On the clock PSU adds players, and winning is rush order — SEE SPORTS, B1

PortlandTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015 • TWICE CHOSEN THE NATION’S BEST NONDAILY PAPERTribune • PORTLANDTRIBUNE.COM • PUBLISHED TUESDAY AND THURSDAY

STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS ’s statute of limitations for prose- cution of rape cases is six years. Changing law, changing culture About a decade ago, lawmakers amend- ed it to allow rape survivors under 18 to seek delayed prosecutions. For them, the themselves. cy just did so in No- it is longer for victims under age 18, deadline is when they turn 30, or 12 years Two women work They actually just vember. and there is an exception if DNA evi- after they report the crime to police, which- ever comes  rst. met a few weeks ago. “I was impressed dence is involved. to extend statute In 2009, lawmakers created an exception But they have a by her courage and That deadline is far shorter than in if there is DNA evidence. There is no time few things in com- the strength it takes most states, including California and limit for  rst-degree sex crimes, and 25 of limitations on rape mon. to share that story,” , according to the Rape, years for second-degree sex crimes. They are survivors Tudor says. “I know Abuse and Incest National Network. In California, the statute of limitations for By PETER WONG of rape — Tudor in what it takes.” About 40 states set it at 10 years or lon- rape is 10 years, or by age 28 for those Capital Bureau 1979, Tracy in 1998 — They also want ger; 28 have no limits. under 18. who took years to go TUDOR TRACY lawmakers to extend Oregon’s law matches limits in Ar- In Washington, the statute of limitations Danielle Tudor and Brenda Tra- public with their sto- Oregon’s deadline kansas, Hawaii and New Hampshire; is 10 years if the crime is reported to police cy, unlike many of the people who ries. Tudor did so in 2008 — although for prosecutions of rape under the stat- only Connecticut, Florida and Minne- within one year; otherwise, it is three years. will walk the halls of the Capitol she acknowledges that she described it ute of limitations. Current law sets it at For those under 18, rape prosecutions must start by age 30. Both states allow prosecu- this year, say they want nothing for then as an attack, not rape — and Tra- just six years after the crime, although See RAPE / Page 3 tions within one year of a DNA match.

TRIBUNE PHOTO: JONATHAN HOUSE Oregon governor leaves the podium after talking to the media in an attempt to explain why First Lady Cylvia Hayes may have failed to report $118,000 on her tax returns. GOVERNOR CALLS FOR INVESTIGATION Will SALEM — Oregon Attorney General has opened an investigation into ques- Kitzhaber tions surrounding  rst lady Cylvia Hayes and her dealings with the administration of Gov. John Kitzhaber. resign? Rosenblum con rmed the investi- gation in a letter to Kitzhaber Monday morning, shortly after the Not likely TRIBUNE PHOTO: JAIME VALDEZ governor asked Rosenblum to inves- Bob Ball, developer of The Parker Apartments, holds son Parker (left) as he visits with tenants Lisa Moose, David Carroll and Cristian Gonzales tigate questions surrounding  rst lady Cylvia Hayes and her dealings next to an outdoor fi replace in the courtyard of the Northwest building. with the administration. History shows state “My of ce has already opened rarely sees turnover an investigation into this matter,” Rosenblum wrote. “I appreciate your intent to cooperate fully.” in governor’s of ce Kitzhaber said he asked Rosenblum to launch a review By HILLARY BORRUD, because of the media’s focus on PETER WONG the overlap between Hayes’ paid Capital Bureau consulting jobs and her unpaid PEARL PIONEERS PARTY ON work as policy adviser, as well as SALEM — Democratic the median income, young peo- the role of Kitzhaber associates in Residents of The Parker helping Hayes obtain some of those leaders in the Oregon Legis- ple in Portland’s strong suits: jobs. Public records released Friday lature said Thursday they luxury apartments high tech, apparel, education. revealed that Hayes directed state do not want the controversy love the mix of dance People who minimize time employees to adopt an economic around Gov. John Kitzhaber spent in their car and maxi- indicator called the Genuine and fi ancee Cylvia Hayes to parties and dog runs mize time spent with their pets Progress Indicator, at the same time distract lawmakers from im- and laptops. she was paid by a New York-based portant policy and budget By JOSEPH GALLIVAN The publicity drive focused group to advocate for governments to adopt that speci c indicator. work. The Tribune on the lavish community room, Kitzhaber said he and Hayes are Law- the dog washing station and already cooperating with the Oregon makers The lights have been going the car elevator that crams a Government Ethics Commission, spoke on in The Parker apartments few more vehicles into the ga- which is conducting a preliminary out after SCANDAL this winter. rage. Developer Bob Ball saw civil investigation of complaints The Ore- Not just the LEDs that spray the latter in San Francisco. against the governor and Hayes. gonian IN SALEM downward on to the white For the launch party, one “Nonetheless, it is increasingly editorial ONGOING REPORTS brickwork — orange for Hal- unit was taken over by local clear that the statutory process board on loween, green and yellow for TRIBUNE PHOTO: JOSEPH GALLIVAN video game developers, anoth- established to review questions of Wednes- big Duck games, pink and red er by a craft brewer. Since then, this nature, to determine the facts Up from nowhere: The western aspect of The Parker in October 2013. and to arrive at conclusions con- day called for Kitzhaber to re- for Valentine’s Week. But the Open since last fall the luxury building is attracting 25 to 35-year-olds residents have celebrated with sign, and wrote that he is lights in the apartments them- Halloween- and Great Gatsby- cerning whether laws have been vio- from out of state. lated has in no way stemmed the “now less a governor than a selves, as new residents gradu- themed costume parties. rush to judgment currently under- source of unending distrac- ally move in. It’s quickly turning into the way in the Oregon media,” Kitzhaber tion.” A stream of new people can avenues, which were dirt a few The Parker has high ceilings high-energy party building of wrote in the letter to Rosenblum. Hayes accepted several paid be seen heading to the dog run years ago, are crowded with and deluxe finishes, but no the Pearl District, which, until Kitzhaber also wrote, “I deeply jobs at organizations with an at the Fields park, to Safeway cars belonging to the construc- more than two bedrooms per now, has attracted a prepon- regret that this situation has interest in the same state poli- and to LA Fitness. Parts of Qui- tion workers working on three apartment. It was designed to See PARKER / Page 2 become a distraction from the cy issues on which she advised mby Street and 12th and 13th sides of The Parker. attract people with jobs above important work of our state and look forward to your review and its the governor, and The Orego- conclusion.” nian reported this week that — The Capital Bureau is a collabo- people involved in Kitzhaber’s ration between EO Media Group 2010 campaign helped Hayes and Pamplin Media Group. secure two of those positions. Kitzhaber does not plan to Reynolds shooter’s motivation still unknown resign, and said in an emailed statement that “I was elected Investigators still have no clear answers why Jared Padgett opened re at high school to serve the citizens of the state of Oregon and I intend to By KATY SWORD pears there is no defi nitive rea- the Multnomah County District the key,” Wendland said. continue to do so.” Pamplin Media Group son Jared Padgett, 15, took his Attorney declined to charge “That’s one of those things I Although gubernatorial brother’s .223 caliber AR-15 any of Padgett’s family mem- don’t know we’re ever going to turnover is common in some Eight months after the fa- semiautomatic rifl e to school bers for allowing Jared to ob- get the answer to.” states, only four Oregon gover- tal June 10 shooting at Reyn- and killed classmate Emilio tain the rifle he used in the The lock was a simple pad- nors have resigned in the olds High School, investiga- Hoffman, a 14-year-old Reyn- shooting. This was largely lock, which Wendland empha- state’s 155-year history. Nearly tors are at a loss. Although olds freshman. based on the determination sized are easy to break into. all did so in order to accept a the criminal probe is com- According to Wendland, that Luke Padgett had locked “It doesn’t take much to de- different elected or appointed plete, Lt. Joel Wendland, sec- that’s different than other the rifl e in a gun box in the bed- feat those,” he said. “It’s way position. ond in command for the school and mass shootings he’s room he shared with Jared in easier than you think.” “We’re not Illinois, and Troutdale Police Depart- studied, where the suspects the Padgett home. How Jared Jared also brought a hand- we’re not Louisiana,” said Jim ment, says investigators are have a history of mental illness obtained the rifl e is still a mys- gun owned by his father to the Moore, a political science pro- still scratching their heads. or are emotionally upset about tery to police. school. Micheal Padgett says it fessor and director of the Tom “It’s what I call a one-out,” something. “(The brother) typically kept McCall Center for Policy Inno- Wendland says, meaning it ap- It was only in November that it locked and he typically kept See SHOOTER / Page 2

“Pamplin Media Group’s pledge is to deliver balanced news that re ects the THE ‘CONSECRATED LIFE’ stories of our communities. Thank you — SEE LIFE, PAGE B10 for reading our newspapers.” Inside — DR. ROBERT B. PAMPLIN JR. OWNER & NEIGHBOR A2 NEWS The Portland Tribune Tuesday, February 10, 2015 Resign: Line of succession is complicated

