gmail. ing about five starters and as degrees colder than the rest of and after the dinner hour. From com and on Facebook at Bread many entrees. Desserts are sim- the city. 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. on weekdays, & Brew Creative services donated by Leopold Ketel & Partners. 327551.092712 PT Archer: Series looks at unknowns ■ out the use of wheels to move out. (For info on books, go to From page 1 things. rjarcherbooks.com). “Why were they so advanced Archer says archaeology has swers, Archer says, and just as in one area and so primitive in been “a big yawn” for him in the the ocean remains the great un- other areas?” Archer asks. past, but writing the books has explored area of our inhabitable “Tsubute” centers around the piqued his interest. He’s curious sphere, he expects clarity in Yonaguni pyramid in the waters to see what researchers and aca- questions as time goes on. off Japan. Subsequent discover- demic types choose to explore “Everything we know about ies were made of other pyra- and acknowledge in the future; archaeology is derived from the mids. he says fi ndings and theories dis- study of 30 percent of the plan- “That’s a lost civilization,” Ar- pel accepted beliefs and truths et,” he says. “There’s still 70 per- cher says. among academics. cent (the oceans) that archaeolo- And, “Triangle” is about con- “Archaeologists like to dig in gists haven’t looked at. Because temporary work near Bimini Is- the dirt and not in the mud,” he of the rise in oceans since the land (the Bahamas), “where says. “Like with the Bahamas, last Ice Age, there are millions of they’ve demonstrated there was there are enough people who miles of coastline that are now an advanced culture there about have published articles about underwater that would have 15,000 years ago, thousands of what’s there, or think is there, been inhabitable 20,000 years years before they thought the you would think someone would ago. That would have been the Indians first came to North have got interested and mounted logical place to build communi- America, and three times as old a major expedition. It doesn’t ties back then. as the pyramids in Egypt,” Ar- seem to be happening. “Whatever was there, and I cher says. “They were an ad- “And there are sites in India believe there were a lot of sites, vanced maritime culture that and all over Asia, especially near those are all underwater and built harbors and structures to the equator, where they’ve found they haven’t been explored.” protect the harbors. ... A lot of underwater strange things.” His debut book in the fi rst se- things left unexplained. ... I think He understands that people ries, “Tractix,” introduces his Bimini is the tip of the iceberg.” dispute the existence of ancient

402172.101112 four characters and how the The “Parallel Ops” books are civilizations, especially when Maya could predict solar eclips- “The Scientists,” “The Infor- considering an influence from es to the minute, yet lived with- mants” and “The Guardians,” aliens. the latter his newest release, and “I’m not sure I believe that my- the second series follows the self,” Archer says. “But, the ar- four fictional characters and chaeology is all real and all mys- their attempts to fi gure things terious.”

OCT. 20 MQX West VISIT CAMPAIGN CENTRAL AT Returns to Portland A Great Quilt Show DUCKFORPRESIDENT.ORG NOV. 4 in a Great City! NEWMARK THEATRE

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Bring this coupon to the show for Adapted from Duck For President. www.MQXWest.com Text copyright © by Doreen Cronin. Illustrations copyright © by $1 OFF Admission Betsy Lewin. Originally Published PRESENTED BY SUPPORT PROVIDED BY MEDIA SPONSOR MEDIA SPONSOR 866.675.4355 by Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing. Used with permission Machine Quilters Exposition, LLC of Pippin Properties, Inc. 398612.101812 The Portland Tribune Thursday, October 18, 2012 Portland!Life LIFE B3

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well within the demands of his style, Opera: LiveMusic! which evokes that of Leonard Cohen and other similarly minded poetic, conversa- By ROB CULLIVAN tional writers. His second album “Royal Pamplin Media Group Violent Birds” features his brother, Tim Dancers Ward, who played with Brusseau in pop- Oct. 18 punk band The Jimmies, as well as Sally Ford and the Sound Outside’s Tyler Torn- bolster The girls are back in town felt, Double Clicks’ Aubrey Webber on In September, the Japanese all-female cello, and jazz horn player Michael Paul. rock ‘n’ roll trio Akabane Vulgars put on Barry Brusseau, Jon Ransom, Cait lineup a killer show at Slabtown that most of you Olds, 8 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 20, Secret Soci- missed. Now you have a chance for re- ety Ballroom, 116 N.E. Russell St. $5. Info: demption by checking out this powerful 503-493-3600, secretsociety.net. ■ From page 1 semi-thrashy punk-blues-a-billy trio fea- turing sisters Yumi Uchinozo, on guitar Grass with class has enjoyed the same lineup for and vocals, and Miki Uchinozo on bass The Eastside Bluegrass Series takes almost fi ve years: Stern, tenor/ and vocals, as well as Kei Sofue, on drums place at Freedom Foursquare Church, 660 accordionist/pianist/composer; and vocals. The group explodes like old- S.E. 160th Ave., every third Saturday of the Jackson, saxophonist; Jason school punk rockers on stage, and es- month. The fi rst concert of this year’s se- “Krivo” Flores, upright and elec- chews pretty soprano vocals that often ries is from 7-9:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 20. tric bassist/gypsy and Mexican characterize female bands for straight-on, Jamming takes place in the lobby starting guitarist/melodica; Ashia Grze- almost guttural alto-fl avored attack. at 5:30 p.m. This week’s acts are Coral sik, vocalist; Mark Burdon, COURTESY OF JOAN MARCUS Akabane Vulgars, You Guys, DJ Ken Creek, which plays gospel and bluegrass; drummer/composer; Skip Want tickets to “Book of Mormon,” the Broadway hit coming to Portland in January? Dirtnap, The Cry! 9 p.m. Thursday, Oct. Seth Moran; and Bass Mandolin, featuring vonKuske, cellist. Dr. Xander Good luck. There’ll be a lottery for tickets the day of each show. 18, Slabtown, 1033 N.W. 16th Ave. $5. Info: Josh Feinberg on upright bass and Brian Gerrymander serves as manag- 971-229-1455. Oberlin on mandolin. The duo plays a er and “Diva Handler.” Ursula com and pcpa.com, the latter the Port- combination of classical, jazz, Indian, blue- Knudson often joins the band as Bits&Pieces land Center for the Performing Arts Oct. 19 grass and swing. guest artist. website. Suggested donation is $10. Children are But, “winds of change are About 3,000 people will attend each of Different kind of duo admitted free. For more information, visit blowing,” Jackson says. Grzesik By JASON VONDERSMITH the eight shows, meaning 24,000 lucky We’ve got lots of guitar-drum duos eastsidebluegrass.com, or write eastside- The Tribune plans to head to Europe to sing folks will get to see “Book of Mormon” in these days, so it’s time for other instru- [email protected]. with the Berlin Circus. The band Portland. And, there are 10,000 subscrib- ments to take the stage, and Big Gigantic has hired a new singer, Sophie ers who had early dibs on tickets. does just that with Dominic Lalli’s lyrical Oct. 21 Bloch, who will perform during Book of Money Each time “Wicked” has come to Port- saxophone, which would not sound out of the Halloween show; she and Trey Parker’s “South Park” musical, land, it has resulted in a lottery for each place on a 1980s cop movie soundtrack. Brothers’ benefi t Jackson attended high school to- “Book of Mormon,” has taken the the- show. “Rent” also had lottery tickets. Lalli and his musical partner, Jeremy Portland’s Brothers of the Baladi play gether in Eugene. ater world by storm lately. And, the Salken, also use electronic beats and sam- Middle Eastern and world music in Ara- Vagabond Opera has put out storm enters Portland Jan. 1 to 6 at All Gaga pling to augment their fl amboyant attack, bic, Turkish, Spanish, Farsi, Armenian, four albums, including “Sing For Keller Auditorium. which would appeal to fans of hip-hop, French and English, mixing exotic Your Lives” last year. It has Tickets went on sale Oct. 5 and if you Tickets for Lady Gaga’s “Born This smooth jazz, dubstep, house and funk. rhythms with familiar grooves and tradi- toured throughout the U.S. and weren’t quick enough, nearly all of Way Ball” tour stop at the Rose Garden, Big Gigantic, Griz, 9 p.m. Friday Oct. tional instruments, including Middle East- Europe. them sold without you bagging good 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 15, go on sale at 19, Wonder Ballroom, 128 N.E. Russell St. ern percussion and reed instruments “I’ve never found anything seats. 10 a.m. Friday, Oct. 19. Again, get on the $16. $20. All ages. Info: 503-284-8686, won- alongside guitar, bass and drums. The that close to us (in style),” Jack- Just like with any big event — the- phone early (1-877-789-7673), or online derballroom.com. quartet will feature music from their 2008 son says. ater, music (Bruce Springsteen), sports (rosequarter.com) or stop by Rose Grammy nominated CD “Just Do What’s “We’ve toured enough that a — there will be offers on the secondary Quarter box offi ce or Safeway/Tickets- Oct. 20 Right” as well as from their other 10 CDs, scene has picked us up,” he adds. market. While regular tickets go as West outlets. Tickets are $49.50 to $175, at this 11th annual Daniel Pearl World “Cabaret, Steampunk, bur- high as about $100, a look at scalper plus service charges. Barry good Music Days. lesque, Vulcan groupies ... we are sites show that tickets for “Book of Portland singer-songwriter Barry Brothers of the Baladi, Grace Constan- more known than we actually Mormon” are going for twice to five GuignolFest Brusseau is reportedly somewhat inse- tine, Deviant Duet, 7 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 21, tour. We’ve worked hard at it.” times the regular price. cure about the “imperfections of my Tony Starlight’s Supper Club, 3728 N.E. The band has picked up interna- But local promoters warn: Buyer be- The fourth annual GuignolFest Hor- voice.” It’s not clear why since it’s got a Sandy Blvd. $10. Info: 503-288-4684, 503- tional influences — Bohemian ware. A lot of times online scalper tick- ror Movie Contest, a do-it-yourself great timbre and nice range, and works 517-8584, danielpearlmusicdays.org. neo-cabaret gypsy-pop, tango, Bal- ets are not guaranteed; they are e-tick- event, will be held in October, starting kan beats, Arab music, Parisian ets, and often they do not translate to at 9 p.m. Friday, Oct. 19 at Red Flag, 344 hot jazz — and plans to tour again, you getting through the turnstile at N.E. 28th St. while also expanding its appeal. Keller. Portland horror fi lmmakers will pro- Belly dancers Rachel Brice and Broadway Across America, which duce movies, seven to 10 minutes long, Karolina Lux will join Vagabond conducts the musical tours that stop at starting at midnight opening night, and Opera at its Oct. 31 show. the Keller, will hold a lottery for tickets drop them off 72 hours later at Red Flag. “We continue to reach out to for each of the eight “Book of Mormon” Screenings will take place at 9 p.m. Oct. 28. who we think are the best in our shows. Details will be released later, A panel will judge the films. Last community, especially in Port- but it’s expected that a limited number year’s panel included Jedediah Aaker land,” Stern says. of tickets — likely orchestra level — (“Portlandia”), Tres Shannon (VooDoo Vagabond Opera will be will be released for the lottery the day Doughnuts) and David Cress (“Port- joined by Russian party band of each show. Basically, scores of people landia”). Chervona and Dum Spiro Spero will stand in line at the Keller Audito- For info, go to dylzone.wix.com/ with Flip Cassidy and the Junk- rium box offi ce and be given numbers grandguignolpdx. yard Gospel, as well as dancers — if your name/number is called, you Big Gigantic’s Rachel Brice and Karolina Lux get into the show. Jack Daniel’s competition melodramatic for its Halloween gig, 8 p.m. Also, some limited view seats are still dance party Wednesday, Oct. 31 at Star The- available, and there could be cancella- Movin’ The Chains, a professional hits Wonder ater, 13 N.W. Sixth Ave. tions (visit Portland Opera box offi ce, barbecue team from Beaverton, has Ballroom Tickets are $16, $20 at door 211 S.E. Caruthers St., or call 503-241- qualifi ed for the 24th annual Jack Dan- on Oct. 19. (startheaterportland.com). For 1802). The only place to get guaranteed iel’s World Championship Invitational COURTESY OF information, go to vagabondop- tickets online: broadwayacrossamerica. Barbecue, Oct. 27 in Lynchburg, Tenn. BIG GIGANTIC era.com.

