Metro talks trash as area's waste piles up

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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 25, 2014 • TWICE CHOSEN THE NATION’S BEST NONDAILY PAPER • PORTLANDTRIBUNE.COM • PUBLISHED TUESDAY AND THURSDAY
2 014 : ST RAN GE BUT T RUE
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WAIT.
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TELL ME!
Y ear- end q uiz tests readers’
knowledge of P ortland- area
newsmakers and events
By PORTLAND TRIBUNE STAFF
W
hat kind of a year was 2014?
It was a year when Oregon — and especially Portland — proved it was politically different from the rest of the country by re-electing incumbent Democrats
and increasing their control of the Oregon Legislature. That trend included reelecting Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber, despite personal revelations about his fiancee Cylvia Hayes that turned the governor’s race into a soap opera.
It also was a year when Portland voters
overwhelmingly decided not to take away
control of the water and sewer bureaus
from the City Council, they continued to
complain about Water Bureau plans to
disconnect the open reservoirs, and
rolled their eyes about cost overruns at a
new Bureau of Environmental Services
building.
And don’t get us started about the
street fee or tax or fund — or whatever —
proposed by Mayor Charlie Hales and
Commissioner Steve Novick.
In fact, sometimes it’s hard to distinguish fact from fiction in the Rose City —
or real news from fake news. Take a stab
at answering the following questions
about Portland and Oregon news events
of 2014, and you’ll see what we mean. The
correct answers are on Page A11.
1. In 2 0 14 , Mayor Charlie Hales and the
city of Portland established a cozy relationship with which new company in the
“ sharing economy” ?
a) San Francisco-based Uber, which
enables anyone to become a taxi driver
19
TRIBUNE PHOTO: JAIME VALDEZ
C
Cassandra
Wells, who is an offi cer with the Portland Police Bureau’s Mounted Patrol Unit offi cer, warms up Murphy before heading out to the outdoor
aarena at Centennial Mills. The horses are back at the former fl our mill after eight new pre- made stalls were installed in a safe area of the building.
5
using their own car, and connects riders
to drivers.
b) Portland-based Vacasa, which manages Oregonians’ second homes as vacation rentals
c) San Francisco-based Airbnb, which
enables tourists to rent rooms and vacation rentals in Portlanders’ homes, condos and apartments
d) Zipcar, the car-sharing company
that traces its origins to Portland
2 . Art Robinson, the Oregon Republican
Party chairman who lost his third race
for a seat in Congress in November, is
known for which of the following?
2
AArt Robinson
a) Circulating a petition that claimed
reducing greenhouse gases in the atmosphere would harm the environment
See Q UIZ / Page 2
TRIBUNE PHOTO: JONATHAN HOUSE
Elise Burke, of Moreland Farmers Pantry, stocks the shelves of
Oregon’s fi rst non- GMO grocery store.
Metro talks trash as area’s waste piles up
P olicies under review
as ex p iration looms
on scores of contracts
By JENNIFER ANDERSON
The Tribune
A month after their “Let’s
Talk Trash” film festival, the
Metro regional government
is still talking trash.
In fact, the public will be
hearing much more about how
to overhaul the region’s trash
network in 2015.
Several hundred contracts
with companies that haul,
burn, recycle or bury solid
waste all expire in 2019. Metro’s
Solid Waste Roadmap (oregonmetro.gov) lays out various
options.
Earlier this month, the Metro Council directed its staff to
come up with a policy that evaluates landfill capacity available
to the region to guide decisions
about where the region’s waste
should be sent.
In a resolution, Metro Councilor Bob Stacey noted the concerns raised by farmers, business owners and residents in
Yamhill County during the past
few years about a proposed expansion of Riverbend Landfill
outside McMinnville.
The landfill, which is owned
by Waste Management, Inc.,
Portland Tribune
Inside
receives about 29 percent of the
Metro region’s garbage.
The Metro region’s garbage
makes up about 48 percent of
the incoming volume of waste
at Riverbend.
Waste Management anticipates that without an expansion, the landfill will run out of
room for more waste in two
years. Therefore, Waste Management is seeking approvals
to add another 15 years of capacity to the landfill.
“If we’re going to seriously
discuss reducing waste, why
should we invest in more landfill capacity for the region?”
Stacey asked.
Mike Dewey, a lobbyist for
Waste Management, told the
council his client did not
oppose Stacey’s proposal and
acknowledged that there is
plenty of landfill capacity in
the region.
But, he said, “for people who
want to close the landfill, this
See TRASH / Page 7
TRIBUNE PHOTO: JONATHAN HOUSE
At the Metro Central Transfer Station in North Portland, people dump trash, where gleaners will come by
later to see what can be recycled.
DUCK FANS READY TO REPRESENT
— SEE LIFE, PAGE B1
“Pamplin Media Group’s pledge is to
deliver balanced news that reflects the
stories of our communities. Thank you
for reading our newspapers.”
— DR. ROBERT B. PAMPLIN JR.
OWNER & NEIGHBOR
A2 NEWS
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
Quiz: Rose City facts or fiction? You decide
■ From page 1
2 0 14 : ST RAN G E BUT T RUE
b) Suggesting we could get
rid of nuclear waste by sprinkling it over the ocean
c) Asking Josephine County
residents for urine samples
d) Saying public schools are
the most devastating form of
child abuse in the U.S.
a) Fred gets visited by a fact
checker before a date.
b) A celery salesman goes
to great lengths to get celery
back on the table
c) A Vermont company
chooses Portland to launch its
line of “sustainable” condoms
d) OPB listeners enjoy a tailgate party before a “Prairie
Home Companion” taping
3 . Portland Parks &
Recreation spent $ 1 million on
what unex pected proj ect this
year?
a) An urban swim center for
immigrant youth
b) An urban library for the
homeless
c) An urban nature playground with logs, rocks, sand
and water
d) An urban technology center for low-income kids who
don’t have access to video
games
4 . Gov. John Kitzhaber was
re- elected in November
despite which scandals involving his partner, Cylvia Hayes?
10 . What happened in the
months after Mayor Charlie
Hales and Commissioner Steve
Novick announced their “ like
it or lump it” street fee for
local roads in May?
14
TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO
C offi cials have come up with a new plan to
City
rrelocate the people staying at Right 2 Dream Too
hhomeless camp in Old Town.
18
a) Hayes admitted to an illegal marriage to an Ethiopian
immigrant
b) Hayes used her role as
the governor’s fiancee to benefit her private consulting business
c) Hayes bought land in
Washington state to grow pot
d) Hayes hiked the Pacific
Crest Trail to find herself
5. Measure 92, the GMOlabeling measure that nearly
won victory statewide, would
have ex cluded what categories?
a) The bureaus should not
have spent ratepayer money
on public campaign financing
(Voter Owned Elections)
b) The bureaus can legally
spend ratepayer money to relocate utility lines in advance
of transit projects, even if
they aren’t scheduled for replacement
c) The Water Bureau
should not have spent ratepayer money on the Portland
Loos
d) The Bureau of Environmental Services could legally
spend ratepayer money to
help buy an undeveloped portion of River View Cemetery
TRIBUNE FILE
PHOTO
6 . What two Hollywood
actresses star as mother and
daughter in the fi lmed-inOregon movie “ Wild” ?
a) Laura Dern and Reese
Witherspoon
b) Jennifer Aniston and Angelina Jolie
c) Meryl Streep and Scarlett
Johanssen
d) Maya Rudolph and Whoopi Goldberg
a) Street Roots went to
weekly publication
b) The Portland Tribune
went back to twice a week
c) Willamette Week’s biggest exposé was not about sex
(well, sort of ... see No. 4)
d) The Oregonian went to
four days a week and became
a tabloid
21
TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO
D Monica Wehby, the Republican candidate
Dr.
cchallenging U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, fell short in her
aattempt to unseat the incumbent.
8 . The Portland Bureau of
Transportation’s nex t “ road
diet” — removing vehicle
lanes to slow traffi c and
improve safety — will be
a) They couldn’t get a third
vote and pushed its approval
back until January, at the earliest
b) Multnomah County said
Portland has to pay more for
the replacement Sellwood
Bridge project
c) Gov. John Kitzhaber announced a Transportation Visioning Committee that could
delay any new state funds for
local streets for years
d) The Bicycle Transportation Alliance agreed to support bicycle licensing to help
fund infrastructure improvements for bicycle riders
11. The Multnomah County
Circuit Court j udge hearing
the lawsuit about illegal
spending by the water and
sewer bureaus issued what
ruling?
Salt and
Straw.
a) Snack food eaten after
midnight
b) Anything made with kale
c) Restaurant food, beer and
wine
d) Peanut-free, gluten-free,
lactose-free pizza
7 . The biggest bombshell in
Portland’s media world in
2 0 14 was which development?
9. Which of these events really
occurred in 2 0 14 , and which
were gags on “ Portlandia? ”
which of these?
a) The Banfield Freeway
b) 82nd Avenue
c) Foster Road
d) Tilikum Bridge
12 . After Portland met all of
Google’s conditions for bringing its ultra-hig h-sp eed
broadband service to town,
which company was offering
the most residential 1 Gig service by the end of the year?
a) Google, which installed
its Fiber service much faster
than anyone expected
b) Comcast, which began
upgrading its service to reduce slowdowns to Netflix customers
c) Frontier, whose CEO said
nobody really needs 1 Gig ser-
vice anyway
d) CenturyLink, which already was offering it in select
locations
18 . Ice cream maker Salt &
Straw opened its fi rst Los
Angeles branch, offering which
new fl avors?
13 . After years of discussions,
construction fi nally began on
which of the following longdelayed proj ects this year?
a) Black olive brittle and
goat droppings
b) Sour grape and corneille
c) Tomato water and Ojai
olive oil
d) Avocado and prune
colonic
a) Renovation of Veterans
Memorial Coliseum
b) Redevelopment of Centennial Mills in Northwest
Portland
c) Redevelopment of the
large U.S. Post Office complex
in Old Town
d) The replacement for
Multnomah County Courthouse in downtown Portland
e) Renovation of the Portland Building next to City Hall
14 . Which of the following big
controversies did the City
Council resolve this year?
a) Finding a mutually agreeable new location for the R2DToo homeless camp in Old
Town/Chinatown
b) Reaching an agreement
for Uber to operate its appbased paid ride service in the
city limits
c) Approving an acceptable
street fee to fund maintenance
and safety projects
d) Making sure neighbors
and apartment builders agree
on how much new parking
should be created for each
project
e) Solving the problems created by residential demolition
and infill projects
15. What Portland School
Board action(s) caused an
uproar this year?
a) Approving a 28 percent
raise for Superintendent
Carole Smith
b) Changing the policy on
transfers to focus-option
schools
c) Firing a popular principal
d) Letting teachers go on
strike when a deal was not met
at the bargaining table
16 . Which of these did Phil
Knight do in 2 0 14 ?
a) Acquired minority ownership of the Ducks football team
b) Released his third feature-length film
c) Committed Nike to develop concussion-proof football
helmets
d) Agreed to annex Nike into neighboring Beaverton
17 . After 50 years in business,
what is the new season format
that Portland Opera
announced?
a) “Carmen” five times a year
b) Cataract Sundays for senior citizens
c) Twenty-three performances in a three-month summer festival
d) Switch to an all-Broadway
musical format
19. What did the Portland
police Mounted Patrol Unit do
with their horses because of
structural problems at their
stables?
a) Sold them all off to a local
CSA
b) Moved them out of Centennial Mills to a barn in Aurora
c) Replaced them with a
Segway-based ride-sharing
system
d) Fitted the horses with bodycams allowing them to roam
in the new Riderless Square
zone
2 0 . Kevin Rose, a general
partner for Google Ventures,
incurred the wrath of his
neighbors when he paid $ 1.3
million for a Willamette
Heights house built in 18 92
and proposed to do what?
a) Turn it into an incubator for tech startups complete with plumbed-in Red
Bull and coffee, cots and 1
gigabit-per-second data
connections
b) Demolish and replace it
with a modern, energy-efficient home designed by a renowned local firm of architects
c) Live in it, quietly, changing nothing, taking The Oregonian and swimming at the
MAC
d) Use it as the set for a
reality show called “TenEx,”
format to be decided later
2 1. Monica Wehby was
involved with which of these
events during her losing bid
for the U.S. Senate?
a) She was named in Portland police reports by her
former boyfriend and her
former husband — both of
whom accused her of stalking them
b) She was named in
BuzzFeed accounts of plagiarizing statements from other
Republicans — including her
former primary opponent —
in her health care and economic positions
c) She received help from
past presidential nominees
John McCain and Mitt
Romney
d) She aired a TV ad that
featured the endorsement of
a male couple challenging
Oregon’s ban on same-sex
marriages
— Answers on page 11
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©2014 Portland Tribune
NEWS A3
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
As 2014 comes to an end and we take time to celebrate
ate the holidays with our families and friends, I see
it as the perfect time to thank each and every one of you for helping
lping to make the past 12
1 months so
exciting and productive here in Portland.
Speaking
ng both personally and on behalf of Bank of America, I’m incredibly grateful for the opportunity to
help play a role in the many things you all do to make this community such an incredible place in which
whic
to live,
ive, work and raise families.
Your endeavors and achievements
ements are an inspiration, and they fuel our commitment
commit
to making financial
lives better for everyone here in Portland
tland through the power of every cconnection:
• Connecting our customers and clients
lients to the resources,
resources tools, expert analysis and advice they
need to succeed
• Connecting local
al businesses to the loa
loans and expertise they need to grow, hire and fuel
our local economy
econ
• Connecting nonprofits to the funding and volunteer support that enable them to fulfill
their missionss
• Connect
necting neighborhoods to the capital they need to become healthier, more
vibrant communities
vib
That’s our purpose. It’s what drives us each and every day at work. And we pledge to use the power
powe
of local connections to make life here in Portland even better in 2015.
Again, thank you for working with us, and I wish you all a very happy and healthy holiday
holida season!
Sincerely yours,
Life’s better when we’re connected®
500033.122314
Roger Hinshaw
Bank of America President,
ent, Oregon and Southw
Southwest Washington
© 2014 Bank of America Corporation. Member FDIC. | AR7NK53K | AD-12-14-0374.B
A4 NEWS
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
Compromise on
street fee in works
Tiered payments based on gasoline
consumption could replace tax proposal
version misclassifies large
transportation companies
that cause a disproportionate
A potential compromise
amount of street damage.
residential street fee is beIt is not clear whether the
ing discussed within City
gasoline-and income-based
Hall.
compromise will attract the
It would replace the connecessary three votes to be
troversial progressive perapproved by the City Council.
sonal income tax with tiered
It is not as progressive as the
payments based on estimated most recent income tax progasoline consumption.
posal, which appeals to
The payments still would
Novick and Commissioner
be related to personal inAmanda Fritz. But that procome, however. The possible
posal is strongly opposed by
proposal is based on the asthe Portland Business Allisumption that wealthy peoance, which has promised to
ple use more gasoline than
help fund a petition drive to
poor people, who are less
refer the entire fee to the ballikely to own cars and are
lot.
more dependent on public
The other two members of
transit.
the council, commissioners
Many details of the
Nick Fish and Dan
proposal are still being
Saltzman, both want
worked out, including
the council to ask
how many tiers to use
voters to approve
to determine the paythe fee. That has led
ments. Among the opto discussions about
tions are five tiers,
requiring that it be
each representing 20
referred to voters afpercent of Portlanders,
ter a set number of
based on their inyears, which is what
comes. Those in the
occurred when the
lowest 20 percent
council approved the
would pay the least,
public campaign fiwhile those in the
nancing program
highest 20 percent
— Robert called Voter Owned
would pay the most,
McCullough, Elections. The
based on the assumpmanaging parnter program had been
tion that those in the
of McCullough plagued by controtop tier own the most
Research versies, including
and the least fuel-effialleged misspending
cient vehicles.
by a number of
The concept was first
candidates who qualified
broached to Mayor Charlie
for public funds, and was
Hales and Commissioner
repealed by voters.
Steve Novick by Robert McHales and Novick first proCullough, a local economic
posed the fee in May to fund
consultant.
maintenance and safety proj“I’m a successful small
ects. The current version is
businessman, and I drive a
intended to raise around $40
large SUV. Hello?” says Mcmillion a year. It has grown
Cullough, a managing partincreasingly complex as new
ner of McCullough Research. amendments were introIronically, McCullough also duced to address problems
is president of Southeast Up- raised by critics.
lift, the neighborhood coali“It doesn’t have to be rocktion office that sued the Port- et science. In fact, complicatland Bureau of Transportaed solutions hardly ever
tion to obtain internal work
work,” McCullough says.
papers it believes will show
The compromise could be
some companies would not
introduced on Dec. 31.
pay their fair share under
The council is tentatively
the nonresidential portion of scheduled to consider final
the proposed street fee. Mcamendments on Jan. 7 and
Cullough says the current
hold a final vote on Jan. 14.
By JIM REDDEN
The Tribune
“ It doesn’t
have to be
rocket
science. In
fact,
complicated
solutions
hardly ever
work.”
COURTESY: MAYA LIN STUDIO
An artist’s rendering of Maya Lin’s proposed Celilo proj ect.
Lin proj ect offers insight into
riv er’s history , culture, ecology
‘Celilo Arc,’ largest
public artwork, caps
Confluence Project
By PETER WONG
The Tribune
Maya Lin has come a long
way since 1981, when as a senior at Yale University, she
submitted the winning design
TRIBUNE PHOTO: PETER WONG
for the Vietnam Veterans MeMaya Lin describes herself as a
morial in Washington, D.C.
She came to Portland to designer, rather than an artist or
talk about her most expan- architect.
sive projects yet.
One is the Confluence Project, education program, the seventh
which spans 438 miles of the Co- site.
lumbia River, from its mouth at
The “Celilo Arc” centerpiece,
the Pacific Ocean east to Hells still in the design stages, will be
Canyon. Five public art sites in an elevated wooden walkway
Oregon and Washington are that projects over the now-calm
nearly complete.
river. Lin says the design is inThe sixth site will be at Celilo spired by the wooden fishing
Park, 13 miles east of The Dalles, platforms that once jutted over
and is scheduled for completion the falls.
in 2017. The Schnitzer family anThe Celilo Park site also will
nounced a $1 million gift for it have an interpretive pavilion and
just before Lin spoke at the City online interpretive center, a reClub of Portland.
designed landscape, a parking
It’s the largest public art lot and railroad crossing.
project in the United States.
Lin’s other major undertaking
“I am fixated on water and is “What Is Missing,” a virtual
rivers,” she says.
project that calls public attention
Lin says the Confluence Proj- to vanishing species and habitats
ect goes beyond the six public art — but also will offer practical
sites to interweave the natural suggestions that people can foland tribal stories of the Colum- low to reverse those trends.
bia River with the descriptions
While they have differences,
from the journals of the Lewis Lin says, they also have similariand Clark Expedition two centu- ties.
ries ago.
“They are fairly complex projShe calls that interaction, ects, in full (public) view, in
which will be done through an time,” she says.
“I write things down, develop
it as a whole, and then pin things
down. But they all talk to one another.”
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When U.S. explorer William
Clark wrote in 1805 that “the
multitude of this fish is almost
inconceivable,” he could have
been writing about Celilo Falls,
which had been a prime fishing
spot for tribes on the Columbia
River. Their settlements dated
back 15,000 years, and Clark and
co-leader Meriwether Lewis noted their presence in the expedition’s journals.
The spot disappeared, however, in 1957 when the Army Corps
of Engineers completed The
Dalles Dam — two miles east of
the city — and the resulting
backwaters submerged the falls
and drowned the village of Celilo.
While the site was a natural
for the Confluence Project, which
Lin agreed to take on at the invitation of the tribes along the Columbia, they were initially reluctant.
“They said, ‘please, don’t
touch it; it might be seven generations before we can face it,’ ”
Lin recalls.
Five years later, after Lin had
completed public art work at
three other sites along the Columbia as part of the Confluence
Project, the tribes invited her to
take another look at the former
Celilo Falls.
“The fact that we could have a
conversation is part of what the
Confluence Project stands for,”
she says. “Sometimes it is not the
physical building that counts. It’s
about the ideas, dialogue and discussion that has taken place.”
After her City Club remarks,
Lin told reporters:
“It is not just a symbol. It is still
one of the sacred spaces to the
tribes. They know it’s still there
under the water. When we studied this, there was a lot of concern that it has been dynamited
— but it’s still there.”
In 2008, sonar readings by the
Army Corps of Engineers
showed that the falls remain intact below the artificial Celilo
Lake created by The Dalles Dam.
Lining up funding
The announcement of the $1
million gift to the Celilo Park
site by Arlene Schnitzer in honor of her son, Jordan, was made
by Thomas Lauderdale, leader
of the Portland-based band Pink
Martini. The gift also is in his
honor.
“The Confluence Project tells
this story and our family wants
to help support this project so
that other families will understand our heritage for generations to come,” Jordan
Schnitzer said in a statement.
The gift is in addition to commitments of $500,000 from the
Meyer Memorial Trust, $250,000
each from the Ford Family Foundation and the Collins Foundation, and $150,000 from the Oregon Community Foundation.
The Oregon Legislature has
approved $1.5 million, and the
federal government $3.7 million.
The project is still seeking $1.1
million in private donations and
$1 million in foundation donations for the $11.4 million goal,
which includes support for a
continuing education program.
Other public art sites in the
Confluence Project are complete, or nearly so:
■ Cape Disappointment State
Park, Ilwaco, Wash., 2006
■ Fort Vancouver land
bridge, Vancouver, Wash., 2008
■ Sandy River Delta forest
ecosystem, Troutdale, 2008
■ Sacajawea State Park at
the confluence of the Columbia
and Snake rivers, Pasco, Wash.,
2010
■ Chief Timothy Park on the
Snake River, Clarkson, Wash.,
2015.
Memory, not memorial
Lin did not go into detail
about her best-known works —
the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, two black granite walls that
converge as a “V” on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.,
and the Civil Rights Memorial
at the Southern Poverty Law
Center in Montgomery, Ala.
Both were completed in the
1980s.
She talked about more recent
work, such as the Langston
Hughes Library in Clinton,
Tenn.; the Museum of Chinese
in America in New York’s
Chinatown, and Wave Field, a
series of mounds that she has
done in three places. The largest is an 11-acre installation at
Storm King Art Center in
Mountainville, N.Y.
But she says in all her works,
art should portray not just what
was or is, but what could be.
“To me, none of these memorials has been about loss,” she
says.
“These are ‘memory’ memorials. We learn from history —
and if we do not accurately remember our past, we cannot
learn from it in order to proceed
to our future.
“So none of my projects —
whether it’s the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, Civil Rights Memorial, Confluence Project or
What Is Missing? — is chosen
with just the old idea about
what a memorial is. To me, that
(old idea) is that it’s done, and
we can’t change it. It’s really
about how we can affect and
change the future.”
Her latest work
At 55, Lin describes herself as
a designer, rather than an artist
or architect.
Aside from the Confluence
Project, her most ambitious project is not a single work but a
multimedia, multiple-place piece
called “What Is Missing?” A series of video and audio recordings tell about the disappearance of species and their habitats at a pace that has accelerated in recent years.
Some of those videos were put
on display in New York’s Times
Square in 2010.
Lin says the project is still
evolving, and while she describes it as “my last memorial,”
it is not intended to spread a
message of doom.
“Nature is resilient,” she
says. “If we give it a chance, it
can and does come back. But we
are moving so rapidly that we
are not giving nature a chance.”
New segments will be in the
form of “greenprint,” which will
offer practical suggestions for
people to carry out to improve
the environment.
“What can art do? Art can
imagine a different future,” Lin
says. “Sometimes I just think we
need to imagine it, and then we
can achieve it. People feel they
are a little helpless and nothing
they can do will make a difference. But that’s not what it is.”
pwong@pamplinmedia.com
twitter.com/capitolwong
JljkX`eXY`c`kp
The ability to live “green” is easier than you might think.
Fluorescent light bulbs. Wind power. Biodiesel. Organic greens. Does any of it really help?
We think it does.
Sustainable Life, the monthly special section
appearing in the Portland Tribune and Community
Newspapers, features Earth-friendly living tips,
trends, and the people and companies making a
difference by leaving the world in better shape for
GFIKC8E;KI@9LE<s:FDDLE@KPE<NJG8G<IJ
future generations.
S U S T A I N A B L E
L I F E :
W A T C H
F O R
I T
E V E R Y
S E C O N D
W E E K
O F
T H E
M O N T H
NEWS A5
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
Love food? Che fs take diners on
tasty adventure here or abroad
5-year-old dining
network goes global,
plans Barcelona trip
S
By JENNIFER ANDERSON
The Tribune
Eat and drink yourself silly
Unlike Portland Food Adventure’s typical dinners, which
come in courses, with a menu,
the Barcelona dinners “will be
very casual, kind of a party, eating and drinking,” Angelus says.
“We have it in the budget to eat
and drink themselves silly. That’s
what Barcelona is.”
In Barcelona — one of the culinary capitals of the world — the
group will visit two of the region’s
most sought-after tapas restaurants: Can Jubany and Suculent,
with plans to visit Tickets, considered the French Laundry of
Barcelona.
“Most of our visits will encompass sharing of small plates, and
lots of them,” Angelus says. “We
want to let Jose do a lot of the ordering.”
A funny cultural difference
Angelus encountered while plan-
Portland Food
Adventures
founder Chris
Angelus has
cooked up a new
idea: a
16 - person food
adventure to
sample the best
fare in
Barcelona,
Spain. For nearly
$ 5,0 0 0 per
person, diners
will stay in fourstar hotels and
be given a seat
at some of the
most soughtafter tables in
Barcelona.
COURTESY OF
NEKOSAM IMAGES
The table is set
The next Portland Food
Adventures dinner is set for
Thursday, Jan. 8, at Roman Candle
Baking Co. on Southeast Division
Street.
It will be a collaboration
between Joshua McFadden, chef/
owner of Roman Candle and Ava
Gene’s, and Ethan Stowell, chef/
owner of nine acclaimed restaurants in Seattle, including Staple
& Fancy, Anchovies & Olives, and
How to Cook a Wolf.