“Oregon’s been fairly clean Oregon is one of seven states whether to run in 2016 to remain focused on the ancing our budget. We have a ■ From page 1 in that respect,” Tymchuk said. that do not have lieutenant gov- for the balance of work of writing bills and lot to do and we need to get it The first Oregon governor to ernors. If there is a vacancy, Kitzhaber’s term. If “The budgets. done before July. We can’t let vation at Pacific University. resign was LaFayette Grover, the secretary of state is next in the vacancy occurred governor is “The governor is fac- anything distract us.” At the same time, Moore ac- who did so in 1877 after the line, followed by the state trea- after January 2017, facing ing serious challenges House Speaker Tina Kotek, knowledged the ethical ques- Legislature appointed him to surer, Senate president and the secretary of state and he’s hurting,” Sen- D-Portland, issued a similar tions Kitzhaber now faces are fill a U.S. Senate seat, accord- House speaker. elected in 2016 would serious ate President Peter statement and cited a prelimi- unprecedented for a sitting ing to the National Governors Secretary of State Kate succeed the governor challenges Courtney, D-Salem, nary inquiry into Hayes and governor in Oregon. Former Association. George Chamber- Brown and Treasurer Ted until Kitzhaber’s term wrote in a statement Kitzhaber’s activities by the Gov. Neil Goldschmidt had lain resigned as governor in Wheeler are both rumored to ends in 2018. Brown’s and he’s Thursday. “I want to be Oregon Government Ethics been out of office more than a 1909, after he won a U.S. Senate be interested in running for second term as secre- hurting.” fair. I want to be compas- Commission. decade by the time Oregonians seat and Frank Benson, who governor in 2018. tary of state will draw — Senate sionate. I want to do my “This session is off to a pro- learned he sexually abused a succeeded Chamberlain, re- If the governor were to re- to a close in 2016, and President Peter job the best I can. I will ductive start,” Kotek wrote. “As teenage girl while he was the signed in 1910. Benson resigned sign, the secretary of state she cannot run for a Courtney, not speculate on his fu- the Oregon Government Ethics mayor of Portland. due to illness, Tymchuk said. would only hold the position third consecutive D-Salem ture. As legislators we Commission does its job, we Kerry Tymchuk, executive Douglas McKay resigned as until the next biennial state- term. need to stay focused on must remain focused on our job director of The Oregon Histori- governor in 1952 to accept Pres- wide election. That complicated providing money for our as legislators, which is to serve cal Society, also said Oregon ident Dwight D. Eisenhower’s That means if Kitzhaber line of succession might be the schools, taking care of our se- Oregonians by advancing poli- governors resigned for mun- appointment as U.S. interior were to resign before 2016, last thing legislative leaders niors, tending to our state’s cies that improve people’s lives dane reasons. secretary. Brown would have to decide want to ponder, as they attempt transportation needs, and bal- and strengthen our state.” Parker: Hot spot for Portland singles Shooter: Classmate Emilio ■ From page 1 Hoffman wasn’t targeted derance of empty nesters and retirees exposed to playing video games is go- who leave the streets empty after 8 ■ From page 1 ing to cause them to go out and act p.m. violently, I would submit we’d have a Resident Cristian Gonzales and his was in his bedroom closet behind a lot more violence,” he said, adding husband are enamored with Portland. locked door. that not even the Federal Bureau of After living in noisy downtown San But how Jared got the guns is only Investigations has determined a cor- Franciso, they realized it would cost one unanswered question about the relation between the two. “Yes, he had around $3,800 a month for a newish gruesome event. Many still wonder video games and posters of video one-bedroom. They looked north to what caused Padgett to turn on his games (in his room), but so does my Portland and south to Los Angeles. classmates before killing himself. son.” They wanted somewhere quiet but ac- Wedland says none of the 200 or so What Wendland said the police do cessible. Gonzales took a job as social Lisa Moose witnesses interviewed by investiga- know, is Hoffman was not a target. media manager for fitness company checks out a dog tors had any explanation or saw any “(Padgett) was not after a specific Nautilus. wash station warning signs. person and the fact is that Emilio was “San Francisco has become really, with her dog, “One of the things that really makes not supposed to be in the locker room really, really insane in terms of rent,” Moose, in the it kind of more so the ‘one out’ in my at the time that he was,” he said. As it Gonzales says. “We looked at six or basement floor mind is, a few weeks — maybe a month was finals week, students were direct- seven different places in Southeast, of The Parker — after this occurred, I received a ed to clean out their lockers whenever Northeast and Southwest. In the end, Apartments. phone call from one of the shooter’s they had time that week. “(Hoffman) we settled on The Parker because of grandmas,” Wendland said. “When I wasn’t scheduled to be there to clean Tribune Photo: the location and because the leasing Jaime valdez called her back she thanked me but out his locker. (His death) comes down office was super friendly and patient. said she already got the information to wrong place, wrong time. We were They were never too busy to help us They walk to the park about four roll says. “New things are coming up she was seeking. What she did tell me able to establish very clearly and very out.” times a day. Moose moved here four all the time.” His floormates are from was she had spent some time with the easily on that he was not an intended He commutes to Vancouver, Wash., years ago from Rochester, N.Y. New York and the Netherlands-by- shooter in the day or two preceding the specific target.” but in a pinch he can do his job on his “I lost another husband along the way-of-Texas. shooting and she said it didn’t seem Wendland said it’s possible the phone from anywhere. way,” she jokes. “If you’re going to get “For as many dogs as there are like anything was going on, it didn’t shooting will never make sense. “I also like to work in the commu- divorced, get a dog, they keep you around here, it’s very clean,” he adds. seem like anything was out of place.” “There’s still nights I’m lying there nal lobby or the heated courtyard in sane.” A little niceness goes a long way. The grandmother reportedly said in bed thinking why did this whole my headphones,” he says. Her westward journey is “The staff is very responsive, they Padgett was talking about the future thing happen,” Wendland said. As new tenants arrive, classic Parker. She rents a ju- know everyone’s name,” Carroll says. and how he was looking forward to the But that doesn’t mean the Troutdale they have to make a mark on This week nior one- bedroom (a studio). “It’ll be nice when there are a few new school year. Police Department can’t grow from the blank state that is the See this Thurs- She kept her Xerox Corp. con- things within stumbling distance, but “She was at a loss to why this hap- the situation. north end of the Pearl Dis- day’s Tribune tacts alive and now writes I like it because it’s so quiet.” pened,” he said. “If grandma, who says “This is one of those (cases) where trict. Forty years ago, this for a profile of marketing copy for them, vis- He will use the community room, she spends a lot of time with him, said there’s not the precursors and indica- was train yards. In 1999, the Parker developer iting their Wilsonville office with its test kitchen and big screen, to (that), I just don’t know.” tions and contributing factors that you Lovejoy viaduct was demol- Bob Ball. two or three days a week or host an event for alumni of his college Although a toxicology report and try to look for and find. It’s troubling,” ished. Bob Ball was part of working from home. Washington & Jefferson College in autopsy haven’t been released, Wend- he said, “but that doesn’t mean we the team that saved the Lovejoy art David Carroll moved here from Washington, Pa. And maybe get some land said there are no explanations can’t do something with it — we can’t columns. And, at the time, then-com- Pittsburgh two years ago. As Director Willamette University students over found there either — no apparent drug learn something with it.” missioner Charlie Hales told the Daily of Recruitment for Willamette Uni- to the courtyard, “when it’s nicer out. use and nothing physically wrong to While Wendland is proud of his de- Journal of Commerce, “The recon- versity’s Professional MBA program Maybe after July the 4th.” explain Padgett’s actions. partment — especially their response struction of Lovejoy is a critical piece based on nearby Northwest Lovejoy Carroll feels the pull of trendy “We want to place blame on some- time of two minutes to the scene — he of the emergence of the River District Street, he likes being able to stroll North Portland — the nightlife of Mis- thing and we look at all of those things. said there’s always a lesson to be as a vibrant residential neighborhood home to walk his half-chihuahua, sissippi Avenue is “just across the Does this person have preceding is- learned. In this instance, that could be in Northwest Portland.” half-dachshund at lunchtime. river.” sues with either illicit, drugs or legal communication and evacuation. Carroll pays $1,385 per month for But for now he likes living in a drugs or alcohol?” Wendland said. “It’s little things like that,” he said. If you lived here you’d be home now his junior one-bedroom, plus $40 for small radius the size of a neighbor- “There’s no indication of that whatso- If there’s one thing Wendland said As Lisa Moose’s 13-year-old dog, “pet rent.” He was in the 735 St. Clair hood. ever.” he hopes can come out of this tragedy, Moose, struggles up the stairs of the on Southwest Vista Avenue, but when “When I do entertain people, they With school shootings, people often it’s an increased sense of public safety. marble and quartz lobby, residents of- they upped his rent by $100 he real- can find parking,” he says. “Every- wonder if violent video games are to “For me, I want to make sure the fer encouragement as his back legs ized he could do better elsewhere. one’s always like, ‘Oh, you’re in The blame. Wendland said that’s not the public is safe,” he said. “I want to abso- buckle under him, then recover. “The location is fantastic, I like how Parker!’ For the single life, this is the case here either. lutely make sure the public has infor- Moose gives him a cookie at the top. it’s still developing around here,” Car- place to be.” “The simple (assumption) of people mation that makes them safe.” 7 DAY FORECAST 021015 2015 KIA OPTIMA 2015 KIA SORENTO LX AWD Lease for Lease for 497881 010115 $129/month $219/month 36 months • $2,269 due at signing 36 months • $2,499 due at signing Lease only. MSRP $23,115, Weston Discount $3,324, Sale Price $19,791, Net Cap Cost $16,195, Lease only. 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Lake Road [email protected] Portland, OR 97222 ©2015 Portland Tribune The Portland Tribune Tuesday, February 10, 2015 news A3 Fritz proposes ban on smoking in parks Documents deepen Ban would take Recreation, Fritz says the measure aligns with PP&R’s PP&R events, but a limited ex- hodgepodge of regulations re- focus of ‘Healthy Parks, ception is carved out for golf gov’s political crisis effect July 1, stricting tobacco use are con- Healthy Portland.’” tournaments. fusing. There is currently a The proposed new ban also The ban would include bidis, ing for Demos,” Gray wrote. the same day pot smoking ban in select Portland would include marijuana, cigarettes, cigarillos, cigars, Emails hint Hayes It was that experience, she parks — , Pioneer which Oregon voters legalized clove cigarettes, e-cigarettes, said, that led Demos to hire smoking is legal Courthouse Square and the last November. nicotine vaporizers, nicotine blurred line between Hayes “to help advance the idea Portland State University side If passed by the council Feb. liquids, hookahs, kreteks, in other states and nationally. By SHASTA KEARNS MOORE of the — and 18, the new regulation would pipes, chew, snuff, smokeless public, private role “Inasmuch as she and the The Tribune 25 feet around any play struc- take effect July 1, which is also tobacco and marijuana. governor have continued their ture, picnic table or designated when recreational marijuana The state Parks and Recre- By HILLARY BORRUD commitment to new measures Should smoking be pro- children’s area. will become legal. ation Department dropped a Capital Bureau for progress in Oregon, it was hibited in all of Portland’s “Expanding PP&R’s existing Violators in the first five plan last November to ban outside of the scope of Demos’ parks? tobacco-free policy across the months of the new policy would smoking on its 362 miles of SALEM — More evidence six-month consulting contract.” That’s what city Commis- entire system sends a consis- be educated about the ban, public beaches. The agency of the overlap between the However, the emails released sioner Amanda Fritz will pro- tent message,” Fritz said in a though patrons who refuse to has banned smoking in most public policies championed Friday revealed Hayes was ac- pose at the city council meeting news release. “It helps to cre- comply could be issued a park parts of state parks, picnic ar- by Gov. John Kitzhaber and tively involved in developing an on Wednesday, when a hearing ate healthy and safe environ- exclusion. After the grace pe- eas and trails. More than 60 the private business of his fi- Oregon GPI at the same time is scheduled on the issue. ments within all of Portland riod, a violation would be con- other cities and counties in ancee, Cylvia Hayes, emerged she worked for Demos. As the commissioner in Parks & Recreation — especial- sidered a misdemeanor. Oregon have smoke-free Friday, when the state Depart- On Oct. 10, 2013, Hayes charge of Portland Parks & ly for children and youth. This The policy would extend to parks. ment of Administrative Ser- emailed Jordan with a job de- vices and the Governor’s Of- scription for an employee the fice released hundreds of pag- state eventually would hire to es of public records requested implement the GPI. by members of the media. “Here are my thoughts on Emails released on Friday re- what the GPI Director will need veal the close relationship be- to do,” Hayes wrote. She went on Rape: Reporting of crime urged tween a group that hired Hayes to list “build stakeholder partici- and state employees working on pation and support within and National Institute of Justice and tor 20 years later to come forth the impression by the (Benton an alternative measure of Ore- beyond state government,” and ■ From page 1 the Centers for Disease Control with her story. She did not do so County) district attorney that gon’s progress on environmen- “work with, leverage, learn from and Prevention — and cited on then, but finally did in a news ac- this was a ‘he said, she said’ type tal, socioeconomic and other is- other state GPI efforts.” sota have lower limits. the RAINN website — one of ev- count later in 2008. of case — which would be diffi- sues. The Department of Adminis- They already have enlisted the ery six women in the United “Even though it was not my cult — and I was going to have to Hayes signed a $25,000 con- trative Services eventually hired help of Senate President Peter States is a survivor of rape or a fault, I still felt a lot of guilt and go through four separate trials,” tract with Demos, a an employee, Sean Courtney, D-Salem — a longtime target of attempted rape. shame,” Tudor says, even substi- Tracy says. New York-based poli- McGuire, in March champion of tougher laws About 3 percent of men have tuting “attack” for rape in that “The DA said that if they did cy group, in July 2013. Scandal 2014 to fill the posi- against sexual abuse — and Rep. been rape victims. 2008 account. not have me, they had nothing. I Her work for Dem- tion Hayes de- Jeff Barker, D-Aloha, chairman The issue has drawn renewed “I thought: Am I still that terri- was not going to be able to do os included “advising in salem scribed, according of the House Judiciary Commit- attention, particularly on college fied 17 year old? I thought I was. four trials. state and county lead- to records released tee. campuses and professional When I got the courage to “Knowing what I know now, I ers on implementa- ongoing reports by the Department Although Courtney’s bill is sports leagues. Oregon has had a change my mind and come for- would have loved to have had tion of GPI,” or Genu- of Administrative likely to propose 20 years, they sexual assault task force, part of ward as a victim, I found I was them prosecuted. But I have no ine Progress Indica- Services. say they expect negotiations over the Department of Justice, for not that person any longer.” recourse.” tor, the specific indicator that Hayes’ involvement with the specifics with the Oregon Crimi- more than a decade. The parole board denied Gill- Tracy says she was upset that Demos advocates for govern- project appears to have been a nal Defense Lawyers Associa- Survivors are more than sta- more’s bid for parole by a 2-1 vote evidence was destroyed before ments to adopt. selling point for Demos. tion. tistics. in 2012, after the proceeding the six-year limit expired. Lew Daly, director of Demos’ George Soule, a spokesman Tudor says she does not ex- drew public attention. He did not sustainable progress initiative, for the Surdna Foundation, pect lawmakers will abolish a Danielle Tudor renew a bid for parole last year. Personal aftermath emailed a document related to which helped fund Demos’ GPI statute of limitations for rape or Tudor was raped by Gillmore Gillmore remains at Two Riv- Tudor never told her sons the GPI to Hayes in September work, said Demos listed Hayes allow a revival of years-old cases at her home in Portland in 1979, ers Correctional Institution in about her 1979 rape until they 2013. in a proposal for a $200,000 grant based on hearsay evidence. when she was 17 years old and he Umatilla. found out about it through the “Once we polish it up, Cylvia, that ran from April 2013 to April “We are not trying to be un- was nearly 20. Gillmore, who be- 2008 news account. maybe you should forward it to 2014. reasonable,” she says. came known as the “jogger rap- Brenda Tracy Tudor says as hard as it is for the relevant group in the gover- “The grantee, Demos, indi- Tudor and Tracy, who spoke in ist,” was finally arrested in con- Tracy was a 24-year-old wait- victims, she encourages them to nor’s office, for questions, etc.,” cated to Surdna, in their grant an interview with the Portland nection with the 1986 rape of Tif- ress at a restaurant in Keizer report such crimes to police. Daly wrote. proposal material, that they Tribune, say they are not press- fany Edens, then 13, at her home back in 1998 when she was raped “Even if you cannot move for- Hayes waited until Jan. 8, would be funding a fellow who is ing for a change in the hope that in Troutdale. and sodomized by four men after ward with that case now and do 2014, then forwarded the email the first lady of Oregon,” Soule it will help their personal circum- Gillmore acknowledged that a night on the town with others not see how you would be able to, to Kitzhaber’s chief of staff, Mike wrote in an email Friday. stances. he raped nine women, including in Corvallis. Three of them were do everything you can, so that Bonetto, and Michael Jordan, However, Soule wrote in a Tudor’s perpetrator, Richard Tudor, but was convicted only on football players at OSU. you have that option open,” she director of the Department of subsequent email that Surdna Troy Gillmore, has been in state charges involving Edens. He was They were arrested, and two says. Administrative Services. already had awarded two previ- prison since 1987. Gillmore ac- sentenced to a minimum of 30 of the players were suspended by Tracy’s sons were young — Elektra Gray, director of com- ous grants — $100,000 and knowledged past rapes of nine years — and a maximum of 60 then-Coach Mike Riley. But about just 4 and 5 — when she was munications for Demos, said in $275,000 — to Demos and “Dem- women, but was convicted of on- years — for rape, first-degree three weeks later, she declined to raped. She says she told her older an emailed statement Friday os’s indication that the first lady ly one. burglary, and two counts of first- press criminal charges, and they son when he was 15, but never that Hayes and Kitzhaber’s sup- of Oregon would be a fellow nei- Tracy had four perpetrators degree sexual assault. were not indicted. told her younger son; both are port for the Genuine Progress ther increased or decreased the — three of them football players The rape occurred eight years Under Oregon’s mandatory now in their 20s. Indicator predated Hayes’ con- attractiveness of the proposal.” at Oregon State University — before voters approved manda- minimums, known as Measure “I had to learn that if I came tract. Gray declined to comment on who were arrested but not pros- tory minimum sentences for vio- 11, their sentences would have forward and speak the truth “Gov. Kitzhaber has been an the record regarding Soule’s ecuted. lent crimes such as rape. been slightly more than eight about what happened to me, it advocate for such alternative statement about the grant pro- “We cannot change the past, But in 1988, the year after his years each on counts of first-de- does not define me,” she says. “I metrics since at least 2001, and posal. and what happened with us,” Tu- conviction, the state parole board gree rape and first-degree sod- tried for 16 years for me not to Cylvia Hayes was a champion of dor says. “But we can change the cut Gillmore’s minimum sen- omy. deal with it — act like it did not the issue and sought Demos’ The Capital Bureau is a c future.” tence in half. “At that point I decided to drop happen to me — and it was not technical assistance before any ollaboration between EO Media Based on a 1998 report by the Tudor was urged by a prosecu- the charges, because I was given part of my story. 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501174.021015 A4 NEWS The Portland Tribune Tuesday, February 10, 2015 Hayes gig could AG calls allegations against Kitzhaber, Hayes ‘troubling’ Oregon City resident Arin Governor recall Marcus also filed a recall pe- help job seekers efforts must wait until tition earlier this week, that included allegations Kitzha- July to go forward ber failed to protect Oregon he latest jobs num- motorcycles to pass between businesses, families and chil- bers came out last lanes during traffic jams. dren. Friday and most Motorcyclists say it’s safe By HILLARY BORRUD Under the Oregon Consti- T agree; things are and would allow them to Capital Bureau tution, the governor or any looking good. Companies are avoid congestion. Mark & other official must be in of- hiring again and, according Dave say it’s scary, and SALEM — Oregon Attor- fice, in their current term, to indeed.com, a job bulletin would cause your driver’s ney General Ellen Rosen- for six months before anyone board site, the most in-de- seat to become a toilet. blum said her office is look- can launch a recall effort. mand jobs for 2015 include Mark&Dave • • • ing into whether to launch That led Secretary of State registered nurses, truck an investigation of first lady to announce Fri- drivers, and anyone who can Up in the air Just in time for Valentine’s Cylvia Hayes’ private con- day evening that the peti- handle public relations for Day, Portland will be the sulting business and Gov. tions were filed too early. Cylvia Hayes. host of the first-ever “Cuddle John Kitzhaber’s possible in- Kitzhaber’s current term be- they need to do to convince Con,” a cuddling convention volvement in securing some gan Jan. 12. us that climate-change is re- where professional cuddlers of those contracts. TRIBUNE file PHOTO Any recall effort also • • • al, we’ll concede. We prom- can learn more about their “Recent allegations relat- Oregon Attorney General Ellen would have to collect a large ised we’d try the brew on “touch and consent” trade — ing to Gov. Kitzhaber and Ms. Rosenblum called the recent number of valid signatures to We spoke with former the radio show, but we’ll unlike political conventions Hayes are very serious — allegations regarding Gov. move forward: equal to at State Representative Dennis skip the dark beer. where they are obviously and troubling,” Rosenblum Kitzhaber and Cylvia Hayes “very least 15 percent of the votes Richardson on the “Mark • • • out to screw you. said in a statement emailed serious.” cast in the most recent elec- and Dave Show” about Gov- • • • to the EO Media Group/Pam- tion for governor. Based on ernor John Kitzhaber’s trou- Did you know the U.S. plin Media Group Capital Bu- pears to have brought in ballots cast for governor in bles. Kitz’s former guberna- Government is spending $3.5 The Meowlingual transla- reau Friday morning. “My more than $200,000. November 2014, that would be torial opponent isn’t bitter million to hunt and kill tor has hit American shores! office is considering all of our also has 220,458 verified signatures. about how things are turn- barred owls? No, not be- It’s a hand-held gadget that legal options to ensure that reported Hayes does not ap- Recall petitioners would ing out. He’s come to terms cause one is attacking jog- translates your cat’s meows we are best serving the pear to have reported some have 90 days to collect that with the result of the No- gers in Salem’s Bush’s Pas- into language so you can un- state.” of her income during this pe- many valid signatures. Once vember election and cur- ture Park. No, they are hunt- derstand its mood. Price tag: Rosenblum issued the riod to the IRS. signatures are certified, the rently works as a volunteer ing them because it’s the $169. Too rich for Mark’s statement after Republican Meanwhile, two prospec- official who is the target of helping people find jobs. same species that is also at- blood, but Dave thinks, “It’s state lawmakers called for tive petitions to recall the recall has a choice: resig- How ironic. Come July, we tacking and killing spotted worth every penny if it’ll her to investigate Kitzhaber Kitzhaber were filed with the nation, or a statement about suspect Kitzhaber may be owls. Here’s an idea, hire Or- work on my wife.” and Hayes’ activities. News secretary of state’s office this why he or she refuses to re- one of his clients. egon loggers to do the hunt- • • • has continued to trickle out week. sign. An election must be • • • ing — they have plenty of in recent months that Hayes On Friday, two members of scheduled for no later than 35 time of their hands thanks to Will sobriety checkpoints used state resources to fur- Republican Dennis Richard- days after the resignation Are we reading too much the spotted owl. rise up again in Oregon? ther her consulting business son’s 2014 gubernatorial cam- deadline. If the official is re- into Oregon State Senate • • • They may, if State Senator and was paid by groups with paign filed a petition with the called, the secretary of state President Peter Courtney’s Rod Monroe has his way. an interest in state policy. secretary of state’s office. would become governor. comments about the Kitzha- Oregon First Lady Cylvia Oregon is one of the few Willamette Week first re- Charlie Pearce was Rich- It is not unprecedented for ber scandal? Sen. Courtney Hayes’ web page has been states that don’t allow the ported in October that Hayes ardson’s campaign manager, an Oregon governor to re- makes it clear that he wants scrubbed from the state’s In- DUII checkpoints, as our was paid at least $85,000 for and Jacob Daniels served as main in office, despite facing to be fair and compassionate ternet pages. It’s worth not- constitution bans them. work that over- the campaign’s at- multiple recall attempts. Bar- and that he won’t speculate ing that it took longer to re- Good thing, too. With the lapped with poli- torney. Pearce bara Roberts was the target on the governor’s future. He move Neil Goldschmidt’s pic- road conditions around the cies on which she Scandal confirmed in an of three recall attempts while then wraps up the rah-rah ture from the Capitol. Guess state, how can anyone look was an official, al- email Friday that she was governor from 1991 statement with the words, that’s progress. like they are driving sober? though unpaid, ad- in salem they filed paper- to 1994, but none of those “We can’t let anything dis- • • • • • • viser to the gover- work to create a qualified for a statewide vote. tract us.” Sounds like this is nor. The EO Media ongoing reports political action Daniels was not deterred the session the Oregon Leg- After last week’s heinous Mayor Charlie Hales float- Group/Pamplin Me- committee called by the number of signatures islature wants to actually execution of a fighter pilot ed the idea of a $15-an-hour dia Group Capital Oregonians for necessary or other challeng- get something done. Good by ISIL, Jordan’s King minimum wage for city Bureau reported Jan. 27 that Public Integrity to raise mon- es of a potential recall. luck. Abdullah quoted Clint East- workers and contractors. It Hayes was paid an additional ey in support of the recall ef- “We think we can get the • • • wood’s threats of retribution hasn’t exactly caught fire $118,000 by a Washington, fort. 220,000-plus signatures,” from the movie “Unforgiv- with citizens, but we think D.C.-based nonprofit called Pearce and Daniels includ- Daniels said on Friday eve- Big fist-bump to the guys en.” Thank goodness it was its smart idea to raise every- the Clean Economy Develop- ed several allegations against ning. Daniels said the Orego- over at Clean Water Services from an Oscar-winning mov- one’s pay so they can afford ment Center that worked in Kitzhaber in their petition, nians for Public Integrity po- in Hillsboro. They want to ie, and not from that conver- the street fee. 2014 to organize a coalition in including “facilitating the litical action committee will start brewing beer from sation with the chair at the support of a permanent Ore- first lady’s use of the gover- work on building support for treated wastewater. They Republican National Conven- gon low-carbon fuels stan- nor’s mansion in order for his a recall and file another pro- won’t actually brew the ef- tion. dard. household to make financial spective petition in mid-July. fluent; home brewers will • • • Listen to Mark & Dave weekdays When an additional job gains,” and “withholding use the treated wastewater 3 to 6 p.m. on News-Talk 860 that paid Hayes $25,000 in public records requests from The Capital Bureau is a to concoct beers for the rest Oregon and Washington’s KPAM. Like them on Facebook 2011 is factored in, Hayes’ being disclosed which are collaboration between EO Media of us to swill at events and lawmakers are looking at at: facebook.com/themarkand- contracting work during relevant to this pay-to-play Group and Pamplin Media competitions. If this is what legislation that would allow daveshow Kitzhaber’s third term ap- scandal.” Group.

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GOLEMG LEM HEBEPHRENIAHEBEPHR AESOPIANPIAN CALLIOPECALLIOP 505597.020515 485952.012015 The Portland Tribune Tuesday, February 10, 2015 { insight } news A5 Portland Tribune Founder Politicizing special ed hurts students Dr. Robert B. Pamplin, Jr. hen it comes to in- in segregated classrooms who These often are children who did not receive any consider- PRESIDENT tegration, where are “placed” by the district at are seen as having “less se- ation in this process. children are whim. These children are de- MyVIEW vere” disabilities and who ei- Students with disabilities are J. Mark Garber Wserved is only a nied access to the least restric- ther cannot successfully access second-class citizens in PPS. Managing editor small part of the problem. I find tive environments of neighbor- By Dana supports or are shoved into They are not included in the Vance W. Tong it telling that the Tribune arti- hood schools, charters, alterna- mainstream environments that PPS Equity office’s work or def- cle (PPS plan would integrate tives and focus options. Their Brenner-Kelly don’t meet their needs. These inition of equity. They didn’t digital media editor special ed, Jan. 15) cites that families have no decision-mak- further restricted programs get priority status of any kind Kevin Harden kids in Portland Public Schools’ ing power in where they are have served an important role in the recommendations put special education system are “placed.” They are often moved (on the campaign trail) had to in allowing children with differ- forth by SACET and voted in by vice president “experiencing a wide depth and around although they are high- contribute to the Tribune arti- ences to access methodologies the school board (as did kids of Brian Monihan breadth of ly vulnerable. cle on special education was and practices that are better color, those with low incomes, Advertising Director physical, psy- The recent recommendations raising the issue of kids of color suited to their needs than their and siblings). Christine Moore chological and from the Superintendent’s Ad- being identified as having dis- standardized neighborhood Mary Pearson, PPS director intellectual visory Committee for Enroll- abilities inaccurately. That is schools. of special education, has ad- CTIIRCULA ON disabilities.” ment & Transfer notably and true and it needs attention, but Many of these kids are mitted what teachers and ad- MANAGER Completely thankfully addressed the “re- they also are notoriously mis- pushed into charter schools for ministrators have been leaking Kim Stephens missing from placement” issue. Kids will no identified. that reason, and PPS signifi- to parents — that it is the dis- that statement longer be forced to leave their Children of color with neuro- cantly underserves charter trict’s general intent to equal- creti a ve is another cat- schools at the whim of the dis- logical disabilities often are schools with special-education ize the percentage of kids with services manager egory — neu- brenner-kelly trict. However, they still have mislabeled as having behavior- supports (they already receive disabilities across schools, re- Cheryl DuVal rological, or restricted access to their legal al/psychological disturbances less funding). Charter schools gardless of whether those cognitive (yet rights to a least-restrictive en- and not getting the supports will tell you that they are over- schools are able to serve them PUBLISHING SYSTEMS not intellectual) — and it’s by vironment and choice. This is they need. Whether wrongly run with applications from kids well. Manipulating numbers in ManagER/WEBMaster far the category with the larg- not equity. identified or misidentified, they with neurological disabilities this way is political. It’s incon- Alvaro Fontán est number of students in it. The second type of students end up headed for the school- fleeing the public schools. gruent with the true spirit of News writers As one example, PPS has with disabilities includes those to-prison pipeline courtesy of It is hard enough to get into equity, as well as being in op- Jennifer Anderson, been known to remove or not who have more than one equity both PPS and the national charter schools (it’s not uncom- position to the law that states Steve Law, Jim Redden, Jo- recognize the diagnosis of dys- challenge. In addition to experi- movement toward data-based mon to find 200 applications for that children with disabilities seph Gallivan, Peter Wong, lexia from individual education encing a disability, they also decision-making that has re- five slots). With so many stu- have the right to both a free Shasta Kearns Moore plans when it has been diag- may experience poverty, racism moved true learning and poten- dents who don’t have disabili- and appropriate public educa- nosed because the educators and/or class-related disdain. tial from our public education ties shut out of distinctive pro- tion, and a least-restricted en- FTEA URES Writer simply won’t provide appropri- Many never get to access ser- system. The district and board grams and transfer opportuni- vironment. Jason Vondersmith ate instruction to address it. At vices (or appropriate services) bestow the “equity crown” as it ties, special-education students some point where children are because their disabilities aren’t suits them. (who receive no priority status SP ORTS EDITOR served becomes moot if how recognized, but rather mischar- The third type is the one in PPS or in charter schools) Dana Brenner-Kelley is a North Steve Brandon they are served misses the acterized as what is perceived most adversely impacted by will have an even more difficult Portland resident, the mother of SP ORTS writers mark. as poor parenting or other PPS’ decision to shut down the time getting into better-fit three children ages 5 to 18 who expe- Kerry Eggers, There are three types of stu- forms of pathology. school transfer system and re- schools than they do already as rience disabilities, a leadership/ Jason Vondersmith, dents with disabilities ill- The only thing that PPS strict access to focus options the application pool and compe- organizational consultant, and an Stephen Alexander served by PPS. There are those board member Bobbie Regan and alternative programs. tition grow. This third group educational advocate.

Sustainable Life Editor Steve Law READERS’LETTERS Copy editor Denise Szott

DESIGN Keith Sheffield Airbnb, renters don’t want to cooperate Photographers Jonathan House f course Airbnb and voirs is typical engineering Jaime Valdez their rentals don’t belt and suspenders. Existing want to cooperate valves can be upgraded to stop insight with the city (Port- any anticipated backflow. page editor O land to crack down on Airbnb Tell the EPA to pound salt. Keith Klippstein hosts who fail to get permits, Michael Molinaro Web story, Jan. 21). PRODUCTION Southeast Portland Michael Beaird, Valerie Ninety-three percent of those Clarke, Chris Fowler, Gail renting out space don’t get per- Park mits for several reasons: Most State fails those with of them don’t really have the le- low wages, no benefits contributor gal right to do so per their own Rob Cullivan rental agreements, local codes I’m a proud Oregonian. or mortgage/insurance/fire reg- This is a great state. But after web site ulations; they don’t want to de- reading Andrea Paluso’s portlandtribune.com clare the income and thus have guest column (Higher pay ctiircula on to pay taxes; and/or they don’t creates better future for all, 503-546-9810 want their neighbors to have Jan. 29), I realized that Ore- any review of their little scam. gon is not a great state for ev- 6605 S.E. Lake Road Portland, OR 97222 Portland has always very eryone, and it’s time we all 503-226-6397 (NEWS) closely scrutinized and regulat- faced the hard truth. Right ed local businesses, to the point here in Oregon, we’re failing The Portland Tribune where many have left town. But one another. is Portland’s independent now, between the sea of food Too many of us are working newspaper that is trusted carts, Airbnb scams and the too hard for too little. Not ev- to deliver a compelling, whole Uber mess, our city is be- TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO ery Oregonian has paid sick forward-thinking and ginning to look like a bona-fide, Although the City Council has decided to disconnect the Mt. Tabor reservoirs, neighbors are still trying to save days at his or her work, and accurate living chronicle third-world urban jumble filled them. many Oregonians are working about how our citizens, with the tacky innovations of for only minimum wage. The government and the new “sharing” economy. gap between the wealthy and businesses live, work Mexico City, here we come. Demolition foes Raising minimum Take reservoir the rest of us keeps growing, and play. The Portland Lee Hill should pay for delays wage isn’t fight to where it and that comes back on all of Tribune is dedicated Southwest Portland us as demand for public ser- to providing vital In your article (Demolition long-term answer really belongs vices grows and grows, too. communication and controversy continues, Jan. 22), Good editorial (Wage hike Low-wage, no-benefit jobs do leadership throughout Why should there be it reads, “The new proposal al- would backfire on the poor, edito- Here’s a typical Portland not work for any of us. our community. rules, regulations? so would require that whoever rial, Jan. 22). You cannot legislate scenario: Fighting among our- Sometimes it feels like we requests the delay pay a $1,318 prosperity. Do people think that selves instead of combining to have the eyes of the nation on After all, why should there fee, submit a plan for saving prices are going to stay as they fight the Environmental Pro- us right now. Oregon has a be rules and regulations about the property, and prove they are after the minimum wage is tection Agency (Tabor reser- chance to be the next national anything? (Portland to crack have the financial means to car- increased? At best, all you will voirs’ fate up to City Council, leader on these and other im- down on Airbnb hosts who fail ry it out.” do is keep even with where you Jan. 29). portant issues facing our Portland Tribune to get permits, Web story, Jan. That makes sense. If you are now. With all of my drinking wa- workers, our families and our editorial board 21). Why can’t property rights want to gripe about your neigh- Your real argument is with ter coming from the under- communities. Let’s take the J. Mark Garber be paramount, allowing any- bor’s new house, you need to state and local policymakers who ground storage tank, the reser- right steps forward and make president, thing the owner wants to do, have some skin in the game in- have ensured that, for many peo- voirs are effectively “removed” this a better state for each Portland Tribune anytime? That worked just fine stead of just kvetching and ple, the only economic opportu- from the system today, with no and every one of us by lead- and Community for thousands of years, right? blocking their property rights. I nity is minimum wage employ- loss of water pressure in my ing on paid sick days for ev- Newspapers Inc. Who needs so-called civilized like it. ment. Oregon’s anti-forestry poli- shower, no nasty taste. So we ery Oregonian and raising 503-546-0714; society? Rick Zehr cies, to name just one, have de- are in about 95 percent compli- the minimum wage. mgarber@ Jim Gardner Southwest Portland stroyed thousands of good, mid- ance with the EPA clean water Oregon can do better. Let’s commnewspapers.com Southwest Portland dle-class jobs. mandate. The “air gap” re- step up to the plate. Dave Lister quired in the underground pip- Louise Currin Vance W. Tong Tigard ing to disconnect the reser- Aloha managing editor, Portland Tribune 503-546-5146; vtong@ portlandtribune.com