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Color Your Garden a Petitti exclusive collection! Container Gardeningp21 more impact - less work Annuals, Perennials & Nursery See what’s NEW for ‘12 If you are in need of custom printing, give us a call! It doesn’t matter what the piece is, or how you plan to distribute. Simply choose the paper, ink colors and the quantity. Whether we design it for you, or use your press-ready artwork, you can be sure your printed piece is exactly what you want. We can even direct mail to a targeted area, or even to a targeted sort of individual. You decide who should get your message, we’ll take care of the rest! We want to be your printer! Contact Don Atwell for a quote today! 503.492.5132 [email protected] 327880.100112 SG 327880.100112 The Portland Tribune Thursday, October 18, 2012 NEWS B5

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

Your Neighborhood Marketplace

Help Business Health Care Pets & Supplies Wanted Opportunities Equipment

RALLY 4-wheel motorized NEED HELP ATTENTION scooter, like new! New was PLACEMENT INFORMATION $1,900, sell for $900 OBO. Animals & WITH YOUR READERS (503) 674-0109 Telephone: Due to the quantity and Agriculture (503) 620-SELL (7355) CLASSIFIED variety of business op- Community portunity listings we re- Shower bench-$35, Rail AD? ceive, it is impossible for support for tub-$40, Wall CHLOE: Weighing in at Fax: Calendar us to verify every oppor- mount support bars-$20, only 10 pounds, Chloe is (503) 620-3433 tunity advertisement. Folding walker-$40, Bed- quite the dynamo! She is Call Mindy! Readers respond to side toilet (brand new)-$80, full of energy and is a ton business opportunity Oak entertain center-$200. of fun to be around. E-Mail: 503-546-0760 WILSONVILLE: Chloe’s a youngster, born for ad rates, general ads at their own risk. If (503)528-4715 - PDX info@ Sts Brendan & Bridgid in doubt about a partic- 9/20/10, and a diamond in information or help the ruff. She is sharing a Community-classifieds.com writing your ad in any one Catholic Mission ular offer, check with the Lawnmowers An inclusive, contemporary Better Business Bureau, home with other dogs and of our & ecumenical Catholic a cat and gets along with Address: Community Newspaper 503-226-3981 or the congregation. Consumer Protection and wants to play with eve- 6606 SE Lake Road Publications First Mass: ADELE: Rumour Has It, ryone! Please call Animal and get the RESULTS Agency, 503-378-4320, AL’S MOWERS Portland, OR 97269 Sun, October 21, 2:00 PM BEFORE investing any I’m a real sweetheart who Aid 503-292-6628 or visit you want! Communion Table open to Guaranteed used Gas, just loves people once I our Web site: money. Hand & Electric mowers, Office Hours: ALL baptized Christians. know I can trust them. I’m www.animalaidpdx.org for [email protected] No one excluded because Chainsaws a gorgeous grey tabby who more information. 8 am - 5 pm of belief, conscience, or life Loans Tune-ups & Repair loves to pose for the cam- circumstances. Trade-Ins Welcome! era! Despite being named www.catholicswithadifference.com Call 503-771-7202 after a famous singer, I’m a Meeting at St Francis of 8828 SE Division Street quiet cat who would love a Assisi Episcopal Church It is illegal for companies quiet home to call my own. Help Wanted 8818 SW Miley Road doing business by phone to Machinery & Tools Then everything would be Wilsonville, OR 97070 promise you a loan and Right as Rain. I’ll Be Wait- (Take Charbonneau Road ing right here for you. FELLA: I get a lot of com- Job Opportunities ask you to pay for it before pliments on my unique exit off I-5) they deliver. For more in- Please call 503-292-6628 GENERATOR: Briggs & and ask for Adele or visit: style. I’m mostly DRIVER: $0.03 enhanced formation, call toll-free smoke/charcoal color but I Help 1-877-FTC HELP. A public Stratton, 5 hp, used only www.animalaidpdx.org for quarterly bonus. Get paid more information.. have a silver lining/ to for any portion you qualify Personals service message from once. $200. Wanted (503) 522-1702 play; I’ve got so much en- for: safety production, Community Classifieds and ergy and love to give! MPG, CDL-A, 3 months the Federal Trade Com- Some people say I’ve got it ENVIRONMENTAL mission. HEALTH & SAFETY MGR. current OTR experience. SHOP VAC - all: the softest fur, the Clark College, Vancouver, 800-414-9569 ❤ADOPT❤ A loving Wet-Dry/Contractor. Heavy BETTINA: A young dilute loudest purr, good health, WA is seeking to fill FT po- www.driveknight.com family longs to provide Duty, portable 5 gallon, 5.5 Calico who wears her fes- and heart melting cuddles. sition. Reports to Dir. of everything for 1st baby. HP. All accessories in- tive Halloween colors 365 The only thing I’m missing Help Risk Mgmnt. & is responsi- DRIVERS: Get on the Playful pup, Beaches, cluded, excellent condition. days a year. Her muted is a home to call my own ble for directing, develop- ROAD FAST! IMMEDIATE laughter, Security. $50.00. Call (503) grey and orange is medium and caring people to love Wanted ing, planning & managing OPENINGS! TOP PAY, Expenses paid. Robin, 803-5527, please leave length and she keeps im- me as much as I would the Environmental Health FULL BENEFITS, CDL-A, ❤ ❤ 1-800-990-7667❤ ❤ message. maculate care of it. She is love them. Please call & Safety Program. Salary Hazmat, Doubles Re- Merchandise super friendly and outgoing 503-292-6628 and ask for CAREGIVER is $52,836 annually. Clos- quired! Haney Truck Line, - a great girl for an active Fella or visit our website: Compassionate and relia- ing date is 3:00 p.m., Nov. CALL NOW! Miscellaneous for family. Come meet Bettina www.animalaidpdx.org for ble care. Assist with AM 2, 2012. For complete po- 1-888-414-4467 and her friends this Friday more information. Sale and Saturday from 11-4 at HS care & showers. sition description, require- www.GOHANEY.com GERMAN SHEPHERD Relief/Part-Time needed. ments & to apply go to: The Oregon Cat Project, TREE SPRAYER, 25 gal., 342 B Ave, Lake Oswego. PUPPIES, AKC, Born Good references. Call www.clark.edu/jobs DRIVERS: 9/17, hand raised, sire and (503) 543-3747. TVH/AFH. Clark College HR, Appliances with hose & nozzle - $125. It’s an “Adults Only Week- Inexperience/Experienced. STOCK TANK, 100gal $50 end” with adoption fees dam on site, Active, 1933 Ft. Vancouver Way, Unbeatable career oppor- intelligent and ‘’oh, so Vancouver WA 98663. RUFF-HOUSE (large dog running between $10 and tunities. Trainee, Company house) $45. (503)543-6394 $40 through the luck of the cute.’’ Come and pick your (360) 992-2105 Driver, Lease Operator, puppy. $600. Picture on re- Grapple Truck Operator WASHER & DRYER: GE, draw. For more informa- AA/EO Employer Lease Trainers quest. Leave Msg.. 5-speed, lightly used, need tion: TheOregonCat.Org Wanted. (877)369-7104 Business Miscellaneous 360-262-9674. the room, $50/each. Call, Must have valid Class A GENERAL LABOR www.centraltruckdrivingjobs.com CDL, with 2 year verifiable Opportunities 503-563-5947. Wanted GERMAN SHEPHERD Fabricating panels and ma- PUPPIES/ADULT MALE exp. Must pass drug & terials. Forklift exper help- PLEASE NOTE: background checks. Cemetery Lots COIN COLLECTOR RARE OPPORTUNITY ful but not required, Clean Abbreviations destroy the LOOMIX FEED supple- BRITTANY pups, Pure- East/West DDR working Please call DMV printout required. intent of your advertise- Cash paid for older U.S. or Greg @ 678-576-8151, ments is seeking dealers. foreign coins. I will travel bred. Very cute, happy international championship Call 253-863-0348 or ment. Your advertisement Motivated individuals with lineage: Heavy bones; or Dan @ 515-557-0299. Fax: (253)863-0385 should be attractive and to you if you cannot travel & healthy. Great family cattle knowledge and com- CEMETERY PLOTS: 2, to me. | (503)407-7269 Strong head type; Great easy to read. Let us help munity ties. Contact pets. | 503-666-8582 pigmentation; Strong you put together your ad- side-by-side at Forest Bethany @ 800-870-0356 / Lawn Cemetery in working drive. vertisement. Call us today [email protected] 2 litters, males and ELP ANTED at: Gresham. Endowment WANTED: H ELP WANTED to find out if there is a deal- care included, $2,900. Call females/10 weeks old 503-620-SELL(7355) ership opportunity in your DIABETIC TEST Dark mahogany, black and www.community-classifieds.com 503-666-1109. Carmella is a heart stopper area. STRIPS - not only does she have tan, sables. Excellent Christmas Trees Can pay up to $20.00 the cutest face ever, but temperament, kid and per box. Call Sharon - she and her siblings are adult handled. Adult male 5 0 3. 6 7 9. 