Monday, February 13

Sam Adams is on Yelp

News The other day I noticed a curious tweet from our venerable mayor's Twitter account:Yes, Sam is tweet... More

Feb 13, 2012 01:20 pm by RUTH BROWN  | Comments 1
 

Doctor Groups Flex Muscle In Capitol: $2.3 Million in Campaign Cash to Influence Health-Care Reform

News The State Capitol has been abuzz the last couple of days because of a hot list (PDF) circulating in ... More

Feb 10, 2012 06:00 pm by NIGEL JAQUISS  | Comments 4
 

Nonsense Knows No State Boundary: Washington Legislators Get Bogus Job Claims on CRC

News Up north of here, Washington legislators in Olympia are debating whether or not they should authoriz... More

Feb 10, 2012 09:09 am  | Comments 1
 

Occupy Arrestees Win Their Right to Full Trials—Even Though They May Not Need It

News The estimated 160 people arrested during Occupy Portland protests in the past five months have won t... More

Feb 9, 2012 01:24 pm by HANNAH HOFFMAN  | Comments 3
 
 
 
Home · Articles · News · Murmurs · Three out of George Carlin’s seven dirty words (Plus asshole) right here. May he R.I.P.
June 25th, 2008 WW Editorial Staff | Murmurs
 

Three out of George Carlin’s seven dirty words (Plus asshole) right here. May he R.I.P.

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LISTER’S BLISTER: He’s no worse for wear from chewing lead.
IMAGE: Matt Wong

• Harder to kill than Freddy Krueger, the long-proposed “headquarters hotel” next to the Oregon Convention Center may be inching closer to reality. Earlier this year, Convention Center owner Metro OK’d $600,000 to develop a firm project budget while telling staff to find another sucker, er, agency to issue construction bonds. Now, Murmurs has learned Metro is talking with the City of Portland, which shitcanned a different version of the HQ hotel only two years ago. “It could work if we broaden the revenue base to include access to the [motel-rental car tax] instead of just relying on hotel revenues,” says the city’s chief administrative officer, Ken Rust.

• Get me rewrite: Since Oregon’s founders wrote the state Constitution in 1857, much has changed. For instance, Article II, section 9, which disqualifies from public office “every person who shall give, or accept a challenge to fight a duel,” might need tweaking (Randy Leonard might be an exception). Thus this Monday, June 30, a House committee will hold a 10 am hearing in Salem on whether to hold an Oregon Constitutional Convention. Among those testifying: Bureau of Labor and Industries Commish Brad Avakian, who twice introduced bills when he was a lawmaker aimed at updating the state’s most important document. Now, he says Reps. Mitch Greenlick (D-Portland) and Chuck Riley (D-Hillsboro) will try to advance that effort. “It’s a tough political sell,” says Avakian. “But it’s time.”

• Weirdness in St. Johns: Scrappy Sentinel publisher Cornelius Swart got into an email fight recently with BUILDERnews magazine’s Mark Steck. When Steck inquired about the Sentinel’s circulation, Swart replied that internship applications were closed, signing himself “Publisher at Charge…I mean, IN charge....” Steck took offense: “Abortive punctuation use. And that awful signature? Anyway, I don’t give a shit about your applicants, I just wanted to know how much you’ve inflated your circulation numbers.” Replied Swart: “Fuck off asshole (no punctuation needed)…I have a job and you don’t…Get a real job. The world needs plumbers too[.]” Swart tells Murmurs, “I had to defend myself.”

• Fresh advice from Portland’s $6.5 million Office of Neighborhood Involvement: “Never let children under age 10 cross the street alone.” BrainstormNW columnist Dave Lister’s online comment after reading ONI’s zealous safety spiel on wweek.com: “My mother smoked like a chimney and drank like a fish during pregnancy. I chewed lead-based paint off my crib. We walked by ourselves to kindergarten, rode bikes without helmets, and skateboards.... Somehow we turned out OK.” They don’t make fetuses like they used to.

