Portland, OR. In its 17th year, the Portland’s Original Iron Chef event raised nearly $200,000 to help keep children safe and build strong families. Chef Christian Russell of The Steakhouse at 9900 was named the 2018 Portland’s Original Iron Chef by a popular vote. He was one of many top local chefs who participated in the culinary benefit. The funds raised will be directed toward the work of three LifeWorks NW‘s Children’s Relief Nurseries that serve children and their caregivers to intervene in situations of child abuse and neglect. Through therapeutic classrooms, parenting classes, home visits and more, the Nurseries see proven positive outcomes in family relationships and children’s development. (Photo credit, Andie Petkus)
Auctioneer Chris Sheik and Steve Dunn, emcee
Chef Bryant Kryck prepares appetizers
Huber’s Chef Julius Baliola
Winning appetizers prepared by Chef Christian Russell and The Steakhouse at 9900 team.
Chef Christian Russell of The Steakhouse at 9900 shows off his prize for taking top honors.
The El Gaucho Portland team takes time for a selfie.
Alto Bajo showcases traditional Mexican flavors in a modern, distinctive way. At the event it showed off this mushroom stump table decor.
Portland’s Original Iron Chef 2018 competitors included:
Every eight minutes in Oregon there is a report of child abuse or neglect. At LifeWorks NW we are fighting to keep children safe and families strong through the proven programs at our Children’s Relief Nurseries.
Mission
Our mission at LifeWorks NW is to promote a healthy community by providing quality and culturally responsive mental health and addiction services across the lifespan.
Vero Beach, Fla. Portland’s Lara Tennant arrived at Orchid Island Golf & Beach Club having won just one match in a USGA amateur championship in eight starts, but on October 11th she captured the USGA Senior Women’s Amateur Championship in convincing fashion. “I would say except for last year, all of the other USGA championships I played in, I probably prepared two weeks before,” explained Tennant. “With five kids I was never prepared like I am now. Since I turned 50 I was able to have the time to prepare, and I would say I have a new passion for golf.”
Making the experience even more exciting, Lara’s 78-year-old father, George Mack, served as her caddie. He was enjoying the experience even before the final round. “How can you beat this?” said Mack, “Regardless of what happens tomorrow, it doesn’t matter because we’ve had a great time.”
Tennant never trailed on Thursday, defeating Sue Wooster, 56, of Australia, 3 and 2, in the 18-hole championship match, USGA official Scott Lipsky, reported.
Tennant was able to build a cushion on the back nine on Thursday by taking advantage of some late miscues by Wooster.
As the runner-up, Wooster receives an exemption into the 2019 U.S. Senior Women’s Open, as well as a three-year exemption into the U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur and exemptions into the 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur and U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur.
What the Champion Receives
Custody of the U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur Trophy for one year
Gold medal
10-year exemption in the U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur
2-year exemption into the U.S. Senior Women’s Open
2-year exemption into the U.S. Women’s Amateur
2-year exemption into the U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur
Here are some details about the final matchup:
SUE WOOSTER
LARA TENNANT
56
Age
51
Lysterfield, Victoria, Australia
Hometown
Portland, Ore.
N/A
College
University of Arizona
Round of 32 (2016, 2017)
Best Previous Finish in this Championship
Round of 64 (2017)
No. 5 / 87 holes played
Seeding / Match Holes Played
No. 10 / 83 holes played
Defeated 2013 runner-up Susan Cohn in the semifinals, 3 and 2
Notable Victory
Defeated 2004 U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur champion Corey Weworski in the quarterfinals, 3 and 2
25
Age Started Playing
10
Has won national golf championships in Australia, Canada, and New Zealand
Noteworthy
Was co-medalist in her U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur debut in 2017
Has advanced to match play in all nine USGA amateur championships in which she has competed
USGA Credentials
Has been competing in USGA championships dating back to the 1983 U.S. Girls’ Junior
Did not start playing golf competitively until she was in her 40s
Fun Fact
Made the first hole-in-one in U.S. Senior Women’s Open history earlier this year
Portland, OR. The McCulloch Foundation is gearing up for “2018 Halloween Haunted Historical House, a Benefit for Affordable and Homeless Housing and Historic Preservation.” Visitors can be spooked and thrilled at the creepy Queen Anne Victorian mansion on NE 15th Ave in Irvington. The McColluch Foundation (a Non Profit Organization) is raising money to build affordable housing for those in need, while also protecting further demolition in the area.
The Haunted House will take place October 24th – 26th and tickets are $15 – $25.