The following month, it’s
Laurelhurst Market Executive Chef
Ben Bettinger and Kevin Ludwig, a
pioneer in the craft cocktail world
at The Rum Club and La Taq,
among other spots. The dinner,
cocktail and wine pairing is set for
Feb. 5 at Simpatica Dining Hall.
Web: portlandfoodadventures.com
Phone: 503-208-4290.
Union fears may be crux
of HQ hotel fl ap
A lawsuit in Los Angeles is shedding light on
the fight to prevent Metro from subsidizing the
construction of a headquarters hotel next to the
Oregon Convention Center, which it owns and operates.
According to a Dec. 17
story in The Wall Street
Journal, two national hotel groups are suing to
repeal the $15.37 minimum wage for large hotel
workers approved by the
L.A. City Council. The
wage is waived at hotels
with collective bargaining agreements with its
employees.
One of the groups supporting the suit is the
Asian American Hotel
Owners Association. It
also is fighting the con-
struction of the headquarters hotel, which
would be operated by Hyatt. Metro has required
Hyatt to accommodate a
union for its workers
as part of the deal.
Senat soon
Senators
may
m hold
little
l
sway
U.S. Sens.
Ro Wyden
Ron
Je Merkley
and Jeff
may be having a little trouble adjusting to
the fact that they soon
will be in the minority.
Republicans will be in
charge of the U.S. Senate
when the new Congress
convenes next year, costing Wyden and Merkley
a lot of their clout.
Despite that, Wyden
sent a letter to the U.S.
Department of Energy
on Dec. 16 demanding
that it clean up leaking
storage tanks at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation. The letter sent to to
Energy Secretary Ernest
Moniz asked the department to implement the
recommendations of a
recent General Accounting Office report he had
requested. As a member
of the Energy Subcommittee of the Senate
Committee on Energy
and Natural Resources,
Wyden is correct to expect Moniz to listen to
him. However, Wyden
could lose that position
in just a few weeks.
Merkley recently announced a plan to greatly
expand federal gay rights
protections, but he was
unable to convince the
Senate to pass a narrower job discrimination bill
when the Democrats held
the majority. In fact, his
Employment Non-Discrimination Act never
even reached the floor for
a vote.
Then again, Wyden
and Merkley are likely to
have a lot more free time
on their hands to pursue
their proposals next year.
Chef Jose Chesa of Ataula has his roots in Spain and will co- host
ning the expedition is that in Bar- Portland Food Adventures’ trip to Barcelona in September.
celona, “they don’t understand
what gift certificates are,” so he
will probably give guests an al- graphic of culinary adventurers
lowance for restaurants they may will see it as the trip they’ve
visit on their own during the trip. been waiting for.
Besides the three planned
“This is not for people who
restaurants, most
aren’t into food,”
of the spots and
he says. “That’s
menus will be surwhy we think it’s
“ I can never
prises to the
for Portimagine any chef right
guests on the trip.
land.”
“I think if you’re
Besides overseeon the East
You may be eligible for a federally-funded research
going to be an ading PFA, Angelus
Coast agreeing runs a small ad
study on frequent neck-related headaches.
venturer, you find
out the day of,” he
to try to send 4 0 agency on the side
says. “If people
and just celebrated
people to
spend a lot of time
• Must be 18 years or older
the one-year anniresearching,
versary of the podanother
• Care provided by licensed
that’s not what
he co-hosts,
restaurant. Only cast
this is about.”
Right at the Fork.
chiropractors
in Portland does The podcast aired
The Barcelona
• Participants will be compensated
trip is priced at
41 episodes intereverybody
$4,990, which inviewing Portland’s
• Limited spots available
support
cludes lodging in a
artisans and chefs,
four-star hotel for
tracing the origins
everybody.”
seven nights, 10
of everything PortFor more information, call the
— Chris Angelus, landers eat, drink
food experiences,
Center for Outcomes Studies at
Portland
Food
beverages, transand experience in
Adventures founder the food world.
1-800-678-9072
fers, tours and
travel planning as“There are lots
or visit www.uws.edu/headache
sistance. Airfare isn’t included.
of chefs who go to India, ThaiTwo more PFA trips with a land and other places to learn
Portland chef already are in the and spend time eating the food
works for 2016, to San Sebastián, they serve in their restaurant,”
Spain, and elsewhere in Europe. Angelus says. “This is the first
Angelus has booked a hand- opportunity to go with one.”
ful of guests for Barcelona, and
knows that a certain demo- On Twitter @jenmomanderson
Portland’s
BEST
local
radio!
468514.052114
COURTESY OF PORTLAND FOOD ADVENTURES
ome City Hall observers think
Commissioner
Amanda Fritz has
changed her mind and
will run for re-electer
tion in 2016 after
all.
Although
Fritz did
not respond to repeated inaid
quiries, she said
this would be her
last term during and after her successful 2012 reelection campaign. However, that was when she
planning to spend more
time with her husband,
Steven, who was killed in
a car crash on Interstate 5
on Sept. 24.
She also may need the
salary. Fritz contributed
$123,757 to her 2012 campaign and wrote it off
when she closed the committee at the end of 2013.
She was first elected to
the City Council using
Portland’s public campaign funding program in
2008, but voters repealed
it before she ran for reelection.
HEADACHES
RELATED TO YOUR NECK?
FIRST
EDITION
TERRY BOYD’S
5am to 9am
Monday-Friday
9am
5am to
to Noon
9am
Monday-Friday
with Tim Hohl and Terry Travis
WORLD
3pm to 6pm
Monday-Friday
485947.120214
From smoked trout to charcuterie, rabbit liver mousse to
fish sauce wings, Chris Angelus has, for the past five years,
been helping people live out
their foodie dreams, one dish
at a time.
Angelus is founder of Portland
Food Adventures, a sort of underground network that connects
diners to the city’s hottest chefs
and restaurants.
At about $125 per person, the
all-inclusive monthly dinners are
served family-style, with the chefs
talking about their dishes and occasionally mingling with guests.
But there’s a kicker: Only in
Portland would chefs recommend restaurants other than
their own. Each PFA dinner includes at least three gift cards
hand-picked by the host chef to
some of their favorite spots.
“I can never imagine any chef
on the East Coast agreeing to try
to send 40 people to another restaurant,” says Angelus, 56, who
moved here from Connecticut in
2005. “Only in Portland does everybody support everybody.”
Five years into his venture —
after about 40 restaurants, 130
gift cards handed out, and more
than a thousand happy guests
served — Angelus is now branching out, taking the concept international.
He’s just started selling tickets
for the first PFA dinner series
outside of Portland, in Barcelona,
Spain, next September.
Guiding the group of 16 or so
will be Angelus and Portland
chef Jose Chesa, of Ataula (ahTAU-luh, meaning “to the table”
in Catalonian), a modern tapas
restaurant in Northwest Portland
that opened in August 2013.
“There are so many events going on in Portland now, it’s hard
to do something different,” Angelus says. “This is something that’s
completely different ... It’s expanding the Portland food scene
to the roots of the chefs.”
The son of a chef, Chesa grew
up in Spain cooking with his father and grandmother, using local products like olives, ham and
seafood. He began traveling and
honing his craft at prestigious
restaurants like Arpége in Paris,
and the now-closed Can Fabes in
Barcelona and Fleur de Sel in
New York.
Now at Ataula, both the restaurant and Chesa have won “best
chef” and “best new restaurant”
accolades, quickly rising to the
top of the foodie worship ladder.
Fritz might run
for City Council
re- election after all
{ INSIGHT }
A6 INSIGHT
I
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
Jobs report rosy, but there’s work to do
f you weren’t yet feeling that holiday cheer, here’s something to
boost your spirits: The Portlandarea economy is showing verifiable signs of sustained growth.
Two bits of evidence emerged in recent days to document the economic
progress being made in this region.
On Wednesday, Dec. 17, the Value of
Jobs Coalition released the latest in a
series of five reports tracking trends
in the local economy over the past
few years. In some
respects, this report was the rosiest of the bunch,
showing the metro area’s economy
adding jobs at a quickened pace.
The other piece of good news came
on Dec. 16 from the Oregon Employment Department, which reported
the state’s economy added 11,200 jobs
in November. That number far exceeded any previous month in 2014
and brought the state’s total employment to 1,740,800 — the highest level
ever.
The accelerated growth in employment has many positive side effects
for public funding of programs such
as K-12 education and health and human services. Oregon depends on income taxes to pay for government
OUROPINION
Portland
Tribune
FOUNDER
Dr. Robert B. Pamplin, Jr.
PRESIDENT
J. Mark Garber
MANAGING EDITOR
Vance Tong
DIGITAL MEDIA EDITOR
Kevin Harden
VICE PRESIDENT
Brian Monihan
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Christine Moore
CIRCULATION
MANAGER
Kim Stephens
CREATIVE
SERVICES MANAGER
Cheryl DuVal
PUBLISHING SYSTEMS
MANAGER/WEBMASTER
Alvaro Fontán
NEWS WRITERS
Jennifer Anderson, Steve
Law, Jim Redden, Joseph
Gallivan, Peter Wong,
Shasta Kearns Moore
FEATURES WRITER
Jason Vondersmith
SPORTS EDITOR
Steve Brandon
SPORTSWRITERS
Kerry Eggers,
Jason Vondersmith,
Stephen Alexander
SUSTAINABLE LIFE
EDITOR
Steve Law
COPY EDITOR
Mikel Kelly
DESIGN
Keith Sheffield
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Jonathan House
Jaime Valdez
INSIGHT
PAGE EDITOR
Keith Klippstein
PRODUCTION
Michael Beaird, Valerie
Clarke, Chris Fowler,
Gail Park
CONTRIBUTOR
Rob Cullivan
WEB SITE
portlandtribune.com
CIRCULATION
503-546-9810
6605 S.E. Lake Road
Portland, OR 97222
503-226-6397 (NEWS)
T h e P ortland T rib une
is P ortland’ s indep endent
newsp ap er th at is trusted
to deliver a comp elling,
forward- th inking and
accurate living ch ronicle
ab out h ow our citiz ens,
government and
b usinesses live, work
and p lay . T h e P ortland
T rib une is dedicated
to p roviding vital
communication and
leadersh ip th rough out
our community .
er in comparison to places such as
services. As more people return to
work, more money becomes available Seattle, Salt Lake City and Denver.
As Sandra McDonough, president
for schools, colleges, health care, enof the Portland Business Alliance,
vironmental protection and the like.
says: “Jobs have come back, but inMore jobs, but less pay
comes lag.” She further laments that
our region is in danger of losing its
If the total number of jobs being
middle class.
created in the Portland area was the
only statistic that mattered, we would
Strive for the right jobs
say this region is on the right track,
and should just do more of the same.
To attract high-paying jobs, the PortBut in addition to the positive news it land area must recognize that commucontains, the Value of Jobs report al- nity wealth — or in this case, regional
so reveals ongoing economic weakwealth — is best encouraged when
nesses. In the past four years, the
companies create products here that
Portland area has added back more
can be sold elsewhere. These so-called
jobs than it lost during the Great Re- traded-sector industries bring dollars
cession, but wages have not caught
into the region, rather than recirculatup to their previous levels.
ing money that’s already here.
In fact, the report shows the median
Traded-sector businesses can be as
household income in the Portland ar- large as Intel, but also can include maea is $4,408 lower per year now than it ny specialized shops that make unique
was before the recession. This report products for export outside the region.
— sponsored by the Portland BusiThey support other businesses, as
ness Alliance, the Port of Portland
well, as they use local suppliers for evand other business groups — also
erything from making their parts to
notes that Portland residents’ salaproviding their coffee service.
ries provide them less buying power
So what’s needed to attract more of
than their peers in other mediumthese types of businesses and to prosize cities. In other words, the cost of mote creativity and entrepreneurship,
housing and other goods and services in general? The list is a familiar one:
in the Portland metro area makes lo■ Better career and technical traincal residents’ salaries seem even low- ing in our schools and colleges.
■ Stronger connections between
training programs and the workplace.
■ More engineering degrees, and
fewer history majors (not that there’s
anything wrong with them).
■ Available land for industrial development, so the region can land large
employers that in turn support familywage jobs and help smaller businesses
in the community.
■ Investment in roads and other
forms of transportation so businesses
can move their products and employees can be productive.
Business and community leaders, as
well as public officials, are working on
all of the items on the above list. But
part of the solution is a matter of attitude. Are Portland-area residents worried about stagnating or declining
wages, and are they willing to support
initiatives that can help reverse the
trend?
In part, this means treating businesses large and small as a benefit,
not a detriment, to the community.
On that score, there’s lot’s of work
left to be done. But sometimes — especially this time of year — it’s also
important to recognize signs of success. The latest jobs reports show
positive momentum quite worthy of
celebration.
READERS’LETTERS
Solve homeless problem, don’t relocate it
T
hanks for a very
thoughtful and wellresearched article
(Where are Portland’s
broken windows?, Dec. 4).
What “broken windows” policing doesn’t address is why we
have so many people living on
the streets in the first place.
As far as I know, a lot of our
policing strategy involves
sweeps to push the homeless
into another neighborhood
when the political complaints
get too loud.
Yes, we have a 10-year homeless strategy and many fine organizations doing an outstanding job with the very limited
resources they have. But as
the article points out, we’ve
come to tolerate a much higher level of “disorder” than other cities.
From what I’ve read, other
research has shown that if you
give people the choice to have
housing or not, most will take
it and, for many, it will provide
the stability they need to get
their lives back together. So,
rather than crafting yet more
clever “sit-lie” ordinances,
why not adequately fund the
services that will get our fellow Americans back on their
feet?
Dave Brook
Northeast Portland
Garden is a treasure;
neighborhood isn’t
I visited the Lan Su Chinese
Garden for the first time last
month and thoroughly enjoyed
the visit. The garden itself is
tranquil and well-tended. A stop
in the teahouse was the perfect
end to our wanderings (Where
are Portland’s broken windows?,
Dec. 4).
What was less than pleasant
was the surrounding neighborhood. There’s no nice way to say
this, but those handful of blocks
are a total disaster — large, nondescript warehouse-like buildings, trash and homeless people
blown into doorways in equal
measure. I didn’t feel all that unsafe — no one bothered us — but
the oppressive smell of urine was
definitely off-putting to say the
least.
I can see why more people
don’t want to go out there. However, in just a few blocks, the city
opens back up into something
more inviting and comfortable.
Going to that part of Old Town
feels a little like lifting up the furniture to find something you lost.
On the one hand, there might be
treasures you’d have missed, but
it’s often so choked with crud, it
makes you a little embarrassed
to have even looked under there.
Brynn Riya Delaney
Downtown Portland
Attack empty houses Put health care money
via property tax route where it matters most
Regarding Peter Korn’s article (Abandoned houses signal
disorder, but answers costly,
Dec. 9): Have the property taxes been paid? Would the problem be reduced if the property
tax laws were changed so it
would take less than seven
years for the county to foreclose and sell the property to
someone who would put it to
use?
Gordon Hillesland
Southeast Portland
Developers have voice,
but citizens don’t
This article states that Portland’s Development Review
Advisory Committee is “comprised primarily of developers
and neighborhood representatives” (Neighborhood groups
say city demolition changes
need work, Dec. 2).
Sorry, but that is not the
case — 14 of the 17 members
are developers and clearly
have their business interests
in mind and not the communities. DRAC members absolutely fell short on the changes
they should have made, and
the fact that they are taking
away the 120-day delay is
proof. Mayor Charlie Hales
and city Commissioner Amanda Fritz need to do the right
thing and take the citizens’
recommendations, not developers’.
Rena Jones
Northeast Portland
Thank you for this reminder of the vast, tangled, restricted health care bureaucracy that we pay billions for,
rather than for our health
care itself, as they have long
had it in other rich countries
(Don’t pay for ‘nothing,’ fund
universal care, guest column,
Nov. 4).
We just keep paying millions of dollars in bonuses to
corporate CEOs and their lobbyists. And then they buy
more and more publicity for
themselves (see the Moda
Center here in Portland). Recently I received a co-pay bill
for lab work done almost a
year ago. I can’t remember
now what it was for — is that
part of the trick?
President Barack Obama
could have gone big for universal care, but instead left
us with this mess. We need a
true progressive leader to get
us out of it. I bet Elizabeth
Warren (U.S. senator, Massachusetts) could do it.
Patrick Story
Southeast Portland
Beware of health
care alternatives
If you think something is
expensive, just wait until it is
free (Don’t pay for ‘nothing,’
fund universal care, guest
column, Nov. 4). Some lessons
are never learned.
Chris Hawes
Damascus
City’s comp plan draft Editorial misses on
is unsupportable
terrorist insurgency
Jim Redden’s informative article on the city land plan update (City land use plan update worries some neighborhood leaders, Nov. 11) includes
a comment from city staff that
suggests the state requires
that the comprehensive plan
precede the zoning specifications. This would be acceptable if the comp plan only contained guiding principles and
aspirations as it is supposed
to.
Unfortunately, this flawed
comp plan draft includes specific zone designations for specific neighborhoods. That
makes it impossible for citizens to evaluate the plan prior
to the definition of the corresponding zones and absurd for
citizens to accept the current
draft.
William Kielhorn
Southwest Portland
In your editorial (Voters
should demand better choices,
Nov. 6), you wrote, “And from
the far right came the unfounded claim that issuing
drivers’ licenses to undocumented immigrants (as proposed by Measure 88) would
increase the chances of
terrorism.”
I don’t know how you could
possibly label this as unfounded. One of the objectives of terrorist intrusions in the United
States is to obtain valid, or
what appears to be valid, identification. That allows for more
freedom of movement and a
certain security for their terrorist intentions. Though obviously not an intention of the
supporters of Measure 88, it
would have been a byproduct
of its passage.
Gary Gipson
Lake Oswego
DREAMSTIME ILLUSTRATION
Yes, Virginia, there
is a Santa Claus
EDITOR’S NOTE: In the
fall of 1897, an 8-year-old girl
wrote a letter to the editor of
the New York Sun, and the
response was printed as an
unsigned editorial on Sept.
21, 1897. The work of veteran
newsman Francis Pharcellus
Church has since been considered a classic, and history’s most reprinted newspaper editorial. The column has
appeared in its entirety or in
part in dozens of languages,
in books, movies and on posters and stamps. In a holiday
season often marred by controversy and conflict, this uplifting editorial celebrates
the true spirit of Christmas.
Dear Editor: I am 8 years
old. Some of my little friends
say there is no Santa Claus.
Papa says, “If you see it in
The Sun it’s so.” Please tell
me the truth; is there a Santa
Claus?
Virginia O’Hanlon
115 W. 95th St.
Virginia, your little friends
are wrong. They have been
affected by the skepticism of
a skeptical age. They do not
believe except what they see.
They think that nothing
can be which is not comprehensible by their little minds.
All minds, Virginia, whether
they be men’s or children’s,
are little. In this great universe of ours man is a mere
insect, an ant, in his intellect,
as compared with the boundless world about him, as measured by the intelligence capable of grasping the whole of
truth and knowledge.
Yes, Virginia, there is a
Santa Claus. He exists certainly as love and generosity
and devotion exist, and you
know that they abound and
give to your life its highest
beauty and joy.
Alas! How dreary would be
the world if there were no
Santa Claus! It would be as
dreary as if there were no
Virginias. There would be
no childlike faith then, no
poetry, no romance to make
tolerable this existence. We
should have no enjoyment,
except in sense and sight.
The eternal light with which
childhood fills the world
would be extinguished.
Not believe in Santa Claus!
You might as well not believe
in fairies! You might get your
papa to hire men to watch in
all the chimneys on Christmas Eve to catch Santa
Claus, but even if they did
not see Santa Claus coming
down, what would that
prove?
Nobody sees Santa Claus,
but that is no sign that there
is no Santa Claus. The most
real things in the world are
those that neither children
nor men can see. Did you ever see fairies dancing on the
lawn? Of course not, but
that’s no proof that they are
not there. Nobody can conceive or imagine all the wonders there are unseen and
unseeable in the world.
You tear apart the baby’s
rattle and see what makes
the noise inside, but there is
a veil covering the unseen
world which not the strongest man, nor even the united strength of all the strongest men that ever lived,
could tear apart.
Only faith, fancy, poetry,
love, romance can push aside
that curtain and view and
picture the supernal beauty
and glory beyond. Is it all
real? Ah, Virginia, in all this
world there is nothing else
real and abiding.
No Santa Claus! Thank
God! He lives, and he lives
forever. A thousand years
from now, nay, 10 times 10,000
years from now, he will continue to make glad the heart
of childhood.
Portland Tribune editorial board
Submissions
■ J. Mark Garber – president, Portland Tribune
and Community Newspapers Inc.
503-546-0714; mgarber@commnewspapers.com
■ Kevin Harden – digital media editor, Portland Tribune
503-546-5167; kevinharden@portlandtribune.com
■ Vance Tong – managing editor, Portland Tribune
503-546-5146; vtong@portlandtribune.com
The Portland Tribune welcomes essays on topics of public interest. Submissions should be no longer than
600 words and may be edited. Letters should be no longer than 250 words. Both submissions should include your
name, home address and telephone number for verification purposes. Please send submissions via e-mail:
tribletters@portlandtribune.com. You may fax them to 503-546-0727 or send them to “Letters to the Editor,”
Portland Tribune, 6605 S.E. Lake Road, Portland, OR 97222.
NEWS A7
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
Students take stand on climate change Tracking energy use
Catlin Gabel kids
may be required
pressure politicos
states, in contrast, are trying a
different approach in setting a
limit on greenhouse-gas emissions and allowing industries to
sell their emissions allocations
— a system known as cap and
trade. California’s system, however, is about two years old and
too new to draw conclusions.
Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, as
part of his next two-year budget,
has proposed a cap-and-trade approach that would tax and limit
carbon emissions. The limits
would be reduced gradually to
spur polluters to reduce emissions. Democrat Inslee estimates
$380 million from the new tax,
which would go toward transportation projects.
Washington has slightly different goals of reducing greenhouse-gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2020, by 25 percent below
1990 levels by 2035, and 50 percent
by 2050.
The projected increase would
equate to 12 cents per gallon of
gasoline, although the tax would
not be applied at the pump.
But the tax may be a hard sell
in the Washington Legislature,
where Democrats control the
House and Republicans the
Senate.
Lewis says a carbon tax and a
cap-and-trade system, even
though the approaches differ,
both have the same aim.
A pure cap-and-trade system
limits emissions, Brown says, but
the price of those limits fluctuates.
“A carbon tax would be more
stable economically,” he says.
“But in the end, as long as something is being done, it’s better
than nothing.”
to reduce emissions
By PETER WONG
Salem Bureau
Catlin Gabel School students have more than an academic interest in a new report
on the economic and environmental effects of a potential
state tax on carbon emissions.
Yes, they are part of a class
taught by Patrick Walsh studying
TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO
the cultural, economic and enviGasoline prices would jump if Oregon adopts a carbon tax, but
ronmental effects of globalization
greenhouse gas emissions would fall.
— a class Walsh timed to coincide with the report earlier this Such a tax would be broader tive to the broader economy,” Pomonth by the Northwest Eco- based, levied on gasoline and tiowsky says. “But you also need
nomic Research Center to state other fossil fuels used for motor to take a look at the different relawmakers.
vehicles, heating and power.
gions, income groups and indusBut there’s more to it for the
The Canadian province of Brit- tries, which will have different
students.
ish Columbia has such a tax, impacts based on the carbon tax
“I think it’s important for us, which started at $10 per ton in that is set.”
especially as a group of students, 2008 and has risen to its current
The most direct economic efbecause the consequences will amount of $30 per ton. It has re- fects would be in the Portland
ultimately be faced by us,” says sulted in a 16 percent reduction in metropolitan area, which generKatarina van Alebeek, one of the emissions.
ates more than 60 percent of the
students from the Portland
Oregon has goals of a 10 per- emissions.
school. “So it’s great for us to get cent reduction in 1990 greenThe report studied a carbon
involved and get our message out house-gas levels by 2020, and 75 tax at amounts ranging from $10
there.”
percent reduction by 2050.
to $150 per ton — the latter is conThey heard the presentation
“Oregon has historically been sidered politically unlikely — and
by economists and physicists a leader on climate issues,” says concluded that even the highest
from Portland State University to Elliot Lewis, another student.
such tax by itself would not
three legislative committees in
The report says Oregon could achieve Oregon’s 2050 reduction
Salem and spoke to some legisla- achieve its 2020 goal, without sac- target.
tors about it.
rificing significant jobs and ecoOregon Gov. John Kitzhaber
“We talk about climate change nomic growth, with a $30-per-ton says he anticipates a fuller disand the dangers it is posing to the tax. But Tom Potiowsky, the for- cussion of such a tax, but not in
world and our communities,” mer state economist who leads the legislative session that
says Ford Brown, another stu- the Northwest Economic Re- opens Jan. 12. He also says acdent. “We are trying to ask our- search Center, says details of the tion on climate change should
selves: What can we do?”
tax are important to cushion its be coordinated with California
A carbon tax of $1 per metric economic effects on low-income and Washington, the other
ton of carbon dioxide, one of the people and some industries.
West Coast states, as well as
pwong@pamplinmedia.com
main greenhouse gases, equates
“We’ve shown you that the British Columbia.
to 1 cent per gallon of gasoline. economic effects are small relaCalifornia and some Northeast twitter.com/capitolwong
City hopes to
improve commercial
buildings’ efficiency
By JULES ROGERS
The Tribune
Portland’s commercial
buildings today have no
requirements to track their
energy performance, but are
responsible for almost 25
percent of Portland’s carbon
emissions.
The largest carbon pollution
source in the city, commercial
building tenants spend more
than $335 million on energy
annually.
Last Thursday, the City of
Portland Bureau of Planning
and Sustainability officially
launched a new energy performance reporting proposal for
commercial buildings, hoping
to create awareness and transparency in energy-efficiency
improvements reducing carbon emissions.
“We want to move forward
with sustainability; we want to
do the right thing for Portland,” says Alisa Kane, Green
Building and Development
Manager with BPS. “We hope
to shine a light on high performers.”