3 6 0 5 also manx (no tails). They is Advertising Marketing Consultant & Trim obedience trained HELP WANTED look like fuzzy little bears when they tumble and play. PUPPIES: $850.00 - Community Newspapers has an immediate opening for $2500.00 ADULT MALE: WANTED: Indian Artifacts, They want to invite you to a full time Advertising Marketing Consultant. The The Oregon Cat Project’s $3000.00 (to qualified successful candidate must be self-motivated, possess SALES ASSISTANT Arrowheads & Beadwork. home). Visit our website for Call 503-663-0937. Kitten Spooktacular where the ability to multi-task, work in a fast paced environment Part-Time over 150 kittens will be more information. and meet deadlines.You will work with existing available for adoption. The ZimmerhoffGermanShepherds.com customers as well as seek out new business.You will be We’re seeking a dedicated team player for 15-18 busy SANDY/ESTACADA, hours each week. This person should be able to handle event is Saturday, Oct 27 driven, like to work with people and have a desire to be WANTED; Danish OREGON AREA heavy deadlines while working as part of a busy sales at the Hotel Monaco in 503-686-0217 successful. Sales experience preferred but not modern , teak, mid Downtown PDX from 11-4 necessary. Our marketing consultants meet with local team. Basic computer skills for data entry, strong 503-637-3163 communication skills and a customer service orientation century designer furni- and will be the largest businesses to develop marketing plans and strategies to ture & accessories! event of its kind ever held grow their business. are required. We are open M-F, days, but would offer flexible hours within that timeframe to the right 503-317-7009 in Portland. Come check candidate. Compensation is $15 per hour. Benefits are out Carmella and her This position reports to the Advertising Director at the friends of every size and Gresham Outlook. We offer an above average base not available to part-time employees. For consideration, please send a resume to: Box 355, c/o: Community Douglas Fir Musical Instruments/ color. For more informa- salary, generous commission plan and benefits including tion: TheOregonCat.Org medical, 401(k) plan, vacation and more. A valid driver’s Classifieds, PO Box 22109, Portland OR 97269. OPEN: Entertainment license and reliable vehicle with insurance is required. Nov 25th - Dec 23rd HOAGIE & OLIVIA: Meow! 8am - Dusk We’re the yin and yang of If you are looking for a an opportunity with a growing 1-1/2 Miles E of GIBSON MANDOLIN, 100 kitties! Olivia is the lively company that values its people and has a strong Milwaukie on Lake Road years old, in beautiful ENGLISH BULLDOGS playful one and I’m, Hoa- community service ethic, please submit your resume to: at Freeman Road shape. Sounds wonderful! gie, the smooth, suave and Cheryl Swart, Advertising Director,The Gresham Includes hard case. debonair half! Although I Outlook, 1190 NE Division, Gresham, OR 97030 or $1,900. 503-987-1320 - must admit I do enjoy e-mail your resume to: SALES ASSISTANT Firewood/ Scappoose chasing the laser light be- [email protected] tween snuggles. You’ll Heating Supplies never lack for love or atten- Community Newspapers and the Portland Tribune Sell it today tion when you adopt us. publish eighteen newspapers in Portland and suburban FREE FIREWOOD: U-Cut, We are hoping to celebrate Business Development Professional markets. We are currently seeking a skilled support haul & clean site. Oregon in the the New Year at home with person to join our busy retail advertising team. City area. Call for info: you! Please call We are seeking a dynamic, organized and self-driven 503-656-8147. Classifieds. AKC registered, first professional to join our team selling print advertising to 503-292-6628 option 3 or The selected individual will work with a group of shots, born 8/6/12.. visit our website: regional and national accounts. This position is advertising executives to assist with scheduling, responsible for acquiring new accounts, as well as Furniture/ Call 503-620-SELL Call BRADY’S BULL- www.animalaidpdx.org for preparing ad copy, proofing and other day-to-day (503-620-7355) more information. maintaining relationships with existing clients. We’re activities. This person will also support the entire Home Furnishings DOGS : 541-280-6268 looking for someone who can identify advertising department in a variety of ways, including booking ads, opportunities and go after them, find unconventional dummying newspapers, coordinating with creative ways to explore new revenue ideas, and keep the new services, reconciling billing issues and more. We’re accounts coming in. Experience in print sales is looking for someone who is good at working with a vari- PPAREL EWELRY essential, while media buying, selling and financial ety of personality types, has strong computer skills, is A PPAREL/J EWELRY forecasting is preferred. great on the phone and is very organized. Knowledge of the newspaper business is a plus. Ours is a fast-paced work environment, and we depend KITTENS: CFA registered chinchilla silver Persian kit- on the effort of each member of our team. In return, we This is a part-time position (25 hours per week) with $295 offer a base salary plus commission, health benefits, tens. Grand Champion lin- potential for future full-time employment. NEW PILLOW TOP SET WE BUY GOLD age, show quality. 14 401k, life & disability insurances and a 125 plan. For For consideration, please forward a resume with cover Full or Queen Mattress Set Sterling Flatware -Silver-Pocket Watches consideration please send a resume, including salary weeks, male and female letter and salary requirement to: Call for Info: 503.775.6735 $500. Call 360-823-9425. requirement, to: Box 354, c/o: Community Classifieds, [email protected] www.applecrate.net PO Box 22109, Portland, OR 97269. No phone calls, please. The Jewelry Buyer LAB PUPS 20th N.E. Sandy PDX 503-239-6900 AKC registered, incredible bloodlines, super hunters www.jewelrybuyerportland.com and great family dogs. Yellow & black pups available. Ready for M-Fri. 9:30-5 Sat 10-4 Christmas. $1,200. Mark @ (509) 961-6411 BASIC PLATFORM BED Made of hardwood. ALL NEW! $199 Queen or Full, Pumpkin 5 finishes. Mattress extra. Patch Call for info. 503-775-6735 GRESHAM WEST LINN THOMPSON FARMS ESTATE SALE PORTLAND’S CHAIR: Large Tan/Gold LARGEST GARAGE SAMPLE SALE Microfiber Chair, Like New! ‘’Swan Song’’ 20322 NOBLE LN New Lower Price, 850 NE THIRD ST SALE FRI & SAT: 9-3 Fresh Picked $100/OBO. Hundreds of Sales Gift items, greeting cards, 503-659-1637 FRI, SAT, SUN: 11-4 FRUITS & VEGETABLES Antiques, collectibles, Hav- NOV 3: 8 am-5 pm & more iland China, books! LPs, PORTLAND EXPO DINING SET: Drexel table Cloissonne’, Kerosene CENTER PLEASE NOTE: & 6 ivory colored uphol- lamps, tools, Everything!!! Abbreviations destroy the Visit our Pumpkin Patch stered chairs, 2 table Sellers & Shoppers intent of your advertise- leaves & pads, china hutch Wanted ment. Your advertisement for an abundance of pumpkins, & side cabinet. Beautiful GRESHAM www.portlandgsale.com should be attractive and Condition! $2,000/OBO. ‘’Make A Difference easy to read. Let us help fall produce & seasonal decor. NE Ptld | (503)231-4754 Book Sale’’ you put together your ad- To place your vertisement. Call us today Horse-Drawn Pumpkins Community Classifieds Located 5 miles south of Powell on SE 242nd Hayrides at: Oct. 13-14, advertisement, 503-620-SELL(7355) call 503-620-SELL(7355). www.community-classifieds.com or 1 mile north of HWY 212 on 242nd. 20-21, 27-28 Gourds 503-667-9138 Sweet Corn GRESHAM LIBRARY OREGON’S LARGEST 503-658-4640 385 NW MILLER AVE No Insecticides fall decor SAT, 10/27 & SUN, or Fungicides. NEW BUNK BEDS 10/28 from 12p - 5p 3-DAY GUN & KNIFE SHOW Just Great All hardwoods, twin/twin, Connections Commu- October 19, 20 & 21 Taste!! Apples & pears Cherry, Chocolate, white, nity, Inc. is a Non-Profit $269. Twin mattresses, organization. Proceeds Portland Expo Center Cauliflower $99 each. (503) 775-6735 benefit local charities such as David’s Harp. (I-5 exit 306B) VEGGIES 26483.100212c PIANO, LAKE OSWEGO Fri: 12-6 Sat: 9-5 Sun: 10-4 Just in time for GARAGE SALE Conveniently located on the corner Christmas!! Admission $9 Beautiful ivory color, 5545 KILCHURN AVE of 222nd & Borges Rd., Damascus Samick, upright, like FRI-SAT: 9 - 4p OPEN: 9am-6pm M-Sat • 10-5 Sun new, with matching Furniture, house & yard 1 (800) 659-3440 bench. | $4500 items, Holiday decor, 503.658.2237 • www.olson-farms.com 503-598-9309 - Tigard books, Collectibles, and www.CollectorsWest.com 24209.100212c miscellaneous.

