Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, January 18, 2006, Page 3, Image 3

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    lanuary 18, 2006
(Tire
Page A3
|Jn rtla n b © bscruer
In the Neighborhood
Soaked
Northwest
Floods
What da you think about the proposal to require Jefferson
High School students to wear uniforms and will it im pact how
others perceive the school?
It’s not going to contribute to our
learning. The population of students
is going to go down even more. I
think that we will be stereotyped. --
A’/u Carter, 9"1 grade
M elinda Thompson and her
daughter K estrel take in the
floodwaters covering
C lackam et Park in Oregon City.
Four weeks o f rainfall on a
near daily b asis has soaked
Portland, Vancouver and
Western Oregon and Washing­
ton. High winds and m udslides
have also caused damage in
both states.
►yl
If we have to wear uniforms
then every school in the P.I.L
should do it. --Dominick
photo bv I saiah B ouie /
T he P okii a n d O kseksek
Dixon, I l 'h grade
SEASONS
It’s not fair because we are a
public school. The Board of
Education says that it will
make a positive difference,
but I disagree. --Alexandria
Pharma, Ctjstomers/ ^
ransfer a
L
9et a î i
9''t card.
Martin, 9lh grade
M eet yo u r P h a rm a cists,
M elinda B u tle r a n d Todd M artin
AT A R B O R LO D G E
We are a regularpharmacy z
Dressing is a part of individu­
ality and it is important to how
you feel and it describes your
personality. There’s no reason
why we should have to wear
uniforms. -L a u r a Arellano,
| r W e fill p r e s c r ip tio n s — in c lu d in g a n tib io tic s ,
h ig h b lo o d p r e s s u r e m e d ic a tio n s ,
a n ti- d e p re s s a n ts , b irth c o n tro l, a n d m o re .
9“h grade
Ti
I like to wear basketball shorts and
sweats because they are comfort­
able, the uniforms won't be. Also, I
don’t like that they are bringing
middle school kids into Jefferson, I
left middle school and got away
from those kids. —Theron Segar,
K W e h a v e k n o w le d g e a b le , frie n d ly p h a r /n a c is ts
w h o h a v e th e tim e to s h a re in fo r m a tio n .
■ *
| r O u r p r ic e s a re c o m p e titiv e . W e a c c e p t m o s t
in s u r a n c e p la n s a n d a re a d d in g o th e r s a s
re q u e s te d .
FP
s '*
IOlh grade
✓
W e s p e c ia liz e in c u s t o m c o m p o u n d in g .
Y O U R L O C A L L Y O W N E D , N E IG H B O R H O O D
P H A R M A C Y AT ARBO R LO DG E
N IN T E R S T A T E A V E N U E 4 P O R T L A N D B L V D
S 0 3 .4 6 7 .4 S 4 8 • W W W .N E W S E A S O N S M A R K E T C O M
M O N -F R I 9 a m
I wouldn't wear the uniforms, and
I wouldn't go to school. It
wouldn’t feel like home to the
perception and me already is that
Jefferson sucks. I am graduating
and going to college and a lot of
people don’t think that we will. -
-Robert Hylla I2'h grade
7pm • SAT 9am 6p m • SUN 10am 4pm
Smooth Jazz Is Here!
Assisted Suicide Law Upheld
(AP)— The U.S. Supreme Court
upheld O regon’s one-of-a-kind
physician-assisted suicide law
Tuesday, rejectinga Bush adminis­
tration attempt to punish doctors
who help terminally ill patientsdie.
Justices, on a 6-3 vote, said the
1997 Oregon law used to end the
lives of more than 200 seriously ill
people trumped federal authority
to regulate doctors. New Chief Jus­
tice John Roberts backed the Bush
administration, dissenting with the
majority for the first time.
The ruling was a reprimand to
form er Attorney General John
Ashcroft, who in 2001 said that
doctor-assisted suicide is not a "le­
gitimate medical purpose" and that
Oregon physicians would be pun­
ished for helping people die under
the law.
Oregon’s law covers only ex­
tremely sick people — those with
incurable diseases, whom at least
two doctors agree have six months
or less to live and are of sound
mind.
Kitzhaber Priority:
Public Health
105.9
Won’t challenge current governor
(AP)— FormerGov.
“At some point I had
John K itz h a b e r a n ­
to decide where I could
nounced Friday that he
make the greatest dif­
won’t challenge Gov.
ference,” he said. “I can
Ted Kulongoski in the
do that best, not as a
Oregon Democratic pri­
candidate for governor,
mary, removing one ob­
but to lead a campaign
sta c le
to
the
to change the American
incumbent’s efforts to
health care system."
get re-elected in Novem- John Kitzhaber
Kitzhaber said he will
her.
spend the next few
Kitzhaber, 58, a former emer­ months raising money to promote
gency room physician who left his health care reform plan.
politics in 2002 after declining to
The health plan he has put for­
make a nin for the U.S. Senate, has ward would scrap Medicare and
been publicly musing about a race Medicaid in Oregon as well as the
for months, saying his campaign tax break that employers get for
could be a platform to promote insuring workers. They would be
sweeping health care reforms.
replaced them by a basic, govern­
Instead, he said Friday that he ment-paid policy forevery resident,
will focus on a broader campaign to and then allow people to buy addi­
“bring change to the American tional coverage in the private mar­
health care system.”
ket.
Portland's Only Smooth Jazz Station
kijz.co m
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