Kevin Harden digital media editor, Portland Tribune Pembina plan puts safety on the line 503-546-5167; kevinharden@ he propane terminal age to the tanks, pipeline or cessing, shipping and burning the choice is made between fos- portlandtribune.com proposed by the Cana- propane-filled rail cars. A leak of great quantities of propane sil fuels or renewable energy. dian company Pembina of toxic, highly explosive pro- MyVIEW that would add to the growing It’s where Pembina and politi- Submissions TPipeline Corp. would pane vapors would be extreme- problem of climate warming. cal leaders opt to practice in- The Portland Tribune locate 10 large propane tanks ly dangerous, especially in By Barbara Quinn Pembina has portrayed pro- clusiveness and transparency welcomes essays on topics holding 33.6 million gallons on combination with the large pane as a transition fuel even with the community — or not. of public interest. the banks of the Columbia Riv- amount of fuel stored at the though it is a hydrocarbon by- Community members can er in a flood and earthquake site. A mere spark from a cell site would be almost 30 times product of gas and oil process- weigh in on the decision being Submissions should be no hazard zone (A phone or train wheel could ig- that, so a two- to three-mile ing. In this case, it is obtained made by the city’s Planning longer than 600 words primer on nite leaked fumes with cata- blast zone is a conservative es- by hydraulic fracturing, or Commission until March 17 by and may be edited. Pembina ter- strophic results. timate — engulfing residences fracking, a practice that de- email: psc@portlandoregon. Letters should be no minal project, Rather than offering solid in- in the St. Johns neighborhood stroys groundwater quality and gov. The commission is consid- longer than 250 words. Jan. 22). formation to the most affected and West Hayden Island, as poses “significant health risk to ering whether or not to recom- Both submissions should According to communities, Pembina has not well as Kelley Point and Pier both human and non-human mend removal of environmen- include your name, home chief scientist responded to the request for parks, the Smith and Bybee life,” according to Physicians tal zoning at the site to allow address and telephone Ian Madin of the blast zone size in a worst- Wetlands Natural Area, and the for Social Responsibility. the propane terminal. number for verification the Oregon De- case scenario. Instead, it has of- entire span of the Columbia The fracking process also City commissioners then will purposes. Please send partment of fered an estimate based on oth- River well into Vancouver, causes the release of large make the final decision wheth- submissions via e-mail: Geology and quinn er sites — 300 yards, or about Wash. amounts of methane gas, which er to remove the environmental tribletters@ Mineral Indus- three or four blocks in all direc- These residents deserve is even more damaging to the zone or not, either allowing or portlandtribune.com. You tries, if an earthquake of 6.0 or tions. more transparency from Pem- atmosphere than carbon diox- disallowing the terminal. may fax them to 503- stronger struck the vicinity, it In contrast, the Environmen- bina and our own political lead- ide. This proposal clearly ex- 546-0727 or send them could cause catastrophic tal Protection Agency esti- ers. pands fossil fuel use. Barbara Quinn is executive director to “Letters to the Editor,” ground movement and liquefac- mates the blast zone for a Besides the safety issue, The decision to accept or re- of the Friends of Baltimore Woods, a Portland Tribune, 6605 tion. 125,000-gallon propane tank to there also is the problem of ject this proposal is where cli- member of the Portland Harbor S.E. Lake Road, Such a ground failure could, be more than a half-mile. The high carbon dioxide and meth- mate change rhetoric meets on- Community Advisory Group and a Portland, OR 97222. in turn, cause structural dam- total capacity at the Portland ane emissions from the pro- the-ground action, and where North Portland resident. A6 NEWS The Portland Tribune Tuesday, February 10, 2015 Memorial Tributes

Celebrating The Lives Of Local Residents

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In Loving Memory Service Directory In Loving Memory Virginia Helyer John Byron Powers October 16, 1916 February 13, 1938 - January 26, 2015 - January 23, 2015

Virginia M. Helyer, 98, of John Byron Powers, 76, of Mansfield, Portland, passed on Jan. 26, 2015. Wash., died on January 23, 2015. She was born in Kent, OR to Elmer & John was born on February 13, 1938 in Olive (Adams) Helyer; & was raised with 4 Portland Tulsa, Okla., where he lived for 16 years. He also siblings. Virginia studied education in college & 832 NE Broadway resided in Tigard, Ore. for 14 years and Pacific City, earned a bachelor’s degree in education from the 503-783-3393 Ore. for 19 years. John joined the Navy and was an University of Oregon. Following her studies she Milwaukie Aviation Mechanic and MP from 1954-1964. He was 17064 SE McLoughlin Blvd. stationed in Oak Harbor, Washington, California, taught at various schools in Oregon for 40 years; 503-653-7076 32 of which were served at Alice Ott Middle Oklahoma, Texas and Hawaii. While actively serving Tualatin in the Navy, John became a Santa Clara County School in Portland. Avid reader, sharp and 8970 SW Tualatin Sherwood Rd Sheriff. He married Anna May Evans on Dec. 5, 1955. independent were just a few words use to describe 503-885-7800 Virginia. John was employed as a Mechanic, Fabricator SIMPLE CREMATION $$$545495 and in Construction. He had multiple employers and Virginia was preceded in death by her life $ Traditional Funeral $1,9751,475 was also self-employed. John worked many jobs that partner George Robbins; sisters, Verta, Merta & Immediate Burial $550500 Norma. She is survived by her brother, Gordon took him all over the world. His favorite jobs were in No Hidden Costs, Guaranteed Alaska. John was a member of the Elks, American and many close friends. Privately Owned Cremation Facility www.ANewTradition.com Legion and the Lions. He enjoyed Fishing, Hunting, A funeral service will be held at Bateman 412210.012413 Barbecuing and spending time with family and Carroll Funeral Home on Sat. Feb 7 at 11am. 467734.031814 friends. Visit www.batemancarrollfunerals.com for more information. John is survived by his wife, Anna May Powers, of Mansfield, Wash.; and children JoAnn & Don Randall, John & Ginny Powers, Rose & Tracy Smart, Bateman Carroll Ida & John Monroe, Jackie & Mike Tupling, Chris & Funeral Home Wendy Powers; 15 Grandchildren; and seven Great- 520 W Powell Blvd | Gresham, OR 97030 grandchildren with three more on the way. 503-665-2128 498318.020615 A public service will be held on Feb. 14, 2015 BatemanCarrollFunerals.com 11:00 a.m. United Protestant Church, Mansfield, WA *In lieu of flowers please make donations to Caleb J Power Memorial Scholarship or Mansfield ambulance. In Loving Memory

Gerald Mitchell May 29, 1929 Hannah Bacon Eldridge to January 28, 2015 March 11, 1926 - February 1, 2015 Gerald Mitchell better known as “Papa Jerry” and husband to Hannah Bacon Eldridge, Wilbur August Olson Bettie P. Mitchell died on Wednesday, 88, child of the windswept January 28, 2015. great plains and the glorious, September 3, 1926 to January 31, 2015 seemingly endless wheat fields of Born in Portland, Ore., and was raised in Wilbur A. Olson, SE attending Grant High School. In 1952, he married Kansas, has reached the end of her journey in Portland, Oregon, 88, of Damascus, the love of his love Bettie. Jerry was quickly shipped having thrived from March, 1926 passed away Jan 31, off to serve our nation during the Korean War. through February 1st, 2015, at the 2015. Wilbur was born Papa Jerry raised his family in Beaverton and age of 88. Sept 3, 1926 to August spent his career teaching at Beaverton Schools. Daughter of Stewart Virgil and Emma (Staffenson) Jerry loved teaching and had a true appreciation for and Aileen Strandberg Bacon, of Olson. He was raised on history and took his family on road trips discovering Hutchinson, Kansas, and sister of her beloved brothers, Charles, the family farm along America’s rich history! with two older sisters. Jerry was an integral part in creating a legacy Bob, and Pete, all of whom preceded her in death, Hannah was married for two decades to Al Eldridge, who Wilbur graduated from with Good Samaritan Ministries. In 1976 GSM was Gresham High School an idea and side-by-side with his wife followed their also preceded her in death. They raised three children: Elaine (husband, Jeff, in , Washington with in 1944. After high profound faith and desires to teach the world. GSM grandchildren Pete and Reve), eldest son Stewart, and school Wilbur devoted started in the home he raised his family and is now Douglas (husband, Carl, in Portland, Oregon). his life to the family in over 30 countries. Jerry’s devotion helped the Hannah earned bachelor and master degrees from farm, a devotion that earned him the honor of “Century ministry open orphanages, counseling centers, and Kansas State University, before teaching there. While Farm” in 2006. In 1961, he married Mildred Carlson. making the world a better place one country and raising her children in Manhattan, Kansas, Chicago, They spent 30 wonderful years together until her death in town at a time. Illinois and Valparaiso, Indiana, she taught both English 1992. Wilbur was known within the community for his One of his great joys, was playing catch with and Biology for many years in Hebron High School and heart of service; he would always lend a helping hand to children he taught locally and around the world. in Chesterton Senior High School. those in need. Wilbur enjoyed baseball, antiques and Jerry is known for his humor, love of sports, and After her retirement from over 40 years of teaching, spending time with his family, especially his beloved lived life to the fullest. Hannah traveled extensively (Australia, China, Egypt, grandchildren. Jerry is survived by his wife, Bettie; four children, Europe, South America, and throughout the United States and Canada). She continued her volunteer He was preceded in death by his wife; and two sisters Michelle Smith, Laura Sweitz, Jennie Mitchell, and activities with various women’s support groups and with Alice and Miriam. Wilbur is survived by his children, adopted son, Mohammad Bader; 9 grandchildren, 2 help for the homeless in community shelters. She had a Donald(Denise) and Nancy(Kent); and two grandchildren great-grandchildren, and a third on the way. strong, inner-directed, Quaker commitment to public Emma & Trey. The world is a better place because of Papa Jerry. service, and she earnestly tried to A viewing will be held on Fri. Feb 6th from 4-8pm at A memorial service is scheduled for 3:00 p.m. make a positive difference in the 498319.020615 Bateman Carroll Funeral Home. A funeral service will be on February 14, 2015 at C-3 Church, 17979 S.W. world. held Mon. Feb 9th at 11am at Bateman Carroll. Wilbur Stafford Road, Lake Oswego, OR 97034. In lieu Having lost most of her will be laid to rest with his wife in Damascus Pioneer of flowers the family asks for memorial gifts may be generation and all of her elders Cemetery. made to Good Samaritan Ministries. to death before her time came to an end, she requested no funeral Please visit batemancarrollfunerals.com for additional Lincoln Memorial Park services. In lieu of flowers, a information. and Funeral Home contribution in her memory Bateman Carroll 11801 SE Mt Scott Blvd to a local women’s shelter, or Funeral Home Portland, OR 97086 to a homeless shelter, or to a 520 W Powell Blvd | Gresham, OR 97030 503-771-1117 local library or school would be 503-665-2128 LincolnMemorialPk.com sincerely appreciated. BatemanCarrollFunerals.com The Portland Tribune Tuesday, February 10, 2015 news A7 Hales seeks Move to protect West Hayden balance on Island leaves few people happy Area off development density dilemma map for now, but Mayor: Development IN IT TOGETHER may be tapped later won’t come at expense What: Community summit spon- sored by the Office of By STEVE LAW of neighborhoods Neighborhood Involvement The Tribune When: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 28 Portland planners, bowing By JIM REDDEN Where: Ambridge Center, 1333 to a public outcry, yanked The Tribune N.E. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. West Hayden Island from a More: For information and to reg- proposed list of industrial ister, visit: portlandoregon.gov/ Mayor Charlie Hales’ prom- oni/inittogether2015 lands earmarked for develop- ise to preserve the character of ment over the next 20 years. existing neighborhoods has But the move, which doesn’t cheered activists trying to slow sider Thursday. It keeps the rule out future marine trade ter- the increase in residential de- existing 35-day delay on all de- minals on the island, didn’t molition and infill projects. molitions, allows anyone to re- please anyone. Hales made the vow during quest an additional 60-day ex- Port of Portland officials, who his State of the City speech on tension for any house of signifi- own or control about 800 acres of Jan. 30. Speaking to the Port- cance to a neighborhood, al- forest, meadow and sandy beach- land City Club, Hales said he lows the $1,318 extension appli- es on West Hayden Island, say will propose restrictions on the cation fee to be waived for the city is low-balling the need for size of replacement houses, in- neighborhood associations, trade terminals and industrial TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO cluding mandating setbacks and provides for fundraising jobs along the Columbia River. City planners, in an about-face, now recommend West Hayden Island not be designated for future industrial from the street and adjacent plans to be developed during Environmentalists and Hayden development over the next 20 years. houses. the extension. Island residents, while praising Those praising the an- Ellis praises the subcommit- the removal of West Hayden Is- with some of the Planning and and switch on us,” says Bob nouncement include Al Ellis, tee for being willing to compro- land from the industrial lands in- Sustainability Commission’s en- WHAT’S NEXT? Sallinger, Audubon Society of co-founder of United Neighbor- mise. ventory, say that doesn’t go far vironmental protections. What: The Planning and Portland conservation director. hoods for Reform, a grassroots The second forum is a city- enough. They want the site per- “The door is open for the port Sustainability Commission work “They took Hayden Island off the organization fighting the in- wide Community Summit ti- manently protected as open to come back and say ‘We’re session map, which is a step in the right creasing number of demolition tled “In It Together” sponsored space. ready to annex,’” Armstrong Issue: City planners’ proposal for direction, but they left the policy and infill projects. by the Office of Neighborhood City planners’ new proposal says. providing industrial-zoned land to intact,” Sallinger says. “We were “UNR couldn’t be more de- Involvement on Feb. 28. (See for providing lands for future in- To remove the island land accommodate the city’s job and told very explicitly it was out of business growth projected for the lighted with the mayor’s posi- info box). Three UNR members dustrial businesses and jobs, and from the inventory, though, the next 20 years, and West Hayden the plan.” tion on this issue and hope to are scheduled to lead a work- the role West Hayden Island may city is simply lowering its esti- Island’s role. It’s unclear what the city’s ac- work closely with the council shop titled “Demolition and or may not play, now goes before mate for the expected demand for When: 12:30 to 5 p.m. Tuesday, tion might mean for the potential in formulating the new policies Development — How Neigh- the Planning and Sustainability trade-related sites in the Port- Feb. 10 port development. and getting them implemented borhood Grassroots Organiza- Commission for a Tuesday, Feb. land Harbor during the next two Where: 1900 S.W. Fourth Ave., The port can come to the city as soon as is practically possi- tions Can Impact Public Poli- 10, work session. decades. Now the city says it Suite 2500 A, Portland any time and seek a comp plan ble,” Ellis says. cy.” It will cover such issues as It’s unclear if the city’s new needs only 150 acres, its low-end More: Agenda, background materi- amendment as well as a zoning But Hales’ promise has puz- the demolition of viable afford- proposal will pass muster with forecast, instead of the 390 acres als: portlandoregon.gov/bps/arti- amendment, Armstrong says. zled some home builders who able houses and their replace- state regulators. The industrial it was using before, which was its cle/510462 He points out that the city say city officials are planning ment with more expensive land inventory is a component of mid-range forecast. still is providing for a potential on density increases in resi- ones. It is scheduled to begin at Portland’s updated comprehen- “They changed their forecast was in the city of Portland, in- 1,800 acres of developable in- dential neighborhoods to help 10:10 a.m. sive land use or “comp” plan, assumptions,” says Susie Lah- cluding Port of Portland and pri- dustrial lands for the next 20 accommodate projected which will guide city growth from sene, the Port of Portland’s senior vate property. years, or about 100 acres more growth over the next 25 years. Plan calls for more density 2015 to 2035. That plan must be manager for transportation and The port estimates there’s an- than the forecasted demand. The city is predicting 123,000 Portland is currently in the approved by the state Land Con- land-use policy. “That’s surpris- other $2.8 billion in proposed Some of that land would be pro- additional households by 2035. middle of a multiyear process servation and Development Com- ing to me, given the amount of projects, including a $500 million vided at golf courses the city The draft Comprehensive Plan to determine where and how mission. investment that’s going on along propane export terminal pro- expects might come on the update currently being consid- the city will grow during the The Port of Portland, which the Columbia River and the har- posed by Pembina Pipeline Corp. market in the next 20 years, be- ered calls for 20 percent of next 20 years. State land-use considers West Hayden Island an bor in general.” at the Port’s Terminal 6. cause fewer people are playing them to be built in residential planning laws require the Com- ideal site for more Columbia Riv- Since the federally funded Co- Jeff Geisler, chairman of Hi- golf these days. Other land neighborhoods — a total of prehensive Plan that governs er shipping terminals, acquired lumbia River channel deepening Noon, the neighborhood associa- would come from cleanups at 24,600 additional households in growth to be updated by the the property via condemnation was completed about four years tion for Hayden Island, called the contaminated “brownfield” residential neighborhoods over end of this year. It is intended from Portland General Electric in ago, there’s been significant ex- city’s move “kind of a shell sites. the next 20 years. to determine where the 123,000 the mid-1990s. Ever since, the pansions of trade terminals in game.” The comp plan still will While business groups and the “The city is being disingenu- new households expected by port’s proposals to develop the Portland, Vancouver, and other include language that could fa- port want more land available for ous if it suggests there won’t be 2035 will be located. island have been hotly opposed communities along the river. By cilitate industrial development industry, Armstrong says the city growth in existing residential The draft now being consid- by environmentalists, led by the the port’s count, there’s been $866 on West Hayden Island. “We is supplying plenty. “We’re still neighborhoods,” says Jeff Fish, ered by the Planning and Sus- Audubon Society of Portland, as million in new marine facility im- want that removed as well,” accommodating 32,000 jobs.” owner of Fish Construction, tainability Commission envi- well as neighbors living on the provements and related infra- Geisler says. which has built many infill sions 30 percent of the new eastern half of the island. A year structure. Of that, $366 million “They’ve kind of done a bait [email protected] houses in Portland over the households in the central city ago, the port withdrew its latest years. and 50 percent in urban cen- bid to have the land annexed to ters and along major transpor- the city, saying the environmen- More reactions to come tation corridors — 80 percent tal mitigation measures pro- Hales’ promise and its impli- of the total. The draft also calls scribed by the Planning and Sus- cations will likely be discussed for 80 percent of new housing tainability Commission would at two high-profile forums this units to be apartments and make it too expensive to develop. month. condominium. But now the city is in a pinch. The first is a Feb. 12 City At first glance, that would As part of the comp plan update, Council hearing on a proposal seem to minimize the density it’s obliged to show state land-use from the Bureau of Develop- increases in residential neigh- regulators it’s accommodating ment Services to change its borhoods. But 20 percent of land for new jobs over the next policies regarding residential new households is still a large two decades, including industrial demolitions. The hearing was number — 24,600 during the acreage and harbor-related sites. continued from Dec. 17 be- next two decades. Because Last September, city planners in- cause time ran out before ev- Portland’s neighborhoods are cluded 300 acres on West Hayden eryone could testify. already so well developed, Island, enabling the city to meet The original proposal was there is not enough vacant its projected 20-year land supply crafted by the Development Re- land to accommodate so many. for harbor and industrial jobs. view Advisory Committee, an That means many existing But neighbors and environ- appointed panel that assists houses will have to be demol- mentalists bashed city planners, BDS, the city agency that issues ished and replaced with one or calling it a back-door move to get demolition, remodeling and more new housing units over the port terminals developed construction permits. DRAC is the next two decades. without the environmental con- composed primarily of develop- Fish says the city will not be ditions approved earlier. ers with some neighborhood able to meet its housing goals if In response, city planners re- representatives and city em- Hales reduces incentives for cently backed down. ployees from related agencies. infill projects, including build- “In response to public testimo- At the first hearing, many ing larger homes and multiple ny, our current proposal is to des- witnesses — including UNR houses on the same lot. ignate West Hayden Island rural members — objected to part of “Land prices are already so farm/forest, which is sort of a the proposal that called for high in Portland that larger continuation of its current desig- ending an existing 120-day de- houses need to be built to jus- nation as a holding zone,” says molition delay automatically tify the cost. But if you hold Tom Armstrong, supervising granted to neighborhood asso- land prices down by limiting planner for the city. ciations that request them. development options, home- The city comp plan will include Two weeks ago, DRAC and owners who have been count- language about possibly using UNR representatives met and ing on making money when 300 acres for industry in the fu- worked out a compromise pro- they sell their houses will be ture, and saving the remaining posal that the council will con- hurt,” Fish says. 500 acres for open space, along 486440.021015 501925.020315 A8 NEWS The Portland Tribune Tuesday, February 10, 2015 PORTLAND TRIBUNE PUBLIC NOTICE 021015 View legals online at: http://publicnotices.portlandtribune.com Route proposal would allow PUBLIC AND LEGAL NOTICES These notices give information concerning actions planned and implemented by attorneys, fi nancial institutions and government agencies. They are intended to keep you and every citizen fully informed. Space-reservation deadline for all legal notices is Thursday 10 am better access to NCNM campus Trib Info Box 0813 Trib one week prior to publication. Please call Louise Faxon at (503) 546-0752 or e-mail [email protected] to book your notice. School looks forward way, Considine says the steep REQUEST FOR BIDS switchbacks leading up to the Layton Construction will be soliciting bids for the Additions & to less isolation, bridge can make the crossing Renovations to the McKenzie-Willamette Medical Center. The time-consuming or difficult for project documents will be available mid-February. The project improved safety people with wheelchairs or includes the addition of a new 4-story tower (150,000 SF) and strollers. Some pedestrians interior renovation (70,000 SF). The project has an anticipated By KELSEY O’HALLORAN, forgo the route and try to run 2nd quarter of 2015 start and overall duration of approximately Pamplin Media Group across the road instead, she 24 months. All interested subcontractors are encouraged to says. prequalify with Layton Construction online at http://laytoncon- Marilynn Considine has “We’ve seen near-accidents struction.com/prequalification.html. If you have any questions watched the National College more than once. I’ve seen them about the project, please contact Logan Deal (ideal@layton- of Natural Medicine grow in personally — cars hitting peo- Southwest Portland over the ple that are running across construction.com) at 801-563-3877 or Eric Carlson (ecarlson@ years — from a one-building those roads because there is no laytonconstruction.com) at 801-563-3638. campus in 1996 to today’s five- direct crossing area,” she says. acre grounds that include a “I saw a mom and dad with Publish 01/27, 02/03, 02/10, 02/17, 02/24/2015. PT1330 health research institute, bo- their child in a buggy; they tanical garden and public clinic nearly got hit as they crossed IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON with 20,000 patient visits each the road that way.” year. Considine says she is con- FOR THE COUNTY OF MULTNOMAH TRIBUNE PHOTO: JONATHAN HOUSE But with an increasing num- cerned that Naito Parkway Probate Department In the Matter of the Estate of National College of Natural Medicine President Dr. David J. Schleich and ber of students and community may be left out of the South- LINDA LEE CARTER, Deceased. Communications Director Marilynn Considine chat on a hard-to-reach Case No. 15PB00014 visitors, Considine, the school’s west Corridor Plan, particular- communications director, says pedestrian bridge that provides the only safe way across busy ly if the high-capacity transit NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS Southwest Naito Parkway to the Southwest Portland campus. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned transportation issues also have route lands on Southwest Bar- has been appointed Personal Representative. All persons hav- been on the rise at the campus, bur Boulevard. ing claims against the estate are required to present them, with which is bordered by South- The two transit routes aren’t vouchers attached, within four (4) months after the date of first west Naito Parkway, Kelly Av- necessarily exclusive, and are publication of this notice, or the claims may be barred. Claims enue, Corbett Avenue and both expected to move forward must be presented to the undersigned at the following address: Woods Street. from the plan’s second phase, The Estate of Linda Lee Carter, c/o The Law Offices of Erik “We are isolated by traffic — accord to Metro’s Southwest Graeff, P.C., 2125 N. Flint Ave., Portland, OR 97227 we’re talking about fast traffic Corridor Plan project manager All persons whose rights may be affected by the proceed- on all sides of us,” Considine Malu Wilkinson. But the plan’s ings may obtain additional information from the records of says. “As our school continues Local Preferred Alternative, to the court, the Personal Representative, or the attorney for the to grow ... we have to have bet- be completed in May 2016, will Personal Representative listed below. ter access. We have to have eventually prioritize its road, Date of first publication: February 3, 2015. safe access.” bike and pedestrian projects. At a Jan. 28 meeting of the “It’s really a matter of money,” Portland City Council, Consi- Wilkinson says. If the high-capac- /s/ Erik Graeff, OSB #102169 dine and other college officials ity transit route winds up on Bar- Publish 02/03, 02/10, 02/17/2015. PT1332 spoke in support of a potential bur, she says, the plan still may Southwest Corridor Plan route address the need for improved that could benefit the college. COURTESY National COLLEGE OF NATURAL MEDICINE access to the South Waterfront. IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF RUTHERFORD The plan aims to improve Improved transit service could help those going to the National College “We’re not looking at just a COUNTY, TENNESSEE AT MURFREESBORO transportation between down- of Natural Medicine in Southwest Portland, which is boxed in by busy transit investment, because Abigail Joana Brandon and Jon Marc Brandon, Petitioners town Portland and Tualatin by streets. that doesn’t meet all the vs. improving and increasing pe- needs,” she says. “I would Kyle Stirling Soller, Defendant. destrian, bike, roadway and in 2012 by the Portland City pects to grow from 600 to 800 imagine some sort of improve- Case No. 15CV-3 public transportation options. Council. students in the next few years, ments in regard to pedestrian TO: KYLE STIRLING SOLLER If the high-capacity transit The school, which educates increasing the need for safe ac- and bike crossing (near the Na- ORDER OF PUBLICATION route were to include Naito and trains naturopathic and cess to the campus. tional College of Natural Medi- It appearing from the bill in this cause, which is sworn to that Parkway, Considine says it Chinese medicine students, re- A light rail or bus rapid tran- cine), regardless of where the the residence and current address of the above listed defendant, could provide an easier and searchers and other natural sit route along Naito Parkway high-capacity transit ends up.” KYLE STIRLING SOLLER is unknown and cannot be served safer way for students, staff health care specialists, was could provide more transporta- Considine says that ultimate- with process, It is ordered that publication be made for four members and visitors to get to founded in 1956 as the National tion opportunities, and cross- ly, any of the proposed im- consecutive weeks in the PORTLAND TRIBUNE, a newspaper the campus. College of Naturopathic Medi- walks at regular stops could provements could help the published at Portland, Oregon, in Multnomah County, requir- The National College of Nat- cine, and owned its first loca- help people access the campus. campus and its visitors. ing the said defendant, KYLE STIRLING SOLLER to appear ural Medicine is committed to tion on Southeast Market Such improvements also would “Any kind of increased trans- before the clerk of said Court on or before thirty (30) days after staying in the area, Considine Street. It purchased its current make the campus more acces- portation will be a boon,” she the last publication hereof and make defense to the bill filed says, located in the “education location — formerly Josiah sible to people with disabilities, says. “This is just how develop- in the above cause, which seeks Petition to Terminate Parental triangle” between Oregon Failing Elementary School — Considine says. ment happens, and it’s pretty Rights/Adoption or otherwise said bill be taken for confessed Health & Science University from Portland Community Col- Though the Southwest Naito exciting to be a part of it.” and cause proceeded with exparte. and Portland State University. lege in 1996 after outgrowing Pedestrian Bridge connects This the 23rd day of January, 2015. The college’s 20-year Master the Market Street campus. Southwest Hooker Street [email protected] /s/ Lori Finch for John A.W. Bratcher, Clerk & Master Plan for the area was approved Considine says the school ex- across Southwest Naito Park- Twitter: @kelsohalloran John A. W. Bratcher, Clerk of said Court. By: Lori Finch, Deputy Clerk Solicitors for Plaintiff: Sandra L.M. Smith, Published 02/03, 02/10, 02/17, 02/24/2015. PT1333