COMMUNITY CLASSIFIEDS ✵ YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD MARKETPLACE ✵ 503-620-SELL (7355) ✵ 8:30AM - 5:00PM ✵ WWW.COMMUNITY-CLASSIFIEDS.COM B6 NEWS The Portland Tribune Thursday, October 18, 2012

Pets & Supplies Homes for Sale Cars For Sale HAPPY VALLEY: Service Directory Home & Professional Services Apartments for Rent LUCINDA: Woof! Are you looking for tail wagging fun, View!!! Top of Mt Scott a wiggle butt, and love all 3 bdrm, 2 ½ ba, 2 story in one package? It’s me! contemporary w/view of Cleaning/Organizing Floors Landscape Lucinda’s my name and I West Hills, on 1ac w/barn, MERCEDES-BENZ haven’t met anyone I don’t ideal for family & entertain- ❃ ❃ ❃ ❃ SL500, 2003, Hardtop con- Maintenance like and my foster mom ing, 60’ garage, landscp Show Your Apt vertible. Excel condition! thinks I would do well with w/3 waterfalls, $475,000. Special Launch Edition, children and would make a Rentals in HAIGHT’S FLOORS Also avail, 5 other view lots Designo Edition, includes GARCIA great family dog. I am a pe- Gresham Butte & ‘’When Quality Matters’’ MAINTENANCE tite gal at less than 20 Mt.Scott. 503-887-0070. 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Building & •Retaining structural 541-410-8084 (cell) & remote entry, powered walls •Driveways & Hardworking’’ MB PAINTING Sec 8 OK Junk, Yard & Building Sun Roof, dual 12V outlets Remodeling Since 1978 [email protected] CCB#31044 Debris; Attic, Garage & 160K mi. | $2,800 Rental Clean-outs. email for details (503)397-5511 503-760-2997 NOTICE: www.cnw-inc.com Rick, (503) 705-6057 503-630-4300 Oregon Construction Mini Vans & Contractors’ Law (ORS 701) SARA: Rescued from a ne- CANBY/WILSONVILLE Passenger Vans Requires anyone who con- Decks *Interior / Exterior Miscellaneous tracts for construction work *Clean quality work glect situation, Sara was NEW HOME ~ $329,900 Gerry Dean’s very shy & scared when to be licensed with the Cleanup *Cabinets/woodwork she arrived at the shelter. Rentals Construction Contractors’ After some patience & at- Board. An active license (503) 244-4882 *Free est. CCB#56492. tention she’s blossomed means the contractor is www.mbpainting.us into an adoring girl. She OREGON CITY: bonded and insured. Verify Total Quality Deck Call Matt @ would love to spend her HALL RENTAL the contractor’s CCB li- Restoration Landscape second chance at life, giv- cense through the CCB ‘’No job too small’’ 503-640-0632 Strip, sand, stain, repair. ing you all the love she Brand New 1 Level 2021sf, Consumer Web site: Maintenance wwwhiralicensedcontractor.com Power Washing Drive- can! Please call Great Room plan w/3 car FORD MARK III 2000, 503-292-6628 or visit our www.ccb.state.or.us ways & sidewalks garage & lots of upgrades, Van conversion. Fully Call 1-503-378-4621 Plumbing & website for more info: vaulted ceilings, slab coun- loaded! DVD player, four DECK ** AFFORDABLE ** www.animalaidpdx.org ters, Alder cabinets, SS Captain’s chairs, fold-down Quality Maintenance & Drainage applces, hdwd floors & Accommodates large & backseat bed, seats 7. 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COMMUNITY CLASSIFIEDS ✵ YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD MARKETPLACE ✵ 503-620-SELL (7355) ✵ 8:30AM - 5:00PM ✵ WWW.COMMUNITY-CLASSIFIEDS.COM The Portland Tribune Thursday, October 18, 2012 SPORTS B7

©2012 Media Services S-9467 OF26219R-1 We live in an area which is known for very cold winters. Enclosed you will find printouts of our electric bill Our facility is nearly 7000 square feet in area. When we be- and gas/heating/cooking bills for 2007 - 2008. Our gan to utilize the first unit we were amazed to see how gas company, AmeriGas, stated that more money was even the heat was for the entire living room area. We or- saved than would show up because of the cost going dered a second and a third unit which now warms the en- up. We would turn the gas on early in the morning tire home. Much to our surprise we are saving over $250 a and turn it down to 60 degrees; We would use the month and had the lowest expense for heating we have EdenPURE® heaters from then on and they provided ever experienced here. I would heartily recommend your such warmth and cozy heat. Many of our friends have products to anybody who is interested in really nice, even heat in their home and informed me recently that they are going to purchase these heaters for their also interested in saving on their utility expenses. homes this winter. Dennis Crystal, Troy, MT (Retired Airline Pilot) Gloria D. Smith, Boydton, VA (Retired Elementary Principal) EdenPURE® reopens Ohio factory creates 250 new jobs New models shipped direct from warehouse at 49% savings

Richard Karn, Never be cold again How it works: North Canton, Ohio I was fortunate enough to attend the grand opening of the new EdenPURE® factory in North Canton, Ohio. The new plant brought hundreds of new jobs back to Ohio and reversed the common practice of send- ing Midwest manufacturing jobs to China. Now, Eden- PURE® continues to ramp up production for the coming Winter with exciting new models and hundreds of new employees as this Made in America success story contin- ues to grow. American Labor, Ameri- CUTAWAY can Quality Heats floor to the VIEW With over 3 million porta- same temperature ble heaters sold EdenPURE® as ceiling. 3. The soft heat “rides” is the best selling portable in- the humidity in the frared heating system in room and provides North America. However, 1. Electricity ignites powerful like any classic, EdenPURE® SYLVANIA infrared lamp. even, moist, soft heat has dozens of would-be com- ceiling to floor and petitors who create Asian wall to wall without copies at low prices using 2. The quartz infrared lamp gently warms the reducing oxygen and PERSONAL MODEL 750 cheap, foreign labor. Don’t patented copper heating chambers. humidity. be fooled by these imitations. ® As Al Borland on Home Improvement I was the man with SYLVANIA is a registered trademark of OSRAM SYLVANIA Inc. used under license. Look for the EdenPURE lo- ® go and the Made in North all the answers. However, as Richard Karn I still look for Richard Karn is a paid spokesperson for EdenPURE . Canton, Ohio stamp. Save like money saving and efficient heating in my home. I have an a large sheet of cured copper. FOR A TOTAL SAVINGS OF The made in North Canton, millions of others on your EdenPURE® Infrared Portable Heater in my California Jones stored the large copper $192 ON THE EDENPURE® Ohio EdenPURE® carries a heating bills and say “NO” to sheet in his basement near the PERSONAL HEATER. 60-day, unconditional no-risk cheap foreign imitators. home and like millions of others found it to be a super- coal furnace he labored to fill This special offer expires in guarantee. If you are not total- I spoke with Neil Tyburk safe, reliable source of portable heat all year long. every chilly morning. 10 days. If you order after that ly satisfied, return it at our ex- the Chief Designer and Presi- Jones noticed something we reserve the right to accept pense and your purchase price dent of EdenPURE®’s North fomercials on TV. I’ve en- record levels. The cost of peculiar. The coal furnace or reject order requests at the will be refunded. No ques- Canton plant who is very di- joyed talking to them and I heating our homes and apart- warmed the copper sheet and discounted price. See my at- tions asked. There is also a 3 rect in his beliefs. “We have want everybody to save money ments will continue to be a as the furnace cooled down the tached savings Coupon to take year warranty on all parts and better designs, better materi- in these hard economic times. significant burden on the copper sheet stayed warm. In advantage of this opportunity. labor. als and a better work force. I believe in paying it forward, family budget. The Eden- fact, the copper sheet stayed We can kick their butts in so when you experience some- PURE® can cut your heating warm for many hours and RICHARD KARN’S SAVINGS COUPON production and quality. The thing good, you want to share bills and pay for itself in a heated much of the large base- The price of the EdenPURE® Model 750 Heater is $449 only advantage they have is it.” matter of weeks, and then ment. plus $27 shipping and the price of the Personal Heater is cheap labor.” Stay Comfortable 365 start putting a great deal of As Jones continued to de- Save up to 49% on 2013 Days a Year extra money in your pocket velop a portable infrared $372 plus $17 shipping, but, with this savings coupon you EdenPURE®s “Never be cold again” is the after that. heater he knew the copper was will receive a $202 discount on the Model 750 and a $175 Now readers can save up to EdenPURE® promise. Eden- Super Safe Infrared Heat the secret ingredient that discount on the Personal Heater with free shipping and be 49% ($229 the largest savings PURE® provides you insur- Now remember, a major would make his heater differ- able to get the Model 750 delivered for only $247 and the ever on new EdenPURE®s). ance against the cold all year cause of residential fires in the ent from all the rest. His cop- Personal Heater delivered for only $197. EdenPURE® is not just the long. Stay comfortable on United States is carelessness per heating chambers com- The Personal Heater has an optional remote control for only best-selling portable heating those unseasonably chilly and faulty portable heaters. bined with the far infrared $12. The Model 750 remote is included in the price. system in North America. As evenings no matter the season. The choice of fire and safety bulbs provided an efficient Check below the number you want (limit 3 per customer) an EdenPURE® owner I rank I live in California but believe professional, Captain Mike wave of “soft” heat over large ■ Model 750 with remote, number _____ ■ Personal EdenPURE® #1 for quality, me it gets cold at night. Keep Hornby, the EdenPURE® has areas. The breakthrough Eden- Heater, number _____ safety and efficiency. And your expensive furnace turned no exposed heating elements PURE® infrared heating cham- ■ Optional Personal Heater Remote $12, number _____ now is the perfect time to save down until it’s absolutely nec- that can cause a fire. And a re- ber was born. • To order by phone, call TOLL FREE 1-800-315-1257 Offer like never before on our ex- essary. And if we are fortunate dundant home protection sys- The Health Secret is in Code EHS7112. Place your order by using your credit card. panded 2013 EdenPURE® line enough to experience a mild tem that simply shuts the the Copper Operators are on duty Monday - Friday 6am - 3am, Satur- made in our brand new North winter as many of us did in the EdenPURE® down if it senses EdenPURE®’s engineers day 7am - 12 Midnight and Sunday 7am - 11pm, EST. Canton, Ohio facility. Midwest last year, you keep danger. That’s why grandpar- have taken Jones’ original con- • To order online, visit www.edenpure.com enter Offer With two models Eden- your furnace off all season and ents and parents love the cept through revolutionary Code EHS7112 PURE® can meet all of your save even bigger. EdenPURE®. changes. EdenFLOW™ tech- • To order by mail, by check or credit card, fill out and mail in heating requirements 365 days New, More Efficient The outside of the Eden- nology uses copper heating this coupon. a year. We receive thousands Models PURE® only gets warm to the chambers to take the energy This product carries a 60-day satisfaction guarantee. If you of letters from satisfied cus- The engineers at Eden- touch so that it will not burn provided by our special SYL- are not totally satisfied return at our expense, and your pur- tomers who share their heating PURE® listened to their mil- children or pets. And your pet VANIA infrared bulbs and dis- chase price will be refunded – no questions asked. There is testimonials many of which lions of customers and some- may be just like my dog who tribute our famous soft heat also a three year warranty. you can view at our website how managed to improve the has reserved a favorite spot evenly throughout the room. ® ______edenpure.com. This Summer #1 portable heater in North near the EdenPURE . You see Now our copper isn’t ordi- NAME we even followed up with America. Through old fash- the EdenPURE® uses infrared nary. It’s 99.9% pure antimi- ______® ADDRESS EdenPURE customers from 5 ioned American ingenuity the heat. And just as pets enjoy crobial copper from an over ______years ago like Gloria Smith new EdenPURE® line is more basking in a beam of sunlight 150 year old American owned CITY STATE ZIP CODE (see her original testimony efficient to save you even more they try to stay close to Eden- company in Pennsylvania. Re- Check below to get discount: above) who are still just as en- money. PURE®’s “bone-warming” in- searchers have discovered cop- ■ I am ordering within 10 days, therefore I get a $202 dis- thusiastic and in some in- The EdenPURE® Personal frared heat. per as an antimicrobial is far count plus Free shipping and my price is only $247 for the stances saved thousands of Heater now heats a larger area, The Origin of EdenPURE® more effective than stainless Model 750 Heater. dollars versus costly propane. an increase from 350 square a Missouri Rancher’s Dis- steel or even silver. That’s ■ I am ordering within 10 days, therefore I get a $175 dis- Gloria Smith Interview feet to 500 square feet. That’s covery why our special antimicrobial count plus Free shipping and my price is only $197 for the May 20, 2012 a 30% increase in efficiency! American’s love to tinker. copper is marked Cu+ and Personal Heater. ® “My name is Gloria Smith And EdenPURE is proud to We are a nation of inventors used in hospitals on touch sur- ■ I am ordering past 10 days, therefore I pay full price for ® and I am a retired principal introduce the 2013 Model 750. from Benjamin Franklin to faces. So your EdenPURE the Model 750 or Personal Heater plus shipping and han- from Boydton, Virginia. I’ve The new Model 750 is perfect Thomas Edison. A Missouri heater is continuously pushing ® dling. been using EdenPURE for larger areas and heats up to horse breeder named John soft, healthy, infrared heat Enclosed is $______in: ■ Check ■ Money Order Heaters for 5 years. I think I 750 square feet. But the best Jones was no exception. throughout your room. (Make check payable to EdenPURE®) or charge my: saved at least $15,000 over a thing about the Model 750 is Jones lived in a large drafty How to Order ■ VISA ■ MasterCard ■ Am. Exp./Optima period of 5 years. And that’s the price. We priced the Mod- old farmhouse with his family During our 2013 introduc- ■ Discover/Novus proven with my bank state- el 750 at only $50 above the of five. They stayed warm on tion you are eligible for a $202 Account No. ______ments because it’s document- Personal Heater. This means cold Missouri nights with an DISCOUNT PLUS FREE ed. And I feel really great you receive a 33% increase in old coal furnace and plenty of SHIPPING AND HANDLING Exp. Date _____/_____ about using the EdenPURE® performance for only $50. blankets. FOR A TOTAL SAVINGS OF Heaters.” That’s American engineering Now Jones was always col- $229 ON THE EDENPURE® MAIL TO: EdenPURE® “Many people have called at its best! lecting scrap to use in his latest MODEL 750 AND A $175 Offer Code EHS7112 me from all over the country We all know heating costs inventions and somewhere DISCOUNT PLUS FREE 7800 Whipple Ave. N.W. when they have seen the in- are expected to remain at along the line he had picked up SHIPPING AND HANDLING Canton, OH 44767 All of the testimonials are by actual EdenPURE® customers who volunteered their stories, and were given another EdenPURE® heater as thanks for their participation. Average homeowners save 10% to 25%.

