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About Just out. (Portland, OR) 1983-2013 | View Entire Issue (May 18, 2001)
may 18. 2001 4 out Injured? ...Call me Safety in numbers To the E ditor : Proudly serving our communify since 1989 in personal injury claims including: Hala Gores, P.C. Attorney at Law Free ’Bring in this ad and receive K)% OFF all perennials through May 312001 Consultation No Fee Until We Get You Money We fe a tu re * * # « Annuals # * • Bicycle & Pedestrian Accidents Insurance Claims 503/ * • Shrubs & Trees • Garden Accessories • Hanging Baskets • European Baskets • Statuary Amy Gerver, 1960-2001 •Vases and Lamps Cut Flowers • Pottery FAI'»14*I «II« • Keepsake Gifts -------- ^ ------- 8601 SWTerwilliger Blvd. (next to the Chevron station) 12th Floor 621 SW Morrison Portland M A M Integrity, Experience oR esults 5 0 3 . 977.6545 Million Dollar Inventory Reduction We are forced to liquidate a major part of our fine selection of hand-made rugs. mm /- \ ifir / / * 50% to 75% OFF ORIGINAL PRICES VERY LIMITED TIME SAVING OPPORTUNITY! S hop early for the best selection ! YOU WILL SAVE BIG, BECAUSE WE MUST RAISE CASH. RUGS STARTING AS LOW AS $25 Choose from a large selection of Decorative, Vegetable Dye, Tea Wash, Persian and Afghani Tribal, Gabeh, Kasholi, Caucasian design, Traditional, Modern, New & Old rugs. IHAM1 LX S! HAMID S PERSIAN RUGS 901 SW Washington • Portland, OR 97205 ¡PE R S IA N RUGSi SINCE 198 1 T transitions 295-1940 Perennials •Roses he Fair Schools Act seeks to amend the existing education code’s nondiscrimina tion law to include sexual orientation. This would help ensure all students are treated fairly in Oregon schools. In these times of school vio lence, intimidation and rising youth suicide rates, it’s a basic issue of fairness that none of us concerned about our children’s safety can afford to ignore. Thousands of young people experience some fonn of harassment in Oregon schools each year because of some perceived difference such as race, physical ability, gender or sexual orienta tion. There is a law that prohibits discrimina tion for all of these forms of harassment and vio lence. It sends a clear message that no form of harassment should be tolerated in our schools. Oregon schools should be safe and wel coming institutions in which all youth are able to grow and learn without fear. Accord ing to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, anti-gay harassment puts students at greater risk for skipping school and drug and alcohol abuse. The governor’s Youth Suicide Task Force found that school-based harassment was a sig nificant contributor to suicidal thoughts and actions. In fact, youth suicide in Oregon is the second-leading cause of death among those between 10 and 24 years old and the leading cause of death for youth who are gay or lesbian. Students who are harassed at school are three times more likely to attempt suicide than non- harassed peers. Public schools have a responsibility to all our children to ensure their safety and to teach them the value of respect. We must (503) 248-951 I Hours: Mon-Sat 10-0. Sunday 12-5 my J. Gerver, Our House of Portland development director, was killed in a rafting accident May 5 on the South Fork of the Boise River in Idaho. She was 41. She was bom Feb. 28, 1960. She moved to Portland in 1992. Before coming to Our House three years ago, Gerver worked for Meier & Frank and Loaves & Fishes. Co-workers described her as a dynamic political activist with a wicked sense of humor. “This tragic and shocking news affects so many people in a multitude of ways,” volunteer director Kathryn Siebert wrote in a letter to supporters May 8. “Amy was an integral part of the Our House family— a force to be reckoned with and an extraordinarily good fund-raiser. She had just coordinated a most successful auction not two weeks before her death, an event that is our biggest annual fund-raiser and raised $ 124,OCX) this year. In the next few days, you will be receiving a solicitation letter that Amy co-authored with one of our residents. It is a powerful, beautifully written letter that now proves to be her ‘swan song’ in her role at Our House.” She had a passion for traditional witchcraft, animals, Irish dance and white-water rafting. “I find some small comfort in knowing that she died doing something that she loved so much,” Siebert said. Gerver was a longtime member of the Port land Area Business Association, Willamette Valley Development Organization and Feral Cat Coalition. She also volunteered for Oregon Public Broadcasting. “She had more integrity than anybody I ever met,” friend Leslie Zemenek said. “She just dug into life; she just embraced it.” Gerver is survived by her brother, Grant of Flagstaff, Ariz., and parents, Carole and Spike of Los Angeles. A funeral was held May 10 in Los Angeles, a soul release ritual was held May 15 at a pri vate residence, and a celebration of life was held May 16 at Our House. Remembrances may be made to Our House and the Feral Cat Coalition. Reggie Cano, 1956-2001 P ortland resident Reginald Kiapo Cano died May 12. He was 45. He was bom March 27, 1956, in Oahu, Hawaii. He moved to Portland 28 years ago. Cano worked as a stylist at Broadway Hair and Tan Salon. He was also a member of the Pentecostal Church. He was a female impersonator at Darcelle XV for eight years during the 1980s. He was voted Debutante IX (1981-82) and Miss Gay Portland XIII (1984-85). Cano was preceded in death by his sister, Cinderella K. Davis, in 1992; brother, Frank, in 2000; and mother, Myma, in 1999. He is survived by his partner, David Alan Smoot; siblings, Kenona R. Anderson, Patricia L. McAneney, Jeanette L. Loomis, Alexander Gasper, Dolores “Lani”. Manuel, Donna Mae Kamana, William Hoolhuli, Debra N. Gayle, Angela Baker, Edwina Kahikina, Edward Kau- lia and Kalani Kaulia; and grandmother, Annie Wright. A gathering of family and friends will he held from 1 to 6 p.m. May 19 at 7315 S.E. Sherrett St. Final disposition will be by cre mation; his remains will be scattered in Hawaii. Remembrances may be made to the Oregon Humane Society. Killingsworth Little Chapel of the Chim es is handling the arrangements. \