IN THE FAMILY DIVISION OF THE SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT OF THE STATE OF Metro includes neighborhood NEVADA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF WASHOE In the matter of the Guardianship of: TROY DAVID ALLINGHAM, Minor Child Case No: GR14-00289 Dept. No.: UM/D5 panel in Southwest transit plan CITATION TO APPEAR AND SHOW CAUSE delaying the vote for a week so The Southwest Corridor Plan sive, reduce the traffic lanes on TO: William David Allingham, Tiffany Macias, Eileen Public involvement that Metro could refine its pub- is intended to expand transpor- Southwest Barbur Boulevard, Allingham and any person having the care, custody, and control lic involvement process. tation options in the corridor and lead to unwelcome resi- of the above-named minor child. improved as council Novick, who is in charge of between Portland, Tigard and dential density. Some unsuc- YOU ARE HEREBY CITED and required to appear before a the Portland Bureau of Trans- Tualatin. Alternatives include cessfully battled the Portland- Judge of this Court in Department UM of the Family Division OKs $650,000 portation, said he very much a new high-capacity transit Milwaukie Light Rail Project, of the Second Judicial District Court located on the first floor By JIM REDDEN appreciated the feedback from line, along with road improve- which is under construction of the Courthouse at One South Sierra Street, Reno, Nevada on The Tribune members of the transportation ments and new bike and pedes- despite Clackamas County vot- Wednesday, February 11, 2015 at the hour of 8:30 AM the and committee of Southwest Neigh- trian paths. Transit options in- ers approving a ballot measure there to show cause why Geraldine Macias and Angelo Macias Metro has agreed to ap- bors Inc., the coalition office clude a light-rail line and vari- to stop funding it. should not be appointed at act as guardians of the minor child. point a neighborhood adviso- that serves neighborhoods in ous forms of bus rapid transit. After the election, TriMet YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that the above-named child, ry committee as part of its Southwest Portland. Former The planning process is being won a court ruling that said the shall appear at the hearing in accordance with N.R.S. 159.0535 agreement to receive $650,000 committee chairwoman Mari- overseen by Metro, the elected project had to proceed because and, if they are of a proper age, may consent or oppose the from Portland to help fund anne Fitzgerald testified on regional government. The coun- county officials had signed le- petition and may be represented by an attorney, who may be the second phase of the Jan. 28 that she only recently cil resolution transferred gally binding agreements to appointed by the Court if the child is unable to retain counsel. Southwest Corridor Plan. had become aware of the sec- $500,000 in general fund dollars pay their share of it. YOU ARE FURTHER NOTIFIED that Geraldine Macias and The City Council insisted on ond phase, even though she to Metro and committed an ad- The measures in Tigard and Angelo Macias, if appointed as guardians of the person and the the new public involvement and other committee members ditional $150,000 in city staff Tualatin passed before funding estate, may have full management, care, and control of the process after Southwest neigh- had been working on the proj- work to the project. The City agreements were signed, how- minor child. borhood association represen- ect for years. Council already has approved ever. THIS CITATION is based upon the verified Petition for tatives complained they had Roger Averbeck, the trans- the spending, but needed to au- Now some activists are Appointment of Guardians filed by the above named guardians not been informed of the sec- portation committee’s current thorize an Intergovernmental working to place a measure on on November 4, 2014 and is issued pursuant to the Order of the ond phase of the project before chairman, thanked the council Agreement with Metro about the Washington County ballot court. Commissioner Steve Novick for taking the time to ensure the scope of the work. to prevent county funds from Dated: This January 20, 2015. submitted a resolution asking the public will be fully involved Despite the promise of trans- being used for transit projects /s/ Jacqueline Bryant the council to approve the in the second phase of the proj- portation improvements, the without a public vote. Clerk of the Court funds. The council approved ect at the Feb. 4 council hear- project is opposed by activists Publish 02/03, 02/10/2015. PT1334 the funds last Wednesday after ing. who think it will be too expen- [email protected]

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500131.012715 A10 NEWS The Portland Tribune Tuesday, February 10, 2015 Democratic majority hits ground running

Bills on class-action from class-action settlements States but ineligible to vote, and unnecessary burden.” “I would urge this committee action lawsuits on which a judg- for Legal Aid once a distribution a few people such as police offi- His comparison of the barri- to not take any precipitous ac- ment has not been entered — lawsuits, fuel, voter is made to those affected. House cers and domestic-violence sur- ers to those thwarting voting tion before we know the true including one involving BP Bill 2700, which allows discre- vivors whose information is not rights for blacks in the South costs of the market distortion West Coast Products, which a registration get nod tion for a judge to award 50 per- made public. during the 1960s, McLane says, that we are calling the low-car- Multnomah County jury decid- cent to Legal Aid and 50 percent The National Voter Registra- “is not well taken. ... I think they bon fuel standard,” says Senate ed in January 2014 was wrong By PETER WONG to programs related to the issue tion Act, passed by Congress in are radically different.” Republican Leader Ted Ferrioli to charge a 35-cent fee for use of Capital Bureau that prompted the class-action 1993, requires states to ask new The bill heads for the joint of John Day. debit cards on gasoline pur- lawsuit, passed the House Judi- and renewing drivers if they budget committee, so no imme- Republicans sought to tie the chases at Arco stations between Democrats wasted no time ciary Committee on a party-line want to register to vote. But diate action is expected. issue with its advocacy by Cyl- Jan. 1, 2011, and Aug. 30, 2013. during the opening days of vote. One Republican was ab- their driver records currently via Hayes, Gov. John Kitzha- About 2 million people were the 2015 session last week in sent. are transferred to county elec- Low-carbon fuels ber’s fiancee, whose activities estimated to be eligible for $200 using their expanded majori- Versions of those bills died in tions officials by paper. Lawmakers in 2009 autho- have raised government ethics shares of a settlement. Claims ties to advance three issues the Senate in the past two years “Oregonians have demon- rized the Environmental Quali- questions about her and the were due by Dec. 31. that died by a single vote in on 15-15 votes, when one Demo- strated that if we put a ballot in ty Commission to write rules governor. But Democrats say BP is appealing the 2014 ver- the past two years. crat — Betsy Johnson of Scap- the hands of voters, we will cast for a standard, and the commis- the issue stands on its own. dict, so there is no judgment. They gave initial clearance to poose — joined 14 Republicans. it,” Brown says. “My goal is to sion has done so. However, the “This case could be tied up in three bills that Senate Majority Democrats now have an 18-12 put a ballot in the hands of vir- 2009 law also carried an auto- Class-action settlements the courts for five years and not Leader Diane Rosenbaum, D- majority over Republicans. tually every eligible Orego- matic expiration of 2015, unless Democrats also resurrected a a single dollar will go to Legal Portland, described as “unfin- Two of those three bills, ex- nian.” lawmakers remove it. bill, which also failed by one Aid before it is resolved,” says a ished business.” cepting the low-carbon fuels Though Oregon has histori- California has a standard, vote in the Senate last year, to statement presented by a coali- They were: standard, passed in the House, cally high participation of vot- which survived court challeng- allow some unclaimed money tion of business groups. “If the n Automatic voter registra- where Democrats now have a ers already registered, it trails es, and Washington has set into from class-action settlements to appeal succeeds, this legislation tion for people 18 and older, un- 35-25 majority over Republi- other states in the share of eli- motion rulemaking. All three help fund Legal Aid programs. will generate no money for Le- less they choose to opt out with- cans. The fuels bill never came gible people who are registered states have done so in pursuit of Attorney General Ellen gal Aid.” in 21 days, when they obtain or to a vote in the House in 2013. to vote. reducing carbon emissions. Rosenblum says Oregon law al- The bill’s critics say it would renew driver’s licenses. House The House scheduled debate “I think this is the single most “If we want people to invest lows “an unfair practice of re- apply to a class-action lawsuit, Bill 2177, which has the support Feb. 9 on the class-action bill important thing Oregon can do and try to find solutions, you turning unclaimed award mon- filed in January in Multnomah of Secretary of State Kate and a substitute proposed by to change the face of elections” have to send a clear public mes- ey in class-action lawsuits to the County, against the Oregon Lot- Brown and Oregon’s county Republicans. since Oregon voters approved sage that the government and very companies or individuals tery. The suit, which has not clerks, passed the House Rules all-mail balloting in 1998, says the public will be there for who caused that harm ... This is gone to trial, accuses the Lot- Committee on a party-line vote. Repeat for registration Steve Druckenmiller, Linn them, if they make an invest- a practice not followed in most tery of misleading players that n A state standard for fuels Although other states are County clerk since 1987. ment in a reasonable sense of states.” their chances of winning are that will generate less in carbon considering it, Oregon would be But all four Republicans on the term,” says Sen. Lee Beyer, Unlike the failed 2014 bill, the better if they let machines se- emissions. Senate Bill 324, the first to register voters auto- the House Rules Committee D-Springfield. current bill would let a judge lect cards in video poker. which extends the standard matically upon changes in driv- raised critical questions, includ- Republicans have argued that award half of the unclaimed Two Republicans propose a past a 2015 expiration date, er records, which would be ing GOP Leader Mike McLane Oregon’s contribution to carbon money to legal aid and the other substitute that would make it passed the Senate Environment transferred electronically. Re- of , who took issue emissions is negligible, but a half to individuals or organiza- apply only to new class-action and Natural Resources Commit- cords would not be forwarded with Druckenmiller’s descrip- state low-carbon fuel standard tions related to the class-action lawsuits. tee on a party-line vote. for drivers under 18, those le- tion of some barriers to regis- would add to the cost of gaso- lawsuit. n Use of unclaimed money gally present in the United tration as “repulsive” and “an line. The bill would apply to class- [email protected] County seeks feedback on bridge improvement plans

needs for maintaining and seis- at multco.us/bridgeplan. Public meetings, mically retrofitting the bridges The board will consider through 2034. adopting the plan as part of the online surveys Residents will have several county’s transportation capital start this month chances to learn about improvement plan and the plan and comment More online program during the By JENNIFER ANDERSON on it this month; it’ll To view the annual budget process The Tribune be available for review plan, visit in May. starting Thursday, multco.us/ Fifty-three capital Care about Portland’s bridg- Feb. 12, at multco.us/ transportation- projects are listed in es, roads, bike- and foot-traffic bridgeplan. planning the plan, at a total cost access? The county board of of about $1.3 billion. Multnomah County leaders commissioners will be briefed Projects are prioritized in are inviting input on a draft on the plan that morning. five-year increments based on 20-year capital improvement That evening, the public is factors including urgency, con- plan for the county’s six Willa- invited in for a briefing on the sequence of inaction, align- mette River bridges. plan, to ask questions and ment with county values, capi- The plan identifies a 20-year share comments. tal costs and available funding. program of projects deemed The briefing is set for 6 p.m. A funding plan will be devel- necessary for the Broadway, Feb. 12 in room 315 of the Mult- oped after the board takes ac- Burnside, Hawthorne, Morri- nomah Building, 501 S.E. Haw- tion on the plan, which was de- son, Sauvie Island and Sell- thorne Blvd. veloped with input from vari- wood bridges. People also may take an on- ous community organizations, Tribune file photo It also outlines funding line survey between Feb. 12-26, public agencies and citizens. Repair work to Multnomah County’s bridges are part of the 20-year plan under discussion this month. Happy Valentine’s Day! Valentine’s Day Dinner Serving the Northwest since 19891989

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500196.021015 PortlandTribune.com

SportsPAGE B1 PortlandTribuneTribune TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015 KerryEggers