277086.101812 B8 SPORTS The Portland Tribune Thursday, October 18, 2012 Scoresheet: Speed thrills Pumpkin Ridge golf pro Brandin Cooks of Oregon State ■ From page 10 between shots and reads greens curling “captains,” defenseman and receiving only as he is approaching them Troy Rutkowski guided his partner Markus and his ball. team (which included Tyler Wheaton have take some time to smell the “It’s two-thirds golf, one-third Wotherspoon, Derrick Pou- combined in fi ve fl owers and take in the scenery, running,” he says, adding that liot and Dominic Turgeon) to games for 75 it’s Bandon Dunes. “the good golfer will always fi rst place in the bonspiel for the catches, 1,123 Christopher Smith has a beat the fast player.” second year in a row. yards and eight different point of view. Predicting what score it will ■ Johnston says the biggest touchdowns this A teaching pro at Pumpkin take to win at Bandon Dunes pleasant sur- season. Ridge Golf Club in North Plains, isn’t easy. prise through Smith is in the Guinness Book “The weather is a crapshoot 11 games is de- TRIBUNE PHOTO: Josh JAIME VALDEZ of World Records for the best — it could be perfect or it could fenseman round of speed golf. In 2005, at be a hurricane,” Smith says. Hanson: “He’s Jackson Park in Chicago, he “We’ve got several mini-tour taken a huge shot a 65 in 44 minutes (a speed players, PGA professionals and step at (age) OSU: golf score of 109). Yes, he played guys who used to play on differ- 18.” The entire Star receivers nearly all 18 holes. ent tours, so we’re really eager defense has Smith is now 49 and battling to see what they all do. If some- played well, arthritic hips, but he is one of body could shoot around par, or Johnston adds. HANSON top contenders to win the fi rst a little better, and do it in 55 to wound up playing elsewhere Speed Golf World Champion- 60 minutes each day, I think that Happy birthday ships Saturday and Sunday at would be up there.” Oct. 23, 1972 — Tiffeny Mil- ■ the weight room. I’m his lifting Neuheisel’s pistol offense, then Bandon Dunes. ■ Adam Bean of Puget brett (age 40) From page 10 partner. I stay on him; he stays still considered Washington be- He and 13 others will tee it up Sound, a sophomore from Lin- Oct. 21, 1978 — Joey Har- on me sometimes. On the fi eld fore deciding on Oregon State. — quickly — in the 36-hole elite coln High, won the 11-team Pa- rington (age 34) to say, ‘Yes sir, we feel like and in the meeting room, I’m “I was real heavy with (the division (total purse $50,000, cifi c Lutheran Oct. 22, 1989 — LaMichael we’re one of the best (duos) in trying to teach him all the little Huskies) before I learned that with $18,000 to the winner and Invitational by James (age 23) the country.’ things that I didn’t know when Coach Riley is just amazing,” $10,000 to the runner-up). Forty- four shots this “What will keep us doing I was getting started.” Cooks says. “He sold me right fi ve golfers are in the amateur week. He shot Oregon sports history that is working hard. We can’t Cooks considers Wheaton a away. He didn’t have to use spe- division. 73-70—143, Oct. 22, 1910 — Charles Tay- get big-headed or overconfi- role model. cial tactics. I just liked the way CBS plans to air a 30-minute 1-under-par, at lor sets University of Oregon dent or complacent. We have to “I call Markus my big broth- the players came together as a show on the tournament next Chambers Bay football records that still stand, keep working like it’s the fi rst er,” Cooks says. “Words can’t team. That’s what’s special April in a coveted TV time slot Golf Course, with 10 touchdowns and 14 week. our motto during the off- explain how close we are when about Oregon State. And I felt — right before the third round site of the 2015 PATs in a 115-0 victory over season was to make sure we it comes to football — even in like I’d fi t great into our pro- of The Masters. U.S. Open. Puget Sound. The Ducks later keep getting after it, come to- life, period. style offense.” Smith is excited about the BEAN ■ Wilson fi nish the season with a 4-1 re- gether and do something spe- “He has been through every- Wheaton ranks fourth on the publicity speed golf is getting. High’s Mike cord, losing their fi nale 5-0 to cial.” thing. He’s a senior, I’m barely OSU career receptions list with “It’s easier from a mental Clopton, whose Trojans won MAAC (Multnomah Amateur Wheaton has an even more a sophomore. His little tips 177, behind only Rodgers, Hass standpoint and even from a golf the 5A title in 2012, has been Athletic Club, now Multnomah modest response. have been huge. I really thank and Newson. Wheaton needs 44 swing standpoint than tradition- named national high school Di- Athletic Club). “I feel like we have two of the him for that. He has been great more catches to pass Rodgers al, or slow golf, where people vision II baseball coach of the Oct. 22, 1994 — Kenny best quarterbacks in the coun- about it. Love him to death.” (222) and become the school’s tend to over-analyze and over- year by the American Baseball Wheaton returns an intercep- try” in Sean Mannion and Cod The two have different per- all-time leader. Wheaton is also think,” he says. Coaches Association and Dia- tion 97 yards for a touchdown in Vaz, Wheaton says. “That helps sonalities. Cooks is the life of fi fth on the OSU list with 2,314 Smith is considered one of the mond Sports Company. Clopton the fi nal minute as Oregon beats us a lot. We don’t have to do too the party. Wheaton is as pleas- yards. He won’t catch Hass top teaching pros in the country; will receive his award Jan. 4 at ninth-ranked Washington 31-20 much. We run our routes and ant as a Maui sunset but not as (3,924) or Newson (3,572) but he was the 2004 Pacifi c North- the ABCA national convention at Autzen Stadium and gives the ball just falls in our laps effervescent. needs only 310 yards to pass west section PGA Teacher of the in Chicago. Duck fans the highlight video most of the time.” “Brandin has a great way Stroughter (2,623) and Rodgers Year. The former UC Santa Bar- Greg Lord, and audio that have been re- Wheaton and Cooks are as about him,” Brennan says. “He (2,582) and move up to third on bara player has written for Golf coach of 6A played, oh, maybe 1,248,487 close as siblings, by all ac- is very smart and has an opin- the receiving yardage list. Digest and authored a book, champion Ore- times, and counting. counts. ion that’s valuable and fun to Cooks has already surpassed “I’ve Got 99 Swing Thoughts But gon City, also Oct. 22, 2003 — Dee Andros, “They are like brothers,” listen to. He likes to have a his 2011 numbers, when he ‘Hit The Ball’ Ain’t One,” subti- will be honored “The Great Pumpkin” who Brennan says. “There’s a big- good time, joke with the guys caught 31 passes for 391 yards tled, “Pick Up The Pace To Pick with the Divi- coached Oregon State football time mutual respect there. You and have fun. When he showed and three touchdowns as a true Up Your Game.” sion III regional from 1965-75, dies at 79 in Corval- should have seen them work- up as a freshman, he was im- freshman. Like Wheaton, he He says even tour pros — in- coach of the lis. Andros, an ex-Marine who ing together in the offseason, mediately in with the group. He possesses great speed and cluding friend and fellow Port- year award. was athletic director at OSU catching balls and running was instantly well-received and quickness. land-area pro Ben Crane, noto- ■ Winter- CLOPTON from 1975-84, was known for his routes. They ran every day. respected and fell right in. That “Brandin is a hard guy to rious for his deliberate style hawks coach- Power-T offense, his 1967 “Giant They were unbelievable that personality of his is a big part tackle in space,” Brennan says. — probably would play better if GM Mike Johnston says one Killers” team, his colorful speech- way. of that. “He has great stop-and-start they played faster. “Ben would thing that’s diffi cult about taking es and pep talks, his 9-2 record in “When ‘Cookie’ first got “Markus is not as outgoing ability, good hands and can be a great speed golfer. He’s re- a junior hockey team by bus to the Civil War, and more. here, he looked up to Markus as Cookie, but he still has a play the ball outside the frame- ally fi t,” Smith says. Manitoba and Saskatchewan for Oct. 22, 2009 — LaMarcus Al- because he was a playmaker on great personality, and his team- work of the body. Put that to- According to Smith, science six games in nine nights — as dridge signs a fi ve-year contract our side of the ball. And mates really like being around gether with his motivation and and performance experts have Portland did this month — might extension with the Trail Blazers. Markus is such a good guy, he’s him. He’s not quiet — just not personality and mindset, you shown that we don’t need to surprise you. easy to like. They’ve both been quite as effusive as Cookie is.” have a really good player.” take our own sweet time in or- “Believe it or not, the chal- Tweets of the week pretty fun to be around.” Wheaton and Cooks both Wheaton was bitterly disap- der to play well. lenge is to keep the players Great TEAM win today! How Wheaton says it’s simply a nearly wound up elsewhere. pointed at not making a bowl “It’s been shown that we re- busy,” he says. “If they’re sitting bout them beavers! matter of paying it forward, Wheaton was headed to Ore- game the past two seasons. He ceive about 11 million bits of in- in a hotel room, they lose energy. Cody Vaz “@c_vaz14 something that has been done gon — where cousin Kenny was is thrilled the Beavers have formation per second through It gets boring when you sit (posted shortly after Vaz’s through a great line of receiv- once a star defensive back — turned it around his senior all our senses — and a large around.” quarterback play helped OSU ers during the Mike Riley era at before changing his mind. year. majority of that for humans is So the Hawks kept their play- win 42-24 at BYU) Oregon State, from James New- “I was real close to going (to “It’s working out perfect,” visual,” Smith says. “If we’re re- ers as engaged as possible on son to Mike Hass to Sammie Oregon), but I came on a visit he says. “We put in a lot of ceiving that much information, their recent trip, and the team Too blessed to be stressed Stroughter to James Rodgers here, fell in love with the pro- work to make sure this year why do we need to take so long fi nished with a solid four wins, Too anointed to be disap- to the current duo. gram and Coach Riley,” Whea- went well. We’re not even to read a putt?” sweeping the last three despite pointed “Brandin and I have spent a ton says. “I loved the offense halfway through, but it’s look- In speed golf, Smith carries a having to play four times in fi ve Too devout to pout lot of time together,” Wheaton they were running. Then when ing good right now. We’re go- light bag with only six clubs nights. One of the wins was 5-2 I’m too redeemed to be says. “When he fi rst got here, I came for my visit, I loved the ing to do what we can to get (driver, 5-wood, 5-iron, 8-iron, over previously unbeaten, untied steamed it was me, him and James. As town and Coach Riley sealed that next win and try to keep gap wedge and putter), wears Prince Albert. Damian Lillard “@Dame_ James helped me, we helped the deal.” it rolling.” running shoes (“golf shoes are Highlight of the idle-time ac- Lillard him, and we all grew together. Cooks de-committed from way too heavy”), takes no prac- tivities had to be the team curl- “He is like my little brother. UCLA when he had second [email protected] tice swings, uses no yardage ing tournament on Thanksgiv- stevebrandon@portlandtribune. We do everything together in thoughts about Rick Twitter: @kerryeggers book or distance fi nder, sprints ing Day in Canada. One of the com, Twitter: @sbrandonsports Enter to Win Your Brought to you by this newspaper in partnership with Explore the Gorge Adventure Two Grand Prizes PUBLIC NOTICES • Two-night stay at the Hood River Inn • Dining Certifi cate for the Always in your newspaper: Riverside • Sunday Brunch Scenic Train Now in your inbox, too. Ride on the Mount Hood Railroad. 30 Second Prizes • 5 lucky weekly winners will receive a VIP Pass from Baja Fresh!

