Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, January 05, 2005, Page 10, Image 10

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    lanuary 5, 2005
Page AIO
M etro
|Jctrtlanh Qf)bseruer
in in u n i t y
(a le n d a r
Unity Rally
A Unity Rally to show public
disgust for the distribution of
fliers by aracist group is planned
for Saturday, Jan. 8 at 1 p.m. at
the Multnomah Center, 7688
S. W. Capital Hwy. For more in­
formation, call 503-295-6761.
King Tribute
A tribute and celebration to
Martin Luther King Jr. will be at
Jefferson High School’s Robert
G. Ford's Auditorium, 5210 N.
Kerby, on M onday, Jan. 17.
Many speakers, performers and
vendors will entertain partici­
pants. A donation of $3 or three
nonperishable food items is re­
quested. For information, visit
www.worldartsfoundation.org.
Get in Shape
Get in shape with Portland Com ­
m unity C o lleg e 's non-credit
classes designed to get you
trimm ed and toned in January.
Weight training: cardio circuit
revs up the class for 90 minutes
from 6:30 to 8 p.m. in the newly
built gym of PCC’s Cascade
Campus, 705 N. Killingsworth.
Cost is $89 for 10 weeks. For
more information, call 503-978-
5205.
PCC Skills
Learn how to build a Web-based
business in a three-week class
from 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesdays from
Jan. 25 through Feb. 8 in Room
130of Mt. Tabor Hall at Portland
Community College’s Southeast
Center, 2305 S.E. 82 Ave. Cost is
$49. For more information, call
503-788-6265.
Business Meeting
Join North/Northeast Business
Association m eetings on the
first Monday of each month from
6 to 8 p.m. at AlbinaComm unity
Bank, 2002 N.E. Martin Luther
King BI vd. Morning networking
meetings are the third W ednes­
day of each month from 7:30 to 9
a.m. at the Blazers Boys and Girls
Club, 5250 N.E. Martin Luther
King Blvd. For more informa­
tion, call 503-249-0487 or visit
www.nneba.org.
Moved by Spiritand Experience
University of Portland coach is student of the game
BY JAYMEE R . C l'T l
T he P ortland O bserver
U niversity o f P o rtlan d ’s
head basketball coach sees him­
self as an educator above all
things. He views his athletes as
students first and commits that
all players who stay at UP for
four years will leave with a de­
gree, and he has the record to
back that up.
Michael Holden coaches on
his feet, but his humble spirit
and experience with the game
have helped him to guide his
players in life and basketball.
“I’ve been the bench warmer,
been traded, been semi-pro,
driven the van, ridden in the
back o f the bus, I’ve been the
first guy and I’ve been the 13th
guy,” Holden jokes. That expe­
rience has helped him relate to
his team.
Following H olden’s career
as a UCLA Bruin, he was a
third-round draft pick in 1983 of
the Golden State Warriors. He
played in the NBA for six years,
as a Portland Trail Blazer from
1986 to ’88.
“I’m a student o f the game
and I’ve had tremendous men­
tors,” said Holden, w ho still
c o n su lts leg en d a ry U CLA
coach and college basketball
ro y alty John W ooden. He
played under C oach Larry
photo by M ark W ashington /T he P ortland O bserver
Brown at UCLA.
University
of
Portland
Coach
Michael
Holden
shares
his
knowledge
of
life
and
sport
from
a career in which he was mentored by the
At 43, Holden is one o f the
basketball
legends
at
UCLA
and
the
NBA.
u n iv e r s ity ’s
youngest
coaches. He is also only the
“ I stayed a couple chapters ahead o f
“From a readiness standpoint, they’re 18
“W hen I played, I didn’t realize how much
school's second African-American basket­ in a business with men. The pureness o f the the class,” he jo k ed , but he said that
I
respected
and looked up to and observed all
ball coach at University o f Portland.
sport and athletic readiness isn’t w hat’s teaching show ed him not to take the work
my
coaches.”
“You look at all the sports, college and
problematic. Emotional maturity, financial o f others personally, w hich helped him in
But after a brief stint in the fashion indus­
pro, and there’s not adequate representa­ responsibility; that’s a real reach,” he said. coaching. "W hen y o u ’ve been in the
try,
coaching called to him.
tion,” he said. “In basketball, the transition
Holden also taught for one year, to supple­ classroom , you learn that everyone learns
“As
soon as I felt I could do something
from player to coach is smoother.”
differently
and
you
have
to
be
sensitive
ment his coaching income while working for
outside of basketball, I wanted to coach.