ON SPORTS Lillard in All-Star spot he deserves

ouching on a lot of subjects after a week of Super Bowl cover- Tage ... ■ Damian Lillard’s absence from the Western Conference NO TIME roster for the NBA All-Star Game didn’t last long. Sunday’s announcement that the Trail Blazers’ point guard will replace the injured Blake Griffin on the West squad was welcomed by ev- eryone — Lillard, Commis- TO LOSE sioner Adam Silver and PAMPLIN MEDIA GROUP: JOSH KULLA Sacramento Parkrose High quarterback Jonathan Boland applies a stiff-arm to Wilsonville defensive back Charlie Stapleton. Boland was one of fi ve high school players to sign a letter-of-intent center DeMar- with Portland State last week. cus Cousins among them. The West is loaded at ■ PSU signs 13 recruits, and all eyes on Vikings coach Barnum guard, with Golden State’s By STEVE BRANDON been stuck in the middle of the Can the Vikings fi nally make business in there. The guys run Stephen Cur- LILLARD The Tribune pack, or lower, in the Big Sky the jump into the Big Sky upper from the locker room to the ry and the Conference, echelon occupied by Eastern weight room and get their work Lakers’ Kobe Bryant voted by Ah, letter-of-intent day. In col- and whose at- Washington, Montana State, done.” fans as starters and the West lege football, it’s like that warm tendance has Montana and at times others, Those guys include fi ve prep coaches adding Golden State’s afternoon in January and the gone from such as Northern Arizona, Cal signees, including two quarter- Klay Thompson, the Clippers’ sight of a new fl ower, which cre- modest to mi- Poly (coached by former PSU backs from the Portland area Chris Paul, Houston’s James ate visions of what spring might nuscule, it’s boss Tim Walsh) and last year’s who are not guaranteed any- Harden and Oklahoma City’s be like in a couple of months. just win now, surprise, Idaho State? thing, including a position. Bar- Russell Westbrook as re- Signing day generates hope for baby. “Because of my contract, that’s num is high on Jonathan Boland serves. what a team could be like in a Hence, on got to be done right away,” Bar- of Parkrose and Thomas Morri- When Silver chose to re- couple of years, when its new letter-of-intent Viking num says. “I don’t have a choice. son of Oregon City, both standout place the injured Bryant with crop of players gets bigger and day last week, “If I don’t win this year, I’ll be QBs at the prep level. Also new to a center — Cousins — #Lil- stronger and blossoms on the Barnum and moving on and transitioning the Viks is Chase Morrison, a lardtime followers balked. Sil- field. Most football programs the Vikings Watch somewhere else.” COURTESY OF PORTLAND STATE UNIVERSITY running back/defensive back ver picked Cousins because he have time to fertilize and water signed only Barnum, a 50-year-old gradu- New PSU coach Bruce Barnum is from Jesuit. got the next-most votes from and watch their newcomers grow. fi ve high school players. Part of ate of Columbia River High in seeking quick improvement. Morrison, listed at 5-10, 190, West coaches. Then you have Portland State. the reason for that is because the Vancouver, Wash., says he be- “has to get in the weight room “I didn’t like having to make The Vikings, and especially team has 82 players still on board lieves the Vikings can turn the ways. Often in the fourth quarter, and make his body more durable, that choice,” the commission- new coach-on-the-spot Bruce who were on the 2014 roster. But corner at high speed. or even the fi nal minute or sec- but with his speed and football er said on ESPN Radio. “I wish Barnum, want — and maybe the smallish 2015 signing list — “It’s a simple game, and if you onds. sense and the college he got at I had another slot for Damian, need — to sprout more wins and with probably two to four more take care of the little things, if it’s To Barnum, it’s all about “disci- Jesuit, he fi ts into what we want- because I think he’s so deserv- better football before next spring. players to come — has eight play- fourth-and-inches and you’re not pline.” And so he is “trying to fo- ed to bring in for the future of Vi- ing of being an All-Star as On Dec. 8, about two weeks af- ers who are from junior colleges jumping offside ...,” Barnum says, cus the players a little more.” king football, and will probably well.” ter fi ring Nigel Burton, PSU pro- or transferring from big schools, his voice trailing off. There will be more concentration wind up at safety, or possibly cor- Cousins even texted Lillard, moted Barnum from offensive and who will be expected to con- The Vikings have lost games on football and the tasks at hand, nerback.” telling the Blazer he was more coordinator to head coach — but tribute a lot immediately at Port- that way over the past fi ve years. he says. “I’ve stripped the jewelry Barnum says Boland and Mor- deserving. gave him only a 12-month deal. land State. They’ve lost games in a variety of and turned the music off in the When Griffin got hurt, it So, for the Vikings, who have Or else. ways. Inventive ways. Simple weight room,” he says. “It’s a See VIKINGS / Page 3 bailed Silver out from a diffi - cult situation and gave Lillard his second straight All-Star nomination. ■ The coaches of each con- ference are directed to vote Local players cast their lot for two guards, three front- Ducks make a haul court players and two wild with new OSU coach cards, mean- More online ing they can Read other Brandel, Kearsley opt for as Kerry Eggers many as four columns during on signing day guards as re- the week at portland ready to make tribune.com serves. West impact for Beavers coaches 22 commit to UO, chose the maximum, so no By KERRY EGGERS gripes there. making it 21st-best The Tribune A couple of suggestions. recruiting class One, increase the All-Star A look at the two Portland-ar- Game roster sizes to 13. That’s By STEPHEN ALEXANDER ea players who are among the how many players dress for The Tribune 22 recruits in Gary Andersen’s regular NBA games now. fi rst recruiting class at Oregon Two — and this by way of The Oregon Ducks added State ... Lillard’s agent, the well-re- 22 players during national Travis Waller, a ■ When Central Catholic spected Aaron Goodwin — letter-of-intent day last quarterback High coach Steve Pyne calls make transparent the votes of week. from Servite Blake Brandel “by far the best each of the coaches. The Ducks signed one quar- High in Anaheim, offensive lineman I’ve had in 25 COURTESY OF BLAKE BRANDEL “They should make it public Central Catholic High’s Blake terback, one running back, Calif., signed a years of coaching,” it’s saying what the coaches’ votes were,” Brandel rates as a top prep three receivers, one tight end, letter of intent something. Goodwin offers. offensive linemen and future left fi ve offensive linemen, fi ve de- last week with At Corvallis High, Pyne Goodwin was told by a tackle for coach Gary Andersen’s fensive linemen, three line- the Oregon coached Brad Badger, who league source that three of the backers, two cornerbacks and played 11 years in the NFL, and Oregon State Beavers. 14 West coaches left Lillard off Ducks. one safety. Mark Gregg, a four-year starting their ballots. Oregon was ranked the 21st- COURTESY OF center at Oregon. At Central “All of those things together, “What three coaches could MICHAEL GOULDING/ best recruiting class in the na- ORANGE COUNTY Catholic, Pyne coached Kevin as he refi nes his skills and un- say Damian isn’t an All-Star?” tion according to Scout.com, REGISTER Frahm, a three-year starting de- derstands what it means to be Goodwin says. “I’d love for the which had the Ducks bringing fensive tackle at Oregon State. most likely a left tackle — he’ll public to see that.” in one five-star recruit, six body that had him in camps touchdowns. He is on the UO “Blake’s upside is ridiculously have a chance to play on Sun- Fair enough. But if Lillard four-star recruits and 15 3-star and all that stuff loved him,” campus and his brother, fresh- large,” says Pyne, whose Rams days. He’s that kind of athlete.” received votes from 11 of the recruits. Helfrich says. man QB Ty Griffi n, “did a fan- have won back-to-back Class 6A What Pyne likes most about 14 coaches, I’d guess that Here is a position-by-posi- “He’s been an tastic job for us this fall as a championships, beating Tigard Brandel is his demeanor. would be enough to get him a tion breakdown of Oregon’s impressive, scout-team player,” Helfrich 49-0 in the title game last fall. “I’ve never seen the kid have a spot. I’m thinking more than catch, with coach Mark Hel- mature young says. “Ty is electric fast. And “He doesn’t even hardly know bad day,” Pyne says. “The world three coaches left him off frich’s impressions of each man.” he says Taj is faster, so we can’t what he’s doing yet. It’s crazy, could be falling around him, and their ballots. player: ■ Running wait to see him at full strength.” and he’s really good already.” he’d be smiling and saying, ‘I’ll ■ Lillard turned down the ■ Quarterback: Travis back: Taj Grif- ■ Wide receiver: Malik The 6-7, 275-pound Brandel make the most of it.’ He brings opportunity to take part in the Waller, a 6-3, 195-pounder out fin is a 5-10, Lovette is a 5-11, 205-pounder was Mt. Hood Conference co-of- everybody around him up. He skills challenge and 3-point of Servite High in Anaheim, 175-pounder out of Redlands (Calif.) East fensive player of the year, an has a unique ability to get that competitions during All-Star Calif. As a senior, the four-star out of McEach- Valley High. His senior season, honor rarely bestowed on an of- out of his personality.” Weekend. Scout prospect completed 122 ern High in HELFRICH the four-star recruit had 70 fensive lineman. Pyne says Brandel reminds “Had I been in the game, of 224 passes for 1,692 yards Powder catches for 1,154 yards and “Blake will be 300 pounds by him of former Rams star Ryan there’d be a reason” to do the and 14 touchdowns and rushed Springs, Ga. The four-star re- nine touchdowns and rushed the time he is 19 or 20,” Pyne Nall, Brandel’s close friend who other events, Lillard told me for 840 yards and 13 TDs. He’ll cruit ran for ran for 137 yards for 985 yards and 23 TDs. says. “He has phenomenal feet, is now a redshirt freshman at before he had been named as be with the Ducks for spring on 21 carries in the 2014 opener “This guy is special in his long arms and can fi nish blocks. Oregon State. an All-Star. “But since I’m not ball. before a torn left ACL ended vibe, his energy, everything He likes to compete. He want to “They’re cut from the same (in the All-Star Game), I’m not “He should be here for spring his prep career. As a junior he be as good as he possibly can. He ball,” Helfrich says. “Every- ran for 1,253 yards and 13 See UO / Page 3 doesn’t like to lose. See OSU / Page 3 See EGGERS / Page 2 B2 SPORTS The Portland Tribune Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Christian at Knappa, Portland and shot put. Eighth-graders and MainEvents Waldorf at Life Christian, Columbia older, male and female, may enter. Christian at Damascus Christian, 6 Shot put registration is 5:15-6 Eggers: Ducks need to take p.m. ... Southridge at Jesuit, La p.m., with competition at 6:15 Tuesday, Feb. 10 Salle Prep at Liberty, Putnam at p.m. Race registration is 5:30 Parkrose, 7:15 p.m. ... Lincoln at p.m.-7 p.m., with events starting at Prep boys basketball: Jesuit at Jefferson, Grant at Roosevelt, 7:15 p.m. best players, from state or not Southridge, Liberty at La Salle Madison at Cleveland, Wilson at Prep, Parkrose at Putnam, 7:15 Franklin, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 11 a 24-14 lead in the Super Bowl. nament — will be streamed live p.m. ... Jefferson at Lincoln, College men’s basketball: ■ From page 1 There’s no comparison what- to China. Roosevelt at Grant, Cleveland at Lewis & Clark at Willamette, 8 p.m. Blazers: Los Angeles Lakers at soever. To borrow from one-time Madison, Franklin at Wilson, David College women’s basketball: Portland, 7 p.m. (KGW 8). going to go out there when I The NFL’s decision to not New Jersey Jets forward Der- Douglas at Central Catholic, Lewis & Clark at Willamette, 6 p.m. Prep wrestling: Benson and can get some rest.” fine Lynch for his “coopera- rick Coleman, when asked Portland Adventist Academy at College softball: Concordia at Jefferson at Roosevelt, 4 p.m. ... n The bigger issue now is tion” during Super Bowl week, about teammate Kenny Ander- Oregon Episcopal School, De La Saint Martin’s, 2 p.m. double- Wilson at Cleveland, Grant at Lillard’s 3-point shooting incidentally, was ridiculous. son missing practice: “Whoop- Salle North Catholic at Riverdale, header. Lincoln, Madison at Franklin, 7:30 stroke. Over 11 games leading “I’m just here so I won’t get de-damn-do.” Portland Christian at Clatskanie, Timbers: Portland-San Jose pre- p.m. into last weekend, he was a fined” doesn’t cut the mustard. It’s heartwarming that the 1.4 City Christian at Knappa, Portland season game, Tucson, Ariz., 9:30 College men’s basketball: collective 16 for 85 (.188) and n Comcast Sports Net billion Chinese citizens can get Waldorf at Life Christian, Columbia a.m. Oregon at USC, 6 p.m. (Pac-12 had missed his last 17 attempts Northwest’s Dwight Jaynes re- on the computer to watch their Christian at Damascus Christian, Horse racing: Final day of the Networks) ... Oregon State at from beyond the arc. In the cently addressed the issue of favorite Pac-12 team play. 7:30 p.m. live racing season at Portland UCLA, 7 p.m. (Pac-12 Networks) ... games at Dallas and Houston, another noncompliant pro ath- It’s all about money, of course. Prep girls basketball: David Meadows, noon. Clackamas CC at Portland CC, Lillard was only slightly bet- lete, former Trail Blazer Ra- Same thing with the NFL look- Douglas at Central Catholic, Track and field: Week four of 7:30 p.m. ter, making a collective 5 of 19. sheed Wallace, who received a ing at more regular-season Portland Adventist Academy at six in the University of Portland’s College women’s basketball: That makes him 21 for 104 mostly positive reception games being played abroad, and Oregon Episcopal School, Portland Tuesday Night at the Races series Multnomah at Walla Walla, 5 p.m. (.202) in his last 13 games. when shown sitting in the what seems the inevitability of Christian at Clatskanie, De La Salle at Chiles Center. Events tonight are ... Clackamas CC at Portland CC, At some point, he’ll find a Moda Center stands on the placing a team in London within North Catholic at Riverdale, City the mile, 400 meters, 800 meters 5:30 p.m. rhythm again. The Blazers Jumbotron during Thursday’s the next decade. hope it’s sooner rather than victory over Phoenix. Not to worry about the exten- later. Wallace was a very talented sive travel it would take for play- n I read with amusement player who was popular with ers, and the problems it would the comments of Peter Court- his Portland teammates, and create with scheduling. Temple, 4:30 p.m., CBS Sports ... UCLA, 7 p.m., Pac-12 Networks, ney, president of the Oregon like just about every person on n Gregg Popovich recently TV&Radio Wisconsin at Nebraska, 6 p.m., KEX (1190 AM) ... Syracuse at Senate, complaining that the the planet, has a good side. But explained his reasons for dis- ESPN ... Kansas at Texas Tech, 6 Boston College, 4 p.m., ESPN2 ... Ducks have no in-state re- it’s revisionist history to say daining the requirement that p.m., ESPN2 ... Xavier at La Salle at Virginia cruits in their 2015 football he was accommodating to the NBA coaches do between-quar- Tuesday, Feb. 10 Marquette, 6 p.m., FS1 ... Dayton Commonwealth, 4 p.m., CBS class. fans. I saw him walk past auto- ter interviews with TV sideline at Saint Louis, 6:30 p.m., CBS Sports ... Villanova at Providence, There were three Pac-12-cal- graph seekers too many times reporters. Prep boys basketball: Sunset at Sports 5 p.m., FS1 ... DePaul at St. iber senior prospects in the to mention. “I’m supposed to be setting Glencoe, 7 p.m., KUIK (1360 AM) John’s, 6 p.m., CBS Sports ... state last fall — Central Catho- In three seasons from 1999- the defense and offense to start NBA: Houston at Phoenix, 5 Wednesday, Feb. 11 Wyoming at San Diego State, 8 lic running back Cameron 2002, “Mr. T” received 107 tech- the next quarter, and I can’t do p.m, TNT ... Denver at Los Angeles p.m., CBS Sports Scarlett, headed for Stanford; nical fouls, including a league- my job because I’m doing this Lakers, 7:30 p.m., TNT Blazers: Los Angeles Lakers at NBA: Miami at Cleveland, 5 Central Catholic tackle Blake record 41 in 2000-01. Wallace inane deal with whoever is ask- College men’s basketball: Portland, 7 p.m., KGW (8), KPOJ p.m., ESPN ... Houston at Los Brandel, bound for Oregon led the NBA in the category ing me a question,” the veteran Kentucky at LSU, 4 p.m., ESPN ... (620 AM), KKRZ (102.9 FM) Angeles Clippers, 7:30 p.m., ESPN State, and Beaverton tackle five different seasons, and it San Antonio coach says. “I don’t Notre Dame at Clemson, 4 p.m., College men’s basketball: NHL: Detroit at Pittsburgh, 5 Jared Hilbers, who signed with wasn’t because the referees agree with the NBA. They don’t ESPN2 ... Georgetown at Seton Oregon at USC, 6 p.m., ESPN2, p.m., NBC Sports ... Washington at Washington State. had it in for him. I would assert need it. It’s superfluous. ... you Hall, 4 p.m., FS1 ... Cincinnati at KXTG (750 AM) ... Oregon State at San Jose, 7:30 p.m., NBC Sports Does anyone think Oregon he’d have gotten more if the can’t answer a question in 10 coach Mark Helfrich or OSU refs hadn’t gotten tired of call- seconds.” coach Gary Andersen don’t ing them on him, and also be- While “Pop” may be a bit un- want in-state players? That cause they didn’t want to be diplomatic in his response, I will always be a priority at accused of bias. couldn’t agree with him more. both schools. The 6-10 Wallace finished The sideline interview is an 12th annual Hayward Banquet Demarco at Boston Garden. But this isn’t intramurals. his 15-year NBA career at 225 interruption to the coach when History sponsored by the Oregon Tony Borne and Shag Thomas will This is big-time tackle football, pounds, in large part due to he is trying to do his job. The Sportswriters and Sportscasters wrestle Ed Francis and Maurice and the time has long passed lack of work in the weight interviews are rarely insightful. Dyrol Burleson, University of Association. LaPointe in the tag team main event when the Ducks and Beavers room. Blazer fitness personnel It’s an unnecessary imposition Oregon distance runner, wins the Bill Portland’s Denny Moyer, a at the Armory. load their rosters with in-state at the time say Wallace — who the league would do well to Hayward Award as the state’s top 20-year-old ranked middleweight Cleveland High’s Indians lead the talent that can’t match up with never averaged more than eliminate. athlete of the year 1959. Medford boxing challenger, wins a blood- Portland Interscholastic League bas- that around the country. eight rebounds a game — n A recent USA Today article High football coach Fred Spiegelberg drenched, second-round TKO over ketball standings and are ranked n In an article he wrote for wasn’t much interested in de- detailed the inherent problems is named man of the year at the former world champion Tony fourth in the state. Sports Illustrated prior to the veloping his body, which would with the full-cost-of-attendance Super Bowl, Seattle corner- have helped make him more benefits package for student- back Richard Sherman ad- productive on the block. Con- athletes approved by the NCAA dressed the topic of teammate trast that with LaMarcus Al- for the five high-resource foot- Marshawn Lynch not speaking dridge, who has added 30 ball conferences. game winning streak came to an with the media. pounds of muscle over the Auburn officials say the ben- StatusReport end in a 6-3 loss Friday at Seattle, Birthday “Under (Commissioner Rog- years and has become both a efits are likely to be about after the Hawks had battled back er) Goodell, the league contin- much more proficient post-up $6,000 a year, with an addition- to 3-3 from a 3-0 deficit before ues to put players like Mar- player and a better rebounder. al $1,500 for those athletes en- Blazers: With a win at home losing. On Sunday, Portland also Feb. 11, 1981 shawn in a position to be n One of the biggest reasons rolled in summer school. Wednesday night against the lowly rallied to force overtime at Everett, mocked by the media, which why Gonzaga is second-ranked That’s a potential $7,500 annu- Los Angeles Lakers, Portland would but dropped the showdown of seems to get a kick out of peo- nationally and in position to ally, and much greater than go into the NBA All-Star break with WHL U.S. Division leaders. The Scot Thompson (age 34) ple who struggle on camera. ... make the Final Four for the first what was represented as about a 36-17 record and be no worse Silvertips solidified their first-place The former Portland Timbers Marshawn’s talking to the time in history is Kyle Wiltjer, $3,000 per school. If one school than fourth in the Western standing and have 72 points with defender, now a coach and head press is the equivalent of put- the 6-10 junior from Jesuit High offers $3,000 and another one Conference. That’s a 56-win pace, 18 regular-season games remain- of the Oregon Episcopal School ting a reporter on a football who leads the Bulldogs in scor- can give $7,500, that could be- one year after the Blazers went ing. The Winterhawks have 66 girls program, was born on this field and telling him to tackle ing at 16.4 points per game while come a major recruiting ad- 54-28. points, with 17 games before the day in New York City. He played for Adrian Peterson.” shooting superbly — .541 from vantage. Winterhawks: Portland’s eight- playoffs. UCLA from 1999-2002. Sherman’s assertions the field, .443 from 3-point “Each school calculates the couldn’t be further from the range, and .806 from the free- miscellaneous and living ex- truth. throw line. penses differently — geograph- Lynch doesn’t have a speech I recently asked Boston Celt- ic area, technology needs, gen- impediment. He speaks rather ics center Kelly Olynyk — the eral cost of living near campus IF IT’S ON PAPER, WE CAN PRINT IT! well and has handled himself former Gonzaga star who are a few factors,” says Mark ably in the times he has cho- played some with Wiltjer on the Massari, deputy athletic direc- sen to conduct interviews. He Canadian national team — tor at Oregon State. “We’re still is simply unwilling to fulfill about the transfer from Ken- finalizing numbers, but we will the commitment every player tucky. be competitive and offer the full- makes when he signs an NFL “Kyle is one of the most est allowed by campus.” contract. skilled guys in college basket- Full-scholarship athletes, I’ve not seen even one re- ball right now,” Olynyk says. Massari says, will get the big- porter “mock” Lynch for not “He can do so many things. He gest package. Partial-scholar- talking. Most members of the shoots the ball so well. His of- ship athletes will get a package media would love for him to fensive arsenal is unbelievable. that reflects the amount of 2013 Spring talk, so they can convey his He just has to keep working in scholarship money they re- thoughts to fans who are inter- the weight room — get more ceive. ested in what one of the game’s athletic, quicker, stronger, fast- What the NCAA must do is bloombQuarterly Inspiration for your Garden, Home & Lifestyle from Al’s Garden Center great players has to say. er. He knows how to play the set a reasonable limit, and make The analogy about putting a game of basketball.” all of the member schools com- reporter on the field to tackle n A recent release from the ply. Otherwise, another can of Peterson? As ill-advised as Pac-12 office trumpets the fact worms has been opened. Introducing Al’s Garden Market Enjoy fresh fruits & vegetables from your own backyard Sherman yukking it up on the that 27 men’s basketball games [email protected] Stylish Spaces sidelines in front of reporters — including every game from Patio collections for all lifestyles after the Seahawks had taken the upcoming conference tour- Twitter: @kerryeggers