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Phone______Email ______16EG2 If nobody knows what’s going on, No purchase necessary. Entry forms are available at or may be mailed to Circulation, Gorge Adventure, 6605 SE Lake Road, Portland, OR 97269. Last day to enter Gorge Adventure is November 2, 2012. Enter once per week per household. Some restrictions and limitations may apply to prizes in giveaway. Must be 18 years or older. All information on entry form must be completed to be valid. All entrants will receive four weeks free of our Community Newspaper where applicable. Information will not be sold but may be used for internal purposes. nobody can do anything about it. For offi cial entry rules and location of all entry boxes, email [email protected]. No cash value. That’s whyh we keepe sayying your loco al andd state govverrnment should keep publb ishih ng their public notices in the newsspaperr. 1053 NW Civic Dr 17805 SW 65th Ave 11685 SW Pacifi c Hwy Gresham, OR Lake Oswego, OR Tigard, OR Now yoyou cac n stay informed AND keep those pubblicc notices in the 503-667-1687 503-620-6732 503-352-1350 newsw paper. 899 NE 25th Ave 10090 SE Washington St 7801 NE Highway 99 7421 SW Barbur Blvd, 2526 SW Cedar Hills Hillsboro, OR Portland, OR Vancouver, WA Juust go to publicnoticeadss.como /or, sign up foro thhe free SmartSearch seervici e, #190 Blvd 503-718-0030 503-595-0550 360-823-8001 and get all of this paper’r s public notices dele ivverred to you via eme aia l.l Portland, OR Beaverton, OR 399561.080712 503-595-0399 503-277-2252 1505 NE 40th Ave 12286 SW Scholls Portland, OR Ferry Rd 9757-E SE Sunnyside Rd 503-331-1000 Tigard, OR Clackamas OR 503-590-9789 publicnoticeads.com/or 503-652-4448 The Portland Tribune Thursday, October 18, 2012 SPORTS B9 PDXSports Eggers: Confi dence up underappreciated during his Thursday, Oct. 18 will have a big role. “He’s going to ■ From page 10 time at Portland State, when College football: Are the 6-0 play a lot more than he did last the Vikings were 90-68 and al- Oregon Ducks for real? You know, season and is going to be our goal- try to keep the streak alive.” ways competitive despite being No. 2-in-the-nation real? We’ll fi nd tender of the future,” Johnston says. Walsh has four assistant underfunded and with facilities out more on this when the Ducks Ty Rattie, Portland’s leading scor- coaches with deep Portland ties. less than ideal. It’s not an easy play at 26th-ranked Arizona State er last season, got going with seven Three of them played for him at place to win. Walsh’s successor, (5-1), today at 6 p.m. (ESPN). Then goals and four assists in the last Portland State — Saga Tuitele Nigel Burton, has found that comes Oregon’s tuneup game, Oct. fi ve games. (co-offensive coordinator/line), out, though he has improved 27 at home against 1-5 Colorado), “Everybody in the league was Juston Wood (wide receivers) his chances by upgrading facili- before the big clash at No. 11 USC wondering what happened to Ty and Neil Fendall (secondary). A ties and working hard at re- (5-1) on Nov. 3. Rattie. Well, nothing happened to fourth, Aristotle Thompson cruiting in-state. Munich ‘72 remembered: him,” Johnston says. “He’s played (slotbacks/recruiting coordina- Now Walsh, 57, has re-invent- Dan Alon, one of fi ve Israeli well every game, he just wasn’t tor), is a former star tailback at ed himself running the triple- Olympic athletes who survived the rewarded in the fi rst couple. And Jesuit High. option at Cal Poly. He might not terror attack on his team at the we have six new guys on our pow- “For them, I’m sure there’s admit it, but I’ll bet there’ll be 1972 Munich Summer Olympics, er-play (teams), which has been some emotion involved with this more than a little emotion on will speak at 7 p.m. at Mittleman refl ected in our (lower) scoring. You game,” Walsh says. “And I know his part Saturday night as he Jewish Community Center in also have to take into account that Andre is fi red up. He knows a goes against the program he Southwest Portland. General TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO: NICK FOCHTMAN Ty was playing before with highly lot of those (Portland State play- coached for so many years. admission tickets are free; reserved Ty Rattie has a team-high seven goals, and 12 points in 10 games for talented guys, and now he IS the ers). He wishes the game were [email protected] tickets are recommended and are the Portland Winterhawks. guy. Teams are trying to get their being played in Portland.” $10 to $25. Call 503-977-9947 best line or defense against him, I always thought Walsh was Twitter: @kerryeggers for information. Alon, a fencer, has with the Trojans on the verge of a 1 p.m. date at Lewis & Clark and he’s getting more checking written a book, “Munich Memoir” sewing up no worse than a tie for (4-2). No. 19 Willamette (6-0) is at pressure.” about the attack by a Palestinian fi rst place; Franklin (1-6) at Pacifi c Lutheran (3-2), 12:30 p.m. Seth Jones, the highly touted terrorist group that killed 11 Israeli Benson (0-7), Jefferson (0-6) at Western Oregon (4-2 Great WHL rookie who will be a high NHL team members. Roosevelt (5-2), and new school Northwest Athletic Conference) has draft pick next spring, continued his College volleyball: Portland Ridgeview (5-2, No. 7 in 4A, 40 won four in a row going into its solid play on defense, while adjust- State takes a 9-1 Big Sky record points per game) of Redmond at game at Simon Fraser (2-4), 2 ing to the speed of league play and into a 7 p.m. match with Eastern Cleveland (3-4). Also in 5A, St. p.m. contributing two goals and three Washington (0-10, 0-21 overall) at Helens (1-6) treks to Parkrose Winterhawks: Seattle (5-3-0- assists. Stott Center. (2-5). 0) returns to Portland (7-3-1-0) for College volleyball: Big Sky You Never Know What You’ll Find At The Vikings suffered their fi rst Also Friday, No. 2-ranked La a 7 p.m. game at the Rose Garden. co-leader PSU (9-1) meets A Collectors West Gun & Knife Show! conference loss on Friday, 3-0 at Salle (5-2) plays at No. 20 The Thunderbirds beat the Hawks Sacramento State (3-7) at 7 p.m. Idaho State (also 9-1), as they Estacada (5-2) in a 4A game, and 5-2 there in the Western Hockey at Stott Center. APRIL 20-21-22 were outhit for the fi rst time in Big 2A No. 6 Portland Christian 7-0) League season opener on Sept. College soccer: The PORTLAND EXPO CENTER (I-5 Exit #306B) Sky play. They rebounded with a plays host to No. 18 Nestucca 21. Concordia men play host to College sCOLLECTORSWESTCOMs&RI.OON P 3ATA P 3UNA P 328446.101712 sweep at Weber State behind (3-2). All games start at 7 p.m. Portland is coming off a solid of Idaho at 6 p.m., and Warner Aubrey Mitchell’s eight kills and College soccer: The Portland road trip through parts of the Pacifi c’s men welcome OIT to David Kaeli Patton’s six service aces. State women (5-2-1, 16 points) Eastern Conference. The Douglas at 1 p.m. The split left PSU 65th in the play their fi nal Big Sky regular-sea- Winterhawks won four of six games Golf: The Oregon Golf NCAA RPI rankings, with Northern son game at 1 p.m. at Hillsboro in nine nights, with one of the loss- Association Players Championship Arizona 69th and Idaho State 75th. Stadium against Sacramento State es in overtime, giving them nine of is today and Sunday at Columbia Prep soccer: The Grant High (3-3-2, 11 points). The Vikings are a possible 12 points on the swing. Edgewater Country Club. girls, 6-3-0 and ranked second in all but headed to their four-team “Our new players have integrated Prep volleyball: West Linn Class 6A by the Oregon School conference tournament for the sixth well into our skating, puck-moving, hosts a major state tuneup tourna- Activities Association, will play host year in a row, but a win Friday puck-possession team,” coach-gen- ment, with Central Catholic, Jesuit, to 5A Cleveland (5-5-0) at 4:15 would help their chances of hosting eral manager Mike Johnston says. Clackamas and Lake Oswego p.m. the tourney as the regular-season “It’s still a long process — they’re among the entries. Grant’s boys team, 5-1-3 and champ. going to be up and down a little ranked fi rst, goes to Cleveland Concordia’s 17th-ranked men — but they can all play the style we Sunday, Oct. 21 (3-3-5). Kickoff is 7 p.m. (9-0-0 Cascade Collegiate want.” Conference) have a 6 p.m. home Goalie Mac Carruth returned to Timbers: Portland’s last Friday, Oct. 19 game with Oregon Tech (1-7-0). the team after a stint in an chance to get a road win this sea- Warner Pacifi c’s men (4-4-1) take American Hockey League camp son comes at 4 p.m. at Vancouver Golden State plays at the Rose on College of Idaho (1-7-0) at and allowed two goals in two (Root Sports). The Timbers are Garden, 7 p.m. (KGW 8). Warriors David Douglas High at 1 p.m. games, with one shutout and two 7-16-9, 30 points, with two games UPCOMING EVENTS point guard Stephen Curry looks College cross-country: wins, to earn Canadian Hockey remaining; the playoff-hopeful good after ankle surgery, with 24 Oregon State plays host to UP, PSU, League goalie-of-the-week honors. Whitecaps are 11-12-9, 42 points. points in 25 minutes Monday Warner Pacifi c and others for the “Having a veteran goaltender is against Denver. Beaver Classic at 10 a.m. really important — it helps your Monday, Oct. 22 Prep football: No. 1-ranked in team mentally,” Johnston says. the OSAA formula, Central Catholic Saturday, Oct. 20 Carruth is one of Portland’s three Blazers: Utah visits the Rose (5-2) can clinch another Mount allotted 20-year-olds. With his Garden, 7 p.m. (KGW 8). The Jazz Hood Conference title with a win College football: It’s return, the Hawks released goalie were 3-1 in the preseason going over Barlow (2-5 and 40th out of Homecoming in Corvallis, as Cam Lanigan, also 20. into Wednesday’s game at the Los 42 Class 6A teams) at Mt. Hood eighth-ranked Oregon State (5-0) “Cam did a phenomenal job for Angeles Clippers. Community College. plays Utah (2-4), 7:30 p.m. us,” Johnston says. “Mac is ready to DAYS > | VARY > No. 3 Aloha (7-0) visits No. 8 (ESPN2). play at the pro level, but it’s more Tuesday, Oct. 23 2&7 2&7 Jesuit (5-2) in a key Metro League Portland State (2-4, 1-2 Big diffi cult for a goalie to step in, battle. No. 29 Grant (3-4) is at No. Sky) visits 12th-ranked Cal Poly especially during a lockout year, Prep soccer: Grant’s boys BASSNECTAR 30 David Douglas (3-4), and No. (6-0, 4-0), 6 p.m. (CSN), to meet when there are more players.” play Lincoln at Delta Park at 4:15 34 Centennial (1-6) is at No. 36 former coach Tim Walsh and his Johnston calls Carruth and p.m. They tied 1-1 on Oct. 9. Also, Lincoln (1-6) in other 6A games. Mustangs QB, Andre Broadous Brendan Burke, 17, a “great tan- Lincoln’s girls play host to Grant at The PIL 5A has No. 12 Wilson from Grant High. dem,” and is sticking with his pre- 7 p.m. The Generals beat the (6-1) at No. 32 Madison (4-3), Fourth-ranked Linfi eld (5-0) has season pronouncement that Burke Cardinals 3-0 on Oct. 9.

