QTlçe January 25, 2012 IN S ID E Week ¡nThe Review L aw J ustice Fortiani» ©baerucr This page Sponsored by: Page 3 FredMeyer What's on your list today?. page 2 pages 4-5 S ports page 7 O pinion pages 10-11 Winter Clothes Shopping Spree Trail Blazer Wesley Matthews takes kids from the Police Activities League on a shopping spree for warm winter clothing Sunday at the Johnson Creek Fred Meyer. The event kicked off the Fred Meyer Coat Drive to provide winter clothing for disadvantaged youth and their families. Donations of new and gently-used coats will be collected at all local Fred Meyer locations through Feb. 12. Survivors of the Sex Trade Stories of exploitation, and a call to action C lassifieds F o o d page 16 The survivors tell their stories of exploitation as young girls, survival and growth as women. As their sto­ ries unfold, audiences’ perceptions of prostitution are forever changed, bringing about awareness and a call to action. Lunacy Stageworks presents Sto­ ries: from Survivors ofthe Sex Trade, a staged theatrical work as part of Portland’s Fertile Ground Festival. The readings as told by survi­ vors of the sex trade, Jeri Williams, Valarie Newman, and Rachel Cerise Indigo Baum, will take place at 8 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 27 and Saturday, Jan. 28 at the Sellwood Masonic Temple, located on Southeast Milwaukie, just south of Bybee Boulevard. Williams, the neighborhood pro­ gram coordinator for the city of Portland and a candidate for City Council on the May 2012 ballot, said the biggest misconception about prostitution is that it is a choice. Survivors of human trafficking and the sex trade will bring aware­ ness to the issue and a call to action during staged readings this weekend at the Sellwood Masonic Temple as part o f Portland’s Fertile Ground Festival. In reality, most of these girls are forced into it, sometimes even sold into it by a parent, Williams said. Last year, Lunacy Stagew orks p ro d u ced , "S to ries: From the Streets," in collaboration with writ­ ers from Street Roots new spaper, w ritten and p erform ed by the hom eless. Lunacy continues their Stories series this year, featuring women who have survived hu­ man trafficking.