If approved by the Portland
City Council in April, the new
policy will begin affecting commercial buildings more than
50,000 square feet in 2016, and
buildings between 20,000 to
50,000 square feet in 2017. The
policy covers offices, retail
spaces, hotels, health care,
higher education and grocery
store buildings.
Imitating successful similar
policies in the states of California and Washington and cities
including Boston and Chicago,
the proposed energy performance report will require
buildings to complete a threestep process.
First, building owners will
track their energy performances using Energy Star Portfolio
Manager, the industry standard with free online software.
Energy Star will help them calculate their official energy use
per square foot and their carbon emissions, scoring them.
Lastly, they’ll report the score
to the city to be uploaded to a
public database annually.
“This tool will allow participation in this to be something
that benefits the rest of our society,” says Renee Loveland, a
sustainability manager at
Gerding Edlen real estate,
whose company already has an
Energy Star score of 99. “This
is a great step in the right
direction.”
Currently only 80 buildings
already calculate their energy
use out of about 5,000 commercial buildings in the city. The
proposed investment will not
only promote the city’s sustainability, but will also lower building owners’ energy costs by an
average of 2.4 percent per year.
Not only will this new policy
provide incentive for energy
use tracking, but the program
will recognize efficient buildings, bringing awareness to the
market’s energy use.
Trash: Ban on food waste may be considered
TRIBUNE PHOTO: JONATHAN HOUSE
Tony White pushes collected trash into a compactor at the Metro South
transfer station in Oregon City.
raise rates just because you
can,’” Harrington said. She noted that leaders from Beaverton
and Washington County sent
letters expressing concern
about the potential effects of
diverting waste away from Riverbend on their communities’
garbage customers.
Harrington offered an
amendment to the resolution to
ensure that Metro looks at capacity at existing landfills —
and not just proposals for new
landfills or landfill expansions
— so as to create a “more level
playing field” in evaluating all
available landfills, not just
those proposing to create new
capacity.
The resolution, with Harrington’s amendment, was
passed unanimously by the
council.
Metro staff now will work to
craft policy language for the
Metro Council to codify in its
solid waste ordinances that
takes landfill capacity into consideration when approving future licenses for garbage haulers and transfer stations to
manage and transport the region’s waste.
Metro staff must provide the
recommended policy language
to the Metro Council by June
30, 2016.
Disposing of food waste
A large part of the waste
management discussion involves food waste.
Matt Korot, a manager in
Metro’s Sustainability Center,
said his department received
two directives from councilors.
He said the council wanted to
THE
ECONOMICS
OF FILM
THE DOWN AND DIRTY
ON PORTLAND’S BURGEONING
FILM BUSINESS
BY KENDRA HOUGE
down in an oxygen-free environment, producing gases
that make electricity. What’s
left after processing can be
turned into fertilizer.
Currently, the region sends
some of its food waste to a digester in Junction City, 90
miles south of Portland.
Another facility, Columbia
Biogas, is planned along Columbia Boulevard in Northeast Portland.
It was approved after binding agreements with area
residents and Metro about
how many trucks could come
in and out of the facility, and
what would happen if foul
odors were detected by area
residents.
Korot says Metro would
have to clearly communicate
with residents about the impact of such a facility.
“You have to make it transparent for folks — what they’d
be getting in their neighborhood, how an anaerobic digester has no resemblance
other than the feedstock to a
composting facility,” Korot
said. “To have a fighting
chance, we’d have to demonstrate that it doesn’t bring
down the quality of life.”
Metro Council expects to
make a decision in the next
year or two.
“To me, the craziest thing,”
said Councilor Carlotta Collette, “is that we haul food off
to the desert when we do have
options.”
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Tribune
MARCH 18, 2014
Business
proposal probably isn’t the
place to do it.”
Dewey said Waste Management already is applying for
permits with the Oregon Department of Environmental
Quality to expand the landfill.
He said DEQ has been monitoring the landfill and re-issuing
permits for more than 20 years.
“There have been plenty of
opportunities to close the landfill,” Dewey said.
If the Metro Council were to
decide to stop sending any garbage to Riverbend, nearly all of
that waste would be sent to Columbia Ridge Landfill, located
south of Arlington, about 150
miles east of Portland, per an
existing agreement with Waste
Management.
That agreement obligates 90
percent of the region’s wet
waste (the garbage that remains after recycling and recovery efforts) to be sent to a
Waste Management-owned
landfill until the end of 2019.
Waste Management also
owns and operates Columbia
Ridge.
Much of the waste that gets
sent to Riverbend is collected
from homes and businesses on
the west side of the region, and
diverting that waste to Columbia Ridge could pose increased
transportation costs that ultimately are borne by garbage
customers.
That raised concerns from
Councilor Kathryn Harrington,
who represents communities in
northern and western Washington County.
“I’m concerned about hearing a refrain, after today’s action, as to ‘Why are you doing
this? Why now? And don’t
look at whether a ban on food
waste would make sense in the
Portland region. Both Seattle
and San Francisco have instituted such bans.
But the council also wanted
options for financial incentives
for increased composting of
food waste, Korot said.
The council wanted staff to
“look at what the meaningful
options would be to financially
incentivize the separation of
food waste as an alternative to
a regulatory ban,” Korot said.
That could mean adjusting
the fees Metro charges for garbage and food waste, to encourage residents and businesses to
cut down on the amount of food
they put in the trash.
It also likely would involve
making it easier to send food
waste into the composting
stream.
But the city of Portland’s
curbside food waste composting has encountered problems,
like residents’ complaints
about odors from the compost
processing facility in North
Plains.
When the facility limited its
capacity for food waste, some
compostable food was sent
hundreds of miles into Washington. Finally, commercial
food waste was pulled from the
waste stream, making it less
noxious.
Metro officials this month
said they’re leaning away
from composting near the
Portland region as the key
way of managing food waste,
turning instead to another
technology — anaerobic digestion.
Unlike composting — which
turns into garden-friendly
compost — the digester process involves food breaking
488821.121814
■ From page 1
A8 NEWS
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
Memorial Tributes
Service Directory
Celebrating The
Lives Of Local
Residents
Robert Vincent Pierik
Dec. 29, 1921 - Dec. 6, 2014
A
Portland
832 NE Broadway
503-783-3393
Milwaukie
17064 SE McLoughlin Blvd.
503-653-7076
Tualatin
8970 SW Tualatin Sherwood Rd
503-885-7800
412210.012413
Traditional Funeral $$1,975
1,475
500
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Privately Owned Cremation Facility
www.ANewTradition.com
Ray Leon Lekberg
March 29, 1958 - Dec. 12, 2014
Ray “George” Leon Lekberg died peacefully,
surrounded by family and friends, on December 12,
2014 at the age of 56.
Ray is survived by his wife, Julie, son Tyler and
his wife Brieanne, son Aaron and his girlfriend
Claire, and daughter Brandi and her fiance Tyson.
Parents Ray and Kathy Lekberg and siblings
Winnie, Connie, Bob, Eric, Jason, Kristine,
Katherine, Becky, Ryan and Danny.
Ray was born on March 29, 1958 in Portland
OR. Ray loved golf more than anything, he boasted
12 hole-in-one’s over his lifetime. He enjoyed fly
fishing, camping and wood working. Ray would
finish his day with family, a cold beer and chocolate.
A Celebration of Life is scheduled for January 3,
2015 at, Sheraton 4 Points Hotel at 1919 Northeast
181st Avenue, Portland, OR 97230. Next to
Francis Xavier’s Restaurant from 1-5pm. All are
welcome to attend and celebrate Ray’s life. Pot luck
optional.
Victor Ives
August 17, 1935 to December 11, 2014
Victor Ives of Lake Oswego, Ore. passed away on Dec. 11,
2014 of complications from brain cancer. He was 79.
Victor was born in San
Francisco, Calif. to Milo and
Lucy Ives. He was raised there
and graduated from Balboa High
School in San Francisco.
Victor was a broadcast veteran
and started at Channel 5 (on air) San
Francisco at the age of 16 when he
was still in high school. He was a
newscaster and quiz program host
in Northern California where he
met his wife Carol. He served as Operations Director of a
Philadelphia TV station and in the 1970s he produced and
hosted Portland’s highest-rated local television program on
KATU TV, “Sinister Cinema.”
Victor organized the Tom McCall Radio Network
composed of more then 25 Oregon radio stations. During
the late 1980s he bought the Portland stations then known as
KMJK AM and FM, sold the FM station and relaunched the
AM station as KVIX, which aired vintage radio programs.
Victor held positions in upper level management for two
Fortune 500 companies and consulted a third. He was vice
president in charge of FM radio for Gene Autry’s Golden
West Broadcasters which he ran out of Detroit, Michigan,
where he built and managed Tower 92 FM. During his 12year stint with “The Cowboy,” he was program director of
KEX in Portland (1970 - 1975) and KSFO in San Francisco
(1975 - 1978). While at KEX, Victor received the Billboard
Magazine Program Director AND Station of the Year AWARD
in 1974.
He married his wife of 55 years, Carol Holyfield, on June
6, 1959 in Redding, Calif.
Victor lived on South Shore Blvd. in Lake Oswego in the
early ‘70s and then moved back in 1982. He purchased a horse
farm off of Stafford Road for his wife Carol and daughter
Michelle, where they have lived since 1985
He was passionate about animals and improving their
quality of life.
Survivors include his wife, Carol Ives of Lake Oswego;
son and daughter-in-law Matt and Mikelle Ives of Naples Fla.;
daughter and son-in-law Michelle and Darrel Purdy of Lake
Oswego; and daughter Melissa Ives of Lake Oswego; and his
beloved cat Compari.
A memorial gathering will take place in the new year.
Donald Anthony
Normand
June 2, 1933 - December 15, 2014
D
onald Anthony Normand, age 81, passed
away peacefully, on December 15, 2014,
at home in Boring, OR. He was born in
Grafton, ND, one of 11 children to Al and Eva
Normand. Don attended school in Oakwood, ND,
and high school in Grand Forks, ND. He completed
his junior and senior year at Gresham Union High
School, graduating in 1953. After helping on the family farm near Oakwood, ND, he served in the United
States Army from 1954 to 1956. Following his discharge from the Army, Don ran Normand’s Mobil
Station in Grafton, ND, and later was employed at
Borden Foods and LaBerge Motors as an auto body
mechanic. On November 14, 1957, Don married
Earline Stoltz in Grafton, ND. In 1964 he moved his
family to Gresham, OR. Don was employed at
McRobert Ford (now Gresham Ford) and later started Four Seasons Recreational Vehicles, selling snowmobiles, minibikes and tent trailers. In 1974 he
started his own business, Normand’s Auto Body
Shop, on Powell Blvd. in Gresham, where he worked
until retiring in 2004 and moving to Boring, OR. Don
enjoyed volunteering for the Mounted Scouts and
was very involved with Gresham Little League as
leader of field maintenance. He was Little League
major director at J.C. Field (now Main City Park).
Don enjoyed the great outdoors and everything that
went with it, especially deer and elk hunting with
family and friends. Don loved to tell stories, but
above all, he loved his family. He was a very caring
person, concerned about everyone, and he touched
many lives in his years here with us.
Don is survived by his wife, Earline; daughter, Joy
(Mike) Childs of Troutdale; sons, Dale (Becky) of
Gresham, Wayne (Mary) of Gresham and Guy
(Tami) of Tigard; son-in-law, Jay Winters of
Hermiston; sister, Thea (Jack) Dolan; brothers, Allen,
Kenneth (Rita) and Raymond (JoAnn); sister-in-law,
Sandy Normand; and 13 grandchildren, one greatgrandchild and numerous nieces and nephews.
He is preceded in death by his daughter, Lisa
Winters (2011); grandson, Austin Winters (2008);
sisters, Lois Breniser Pilon, Ione Kirby, Lyla McLean
and Inez Kamrowski; and brothers, Charles and Dee.
Funeral mass will be at 11:00 a.m. Tuesday,
December 30, 2014, at St. Anne Catholic Church
1015 SE 182nd Avenue, Gresham, OR 97233.
In lieu of flowers, please send donations to KidsHeal.org, Children’s Cancer Association (CCA) or
Ronald McDonald House Charities of Oregon and
Southwest Washington.
In Loving Memory
Belva June Kuhl
December 30, 1918 –
December 15, 2014
498250.122414
Belva June Kuhl was born the
daughter of John and Trella (Bishop)
Steele on Monday, December 30, 1918 in Nebraska.
Belva was married to Everett Kuhl on May 20,
1944 in Ft. Smith, Arkansas. They moved to Newberg in September of 1945, and lived there until
making their home in Canby in 1979. They enjoyed traveling to Quartzsite, Arizona in the winters and then back to Oregon in the summer time.
Belva very much enjoyed spending time salmon
fishing and crabbing. Traveling was something
that both Everett and Belva loved to do, visiting
family and friends wherever they went. Belva was
a very caring person and was always wanting to
help people.
On Monday, December 15, 2014, Belva Kuhl
died at a local care facility when she was 95
years, 11 months and 15 days of age.
Surviving and left to honor her life are: Her son
Kim, of Canby; brother Larry Steele, of Troutdale;
two sisters, Lela Hall, of Newberg and Carolyn
Steele, of Borrego Springs, CA; two grandchildren; five great-grandchildren and those who have
come to know and appreciate her where she has
lived and worked. Her husband, Everett Kuhl,
preceded her in death.
Her funeral service was Saturday, December 20,
2014 at Zion Lutheran Church, Newberg, with
Reverend Norm Olson officiating. Concluding
service followed at Valley View Memorial Park,
Newberg. Arrangements were in the care of Attrell’s Newberg Funeral Chapel, a Golden Rule
Funeral Home. Online condolences may be made
at www.attrells.com.
CelebrateTheir Life
Placing an obituary is a final keepsake of a loved
one and provides a memorial tribute to their life.
The Pamplin Media Group offers both paid tributes and death notices as a
service to the community.
To place a tribute, please go online to any of our newspaper websites and fill
out our easy to use tribute form.
You can also email your tribute and photo to the appropriate newspaper.
Please feel free to contact any of our newspaper representatives with any questions.
487976.090414
467734.031814
495
SIMPLE CREMATION $$545
495
memorial service for Gresham resident
Robert Pierik will be held at 11 a.m.,
Saturday, January 3, 2015 at St. Aidens
Episcopal Church.
Robert was born on December 29, 1921 in
Whittier, California; the son of Theodore and
Christina (Smith) Pierik.
Robert served in the United States Coast Guard
from 1942 until his honorable discharge in 1945.
In 1957, Robert graduated from the University
of Southern California receiving a Master’s
Degree. He taught high school and college speech
and drama until his retirement in 1972, after which
he taught part-time.
On July 25, 1964 Robert married Marilyn
Bowers in Claremont, CA. and to this union two
sons were born.
Robert is survived by his wife, Marilyn, sons,
David and Donald Pierik and three grandchildren.
The family suggest contributions to St. Aidens
Episcopal Memorial Fund or the Mt. Hood Pops
Orchestra.
NEWS A9
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
Rabbi sheds light on the holiday season
Be mindful of others, respect
diversity, spiritual leader urges
my wife and my kids, and to
raise them,” Isaak says. “And,
in fact, it turned out to be really terrific for all of us.”
But what exactly does being a rabbi actually entail?
“The word
‘rabbi’ means
‘teacher’, so
although I do
perform ritual
ceremonies
and life cycle
e ve n t s , m y
ISAAK
primary role
is as a teacher
of Jewish wisdom, Jewish
values, Jewish ethics,” Isaak
explains, and “not just to
members of my congregation,
but for instance, I got an invi-
By DREW DAKESSIAN
Pamplin Media Group
The holiday season, with
its undercurrent of holiness, is a time of spiritual
contemplation and engagement, when Portlanders
seek guidance from their
religious leaders. One is
Rabbi Daniel Isaak, of Congregation Neveh Shalom in
Hillsdale.
Isaak, a longtime resident
of Portland Heights, has
served Congregation Neveh
Shalom for 21 years.
“Although I was functioning as a rabbi in New York
state, this looked like a wonderful community and a wonderful place for me to bring
tation from one of the local
c h u r c h e s , S t . A n d r ew ’s
Church, that would like me to
come next month to an adult
program to talk about the
holiday of Hanukkah. So it is
both within the congregation,
within the community, and in
the general community as
well.”
Of course, all good things,
as they say, must come to an
end: the 66-year-old rabbi will
be retiring next year, making
this Hanukkah, the Jewish
Festival of Lights, his last in
his official capacity at the
synagogue.
“Retirement means that
my day-to-day duties here
w i l l c e r t a i n ly b e l e s s , ”
he says, “but I will still (continue to) be involved in teaching and involved in the
community.”
Isaak offered spiritual
counsel this holiday season
as his congregation cele-
brates the eight-day commemoration of rededication
of the Temple by the Maccabees after their victory over
the Syrians.
“Every year, we have a Hanukkah gathering here in the
synagogue. It’s not very
much of a religious event; it
is much more of a social
event: We have dinner together, we light the Hanukkah candles together, and it’s
really an opportunity for everybody to come together on
one of the eight nights of Hanukkah.”
“ I t ’s a lways a h ap py
occasion.”
A happy occasion, he says,
and an important opportunity for reflection.
“I’ve watched the community, as everywhere else, increase
in its diversity, and one of the
things we have to be mindful of
— and I think it’s very easy to
be blind to — is the number of
from, is shameful,” he says. “In
the Southwest community, we
really have to open our eyes to
see that at the same time the
vast majority of us have full refrigerators and roofs over our
heads, there are so many who
don’t.”
When asked how his congregants — and Southwest
Portlanders, in general — can
best honor the spirit of the
season, Isaak says: “It’s different for us than for the
— Daniel Isaak, Christian community. Alrabbi at Congregation Neveh Shalom though we celebrate the holidays, Hanukkah is a very difneedy people we have in the ferent holiday than ChristSouthwest community. We mas, but I think that respecthave Neighborhood House, ing our diversity, it’s somewhich actually began as an or- thing that is very uniquely
ganization within the Jewish American that we are becomcommunity, and there are also ing a more diverse country
a lot of other people who are racially, religiously, ethnicalterribly dependent. The idea ly, and the more we can be
that in America we have people respectful of those differencwho are not sure where their es, the better a country we
next meal is going to come become.”
“ In the Southwest
community, we really
have to open our eyes to
see that at the same time
the vast maj ority of us
have full refrigerators
and roofs over our heads,
there are so many who
don’t.”
HOME
DELIVERY-
COMING TO A MAILBOX NEAR YOU!
GRZESIK’S
SOUND
GARDEN
SCHLITTENTAG!
SEE LIFE, B1
— SEE LIFE, B1
PortlandTribune
PortlandTribune
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 2014 • TWICE CHOSEN THE NATION’S BEST NONDAILY PAPER • WWW.PORTLANDTRIBUNE.COM • PUBLISHED THURSDAY
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19, 2013 • TWICE CH
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■ Annual intergalactic battle helps Red Cross save lives Hales
tiptoes
toward
big ideas
Will mounted
patrol ride off
into the sunset?
Nonprofit group takes to TV to buck
Novick plan to cut police horse unit
One year in office,
mayor puts priority
on revenue, parks
By JIM REDDEN
The Tribune
That’s a real Portland police car behind
“Grimm” actor David Giuntoli. When it
comes time to knock down a door or make
an arrest on the show, Portland police are
often used as consultants. Local cops say
they sometimes watch the show just to
see familiar faces and places, and for an
escape from reality.
COURTESY OF SCOTT GREEN/NBC
STORY BY
PETER KORN
S
ure, in TV shows like “Law &
Order”, art imitates life. But
Portland police detective Sgt. Joe
Santos says sometimes on the job,
life imitates art.
A while back, a lieutenant was telling
him about a case that immediately brought
to mind a Morgan Freeman/Brad Pitt movie, Santos says.
“A brother killed his sister and she was
WATCHING
THE DETECTIVES
Mayor Charlie Hales included
the agreement in the 2013-14
budget summary his office reSupporters of the Portland leased after the council approved it.
Police Mounted Patrol are
pushing back against two deThe Friends’ group had
velopments that threaten the raised the first $200,000 and was
future of the horse unit.
in the process of transferring it
to the city when
First, CommissionNovick made his proer Steve Novick proposed eliminating the “The mounted posal in a Feb. 3 memo
the other council
unit in next year’s
patrol is very to
members.
budget.
“We didn’t know
Then the Portland popular and
anything about ComDevelopment Com- versatile.
mission declared the
missioner Novick’s
stable area at Centen- People love
proposal and the
nial Mills unsafe, forc- the horses. ... problems with Centennial Mills before
ing the horses to be
Why
would
the
they were announced.
relocated to a farm in
It’s put us in a holding
Aurora. The unit has council want
until we can
been housed at the agto get rid of a pattern
meet with him and
ing former flour mill
on Northwest Naito program that Mayor Hales and
learn more about
Parkway and Ninth connects so
Avenue since the PDC
what they’re thinkwell with the ing,” says Bob Ball, a
bought it in 2001.
The one-two punch public?”
real estate developer
and reserve Portland
came as a surprise to
— Bob Ball,
police officer who
the Friends of the
Friends of the
serves on the Friends’
Mounted Patrol, a
Mounted Patrol board
board of directors.
nonprofit organizaof directors member
Ball says he was
tion that thought it
caught off guard by
had struck a deal with
Novick’s proposal bethe City Council that
guaranteed the unit would con- cause of the council agreement.
tinue at least through the next
“I testified before the council
fiscal year.
and thanked them for agreeing
When the council considered to continue the unit for two
By STEVE LAW
The Tribune
Darth Vader and his Imperial Stormtroopers stop holiday shoppers in their tracks outside Macy’s (above).
Jedidiah Maxwell of Canby has his picture taken with Queen Apailana (right).
BEAM ME UP, SCOTTY B
THE FORCE IS
TUESDAY EDITION
lood will
flow when
fans of
“Star
Wars” and “Star
Trek” rally their
supporters later this month.
At least that’s the hope for the upcoming American Red Cross blood
drive that pits supporters of the two
l
t t i
t f
hi
Wars’ and ‘Star
Trek’ both have a
lot of fans who turn
out, and we always
have a lot of fun.”
The competition, similar to the Oregon vs. Oregon
State Civil War blood drive, has been
held three times in the past. It has been
won twice by “Star Wars” fans, which
i
t
i i g
id i g th
Portland Mayor Charlie
Hales pledged Friday to pursue a new tax
measure to
pave city
streets in
2014, as well
as funding to
build out the
city’s parks
system.
Hales also
told the Portland Tribune
“I don’t feel
editorial
a need to
board that
he’s exploring look at a
a major reno- map of the
vation of Veterans Memo- city and
rial Coliseum, come up
hoping to pigwith new
gyback on the
World Indoor visions at
Track & Field the
Championships coming moment.”
— Mayor
to the Oregon
Charlie Hales
Convention
Center in 2016.
(See related
story, Page A8.)
Hales gave himself a “B”
grade for his first year in office,
b t id h
d di
tti g
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A10 NEWS
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
Anybody know what
street fee is all about?
U
pdate on the Portland
street fee, er, tax, er,
levy, er fund. ... The final vote has been
pushed back, again, to Jan. 14 at
the earliest, according to the
Portland Tribune. There have
been so many incarnations of
this proposal we don’t know
what’s in it anymore, and we
dare you to figure it out, too. If
they had to sell it in front of the
“Shark Tank” sharks, their reaction would be the same as
yours: “I’m out.”
One other thought on the
street fee, er, tax, er, levy, er,
fund. Why not just call it what it
is? Street FUBAR.
•••
Well, here’s proof it does no
good to work out. City Commissioner Nick Fish’s bike was stolen outside 24 Hour Fitness in
Hollywood. He did all the right
things, but thieves managed to
take his ride anyway. Now that
he has to drive his car to get
around, we wonder if he’ll
change his mind and vote yes
for a street fee.
•••
Special division
dedicated to foiling
commercial thefts
Mark&Dave
UP IN THE AIR
By GEOFF PURSINGER
Pamplin Media Group
Uber once again will offer rideshare services without permits.
Gee, wonder what would happen if we refused to pay our
property taxes until the county
lowered them.
•••
W hen J im D elmore first noticed appliances were missing
from his model home in T igard last year, he didn’ t ex pect
police to do much.
Delmore, a construction manager at Stonebridge Homes NW
in Lake Oswego, said it’s fairly
common for appliances to go
missing from his model homes.
“About once a year, something
would disappear — like a dishwasher,” he said.
He reported the thefts to police, who came out and took his
statement.
“That’s usually where it stops,”
he said. “Police come out, take a
report, and say that they will do
everything they can, but that’s
it.”
And in most cities across the
country, that’s likely all that
would have happened.
But that’s not T.J. Hahn’s style.
Hahn is a detective with Tigard Police Department’s Commercial Crimes Unit, a division of
the police department that has
exclusively investigated crimes
against local businesses since
2008.
The unit is thought to be the
only one of its kind in the country,
said Lt. Jamey McDonald, the
unit’s supervisor. Traditionally,
crimes against businesses are often lower priorities for police.
“Job-site thefts, in particular,
don’t really get investigated,” McDonald said. “Partially, that’s because they’re difficult to investigate and are time consuming, but
also because there often isn’t the
staffing level to do it.”
Microsoft’s Bing search engine revealed its predictions for
2015.
Turtlenecks will be in fashion
(glad we saved ours), hummus
will be the most popular food in
America (over our emaciated
bodies), “Boyhood” will win the
Academy Award for Best Picture, and Beyoncé will take
home the Grammy for Album of
the Year. It also predicts the Seahawks will not win the Super
Bowl (they won’t even be in it),
and that the Ducks will start
2015 by losing to Florida State.
Ouch. We thought Microsoft
was a Northwest company.
•••
Things are changing in Vancouver, Wash. They may not
want a Portland-style light-rail
system, but they would love to
have a version of Seattle’s Pike
Place Market. Plans are floating
around to turn the old Red Lion
Inn into a large farmers market.
Only problem, Seattle is on
Puget Sound; Vancouver is on
the Columbia River. So, while
our neighbors to the north are
tossing exotic swordfish and yellowfin tuna, what would our local fish mongers throw? Flying
carp or sturgeon don’t exactly
make for tourist photo ops.