Portland, OR. Over 200 women joined forces for the 17th annual Circle of Strength Women’s Fundraising Brunch. Guests, like excited raffle winner, Maryliz Herron, gathered at Riverside Golf and Country Club on September 29th for an afternoon of coffee, brunch, and conversation. The women had a common purpose—to raise money for women and children who cannot afford mental health care. The benefit for Northwest Catholic Counseling raised $75,000. (Photo credit, Megan Ziegenfus)
Table hostess, Diane Millemann (third from left), and her enthusiastic guests.
The event speaker, Jennifer Pepin, inspired the theme for this year, “The Art of Healing.” Diagnosed with bi-polar disorder in her 20’s, Jennifer shared about her own mental health journey. Jennifer is the owner of the J. Pepin Art Gallery, located in the Pearl District. In an effort to break down stigma, the gallery only features artists living with mental illness. Jennifer believes that by working together, the landscape of mental health can be one of hope, dreams, and believing in a more accepting world.
A room full of women dedicated to empowering other women in their community.
Event speaker and former NCC client, Marchelle Carl
Marchelle Carl was the client speaker of the event. She first came to NCC for counseling as a young child and has continued off and on through adulthood. The Center and its staff have walked with Marchelle, offering support through the struggles, losses, and pains of life. Marchelle would not have been able to access counseling if not for the sliding scale fee offered at The Northwest Catholic Counseling Center. Through their generosity, the women gathered at Circle of Strength expressed their belief that no woman or child should ever be denied access to counseling.
Here’s a video about the program:
From Northwest Catholic Counseling Center:
For three decades The Northwest Catholic Counseling Center has worked for social justice – the idea that we all share a common humanity, have a right to equal treatment, are due a fair allocation of community resources, and are valued in our diversity. Recent events, including hateful and degrading rhetoric and violent attacks against minorities, call to the Staff and Board of NCC to redouble our commitment and stand firm in our values. As we move forward, NCC will speak out more on injustice on our website and Facebook pages. We will educate more on mental health issues and those needing help. We will look for public opportunities to show our solidarity with others.
Portland, OR. Hundreds of supporters flocked to the Portland Art Museum for the 13th Annual Bridge Meadows IMAGINE Fall Auction & Gala. (Bridge Meadows supports former foster youth, adoptive families and elders in a residential setting.) At the September 20th benefit, leaders of the nonprofit announced that they’re looking for new sites in Oregon to build intergenerational housing. Auction items included the Bridge Meadows Courtyard in Felt created by Xander Griffith Art. (Photo credit, Paul Rich)
KGW’s Drew Carney and auctioneer Johnna Wells
Supporter, Howard Hedinger, hits the photo book with some young Bridge Meadow fans.
Cathedral Park Performing Arts Collective intergenerational choir
Executive Director Dr. Derenda Schubert
This is a video from the most recent ribbon cutting of the Bridge Meadow complex in Beaverton:
From Bridge Meadow:
Bridge Meadows is a unique multi-generational community with locations in North Portland and Beaverton where children formerly in foster care, adoptive parents and elders – those over 55 – find a true home built with love and the shared vision of a better tomorrow. Children move from the instability of foster care placements to permanent homes and families where they find the stability, caring connections and educational support they need to succeed and re-calibrate the trajectory of their lives. Parents receive essential resources and guidance, while elders find safe, affordable housing and an opportunity to make a significant difference in the lives of families and children- all while building meaningful social connections that keep them active and healthy. By leveraging the power of place, permanence and purpose, Bridge Meadows helps three generations transform individual vulnerability into collective strength.
Portland, OR.Portland Opera is pulling out all the stops to build excitement for its first big production of the season next month. It is holding an open rehearsal of the organization’s chorus as they prepare for November’s production of Verdi’s La Traviata. The outdoor public working rehearsal on Sunday, October 7th will be held in Director Park (815 SW Park Ave) from 2:00-4:00 pm and will feature the opera chorus. In addition to the rehearsal, downtown shoppers are getting a glimpse of some of the costumes for the production.
The Mercantile at 7th and Alder has a special La Traviata costume in the window.
Portland Opera’s Costume Director Christine A. Richardson and her staff are working on dozens of period ensembles.
Christopher Mattaliano, Portland Opera’s general director, supervises every the detail of the productions. “I am very excited to begin our new season with a traditional production of a work by one of my favorite composers, Giuseppe Verdi,” says Christopher Mattaliano. “This magnificent score and story are deeply human, and although it was composed 165 years ago, the situations and characters continue to resonate with audiences today.”
Sets and costumes are a big part of the spectacle of the opera experience.
Romanian soprano Aurelia Florian makes her Portland Opera debut as the tour de force heroine. The famous Italian opera, La Traviata, tells the story of the brilliant and beautiful Parisian courtesan Violetta Valéry and her forbidden love. Haunted by illness, Violetta navigates sexual politics and societal expectations as she endures a broken heart.
Portland Opera will present four performances of La Traviata on November 2, 4 (matinee), 8, and 10 at the Keller Auditorium. Tickets start at $35 and are available atwww.portlandopera.org, or by calling 503-241-1802.