> 2&7 > 129

Costa: ‘Football brain’ shows on TV LEONARD COHEN ■ pressed with Costa’s fi rst year He enjoys being able to pick His knees are still not as From page 10 on the Comcast show. and choose the coaching styles healthy as most people’s. He “He’s got a great football that he liked best in high school cannot yet play a full game of point of keeping a bond of trust brain, and we’re lucky to have and college. pickup basketball. with them. Hence, some details him,” Kamens says. “I get to coach them in my “It’s something I can contin- remain private, even though he When Costa is not in the own way,” Costa says. “I don’t ue to work on,” Costa says. “It’s is on the other side — part of Comcast studio, he works with have a head coach who’s above still a struggle for me on a daily the media. youth and prep football play- me and telling me to teach basis. But I’m not going to give > 129 > NOV 11 “You have to do that,” he ers. A product of private coach- them certain things. I am the up on it.” says of keeping some things ing coming out of his home- head coach. I get to use the To be closer to some of his confi dential. “There’s a lot of town of Hilmar, Calif., Costa things I like, and I get to leave clients as well as the Comcast Connect with us! information I’m provided with has launched what he unoffi - out the parts that I didn’t like.” studio, Costa has moved from facebook.com/ because I have friends who are cially calls “Nate Costa Train- The work could be a gateway Eugene to Beaverton. And the rose.quarter.pdx in the locker room everyday. ing.” for Costa to get into college stars have fi nally aligned. @Rosequarter But I don’t share that informa- “There was a niche that coaching. For now, though, he “I really like coaching,” he tion, because it’s not supposed needed to be fi lled,” Costa says, is cautious about taking that says. “I like the impression that rosequarterblog.com to be out there. referring to a lack of private step. you can have on the young ath- “It’s not my job to break that coaches in Oregon. “I fi gured I “I look at the college coaches letes and that I can help them pinterest.com/rosequarter information. That’s not the learned from the best (the UO and see the lifestyles they live in their lives. Rose Garden Area/ type of media member I am. coaches), and I had a lot of as far as the strain it puts on “And one thing that I worried Memorial Coliseum “It’s my job to share my ex- knowledge to share with these their family because of the about going into law enforce- 277091.101812 periences and break down guys in Oregon and I might as traveling,” Costa says. “And ment was that I was going to be complex things, put things into well be the guy to fi ll that role.” that’s why I’m not so eager to going away from my (Ducks) > 7LFNHWV216$/(12:DW5RVH4XDUWHU%R[2IÀFHDOOSDUWLFLSDWLQJSafeway/ layman’s terms so people can Costa estimates that he has jump into that at this point. family. You take certain paths 7LFNHWV:HVWRXWOHWV5RVH4XDUWHUFRPRUE\FDOOLQJ526(   understand them better. ” 25 clients in Portland and Eu- This is just a way for me to in life, and this path has led me )RUPRUHLQIRSOHDVHYLVLW5RVH4XDUWHUFRP Kamens says he was im- gene ranging from age 9 to 18. taste it — and so far, so good.” back into that brotherhood.”

ATTENTION RUNNERS – SAVE THE DATE!