•••
Ever wonder what happens if
a resident on Portland’s Peacock Lane dies? We did. So
when we had a chance to speak
with a homeowner on the
“Mark & Dave Show,” we asked.
Does the house go dark? Turns
out, it has happened and others
on the famous street just rally
to decorate for them. After all,
the show must go on, as well it
should.
Uber says it will stand down
for 90 days while the City of
Portland works to update its
taxi regulations. If the city fails,
Listen to Mark and Dave 3 to 6 p.m.
weekdays on AM 860 KPAM.
Follow them at: facebook.com/
themarkanddaveshow
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PAMPLIN MEDIA GROUP: JAIME VALDEZ
Lt. Jamey McDonald returns a stolen oven to Bill and Gail Miller on
Wednesday, Dec. 17 . McDonald leads the Commercial Crimes Unit, a
division of the Tigard Police Department that specifi cally investigates
crimes against local businesses.
Hahn said business owners
who are victims of crime are often left feeling law enforcement
agencies don’t care about their
loss.
“There comes a point where
businesses get tired of calling the
police, because they feel that
nothing ever gets done,” Hahn
said. “We’ve learned that the
hard way.”
With more than 3,000 businesses scattered across Tigard, that
left a great deal of crimes going
uninvestigated, McDonald said.
The three-person team of McDonald, Hahn and Det. Gabriella
Schweitz hope to change that
perception.
“The truth is that the vast majority didn’t get investigated prior
to 2008,” McDonald said. “Everything we do is tied to the business
community, or generated from
the business community.”
Large case load
The Commercial Crimes Unit
keeps busy.
Hundreds of cases come
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worth of appliances and furniture, many of which were found
stashed in storage units across
the Portland area.
That investigation continues,
McDonald said.
“Who knows what direction
the investigation will take, but
there will be more to come, for
sure,” he said. “If you had asked
us a month ago if we’d be able to
recover all those pieces, I’d have
said no. I don’t think anybody ever thought we’d ever get that
stuff back.”
The unit warned local homebuilders and neighboring police
departments about the thefts,
and soon, similar reports began
to flood in from Lake Oswego,
Happy Valley, Beaverton and
West Linn police departments, as
well as the Clackamas County
Sheriff’s Office.
Delmore said it likely wouldn’t
have been possible to arrest Darcy and return the stolen items
without a unit like the CCU taking the initiative.
“Those guys are amazing,”
Delmore said. “They
are so diligent, and they
do fantastic work in Tigard. The city is absolutely lucky to have
them.”
across their desks every month
— everything from petty shoplifting to prostitution, drug issues,
chop shops, counterfeit credit
cards, burglaries, embezzlement,
fraud and identity theft.
“It’s a challenge for us,”
McDonald said. “We’re at
capacity for being able to
investigate cases. These
guys never have any
spare time.”
This year alone, the
Bottom line
CCU has made more than
Commercial Crimes
80 arrests, said Jim Wolf,
Unit detectives mean
Tigard Police spokesman.
business.
The unit also helps
For years, shoplifters
train local businesses on
have stolen items from
how to protect themretail stores, only to reselves from becoming a
turn and get a cash retarget for criminals, infund. That’s traditioncluding working with
ally been seen as a missmall business owners to
demeanor, and shopliftspot shoplifters and workers will be given a suming with Washington
mons to appear in
Square mall retailers to
court. But not in Tigard.
help avoid organized re— Lt. Jamey
“It turns out there is
tail crime rings.
McDonald,
case law for it as firstEven if the unit doubled
Commercial
degree felony theft,”
in size, McDonald said, it
Crimes Unit
McDonald said. “People
would still have a hefty
supervisor
who know the system
case load.
take advantage of it, but
“We could absolutely
keep two more detectives busy,” when they come to Tigard, we
McDonald said. “They would charge them with theft 1, and we
have plenty of work to do and still lodge them in the Washington
County Jail. The word is on the
be working overtime. A lot.”
The unit is funded through streets that you don’t steal in Tibusiness license fees charged by gard, because you will go to jail.”
That mentality has made Tithe city.
“I don’t know of anything else gard a major player in the region
is funded the same way we are, when it comes to handling comand the only other commercial mercial crimes, Hahn said.
Several police agencies have
crimes unit we’ve found is in the
Los Angeles Police Department, contacted the unit to discuss tacand their focus is different,” Mc- tics, and McDonald said other
Portland-area police agencies are
Donald said.
The LAPD unit works largely starting to pay more attention to
with counterfeit products and commercial crimes.
“The curve is finally starting to
fraud. Tigard’s unit, in contrast,
works with every company that catch up,” he said. “Agencies are
does business in the city of Ti- calling us to see what we’re doing
gard, from small mom-and-pop and how we do it.”
Hahn joined the CCU three
consignment shops to industrial
manufacturers and multibillion- years ago and has another year
with the unit before he’s rotated
dollar national chains.
“People we have arrested have to another department.
He said it’s unlike any other
told us, ‘It’s just a business,
they’ve got deep pockets. It police work he’s ever done.
“If I could do this for the rest of
doesn’t matter.’ But it does,” McDonald said. “We all end up pay- my career, I would,” Hahn said.
ing more for things because peo- “If you had asked me that five
years ago, before I started here, I
ple out there commit crimes.”
Delmore said the items stolen probably wouldn’t have said
in his case weren’t the type of that.”
The unit also has earned the
items insurance would cover.
“It’s tough enough as a builder respect of Tigard’s business
to get insurance in the first place. community.
Hahn said many businesses
You can’t turn that type of thing
into your insurance. They’ll drop owners have his cell-phone numyou,” he said. “And you can’t ex- ber and call him directly when
pect a buyer to pay an additional something happens.
“They don’t (need to) call 911
$2,000 on a house to make up the
any more because of the relationcost. You just have to eat it.”
Hahn’s investigation into the ship that we have built and the
model home burglaries lasted reputation that we have,” he said.
For Delmore, it’s a welcome
more than a year and led to the
arrest of Darcy Frisby last month. shift in the law enforcement inThe 42-year-old Tigard resident dustry.
“From a small business standallegedly broke into model
homes across the Portland area point, it’s nice to have somebody
and stole thousands of dollars in your corner,” he said.
“ We could
absolutely
keep two
more
detectives
busy. They
would have
plenty of
work to do
and still be
working
overtime. A
lot.”
The to-do list in Beth Hoyme’s purse
will never get done because a drunk driver
convinced his friends he’d be fine.
Friends Don’t Let Friends Drive Drunk.
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Tigard police unit targets
crime on the business beat
NEWS A11
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
Wait, wait!
Don’t tell me!
Answers to story
on page A1
1. Airbnb.
Portland and Uber
struck a temporary deal
after the city sued. Vacasa’s vacation rental service is still illegal in Portland, though it’s Oregon’s
fastest-growing company.
2. All of the above.
3. C
4. A, B and C
5. C
6. A
7. All are true. However, D, the shrinking Oregonian, was the bombshell.
8. C, Foster Road.
Tilikum Bridge won’t
need to reduce lanes for
cars because it won’t allow any.
9. C.
The rest were “Portlandia” gags.
10. A, B and C.
11. All are true.
12. D. Although Frontier is now offering 1 G ig
service in Beaverton.
13. None. Although the
Portland Development
Commission approved a
Centennial Mills plan by
Harsch Development and
authorized the demolition of some buildings.
14. In your dreams.
The Portland City Council was unsuccessful in
accomplishing any of
these.
15. A and B.
16. None. “The BoxTrolls” was the work of
Laika, of which Travis
Knight (son of Phil and
Penny Knight) is the
President and CEO.
Phil Knight did come
closer to realizing his
dream of a $1 billion donation to the Knight Cancer Research Center,
when the drive to match
his half-billion-dollar
pledge got up to $445 million — and counting.
17. C
18. C
19. B
20. B
21. All of the above
How did you do?
Correct Answers:
18-20: Rock star, indie
hero, G ood Citizen, call
yourself what you want,
you earned it.
14-17: You certainly
heart your Portland. Way
to stay informed!
10-13: G ood joooob!
5-9: Too long, didn’t
read is no longer an excuse.
0-4: Oh dear. Just off
the plane from Silicon
Valley/ Madison/ Pennsylvania? There are some
great apartments to rent
on Division. G et settled
in and we’ll see you in
January.
PAMPLIN MEDIA GROUP PHOTOS: L.E. BASKOW
Don Baack, of SW Trails, walks his dogs along the path beneath the Barbur Boulevard. wooden trestles.
Baack wins Spirit award
SW Trails founder
honored for boosting
biking and walking
A proud tradition
WORRIED ABOUT YOUR TEEN?
Are you afraid your teen is using drugs?
A free counseling and
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287684.010108
This isn’t the first time in recent
memory that a person or group
from Southwest Portland has been
the recipient of a Spirit of Portland
award. The Ashcreek Neighborhood
Association was honored in
November 2012.
By DREW DAKESSIAN
Pamplin Media Group
Consult the Service Directory in
Don Baack is founder of
Southwest Trails and recent
recipient of the Sandy Diedrich
Environemental Steward Award.
new walking biking opportunities in Southwest Portland, and
■ Advocating for more resources for these two alternative modes of transportation
and recreation.
When asked what winning this
award signified to him, Baack
said, “recognition of a major effort
by a group of people — SW Trails
folks — in working toward improving pedestrian and bicycle
environment in Southwest.”
Indeed, at the award ceremony, “We had about 15 people
there supporting us,” he said.
The Sandy Diedrich Environmental Stewardship Award,
as its name suggests, is awarded to Portland environmental
stewards. But what does supporting travel on foot and by
bike via routes previously inaccessible to pedestrians have to
do with environmental stewardship?
“I think it’s fair to say that
(as a result of SW Trails) the
walkability of Southwest has
improved greatly, and it’s
helped people be able to connect with nature, because most
of our trail routes connect to
nature areas,” Baack said. “Also, the trails group has worked
on improving the environmental area. We’ve had a project
we’ve been working on at Wilson for some time in terms of
improving the landscaping
there. We organize walks that
help people get out and see the
community.”
And it would seem that Baack
and his fellow trail-enthusiast
environmental stewards will be
able to continue their work for a
long time to come; the shortterm, at least is guaranteed.
“Mayor Hales tells me we got
$10,000 budgeted for the vote
that’s coming up next month
that will give us funds to do a
Safe Route to School for Robert
G ray (Middle School) between
Bertha (Boulevard) and Beaverton-Hillsdale Highway, following up with a bridge.”
“SW Trails has an email list of
1,300 people, and we have 100
paid members, and quite a few
sponsors. Sponsors pay $100 a
month or more,” he said. “I’m just
a fortunate recipient of this largesse.”
For more information on SW
Trails or to join, sign up for the
mailing list, or become a sponsor,
visit swtrails.org.
Your Neighborhood Marketplace
www.portlandtribune.com
For advertising information call
www.ori.org/CFAR/Portland
503.620.SELL (7355)
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On the evening of Nov. 6,
Hillsdale resident Don Baack
was presented the Sandy
Diedrich Environmental Stewardship Award at the 30th annual Spirit of Portland awards
ceremony.
According to the city of Portland Office of Neighborhood Involvement, which administers
the award, recipients are chosen
based on any of the following criteria:
■ Assisting in the implementation of outstanding projects
■ Enriching and revitalizing
the community and neighborhoods
■ Providing the community
with a special service
■ Demonstrating responsiveness, creativity and civic values
■ Raising cross-cultural
awareness
■ Acting as good steward of
the environment
Baack, however, could be
viewed as meeting all six of those
criteria. The 77-year-old is the
founder and president of
SWTrails PDX , aka SW Trails, a
nonprofit organization and community group that promotes
walking and biking in Southwest
Portland by:
■ Organizing group hikes and
sponsoring a regular monthly
hike
■ Staffing volunteer crews
build and maintain trails in
Southwest Portland
■ Working with city, county
and state planners to develop
Need
Help?
— SEE SPORTS, B8
BIG MAN, little playing time
— SEE SPORTS, B8
THURSDAY, MAY 1, 2014 • TWICE CHOSEN THE NATION’S BEST NONDAILY PAPER • PORTLANDTRIBUNE.COM • PUBLISHED TUESDAY AND THURSDAY
We want to be your printer!
Food cart culture digs in,
grows up,Bike
has a few drinks
THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014 • TWICE CHOSEN THE NATION’S BEST NONDAILY PAPER •
PORTLANDTRIBUNE.COM • PUBLISHED TUESDAY AND THURSDAY
■ Not
longer
seen as
just a fad,
customers
relish new
options
TRIBUNE PHOTO: JONATHAN HOUSE
Brett Burmeister waits to dig into his burger at Cartlandia, the 30-food cart pod on
Southeast 82nd Avenue that was the first in the city to get a liquor license. Now a dozen
others have followed suit.
envoy
gears up
for fun
By JENNIFER ANDERSON
The Tribune
“People are now opening
A couple of years ago, Port- food carts with the
land’s food carts — beloved
intention of it being a first
by hipsters, downtown busistep in being a brand.”
ness people, neighborhood
— Steven Shomler
folks and tourists alike — offered strictly PG fare.
Now, they’re all grown up.
Nearly a third of the city’s
Thanks to a set of OLCC refood cart pods now serve beer, strictions on the licenses, the
wine or cocktails.
infusion of alcohol hasn’t had
Thirteen of the 36 food cart any ill effect on the industry.
pods citywide have in the past
“We haven’t seen any publictwo years sought and received safety impact at these businessliquor licenses from the Oregon es,” says Christie Scott, an OLCC
Liquor Control Commission.
The OLCC board
By JENNIFERspokeswoman.
ANDERSON
Film festival, other
events lighten up
city’s bike culture
approved the restrictions as permanent rules last Friday, for the
first time differentiating food
carts from other outdoor areas
like patios and sidewalk seating.
The rules limit customers to
no more than two drinks at a
time (16 ounces of beer or cider,
6 ounces of wine, or 2 ounces of
distilled spirits); except to allow
two people to share a standard
750-ml bottle of wine, and three
people to share a 64-ounce pitcher of beer.
“No minors” signs must be
posted, and there’s no drinking
See FOOD CARTS / Page 14
The Tribune
There used to be a time
when cyclists in Portland
would whoop and holler during videos of other cyclists
blowing past stop signs,
weaving in
and out of
traffic and
disobeying
the rules of
the road.
Not anymore, says
Ayleen Crotty,
a self-proclaimed “bike
culturalist”
who’s produced dozens
of bike-themed
events, rides
— Ayleen Crotty and festivals
in Portland
since 2002.
“We don’t do that here,”
Crotty says. “We share the
road. It’s actually how we’re
living, staying alive, getting
around to our friends’ houses,
school and work. Nowadays we
don’t have that in Portland,
and we don’t need it.”
That’s not to say that the
bike-obsessed in Portland take
their cycling too seriously.
To the contrary, 38-year-old
Crotty, who lives in Woodlawn,
has made it her mission to
■ Crime is down just about everywhere. Fear is on the rise. Details at 11
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THE HECK
ARE WE SO
TUESDAY
EDITION
“I feel like
we’re
capturing
an
important
time in bike
history in
Portland
and the
U.S.”
FOR RAPE VICTIMS –
A LIGHT IN DARKNESS
■ Police Bureau advocate Susan Lehman helps sex
assault victims recover from crisis
T
here are days, more than a few,
when Susan Lehman feels, if not
torn, at least tugged by the possibility of what could be done.
Lehman works as a Portland Police Bureau sex abuse victim advocate. Her job
is to help women who have been raped
Story by Peter Korn
Photos by Jaime Valdez
“I have thought to myself, I would like
to g t thi b d
ff th
Contact Us Today For A Quote On Your Next Project!
Susan Lehman, a
Portland Police Bureau
advocate for sex assault
victims, talks with a
former homeless woman
who has been victimized
several times on the
streets.
Homeless, mentally
ill most vulnerable
Don Atwell
For many women on street, rape
f
f
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404617 061314
A12 NEWS
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
ATTENTION
DUCK FANS!
Don’t miss our Oregon Ducks Playoff special
section appearing in the Tuesday, December 30
issue of the Portland Tribune.
Available at a newspaper box near you.
OREGON
College Football Playo
ff • December 2014
PL AYOFF
RUN
Pac-12 champs
look for more glory
xxxxxx.xxxxxx
Commemorative Issue
Wheels!
NEWS A13
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
Santa’s been very good to
Portland auto buyers this year
Trib auto writers pick
their favorites among
current crop of vehicles
By JOHN M. VINCENT and JIM REDDEN
For Pamplin Media Group
TRIBUNE PHOTO: JOHN M. VINCENT
The all-electric Fiat 500E is fun and green, a rare
combo.
Vincent’s Picks:
2015 Lexus RC-F. We had to wait a
while for the replacement for the IS-F
V-8 powered hot rod, but the patience
was worth it. For 2015, they’ve launched
the 467-horsepower RC-F coupe, and it
is simply awesome. Lexus quality that’s
light, nimble and viscerally energetic.
Base price: $62,400.
2014 Fiat 500E. Fun and green are
often mutually exclusive when it comes
to your driving experience, but Fiat’s
changing that calculus with their rockin’ 500e battery electric car. It’s a nimble
rocketship around town with exceptional acceleration from its 111-horsepower electric motor. Base price:
$31,800, less federal tax incentives.
2014 Ram 1500 EcoDiesel. A full-size
pickup that earns fuel economy of 28
mpg seemed like a fantasy not long ago,
but the engineers at Ram achieved it
with their 1500 EcoDiesel. Matched
with a great exterior design and the
best pickup interior anywhere, the Ram
has been raking in industry awards.
Base price: $30,215.
2014 Mazda3. Mazda’s a company
that has a proven ability to put great
driving dynamics in everything that
they build, and the 41 mpg Mazda3 is no
exception. With an athletic design and
agility to match, the Mazda3 is tough to
beat in the economy segment. Base
Every year, Santa and his assistants
leave about new 150 cars in our driveways and at special events for us to test
and review.
2014 has been an exceptional year for
the auto industry in the quality and design of their new
vehicles, and the
2014 has been an level of sales that
exceptional year they’ve achieved.
Analysts forecast
for the auto
that 17.2 million
industry in the new vehicles will
be sold in the U.S.
quality and
this year. Subaru
design of their and Audi had already hit new annew vehicles,
nual sales records
and the level of by the end of November.
sales that
To close out the
they’ve achieved. year,
Portland Tribune automotive
writers Jim Redden and John Vincent
have each picked their favorite test
drives of 2014.
TRIBUNE PHOTO: JOHN M. VINCENT
The Ram 1500 EcoDiesel can haul anything and is still EPA rated at 28 mpg.
price: $16,495.
2015 Toyota Sienna. For years, Honda’s Odyssey has been the king of the
premium minivan segment, but with a
2015 refresh Toyota’s Sienna knocks it
from its lofty perch. Sienna offers a
great array of advanced safety and
driver assistance features, and is the
only minivan available with all-wheel
drive. Base price: $28,600.
Redden’s Picks:
2015 Chevy SS. A welcome return to
the fast Detroit family cars that featured big V8s, rear-wheel drive and
plenty of interior room. The exterior
styling is so subdued the police will
never suspect you’re driving a hot rod,
and the ride is much improved over the
old fashioned land yachts, too. Base
price: $44,775.
TRIBUNE PHOTO: JOHN M. VINCENT
TRIBUNE PHOTO: JOHN M. VINCENT
The Toyota Highlander is among the best of the new large crossovers.
TRIBUNE PHOTO: JOHN M. VINCENT
Don’t tell the youngster the Kia Soul is practical enough for grownups, too.
The Mazda3 proves an economy car can be fun to drive.
2015 Honda Accord Hybrid. A rare
hybrid that justifies its higher price by
being better than the commendable
gas-powered car it is based on. Honda’s
innovative Intelligent Multi-Mode
Drive (i-MMD) essentially uses one of
two electric motors for the transmission, producing instant acceleration
and contributing to an impressive 50/45
EPA rating. Base price: $29,305.
2015 Kia Soul. Although aimed at
young people, Kia’s quirky small wagon
is practical enough to appeal to adults,
too. Both the exterior and interior of
the Soul were redesigned to be a little
more grown up without losing its
charm. Perfect for trips to clubs and
garden shops. Base price: $15,100.
2015 Subaru BRZ. An inexpensive
back-to-basics sports car that emphasizes handling over acceleration, allowing more fun in day-to-day driving that
almost anything else on the road.
Largely unchanged from last year, but
that’s a good thing because so-called
“improvements” could undermine its
honest character. Base price: $25,695.
2015 Toyota Highlander. Car-like
crossovers are replacing even large
SUVs, and the Highlander explains
why. It looks imposing, but is easy to
drive, carries up to seven but get respectable mileage, and can be ordered
with all-wheel-drive for weekend trips
to mountain cabins. Base price: $29,415.
All these vehicles and more will be at
the 2015 Portland International Auto
Show, Feb. 5-8, at the Oregon Convention Center.
www.armstrongvw.com
Armstrong Volkswagen
$
$
$
$
DOWN
DUE AT
SECURITY
0 0 0 0
SIGNING
PAYMENT
NEW 2014
189
VW PASSAT S 1.8T
1.8T AUTOMATIC
ALL NEW 2014 VW
TOUAREG ENTIRE STOCK!!
0 $0 $0 $0
$
36
MONTHS
1AT
DOWN
PAYMENT
DUE AT
SIGNING
SECURITY
DEPOSIT
6165
12 $
AT
1ST MO.
PAYMENT
Lease, MSRP $23,125, Cap cost $18,125 after $2750 lease bonus cash, $2250 Armstrong Discount, $0 first payment,
$0 security deposit $348 OR license, title & admin fee totaling $348 due at inception plus $275 lease bonus cash. Total
lease charge $6963, Residual $12,256.Vin # 417187, 10K Miles per year. Financing through VCI on approval of credit,
Expires 1/2/15.
OFF
MSRP
Savings include $6165 Armstrong discount
NEW 2014 MODELS-CLEARANCE PRICE NOW!
2014
JETTA SE
239
$
1AT
PER
MONTH
0 $0 $0 $0
$
DOWN
PAYMENT
DUE AT
SIGNING
SECURITY
DEPOSIT
1ST MO.
PAYMENT
Lease MSRP $23,310, cap cost $18,965 after $3250 lease bonus cash & $1095 Armstrong Discount. $0 down payment, $0 first
payment, $348 Ore. License, title & admin. Fee, $0 security deposit totaling $348 due at inception plus $3500 lease bonus cash.
Total lease charge $8,713. Residual $12,121. Vin #006399. 10K miles per year. Financing through VCI on approval of credit.
Expires 1/2/15. Lease Only.
NEW 2015 MODELS-ON SALE NOW!!
2014 TOUAREG
3.6L SPORT
2014
BEETLE TDI
2014 JETTA
SPORTWAGEN S
DEPOSIT
NEW 2015
VW JETTA SE
$
1ST MO.
PAYMENT
2015
JETTA S
2015 GOLF TSI S
4 DOOR
2015
PASSAT S 1.8T
2015 GTI
2.0T S 2 DOOR
Automatic, Air, Keyless Entry,
AM/FM CD Stereo, Power
Windows & Locks.
Automatic, Air AM/FM CD
Stereo, Power Windows &
Locks, Tilt/Cruise.
Automatic, Air, Keyless Entry,
AM/FM/CD Stereo, Power
Windows & Locks, Tilt/Cruise.
6 Speed Manual, AM/FM/CD
Stereo, Air Conditioning, Power
Windows/ Locks
$6165
OFF MSRP
Automatic, Air, AM/FM CD
Stereo, Tilt/Cruise, Power
Windows & Locks.
1.8T, Automatic, Air, Power
Windows & Locks, Tilt wheel,
AM/FM CD Stereo, Keyless.
4Motion, AWD, Automatic,
Power Options, AM/FM/CD
Stereo, Navigation and more.
17,950 $19,950 $23,950 $43,450
$
1 AT
Automatic, Air Conditioning,
AM/FM/CD Stereo, Power
Windows/Locks, Heated Seats
1 AT
1 AT
Sale Price after
$3,235 Armstrong Discount.
MSRP $23,185. Vin#619245
Sale price after $5175
Armstrong Discount MSRP
$23,125. Vin # 417187
1 AT
Sale Price after
$2800 Armstrong Discount
MSRP $26,750. Vin # 666353
Sale Price after
$6,165 Armstrong Discount,
MSRP$49,615. Vin # 015465
18,950 $20,950 $21,950 $24,950
$
1 AT
1 AT
1 AT
Sale Price after
$565 Armstrong Discount.
MSRP $21,515. Vin#029240
Sale Price after
$850 Armstrong Discount.
MSRP $19,800. Vin#251412
ARMSTRONG VW SELECTION OF CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED VEHICLES
2014 VW JETTA 1.8T SE
Vin# 360572
14,750
$
1 AT
1.49% 60MOS.**
UP
APR TO
2014 VW JETTA TDI NAV
Vin#378051
1 AT
25,485
$
1.49% 60MOS.**
476246.122414 W
UP
APR TO
2010 VW EOS LUX CONVERTIBLE
LOADED
Vin # 022489
20,850
$
1 AT
2.29% 60MOS.**
UP
APR TO
2014 VW PASSAT SEL PREMIUM
27,950
$
1 AT
Vin #020006
1.49% 60MOS.**
UP
APR TO
1 AT
1.49
24,205
$
%
UP
APR TO
60MOS.**
2014 VW JETTA TDI
Automatic,
Vin #378051
$
1 AT
1.49
24,850
%
UP
APR TO
60MOS.**
2014 VW TIGUAN 4MOTION
SEL AWD $
2011 VW TOUAREG TDI
1.49
2.29
Vin#540630
1 AT
28,850
%
UP
APR TO
60MOS.**
**Available through VCI, on approved credit, A+ tier, expires 1/2/15. All sales subject to prior sale, pictures for illustration only
Armstrong
Volkswagen
Sale Price after $700 Armstrong
Discount, MSRP $24,950.