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Fresh new classifi eds every day – all day and night! 410665.022312 PT 410665.022312 503-620-SELL (7355) www.portlandtribune.com online COMMUNITY NEWSPAPERS | PORTLAND TRIBUNE YOUR TOWN, YOUR PAPER.TM 404617 061314 The Portland Tribune Tuesday, February 10, 2015 sports B3 UO: Kaumatule is five-star D-lineman Vikings: ■ visits of all-time,” Helfrich continues to grow and devel- From page 1 says. “Their entire, huge family op,” Helfrich says. “He’s really Hope to was there. (They) had about 35 grown to be a much more about him,” Helfrich says. or 40 in attendance and sang physical guy the last couple “He’ll remind you of (former this very emotional Samoan years.” move up Ducks receiver) Keanon Lowe song. It was unbelievable. Envi- Jonah Moi, 6-4, 235, is a in his energy and how he goes sion the Samoan Von Trapp three-star from Redlands, Ca- about his business.” family. It was awesome. Multi- lif., who went to Riverside City Kirk Merritt, 5-11, 205, from ple family members were cry- College. “Really love this kid,” in Big Sky Destrehan (La.) High, is a ing, and it was one of the cool- Helfrich says. “He was a rugby three-star recruit who ran for est things I’ve ever seen.” All-American from a big-time 1,116 yards and 11 scores and Drayton Carlberg, 6-5, 290, a rugby family. Really some big ■ averaged 14 yards per carry three-star out of DeLaSalle upside with this guy.” From page 1 and 16.9 yards per catch. High in Minneapolis, is a “na- Fotu Leiato, 6-1, 200, is a “Phenomenal athlete,” Hel- tional wrestler-type guy, also a three-star out of Steilacoom rison will start their college ca- frich says. “We see him initially basketball player and was re- (Wash.) High. His senior year, reers at quarterback, but could as a receiver. (Secondary) cruited a bunch on both sides he had 91 tackles, including 61 wind up elsewhere. coach (John) Neal has definite- of the ball,” Helfrich says. “Ini- solo, 11 for loss, 4 1/2 sacks and “Boland is a dynamic player. ly tried to get his hooks in him COURTESY OF jason getz/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION tially, we see him as a defensive one interception. Who knows what his best posi- as well.” Taj Griffin, running back from McEachern High of Powder Springs,G a., lineman, but the offensive line He “got an onslaught of re- tion is? I think he’s going to be Alex Ofodile, 6-3, 190, from tries to elude a tackler in an Aug. 24, 2013 game at the Georgia Dome. and coach (Steve) Greatwood cruiting activity over the last good at all of them,” Barnum Rock Bridge High in Columbia, have already tried to lay their couple months,” Helfrich says. says. “Hamilton is big (6-3, 220), Mo., earned four-star status and shape. He’s already big enough. State.” claim to him.” “He’s just a human highlight strong and fast and a savvy play- caught 96 passes for 1,611 yards Now he’s going to get faster Brady Aiello, 6-foot-7, 265, Gus Cumberlander, 6-6, 240, film. Just loves to run and hit.” er. You might see him at tight and 15 TDs as a senior. He is an and stronger as he goes comes as a three-star out of is a three-star from Cedar n Secondary: Ugo Amadi is end, if we’re stockpiled at quar- early enrollee at Oregon. “He’s a through.” Acalanes High in Lafayette, Ca- Grove High in Ellenwood, Ga. a 5-10, 180 three-star corner- terback.” big guy, a very physical player. Calvin Throckmorton, 6-6, lif. “He just started playing “For a long time, we thought he back out of Overton High in The Vikings have stockpiled in Great hands, great range. He 265, is a three-star from New- football; he was a competitive was our big, hidden gem, but he Nashville, Tenn. Helfrich says the offensive and defensive lines, can go up and get it. He can use port High in Bellevue, Wash. swimmer and a big, long ath- wasn’t so hidden over the last “has the hips and change of di- an unusually luxurious place to his body to post up with lever- Helfrich says he “has a young lete,” Helfrich says. “We’ll try several weeks,” Helfrich says. rection to play corner” and is be going into signing day, and so age and make plays.” body that will develop with the him out at center, and hopefully “He’s a long, athletic guy. Great “physical enough to tackle and their 13 signees last week includ- n Tight end: Jacob Breeland, strength program.” he’ll be able to play all five posi- hips, great pad level and pow- make plays in space. Could al- ed only one player in the trench- 6-5, 205, from Trabuco Hills Shane Lemieux, 6-6, 310, a tions up front.” er.” so be a safety, nickel-type guy es, 6-2, 270 defensive tackle John High in Mission Viejo, Calif., is three-star from West Valley n Defensive line: Canton Rex Manu, 6-3, 295, a three- long-term.” Jackson, a transfer from Wyo- a three-star who had 61 catches High in Yakima, Wash., has Kaumatule, 6-7, 290, has five- star out of Mililani (Hawaii) Jihree Stewart is a 6-0, 175 ming who already had hooked up for 1,028 yards and 11 touch- played guard and tackle. “A star status out of Punahou High High. “Just a grinder,” Helfrich three-star from Centennial with PSU through Burton. Jack- downs as a senior wide receiv- very physical guy and hangs in Honolulu. “He’s huge and says. “Great hands. He has tre- High in Corona, Calif. The son will give PSU 14 defensive er. His father played for USC. his hat on that,” Helfrich says. runs around really well,” Hel- mendous leverage and a great Ducks see him as a corner- linemen (13 returning) to go with n Offensive line: Zach Okun, Jake Hanson, 6-5, 285, got a frich says. “Canton already has feel for using his hands and safety who will be involved in the Vikings’ 14 returning offen- 6-5, 340, is a four-star out of three-star rating out of Eureka the body type and now needs to getting his hips past you.” the return game, as well. sive linemen. Newbury Park (Calif.) High. He (Calif.) High. “Really physical figure out all the details.” n Linebacker: Paris Bostick, Dylan Kane, a 6-3, 195-pound The Viks also landed transfers is on campus and was the first guy,” Helfrich says. “Really Gary Baker is a 6-4, 290-pound 6-1, 215, is a three-star from three-star out of Kamehameha Tyler Foreman, a sophomore de- member of this class to commit good pad level and really fin- three-star out of Upland (Calif.) Tampa, Fla., who went to San- High in Honolulu, “was the fensive back from UCLA, and to the Ducks. “He has a really ishes well. Needs to get bigger, High. As a senior, he had 56 ta Monica (Calif.) College. He 100-meter state champion in wide receiver Trent Riley, a soph- powerful first step, great strike. faster, stronger. He has a huge tackles, 31 unassisted, five sacks redshirted at Georgia in 2013. Hawaii last year,” Helfrich omore from UNLV who almost A close-quarters combat type upside. His brother plays col- and one forced fumble. “He’s kind of a box safety/line- says. “He has both safety and came to Portland State out of of guy. He just needs to get in lege football at Humboldt “One of the greatest home backer, depending on how he corner skills.” Mount Si High in North Bend, Wash. Other potential key contribu- tors include JC transfers Christo- pher Gilchrist, a 6-4 wideout; 5-9, 175 running back Za’Quan Sum- mers; and punter Casey Eyman, OSU: Love of football unites new recruits who figures to replace graduated All-American Kyle Loomis, and ■ was, I made nine new friends football and knows a lot about has place-kicking skills, as well. From page 1 from all over the West Coast.” the game. He has coached a lot of Gilchrist, from Altadena, Calif., Brandel was starting center All-Americans. I’m excited to was on PSU’s recruiting radar for mold,” Pyne says. “Really fan- for Central Catholic’s basketball play for a renowned coach like a long time. “A wild guy,” Barnum tastic kids.” team as a junior but opted to that.” says. “He’s got great releases, Brandel agrees that he is a skip the sport this winter. A nov- Kearsley’s best attributes as a runs great routes, has speed, happy-go-lucky individual. ice tennis player, he is going out player? height and excellent hands.” “I’m pretty optimistic about for the sport for the first time “I know the game,” he says. The Vikings’ 2015 schedule life,” he says. this spring. “I’m a football junkie. I love won’t be easy. It begins with a Brandel is optimistic about his “I’m going to be doubles part- football. My athleticism helps trip to Pullman and a game with future at Oregon State, with ner with a defensive lineman on me out a lot. It puts me in a lot Pac-12 Washington State, which whom he had verbally commit- our football team, Tim Gomez,” of good spots to do what I need beat the Viks there 59-21 last ted before Mike Riley left for Ne- he says. “It’s going to be a blast.” to do — open up holes and cre- season. The second “money braska. Andersen’s hiring forti- Brandel has enjoyed his con- ate space for my ball carriers.” game” for PSU is in Week 5, fied Brandel’s versations with Andersen and Kearsley will redshirt the when the Vikings will visit decision to be- offensive line coach T.J. Woods. 2015 season, then have two sea- North Texas Oct. 10 at Denton. come a Beaver. “They’re the real deal,” Bran- sons of eligibility remaining. Portland State’s football his- “They had del says. “Oregon State is going “It’s going to be good for me,” tory includes colorful, and high- everything I to start winning a lot more. The he says. “I got a lot of playing ly successful coaches Mouse was looking coaches are going to do a lot for experience at BYU. This red- Davis and Pokey Allen, who for,” says Bran- the program.” shirt year will give me a chance tried to recruit Barnum (he del, a 3.4-GPA Brandel says he will arrive in to work on leadership and im- wound up at Eastern Washing- student who Corvallis on June 22 for Oregon prove by going against starters ton). turned down State’s freshman bridge pro- COURTESY OF BRAYDEN KEARSLEY every day. I’m not going to be a Barnum says he is “probably a scholarship of- Andersen gram. Woods has indicated Brayden Kearsley finished his Aloha High days signing a letter-of- lost dog. I know I’ll get coached little more old-school than fers from Colo- Brandel will likely redshirt, “but intent with Brigham Young University. Now, he’s transferring to Oregon hard and coached well.” you’ve seen here in the past,” rado and Washington State to I’ll go to (August training) camp State. Kearsley is in Salt Lake City, and says he already has in mind verbal with OSU last September. trying to earn a spot,” he says. taking online classes and work- the identity he wants his Vikings “It’s close to home. The campus “I’m hoping to report at about Semper Fidelis All-American cess, Kearsley got to know An- ing out with a personal trainer. to adopt as a football team. is great. The engineering pro- 285.” Bowl and was a first-team all- dersen’s son, Chasen, who com- “If I finish the classes by “It’ll be a blue-collar group,” gram is awesome. It’s a great Interests outside of football? state selection as a prep senior, mitted to BYU before transfer- March 20, I’ll enroll (at Oregon he says. “Fun to watch. Funda- football school. “I like to spend time with fam- played as a backup offensive ring to Wisconsin. State) for spring term and par- mental. We score and give the “Coach Andersen’s staff and ily and friends and just hang guard as a true freshman in 2013. “And I’d known about Coach ticipate in the last three weeks ball back to the ref and act like the offense they’re going to run out,” he says. “And I have a cool As a sophomore last fall, he Andersen and what a great job of spring ball,” he says. “If not, we’ve been there before. We’ll works even more for me than girlfriend (Anna Eaul).” started three games and played he did turning Utah State’s pro- I’ll just come in June.” punt and play field position, but what Coach Riley was going to This winter, Brandel is help- seven in a season in which he gram around,” Kearsley says. Kearsley, the youngest of five we’ll be prepared to play fast and run. It’s a perfect fit for me.” ing coach a coed basketball team suffered high ankle sprains to “I’ve heard only good things children, is the son of Aloha attack, as well.” Brandel’s family members are through the Special Olympics both ankles. about him. When he told me he High wrestling coach Stuart Ke- Will that be enough to get the Beavers. His mother, Tanya, program. Why the transfer to Oregon had a scholarship for me, I did a arsley. Brayden wants to pursue job done? went to school at Oregon State, “It’s rewarding,” he says. “The State? couple of fist pumps. I committed coaching once he is done play- “It’s coming together,” Barnum as did his aunt and uncle. Nall, athletes are the happiest people. “I don’t regret going to BYU,” on the spot. I was excited to be a ing football. says. “It has to.” too, played a part in Brandel’s They make you smile.” he says. “It was a good run. I just Beaver.” decision. n Brayden Kearsley almost wanted to be closer to home and Kearsley has another OSU “No one comes close to Ryan,” came to Oregon State out of Alo- have a chance to play in the Pac- connection — chief of staff Zach Brandel says. “I’m excited to re- ha High in 2013. He verbally com- 12. It’s a little better fit for me.” Nyborg, who was the director of unite and be a teammate again.” mitted to OSU, then decided to Kearsley has several Oregon football operations at BYU. Brandel participated in the sign with Brigham Young. State connections. An uncle “Zach’s my man,” Kearsley

Semper Fidelis All-American “Two weeks before the sign- graduated from the school. A says. “He’s going to be fun to be 500324.120214 Bowl Jan. 4 at Carson, Calif. He ing date, I flipped,” says Kears- mentor, Van Anderson, played with at Oregon State.” was among 10 offensive linemen ley, a Mormon. The Cougars basketball for the Beavers. His Kearsley says he looks for- Family Style Customer Service who divided time for the West “had a lot of open spots on the godfather is Mike Lopez Sr., the ward to playing for the new • • squad, which lost 24-3 to the O-line. I had a really good chance long-time Portland-area prep coaching staff. Delivery Service Custom Cutting Special Orders East. to start there, and they told me I football coach whose son, Mike “Coach Woods is a good fit for “It was a cool experience,” he was going to play center.” Lopez Jr., was a star safety for me,” he says. “He’s going to 7609 SE Stark St. says. “The game was fun, but the The 6-4, 300-pound Kearsley, the Beavers. coach me hard. He’s going to love best thing I took away from it who also participated in the Through the recruiting pro- me harder. He loves the game of (503) 254-7387 Mrplywoodinc.com

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Working with, primarily and quality control (QA/QC) and manufacturing services support for Closed Monday internal, customers to support project activities and an outstanding career benefi ts starting day one of capital projects and planned and/or forced maintenance outages for all 28896.021015c implementation of projects. path and related training employment. Continue on divisions of Georgia-Pacifi c. Northwest construction support. with you education and utilize for managers who want to FLOWER: further develop clinical, our tuition assistance program BASIC QUALIFICATIONS REQUIRED: BASIC QUALIFICATIONS REQUIRED: * BS in Engineering or related degree in (Mechanical, leadership and business offering up to $2500 per year! * High School Diploma or equivalent. management skills. Construction, Electrical, Civil or applicable disciplines). * AWS CAWI certifi ed and a minimum of 3 years of experience in a * 7+ years minimum experience managing capital projects Welding QA/QC technician role, or minimum of 7 years of experience with total installed cost greater than $15MM in a Welding QA/QC technician role Interested candidates can apply on-line * 3+ years minimum experience managing projects with total * 5+ years of experience with ASME BPVC, 31.1, and 31.3 code work at www.extendicare.com/jobs. EOE installed cost greater than $50MM * Ability to travel up to 80%, including some international * Willingness to work occasional fl exible shifts to support outages. PREFERRED: Pets & Supplies Flower is the perfect name for me! I’m delicate and * 15 years of project management experience, PREFERRED: dainty and looking for a * Industrial experience - Pulp, paper, and/or industrial steam * AWS CWI, API-510, -570, -653, and/or any SNT-TC-1A certifi cations home where I can blos- power (boilers, turbines, steam distribution, etc.) and/or *Helping Ziggy* som. I have the softest fur * 10+ years welding experience prior to Welding QA/QC technician role Almost home and you will love petting industrial processes and systems. * 10+ years of experience with ASME BPVC, 31.1, and 31.3 code work me! I am a shy girl but * 5+ years of experience in the Pulp and Paper industry Kiosk & Festival Subscription Sales once you get a string toy out and wave it around you Community Newspapers circulation department has an will see the tiger come out! Please go to www.gp.com to apply excellent opportunity to make great money in a I hope you visit me and my part-time position. As a community outreach friends at Animal Aid’s salesperson you will sell newspaper subscriptions for Show & Tell Saturday. We are an equal opportunity employer. Minority/Female/Disabled/Veteran our award-winning publications at kiosk and festivals Please call 503-292-6628 28622.021015 C throughout the metropolitan area. If you have excellent option 3 or visit: communication skills, the drive to succeed and ability www.animalaidpdx.org for Ziggy is 4 years old, a timid more information. to work independently this could be the perfect position small black and white Portland Tribune Mail Room Personals for you. American pit bull dog, res- Part time positions available in the Gresham Outlook cued nine months ago from mailroom. We are looking to fill two shifts, Monday, Regular part-time (primarily Friday, Saturday & Sunday loneliness, abuse, and ne- LEXIE: 2:30pm-9pm and Wednesdays, 12pm-8pm. The job but some weekday work is required). Hourly wage plus glect, by a team who love would be working on an inserting machine putting to- excellent commission. Sales experience preferred. him dearly. He has learned gether the Portland Tribune for delivery. These positions To all my Valentines, Provide own transportation & ability to lift up to 25lbs. many basic obedience require that you be able to lift at least 50lbs, and stand With Love: Background check & drug screen required. commands. He never lost for long periods of time. More hours could be available Please submit resume to his faith in people and has by covering for the graveyard shift throughout the week. [email protected] or fax to learned to trust again. His These positions will pay $9.50 per hour, and will require 503-620-3433. team is seeking a quiet un- a background check and drug test. Please send resume derstanding real home of to [email protected] or stop by and fill out ______his own for Ziggy, as an an application. Antiques/Collectibles REPORTER only dog where his training The Gresham Outlook is located at can continue. For the I’m a spry little lady and 1190 NE Division St. Gresham, OR 97030 Bella- for your The Outlook has an immediate opening for a reporter longest time he has love to go for walks. I un- ______unstoppable spirit. covering the city of Gresham and several other smaller wanted and deserves to be derstand some commands Marian- for putting up ROLL-TOP DESK: beats. The Outlook is a twice weekly newspaper, which somebody’s wanted loved and would love to show with me, still. took first place in the 2014 general excellence category Delivery Truck Driver Antique, very good condi- dog, not just what he was: you what I know. I’m Lexie, Lori- for your tion, paid over $1,000, ask- of the ONPA Better Newspapers Contest. a bark in the back. For a petite 15 pound Sheltie Pamplin Media Group is searching for a delivery truck unstoppable mind. ing $750. 503-632-3287. We are seeking a reporter who enjoys enterprise more information call Pomeranian mix. I am a driver. The qualified candidate will have a clean driving Marissa- for the amazing journalism and who demonstrates a commitment to 503.625.4563 or E mail: senior so you don’t have to woman you’ve become. community-based journalism. This reporter will write [email protected] worry about chewed shoes record, and be able to drive a 24-foot box truck. Ability Vicki- for all of the above. features, and cover general news and breaking news. If you can foster or adopt to use manual pallet jacks, electric pallet jacks, fork lifts Z- though not female, This reporter also will embrace online and social me please contact Animal you’re my favorite guy on S A L E! media. The ideal candidate will have a degree in From two estates, par- Aid, 503-292-6628 option 3 and be able to carry 50 pounds of weight are require- the planet. journalism and 5 years newspaper reporting or visit our website: tial list, Philly dial ma- experience. Strong writing and editing skills are a ments. The position is full time, with overtime possible hogany tall high boy, www.animalaidpdx.org for requirement, as is the ability to meet deadlines and more information. I’m wait- on occasion. Candidates must pass a criminal back- outstanding carved manage several projects at one time. We are looking oak hall tree, set of 6 ing for you! ground check and a pre-employment drug test. CDL is for a team player with a passion for accuracy, a sense Mission chairs, of curiosity and the proven ability to turn out a large not required, but the candidate will have to pass a DOT mahogany curved volume of compelling news content each week. physical. Salary is dependent on experience. Pamplin glass china cabinet, Please email a short letter of interest, resume and at AKC Standard oak and mahogany least three samples of your published work to Media Group offers competitive salaries, medical and high boys, lawyer Poodle Puppies Executive Editor Steven Brown at red & apricot- males avail, dental benefits, and a 401K. Please send resumes to stacking bookcase, [email protected] oak and walnut draw all shots, microchip, house- Don Atwell at 1190 NE Division, Gresham, OR 97030. No phone calls please. To learn more about our broke, crate trained, leaf table with 6 carved newspaper, visit www.greshamoutlook.com chairs, rare signed Ready Now! $900 To see who follows instructions, use these words Go to our Web site: Heisey punch bowl (and only these words) in the subject line: www.ourpoeticpoodles.com set, plus our large se- Gresham Reporter or call (509)582-6027 lection of oak, walnut ______Max is an older cat who is TO MY GUY happy to spend his time and mahogany furni- ALPACAS its been 28 years ture, lots and lots of Marketing Consultant lounging on laps and eat- The Gresham Outlook, a twice-weekly newspaper, is Package of quality female ing treats. Max is affection- time is flying by glassware and collecti- huacaya alpacas to start bles, clocks, rockers, seeking a high energy, motivated salesperson to join ate, easy-going, and en- LOVE TO U our sales team as an outside Marketing Consultant. your herd or add to your thusiastic. After a few min- cedar chests, sets of existing herd. Included: 1 Dear Valentine! chairs, china sets, too We are looking for someone with previous advertising utes of getting petted, Max experience, a proven track record of success, a strong dark rose grey female & 2 will be a purring machine. Snookie.... much to list! New white females of breeding Help Personals 2 hearts..1 love loads arriving weekly. prospector, organizational and computer skills. An Max loves attention and existing account base will be provided, but our new age. Also 1 mature, preg- can’t wait to meet you! We buy, sell and con- nant proven female pro- Wanted sign quality antiques. team member will be required to contact and create Spend time with Max at new accounts. Must have reliable transportation and a ducer & one 6 month white Cat Adoption Team’s Sher- 35 years at the same weanling girl. They are ei- Columbia Gorge ❤ADOPT:❤ Affectionate location. clean driving record. Pre-employment drug screen and wood shelter: Devoted Married Caring good references required. This is a full time position ther already ARI registered 14175 SW Galbreath Drive Premium Outlets —————————— or can be registered. We Lawyers Joyfully await ———— with commission on all sales, a base salary, mileage 503-925-8903 JOB FAIR! Miracle Baby. Excited expenses and full benefits that include health care and will offer 2 extra breedings catadoptionteam.org Do you like Fashion? ❤ Grandparents too ❤ PONY EXPRESS vacation. If you have a passion for sales and are to any of our unrestricted Tues-Fri, 12-7 pm; Come join us on Thursday, ❤❤ Expenses paid ❤❤ ANTIQUES committed to success, send your resume and cover males. Package price Sat-Sun, 12-6 pm; February 12th from ❤❤ 1-800-563-7964 ❤❤ 6712 NE Sandy Blvd. letter to Cheryl Swart, Advertising Director – $3500. We also have free Closed Monday 12pm-3pm for on the spot Tues - Sat 10-5, [email protected] pet boys who will make interviews with select closed Mon or by appt. great pets or fiber animals. merchants in Suite 308 Schools/Training 503-287-8796 Transportation & transfer (next to Van Heusen.) Don~ of registration (females) is Miscellaneous for Sheds/Outdoor responsibility of the buyer. Apparel/Jewelry Sale Buildings Please call Pat at Adult Basic 206-780-3485 for more Education H.S. info. Happy Valentine’s Day to Completion FREE PALLETS Northwest Schools Pear- FUR COAT: Muskrat, 42’’ Good for Firewood. CUSTOM POLE my wonderful husband! son VUE - Authorized test- long, $600. Call for details, BUILDINGS & It’s been a fantastic 29 ing center. Program can be preferably mornings, 1190 NE Division ST years... I look forward to completed within one 503-803-5527 please leave Gresham RIDING ARENAS many more!!! week. PASSPORT TO a message if no answer. 503-665-2181 MITZIE: A 4-5 year old WORK! 503-657-4000 Hemingway (polydactyl) I Love you! bi-color black/white female. Mindy She looks like she is wear- EXECUTIVE MEDICAL BILLING Ring, Goggles, LOVELY Top of the Line Bear Picture As soon as you meet ing catchers mitts. Mitz is DIRECTOR TRAINEES NEEDED! Ladies diamond engage- HOME FURNISHINGS & Harry Belafonte, you’ll the ultimate companion Seeking a top-level Train at home to process ment ring, size 6, yellow PAINTINGS: see how friendly and affec- cat. She will groom you, manager with 10+ years Medical Billing & Insurance gold, 1/3 cttw. $125, Mint condition, reasonable. 60’x120’x14’ tionate he is. Harry has ex- the other cats in the room, broad experience with Claims! NO EXPERIENCE includes box. Call 503-227-0171. Arena, $42,000 perience getting along with anyone who sits next to vision & leadership to NEEDED! Online training Ski Goggles Bolle - brand 36’x84’x14 Vehicle dogs, but he’d prefer not to her. She sleeps with you motivate staff & provide at Bryan University!! HS new in box $35. Teddy Musical Instruments/ live with any other cats. and just wants a person to counsel to the board of Diploma/GED & bear picture for nursery Storage, $20,000 Sweet Harry can be nerv- call her own. She is commissioners. Computer/Internet needed! 8”x20” $5. Milwaukie, Entertainment ous in a shelter environ- spayed, vaxed, microchip- 1-877-259-3880 Barn Metal & Responsible for overall 503-654-8821 Siding ment, but he quickly warms ped. Email: effective operation & 100 yr. Old Duo Art up to any new person. [email protected] profitability of the Replacement Harry Belafonte is waiting for hours and locations. organization. For full Appliances Steck Baby Grand Perfectly restored by the Call Fred at Cat Adoption Team’s details, see: Sherwood shelter: portofanacortes.com/jobs well-known Ken Marts. Beautiful mahogany wood, 503.320.3085 14175 SW Galbreath Drive EEO/Drug-free or visit 503-925-8903 Robin’s Valentine’s wish Workplace. original in-perfect-condition barnsrusonline.com 50 Gal. Water ivory keys. It has been catadoptionteam.org Heater Tues-Fri, 12-7 pm; $35 in Scappoose played very little since its restoration in 2007. This Sat-Sun, 12-6 pm; Dylan, Call 503-543-2093 Closed Monday NEED HELP We love you, Business piano is also a player piano sweetheart! that beautifully reproduced Furniture/ BALDWIN: WITH YOUR Love, Opportunities the expression of the re- Dad & Dawn cording artist, and 29 play CLASSIFIED Home Furnishings rolls are included. It was in the same family since new AD? ATTENTION BED: Convertible bed from (approx. 1914) when we ccb# 117653 Ikea. Like new, cover acquired it. We have over READERS never used. Light Tan che- A home Due to the quantity and $8,000 in the restoration, Robin believed he was fi- Call Mindy! variety of business op- nille. Great for guest room and are selling it for much or grandkids! $100. Cash nally at home but his new portunity listings we re- less.http;//www.pianola.org/r Sporting Goods owner must travel con- 503-546-0760 only. CJ at 503-913-0233. eproducing/reproducing_duo-art.ef for ad rates, general ceive, it is impossible for stantly and can no longer us to verify every oppor- m $3,995 or best information or help I’m a happy-go-lucky kitty keep him. He had a foster tunity advertisement. offer. Call 503-936-7971 writing your ad in any one FOR SALE: who is looking for my for- who loved him dearly and Readers respond to of our Dining Table & 6 Chairs ever home. I’m a young planned to adopt him but business opportunity Community Newspaper Like New - Cherry Office Furniture & CASH FOR GUNS boy who enjoys exciting unforeseen circumstances ads at their own risk. If Publications $500/set 503-888-2351 PISTOLS AND games like chase the toy interrupted her plan; we in doubt about a partic- and get the RESULTS Supplies mouse and follow the str- are carrying her wish and ular offer, check with the PISTOL COLLECTION you want! FOR SALE: ing. My outgoing personal- hope for him forward. Until Happy Valentine’s Day Better Business Bureau, mjohnson@commnews La -Z-Boy Living Room Set OR SINGLE PIECES ity will win you over! Stop we find a new home for Hunny Bunny! I am so 503-226-3981 or the papers.com Reclining Sofa, Loveseat CASH for DIABETIC 503-704-5045 by Animal Aid’s Show & Robin he will be boarding grateful for you! I look Consumer Protection (tan), 2 end tables & 1 cof- [email protected] Tell Saturday and and ask at a kennel. He is a young, forward to “happily ever Agency, 503-378-4320, TEST STRIPS fee table (light wood) for me, Baldwin! Please healthy, 70 pound, neu- after” with you! BEFORE investing any Help those in need. Like New $500/set call 503-292-6628 option 3 tered, American Bull dog, money. Paying up to $30 per 503-888-2351 box. Free pickup. or visit our website: handsome, loving , ex- Call Sharon: GUNS! www.animalaidpdx.org for tremely personable and KYLIE: Health & Fitness Savage 110 7mm Magnum more information. athletic; knows multiple Help Wanted SURPRISE!!! Loans 5 0 3. 6 7 9. 3 6 0 5 with scope and case $350. commands, is crate trained Call Jerome at and is continuing his les- Job Opportunities 503-804-1100 sons. He is best as an only dog for now until training is THICK-IT: 4 boxes, instant Drivers It is illegal for companies completed. Seeking com- doing business by phone to food & beverage thickener mitted, kind, experienced If you have a vehicle that for people with difficulty can tow at least 7,000 promise you a loan and individual to adopt or foster With all the smiles you ask you to pay for it before swallowing liquids. Call, to adopt. Training is in- pounds, you can make a 503-543-6596. living delivering RVs as a share, the laughter too... they deliver. For more in- cluded; He is loved by eve- It’s great to have a kid formation, call toll-free ryone who knows him. For contract driver for Crosby is a playful Foremost Transport! Be like you! 1-877-FTC HELP. A public TREADMILL: more information call (503) service message from ProForma XP Treadmill, biscuit-making cat who is 625-4563 or e-mail your own boss and see looking for a new family. the country. Be My Love Bug! Community Classifieds and (Sears) with space saver [email protected] Love, the Federal Trade Com- feature, regularly serviced, Crosby has had some ad- ForemostTransport.Blogspot ventures outside and now .com or 866-764-1601! Dad & Mom mission. well-maintained. Recently refurbished. Works well. he’ll be a great indoor com- Can no longer use it be- panion. Crosby will be hap- Help Wanted cause we moved to smaller pier as an only cat, but Sales Opportunities space. $35 and pick it up. he’s more than enough cat SPENCER: 2-3 year old Need a new employee? Wilsonville. 503-504-3827. to keep you happy! Meet tabby patch on white boy, the playful, sweet, and super sweet, easy going, is Food/Meat/Produce easy-going Crosby at Cat easily intimidated by other NEED EXTRA SELL (7355)