• Do you work a night shift at a local ER? Drive an ambulance in the evening? Work as a bartender? If you work any night shift worth writing about, we’d like to read about it. And we’ll pay! At the end of the summer, our Night Cabbie columnist will be going off duty. And we’re broadening the job description to include anyone with tales to tell about working after dark. Send your best 250-word Night Shift to nightshift@wweek.com, along with your name and email address; we’ll print the best entries. Who knows—you may become our next columnist, motherfucker.

• First plastic bags, now this: This week the U.S. Conference of Mayors passed a resolution to end taxpayer spending on bottled water. In the six months ending in May, the city of Portland spent $8,000 on bottled water—some of it from Mayor Tom Potter’s office. But now Potter stands poised to join at least 60 cities—including Seattle and Vancouver, Wash.—already done with the bottle. Pestered by Murmurs, Potter spokesman John Doussard says, “We are going to cancel our water contract by the end of this week. Although some might contend this is in keeping with the mayor’s environmental record, the city’s faith in the purity of its Bull Run water supply, or Tom’s vigilance in protecting taxpayer dollars, others may surmise it simply reflects Willamette Week’s continuing quest to root out bottled water and its attendant evils wherever [the paper] may find it.”

 
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06.25.2008 at 07:13 Reply
A constitutional convention isn't just a "tough political sell." It is an idiotic idea. Once you start revising the Constitution, there are few limits to what changes might be made. Basic freedoms we take for granted might disappear in an instant. Why would you possibly propose such a scheme just to remove some obsolete language on dueling? Of course you wouldn't. Therefore, the proponents must have a hidden agenda.

 

06.25.2008 at 10:12 Reply
I sincerely hope that no one working the night shift at an ER or on an ambulance crew sends you anything for a new column to replace Night Cabbie, as you have requested. Even without mentioning any names, there is still patient confidentiality to think about. Circumstances can identify people, too. Put yourself in a patient's place, or a family member's place - of reading in the paper something sensitive that should have remained confidential. Bad deal all around. That's why there are HIPAA laws.

I worked in a Portland ER for years. Saw all kinds of things that would make for some interesting reading. And I'm not about to share any of that with your readers. Please find another night shift group to focus on. If anyone in the healthcare field sends you patient related information, I hope they get their licenses and certifications yanked ASAP. Unprofessional.

Thanks.

 

06.26.2008 at 01:34 Reply
I agree with ED Nightshifter ... what happens in ERs and at fire and MVA scenes need to stay with the medical professionals, cops and firefighters. It is beyond unprofessional to tell stories that are nobody's business and to set up innocent people for ridicule and for your sport.

 

06.27.2008 at 02:41 Reply
I have to say I enjoyed reading about Sentinel's Cornelius Swart - as a little public payback. I worked (more like volunteered) for his paper as the Arts & Culture calendar girl soon after he bought it (then it was called In & About). But soon realized the final editing and formatting was so sloppy, photo captions mislabeled, and so on. Since I was double-sometimes triple-checking my info I submitted for the calendar, I was getting a little peeved that what went in print looked like crap, and than sometimes they'd change correct info I had given to something that wasn't. WTF! So I sent some constructive letters, and highlighted issues showing corrections. Swart's response - not an apology - but he actually said, Well Willamette Week and other papers make mistakes too. Soon after I vacated the position, I did ask Swart if he'd ever give me positive reference. He said not really, he'd have to let them know about my angry. My angry? I think he meant anger. But he is one for typos! Anger! more like floored that someone could have such a obnoxious ego and had no respect for accurate media.

 

06.28.2008 at 06:56 Reply
Ret
Instead of spending time rewritting the constitution, I would suggest the legislature go through the Oregon Revised Statutes first and clean out all the criminal laws that have been found unconstitutional by the courts, e.g. Disorderly Conduct. It's still on the books, but no arrest for it would be legal.

 

 
 

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