Vin # 047995
• 2 YEAR OR 24,000 MILE BUMPER TO BUMPER LIMITED WARRANTY
• 24 HOUR ROADSIDE ASSISTANCE • 112 POINT INSPECTION
2014 JETTA TDI PREMIUM
Vin#378713
1 AT
Sale Price after
$1,360 Armstrong Discount.
MSRP $23,310. Vin#006399
20000 SE McLoughlin Blvd., Gladstone, OR
www.armstrongvw.com
Sales/Service/Parts
1-888-331-6314
TOLL
FREE
41,950
Executive Model $
Vin # 005361 1 AT
%
UP
APR TO
60MOS.**
A14 NEWS
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
A name you know and trust
BRUCE CHEVROLET
COSTCO MEMBERS WELCOME!
let’s
o
r
v
e
h
C
Bruce
R
A
E
Y
END
!
T
N
E
EV NOW!
ON
NEW 2014 SONIC LT 5-DOOR
Automatic, Air Conditioning, My Link and more.
CHEVY YEAR END EVENT
OFF MSRP
20% CASH BACK
1 at $
14,952
Sale price after $3738 Factory Cash Back ( 20%). MSRP $18,690.
Stk #410169 Vin # 151548
REGUALAR
CAB
DOUBLE
CAB
NEW 2014 SILVERADO 1500
NEW 2014 SILVERADO
Automatic, Air Conditioning and lots more in this value priced truck.
V-8 Engine, Trailer Package, Locking Differential and more.
$
1 at 26,988
Sale
ale Price after $2500 factory rebate, $2182 Bruce discount.
MSRP $26,670, Stk #480305 Vin #4EZ332, Stk #480327 Vin #3EZ343
1 at
Sale Price after $2000 factory rebate, $2477 Bruce discount.
MSRP $31,465, Vin #EZ344889, Stk #480337.
NEW 2015 EQUINOX FWD
CHEVY
YEAR END EVENT!
Fully Equipped, Ready to go
20
21,999
Sale Price after $1750 factory rebate, $1646 Bruce discount.
MSRP $25,395, Stk#590097, Vin#FZ207601
$
6,000
NEW 2015 CHEV TAHOE 4X4
Dual Power Heated Seats, Leather, Traction control, Third Seat, Back-up Camera, Alloy
Wheels, Power Options and More!
Loaded, Technology Package, Convenience Package,
Safety package, RS Package.
$
$
1 at 18,636
1 at
48,888
Sale Price after $5,107 Bruce Discount. MSRP $53,995. Vin #
107940, Stk # 580002.
Sale price after $4,659
59 Factory Cash Back (20%).
(20%) MSRP $23,295.
$23 295 Stk # 440142,
440142
Vin # 236975
31MPG
CITY
39MPG
HWY
$
4000
OFF
MSRP
NEW 2014 CHEVY SPARK
NEW 2014 CHEVROLET VOLT
NEW 2015 MALIBU
ABS Brakes, Traction Control, 10 Air Bags, Air Conditioning, 1.2 Litre Fuel Injected
Engine, Power Door Locks, Alloy Wheels and more.
1 att
Off
MSRP
Sale Price after $2000 Factory Rebate and $4000 Bruce Discount. MSRP $43,750. Sale
Price $37,750. Vin #105357. Stk #58001
NEW 2014 CRUZE LT
MSRPP
% OFF
CASH
BACK
$
1 at
ABS Brakes, Traction Control, 10 Air Bags, Air Conditioning, 1.2 Litre Fuel
Injected
more.
ed Engine, Power Door Locks, Alloy Wheels and m
$
21,988
2 att
NEW
EW 2015 SILVERADO 2500
CREW CAB LT 4X4
Automatic, ABS Brakes, Traction Control, Alloy Wheels, AM/FM/CD/
MP3 Stereo.
2015 MODEL, Automatic, Chrome Handles 4G LTE.
$
$
1 at18,888
10,988
$
1 at
Sale price after $3500 Factory Rebate & $127 Bruce Discount. MSRP $23,655. Stk
# 560057 Vin # 154964
Sale price after $2007 Bruce Discount, MSRP $12,995.
Stk#470336 Vin#550323
30,995
Sale price after $1000 factory rebate, Bruce discount $3000.
MSRP $34,995. VIN 172310, STK#490355
Certified Pre-Owned Vehicles
2 year/24,000 mile Standard CPO Plan
12 mo./12,000 mile Bumper to Bumper Warranty
5 Year/100,000 mile Power Train Limited Warranty
1 at
2012 SONIC LT
$
1 at
13,888
Automatic, Equipped #P10071
SERVICE COUPON
MULTI-POINT
INSPECTION*
$
2011 EQUINOX LT AWD 1 at
Low Miles, great on gas. #P9975
18,888
2014 CAPTIVA LTZ
1 at
$
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WE PAY CA$H FOR USED VEHICLES
Change Oil and Oil Filter, Check all fluids,
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SERVICE COUPON
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$
2010 GRAND CARAVAN
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$9,999
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1998 DODGE RAM QUAD CAB 4X4 SLT
$9,999
Automatic, 1 owner. #580028A2 1 at
2011 MALIBU LS
1 at $10,999
Equipped. #P10067
SERVICE COUPON
FALL SPECIAL
OIL CHANGE
29,988
2014 SILVERADO 1500
0
096
CREW CAB LT 4X4 #P10096
FREE
Includes inspect fluid levels; check steering, suspension,
wiper blades, exhaust, undercarriage, belts and hoses. Plus
tax, if applicable. Coupon valid at vehicle check-in.
Expires 1/30/15 Must present coupon at time of service.
Coupon Code:19
$
SERVICE COUPON
2010 FORD
EXPLORER 4X4
1 at $14,888
1 Owner, Equipped. #P10022
2011 FORD F-150 XLT 4X4 1 at $18,999
Equipped, Nice Truck. #P9994
2008 TOYOTA TACOMA
1 at $18,999
Access cab, SR-5, Automatic, Low Miles. #420271A
19
50,000 MILE
SERVICE SPECIAL*
2500
$
$
95
Mon-Fri 8:30-9:00 Sat 8:30-8:00 Closed Sunday (Family Day)
Expires 1/30/15 Must present coupon at time of service.
Excludes Semi Synthetic, Synthetic and Diesel Engines.
2009 HONDA ODYSSEY 1 at $20,999
Automatic, Leather. #580024A
2007 CHEV TAHOE
1 at $22,988 2014 CHEVY TAHOE LT 4X4 1 at $37,999
LT 4X4 Leather, Roof, Quad Seating. #P9956A Roof, Leather, Equipped. #P9976
OFF
Save now on your 50,000 Mile Scheduled Maintenance. See
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with other offers. Coupon valid at vehicle check-in.
Expires 1/30/15 Must present coupon at time of service
Coupon Code:68
1084 SW OAK ST • HILLSBORO • 888-546-7350
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WWW.BRUCECHEVROLET.COM
All vehicles subject to prior sale. Tax, licence, title processing fees not included. All financing subject to credit approval. Interest rates and rebates subject to change without prior notice.
Pictures for illus. only. Offers expire 1/2/15.
THE YEAR THAT WAS IN LIVE MUSIC — Page B3
Weekend!Life
SECTION B
PortlandTribune
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 25, 2014
Duck fans
FLOCK SOUTH
TRIBUNE PHOTOS: JAIME VALDEZ
■ UO success means more team followers, ticket and retail sales
T
he Oregon Ducks are flying
south for the Rose Bowl, and
their fans are following in their
contrails.
The football program that has sold out
its home venue, Autzen Stadium, for 103
consecutive games expects a large turnout for the Jan. 1 game against Florida
State in Pasadena, Calif., and, if the
Ducks win, another large number of fans
attending the national championship
game Jan. 12 at Arlington, Texas.
Craig Pintens, senior associate athletic director for marketing and public relations, says UO’s Rose Bowl allotment of
12,500 tickets and an additional 4,000
tickets granted to the university already
have been sold. Historically, he says, Oregon and other Pac-12 schools attract
about 30,000 fans to the Rose Bowl, and
with the close proximity, UO should outpace Florida State in fan following.
“We know for sure we’ll have
16,500, but beyond that it’s hard to
predict,” he says.
The Ducks had an allotment of about
20,000 for the national championship
game, and Pintens says the response
— even before the Ducks qualify for
the game — has been outstanding,
with the allotment of 20,000 tickets for
season ticket holders and donors already nearly sold. “It’s seemingly a
once-in-a-lifetime type of experience,”
Pintens says, of a possible national
championship appearance — although
the Ducks played Auburn four years
ago for the title. “We’re confident
there’d be enough excitement.”
The concern among schools and College Football Playoff representatives has
been the stress on the fans’ pocketbooks
for the teams involved. Oregon fans already have been asked to spend money
on season tickets and donations, as well
as attend the Pac-12 championship game
in Santa Clara, Calif. — the Ducks were
well-represented at Levi’s Stadium,
much more so than Arizona.
See FANS / Page 3
MUSIC
Portland Youth Philharmonic
It’ll be a day after the big
day, but the Concert-atChristmas is the most popular event of the Portland
Youth Philharmonic season
and features dynamic performances by all four of PYP’s
ensembles: Philharmonic Orchestra, Conservatory Orchestra, Wind Ensemble and
Young String Ensemble. The
Philharmonic Orchestra will
perform Richard Strauss’ festive tone poem “Till Eulenspiegel.”
7:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 26,
Arlene Schnitzer Concert
Hall, 1037 S.W. Broadway,
portlandyouthphil.org, $16$47
The Soul of Winter Music
Festival
A young fan fl ashes the “ O” symbol as he and hordes of other Oregon fans cheer on the Ducks during their November clash with Stanford. The Ducks are likely to have q uite a
following at the Jan. 1 Rose Bowl.
By JASON VONDERSMITH
The Tribune
THESHORTLIST
Golden Entertainment
presents a night of soul and
blues featuring musician
Christopher Brown, the
youngest son of drumming
legend Mel Brown, who has
played with many star performers himself, and Tahirah
Asha Memory, the singing
daughter of trumpet player
Thara Memory, as well as
Saeeda “Mama Sae” Wright,
Darrius Willrich and LaRhonda Steele.
8 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 27,
Alberta Rose Theatre, 3000
N.E Alberta St., albertarosetheatre.com, $20, $25 at door
Straight No Chaser
The male a cappella group,
formed when members were
students at Indiana University and have developed a large
fan base.
7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 27,
Arlene Schnitzer Concert
Hall, 1037 S.W. Broadway,
portland5.com, $38-$69.50
‘ Ode to Joy: A Holiday
Celebration’
Star bassist/singer/composer Esperanza Spalding
and trumpet player Thara
Memory join the Oregon
Symphony and Music Director Carlos Kalmar for a musical event that includes
Beethoven’s “Symphony No. 9
Choral.”
7 p.m. Wednesday-Thursday, Dec. 30-31, Arlene
Schnitzer Concert Hall, 1037
S.W. Broadway, orsymphony.
org, starting at $25
Q uarterback Marcus Mariota (No. 8 ) and other Ducks players
acknowledge the fans as they depart the fi eld after routing Colorado,
which could have been Mariota’s last home game.
MISC.
Whale watching week
■ Seniors — all over 80 — sit down and start dancing
By CAITLIN FELDMAN
Pamplin Media Group
F
our pairs of tap shoes
pitter-pattered on the
wooden floor. Some
were well worn, others had hardly a crack in the
leather.
The dancers could have
been ages 14 or 84 — through
the shoes and the movements of their feet, it was impossible to tell.
The dancers made use of
their expressions, legs, feet,
arms and hands, just as all
dancers do — the difference
with this ensemble is the
performers are seated. And
they’re all older than 80, after all.
After the Courtyard Rockettes warmed up and ran
through their latest routine,
Ethel Henry stood up and
walked over to a potential
new member to help with
some of the basics. Tapping
takes time, she told her, and
lots of practice.
“Rome wasn’t built in a
day. We didn’t get this way
without practicing, and I’ve
been doing this for 83 years,”
Henry said to the class. “The
most important thing is you
have to smile all the time.”
Meet
the
Courtyard
Rockettes
One of the best periods to
catch the migrating gray
whales off the Oregon Coast
is coming up, Dec. 27 through
31. For more than 30 years,
trained volunteers with the
Whale Watching Spoken
Here program have helped
visitors catch a glimpses of
whales at 24 sites in three
states in the Pacific Northwest. A good way to learn
about things is by visiting
with rangers at the Depoe
Bay Whale Center in
Newport. Check out the
whale watching page on
oregonstateparks.org.
Champagne Ball/
New Year’s Eve
The big party at the Hilton
Portland always is a hit on
New Year’s Eve. There’ll be
four dance floors, 17 bars, two
bands and three deejays, as
well as late-night fare. Tickets for the black-tie event are
$79 to $149. For complete info:
champagneball.com. Also, for
many listings of New Year’s
Eve events, see
pdxpipeline.com.
Alberta Rose
Theatre parties
PAMPLIN MEDIA GROUP: JAIME VALDEZ
Kicking around
Head of the Courtyard Rockettes, Ethel Henry (above, left) leads a tap dance routine with Anna Belle Tallman and others at Raleigh Hills’
Courtyard Village.
The Courtyard Rockettes
formed in September at Raleigh Hills’ Courtyard Village
retirement community, stemming from an idea conceived
by Henry and her granddaughter.
At age 87, Henry has
tapped off and on for most of
her life, but hadn’t been lately. She needed a way to get
back into it and get others
excited about it, as well. After the plan for her granddaughter to help teach fell
through, Henry reached out
to fitness coordinator Sherry
Summerville to see if she
could teach the group.
“They thought I taught
dance, but I literally don’t do
tap,” says Summerville, who
also owns Spotlight Perform-
like (teaching) that
ing Arts in Milmuch. I’m doing it bewaukie. “I’ve been
cause I keep getting
in a lot of perforencouraged by my
mances myself
children and by those
where I’ve had to
who are taking it,”
tap, so I’ve picked
she says. “Being a
it up, but I’ve never
teacher is a responsireally learned how.
bility, and I don’t
So I said, ‘Well, I
know if I really am up
can’t teach it. I can
to that. Without Anna
facilitate it, but I
Belle (Tallman), I
will be a fraud if I
don’t know if it would
try to teach you.’”
have held together,
This meant that
because she’s my
for the group to
backbone. She comes
take off, Henry
— Ethel Henry
up with these suggeswould have to take
tions that are so great
the reins. She’d onthat I didn’t have a clue
ly ever been a dancer, never
a teacher, and wasn’t entire- about.”
ly convinced she was capable
Inspiring duet
of leading a class.
“I don’t know if I really
Initially just a participant,
“ Rome
wasn’t built
in a day. We
didn’t get
this way
without
practicing,
and I’ve been
doing this for
8 3 years.”
Tallman, 88, eased her way
into the role of teacher assistant by her continuous suggestions for how to make the
routines better. With a few
months of working together
under their belts, Henry and
Tallman have become a
team, and neither will admit
to being able to teach the
group without the other.
“I was so excited and kept
waiting for it to start, but I
didn’t know who was doing
it. Then I met Ethel, and she
became our teacher. As we
progressed, it was good for
us to work together to form a
little routine,” says Tallman,
who grew up in North Portland and has been tap dancing since age 10. “I look forward to Friday mornings. It’s
companionship, and doing
something from my past that
was missing.”
Though Tallman attempted to keep dance a part of
her life, she’d lost it in the
past five years. September
was her first foray back into
it, and it’s given her something new to be excited
about.
The Courtyard Rockettes
practice for 30 minutes every
Friday morning and already
have had their first performance with another planned
for later this winter. Currently comprised of five members, they’re working on getting more interest and letting other residents know
See DANCERS / Page 2
The venerable venue at
3000 N.E. Alberta St. in
Northeast Portland plays
host to two parties as 2014
comes to a close, both involving the MarchFourth Marching Band (now known as M4
among fans) and Soulfire Sacred Dance Ensemble: The
“End of the Year Party,” 8
p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 30, $25, $3
at door; “New Year’s Eve
Bash,” 8 p.m. Wednesday,
Dec. 31, $37, $45 at door. For
info: albertarosetheatre.com.
STAGE
‘ Frankenstein, the little
monster’
It’s the 10th anniversary
production by Jane Theater
Company, from its “Hullabaloo!” series. There’ll be rollicking good songs, silly jokes,
dancing, boos and yeas.
7 p.m. Fridays, 2 and 4
p.m. Saturdays-Sundays,
through Jan. 4, Post 5, 1666
S.E. Lambert St., boxofficetickets.com (to reserve seats),
free
Portland!Life
B2 LIFE
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
Bits&Pieces
Check your theater listings for
times.
By JASON VONDERSMITH
The Tribune
The Regional Arts & Culture
Council has awarded $693,959 in
project grants for calendar year
2015, which includess 66 grants
to nonprofits and 80 to individual artists in Clackamas,
Multnomah and Washington
counties.
The city of Portland and
Work for Art were the biggest
contributors.
Forty percent of all proposals
received were from artists and
arts organizations that had never applied for RACC funding.
“RACC made a commitment
several years ago to finding and
funding more diverse and accessible artistic programs,” says Eloise Damrosch, executive director, in a news release.
A summary of funded projects can be found at racc.
org/2015projectgrants.
RACC grants
‘ Twilight’ controversy
From the reporting of Mark
Miller of the South County Spotlight newspaper:
A St. Helens Tourism Committee meeting became the unlikely venue for a tense exchange between business officials from two communities
over a themed event.
Amanda Normine, a St. Helens Economic Development
Corp. member who is spearheading the Twilight in St. Helens group, was at the committee
meeting Thursday, Dec. 11, to
make a pitch for $10,000 in community grant money to support
a “Twilight” event next year in
St. Helens.
But Lissy Andros, executive
director of the Forks Chamber
of Commerce, participating in
the meeting by telephone from
Forks, Wash., was critical of the
idea of having Stephenie Meyer
Day — a celebration named for
the author of the “Twilight”
book series, which was adapted
COURTESY OF TRAVEL PORTLAND
into a movie series — in St. Hel- Travel Portland’s 2 4 - foot- tall cuckoo clock is on display at Portland International Airport through March 2 0 15.
ens. The event originated in
It was chainsaw- carved by J. Chester Armstrong and handcrafted by Nicolas Gros.
Forks, where much of the “Twilight” series is set, and Andros
to another community.”
nia, about 20 miles to the west.
turn, the organizers would cover
has said the small Washington
Discussions about holding an
Stephenie Meyer Day is tenta- their major expenses and procommunity will go forward with event in St. Helens to celebrate
tively scheduled to run from
vide a cut of the proceeds to
hosting its own event next year
the 10th anniversary of the 2005 Sept. 10 through 13 next year.
Chastain.
even if St. Helens sets up a rival vampire romance novel “TwiThe timing of the event is meant
Chastain argued that Forks
festival.
light” began earlier this fall,
to coincide with the birthday of
“does not own the concept of
“We here in Forks are really
when Staci Chastain, an orgathe “Twilight” series’ protagocelebrating the [‘Twilight’]
shocked that St. Helens would
nizer of Stephenie Meyer Day in nist, Bella Swan.
saga.”
run with an idea of an event that Forks, contacted Normine and
Under an agreement being
Stay tuned.
Forks created, on the same
other members of the St. Helens worked out between SHEDCO
‘ Unbroken’ opens
weekend that Forks is having it
business community to pose the and Chastain, her Olympic CoChristmas Day, Thursday,
and has it every year,” Andros
idea.
ven acting group would appear
Dec. 25, brings the premiere of
said during the meeting. “We
St. Helens was a filming loca- at several events in the St. Heljust cannot picture, you know, if tion for the 2008 movie adaptaens area next September — and, “Unbroken,” the story of World
someone came to us and wanted tion of “Twilight.” Several
potentially, in September 2016 — War II prisoner of war and
Olympian Louis Zamperini.
to do this, that we would do that scenes also were shot in Vernofor Stephenie Meyer Day. In
Big cuckoo
What an attraction — the
country’s tallest freestanding
cuckoo clock, 24 feet tall and
9-1/2 feet wide and handcrafted, has been put on exhibit in
the south atrium of the Portland International Airport,
courtesy of Travel Portland. It
will remain there until the end
of March.
The clock was created for
Travel Portland’s “Portland Is
Happening Now” winter tourism campaign, but it was unveiled in Seattle and also visited
Vancouver, British Columbia.
The nearly 7,000-pound clock
was chainsaw-carved by Oregon wood sculptor J. Chester
Armstrong and handcrafted by
Nicolas (Nico) Gros. The clock
has functioning wooden gears
and depicts Portland icons
such as Mount Hood, salmon,
beer, bikers, Portlandia, Sasquatch, roses and rivers.
‘ The Sing- Off Live! ’
The tour of the NBC a cappella competition season five starts
in February and includes winner the Melodores on selected
dates. It’ll be late in the tour
when they stop in Portland —
April 7 at the Aladdin Theater.
As of now, the Melodores won’t
appear here. For info: aladdintheater.com.
The Who
Meanwhile, The Who celebrates its 50th anniversary with
a North American tour, kicking
off in April, and stopping at the
Moda Center during the fall leg
on Sept. 25.
Joan Jett and the Blackhearts
joins The Who on tour. For info:
thewho.com.
Stafford’s 10 1st
The year 2014 was a big year
for the celebration of famous
late poet William Stafford’s
100th birthday, which falls on
Jan. 17.
For The Friends of William
Stafford continues to honor
the poet and teacher with a
variety of programs throughout the Northwest. For the
William Stafford Birthday
Commemorative Readings, or
“Stafford Birthday Parties,”
local and regional poets and
writers, artists and musicians
present a variety of programs.
The local lineup: 2 p.m. Jan.
10, Pond House, Milwaukie; 7
p.m. Jan. 11, Stonehenge Studios; 7 p.m. Jan. 14, West Linn
Public Library; 7 p.m. Jan. 15,
Broadway Books; 7 p.m. Jan.
18, Holy Names Heritage Center, Lake Oswego; 7 p.m. Jan.
20, Lake Oswego Public Library, 7 p.m. Annie Bloom’s
Books; 6:30 p.m. Clackamas
Community College, Oregon
City; 7 p.m. Jan. 24, Sunriver
Nature Center, Sunriver; 2
p.m. Jan. 25, Multnomah
Central Library.
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YEAR END CLEARANCE
Ethel Henry (above left) launched a new tap dance group at the Courtyard Village in Raleigh Hills; (above) Henry leads Sharon Norton in a dance routine.
SALE
Dancers: Tap into early training
■ From page 1
DEC 26TH THRU DEC 31ST
that it’s less of a dance group
and more of a tap club, something that doesn’t need to be
intimidating or scary.
“They’re just reaching into
their inner selves to do things
that they’ve wanted to do,”
Henry says. “I mean that’s
what I was encouraging, for
them to do things they wanted to do that they didn’t think
they could.”
Store will be closed New Year’s Day
PORTLAND: 9701 SE McLoughlin . 503 /786 -1234
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‘ I dance’
While Henry has helped
bring this out of those she’s
teaching, doing so also seems
to have brought it out of herself. At the end of class, she
stood up to demonstrate a
particular step, which turned
into a demonstration of an-
other step and then another.
Before long, Henry was tap
dancing for real.
“It’s just me, I don’t know,”
she said shortly before displaying her years of built-up
talents. “Wherever I am,
whatever I do, I dance.”
It wasn’t a dance one might
expect to come from an
87-year-old — it was a dance
that didn’t care how old its
legs were. With her arms out,
her feet kicking and a grin
from ear to ear, Henry was
dancing in the truest sense of
the word.
“I didn’t know I had this in
me anymore!” she said. “I
don’t know about anybody
else, but I’m having fun!”
Not only has leading the
Courtyard Rockettes given
Henry a newfound confidence
you think you do
in herself, it’s givhave a chance to reen her a drive. It’s
live all those things
given all the dancyou really loved, it
ers a drive.
gives you a new en“I think for all of
ergy, a new passion,
the residents,
and a new reason to
there’s something
get up in the mornin their childhood
ing.”
or their youth that
Based on the efif we can tap into,
forts they’ve put into
it does bring a lot
learning their rouof youth and enertine and practicing,
gy back. I’ve just
and the looks on
seen it,” Summertheir faces during
ville says. “Life
class, the women
and your dreams
clearly agree.
kind of get stifled
— Anna Belle Tallman
“It makes me feel
when you’re taking
younger, and like I
care of kids and
haven’t lost it,” Talltaking care of a
business and a career and all man says. “I may have a sethose things. When you get to nior moment now and then,
but I haven’t lost what hapthis time, you think, ‘I wasn’t
pens in my feet.”
able to do this.’ Then, (when)
“ It makes me
feel younger,
and like I
haven’t lost it.
I may have a
senior moment
now and then,
but I haven’t
lost what
happens in my
feet.”
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The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
Portland!Life
LIFE B3
Live music had Portland rocking in 2014
LiveMusic!
By ROB CULLIVAN
Pamplin Media Group
I
f you’re a fan of hearing
music live, 2014 offered an
eclectic selection of
chances to do so in
Portland and its surrounding
areas.
Northern Irish band Ash
came to the Doug Fir in January and got very loud with an
audience of die-hards who
knew all the great tunes
American radio never plays.
In February, Ahmad Jamal,
Wynton Marsalis and Pat
Metheny headlined the Portland Jazz Festival. Highlights
included a live performance of
Portland pianist Darrell
Grant’s “The Territory,” a onehour jazz suite inspired by Oregon’s history and landscapes.
Led by Norman “The Boogie
Cat” Sylvester, several local
blues musicians put on a benefit in March for the statewide
coalition Health Care for AllOregon, which is fighting for a
single-payer health insurance
system. The Melody Ballroom
was filled with an enthusiastic
crowd of dancers who cut the
rug to such groups as the Too
Loose Cajun & Zydeco Band,
The Duffy Bishop Band and
The Strange Tones.
April saw the Soul’d Out
Festival feature a number of
riveting shows, including one
by Guitar Shorty. The master
axeman turned an at-first
somewhat reserved crowd into
a frenzied one by the end at
Mississippi Studios when he
put on one of the most soulful,
rockin’ blues shows this town
has ever seen, refusing to
leave until everyone was on
their feet.