Health Care - INCOME? Advertise it in the Adoption Team’s Sher- cats so he would like to be 40+ year USA company. Equipment wood shelter: your only love or could Needs PT help marketing 14175 SW Galbreath Drive share with a non aggres- 620 Sell your 503-925-8903 sive cat. he is neutered, candles, home fragrances classifieds. Call now! - and decor. Flexible sched- WHEELCHAIR: GRASS FED BEEF catadoptionteam.org vaxed, microchipped. Electric, Jazzy, complete PACKS: Tues-Fri, 12-7 pm; Email:

ule. Fun and profitable! puppies here! www.community-classifi eds.com www.community-classifi

Call 503-232-8007 with charger, like new, 503 $100/ea. Call for details, Sat-Sun, 12-6 pm; [email protected] Call 503-620-7355 503-396-5202. 503-632-3931. Closed Monday for hours and locations.

COMMUNITY CLASSIFIEDS ✵ YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD MARKETPLACE ✵ 503-620-SELL (7355) ✵ 8:30AM - 5:00PM ✵ WWW.COMMUNITY-CLASSIFIEDS.COM The Portland Tribune Tuesday, February 10, 2015 sports B5 Duplexes/Multiplexes Autos Wanted Motorcycles Building Single-level, For Rent Scooters/ATVs Low-maintenance BUIILDIING MATERIALIALS 2 888 9 . 012015 Build Smart High-performing Homes SCAPPOOSE 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath Visit: www.quailhomes.com Country setting, available Call Jon Girod, 360-907-5800 Feb.1, duplex, fenced yard, W/D, wood floors, garbage paid, single car garage, covered patio, possible RV parking, Wanted: 2009 KAWASAKI Ninja $950 mo. plus deposit. Looking to buy any & all 250r: with 16,757 miles on No smoking, no pets. WWII (1941-1946) era it. I am the second owner, 503-543-2161 Jeeps. I pay cash for well maintained and runs Ford GPWs & the Willys great. This is a great MB. Any condition, run- starter bike and allows you Houses for Rent ning or not, I’ll come & to learn at your own speed haul it out & leave CASH while getting use to the Acreage/Lots Apartments for Rent in your hands. See mechanics of a motorcycle. website for all the details: Call or text 503-419-8748. www.ibuyoldjeeps.com or West Linn. Price: $2,800. call 503-631-8949 HILLSBORO: Modern Downtown Pickups PUBLISHER’S Hillsboro Apartment. Cars For Sale W/D in unit. Free NOTICE Water/Sewer/Garbage, across from MAX. *Income Restrictions Apply. ESTACADA City Center Apts, ASK ABOUT OUR 2002 LEXUS HARD TOP 160 SE Washington St. NO DEPOSIT CONVERTIBLE SC430 503.693.9095 Color Egyptian Gold, Gslcitycenter.com OPTION Cream color leather int, Beautiful 1, 2 & 3 bdrm, V8, GPS, Back up sen- All real estate advertised laundry hook-up, kitchen sors, Pristine condition. herein is subject to the PORTLAND NW: applces. Storage shed. 34,000 miles. $19,900 1992 FORD Federal Fair Housing Includes water & sewer! Call 503-697-9701 Act, which makes it ille- 1 Bed: $767, 2 Bed: $913! F250 XLT Free Water/Sewer/Garb! Sec. 8 OK Extended cab, 4X4 long gal to advertise any pref- [email protected] erence, limitation or dis- Spacious open floor plans bed and bed liner. 119,000 crimination based on include full size W/D. Pro- E-mail for ‘97 FORD F150 miles, 7.5L, gas, tow pack- race, color, religion, sex, fessional on-site mgmt. details. 116K miles, red, $5000, age. Blue Book $6,800 - handicap, familial status Lush landscaping, Outdoor 2011 Mini Cooper S, 4K sell for $5,800. Excellent or national origin, or in- Pool, Year round spa, 503-630-4300 miles, British green, condition inside and out. tention to make any LARGE Patio w/storage. $20,000. both have good Call 503-255-7677 such preferences, limi- *Income and Student tags. (503) 786-2943 Restriction Apply. START TALKING BEFORE tations or discrimination. State law forbids dis- *Pets Welcome! crimination in the sale, Westridge Meadows rental or advertising of 18476 NW Chemeketa Ln TOYOTA Avalon real estate based on 503-439-9098 2000 STORAGE www.gslwestridgemeadows.com THEY START DRINKING factors in addition to 86,250 miles, good condi- those protected under tion, well-maintained, clear PROBLEMS?? federal law. Oregon title, tags through April PORTLAND NW: Call State law forbids dis- 1 Bed: $767, 2 Bed: $913! 2016. Comes with 4 Kids who drink before age15are 5 times more crimination based on Free Water/Sewer/Garb! mounted snow tires. Community Classifieds marital status. We will Auto Parts $6,000. Gresham area. Spacious open floor plans and place a Marketplace not knowingly accept include full size W/D. Pro- & Accessories 503-661-2962. likely to have alcohol problems when they’re adults. any advertising for real fessional on-site mgmt. ad to sell your overstock estate which is in viola- Lush landscaping, Outdoor items - tion of the law.All per- Pool, Year round spa, SNOW TIRES To learn more, go to www.stopalcoholabuse.gov sons are hereby in- LARGE Patio w/storage. 4 235/65/17 studded snow GET FAST f m ha all w ll gs or ed t t d e in *Income and Student tires. 90%+ condition. $175 -Reasonable Rates advertised are available Restriction Apply. all. 503-223-9359 FAST or call 1.800.729.6686 on an equal opportunity *Pets Welcome! - Quality Readers basis. RESULTS Westridge Meadows THROUGH -Quick Results 18476 NW Chemeketa Ln For assistance in placing THE CLASSIFIEDS 503-439-9098 YOUR CLASSIFIED Commercial www.gslwestridgemeadows.com ADVERTISEMENT, CALL NOW! Call (503) 620-7355 please call www.community- Property PORTLAND NW: the experts at Located near MAX, Community Classifieds CALL classifieds.com Portland Streetcar & Bus. 503-620-SELL (7355) 2 acre gravel CANBY: Beautiful courtyards, community-classifieds.com 503-620-SELL commercial lot, fncd w/2 downtown view, access gates, septic close to Waterfront Park w/sand filter, 6840 Ander- and the Pearl District. son Rd, $549,000. Great amenities! 503-351-4412. The Yards at Union Station 10’ EAVE 12’ EAVE 14’ EAVE 16’ EAVE 815 NW Naito Pkwy 24x36 $4,765 $5,201 $5,636 $6,060 Manufactured 503-478-1695 30x36 $5,513 $5,978 $6,476 $6,967 Homes/Lots gsltheyards.com 30x48 $6,575 $7,140 $7,644 $8,390 36x36 $6,219 $6,709 $7,191 $7,834 TUALATIN: 36x48 $7,399 $7,998 $8,536 $9,396 NEW Marlette 40x48 $8,313 $8,889 $9,556 $10,434 Special 40x60 $9,644 $10,255 $10,951 $11,985 1404 sqft,4/12 roof, arch shingles,dbl dormer, 9lite door,glamour bath, FOB Hubbard, Or. Subject to code requirements. appl pkg, fireplace, Price subject to change without notice. 10’ EAVE 12’ EAVE 14’ EAVE 16’ EAVE $69,900 finished on site PO Box 407, Hubbard, OR. 97032 24x36 $2,279 $2,333 $2,394 $2,564 PRICE GUARANTEED OR CCB#86204 WA CCB# PARKEB1071D6 30x36 $2,770 $2,830 $2,916 $3,118 1 bdrm/1ba: $767 TILL MARCH 2 bdrm/2ba: $913 30x48 $3,457 $3,539 $3,635 $3,747 36x36 $3,266 $3,338 $3,426 $3,776 JandMHomes.com 3 bdrm/2ba: $1051 503-722-4500 Water, sewer, garbage 36x48 $4,191 $4,261 $4,357 $4,617 paid. Full size W/D in 40x48 $4,934 $4,995 $5,142 $5,599 every apt. Pool, hot tub, 40x60 $5,992 $6,099 $6,241 $6,793 fitness center & clubhouse. 60x120 $17,848 $18,065 $18,516 $18,927 ‘80 COMMODORE Professional on-site mgmt.

Newly remodeled Dbl wide Beautiful, quiet, residential 26348.062014c manufactured home, neighborhood. $35 App 2bdrms, with large closets, Fee. Call Today!!! 1 bath, W/D hook-ups, Wood Ridge Apartments kitchen has new Pergo 11999 SW Tualatin Rd flooring, new cabinets & 503-691-9085 counter tops, New Dish- www.gslwoodridge.com washer, sink & faucet, electric range, living & bed- room has new carpet & Business/Office trim, New hotwater heater, carport & two sheds, This Space for Rent home is in a nice quiet 55 & older park with club GRESHAM Service Directory house & swimming pool. Office Building space rent $540 includes Two office spaces at street water/garbage, $19,500 level available for lease. Home & Professional Services owner will finance with 3/4 Perfect for Salon, Massage down or part trade for Therapy, brokerage or truck. CALL MIKE insurance. Newly remod- (503) 875-1531 eled, excellent downtown location in high traffic area. 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COMMUNITY CLASSIFIEDS ✵ YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD MARKETPLACE ✵ 503-620-SELL (7355) ✵ 8:30AM - 5:00PM ✵ WWW.COMMUNITY-CLASSIFIEDS.COM B6 SPORTS The Portland Tribune Tuesday, February 10, 2015 TribunePuzzles The Crossword Puzzle SOLUTIONS “NAME GAME” By Joel D. LaFargue Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

ACROSS 84 Actor’s accessory mean 16 Henning of magic 55 Leveling machine 90 Expend, as fuel 1 Pacific island 85 That, in Toledo 117 Nods, often 17 “Deal __ Deal” 56 High dudgeon 92 Cool and Lam Sudoku nation 86 Office staple 118 Freebies on 18 For fear that 57 Flamethrower detective series 5 Eastern teachers 90 French peninsular pillows 25 More than excited compound pen name Answers 10 __ bar city 119 Fall locale 28 Like challah 60 Broken nursery 94 Milk buys 15 Frequent 91 It won’t hold water dough rhyme item 96 Buried treasure autograph signer 93 Horse features DOWN 31 No longer in 63 “Bummer” 97 Consecrated Puzzle 1 19 Quaint plaint 94 Marks 1 Pool surface 33 Diamond side 65 Red pig 98 Smythe’s comics 20 Man with common in 2 “M*A*S*H” mess 34 Trimming tape 66 Bit of setter barfly memorable stories server 35 Cannon barrage speech 99 Oft-twisted treat thumbs 95 Landings: Abbr. 3 Boy’s mother 36 Thing of the past 67 Say “Enough!” 100 Generic pet name 21 Really cold 96 Muffet fare 4 Parisian 37 Significant period 68 Liniment targets 101 Jokes 22 Extra 97 Bedroom obsession 38 Cheating 69 Grab forcefully 102 Related 23 Singular community, briefly 5 Classic French deterrent 70 “Like a Rock” 103 Praise highly Puzzle 1 24 1983 novel partly 98 Joe or java firearms company 39 Center singer 104 Blue Devils’ home set in a graveyard 101 Major affair 6 Does lookout duty 40 Weak 71 Frank and Rice 105 Arabian Peninsula 26 Bakery buys 102 He played Arnold for, say 41 A 36-Across may 72 Seuss’ Thidwick, port 27 Arboreal rodents Vinick on “The 7 Subway Series be one e.g. 108 Invention 29 From square one West Wing” team 42 Call before the 73 Date bk. listings 109 Seuss’ Sam-__ 30 Tap 106 Diva’s moment 8 MGM motto word game? 76 Quarterly report 110 MDX ÷ X Sudoku 32 Steams (up) 107 Any top-25 NFL 9 Multi-office rental: 43 Immature hooter line 33 Cannes career scoring Abbr. 45 Org. 77 “Yes, it does conclusion leader 10 __ rice headquartered bother me!” 35 Baffled 111 Transmission 11 Staff figures near Colorado’s 78 Some, in Stuttgart Puzzles Puzzle 2 “Jeopardy!” speed unit 12 What there Cheyenne 81 In flames contestant’s effort 112 Salon treatment oughta be Mountain 84 Likely 36 Proprietary 113 One often turned 13 Jam ingredient? 46 Assume the role 87 As an answer formula, perhaps on 14 Mrs. Blake of 88 Charms 39 Salon treatments 114 Top-tier invitees Carrington on 49 Surroundings 89 Israeli prime 40 Frankie Valli 115 Gospel writer “Dynasty” 52 Author Albom minister before singing style 116 What one star may 15 Drink 54 Blockhead Sharon 44 Bonding agent 45 Classic detective played by William Powell 47 Needing training 48 Sourdough’s strike 49 Item sold in a kit 50 Ohio pro 51 Letter successor, to a large degree 53 Non-metallic rocks Crossword 54 Bibliophile’s prize 58 “Spamalot” co-creator Answers 59 2000 film set in a confectionery 61 __ exam 62 Fitting to the max 64 Cold, in Calais 65 Stupefies 67 DeMille specialties 68 Taken as __: in its entirety 70 Secret rival? 71 Greatly disliked thing 74 Engage in braggadocio 75 Simple to operate 79 Rip off 80 Salon dye 82 Back in time Puzzle 2 83 Least quantity 02/10/15 | [email protected] | ©2015 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

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BUGATTISRESTAURANT.COM 437753.060613 B8 LIFE The Portland Tribune Tuesday, February 10, 2015 TribuneHealth Keeping your kids’ teeth healthy Insurance

