Choosing academics and athletics up as a youngster and how they tau g ht him some good role models for me to pattern m yself after and valuable lessons. they are fine examples o f how an athlete can make good " W e w ould play ball in the streets and they would after his playing days are over. But you know, both o f push me into the parked cars,” he smiled. “ They said them can still come out on the court and go o ff on you. that if you want to be tough, you have got to learn how T h e y ’ ve tau g ht me a lo t about life , academ ics and to take a beating. A ll it did was make me a better athlete basketball." and more competitive.” Hopson and Leary were members o f the 1972 Jeffer­ Haskin led the Democrats basketball team to a I6-9 son High School which won the state cham pionship. season and a berth in the state playoffs while averaging Hopson is a graduate o f W illia m e tte U n iversity and 18.6 points and 7.3 assists per contest. He has scholar­ coaches girls basketball at Lincoln. ship o ffers to W illia m e tte , Lewis and C la rk , W arner Leary is an assistant coach at Jackson H igh and a Pacific, and several ju n io r colleges in the Northwest. graduate o f San Diego State. H e is also an advisor at Although Haskin has Pacific Ten statistics, none o f the Tubman M iddle School. schools in the conference bothered to contact. But as he W hat do you plan to study in college? says, those are the breaks. “ I ’ d like to study com m unications, engineering or " I t will be very nice staying very close to hom e,” he business,” he said. “ But m ore than lik e ly it w ill be said. “ I prefer to stay close because my fam ily likes to business. I would like to be in business because kids and come to the games all the time. I ’m not upset about not people in the community look up to you as an example. being recruited by them but I wonder about some o f the I f I do well in sports while in college, it will serve as a athletes they do bring in. I ’ m just as sharp as they are. foundation for establishing a good business.” Playing at a smaller school like I ’ m considering will give Aside from being active in sports and student govern­ me a chance to play right away and then I can show my ment, Haskin is also involved in a religious club called ta le n t.” M arshall also played baseball for the Dem o­ Young Life. He is a member o f Greater M ount Calvary crats and batted .48*. on a I2-8 team. He plans to par­ Church o f God and Christ under the direction o f Bishop ticipate in both sports while in college. H . B. Daniels. When questioned about athletes who have influenced “ God has helped me to be friends with everyone,” he him over the years, Haskins did not have to go to the explained, “ because there are some people who really National Basketball Association to pick his heroes. He use to bug me. I use to try and hurt people who got on picked a couple o f local ones. my nerves. I ’d either try to hurt them physically or try to “ Tony Hopson and E. Ray Leary have helped me a have them set up to be h urt. G od has allow ed me to great deal over the years," he said. “ Both o f them are move beyond that attitude.and I am very thankful.” B-D Drake Willock: DIALYSIS INNOVATOR OF THE 8 0 ’s. Marshall Haskin. a 1981 Jaffaraon High School graduata, was awardad tha Alfrad Qoaa Sarvlca Cup, glvan aach yaar to tha aanior who providaa th a g raataat Inspiratio n to tha claaa, and tha Hopklna Janklna A th la tlc Cup. aw ardad to tha achool'a top a th la ta . Ha was studant body preaidant during hla Junior year and vice-preeident his senior yaar. Ha was on tha honor roll during his firs t tw o years. M arshall Is a graduata of Boise Elementary School. Ullysses Tucker, Jr. Unlike most high school athletes chasing the dream o f becoming a professional basketball player, M arshall Haskin, the A ll-C ity point guard from Jefferson High has the unrealistic dream in perspective. H a s k in , a s ix -fo o t-s o o n -to -b e college fresh m an , knows that it is not always about talent on the basket­ ball court, but about the breaks as he so frankly puts it. H e firm ly believes that an athlete must be prepared to deal with the job market and business community when the dreams comes to an end. Practicing what he preaches, Haskin sports the title o f student body vice president and a 3.2 7 grade p o in t average. He speaks proudly o f his father Lennel and his late m o th er E m m a Jean w ho s till serves as an in ­ spiration for him. Haskin lives with his uncle and aunt (W illie and M argarett "G ra n n ie ” Frison). " I attrib u te a lot o f my attitu de to my fa th e r,” he said. " H e was my baseball coach and he really stressed hitting the books. When I was young, I use to watch all the older guys who I thought were good athletes but it turned out that they d id n ’t have any grades. They had good basketball careers but the college and pros didn’ t think they were so good. I f they would have had some grades, maybe they could have gone someplace. I don’ t want to end up like those guys." A t 17, (M a y 29th, b irth d ay), M arshall is one o f ten children ranging from the age o f 16 through 25. Haskin talks openly about how his brothers used to rough him As o n e o l the w orld's leading m anufacturers of dialysis equipm ent and single-use products; B-D Drake W illock employs hundreds of people to build its products. In the Portland m etropolitan area, the m anufacturing plant and adm inistrative offices employ approxi­ m ately 300. B-D Drake W illock was one of the first pio­ neers in dialysis, developing the a rtificia l kidney dialysis machine in 1964 in the base­ ment workshop of Dr Richard Drake and Charles W illock. The B-D Drake W illock machine soon gained a widespread reputation for re lia b ility and quality and by 1976, the young company, now called DWS, Inc. was producing about 2,000 machines a year In February, 1976, acquired by Bectofi a New Jersey based wide reputation for single-use products. B-D Drake W illock was Dickinson and Company, corporation w ith a w orld ­ medical equipm ent and Today. B-D Drake W illock is gaining a grow ­ ing reputation for being the innovator of new and safer dialysis products The Company has introduced a new dialysis machine which uses contemporary micro-processor controls and is gaining enthusiastic acceptance of its new needle and blood line products Em ploym ent opportunities at B-D Drake W illock are varied, offering the potential Page 2 Section II Portland Observer. Thursday. July 18.1981 Dail Richards, Q uality Control Tester, assures that the dialysis equipm ent conform s to qual­ ity standards before shipm ent to the customer. employee the o pp ortu nity to join a grow ing, progressive Company which is looking ahead to the future. As an equal opp ortu nity em ployer, B-D Drake W illock encourages all interested job a p p li­ cants to inquire d ire c tly to the Hum an Re­ sources Departm ent; EeiDrakeWillock DWS. 'nc ■ SUBSIDIARY OF BECTON DICKINSON AND COMPANY 13520 S E Pheasant Court • Portland Oregon 97222 (503)659 3355