JULY 5, 2017 Portland and Seattle Volume XXXIX No. 40 25 CENTS News .............................. 3,8-10 A & E .....................................6-7 Opinion ...................................2 Dr. Jasmine on Pets .........9 Calendars ........................... 4-5 Bids/Classifieds ....................11 CHALLENGING PEOPLE TO SHAPE A BETTER FUTURE NOW PHOTO BY MELANIE SEVCENKO NATURALIZATION CEREMONY Harriet Adair By Melanie Sevcenko Of The Skanner News H arriet Adair was only four-years- old when her mother enrolled her in first grade at Vestal Elementa- ry School in Northeast Portland. At that time she was reading and writ- ing at a third grade level. Her aptitude, she said, was thanks to the guidance of her older sister, who was her first real teacher. “I come from a family background where education is key,” she told The Skanner. Adair’s dedication to educating oth- ers has been an inspiration at Portland AP PHOTO/CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI See ADAIR on page 3 Workers prepare chairs for the audience in front of the monument to the heroes of the 1944 Warsaw Rising in Krasinski Square where U.S. President Donald Trump will speak in Warsaw, Poland, Wednesday, July 5, 2017. Trump will be in Warsaw before traveling to Germany for a G-20 summit of top world leaders. World News Briefs page 12 Kam Reviews ‘Baby Driver’ Movie page 6 Paula T. Vetani from Fiji and Zeyneb Nasir from Ethiopia and 500 other people from 67 countries took the oath to become United States citizens at the annual Independence Day Naturalization Ceremony at Seattle Center on July 4 at Seattle Center. The ceremony was attended by numerous public officials, including Governor Jay Inslee, US Senator Maria Cantwell, King County Executive Dow Constantine and Seattle Mayor Ed Murray, who was the Master of Ceremony for the event. Expanding Urban Farming to Everybody Startup engages communities of color in growing and learning about food By Christen McCurdy Of The Skanner News S hantae Johnson and Arthur Shavers both grew up in Portland and both grew up gar- dening. Johnson’s great-grand- mother grew berries for the J.M. Smucker company, and her family grew much of its own food. Shavers helped his grandmother in the garden when he was young. When they met they kept a garden wherev- er they could — in commu- nity garden plots or in the back yard of a condo — but dreamed of having their own farm. Now they’ve launched MudBone Grown, a com- pany focused on promot- ing farming, education and community outreach — and a culturally specific urban food systems project at the Oregon Food Bank’s 33rd Avenue farm. Prior to the company’s launch, Johnson worked for Multnomah County as a community health work- er and breastfeeding peer counselor. Shavers had worked as a leathersmith, firefighter and emergency medical technician. Having inherited an in- terest in growing food, they wanted to pass that on to their children: they each had two from previous re- lationships when they met, and have since had two to- gether. “We wanted to teach our kids to be self-sufficient,” Johnson said. They also wanted to cre- ate a community space — one where diverse groups can learn and work togeth- er – and finally found the opportunity to do so when they were asked to help manage the food bank’s farm earlier this year. The farm is situated right next to the Oregon Food Bank’s Portland location, and people who volunteer there can go home with food they harvest. School groups come to learn and volunteer, and recently, Johnson said, a group of adults with developmental disabilities started com- ing to work on the farm. Johnson and Shavers are working on creating an outdoor classroom space, See FARMING on page 3 Doctor Raises Awareness of Racial Bias in Transplants Vanessa Grubbs, MD, embarks on book tour with her new memoir about kidney transplants By Melanie Sevcenko Of The Skanner News V anessa Grubbs, MD, had only been dating Robert Phillips  nine months when she gave him one of her kidneys. That was 12 years ago. At the time Grubbs was a primary care doctor in Oakland, Calif., and Phillips had been on dialysis for a number of years to treat his end-stage kidney disease. “One of the things (Robert) told me when we first when out was that he had lots of first dates, but not many second dates,” Grubbs told The Skan- ner. The harsh reality of his debilitating kidney condition turned most wom- en away. But Grubbs was different. She began a romantic relationship with Phillips, and came to under- stand the plight of kidney failure from a patient’s perspective — while uncovering the racial bias of the transplant system. Grubbs’ personal experiences and See DOCTOR on page 3 PHOTO COURTESY OF KIM-FROM-L.A. After 47 years, the award-winning educator closes a chapter PHOTO BY SUSAN FRIED Harriet Adair Says Goodbye to PPS Vanessa Grubbs and Robert Phillips on their wedding day.