October s, 2005___________________________ ^Jorthiub © bseruer_______________________________ PaSe 65 C lassifieds 'P o r t l a n d G L s e r v e r A u t o R .e v ie w Associate Planner $4,017 - $4,882 / month C loses O ctober 14, 2005 Engineering Associate $4,435 - $ 5 ,3 8 9 / month Closes O ctober 14, 2005 SR. NETWORK ANALYST $ 4 ,8 9 5 - $ 5 ,9 4 9 / month Closes O ctober 14, 2005 Call (5 03 ) 8 4 6 -8 6 0 6 /TTY (503) 8 46 -48 9 8 for inform ation or see our website: w w w .co.w ashington. or.us. C o u n ty a p p lic a tio n and supplem ental application form s required. W om en, minorities, and p e o p le w ith d is a b ilit ie s a re encouraged to apply. APPLY TO: W ashington County Hum an Resources Division 155 N. First Avenue, Suite 320 Hillsboro, OR 97124 H uman S ervices OREGON DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES Principal Executive/Manager F T h e S ta te o f O re g o n , H e a lth S e r v ic e s . O ffic e o f M e d ic a l Assistance Program s is recruiting fo ra full-tim e Principal Executive/ M anager F. The person in this p o s itio n is r e s p o n s ib le fo r d ir e c t in g a n d m a n a g in g th e Program and Policy Section of the Oregon Health Plan. Application m aterials and detailed job Announcement #LEHS5503 may be obtained either by calling the DHS Job Line at 503-945-5742 (voice) or 503- 945-6214 (TTY), visit our website at www.oregon.gov/OHS/index.shtml or through your loca l Oregon Employment Office. All application materials must be submitted to the Departm ent of Human Services, Recruitment and Retention Unit, 500 SummerSt. N.E. - E22, Salem, Oregon 97301-1099. All m aterial m ust be received by 5:00 pm on Tuesday, O ctober 11, 2005. 2006 E35O Sedan Tested Vehicle Information: Price: $ 5 4 ,1(X); Engine: 3.5 Liter Valve aluminum V6; Transmis­ sion: Drive Adaptive 7 speed au­ tomatic w. touch shift. The Mercedes Benz e35O re­ placed the E320 this year with an im provem ent in perform ance. Hand-polished Burl Walnut wood accents distinguish a spacious interior while engineered preci­ sion and classic Mercedes de­ sign come together in the most elegant manner. The 3.5-litre V6 seven-speed automatic drive train gives the E350 a performance edge over its six-cylinder luxury rivals and, if you spend many hours behind the wheel, its superb comfort, ride and refinement again mark it as the sedan of choice This engine is mated to the 7G-TRONIC automatic gearbox, making the most of the engines MARTIN CLEANING SERVICE CARPET & UPHOLSTERY CLEANING Residential & Commercial Service _______ CARPET CLEANING 2 CLEANING AREAS OR MORE PRE-SPRA Y TRAFFIC AREAS INCLUDES 1 SMALL HALL Qualified candidate m ust have BS in Accounting and four years of accounting experience. Individual m ust have strong com puter skills a n d a d v a n c e d k n o w le d g e o f E x c e l. M u s t a ls o be d e ta il o rie n te d , o rg a n ize d , and have s o lid c o m m u n ic a tio n and a n a lytica l skills. Send s u ccin ct letter of interest with resum e to: accounting@ m m t.ore A p p lic a tio n s d u e O c to b e r 19, 2005. E-m ail only; no phone calls please. Learn m ore about th e Trust at w w w .m m t.org Advertise with diversity in Find future gigs and help starting over (AP) — In the terrify­ ing days after Hurricane K atrin a hit, the Fats D o m in o s and A aron Nevilles of New Orleans music surfaced one by one. But most people have never heard of Jesse Young, a guitar player who serenaded gondola passengers on the la­ goons o f New O rleans’ famed City Park and now is relocated in Portland. There are thousands of musicians like Young, the sidemen and women who backed up the big names in the Big Easy and p ro v id e d the soundtrack for New O r­ leans’ endless party. W orking with other New Orleans guitarist Jesse Young plays under portraits of famous jazz O regon b u sin esses, artists (from left) Thelonius Monk, Charlie Parker and Miles Davis at the realtors, local government Portland Jazz Festival office. (AP photo) and travel agencies, the “The big names, they have re­ Jazz Festival is offering a temporary February festival. Young was one o f the first small sources, they can get out. The home in Portland toany New Orleans groups of musicians to arrive in people that we need to tap into are musician who needs it. “There was a very slow response Portland. He and his wife want to the ones who were the street musi­ to the cultural needs” of the hurri­ start over here, he said, after sal­ cians,” said Gigi Hill, a Houston jazz cane evacuees, said Bill Royston, vaging what he can from their New vocalist who is volunteering with the group. “They are the ones who director of the Portland Jazz Festi­ Orleans rental apartment. “There are a lot o f people sitting really need our help.” val. “A lot is gone. We are doing In Atlanta and surrounding ar­ what we can to preserve what is at the doorstep of New Orleans, waiting to get back in and see what’s eas, several jazz radio stations have left.” banded together to ask listeners to The organization will coordinate left,” he said. In H ouston, a m usician-run provide shelter for displaced musi­ temporary housing, pay for musi­ cians to fly to the city from the G ulf group called New Orleans and cians and help them find jobs. And region, help get children into public- Houston, or NOAH, started up al­ in Baton Rouge, La , the local blues schools, help spouses find jobs most immediately. It has found society is trying to persuade gov­ and - perhaps most importantly - do housing for displaced musicians, ernment to pay displaced musicians what it can to get the musicians persuaded a jazz club to have an “all to perform in public spaces, which gigs at the jazz clubs that dot the New Orleans” night and helped the group says might help bring Northwest. And all displaced musi­ musicians buy or borrow new in­ some cheer to a city overflowing with hurricane evacuees. cians are welcome to perform at the struments Dear Deanna! Each Area I used to hang out, party and have a g