In May, Cage the Elephant
and Foals landed a one-two
punch of festive rock on the
crowd at the Crystal Ballroom.
The month ended on a sad
note, however, when Janice M.
Scroggins died. One of Portland’s most in-demand blues,
ragtime, jazz and gospel pianists, Scroggins’ playing is
sorely missed.
June saw Guided By Voices
roll through town, while Portland’s Michele Van Kleef and
COURTESY OF MICAH REESE
The band Weezer, including Rivers Cuomo (above), played the Roseland Theater recently, performing its new album “ Everything Will Be Alright In
The End” in its entirety.
Brian Copeland released new
records. Meanwhile, thousands of punks, young and old
alike, danced in the hot sun
and got their ears blistered in
the Expo Center lot by such
bands as Every Time I Die and
The Ghost Inside at the Vans
Warped Tour.
The Waterfront Blues Festival took center stage in July,
drawing such acts as Los
Lonely Boys, Los Lobos, Charlie Musselwhite, Maceo Parker
and Commander Cody. Gregg
Allman canceled his appearance, disappointing many, but
singer-harmonica-player Curtis Salgado stepped in to take
his place and put on one of the
hottest sets the outdoor party
has ever seen.
In early August, X, Jonathan
Richman and Warpaint
thrilled crowds at Pickathon in
Happy Valley. Later that
month, Spoon, Girl Talk, Run
the Jewels, tUnE-yArDs and
Future Islands were among
the acts that took the stage at
MusicFestNW, which marked
its first year as a primarily
outdoor festival at Waterfront
Park, departing from its previous format as a clubs-only
event.
September saw the debut of
yet another outdoor music festival, as Pabst Blue Ribbon unveiled its two-day event at Zidell
Yards, featuring such acts as
The Thermals, Modest Mouse,
GZA and Tears for Fears. The
Violent Femmes’ bassist Brian
Ritchie brought the house down
when he noted his father gave
up drinking PBR after 30 years,
on doctor’s orders, and then
met his maker the next day. “So
the moral of the story is, drink
Pabst or die,” Ritchie said.
In October, The Dandy Warhols, Pink Martini and Barry
Hansen, better known as Dr.
Demento, were among the latest inductees into the Oregon
Music Hall of Fame. The event
was tinged with sadness, however, when popular soul and
gospel singer Linda Hornbuckle
— and Scroggins’ collaborator
— lost her long battle with cancer just days beforehand. Hornbuckle left behind a legacy of
moving performances as well as
too many friends to count.
November brought more sad
news when one of the underground rock scene’s most iconic clubs, Slabtown, closed its
doors. Meanwhile, Portland’s
folk-pop-rockers Ages and
Ages, Deke Dickerson and the
rootsy Los Straitjackets and
country phenomenon Sturgill
Simpson all drew appreciative
crowds in town.
The year ended on a high
note for fans of Weezer, when
Rivers Cuomo and company
came to the Roseland Theater
and played their new album in
its entirety, “Everything Will
Be Alright In The End.” We can
only hope.
New Year’s Eve
The year continues this
week, culminating with New
Year’s Eve. Here are some sug-
gestions for New Year’s Eve,
Wednesday, Dec. 31.
■ It will be a nonstop dance
party when The Motet bring its
progressive blend of funk, Afrobeat, disco, jazz and soul to the
Crystal Ballroom, 1332 W. Burnside St., at 8 p.m. The Colorado
band put on an incredible midnight show at the Northwest
String Summit last summer.
Polyrhythmics share the bill,
along with DJ Weather. $26 in
advance, $30 at the door. Info:
503-225-0047, crystalballroompdx.com.
■ Jorma Kaukonen and
Jack Casady of Hot Tuna (as
well as of Jefferson Airplane/
Starship) play the Aladdin Theater, 3017 S.E. Milwaukie Ave.,
at 9:30 p.m. $75 in advance, $80
at the door. Info: 503-234-9694,
aladdin-theater.com.
■ The funky versatile Scott
Pemberton Trio ring in the
new year at 10 p.m. at the Goodfoot, 2845 S.E. Stark St. $16 in
advance, $18 at the door. Info:
503-239-9292, thegoodfoot.com.
Fans:
■ From page 1
“I do think that’s tough for
fans to go to all three,” Pintens says. “That was one of
the main concerns when this
was launched, and why ticket
allotments came down significantly.”
The thing is with the recent
national success of Oregon,
combined with years of marketing nationally, the Ducks simply have more fans. Pintens
says games in other regions,
such as the Ducks playing at
Virginia last year, attract fans
who might not be able to attend
games at Autzen Stadium or at
Pac-12 stadiums.
So more fans means more
opportunities to fill allotments
and stadiums with green and
yellow, and not just with folks
from Portland, Eugene and
Medford.
The Ducks have surged to
near the top in national branding, as evidenced by merchandise sales — Pintens says the
Ducks are on pace to have their
best December ever. No doubt
the Ducks making the national
playoff, combined with Marcus
Mariota’s Heisman Trophy glory, has increased the Ducks’ following. It’s not lost on the
Ducks that they find themselves in the CFP with Florida
State, Alabama and Ohio State
— multiple national championship programs and three of the
most popular teams in the
country.
Just think what winning it all
would do.
“If you’re to win the Rose
Bowl and advance to the championship game, you’ll have
more people interested,” Pintens says. “If you’re to win a
championship, you go to the
stratosphere in terms of retail.
You’re talking about something
that hasn’t been done. Typically, it puts you at No. 1 in terms
of licensing retail sales.”
But being in the national
playoffs is a big deal itself, and
winning the championship
would culminate years of
building from everybody involved with the Oregon Ducks.
“We’ve gotten so close climbing up that mountain. We can
see the top of it, but we haven’t
been able to get to the top and
see what’s on the other side,”
Pintens says. “We’ve heard
about it. It’s a special thing for
fans, the journey they’ve been
on.”
HOW TO
LIVE UNITED:
JOIN HANDS.
OPEN YOUR HEART.
LEND YOUR MUSCLE.
FIND YOUR VOICE.
GIVE AN HOUR.
GIVE A SATURDAY.
THINK OF WE BEFORE ME.
REACH OUT A HAND TO ONE AND
INFLUENCE
THE CONDITION OF ALL.
GIVE. ADVOCATE. VOLUNTEER.
LIVE UNITED
™
Want to make a difference? Help create opportunities for everyone in your community. United Way
is creating real, lasting change where you live, by focusing on the building blocks of a better life–
education, income and health. That’s what it means to Live United. For more, visit LIVEUNITED.ORG.
Portland!Life
B4 LIFE
Place your ad by calling (503) 620-SELL (7355)
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
www.Community-Classif ieds.com
Your Neighborhood Marketplace
H E L P WANTE D
SALES PROFESSIONALS
T
he Pamplin Media Group is on the grow and
currently seeking several top-notch sales
representatives to join our busy sales team.
These jobs require tenacious individuals to help us
to continue our growth. We are looking for personable individuals, professional in manner and appearance, with great sales and presentation skills.
These positions all require individuals with at least
two years of successful sales experience, including
extensive cold calling. Media sales experience is
preferred, but other business-to-business sales experience might be considered. Strong computer, math,
spelling and grammar skills are a must for working
with budgets and creating presentations. Attention
to detail is critical.
We currently have opportunities with our new
Business product, major accounts, local sales, classified advertising and one part-time opportunity as
a primary sales rep for one of our thriving monthly
products.
For full-time employees, we offer a base salary plus
commission, along with a variety of benefits including paid vacation and sick time, 401k, medical/dental/
vision insurance options, life insurance and a variety
of other insurances.
If you are looking for a challenging sales opportunity with a growing company, why not talk with us?
Send a resume with cover letter and salary history to:
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Join the Pamplin Media Group, the area’s largest newspaper organization! We are seeking a talented, Accounts Receivable clerk to join our outstanding team.
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You will work in our beautiful Milwaukie office. We offer
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Part-Time Reporter Needed!
Part-time reporter needed for monthly newspaper, the
Southwest Community Connection. This position is
approximately 20-24 hours per week and is
responsible for generating a majority of the content for
this newspaper. Some weekend and evening work will
be required. Beat includes covering everything
newsworthy that happens in SW Portland and
specifically the Multnomah and Hillsdale
neighborhoods. Ideal candidate will have newspaper
experience in writing, editing and photography.
Attributes of a good community reporter include:
self-starter, attention to detail, patience, flexibility,
prolific writer, ability to meet deadlines, team player,
motivated and understands community journalism.
Send resume, cover letter and three clips to Publisher
J. Brian Monihan via email at
bmonihan@pamplinmedia.com
File size is limited to 5M. No phone calls please.
______________________________________
The Circulation Sales Manager will work with our
circulation team to increase subscription sales and
community visibility for Community Newspapers utilizing
a variety of sales and promotional techniques. This
position will include management of a small community
outreach sales force. The ideal candidate is
self-motivated, able to work in a fast paced environment
to achieve goals and meet deadlines. The ability to build
strong community relationships is a must in this
position.You will work out of our Clackamas corporate
office while also traveling to our newspaper
communities. Sales and/or marketing experience is preferred. Salary, bonus and benefits. Lift up to 25lbs.
Must provide own transportation.
Background check and drug screen required.
Regular part-time (primarily Friday, Saturday & Sunday
but some weekday work is required). Hourly wage plus
excellent commission. Sales experience preferred.
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Please submit resume to
GKraemer@CommNewspapers.com or fax to
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5(3257(5
The Outlook has an immediate opening for a reporter
covering the city of Gresham and several other smaller
beats. The Outlook is a twice weekly newspaper, which
took first place in the 2014 general excellence category
of the ONPA Better Newspapers Contest.
We are seeking a reporter who enjoys enterprise
journalism and who demonstrates a commitment to
community-based journalism. This reporter will write
features, and cover general news and breaking news.
This reporter also will embrace online and social
media. The ideal candidate will have a degree in
journalism and 5 years newspaper reporting
experience. Strong writing and editing skills are a
requirement, as is the ability to meet deadlines and
manage several projects at one time. We are looking
for a team player with a passion for accuracy, a sense
of curiosity and the proven ability to turn out a large
volume of compelling news content each week.
Please email a short letter of interest, resume and at
least three samples of your published work to
Executive Editor Steven Brown at
sbrown@theoutlookonline.com
No phone calls please. To learn more about our
newspaper, visit www.greshamoutlook.com
To see who follows instructions, use these words
(and only these words) in the subject line:
Gresham Reporter
_____________________________________
Marketing Consultant
The Gresham Outlook, a twice-weekly newspaper, is
seeking a high energy, motivated salesperson to join
our sales team as an outside Marketing Consultant.
We are looking for someone with previous advertising
experience, a proven track record of success, a strong
prospector, organizational and computer skills. An
existing account base will be provided, but our new
team member will be required to contact and create
new accounts. Must have reliable transportation and a
clean driving record. Pre-employment drug screen and
good references required. This is a full time position
with commission on all sales, a base salary, mileage
expenses and full benefits that include health care and
vacation. If you have a passion for sales and are
committed to success, send your resume and cover
letter to Cheryl Swart, Advertising Director –
cswart@theoutlookonline.com
3RUWODQG7ULEXQH0DLO5RRP
Part time positions available in the Gresham Outlook
mailroom. We are looking to fill two shifts, Monday,
2:30pm-9pm and Wednesdays, 12pm-8pm. The job
would be working on an inserting machine putting together the Portland Tribune for delivery. These positions require that you be able to lift at least 50lbs, and
stand for long periods of time. More hours could be
available by covering for the graveyard shift throughout
the week. These positions will pay $9.50 per hour, and
will require a background check and drug test. Please
send resume to pwagner@theoutlookonline.com or
stop by and fill out an application.
The Gresham Outlook is located at
1190 NE Division St. Gresham, OR 97030
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CAN HEAL YOU!
Find out how FREE classes.
heart-to-heart-healing.com
Liza at 503-502-5186
LAZ-E-BOY RECLINER
All leather, tan, 100%
warranty, like-new, hardly
used. $800
PORTABLE RICCAR ZIG
ZAG SEWING MACHINE
$100
3 WHITE BOOKCASES, 3
SHELVES $30 EA.
503-668-4975
Business
Announcements
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60 Dealers at Kent
Commons. 525 4th Ave
N. Kent, Wa. 98032
Jan. 17-18, 2015.
10am Open, Sat/Sun
FREE Admit, Park
Hourly Drawings
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A P PAR E L / J EW E L R Y
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:+77$%%<
/$5*(&$7
M-Fri. 9:30-5 Sat 10-4
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$/62:KHHO
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$10-10,000 A-#1 BUYER $
I want jewelry. Costume
etc, also pre-80’s glassware& misc. 503-869-2802
Male neutered cat with
green eyes. Last seen in
Mulino, may have a red
color. Please call
503-829-9876
_____________________________________
Sales Representative
The Pamplin Media Group is seeking a top-notch sales
representative to represent our new Business Tribune
publication. This publication runs in the Tuesday
Portland, as well as several other Pamplin weekly
newspapers.
This position requires an independent worker with at
least two years of successful sales experience,
including cold calling and in-person presentation skills.
Media sales experience is preferred, but other
business-to-business sales experience might be
considered. Strong computer, math, spelling and
grammar skills are a must.
We offer a base salary plus commission. In addition,
we offer a variety of benefits including paid vacation and
sick time, 401k, medical/dental/vision insurance, life
insurance and a variety of other insurances. We have a
fun and familial work environment.
If you are interested in this exciting and challenging
sales opportunity, please send resume with cover letter
to cmoore@commnewspapers.com
All applicants must be able to pass a pre-employment
criminal background check and drug test.
Bugatti’s is an equal opportunity employer.
Help
Wanted
6RQRJUDSKHU
Help
Wanted
Driver - Class A CDL
(Part-Time) – Savage Services Corp, is seeking a
highly motivated, productive, hard-worker at our
Portland, OR facility. Responsibilities include local
hauls, offloading of product, cleanliness, maintenance and safe operation
of equipment. Must have a
Class A CDL with doubles
and triples endorsement,
pneumatic experience and
2 years’ prior Class A experience. Prospective candidates must pass drug
screen & physical. EOE &
DRUG FREE. Interested
individuals should apply
online at:
www.savageservices.com
NEED HELP
WITH YOUR
CLASSIFIED
AD?
Call Mindy!
503-546-0760
for ad rates, general
information or help
writing your ad in any one
of our
Community Newspaper
Publications
and get the RESULTS
you want!
mjohnson@commnews
papers.com
Sonographer for a private
practice OB/GYN office in
Gresham. ARDMS
OB/GYN a must. Needs
current OBMI card. Preferable 2 years’ experience.
Assist Dr.s with
sonohysterograms
Must have excellent patient
care and be able to work
independently. Part time,
flexible hrs. Fax resume to
503-666-3298 or mail/bring
to 2150 NE Division Ste.
202, Gresham OR 97030
$.&6WDQGDUG
LIFELONG COLLECTOR
pays cash for GERMAN &
JAPANESE war relics.
Helmets, swords, flags etc.
(503)288-2462 | Portland
Business
Opportunities
$77(17,21
5($'(56
Records and Tapes
Due to the quantity and
variety of business opportunity listings we receive, it is impossible for
us to verify every opportunity
advertisement.
Readers respond to
business opportunity
ads at their own risk. If
in doubt about a particular offer, check with the
Better Business Bureau,
503-226-3981 or the
Consumer Protection
Agency, 503-378-4320,
BEFORE investing any
money.
Sheds/Outdoor
Buildings
Loans
&8672032/(
%8,/',1*6
5,',1*$5(1$6
It is illegal for companies
doing business by phone to
promise you a loan and
ask you to pay for it before
they deliver. For more information,
call
toll-free
1-877-FTC HELP. A public
service
message
from
Community Classifieds and
the Federal Trade Commission.
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YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD MARKETPLACE
✵
Meow! I’m Allie, the tiny cat
with the adorable black
and white markings. I love
to be held. In fact, I’m quite
content to hang out on
your lap or curled up in
your arms all day long! But
I also have a really playful
side and love to have fun
with all sorts of cat toys.
I’m quite the conversationalist as well. My little chirps
are as cute as I am! I’m
looking for a home filled
with lots of attention and
love. Come by to meet me
and we can talk all about it
at Animal Aid’s Show &
Tell Saturday. Please call
503-292-6628 option 3 or
visit
our
website:
www.animalaidpdx.org for
more information.
BALDWIN:
or visit
barnsrusonline.com
I’m a happy-go-lucky kitty
who is looking for my forever home. I’m a young
boy who enjoys exciting
games like chase the toy
mouse and follow the string. My outgoing personality will win you over! Stop
by Animal Aid’s Show &
Tell Saturday and and ask
for me, Baldwin! Please
call 503-292-6628 option 3
or
visit
our
website:
www.animalaidpdx.org for
more information.
Antiques/Collectibles
ccb# 117653
S A L E!
Sporting Goods
Up to 50% off on
clocks, pictures, misc.
glassware, etc. Rare
Chippendale banded
inlaid table with 2 - 24”
leaves, 8 carved
clawed feet chairs,
was $1850, now $1250.
Victorian cellander
desk, china cabinets,
bookcases, secretaries, drop front desks,
library tables, high
boys, dressers, nightstands, 15 sets of
chairs, rockers, corner
cabinets, buffets, rare
oak hall trees, stacking
bookcases, lots and
lots of glassware and
unusual items hard to
find. One stop shopping. We’re dealing our
loss - YOU SAVE ON
THIS SALE!
——————————
————
)25'
(;3/25(5;
Less than 93,000 miles.
White, good rubber, fairly
new brakes, tow package.
$5,600 or bring offer.
Call 503-668-7252 or
971-832-4445
&$6+)25*816
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6,1*/(3,(&(6
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PORTLAND N:
321< (;35(66
$17,48(6
“Original” Rose City
GUN SHOW
Nov 22nd, 9am-6pm
Nov 23rd, 9am-4pm
Portland EXPO Center
Admission $10
503-363-9564
Apparel/Jewelry
Bella!
Get cash for your
VIDEO GAMES
Today!
503-877-9501
Sell it today
in the
Classifieds.
Call 503-620-SELL
(503-620-7355)
503-620-SELL (7355)
✵
Food/Meat/Produce
%3 +,7=)$50
•Apples - MANY Varieties
•Pears •Onions •Potatoes
•Squash ‡Walnuts
‡Filberts ‡Chestnuts
‡Apple Cider & MORE!
Stand open 1:30 - 5:30
Closed Monday
:LOFR+Z\
:RRGEXUQ
bphitzapples.com
8:30 AM - 5:00 PM
Come meet cute as a button, Minnie, at our Homes
for the Holidays Adoption
Events.
Minnie
is
uber-affectionate and is
looking for a forever lap.
She loves to talk and tell
you all about her day. She
loves to play, but sometimes it is too rough for the
other cats, so, a dog or a
dog sized cat may be her
best companion. She is
about 2, spayed, vaccinated, micro-chipped, and
is eligible for 30 days free
health insurance. Minnie
will be available to meet,
until she is adopted. Come
meet her Saturdays at our
Homes for the Holiday
Adoption Events in Beaverton and Forest Grove.
Email
theoregoncat@gmail.com
for hours and locations.
&RUULQH
Have you ever seen such a
cute kitty smile?! I’m
Corrine the Lynx point Siamese and not only am I
adorable, I’m sweet, affectionate, and looking for my
purrfect match. I love to be
brushed more than anything and a nice warm lap,
it’s my favorite place to be!
Stop by Animal Aid’s Show
& Tell Saturday and and
ask for me, Corrine! Please
call 503-292-6628 option 3
or visit our website:
www.animalaidpdx.org for
more information.
(1*/,6+0$67,))
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House raised with our
family, variety of colors,
Large sweet gentle giants,
Call to see our cute babies.
360-562-1584
Young, playful, hilarious,
medium sized tan and
white spayed female Shelter dog mystery mix, great
with children and adults,
loves to start and play
chase games be in your
lap, knows some basic
commands, has been an
only family dog, lost her
home dueot misfortune
when her owner lost his;
looking for a new family to
call her own, tired of shelter life, rescue involved .
For more information call
503.625.4563 or E-mail
gocbwatchdog@aol.com
Gino’s gentle personality
emerges after he has had
an opportunity to relax and
become comfortable in a
new environment. This
sweet cat thrives on attention and will flourish in a
home with regular activity.
Gino loves to chase string
toys and to receive chin
scratches. Gino is waiting
at Cat Adoption Team’s
Sherwood shelter:
14175 SW Galbreath
Drive 503-925-8903
catadoptionteam.org
Tuesday-Friday, 12-7 pm;
Sat-Sun, 12-6 pm;
Closed Monday
Clausine
*5($73<5(1((6
3833,(6
Computers/
Electronics
Holiday Deadline
We will have the following
early deadlines:
12/30 edition
LineCopy, Wed,12/24 at
Noon
Display, Tues, 12/23 at
Noon
1/1 edition
LineCopy, Mon,12/29 at
Noon
Display, Fri, 12/26 at
Noon
Community Classifieds
office will be closed on
Thursday,
January 1, 2015.
Brown, red & black- male
& females avail, all shots,
microchip, housebroke,
crate trained,
Ready Now! $950
Go to our Web site:
www.ourpoeticpoodles.net
or call (509)582-6027.
ALLIE:
I WILL BUY YOUR VINYL
RECORDS!!!
I’m currently looking to buy
record album collections of
any size. Please call me to
set up an appointment. If
I’m interested, I will come
to you and make a cash offer!!! You can reach me at:
323-301-5746.
FUR COAT: Muskrat, 42’’
long, $600. Call for details,
preferably
mornings,
503-803-5527 please leave
a message if no answer.
The Portland Tribune
Pets & Supplies
This is the mysterious and
unique Cole who has silky
black fur, a slender build,
beautiful green eyes and a
passion for cat toys! While
it may not happen immediately, Cole enjoys being affectionate with people and
will climb up on them and
hug them like a koala bear
once he gets to know
them. For
more
info,
please call:
503-292-6628 option 3 or
visitour website:
www.animalaidpdx.org
3RRGOH3XSSLHV
wesknodelgunshows.com
New Year’s
Cole:
5 0 3. 6 7 9. 3 6 0 5
6712 NE Sandy Blvd.
Wed - Sun 10-5,
closed Mon & Tues
or by appt.
503-287-8796
Announcements/
Notices
Pets & Supplies
EASTERN HAY
ORGANICALLY
GROWN.
$230/TON DELIVERED
TO SANDY.
100LB BAILS.
ALFALFA GRASS MIX.
503-504-2317
Help those in need.
Paying up to $30 per
box. Free pickup.
Call Sharon:
Bugatti’s Family of Restaurants is Oregon owned and
operated since 1991. We have the distinctive dinner
house Ristorante in West Linn on Hwy. 43, and three
family style Italian restaurants in Beaverton,
Tanasbourne, and Oregon City. We are currently
looking for cooks (sauté, grill, pizza & salad) for our
Cedar Hills and Oregon City locations.
To Apply: www.bugattisrestaurant.com
Download, print and complete an application and email
to the General Manager of the restaurant in which you
are interested in becoming a team member.You may
also stop by the restaurant in person between the hours
of 2 pm to 4 pm.
Hay/Straw/Feed
CASH for DIABETIC
TEST STRIPS
Line Cooks (Sautee, Grill, Pizza & Salad)
We are looking for individuals who want long term
positions with the opportunity to grow within the
company. Must be a team player and available to work
a flexible schedule.
The Jewelry Buyer
20th N.E. Sandy PDX 503-239-6900
www.jewelrybuyerportland.com
Miscellaneous
Wanted
Lost & Found
WE BUY GOLD
Sterling Flatware -Silver-Pocket Watches
Health Care
Equipment
Please send resume with cover letter to
Gkraemer@CommNewspapers.com
.LRVN)HVWLYDO6XEVFULSWLRQ6DOHV
Community Newspapers circulation department has an
excellent opportunity to make great money in a
part-time position. As a community outreach
salesperson you will sell newspaper subscriptions for
our award-winning publications at kiosk and festivals
throughout the metropolitan area. If you have excellent
communication skills, the drive to succeed and ability
to work independently this could be the perfect position
for you.
Furniture/
Home Furnishings
Circulation Sales Manager
This job will require a tenacious individual with previous
business development experience to help grow sales for
this important publication. Ideally, this person would
have contacts in the Portland business arena. We are
looking for a personable individual, professional in
manner and appearance.
PA M P L I N M E D I A G R O U P
Announcements/
Notices
In a calm and attentive
home, Clausine is talkative, friendly, and adventurous. Clausine has a confident and lively personality
when she’s around patient
and slow-moving adults,
but the fast movements of
younger children can
sometimes make her nervous. Clausine adapts
quickly to a new environment and she likes attention. Clausine spends her
time at the Washington
Square PetSmart:
8825 SW Cascade Ave
503-644-3091
catadoptionteam.org
Sat and Sun, 12 pm-4 pm
Pure bread, $500. Ready
for new homes now, both
parents on site guarding
alpacas. This breed is
known to be a great family
dog. Wormed and shots,
6 males & 4 females.
Molalla area.509-314-5536
I FOUND A FOREVER
HOME!!!
You can help some of my
friends too. For more information call (503)
625-4563 or e-mail
gocbwatchdog@aol.com
✵ WWW .C OMMUNITY -C LASSIFIEDS .COM
Portland!Life
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
FOREST GROVE
¶V5DQFK
Pepai, a one and a half
year old tan and white
handsome, calm friendly,
American pit bull dog is on
a short time line at a
crowded shelter. He
is
there only because he lost
his home along with everything he knew that was familiar when his owner lost
hers. He loves pats, belly
scratches, playing with a
jolly ball, people, and ignores or is friendly with
dogs he has met. Now he
is the saddest dog on
earth: dejected, lonely and
suffering
from
shelter
stress. Rescue urgently
seeking foster. Fir more information
call
503.625.4563 or E-mail
gocbwatchdog@aol.com
Poplin is an active and adventurous cat who would fit
in with any home – as long
as there aren’t any other
cats. Poplin is a sweet and
adorable four-year-old cat
who looks forward to lots of
playtime interspersed with
some time for naps and
pets.You can find Poplin
at Cat Adoption Team’s
Sherwood shelter:
14175 SW Galbreath Dr
503-925-8903
catadoptionteam.org
Tuesday-Friday, 12-7 pm;
Sat-Sunday, 12-6 pm;
Closed Monday
SHERWOOD: $549,000
www.gslwestridgemeadows.com
PORTLAND NW:
Located near MAX,
Portland Streetcar & Bus.