Columbia County Rotary is hosting a HALF-MARATHON To benefi t military veterans and Habitat for Humanity Saturday, November 10 starting at 10:00 A.M. Along the scenic dike lands of Scappoose, Oregon – A 20-minute drive from Portland on U.S. 30, along the Columbia River

Professional timing by Uberthons, with 5K and 10K options 377302.011212 277093.101812 Registration at www.uberthons.com/rotaryhalf SportsPortlandTribune.comTribune PAGE B8 PortlandTribune THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2012 THE KerryEggers ON SPORTS BEST? Cal Poly football ■ Beavers’ receiving duo has PSU Wheaton, Cooks become like brothers at OSU fl avor hen Cal Poly By KERRY EGGERS tion. But I believe in plays host to The Tribune those two guys.” Portland State So does Jordan Poyer, WSaturday night in CORVALLIS — West Virginia has Sted- Oregon State’s senior cor- San Luis Obispo, it will be an man Bailey and Tavon Austin, Baylorr nerback who ranks among the best na- emotional time for Tim Walsh. owns Terrance Williams and Tevin Reese, tionally at his position, too. Right? and Southern Cal boasts Marquise LLeeee “The“They’rey’re the ttopop receiver tandem in the “I’ve not tried to play it and Robert Woods. country, hands down — I’d bet on it,” Poy- down,” says Walsh, the fourth- But there may not be a more potentent 1-2 er ssays.ays. “I go aagainstgainst them evereveryy dadayy in year Cal Poly head coach who punch of receivers in college football thanhan Or- practice. They make me the player I amam.. ran the PSU program from egon State’s Markus Wheaton and Brandinrandin “They’re super-talented, but more 1993-2006. “But I have a philos- Cooks. than anything, they compete. That’s ophy on that. In fi ve games, Wheaton, a 6-foot, 180-pound-pound been the whole mindset of this team — “The game is for the players. senior from Chandler,r, Ariz., compete and make everybody better. It’s our 2012 team playing (the Kerry says has 41 receptions for 564 That’s exactly who they are.” Vikings’) 2012 team.” yards and six touchdownsowns in Cooks ranks second nationally in re- Going against his former Go to portland- coach Mike Riley’s pro-stylero-style ceiving yardage per game and 22nd in school “is in the back of your tribune.com for Kerry Eggers’ offense. Cooks, a 5-9, receptions per game. Wheaton is sixth in Senior Markus mind, but the emotional part of take on the OSU- 180-pound sophomoree from the nation in receptions and 10th in re- Wheaton anandd it is where we Utah game in “Kerry Stockton, Calif., has 34 ceiving yardage. fellow Oregon are at this says.” His pick: Bea- catches for 659 yardss and a West Virginia’s Bailey (55 catches, State receivreceiverer point in our vers 27, Utes 13. pair of scores. 766 yards, 14 TDs) and Austin (67 Brandin Cooks, a season.” For complete Ore- The votes out of Corvallisorvallis catchecatches,s, 761 yyards,ards, 8 TDTDs)s) have huhugege sosophomore,phomore, have For Cal Poly, gon State-Utah cov- are going to the menn of Or- numbers in six games. Baylor’s made for it’s a comely erage, go to port- ange as the eighth-rankedranked Williams (37 for 830) and Reese (23 spot. The Mus- landtribune.com af- ararguablyguably the ttopop Beavers (5-0 overall,, 3-0 in for 499) and USC’s Lee (54 for 681) pass-catching tangs are 6-0 ter the game. Pac-12 action) prepareare to and Woods (36 for 360) have puputt and ranked combo in the play host to Utah (2-4,, 0-4) at up major stats in six contests, 12th in the FCS country this 7:30 p.m. Saturday at Reser Stadium. totoo.o. in their first WALSH season in the “I think they’re the best twosome in the How do Cooks and Wheaton season in the Big Sky year. country, but I’m biased,” Oregon State receiv- fi gure they measure up? Beavers’ climb After going 4-7, 7-4 and 6-5 in ers coach Brent Brennan says. “I’m withh them “When people ask, we’re to No. 8 in the his fi rst three seasons, Walsh every day, and I see them work. going to be confi dent about national appears to be establishing the “There are lots of good wideouts andnd tan- itit,”,” Cooks ssays.ays. “We’re gogoinging rankings. program he envisioned at Cal dems in our conference. Every team has one TRIBUNE PHOTO:PHOTO: Poly. The Mustangs are aver- or two guys who can really play at thatat poposi-si- See OSU / Page 8 JAIME VALDEZ aging 38.2 points in the triple- option offense that Walsh em- braced during his second and fi nal season as offensive coor- dinator at Army in 2008. “We’re pretty good,” Walsh says. A big part of that is quarter- back Andre Broadous, the Costa’s new play call: TV, coaching 6-foot, 210-pound se- More online Ex-Duck QB doesn’t your body tells you that you nior out of Read other can’t do something, you just Grant High. Kerry Eggers let bad knees get in can’t do it. He has columns during “It’s cliché to say, but things passed for the week at portland way of new careers happen for a reason. And I’m 605 yards and tribune.com Nate Costa happy with the direction I’m nine touch- By STEPHEN ALEXANDER (middle) joins going in right now. I am truly downs and The Tribune Jason Scukanec enjoying what I am doing.” rushed for 292 yards and four (left) and host Costa was offered the job on TDs. Star-crossed is one of the Jordan Kent “Talkin’ Ducks” largely be- “Andre is the catalyst,” most haunting phrases in for a college cause of the ability he showed Walsh says. “His numbers the English language. It football show handling interviews as a play- aren’t as good as a year ago, means to be opposed by fate. on Comcast er. but he has more of a target on No term so perfectly de- SportsNet Costa needed to learn a few his chest. In our offense, the scribes Nate Costa’s career Northwest. TV things about eye contact quarterback has to make pro- with the Or- and energy, but he quickly took gression decisions instantly in More online COURTESY OF egon Ducks. COMCAST SPORTSNET to the new job. the option game. You have to To read Jason In five NORTHWEST “Having been in the huddle, decide to give (the ball) to the Vondersmith’s years at the U Nate has brought an expert in- fullback or pull it out. predictions for of O, Costa due to four serious knee inju- Springfi eld police offi cer in Ju- you to do this.” sider’s opinion and experi- “He has done a tremendous the Oregon-Arizona was a backup ries, he wound up starting just ly 2011, had to leave the depart- A little later, though, fate fi - ence,” says Dave Kamens, ex- job operating the offense. He State game, go to quarterback, one game. ment a month later when he nally began to smile on him. He ecutive producer at CSNNW. “I has unselfi shly distributed the “Jason says” at first to Jere- After a knee injury midway injured his knee while running became a broadcaster on the found him to be such a nice guy, ball to a lot of guys.” portlandtribune. com. His pick: miah Masoli through the 2010 season ended an obstacle course on the fi rst Comcast SportsNet Northwest and he comes across that way Last Saturday in a 56-28 rout Ducks 44, Sun and then to Costa’s playing career, he was day of training at the Oregon show “Talkin’ Ducks” and in television, which you can’t of Northern Colorado, Broad- Devils 31. Darron ready to start the next chapter Public Safety Academy. started a private coaching really teach.” ous ran for 68 yards and com- ■ Complete cover- Thomas. Cos- of his life. He was on his way to “My entire education practice for quarterbacks and The Ducks still have players pleted 9 of 12 passes for 195 age of the UO-ASU ta had all the living his dream of being a po- throughout college was point- receivers. with whom he shared a locker yards and a pair of scores. Cal game also will be at potential to lice offi cer when fate dealt him ed in that direction,” he says. “I wish I could have contin- room, and Costa has made a Poly is averaging fewer than 13 portlandtribune.com be a starter. another blow. “It was tough to be told that ued with my law enforcement passes a game. after the game. But, partly Costa, who was sworn in as a your body is not going to allow career,” Costa says. “But when See COSTA / Page 9 “When we throw, we’re pret- ty effi cient,” Walsh says. Slotback Deonte Williams is Cal Poly’s other big offensive weapon. The 5-10, 205-pound senior has rushed for 757 yards and nine TDs. The Big Sky of- fensive freshman of the year at Young driver takes spin in England Northern Arizona in 2008, he transferred to Sierra (Calif.) ark Draghicescu, a ormula One stars Jenson “I can’t think of (all the) reasons College the next year, then 20-year-old college stu- Button and Mark Webber why I enjoy it — it’s the noise, the signed with San Diego State, dent, is trying to get his are among the previous Fes- speed, the adrenaline, the nerves, but didn’t qualify academical- Mbudding career on the Ftival winners. competing not only with others but ly. Williams wound up at Cal fast track. Draghicescu wants to be an F-1 yourself, the continuous challenge, Poly and has become the Big The 2010 Westview High graduate driver someday. The festival is one of even in practice.” Sky’s No. 2 rusher. will be one of many aspiring race car many early steps that will have to be The Formula Fords go more than Cal Poly beat Wyoming — drivers from around made by a Portland- 140 mph on the straightaways, “and the preseason pick to finish the world competing SteveBrandon er who got hooked it’s quite fun when you’re only a few third in the FBS Mountain in the 40th annual on the sport with his inches away from your competitors,” West — 24-22 at Laramie in its Formula Ford Festi- fi rst rental kart sev- he says. second game Sept. 15. val Oct. 27 and 28 at en years ago. At Derby University, he shares a “That has a lot to do with historic Brands “The sensation of student hall fl at with fi ve other stu- our success,” Walsh says. “Our Hatch near London. pushing yourself and dents. This is his second year of col- confidence level went far up Draghicescu, who a car to the edge is lege there, and he is studying for a after that game.” lives and attends diffi cult to explain,” degree in motorsport engineering. The Mustangs were sup- school in Derby, he says. “It’s a unique course, as much of the posed to be pretty good this England, has a ride At Westview, the learning is done within the technical season, but not this good. next weekend with SCORESHEET 6-foot, 155-pound facility,” he says. “There’s a lot of “If you’d asked me in July if 23 Racing, a local Draghicescu swam hands-on and practical experience.” we’d be 6-0 at this point, I’d say team, but he could and ran track. He al- ■ If there is one place where most probably not,” Walsh says. use a good showing so played piano and golfers generally don’t want to hurry COURTESY OF MARK DRAGHICESCU “We’re way ahead of pace, so to land sponsorship that would en- guitar for several years. But they all through a round, where they want to Two years out of Westview High, Mark Draghicescu to speak. Now we’re going to able him to race in the Formula Ford take a back seat now to driving a race is majoring in motorsport engineering and trying to series next year. car. See SCORESHEET / Page 8 advance his open-wheel racing career overseas. See EGGERS/ Page 9