From Portland Opera:
Portland Opera exists to inspire, challenge, and uplift our audiences by creating productions of high artistic quality that celebrate the beauty and breadth of opera. The company produces both classic and contemporary opera, which are performed in the Keller Auditorium, Newmark Theatre, and the Gregory K. and Mary Chomenko Hinckley Studio Theatre at the Hampton Opera Center. All performances are sung in the original language with English surtitles projected above the stage.
Portland Opera’s 2018/19 season features Verdi’s La Traviata, Laura Kaminsky’s As One,the annual Big Night concert, Rossini’s Il Barbiere di Siviglia, Mozart’s La Finta Giardiniera, and Philip Glass’s In the Penal Colony. The company is also a committed educational partner, touring staged operas to schools and community centers throughout Oregon and SW Washington region each year, in addition to a host of other efforts designed to make opera accessible for all.
Portland, OR. With more than 55 percent of pets overweight, many are at risk for serious health issues. While human weight loss issues continuously top the headlines, National Pet Obesity Awareness Day (Wednesday, October 10) serves as a reminder that obesity is also a serious epidemic among the nation’s pet population.
An estimated 60 percent of cats and 56 percent of dogs in the United States are overweight or obese, according to the Association for Pet Obesity Prevention. Overweight pets are in danger of health problems that can lead to chronic diseases or even emergency situations. Primary risks of excess weight in pets include:
Degenerative joint disease
Insulin resistance and Type 2 Diabetes
High blood pressure
Heart and respiratory disease
Knee injuries
Kidney disease
Many forms of cancer
Decreased life expectancy (up to 2.5 years)
“Some pets may have legitimate health conditions that lead to obesity, such as hypothyroidism, which can be worked up and treated by your family veterinarian,” said Dr. Ladan Mohammad-Zadeh, a critical care specialist at DoveLewis Veterinary Emergency and Specialty Hospital. “Unfortunately, most overweight pets suffer from loving parents who spoil them with too many treats or table scraps and more cuddling than exercise. Their intentions might be good, but this overfeeding can lead to obesity and many health concerns.”
How can you tell if your pet is overweight? If weight gain is gradual, it may be difficult to notice. Feel around your pet’s midsection while they are standing. If you have trouble feeling the ribs and spine, or if your pet lacks an hourglass shape at the waist, consult your regular veterinarian about your pet’s weight. If needed, your vet will be able to set up a weight loss plan.
Pet Weight Loss Tips
Reduce calories – Look up the proper amount of food for a pet’s breed and size. Then write down everything your dog or cat eats for a few days. Compare the two numbers to see if your pet is eating more than the recommended daily amount. If the difference is substantial, consult your veterinarian to determine the best course of action for adjusting your pet’s diet plan.
Rethink treats – Offer treats sparingly and choose low-calorie options. Many dogs like carrot sticks and fresh green beans because they are crunchy. Treat-dispensing toys that make your pets work to release a treat is also a great alternative.
Daily, low-impact exercise – Start by simply increasing the number of steps your pet takes each day. Begin by having them move around the house with you from room to room. For dogs, you can then increase their exercise by walking them to your mailbox or around the yard. Eventually, they will be able to take longer walks. Dog parks are also a great way to encourage activity and play time. For cats, experts recommend at least 15 minutes of active play time a day. Experiment with a variety of toys to see which ones appeal to your feline.
Provide pain relief – If your pet is experiencing pain (possibly due to age, joint issues or recovery from a treatment), consult your regular veterinarian to find ways to reduce the pain and increase movement with prescription medication, heating pads, massage or even acupuncture.
Hydrotherapy – Dogs who enjoy water will love running on a submerged treadmill, which is a safe, low-impact way to burn calories. There are several canine swim centers in the Portland area, and hydrotherapy can help with everything from weight loss to arthritis.
With proper diet, exercise and advice from your regular veterinarian, pets can lose weight safely and live longer, happier, healthier life.
About DoveLewis Veterinary Emergency and Specialty Hospital
DoveLewis Emergency Animal Hospital, established in 1973 and based in Portland, Oregon, is the only nonprofit, 24-hour emergency and intensive care unit in the region. With 45 years of service to the community, DoveLewis has treated more than 500,000 animals. DoveLewis also has seven donor-supported community programs that serve animals in need and the animal-loving community. For more information, please visit dovelewis.org.
Portland, OR. CASA for Children of Multnomah, Washington, and Columbia Counties hosted its 25th Annual CASA Golf Classic presented by Fred Meyer Jewelers. The tournament was held at Langdon Farms Golf Club on September 17th and raised $195,000 in support of CASA’s mission. (Photo credit, Kristi Ebert)
Golfers practice their putts while waiting for their shot at a Hole-in-One and a brand new MINI Cooper.