Beautiful courtyards,
downtown view,
close to Waterfront Park
and the Pearl District.
Great amenities!
The Yards at
Union Station
815 NW Naito Pkwy
503-478-1695
gsltheyards.com
WHY STORE YOUR
RV ~ LET US TURN IT
IN TO $$$$$
NEWBERG/Bald Peak:
1 bdrm, 1 bath, view, W/D,
1300 sq ft, carport, storage, no smoking, no pets,
$850/month. 503-710-0820
We sell all types of RV’S.
Call about our consignment program. There are
no hidden fees.
Manufactured
Homes/Lots
Manufactured
Homes/Lots for Rent
1(:0DUOHWWH
6SHFLDO
1404 sqft,4/12 roof, arch
shingles,dbl dormer, 9lite
door,glamour bath,
appl pkg, fireplace,
$69,900 finished on site
PRICE GUARANTEED
TILL MARCH
JandMHomes.com
503-722-4500
‘80 COMMODORE
Newly remodeled Dbl wide
manufactured home,
2bdrms, with large closets,
1 bath, W/D hook-ups,
kitchen has new Pergo
flooring, new cabinets &
counter tops, New Dishwasher, sink & faucet,
electric range, living & bedroom has new carpet &
trim, New hotwater heater,
carport & two sheds, This
home is in a nice quiet 55
& older park with club
house & swimming pool.
space rent $540 includes
water/garbage, $22,500
owner will finance with 3/4
down. CALL MIKE
(503) 875-1531
:$17726(//"
We have buyers!
List your
MANUFACTURED HOME
JandMHomes.com
503-722-4500
WrightChoiceHomes.com
ZULJKWFKRLFHKRPHVFRP
Real Estate Wanted
+HOS)RU6HOOHUV
We take over your monthly
mortgage, keep your
house in EXCELLENT
condition and cash you out
at a future date. We are
not real estate agents.
We are serious home
buyers. How soon do you
want to move?
Call 503-953-0860
or 503-648-2119
Apartments for Rent
HILLSBORO:
Modern Downtown
Hillsboro Apartment.
W/D in unit. Free
Water/Sewer/Garbage,
across from MAX. *Income
Restrictions Apply.
City Center Apts,
160 SE Washington St.
503.693.9095
Gslcitycenter.com
SANDY
1HZHUEHGURRP
Mobile home. Very clean.
Large storage shed, covered deck, heat pump,
washer/dryer, etc.
Garbage, water, sewer provided. Wunder Mobile Park
$775 plus deposits.
Non-smoking, no pets.
Background check.
503/668-3715 or
503/317-6245
Auto Parts
& Accessories
7,5(6)256$/(
13”-16.5” from new to real
good. Call with size & type
wanted. (503) 754-7673
Boats/Motors/
Supplies
:,11(5
%2$7
1BD APARTMENT
NO SMOKING
NO PETS
Acreage/Lots
STORAGE
PROBLEMS?
Call
Community
Classifieds
and place a
Marketplace ad
to sell your
overstock items
Selling your RV!
We will get you
the most for your RV!
Here at Northwest RV we
have a large budget for
advertising that targets
buyers of all ages! We
advertise not just locally
but Nationwide and
throughout Canada!
6492 Portland Road NE
Salem, OR 97305
Call Jasmine at
503-393-3663
www.northwestrvsales.com
Lead paint poisoning affects
over one million children today.
Learning disabilities, hearing loss, speech delays, violent behavior
17’ 2”, Newer Full Canvas
Top & Interior & 120 Merc
Cruiser. Set up for fishing
or water skiing. These
boats are very, very rare.
Many extras- fishing related gear.
Has trolling
motor with it, if you wish.
Cheaper if you don’t. Nice
trailer. Heath forces sale.
PRICE HAS BEEN REDUCED TO $2900!
and, in rare cases, seizures and even death: these are just some
of the effects lead paint poisoning has on young children. If your
home was built before 1978, lead paint on your walls, doors,
windows and sills may be dangerous. And it’s not just large paint
chips that can cause damage. In fact, three granules of lead dust
Motorcycles
Scooters/ATVs
are enough to poison your child. Let’s make all kids lead-free kids.
To learn more about the simple steps you can take to safeguard
2009 KAWASAKI Ninja
250r: with 16,757 miles on
it. I am the second owner,
well maintained and runs
great. This is a great
starter bike and allows you
to learn at your own speed
while getting use to the
mechanics of a motorcycle.
Call or text 503-419-8748.
West Linn. Price: $2,800.
CHRISTMAS
SURPRISE!!!
MOLALLA:
First, last, & move-in
deposit, $500/ month.
Nice, clean, available now.
147 Shirley St. Call for info:
406-560-4437
All real estate advertised
herein is subject to the
Federal Fair Housing
Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status
or national origin, or intention to make any
such preferences, limitations or discrimination.
State law forbids discrimination in the sale,
rental or advertising of
real estate based on
factors in addition to
those protected under
federal law. Oregon
State law forbids discrimination based on
marital status. We will
not knowingly accept
any advertising for real
estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings
advertised are available
on an equal opportunity
basis.
Call Mike at
503-381-4772 for a
consignment or
purchase value.
Read our customer’s
testimonials at:
AdventureTradingRV.com
• • •
Located at the corner of
Beavercreek & Hwy 213
in Oregon City, by Appt.
Houses for Rent
38%/,6+(5¶6
127,&(
Travel Trailers,
Toy Haulers,
Motorhomes,
Fifth Wheels
5 acres, sloped, views
1977 dayranch, 1733 sf
Heat pump, fireplace,
deck, patio, tile roof,
Large attached garage,
Detached 2 car garage.
Tamara 503-819-3280
Elite Realty LTD
503-650-0061
!~VIDEO’S~!
Pictures & details
Oregon’s friendliest and
Most informative website
Huge selection of
MANUFACTURED &
MOBILE HOMES.
Family Owned Since 1992
Wacissa is a quiet, calm,
and affectionate cat who
would do well in a home
that is similar to her personality. Wacissa is a lap
cat who enjoys sleeping in
sunny spots, and occasionally, playing with a cat toy
or two. Wacissa’s dream
home will be as mellow as
she is, with only older children, easy-going cats, and
no dogs.You can meet
Wacissa at Cat Adoption
Team’s Sherwood shelter:
14175 SW Galbreath
Drive 503-925-8903
catadoptionteam.org
Tuesday-Friday, 12-7 pm;
Sat-Sunday, 12-6 pm;
Closed Monday
Let us sell your RV!
Northwest RV offers one
of the best consignment
programs around. We
have an outstanding
reputation for being #1 at
customer service.
Our specialty is -
PRISCILLA:
Hello there! I’m Priscilla,
the dark gray and white
kitty who looks like she’s
wearing a super hero
mask. If I had a super
power, it would be Being
Your Best Friend! I’m a
mellow kitty that is looking
for a nice quiet home to
call my own. I get along
well with other cats that are
also laid back. Please call
503-292-6628 option 3 or
visit
our
website:
www.animalaidpdx.org for
more information.
59&216,*10(176
www.community-classifieds.com
Pepai
A young dog lost in the
system
NEWBERG - $214,900
Single Level, 3 Bedroom,
1 Bath, Large Lot, Completely Remodeled.
807 Hulet St.
503-537-6407
PORTLAND NW:
1 Bed: $767, 2 Bed: $913!
Free Water/Sewer/Garb!
Spacious open floor plans
include full size W/D. Professional on-site mgmt.
Lush landscaping, Outdoor
Pool, Year round spa,
LARGE Patio w/storage.
*Income and Student
Restriction Apply.
*Pets Welcome!
Westridge Meadows
18476 NW Chemeketa Ln
503-439-9098
RVs & Travel
Trailers
2015 VESPA Primavera
150; Red, practically new,
300 miles, great for
commuting. Price includes
destination fee, setup,
fresh 4 year tags, high
friction brake pads, aux
12V outlet and euro
luggage compartment
(holds full-face helmet).
$4,399
Call 503-344-4473 or
503.781.2529
your family, log on to LEADFREEKIDS.org or call 800-424-LEAD.
Buy it!
Lovely
Marmalade
will
make a sweet addition to
your family this year. Marmalade is a 1-1/2 year old
female orange tabby with
the cutest little flag tail you
have ever seen. She loves
other kitties and would
make a great dog companion with a proper introduction. She is spayed, vaccinated,
micro-chipped,
and is eligible for 30 days
free
health
insurance.
Marmalade will be available to meet, until she is
adopted, Saturdays at our
Homes for the Holiday
Adoption Events in Beaverton and Forest Grove.
Email
theoregoncat@gmail.com
for hours and locations.
3 bedrooms, 1 bath Totally
remodeled! New kitchen
and appliances, new bathroom, efficient heating system, new windows, new insulation, hardwoods, deck.
Corner lot, dead end
street, next to greenspace.
Must see to appreciate!
1116 Hawthorne St.
Call 503-992-0805
Apartments for Rent
PLEASE NOTE:
Abbreviations destroy the
intent of your advertisement. Your advertisement
should be attractive and
easy to read. Let us help
you put together your advertisement. Call us today
at:
503-620-SELL(7355)
community-classifieds.com
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LIFE B5
Portland!Life
B6 LIFE
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
Service Directory
Home & Professional Services
Automotive Services
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Ballard Street
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LIFE B7
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Portland!Life
B8 LIFE
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
TribunePuzzles
The Crossword Puzzle
SOLUTIONS
“FIND OUT” By Peter Wentz Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
Puzzle 1
Puzzle 1
Sudoku
Puzzles
Puzzle 2
12/25/14
©2014 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
xwordeditor@aol.com
Puzzle 2
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484921.070814
Sudoku
Answers
Crossword
Answers
480263.030414
guard and coach
94 Metric lead-in
95 Hatfield, to a
McCoy
96 PC space bar
neighbor
97 Four laps, often
100 Tao, literally
101 Full legislative
assembly
/DNH*HQHYD
feeder
106 White __
107 Rembrandt van __
109 Former capital of
Crete
113 “Grand” brand of
ice cream
115 Epitome of
smoothness
116 Stuffed shirt
/LNHFKDOODKEUHDG
120 Sussex verb suffix
121 Sister
122 Moo goo __ pan
123 Good times
SOLUTIONS
Answer
12/25
©2014 King Features, Inc.
CRYPTOQUIP
12/25
12/25
12/25
Cryptoquip solution:
sentiment
59 Mont. neighbor
3DQGRUD·VER[IXO
60 Masters TV venue
/LNHDTXLFNOLQNV
since 1956
round
61 Word before “Who
18 16th-century
goes there?”
Spain, for one
)LJKWHU·VVWDW
19 So to speak
63 Fed after Capone
24 Wrong
64 Well-known
31 Indiscreet type
65 Slangy prefix
33 Nonsense
meaning “super”
/LNHVRPHENVIRU 66 Green-eyed
kids
67 Rowboat device
35 Napoleon cohort
68 Mole, perhaps
36 Big 12 rival of Kan. 71 Oldest active
(·HQLI
NBAer
&UHGLWRU·VORVV
76 “Goodness me!”
39 Chinese food
%XOOV·IDQV·FKDQW"
veggie
79 Pinochle
41 Flower feature
declaration
46 Sandpaper
81 Quaker possessive
coarseness
82 “Clumsy me!”
measure
84 Speedy superhero
47 Airer of many old
85 Arrive at, cowboyMGM films
style
49 After that
86 Thought process
52 Shouted
88 Sag
53 Years and years
89 Clip joints?
54 Winter Olympics
91 Messy room, to
event
mom
58 Thumbs (through)
93 Former Celtics
AFTER THAT
TEETER-TOTTER.
WAS INSTALLED
ON THE SHORE,
A LOT OF PEOPLE
SEESAWED SEASIDE.
80 Bronchitis
119
Imposing
VXIIHUHUV·DLGV
monetary penalties
81 Spinning toy
with a nice Chianti?
83 Orthogonal joint
124 Old tablet material
84 Spill preceder
125 “No surprise”
87 Conclusion letters 126 Holiday burner
88 “Yippee!”
127 Makes better
90 Heads of
128 Mocha residents
England?
129 Tiptoe past
%DVHEDOO·V0DWVXL
95 Pixie dust?
DOWN
98 Dutch city
1 Spoils
99 Iowa hrs.
2 Comeback
101 Gathers opinions
3 Resort WSW of
from
Boulder
102 BART stop
4 Blown-up detail
&KLFNHQ/LWWOH·V
5 Took the plunge
concern
6 Makes, as a perp
104 Written warning
7 Word with car or
about gangster
top
Gotti?
8 Ski lodge drink
$XEXUQ·VFRQI
&KDUOWRQ·V
110 Many a 19th-cen.
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map
co-star
111 Fair-hiring abbr.
10 Excellent, in slang
79·V´6FLHQFH
11 SFO posting
Guy”
12 Physiques
114 Shot with extreme /RQJ,VODQGWRZQ
spin
14 Rat out
118 Negative particle /RYHOHWWHU
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ACROSS
Come again?
Sampled, with “of”
Bright bunch
Anthem with the
line “The True
North strong and
free!”
21 Muscle ache
cause
22 Prestigious octet
)OLJKWDWWHQGDQW·V
reminder when
serving alcohol?
25 Mideast peninsula
26 Fixed, as a pump
27 Org. with a Double
Down sandwich
+LSKRSSHU·V
adjective
29 Crashed, so to
speak
30 Up to, in invites
32 Equine exhibition
with poor visibility?
37 “Conan” airer
40 __ Equis: Mexican
beer
42 Dice, e.g.
43 Prefix with natal
44 Be beholden
45 Stick around for
sautéing?
48 Well-mannered
manor man
50 Fridge problem
,WSUREDEO\ZRQ·W
keep you up
52 Collectible frame
55 “All yours!”
56 Sobriety
checkpoint target,
for short
57 “Tasty!”
·V·V1+/HU
NQRZQDV´/XFN\
Pierre”
'LGQ·WGHYLDWHIURP
64 Energizing
bluegrass
instruments?
69 U.K. medal
70 Conservatory subj.
72 Decrease
73 Subj. for refugees
´$QQDEHO/HHµ
monogram
75 Craze for some
moms?
78 Fig. in many
churches
1
8
15
20
LOOK NO FURTHER
Published every Tuesday and Thursday
www.portlandtribune.com | 503.684.0360
SPORTS B9
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
Eggers: Locey plans major recruiting push
■ From page 12
The Lewis & Clark administration’s support has been
in question in the past. Lack
of financial packaging often
has made it difficult to attract quality football talent,
and admission requirements
can be a challenging piece of
the roster-building equation,
too.
But there is a growing appreciation for the unifying effect football can have on a
college campus.
Barry Glassner, hired as
university president in 2010,
dean of student life Anna
Gonzalez, and new athletic
director Shana Levine are
among those working to
make the program successful
and relevant, at least on a regional scale.
“There was a time when
football wasn’t a priority for
the institution,” says Levine,
35, Lewis & Clark’s AD since
July. “It is
now.
“We want to
make football
more competitive. It’s an
important
program for
the college.
Jay is the
LEVINE
right choice to
lead our program into the
next chapter.
I’m excited to
have his leadership on
board.”
Jon Jaqua,
who has been
on the L&C
Board of
ROCHON
Trustees for
several years
and was involved in the interviewing process in hiring Locey, has a unique perspective.
Jaqua, 66, starred under Fred
Wilson and is the only Pioneer to have played in the
NFL (Washington, 1970-73).
Jaqua is a successful businessman, with homes in Portland and Eugene, and believes his alma mater is
ready for a major change.
“More than anything, it’s
philosophical,” Jaqua says.
“A problem has been not
staying current with your
ability to compete as you
raise your academic standards. When you’re in Division III, with no athletic
scholarships, you have to
change strategically. I don’t
think Lewis & Clark has done
that.
“But we are committed to it
now, with the president we
have and other aspects that
will affect the program in a
positive way.”
One of those aspects is better use of the school’s multicultural grants, based on
need, for minority students.
The NWC schools that are
similar to Lewis & Clark in
terms of academic standing
as well as price tag — Willamette and Puget Sound —
use such programs.
“The reality is, Lewis &
Clark is behind the 8-ball,
and it’s not something Jay
will turn around in a year,”
Jaqua says. “It’s not just the
football coach here. Everybody else has to buy into this
approach. And there has to
COURTESY OF LEWIS & CLARK COLLEGE
Jay Locey, who enj oyed plenty of success at Linfi eld during 2 3 years with the Wildcats, including 10 as head coach, says one of his top priorities at Lewis & Clark will be adding
numbers to the program — with 4 0 or more freshmen nex t season, if possible.
be some success on the fundraising side for scholarships
and facilities.
“For parents with kids who
are high academic performers
as well as good athletes, there
is an attraction to a college
like Lewis & Clark. When you
have the capability to provide
a variety of scholarships for
talents the kids may have —
whether academic or meritbased or to increase diversity
— it’s an approach that can be
beneficial.”
There were 58 players on
Lewis & Clark’s roster this
fall, with about 40 of them eligible to return. Locey wants
to get the squad number to 80
for next season.
“You have to recruit numbers,” Locey says. “I’d like to
get a group of 40-plus freshmen in. I’ve talked to the
(current) players. They’d like
to have a larger crew.
“We’ll push our strong
points — the opportunity to
play right away, a fresh start
with a new program. I want
to say we’re going to have a
very competent coaching
staff. Strong academics, a
beautiful campus and venue.
“ He’s the kind of guy you
want to run a program.
He had a remarkable run
as head coach at Linfi eld,
and he made a big impact
with our program at
Oregon State, fi rst as a
coach, then with our life
skills program.”
—
Mike Riley
... Lewis & Clark is an incredible place.”
Locey is putting together a
staff, using his connections at
Oregon State and Linfield for
starters. He also will interview some of the members of
Solages’ L&C staff.
The 2014 Pioneers, with
freshman quarterback Cody
Rochon, used the spread
offense, often utilizing four
receivers.
“That’s probably the starting point for us next season,”
Locey says. “You go with
what you’ve got that first fall.
Then we’ll see what we can
PORTLAND TRIBUNE PUBLIC NOTICE 122514
Trib Info Box 0813
View legals online at: http://publicnotices.portlandtribune.com
PUBLIC AND LEGAL NOTICES
These notices give information concerning actions planned and
implemented by attorneys, financial institutions and government
agencies. They are intended to keep you and every citizen fully informed.
IT
introduce.”
Locey says much of what
he’ll employ will be what he
learned from former Corvallis
High teammate Riley during
their nine years together at
OSU.
“I had a great tenure at Oregon State, and I learned a lot
from Mike, both as as a position coach and in terms of player development, life skills and
job networking — the beyondfootball stuff,” Locey says.
“Those were some really good
things I’ll be able to apply at
Lewis & Clark.”
The Pioneers hope he’ll be
able to lead them to victories
on the football field, too.
“The experience and success
Jay has had, and the exposure
to football at a much higher
level in the Pac-12, has us excited,” Jaqua says.
“He has proven himself over
a number of years,” Jaqua
adds. “We need some real leadership to change the performance in this program. It’s
been in such dire need. I think
Jay is the guy to do it.”
kerryeggers@portlandtribune.com
Twitter: @kerryeggers
only
COURTESY OF OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY
New Lewis & Clark football coach Jay Locey was Mike Riley’s chief of
staff at Oregon State the past two years.
TAKES A SPARK.
Space-reservation deadline for all legal notices is Thursday 10 am
one week prior to publication. Please call Louise Faxon at (503) 546-0752
or e-mail legals@commnewspapers.com to book your notice.
CLEVE B. COLSON
BINGHAM COUNTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY
CODY L. BROWER
Deputy Prosecuting Attorney
501 North Maple, #302, Blackfoot, Idaho 83221-1700
Phone: (208) 782-3101
Attorney for the Plaintiff
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL
DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE
COUNTY OF BINGHAM MAGISTRATE DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF:
DILANIAN LYNN STOCKTON
D.O.B.: 06/24/2012, A Child Under Eighteen (18) Years of
Age.
Case No. CV-2013-1563
NOTICE OF HEARING ON PETITION FOR
TERMINATION OF PARENT-CHILD RELATIONSHIP
TO: BLAKE JOHNSON
YOU WILL TAKE NOTICE that the Plaintiff, State of
Idaho, will call up for hearing its Petition to Terminate Parental
Rights on the 20th day of January, 2015, at the courtroom of the
Magistrate Division, Bingham County Courthouse, at the hour
of 10:30 o’clock a.m., or as soon thereafter as counsel can be
heard.
DATED this 3rd day of December 2014.
/s/ CODY L. BROWER
Deputy Prosecuting Attorney
Publish 12/18, 12/25/2014, 01/01/2015.
PT1326
PLEASE RECYCLE THIS PAPER
Please
ONLY YOU CAN PREVENT WILDFIRES.
smokeybear.com
B10 SPORTS
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
COURTESY OF SCOBEL WIGGINS
Guard Jamie Weisner (above) and Sydney Wiese form a starting backcourt for Oregon State that is averaging a combined 2 5 points, 8 .3 rebounds and 8 .3 assists per game and shooting 50 .0 percent from the fi eld (4 6 .9
percent on 3 - pointers). The Beavers are 10 - 0 and tied for No. 10 in the natonal rankings.
Improving Beavers splash into top 10
Trip to Tennessee
next challenge before
run at Pac-12 title
By KERRY EGGERS
The Tribune
The good news: Oregon
State moved into a tie for 10th
place in the Associated Press
women’s basketball poll this
week, matching the team’s
highest ranking ever.
The bad news: Just ahead of
them in ninth spot was North
Carolina, a team the Beavers
thumped 70-55 at Chapel Hill last
Tuesday.
So maybe the nation’s pundits
aren’t totally buying into Oregon
State (10-0), one of the five teams
left standing as undefeated in the
country.
Doesn’t matter to Scott Rueck,
who in his fifth season as OSU’s
coach has built a program that
may have national championship
contention in its near future.
“We’re learning that this is a
team that loves every challenge,”
Rueck says. “I always care about
how well (the players) get along,
and they love each other. So it’s a
sustainable group that will maintain a high level of focus. They’re
not going to have a lot of bad
days. And they keep getting better.”
The Tar Heels were 9-0 and
ranked No. 6 when Oregon State
made the cross-country trek for
the colossal intersectional matchup last week. The Beavers
jumped on them early and never
let up, 6-6 junior Ruth Hamblin
leading the way with 17 points, 10
rebounds and five blocked shots.
Oregon State then moved on to
New Orleans, where victories
over Southern Illinois (71-55) and
Nevada (73-50) kept them on
course for a top-10 ranking.
“I loved what we did on the
trip,” says Rueck, whose Beavers
finished 24-11 and lost to South
Carolina in the second round of
the NCAA Tournament last season. “It was successful on many
levels. (The players) rose to the
Ruth Hamblin,
Oregon State’s
6 - 6 center, leads
the nation this
season in fi eldgoal accuracy
(6 8 .9 percent)
and is fi rst in the
Pac- 12 in
blocked shots
(3 .4 per game).
COURTESY OF
SCOBEL WIGGINS
challenges back there.”
In 2010, Rueck took over a program left in shambles by his successor, LaVonda Wagner. Oregon
State was to finish 9-21 that season, but one of two Pac-12 victories was a keeper — a 61-59 Civil
War win over Oregon in which
the Ducks led by 20 points at halftime.
“Everything is relative,” Rueck
says. “That was a signature win
for our program at the time. It
gave everybody hope for the future. It helped with recruiting.
“The North Carolina game is
similar. It’s significant. It’s a statement win, one that can take your
program’s trajectory to the next
level. Our team can view ourselves a little differently now. We
truly can not only play with anybody now, we can beat them.”
The triumph over Southern Illinois was made more difficult by
the first-half ejection of Rueck,
who came to the defense of Deven Hunter after the 6-3 forward
was given a technical foul for
dropping the ball instead of handing it to the official.
Rueck objected to the technical, was meted two quick T’s himself and handed the second ejection of his tenure at OSU.
“I didn’t feel we were playing
great, so I was a little frustrated,
anyway,” Rueck says. “There
were a couple of calls I didn’t
agree with. One thing led to another, and the next thing I knew, I
was in a locker room.
“It was weird. I don’t condone
what Deven did — dropping the
ball because she didn’t agree
with the call (a foul on teammate
Ali Gibson). She should have
been given a delay of game, or a
warning. But this official chose to
give her a technical. That’s what I
questioned.
“I told him, ‘In 19 years as a
head coach, I’ve never seen a
player given a technical for tossing the ball away.’ She didn’t
throw it at somebody or into the
bleachers. I mean, no way is that
a technical foul.”
After sinking six straight free
throws, the Salukis had an eightpoint lead. The Beavers whittled
the difference to two at halftime,
COURTESY OF KARL MAASDAM
Scott Rueck (right), in his fi fth year as coach of the Oregon State women’s basketball team, has the
Beavers climbing in the national rankings as they prepare for a Sunday clash at No. 8 Tennessee, which is
9- 2 and coming off a 59- 4 0 win at home over Stanford
then took care of business in the
second half.
“Great job by the players of
coming out and playing our style
of basketball,” Rueck says. “And
by our staff of taking over and
running the team in the second
half.”
The Beavers are led by a pair
of All-America candidates in
Hamblin, who leads the nation in
field-goal percentage (.689) and
ranks 12th in blocked shots (3.4),
and Sydney Wiese, the 6-foot
sophomore point guard who is
eighth nationally in 3-point percentage (.517) and 13th in assists
(6.0).
“Ruth has taken her game to
another level efficiency-wise,”
Rueck says of Hamblin, who
leads the Beavers in scoring (14.0)
and rebounds (8.9) despite playing only 21.4 minutes per game.