As a former player. Holden has an opinion
Pasadena City College in California. He was to the recip ien t,”
about players jum ping to professional teams
Holden says he didn't always know that Selling jeans was not my calling. I wanted to
a language arts and social studies teacher of
give back,” he said.
straight from high school.
coaching was for him.
a seventh grade class.
NM M NM M NM M M iM M M nM M M M M HHH HM M I
Gordly Oversees State Budgets
Gain Computer Skills
The Sun program offers a com ­
puter class for parents at King
Elementary School. To register,
call503-91 Mr 156or503-319-3425.
Volunteer Option
If you are looking fora volunteer
opportunity, check out Bradley-
Angle House to end domestic
violence. Bilingual women and
women of color are especially
needed. Forinformation.call503-
282-9940.
Crack the Code
Juan Williams
Crack the code to filling out f i­
nancial aid paperwork with the
help o f the ladies o f Beta Psi
Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta
Sorority. The workshop is at
Portland State University from
10a.m. to2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 8.
For questions and more infor­
mation, call 503-725-8766 or e-
m ail
N ic o le
H a rris
at
dst_betapsi@ yahoo.com .
Lecture
on King’s
Legacy
Volunteer for Hospice
Kaiser Permanente offers train­
ing for hospice volunteers Tues­
days and Thursdays from 12:30
to 4 p.m. from Jan. 18 through
Feb. 3 with one Saturday ses­
sion on Jan. 29. For more infor­
mation or to register, call 503-
499-5285o r503499-5408.
Get Schooled
Learn how to help to improve
schools and jobs at a forum with
State Superintendent of Public
Instruction Susan Castillo and
President of Oregon’s AFL-CIO
Tim Nesbitt at 7 p.m. Thursday,
Jan. 13 at the Hollywood Senior
Center. 1820 N.E. 40*\ Free and
sponsored by the Multnomah
County Democratic Party.
♦
Accomplished civil rights au­
thor and National Public Radio
senior correspondent, Juan W ill­
iams will be in Portland to speak at
a community-wide event celebrat­
ing the life and legacy o f Dr. Mar­
tin Luther King Jr.
The talk begins at 7 p.m. on
W ednesday, Jan. 12 at Portland
State U niversity's Smith M emo­
rial Student Union Ballroom, 1825
S. W. Broadway, room 355. A book
signing follows.
W illiams, one of Am erica’s
leading political writers and think­
ers, will offer insight into the les­
sons learned from King. The event
also features the Woodlawn El­
em entary School dancers.
Tickets are $20 and $5 for stu­
dents and can be purchased at
Ticketm aster or at the PSU Ticket
office. For more information, call
503-725-4422.
State Sen. Avel Gordly (far right) joins northeast Portland residents Laurie Vischer (left) and Sid Bert during a recent Portland Chapter
of Stand for Children breakfast. The group o f education advocates are frustrated by Gov. Ted Kulungoski's proposed budget cuts for
local schools.
Lawmaker also chairs
public safety group
Sen. Avel Gordly, a Democrat serving north­
east and southeast Portland, has been named to
the Joint Ways and Means Com mittee for the
upcoming legislative session. The committee,
considered the most powerful in Salem, will be
responsible for crafting the 2005-2007 state
budget.
Gordly was also named chairwoman of the
subcommittee on public safety, which will cre­
ate the budgets for the state police, corrections,
the judicial branch and other agencies.
With another budget shortfall and other
problems facing the state, G ordly’s previous
experience in public safety and on the Ways
and Means Com mittee will be an asset.
“There will be a number of issues before us,”
Gordly said. “We must do what we can to get
in front of the methamphetamine crisis that is
impacting com munities all over Oregon. And
we have to address the expanding gang prob­
lem, which has grown beyond Portland and
into other areas o f the state.
“ I am also very concerned about securing
funding for the State Police. They continue to
operate with numbers far below national stan­
dards, and that could affect their ability to
protect Oregonians. I have serious reserva­
tions about expanding the lottery to pay for
more state troopers and I will work hard during
the upcoming session to find another source of
funding. But we absolutely need to have these
officers on the road,” she said.
Gordly will draw on 30 years o f experience
working on public safety issues. After earning
a degree from Portland State University in Ad­
ministration of Justice, she worked in the O r­
egon Department o f Corrections as an adult
continued
on page A6
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