Chipping Contest in full swing.
The audience was comprised of over 150 guests and golfers, including: leaders from Portland’s corporate and philanthropic communities, CASA’s Board of Directors, and vendors from all over the United States, including New York, Georgia and California.
From CASA for Children of Multnomah, Washington, and Columbia Counties:
Jon Cook, Fred Meyer Jewelers Vice President of Operations and CASA Board Member said, “Through the 24 years of the CASA Golf Classic we have achieved a great deal, but there is still much more work for us to do in helping the many children still in need. Fred Meyer Jewelers is proud to partner with CASA in making a difference for the children in the Multnomah, Washington and Columbia counties foster care system.”
Thanks to this event, this year CASA for Children will serve 1,110 of our community’s most vulnerable children in foster care with Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASAs). A CASA is the eyes and ears of the judge and the voice of the child. Moreover, a CASA works to secure safe, loving, and permanent homes for each of the children they serve.
All proceeds raised from the event directly impact our ability to serve more children with a CASA volunteer. A CASA passionately and tirelessly works to guide a child through the trauma of the court system. Oregon law gives CASAs unusual authority as a ‘party to the case’ so that they are able to ensure that the system does not ignore a child’s needs and that the judge has the information to act in the child’s best interests. A CASA is trained to work with judges, social workers, teachers, foster parents, and family members to ensure that the safety and well-being of the child is front and center.
If you are interested in learning more about how to become a CASA volunteer, upcoming trainings, or future fundraising events, please contact Anne Marie Johnson, Director of Development and Communications, at 503.988.4170 or [email protected].
Portland, OR. A lively group of new and old faces mingled, bid on silent auctions items, and enjoyed food and drink at a benefit for Wind & Oar Boat School. Peggy Harris and MJ Harris with Christina and Andrea Milano attended the first annual Root Beer Floatilla on September 13th. The event took place at the Daimler Trucks North America Headquarters on Swan Island and was sponsored in part by Daimler. Wind & Oar Boat School is an Oregon nonprofit engaging youth in math, practical and social skills through the art, science, and craft of building wooden boats. Their methods include a low teacher-to-student ratio, hands-on math application and promoting self-confidence in solving problems.
The ‘oar’-raise auction and giving part of the program was an exciting back and forth, particular for the ‘Last Hero’ – a lucky last-bidder winner of the red wagon of high end spirits and a passport to Portland’s Distillery row.
Root beer floats (hand-made using table sponsor Tillamook Creamery ice cream) were served while guests heard from Jessica Howard, President of PCC’s Southeast Campus, outline successful Wind & Oar projects, student stories, and future goals.
Jessica Howard, President PCC SE Campus, was Emcee for the event.
The light from a sunset glinted off the flotilla of student-made boats just outside the headquarters of sponsor Daimler Trucks North America.
A number of sponsors, including Daimler, the Standard, and NW Natural showed tremendous support, as well as all of the guests there to help raise funds to support and expand Wind & Oar’s programs for under-served schools and students.
The live auction item, McKenzie River Drift Boat (also student-built) shown impressively to the side. Screens lined the walls featuring videos and images of the work of the organization they were all here to support.
Partnering with public schools and youth serving organizations, we deliver STE(A)M (science, technology, engineering, art, math) programming to underserved youth across the Portland Metro region in elementary school through post-secondary settings.
Building a wooden boat is the platform for exploration of an array of academic, practical, and social skills.
Students master new skills in an atmosphere that fosters critical thinking, teamwork, and perseverance.
Through the process of crafting a tangible, functional object, young people gain confidence, motivation, and a curious spirit they carry forward at school and in the workplace.
Portland, OR. State of the PERIOD was a gala to celebrate the Menstrual Movement, raise awareness about the issue of period poverty and break the stigma around periods. The theme this year’s benefit was “stand up for periods.” The event on September 13th featured musical guest Storm Large and comedian Margaret. It raised over $200,000. (Photo credit, Sarah Waters)
During the event, Nadya Okamoto delivered a “state of the union” address on the Menstrual Movement, and told her story. Nadya’s book comes out on October 16th, entitled “Period Power: a Manifesto for the Menstrual Movement.” https://www.amazon.com/Period-Power-Manifesto-Menstrual-Movement/dp/1534430202
Musical guest Storm Large
From PERIOD:
PERIOD is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization.
Serve We’re all about action. With the support of generous partners, sponsors and individuals, we deliver PERIOD PACKS to those in need.
Educate It starts with changing the way we talk about periods. We elevate the issue to eliminate the taboo through a growing network of high school, college and community chapters.
Advocate We raise awareness and create change through events, campaigns and media relationships. Help us repeal the tampon tax and lobby for menstrual products in public places.
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