“She started the year knowing
who she is offensively, and she’s
added to the game on that end.
Defensively, she continues to be
who she is — as imposing a force
as there is in our sport. She was
the key to the game against North
Carolina. She started the game
with so much poise offensively.
“Sydney is just a great player,
and she has such an elite mindset. She wants to be so good. She
is constantly improving. Our expectations for her are huge, and
she embraces that. Everybody
knows she’s a 3-point shooter, but
she’s becoming more of a playmaker, and her defensive intensity and execution at that end are
night and day from where they
were a year ago.”
Then there is Hunter, the
McNary High grad who scores,
rebounds, passes and defends.
“I refer to her as our ‘X factor,’” Rueck says. “When Deven
brings her ‘A game,’ we’re tough
to beat. She’s the best athlete on
the team, and she impacts the
game at both ends in so many
ways. Her rebounding in the second half against North Carolina
was the difference. She scored
on three putbacks that helped us
separate and hold off a (Tar
Heel) run.”
There is little rest for the Beavers. Before they open Pac-12
play at UCLA on Jan 3, there is
another huge intersectional on
Sunday — against eighth-ranked
Tennessee at Knoxville, Tenn.
The Volunteers “are similar to
North Carolina,” Rueck says.
“They’re extremely athletic.
They love transition and are
great on the offensive glass. It’s
another huge test, one we’re all
looking forward to. I think it will
get the best out of us.”
It’s early, but Rueck has a
good feeling about the 2014-15
Beavers.
“We can shoot better. We can
add some things defensively.
There are a few more steps we
can keep taking,” Rueck says,
“but I’m excited to see where we
can go.
“We play in a conference that
continues to improve, top to bottom. I hope we’re at the top when
it finishes.”
kerryeggers@portlandtribune.com
Twitter: @kerryeggers
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SPORTS B11
The Portland Tribune Thursday, December 25, 2014
MainEvents
Friday, Dec. 26
Blazers: Philadelphia at Portland, 7 p.m. (KGW
8).
Prep boys basketball: Liberty-Wheeler
(Marietta, Ga.), Les Schwab Invitational, Liberty
High, 7 p.m. ... Roosevelt-Hudson’s Bay, Century/
Hillsboro Christmas Classic, Hillsboro High, 6:30
p.m. ... Wilson at Punahou High Invitational,
Honolulu.
Prep girls basketball: Madison-Barlow,
Gresham Holiday Tournament, Gresham High, 2
p.m. ... Franklin-North Eugene, Gresham Holiday
Tournament, Gresham High, 5:30 p.m. ... JeffersonKelso (Wash.), Evergreen Holiday Tournament,
Evergreen (Wash.) High, 3:30 p.m.
Saturday, Dec. 27
Winterhawks: Portland at Seattle, 7 p.m.
College women’s basketball: San Diego at
Portland, 5 p.m.
College men’s basketball: Portland at San
Diego, 6 p.m.
Prep boys basketball: Les Schwab Invitational
at Liberty High — Reynolds-Jesuit, 9 a.m. ... Lake
Oswego-Peninsula, Wash., 10:30 a.m. ... South
Salem-Jefferson, noon ... Central CatholicLakeridge, 1:30 p.m. ... Oregon City-Rainier Beach,
Wash., 4 p.m. ... Grant-West Linn, 5:30 p.m. ...
Montverde (Fla.) Academy-Westview, 7 p.m. ...
Reynolds-Jesuit winner vs. Liberty-Wheeler
(Marietta, Ga.) winner, 8:30 p.m.
Roosevelt at Century/Hillsboro Christmas
Classic, Century High ... Wilson at Punahou
Invitational, Honolulu. ... Valley Catholic at Portland
Adventist Academy, 7:30 p.m.
Prep girls basketball: Cleveland-La Salle Prep,
Les Schwab Holiday Tournament, Bend High, 4:15
p.m. ... Lincoln-Forest Grove, Les Schwab Holiday
Tournament, Bend High, 6 p.m. ... Central CatholicSouth Salem, Nike Interstate Shootout Swoosh,
Lake Oswego High, 1 p.m. ... St. Mary’s AcademyGlencoe, Nike Interstate Shootout Swoosh, Lake
Oswego High, 3:30 p.m. ... Jesuit-Lynnwood
(Wash.), Nike Interstate Shootout Swoosh, Lake
Oswego High, 8 p.m. ... Grant-Pendleton. Nike
Interstate Shootout Les Schwab, Lake Oswego
High, 3:30 p.m. ... Wilson-Iolani (Hawaii), Nike
Interstate Shootout Les Schwab, Lake Oswego
High, 6:30 p.m. ... Franklin, Madison at Gresham
Holiday Tournament, Gresham High. ... Benson at
Evergreen Holiday Tournament, Evergreen (Wash.)
High. ... De La Salle North Catholic-Battle Ground
(Wash.) at Evergreen High, 4:30 p.m. ... Portland
Adventist Academy at Valley Catholic, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 28
Seahawks: St. Louis at Seattle, 1:25 p.m.
(FOX 12).
Blazers: New York at Portland, 6 p.m. (CSNNW).
Winterhawks: Spokane at Portland, Memorial
Coliseum, 5 p.m.
College women’s basketball: Oregon State at
Tennessee, 10 a.m. PT
Prep boys basketball: Les Schwab Invitational
at Liberty High, games at 10:30 a.m., noon, 1:30
p.m., 4 p.m., 5:30 p.m., 7 p.m., 8:30 p.m. ...
Franklin-Sprague, Abby’s Holiday Classic, North
Medford High.
Prep girls basketball: Franklin, Madison,
Gresham Holiday Tournament, Gresham High ...
Cleveland, Lincoln, La Salle Prep, Les Schwab
Holiday Tournament, Bend High ... Grant, Wilson,
Nike Interstate Shootout Les Schwab, Lake Oswego
High ... Central Catholic, Jesuit, St. Mary’s
Academy, Nike Interstate Shootout Swoosh, Lake
Oswego High.
Monday, Dec. 29
Prep boys basketball: Les Schwab Invitational
at Liberty High, games at 8:30 a.m., 10 a.m.,
11:30 a.m., 1 p.m., 4:30 p.m., 6 p.m., 7:30 p.m.,
9 p.m. ... La Salle Prep-Canby, Barlow Trail
Tournament, Barlow High, 2:30 p.m. ... LincolnWest Salem at Tigard Tournament, Tigard High, 4
p.m. ... Benson-Hermiston at Barlow Trail
Tournament, Barlow High, 5:30 p.m. ... Parkrose at
David Douglas, 7:15 p.m. ... Franklin, Cleveland at
Abby’s Holiday Classic, South Medford High ...
Roosevelt at Century/Hillsboro Christmas Classic,
Century High ... Wilson at Punahou Invitational,
Honolulu ... City Christian-Portland Christian,
Riverdale Holiday Tournament, Riverdale High,
10:30 a.m. ... Oregon Episcopal vs. TBD, Riverdale
Holiday Tournament, Riverdale High, time TBD ...
Columbia Christian-Catlin Gabel, Riverdale Holiday
Tournament, Riverdale High, 4:30 p.m. ... Cedar
Park Christian (Wash.)-Riverdale, Riverdale Holiday
Tournament, Riverdale High, 7:30 p.m.
Prep girls basketball: Roosevelt-McKay at
Hillsboro High, 6:30 p.m. ... Sprague at Parkrose,
7:15 p.m. ... Jefferson-La Center (Wash.),
Evergreen Holiday Tournament, Evergreen (Wash.)
High ... Benson at Evergreen Holiday Tournament ...
Cleveland, Lincoln, La Salle Prep, Les Schwab
Holiday Tournament, Bend High ... Grant, Wilson,
Nike Interstate Shootout Les Schwab, Lake Oswego
High ... Central Catholic, Jesuit, St. Mary’s
Academy, Nike Interstate Shootout Swoosh, Lake
Oswego High ... Lake Oswego JV2 at Riverdale,
Riverdale Holiday Tournament, 6 p.m. ... De La
Salle North Catholic at Evergreen (Wash.), noon ...
City Christian-Portland Christian, Riverdale Holiday
Tournament, Riverdale High, 9 a.m. ... Columbia
Christian-Catlin Gabel, Riverdale Holiday
Tournament, Riverdale High, 3 p.m. ... Triangle Lake
at Portland Lutheran, 1A Hoops Classic, 6:30 p.m.
Prep wrestling: Cleveland, Franklin, Northwest
Duels, Westview High.
College women’s basketball: Seattle at Oregon, 4
p.m. ... Warner Pacific at Cal State Maritime, 4 p.m.
College men’s basketball: UC Irvine at Oregon,
8 p.m.
TV&Radio
Thursday, Dec. 25
NBA: Washington at New York,
9 a.m., ESPN ... Oklahoma City at
San Antonio, 11:30 a.m., KATU
(2), KFXX (1080 AM) ... Cleveland
at Miami, 2 p.m., KATU (2), KFXX
(1080 AM) ... L.A. Lakers at
Chicago, 5 p.m., NBA ... Golden
State at L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m.,
NBA
Friday, Dec. 26
Blazers: Philadelphia at
Portland, 7 p.m., KGW (8), KPOJ
(620 AM), KKRZ (102.3 FM)
Heart of Dallas Bowl: IllinoisLouisiana Tech, Cotton Bowl,
Dallas, 10 a.m., ESPN
Quick Lane Bowl: RutgersNorth Carolina, Ford Field, Detroit,
1:30 p.m., ESPN
St. Petersburg Bowl: North
Carolina State at Central Florida,
Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg,
Fla., 5 p.m., ESPN, KFXX (1080
AM)
Prep girls basketball: Hillsboro
at Century, 6:30 p.m., KUIK (1360
AM)
Prep boys basketball: Hillsboro
at Century, 8:15 p.m., KUIK (1360
AM)
Saturday, Dec. 27
Winterhawks: Portland at
Seattle, 7 p.m., KPAM (860 AM)
Military Bowl: CincinnatiVirginia Tech, Navy-Marine Corps
Stadium, Annapolis, Md., 10 a.m.,
ESPN
Sun Bowl: Arizona State-Duke,
Sun Bowl, El Paso, Texas, 11 a.m.,
KOIN (6), KFXX (1080 AM)
Independence Bowl: MiamiSouth Carolina, Independence
Stadium, Shreveport, La., 12:30
p.m., KATU (2)
Pinstripe Bowl: Boston
College-Penn State, Yankee
Stadium, Bronx, N.Y., 1:30 p.m.,
ESPN, KFXX (1080 AM)
Holiday Bowl: Nebraska-USC,
Qualcomm Stadium, San Diego,
Calif., ESPN, KFXX (1080 AM)
College men’s basketball:
Portland at San Diego, 6 p.m.,
KMTT (910 AM) ... Georgetown at
Indiana, 9 a.m., ESPN2 ... Maine
at Seton Hall, 9 a.m., FS1 ...
Kentucky at Louisville, 11 a.m.,
ESPN2 ... Gonzaga at BYU, 3 p.m.,
ESPN2, KUIK (1360 AM) ... UAB
at North Carolina, 4:30 p.m.,
ESPN2
NHL: Washington at Pittsburgh,
4:30 p.m., NBC Sports ... San
Jose at Los Angeles, 7 p.m., NBC
Sports
Sunday, Dec. 28
Blazers: New York at Portland,
6 p.m., CSNNW, KPOJ (620 AM),
KKRZ (102.3 FM)
Seahawks: St. Louis at Seattle,
1:25 p.m., FOX (12), KUFO (970
AM)
NFL: San Diego at Kansas City,
10 a.m., KOIN (6) ... Oakland at
Denver, 1 p.m., KOIN (6) ...
Arizona at San Francisco, 1:25
p.m., KUIK (1360 AM)
Winterhawks: Spokane at
Portland, Memorial Coliseum, 5
p.m., KPAM (860 AM)
College women’s basketball:
Notre Dame at UCLA, 1 p.m., Pac12 Networks
College men’s basketball: St.
John’s-Tulane, Brooklyn, N.Y., 9
a.m., FS1 ... Harvard at Arizona
State, 11 a.m., Pac-12 Networks
... Morgan State at Marquette, 11
a.m., FS1 ... Wake Forest at
Richmond, 1 p.m., NBC Sports ...
Florida Gulf Coast at Xavier, 1
p.m., FS1 ... UC Davis at
Washington State, 3 p.m., Pac-12
Networks ... Belmont at Butler, 3
p.m., FS1 ... Stony Brook at
Washington, 5 p.m., Pac-12
Networks ... Cal State Bakersfield
at Cal, 7 p.m., Pac-12 Networks
Monday, Dec. 29
Liberty Bowl: Texas A&M-West
Virginia, Liberty Bowl Memorial
Stadium, Memphis, Tenn., 11
a.m., ESPN
Russell Athletic Bowl:
Oklahoma-Clemson, Florida Citrus
Bowl, Orlando, Fla., 2:30 p.m.,
ESPN
Texas Bowl: Arkansas-Texas,
NRG Stadium, Houston, 6 p.m.,
ESPN
College men’s basketball: UC
Irvine at Oregon, 8 p.m., Pac-12
Networks, KXTG (1080 AM)
College women’s basketball:
Seattle at Oregon, 4 p.m., KSTG
(1080 AM)
Birthdays
Dec. 25, 1949
Bernie Fryer
(age 65)
The Port Angeles,
Wash., native played
college basketball at
BYU, then was a 6-3
guard for the Trail
Blazers in 1973-74,
earning second-team
all-rookie honors with
FRYER
7.0 points and 3.5
assists in 80 games.
In 1978, he embarked on a long career
as an NBA referee. He hung up the
whistle after the 2007 NBA finals, then
became vice president and director of
officials for the league.
History
Dec. 25-30, 1965
Oregon State continues its domination of the Far West Classic men’s basketball tournament, an annual holiday
tradition at Memorial Coliseum.
The Paul Valenticoached Beavers
defeat Air Force,
Arizona State and
Stanford, in that
order, to win the
eight-team affair for
the 10th year in a row
and run their win
streak in the tourney
VALENTI
to 27 games.
In the final, played
before a crowd of 12,218, 6-5 sophomore Loy Petersen scores a game-high
30 points as OSU takes control early
against the Cardinal.
Petersen makes the all-tourney team
along with four others, including
Michigan guard Cazzie Russell, whose
91 total points beat the FWC record for
three games of 89 set by Oregon State
center Mel Counts in 1963.
The Oregon Ducks’ hopes take a hit
a few hours before their opening game,
a 77-66 loss to Utah State, as guard
Jim Barnett is lost for at least two
weeks when a teammate slams a door
on his hand at the Benson Hotel.
Barnett loses two fingernails.
UO: Ducks have big lag before Rose Bowl
■ From page 12
this, we need to do that.’”
The response was that positive, he says, because “across the
board, in every phase, our program is a program and a team.
That’s important.”
Now comes the Jan. 1 Rose
Bowl final four matchup between
the No. 2-ranked Ducks and Florida State, which is an imposing
(13-0, defending national champion) No. 3 seed.
FSU has played a lot of close
games this season, but has survived every test to run its winning streak to 29 games.
Helfrich’s take on star quarterback Jameis Winston and the
Seminoles: “A lot of times against
a team like Florida State and its
talent, (opponents) are going to
do something a little different. Or
(FSU) will get every single team’s
best shot, best week of preparation, most dialed in sense of urgency of meetings, everything in
that week when you’re trying to
knock off No. 1. When you’ve
won 29 straight, people are dialed
into that.
“So it’s been that much more
impressive the way they’ve been
able to come back (in games).
Usually it’s (Winston) making a
couple plays down the stretch.”
■ The Ducks have pulled out
a few wins, too, or simply come
on strong to beat teams in the
second half. They’ve done it
largely behind the arm and legs
of Mariota.
With Mariota in the backfield,
the most to benefit this year has
been freshman running back
Royce Freeman. Freeman
couldn’t have asked for a better
college quarterback to play with,
and he beamed with pride after
Mariota won the Heisman in
New York City.
“We were all proud of him. We
knew he deserved it,” says Freeman, who could be a Heisman
candidate in the near future.
“He’s the best out there, in our
opinion, a great guy on and off
the field, none better.
“It was great, coming here my
first year. All these things happening for the University of Oregon football-wise are special.”
Adds Byron Marshall, the
Ducks’ backup running back as
well as starting slot receiver: “He
deserved it. It’s such a blessing to
be named the best football player
in America. Marcus is all about
humility.”
■ How do the Ducks prevent
the layoff of nearly an entire
month from affecting their offensive tempo, rhythm and timing?
“We practice better every
day,” Marshall says. “It’s a cliche,
but stay on top of the little things,
stay on top of each other, don’t let
each other get lazy.
“We’ve got a goal ahead of us,
we can’t slack off right now.”
■ Recently elected to the National Football Foundation Hall
of Fame, ex-Oregon coach Mike
Bellotti (and current ESPN analyst) has some thoughts on the
Ducks’ chances against Florida
State:
“I think it’s a very good
matchup for Oregon. Both
teams with exceptional quarterbacks. (Mariota) has been a little bit more consistent. Jameis
might still be the best quarter-
back in the fourth quarter to
have if you’re behind. Unfortunately for Oregon, Florida State
has probably discovered a running game (with Dalvin Cook)
and is playing a little bit better
defense, with the exception of
this last game, against the
(Georgia Tech) option.”
He concludes: “But Oregon’s
offense is practically unstoppable. There’s some other issues
about defense they’ll have to
overcome for this game, but I
think it’s a great matchup and
one I’m going to be excited to
see.”
■ Plenty of Portland televisions will be tuned to ESPN for
Tribune’sATHLETESoftheWEEK
PRO
Blazers
Oregon State
RUTH HAMBLIN, basketball — A
6-6 junior C from Houston, B.C., she
helped the Beavers, ranked 14th last
week, win 3 more games and move
to 10-0. Hamblin combined for 47
points, 20 rebounds and 10 blocks,
making 15 of 24 FGAs.
DAMIAN LILLARD — He lifted the
Blazers to a 3-OT win at San Antonio,
scoring 43 points in 53 minutes. The 6-3,
195-pound G from Oakland, Calif., also
had 29, 23 and 17 in victories against
Milwaukee, the Spurs and New Orleans.
NHL
Portland
ALEC WINTERING, basketball
DERRICK POULIOT — The 6-0, 205
rookie D and former Portland
Winterhawk scored a goal on his 1st
NHL shot, helping the Pittsburgh
Penguins, coached by ex-Hawk
coach/GM Mike Johnston, defeat the
Florida Panthers 3-1.
— The 5-11, 170-pound sophomore
G from Charlotte, N.C., totaled 28
points and 16 assists as the Pilots
(8-3) beat Montana State and lost in
OT at UNLV.
Concordia
ANTHONY HOLTON, basketball
— The 6-3, 190 senior G from Sunset
High had 21 points, made some timely
baskets (9-19 overall) and brought the
defense as the Cavaliers, ranked No.
13, improved to 11-2 with an 89-86 OT
win at home over Warner Pacific.
COLLEGE
Oregon
LAURA ROESLER, track and field
— The 5-6 middle-distance star from
Fargo, N.D., won the Bowerman
Trophy as the top female track and
field athlete in the nation for 2014.
Southern Oregon
Willamette
TYLOR KING AND NATHAN
TORRES-WALKER, football — King,
JACK NELSON, football — From
Jesuit High, Nelson earned 1st-team
All-America honors as a 6-2, 220pound senior LB for the Bearcats.
from Parkrose High, and Torres-Walker,
from Central Catholic, were part of
SOU’s NAIA championship season. The
Raiders beat Marian (Ind.) 55-31 for
the title at Daytona Beach, Fla. King is
a 6-6, 305-pound junior OL. Walker is
a 6-2, 175 sophomore DB.
HIGH SCHOOL
MALIK AUSTIN, Cleveland basketball — The 5-10 senior G
has helped the Warriors start 4-1. He had 25 points (9-10
FGs, 7-7 FTs) and 9 assists in a 60-39 win last week at
Sunset, then 20 points as Cleveland beat Parkrose 66-42.
Warner Pacific
JORDAN WILCOX, basketball — The
Portland State
EMILY EASOM, basketball — Her
game-high 21 points, including 5 key
points down the stretch, sparked the
Vikings to a 71-66 triumph at
Columbia as PSU (2-9) snapped a
4-game skid.
NOHEAILILANI WAIWAIOLE, Lincoln
basketball — The 6-2 senior transfer
from Aloha, who can play every position, is averaging 19.8 points per
game at PG for the 2-3 Cardinals. The
OIT-bound co-captain also has 9.2
rebounds and 3.4
5-5 senior G from Mountain View
High in Bend had 21 points and 9
rebounds in a 2-OT win, 72-69, at
Concordia.
336886.052214
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PAGE B12
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 25, 2014
JAY LOCEY
READY TO PUT
PIONEERS BACK
IN THE GAME
Jay Locey, 59,
takes over as
football coach at
Lewis & Clark
College, after
spending the
previous nine
years on the
staff at Oregon
State.
COURTESY OF OREGON
STATE UNIVERSITY
■ New coach aims to make
football matter at Lewis & Clark
J
ay Locey is laying
lo
low for a while.
Lewis & Clark
Co
College’s new footw undergo hernia
ball coach will
Frid in Corvallis.
surgery Friday
suppo
“Not supposed
to carry much
m
more than a milk
jug for a few
weeks, but you can move around,
active Locey says.
walk, be active,”
a kind of an
“Shouldn’t be any
impediment.”
That’s good, because Locey has
work to do.
59-year-o Corvallis native
The 59-year-old
is “fired up” to take on what is the
challen of his profesbiggest challenge
siona career — turning
sional
aroun a moribund L&C
around
p
grid program.
The Pioneers have
been the scourge of the
North
Northwest
Conference
tw decades, with
for two
o winning season
only one
t past 19 years.
over the
Their record over that
span: 40-123 overall, 17N
87 in NWC
play. And the
Pione
Pioneers
played only
g
four games
in 2005 due
ON
lac of numbers.
to lack
SPORTS
Lew & Clark football
Lewis
futilit actually goes
futility
D
back further. Dating
to 1971 under
th Pioneers have
Fred Wilson, the
wi
had only six winning
seasons in
thre of them under
44 years — three
fr
Tom Smythe from
1989-91.
i 2013 and 0-9 this
L&C was 1-8 in
fall under head coach Chris Solages.
Enter Locey, who served as
fo Mike Riley at Orchief of staff for
egon State the past two years afa
ter serving as associate
head
B
coach for the Beavers
the previseas
ous seven seasons.
f Jay, and I’m ex“I’m excited for
cited for Lewis & Clark, which has
h
made a great hire,”
says Riley, the
Linfie assistant now
one-time Linfield
N
head coach at Nebraska.
“It will
be a perfect fit. Jay will impact
men growth and dethe young men’s
velopment, and he’ll impact the
Kerry
Eggers
COURTESY OF LEWIS & CLARK COLLEGE
Barry Glassner (left), president of Lewis & Clark College, welcomes Jay Locey as
the Pioneers’ new head football coach.
success of football at Lewis &
Clark.
“He’s the kind of guy you want
to run a program. He had a remarkable run as head coach at
Linfield, and he made a big impact
with our program at Oregon
State, first as a coach, then with
our life skills program. He’ll be
every bit as much a mentor to his
players as a coach.”
Prior to his time at OSU, Locey
served a 23-year run at Linfield, including the last 10 as head coach,
leading the Wildcats to a record of
84-18 and the 2004 NCAA Division
III national championship.
Linfield remains the power of
the Northwest Conference. It’s a
different world on Palatine Hill,
but Locey is eager for a new
adventure.
“It’s a great opportunity,” he
says. “The administration has
been real supportive. They think
it’s important.
“The other thing I’ve gathered
from them and alumni, they feel a
strong sense of, ‘Let’s go, let’s
make something happen, we’re
going to be with you.’ I’m really
looking forward to it.”
See EGGERS / Page 9
Helfrich turnaround puts doubts to rest
Losses always light
new fire under
Duck coach, team
By JASON VONDERSMITH
The Tribune
EUGENE — A lot of public
and media criticism was directed at Oregon coach Mark
Helfrich after the Ducks
dropped two games last year
to fall out of Pac-12 and national title contention and
then lost to Arizona at home
in early October.
A few media pundits speculated on whether Helfrich could
handle being the UO head man.
Now the Ducks are 12-1, with
the school’s first Heisman Trophy winner (Marcus Mariota)
and are getting ready to play in
the national semifinal against
Florida State, with a chance
to play the Alabama-Ohio
State winner for the national
championship.
Helfrich took ownership after
the losses, including the Arizona
defeat. Some coaches use that
tactic to deflect criticism away
from their players.
“In general, I firmly believe
that bad stuff belongs to the
coaches and good stuff is
because of the players and the
assistants,” Helfrich says. “That
will never change. That’s just
how I’m wired.”
And, he adds, “it’s because it’s
true. Execution is on players; it’s
also coaches, coaching every
phase of it. (Players) will be better down the road, and everybody benefits.”
The way Helfrich and his players responded to their loss to
Arizona this year enabled Oregon to win the Pac-12 title.
“You don’t ever want to find
out how great you are coming
back from that stuff (a loss),”
Helfrich says, “but our guys handled it great.”
Helfrich says he remembers
addressing the Arizona loss
right when the team got into its
Autzen Stadium locker room,
moments after the 31-24 setback.
The talk in the Ducks’ locker
room huddle was:
“What are we going to do
now?” Helfrich says.
He says everyone took a proactive, constructive approach to
moving forward.
“We believe so much in what
we’re doing. A bounce here, a
play there that doesn’t go your
way, and you lose to a top-five,
top-10 team, and that happens,”
he says. “Not only were players
not pointing fingers, but in football a coach says, ‘You should
have done this’ — that never happened. It was, ‘We need to do
TRIBUNE PHOTO: JAIME VALDEZ
Oregon Ducks coach Mark Helfrich, getting a sideline shower from receiver Keanon Lowe and other players, kept an even keel after the Ducks
See UO / Page 11 lost to Arizona during the regular season.