Six things to know about ■ Learn deadline more promoting dental health about what to expect s a pediatric dentist, I talk at your looms to parents daily about ways child’s rst to get kids to brush their dental visit This Sunday, Feb. 15, is the last teeth. Toddlers in particu- at: kaiser- chance to sign up for health in- A perman- lar can be so resistant that frustrated enteden- surance for 2015, and health care moms and dads are tempted to give talnw.org/ organizations are scrambling to up altogether. It’s not uncommon for your- rst- get as many people signed up as them to ask, “Do baby teeth really visit/ they can. matter anyway?” New regulations from the Afford- Even though they fall out, they do able Care Act have made it easier for matter. Children with decay in their many people to qualify for and af- baby teeth are more likely to develop ford health insurance — but that cavities in their permanent teeth, comes at a price. Americans who fail and baby teeth hold the space needed to purchase health insurance will be for the incoming adult tooth. Prema- Establishing good required to pay a fi ne through their ture loss of baby teeth can result in dental health income taxes of $325 per person in crooked teeth or even prevent adult habits at an their household or 2 percent of their teeth from coming in. early age is income, whichever is higher. One surprising statistic is that early critical for long- Oregon Health & Science Univer- childhood cavities and tooth decay term health. sity published a study in September are the No. 1 chronic childhood ill- COURTESY: KAISER that found that since the Affordable ness, more common than asthma. Un- PERMANENTE Care Act’s requirements went into treated dental pain effect last year, Oregon’s uninsured and disease affect a parent’s lap, not in (oralb.com/stages/disney-timer-app) ■ Sealants work. A child who re- had gone from 14 percent to 5.1 per- child’s overall well-be- ShelbySetter the dental chair. It’s ■ Try the “Tell-Show-Do” method ceives sealants is 72 percent less like- cent of the total population. ing. It can lead to an opportunity to with younger kids. Tell them what ly to need fi llings over the next three “This fi rst glance at Oregon’s un- missed school days, provide guidance you’re going to do, demonstrate on years. insured rates shows that a signifi - impact a child’s abili- for the parent and yourself or a toy, and then do it. cant number of Oregonians have ty to eat and sleep to talk about oral ■ Use a fl uoridated toothpaste. Get fl uoride varnish on baby teeth benefi ted from expansions in access and lower self-esteem. hygiene, diet, injury Use a pea-size amount for kids ages and permanent teeth to health insurance,” said Peter But there’s good prevention and hab- 3 to 6 and a smear for younger kids. ■ Fluoride varnish is a concen- Graven, health economist with the news: It’s a problem its like pacifiers ■ Rinsing after brushing should trated topical fl uoride brushed onto Center for Health Systems Effective- that can be prevented and thumb sucking. be kept to a minimum or eliminated teeth. ness at OHSU and lead author on by following a few ■ Starting at to maximize fl uoride’s effect. I usual- ■ Like sealants, it’s quickly, easily the study. “Our study found that 95 parent- and child- DENTALHEALTH birth, clean your ly tell parents to make their best ef- and painlessly applied by dental care percent of Oregonians now have friendly tips: child’s gums with a fort to have the child spit out the ex- professionals. health insurance coverage.” soft infant tooth- cess toothpaste, but if they don’t, ■ The American Academy of Pedi- The study found that most of the Start early brush, or cloth and water. As soon that amount of fl uoride is safe to atric Dentistry cites fl uoride as the newly insured qualifi ed for the low- ■ Kids should have their first as the first tooth comes in, start swallow. most effective way to prevent tooth income Oregon Health Plan, which dental visit within six months of brushing your child’s teeth with a decay. saw a 53 percent jump. Private insur- when their first tooth breaks soft-bristled toothbrush designed Get sealants on permanent teeth ers saw a 20 percent boost in enroll- through the gums, or by age 1, ac- for children. Use a smear of fluo- ■ Sealants are a thin resin coating Be mindful of diet implications ment, according to the study. cording to the American Academy ride-containing toothpaste, about that fi lls in the chewing surfaces of ■ Make sure your child has a bal- For those few uninsured strag- of Pediatric Dentistry. Kids can see the size of a grain of rice. teeth, blocking food particles that anced diet. glers left, Legacy Emmanuel Hospi- either a general dentist or a pediat- could otherwise get trapped and ■ Limit sugars and starches to tal’s Lorenzen Center is hosting a ric dentist. Pediatric dentists re- Make brushing fun cause cavities. protect teeth from decay. Last Chance Open Enrollment Fair ceive special training to understand ■ It’s important to brush twice a ■ Sealants are quickly, easily and from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., Saturday, Feb. kids’ needs. day for two minutes. Apps like Oral- painlessly applied by dental care Shelby Setter, DDS, is a board- 14, at 2801 N Gantenbein Ave. ■ The first appointment often B’s free Disney Magic Timer app can professionals. They can last for certifi ed pediatric dentist at the Kaiser takes place in the comfort of the help turn brushing into a game: years. Permanente Oregon City Dental Offi ce. HEADACHES RELATED TO YOUR NECK? Isolation is avoidable for seniors You may be eligible for a federally- oday, thousands of old- Despite pleas, she refuses to the risks. er Americans face seri- DavidLipschitz recognize the benefi ts of life in In the end, we must respect funded research study on frequent ous problems of loneli- an assisted-living center and ig- the wishes of our older parent, neck-related headaches. Tness and isolation. nores her increasingly frustrat- aunt or grandparent. However, For a variety of reasons, ma- ed family. Clinging to perceived we must not allow the desire for • Must be 18 years or older ny older people live alone with independence, the mother re- independence to overwhelm our • Care provided ny licensed chiropractors virtually no contact with the mains unhappy and alone. responsibility as concerned rela- • Participants will be compensated outside world. Loss of a spouse, Beyond frustrating family tives. All too often, adult chil- • Limited spots available frailty and an unwillingness to members, social isolation and dren fail to recognize there are leave the home prevent older loneliness create many adverse many ways to address isolation citizens from maintaining a so- LIFELONG HEALTH health effects. Depression is and reduce loneliness. For more information, cial, outgoing lifestyle. common. Frequently, meals are As baby boomers of the sand- call the Center for Unfortunately, I know of ma- missed or there are diffi culties wich generation, we must com- Outcomes Studies at ny sad stories of social isolation. from his only daughter. He felt purchasing or making meals, mit ourselves to fi nding healthy Recently, a researcher who stud- hopeless, alone, and relegated which lead to weight loss and and creative solutions to ad- 1-800-678-9072 or 496525.120214 ied this problem told me an in- himself to a life confi ned within malnutrition. This, together dress the problems that affect visit www.uws.edu/ credibly vivid and unsettling his small, suburban house. with being housebound, leads to our elderly parents and rela- headache story about an older man who Fortunately for him, he met weakness and reduced mobility. tives. Helping with shopping, led a sad, depressed and lonely and befriended this wonderful Falls are common and, in the medication, meal delivery and life. Although he had a very suc- young researcher, and for the end, virtually every illness be- other daily tasks can reduce the cessful career, he had recently remainder of his life she was his comes more common and more physical tolls on an elderly adult lost his wife and was estranged closest friend. She served as the dangerous. and create new avenues for only link to the world outside, As a geriatrician, I deal with healthy interaction and social- saving him from total isolation. this problem on a daily basis. ization. Additionally, there are The companionship they shared Anytime I meet a new patient, I numerous outside community changed the course of their always ask about loneliness. In resources dedicated to helping lives, making each day fuller many circumstances, I fi nd fam- improve the lives of older citi- and richer. ily confl ict dominating the en- zens, such as the Interfaith Although this man’s story left tire issue of isolation. Adult chil- Caregiver Coalition that recruits an impact, it is far from unique. dren want to take care of their volunteers to visit, befriend and Another frequent scenario to 80- or 90-year-old parent, while care for older adults, or the local plague the elderly community the mother or father demands Humane Society that trains lies not with the isolated adult, to remain alone. Submitting to “compassionate companions,” “ but rather with an exasperated the wishes of well-intentioned pets that assist elderly citizens. I FEEL LIKE son or daughter. Oftentimes, the adult family members often be- Hobbies, clubs, pets or volun- parent refuses to listen to the comes a battle over indepen- teers can change the life of a adult child, and, despite serious dence. For children who become lonely older adult. diffi culties and limitations, re- their parent’s parent, safety be- With a little research and in- fuses to leave the ancestral comes the central priority. vestigation, concerned relatives A FISH home. Usually it is a widowed By contrast, older people will fi nd many avenues and al- mother, who is unable to climb want to maintain independence, ternatives to help their elderly the stairs, can no longer clean and, for them, the psychological friend or family member main- the house, eats inadequately, benefi t of independent (though tain health, independence and WITH NO WATER.” risks falling and will not go out. isolated) living far outweighs happiness.

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mentary about our lifelong search for love launches this Bits&Pieces MovieTime month, including a showing at 1:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 14, at By Jason vondersmith Portland diva By Jason vondersmith the Hollywood Theatre, 4122 The Tribune Storm Large The Tribune N.E. Sandy Blvd. ($8, $6 seniors, stars in director hollywoodtheatre.org). Selma visitor Heather The big screen The film follows 30 seniors in Harlow’s “The Rochester, N.Y., who sign up Students at Open Meadow Punishing Last week: “Jupiter Ascend- for speed dating for 70-to-90- Middle School will welcome a Business.” ing”; “Spongebob Squarepants year-olds, shattering stereo- special guest on Feb. 11: Geneva Harlow and 2: Sponge Out of Water”; types about the booming demo- Craig, a participant in the 1965 fellow Lake “Match” graphic while creating dialogue Selma march and riots, the his- Oswego High This week, Feb. 13: “Kings- about their emotional lives. torical events behind the movie grad Sarah man: The Secret Service” The Hollywood Senior Cen- “Selma.” Skiblinski, the (20th Century Fox), R, 129 min. ter, Elders in Action, and She’ll speak with students screenwriter, About — A spy organization AARP/OR are among the about her experiences growing developed the recruits a street kid to help groups collaborating on the up in segregated Selma, Ala. movie. quell an uprising by a tech ge- Portland screening. After the Before Craig’s visit, students nius; Stars — Colin Firth, Taron movie, seniors can take part in COURTESY OF will watch “Selma” at the Hol- HEATHER HARLOW Egerton, Samuel L. Jackson; their own speed-dating session lywood Theatre. Craig now lives Director — Matthew Vaughn at the Hollywood Senior Center, in Medford and works at Asante fant station began to make in- Deux Encore” (“Together “Fifty Shades of Grey” (Uni- 1820 N.E. 40th Ave., a short Rogue Regional Medical Center roads. He had to retire because ‘Mazes’ rescheduled Again”) won 13 awards on the versal), R, 125 minutes walk from the theater. and serves as AARP Oregon’s of complications from Lou Geh- independent film festival circuit About — It’s the much-antici- Chair of the Diversity Advisory rig’s Disease. The opening of OMSI’s in 2009. pated movie version of the pop- Upcoming events Council and Clinical Program. “Mazes” exhibit has been With her newest movie, “it’s ular book. Student Anastasia Playhouse popularity pushed back one week to Sat- sort of a résumé piece, a way to Steele becomes enraptured n The Hollywood Theatre Dirt dating urday, Feb. 14, because of trans- get my name out there,” Harlow with handsome billionaire has announced that it will de- As expanding on a story last portation issues. It opens at says. “Obviously, I would love for Christian Grey; Stars — Dakota but its new 70mm film projec- The folks who run the Mon- week, Brian Weaver, artistic di- 9:30 a.m.; a special member pre- it to do really well on the festival Johnson, Jamie Dornan, Luke tion with the March 21 screen- ster Jam, the monster truck cir- rector of Portland Playhouse, view will be held from 6 to 9 circuit.” Grimes; Director — Sam Tay- ing of Stanley Kubrick’s “2001: cuit that stops at the Moda Cen- which has collaborated with So- p.m. Friday, Feb. 13. Harlow now is working on lor-Johnson A Space Odyssey.” ter, have come up with a cute journ Theatre on the “How to There’ll be 13 interactive finding venues for this to hap- Next week, wFeb. 20: “Mc- The format was all the rage idea for its Saturday, Feb. 14, af- End Poverty” project, says the mazes in the exhibit, and visi- pen, and there is one place in Farland”; “Hot Tub Time Ma- in the 1960s and ‘70s, highlight- ternoon show. Playhouse crowds have grown tors solve puzzles and patterns particular she would like to get a chine 2”; “Leviathan” ed by such film as “Lawrence of There’ll be backstage speed immensely in the past seven to get through. screening. Arabia” and “2001,” and it of- dating from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. be- years at its theater space on “It would be awesome to show Home rentals fers a greater aspect of ratio fore the show starts. Northeast Prescott Street. Large on screen this film in Lake Oswego,” Har- and high resolution than 35mm. Interested? Curious? Buy a “The first year we had about low says. The top 10 digital movie pur- As theaters convert to digital ticket to the 2 p.m. show (ticket 400 people, the next year it tri- The Portland International chases based on consumer cinema technologies, most have master.com), RSVP by Feb. 13, pled,” he says. “Then, it tripled Film Festival screened locally Cultural investment transaction rate, by Rentrak: gone away from projection, then look for the Speed Dating again. It’s doubled or tripled ev- produced shorts last weekend, 1. “Gone Girl” much less 70mm. The Holly- Table at will-call to be escorted ery year. We’re up to an audience including “The Punishing Busi- Oregonians invested a record 2. “John Wick” wood will be the only film venue backstage for the event. of 13,000. That’s quick growth. ness” by Lake Oswego native $4.4 million in the Oregon Cul- 3. “The Interview” in Oregon to screen 70mm films. “In some sense, we’re a very Heather Harlow. It stars Storm tural Trust in 2014, a 7 percent 4. “Boyhood” Dan Halsted, Hollywood’s Classical add small neighborhood-based com- Large. increase from the year before. 5. “The Equalizer” head programmer, spent years pany. On the other hand, it’s very “Storm is the queen of Port- “It’s an incredible outcome giv- 6. “Fury” trying to track down parts to re- A reader sent us an email with professional, with the artists and land. We were already friends, en it was a year of significant 7. “Predestination” store the 70mm film projection. information to add to our story actors and designers we work and when I read the script for transition for the trust,” said ex- 8. “The Maze Runner” n Another theater has up- last week, “Concerts trumpet with. ... Because of the quality of this project, I thought ‘This is so ecutive director Brian Rogers. 9. “Two Night Stand” graded. The McMenamins 1920s- classical musicians,” about a work and intensity of art we’re Storm Large,’” Harlow tells the The Cultural Trust distrib- 10. “Guardians of the Galaxy” style Grand Lodge theater space, concert series held Thursdays at working on, we work with a high- Lake Oswego Review. utes 42 cents of each donor dol- Other recent favorites: “The 3505 Pacific Ave. in Forest Grove, the Hampton Opera House, level of talent willing to work in The 19-minute “The Punishing lar in grants and puts 58 cents Book of Life”; “No Good Deed”; has been revived with luxury home of All Classical Portland this setting.” Business” follows ex-convict into a permanent fund, current- “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” rocking chairs, projection up- radio. The performance hall for Weaver says Playhouse has named Ellen (Large), who works ly valued at just over $25 million. grades, and 5.1 digital surround the series actually is named the ventured out from its theater for with a developmentally disabled In 2014, the trust awarded $1.8 Doc spotlight sound. Films are shown seven Roger O. Doyle Performance Stu- an August Wilson play, and it person (Addie, played by Melissa million in grants to its statewide days a week: 3:30 and 7 p.m Mon- dio, after the late music profes- went well, but many audience Kaiser), each breaking through partners, 45 county/tribal cul- “The Age of Love” days-Thursdays; 3:30, 7 and 10:15 sor at the University of Portland members commented about how their hard shells because of the tural coalitions, and 51 cultural It’s speed dating for the p.m. Fridays; 12:15, 3:30, 7 and from 1973 to 2010, and All Classi- they liked the intimate space on force of their needs. nonprofits through a competi- 70-plus set on Valentine’s Day, 10:15 p.m. Saturdays; 12:15, 3:30 cal board president when the in- Northeast Prescott. Harlow’s documentary “Nouse tive grant program. as a funny and poignant docu- and 7 p.m. Sundays. Grandin: Animal behavior is specialty THE BYB CONOR MCPHERSON ■ From page B10 Tickets on sale now for 2015-16 ‘Voices’ lecture series February 20–March 14 din? The ones consumed with COHO THEATER video games. After Temple Grandin’s double amputee starred in Griffiths For tickets, call 503-235-1101 “Talented kids are playing appearance in Portland the finale of “Dancing With The world-famous photog- or visit www.thirdrailrep.org video games and not going last week, the 22nd season the Stars” just weeks after rapher was one of the first anywhere,” she says. “There of the famous women’s taking the bronze medal in female photographers to are a few that go into the video lecture series concludes snowboarding at the Sochi work for National Geograph- game industry, and that’s fine, March 18 with Grammy Paralympics. ic, shooting pictures in more but if they end up playing vid- Award-winning singer and n Nov. 11: Azar Nafisi than 100 countries during eo games on their Social Secu- activist Angelique Kidjo. The Iranian professor and her illustrious career. rity check, that’s not OK. There For information, visit author wrote the national n April 6, 2016: Yeonmi are smart kids out there who voicesinc.com. bestseller “Reading Lolita in Park should be working at Google. The 23rd season begins Tehran: A Memoir in Once part of the North Ko- “And, I’m concerned with Oct. 14, with tickets on sale Books,” a compassionate rea elite before becoming a our education system, taking now at voicesinc.com. The and often harrowing por- human rights activist and skills and trades out of schools. lineup: trait of the Islamic revolu- escaping the oppressed Now (students) come out intel- n Oct. 14: Amy Purdy tion in Iran. country in 2007, Park now lectual and have no common The athlete, author and n Feb. 10, 2016: Annie lives in New York City. Carey Owen by Photo sense and no practical skills. We need the practical people.” She remembers cleaning walking dogs, helping in the aged my creativity. My mother the 2010 HBO Emmy Award- eight horse stalls a day while farmer’s market — volunteer was really, really supportive,” winning biopic,“Temple growing up in Arizona, where jobs where they can learn dis- she says. “She knew how to Grandin.” she discovered her love of farm cipline and responsibility.” push and stretch me. She had She always enjoys talking horses and livestock. “Kids get She often says that kids with me make pictures of different about kids. Sponsored by interested in things they get “uneven skills” should be iden- things; art was always “There’s not enough empha- exposed to,” she adds. “I was tified early, and not get stuck in encouraged.” sis on what a kid can do,” she exposed to cattle in high school. Silicon Valley kids start Grandin has written 12 says. 503902.021015 school. I learned skills. These to learn programming in third books on her two passions, au- kids today are not learning grade, she says. tism and animal behavior. She skills, and they’re addicted to “If they don’t have that apti- also designs livestock equip- February 5 - 28 Presented in Spanish with easy-to-follow supertitles in English By Luis Mario Moncada Gil video games. I ran the horse tude, maybe they’ll go into the ment; much of the livestock Directed by Nelda Reyes barn. I learned work skills. I arts,” she says. “We have to handling equipment in the also painted signs in high think about how to get them United States has been de- school and sold them. into careers.” signed by her. She also con- “I wish paper routes were In Finland, the smartest peo- sults for companies such as still around. You not only have ple go into teaching. Here, Burger King, McDonald’s and 501934.021015 to deliver papers, but you have Grandin says, “somebody goes Swift. She invented the “hug 503-236-7253 to sell customers on the route to college and wants to work at box” as a way to help deal Info & and collect money. It taught Goldman Sachs.” with autistic people. www.milagro.org kids how to run a business. I Grandin relishes in her mind Grandin has been featured Tickets 525 SE Stark St. tell parents that we need to always working differently. by media around the country, find substitutes for that, like “My parents always encour- and Claire Danes played her in Opción MúltipleMultiple Choice

Summerplace Assisted Valentine’sConcert Living Community at theOld Church presents: SAFETY FIRST Michael Allen Harrison Join us as we host a lecture series to increase safety awareness on fall prevention, S With Special Guest Julianne Johnson common home injuries and provide solutions to keep you and your loved one safe!

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This is the confession booth at the St. Mary’s Motherhouse. Sisters of St. Mary show the public what the religious life is all about Opening up the ister Michael Francine Duncan heard her call- ing to the Sisters of St. SMary of Oregon from halfway across the world. “It was very exciting to me to see I could change my life in world to the a very radical way to serve God,” Duncan, 62, said last week during an infor- mal tour of the Mother- house, the fi ve-story building that sits STORY BY beneath ERIC the green APALATEGUI dome at the inter- ‘CONSECRATED LIFE’ PHOTOS BY section of JONATHAN Southwest Tu- HOUSE alatin Valley Highway and Murray Boule- vard in Beaverton. “I have been so happy living (here) and being part of this commu- nity. I’m still astounded at my life.” She and fi ve dozen fellow sisters opened up their mas- sive home to share their lives with the public with an open house Sunday, Feb. 8. The open house was the Sis- ters of St. Mary’s answer to Pope Francis’ declaration that 2015 was the “Year of Conse- crated Life.” Part of his call was for those in the church to open up and show what reli- gious life is all about. “We’re taking that very seri- ously,” Duncan said. The complex includes: Our Lady of Perpetual Help Chapel, Top: Sister Michael Francine Duncan shows St. Mary’s cloister, which was part of the open house. Above left: Inside St. Mary’s church. Above right: Sister Michael Francine Duncan with its stunning stained-glass shows where the Catholic robes are stored at St. Mary’s Motherhouse. windows and the 1945 Wicks organ sitting grandly in the balcony; the sacristies where erhouse every 25 years for ma- southeast of Salem. Early on, ed in the 1950s. School and the Maryville med- working in human resources priests prepare for services; jor anniversary tours, and a fa- they were called to the farm- While the sisters no longer ical facilities that fl ank the for British Gas. upper fl oors where nuns live vorite stop has been the room lands west of Beaverton to take manage the youth home, Motherhouse on the large “What I was able to bring close together in dormitory- under the dome. On most days, over St. Mary’s Home for Boys, which has evolved into a pro- campus. with me was a lot of those style rooms; basement where this is a quiet space where the then an orphanage. gram serving at-risk youth in- Duncan said women who business skills a lot of the sis- the sisters bake bread and can nuns pray and refl ect. They had a chapel across cluding criminal offenders, are “feeling the call” may be ters don’t have,” said Duncan, fruits and vegetables; and a The Sisters’ history stretches TV Highway in the early they continue to serve both invited to attend retreats, just who joined the order at age 44. dining room fi lled with photo- back to their founding in 1886 years and started building the the young and the not so as Duncan did nearly two de- “It was like God got me graphs and artifacts. in the Scio and Jordan commu- Motherhouse in the 1930s. young. Their sponsored minis- cades ago when she returned trained to use these skills for They’ve opened up the Moth- nities in the Willamette Valley The fi nal phase was complet- tries are Valley Catholic to the United States after the benefi t of this community.” Autism pioneer works to unlock the labels

■ Temple Grandin thinks seeing things “There are visual minds, differently should be celebrated, not shamed numbers minds, word minds. We need these By JASON VONDERSMITH versity professor of animal kinds of different minds.” The Tribune science and leading fi gure in — Temple Grandin autistic rights and livestock in- As arguably the most fa- dustry, she saw things differ- mous and accomplished per- ently, and she encourages peo- son with autism, Temple ple to allow individuals to see chology Today about antide- Grandin certainly doesn’t things differently. pressants used for anxiety. She have trouble emphasizing “There are visual minds, tried them, and they changed one of her points of discus- numbers minds, word minds,” Author Temple her life. sion — and it’s a great one. she reiterates. “We need these Grandin, who She says people with autism, “We got these kids who are kinds of different minds. On appeared in Asperger’s, ADHD or dyslexia called quirky and different, and the other hand, I can’t be total- Portland last need help, but part of the help we need these kinds of minds,” ly anti-drug, because they week, says should be enabling them to she says, sharing some of her saved me.” understanding, think as they please. Some cre- thoughts with the Portland Tri- Indeed, Grandin says antide- teaching and ativity just might come out of bune during her Portland visit pressant drugs are necessary “conservative” it. Grandin talks about Apple for the “Voices” lecture series. to treat autism, Asperger’s, use of founder Steve Jobs not know- “People are just being labeled ADHD, dyslexia and other medications ing how to write code, but he handicapped.” forms of behavior — along with had grand visions. She talks work with Grandin’s 2006 book, “Think- physical activity and healthy about Ingvar Kamprad — the autistic people. ing in Pictures: My Life With eating, saying, “get exercise founder of Ikea —battling dys- Autism,” kind of says it all. The and don’t eat Pop-Tarts for COURTESY OF VOICES lexia. She talks about David woman didn’t talk for three breakfast.” Neeleman — the founder of Jet years, saw snakes in an offi ce “There’s a place for a conser- side effects. It’s horrible. The But, I knew a kid who was 8 stant state of anxiety,” she Blue Airways — dealing with before going on medications vative use of prescription younger the child the more years old and on six drugs. Ev- says, as a young person. “I ADHD. and generally fought the uphill meds,” she says. “I take antide- conservative I want to be with ery time he acted up in school, started taking them in my ear- “We need these kinds of battle of being labeled someone pressants. For anxious kids, a medication. There are teenag- they chucked another drug at ly 30s, and before that I’d see minds,” she says. who always saw things differ- tiny dose of Prozac would make ers and adults who need medi- him.” snakes in the offi ce all the time. What kind of minds need to ently. Even after her many ac- a huge difference. cation, and I was one of them. ... Grandin, 67, offers her own I was locked in the offi ce, and it be changed, according to Gran- complishments, including be- “There are way too many an- When medications are used testimonial for the use of anti- was full of deadly snakes.” One coming a Colorado State Uni- tipsychotic meds with very bad right, they can be a lifesaver. depressants. “I was in a con- day she read an article in Psy- See GRANDIN / Page B9