Marriage

THE HUSH
Friday January 2, 2009

Lucky Dragons, White Rainbow, Dash! and Rob Walmart at and/or near The Hush (14 NW 3rd Ave, Portland) January 4th 8pm $10 All ages. Also on Monday the 5th as part of the PSU Lecture Series at Shattuck Hall, 1914 SW Park Ave, Room 212, PSU Campus (at the corner of SW Broadway & Hall on the PSU campus) Luke ans Sarah will present themselves. PSU’s website says:

“Lucky Dragons” means any recorded, performed, installed, packaged or shared pieces made by Luke Fischbeck, Sarah Rara, and any sometimes collaborators. Included in the 2008 Whitney Biennial, Lucky Dragons work in a variety of media, including such projects as “sumi ink club”—a weekly collaborative drawing society, and “glaciers of nice”—a small press and internet community. Currently living in Los Angeles, Lucky Dragons have recorded 19 albums which are all available for downloading.

Lucky Dragons and E*Rock will be showing work at Stumptown downtown this month as well, opening on Thursday the 8th.

  1. rob writes:

    http://megazord.tumblr.com/post/67792389/transcript-of-rob-show-08-09

    posted Jan 2, 12:40 PM ~

  2. carl writes:

    MORE IMPORTANTLY:
    WHITE FANG< TONIGHT at ROTTURE w/ meth teeth and past lives.

    posted Jan 2, 02:03 PM ~

  3. Megazord writes:

    rob reppin 4 lyfe

    posted Jan 2, 03:40 PM ~

  4. Megazord writes:

    when is CHIPS going to be starting
    i think i’ve waited long enough

    posted Jan 3, 03:09 AM ~

  5. carl writes:

    we should have a years past years to come post coming pretty soon. a sum up.

    posted Jan 3, 09:30 PM ~

  6. sofuckingstoked writes:

    4 THE VONCERT

    posted Jan 4, 03:42 PM ~

  7. rob writes:

    posted Jan 5, 01:55 AM ~

  8. jordan writes:

    DARK FALCON LPS ARE BACK IN STOCK. Mailing out all the backorders today. All Lucky Deals back in action and available for purchase in the shop.

    posted Jan 6, 03:29 PM ~

  9. sam writes:

    MAYOR SAM ADAMS

    BETTER TOGETHER: BECAUSE PORTLAND BELONGS TO ALL OF US
    Swearing In Remarks
    Parkrose High School Auditorium
    Portland, Oregon

    January 5, 2009

    Thank you Portland! My name is Sam Adams. I am honored to be your
    mayor.

    Thank you for the introduction. And thank you Parkrose High School
    Broncos for your hospitality!

    What a glorious and quirky city we have. Where else can you buy a
    donut designed to look like “dirt?” Or browse one of the world’s
    largest bookstores and then walk a couple of blocks to the world’s
    smallest park. There is a reason experts always seem to rank us so
    high. As the nation’s most livable city, the best city for seniors,
    the best city for walkers — a city known for its bikers and hikers;
    food and flowers; beer and bridges.

    The reason for all this is clear: That reason is you. Us. All of us. Because we have created this think-different, keep-it-real,
    improve-the-world kind of culture; a culture of sustainability, a
    culture you can’t find just anywhere else. It is the reason why
    Portland is a city we can love. And it’s those values that position
    us to thrive at this moment of transition and transformation.

    Portland has also become what it is, in part, because of our leaders.
    Like Mayor Tom Potter. He brought youth, immigrants, Portlanders of
    color into civic decision-making. Like Mayor Bud Clark. He boosted
    the city’s rainy day fund from a few thousand dollars to $20 million.
    And like my dear friend, Mayor Vera Katz. She created beautiful
    Portland places like the esplanade that circles the Willamette. Thank
    you. We are better people and a better place because of you.

    And before I go further, I want to thank my family, like my brother
    and sisters, my Mom and Dad; my boyfriend, Peter; and all the friends
    who keep me grounded and accountable. I love you guys.

    It’s a new year, and now Portland has new leadership. The 2009 City
    Council brims with fresh ideas. Please stand up. Auditor Gary
    Blackmer; Commissioners Nick Fish, Amanda Fritz, Randy Leonard and Dan
    Saltzman: I am excited to work with you. We are a small team with big
    plans, a city council willing to take on smart but unconventional
    ideas that give Portland its standout innovations. Also: Portland has
    strong bureau management and dedicated city workers. You will help us
    steer a constructive course. I have a tremendous team: perhaps the
    best mayoral staff in public service today, anywhere. Will my team
    please stand up.

    Together – with all Portlanders – we will make the city even better.
    Because Portland is better together and because Portland belongs to
    all of us.

    We will do more than just push back on the problems that confront us.
    Together, we will push ahead. Our goals are tough but doable. Make
    Portland the greenest city on earth. Stoke our capacity for
    creativity and groundbreaking innovation. Brand and sell
    Portland-made products and services around the globe. Find more of
    our people family-wage jobs and affordable housing. Keep Portlanders
    safe. And, regardless of neighborhood or race or household income,
    educate all of our kids to world-class standards.

    As mayor, I will take risks to innovate. I will be grateful to those
    who help. If things don’t work out as expected, I will take
    responsibility for failures. To those who disagree with me, let’s not
    be disagreeable. I promise to listen to you. Your ideas may be better
    than mine and your participation makes us stronger. Because Portland
    is better together.

    Our community, of course, has problems — big problems – and fixing
    them will be tough. The work might go slow. This will be
    frustrating, at times. But we need to recognize that our problems can
    also offer us opportunities. One thing is absolutely certain:
    Despite the worst economic recession in 60 years bearing down on us,
    Portland cannot wait; the time to move is now.

    To set a standard of action, in coming weeks I will announce my plans
    for the first 100 days in office. To set a standard of inclusion, I
    will soon announce my citizen mayoral cabinet members.

    In addition to supporting the work of my council colleagues, as mayor,
    my focus is on jobs, education and sustainable planning.

    Let’s talk about jobs first.

    Jobs

    Almost three out of ten Portlanders are unemployed or make so little
    they can barely afford basic essentials like food. This means the
    city needs more family-wage jobs. Good jobs that come from successful
    and ethical businesses. The City Council will work to support such
    companies to open, expand and stay here. And we have already started.

    The resurgent Portland Development Commission and Governor Ted
    Kulongoski last month helped us attract the proposed North American
    headquarters of Vestas Wind Systems. That’s 850 more jobs and a
    quarter of a billion dollars in a private-sector investment in
    Portland. Now we need our legislature to approve the deal.

    To help businesses more immediately, the Portland City Council this
    month will unveil the city’s first local job creation and economic
    stimulus package. I intend it to include scholarships so people
    recently laid off can get training at our Worksource Centers and
    community colleges. Also, I want provisions in the stimulus package
    to give local companies – and companies that hire local workers – “buy
    local” preferences in awarded city contracts.

    To build our local economy on a firm foundation of accountability, we
    aim to integrate these and other efforts into an economic development
    plan. And, as Mayor, I am putting out the city’s “welcome mat” to
    businesses.

    Schools

    Another area of focus for me is schools.

    Here’s one figure that scares me. Count off four eighth graders. One.
    Two. Three. Four. In Portland, chances are that two of them will
    drop out of high school.

    Making sure our children graduate high school is more than an ethical
    thing; it is a smart investment in our future prosperity. Our economy
    hinges on an educated workforce.

    So, Multnomah County Chair Ted Wheeler and I have created a new
    education improvement partnership with local school districts and
    local school foundations. We are collecting the best ideas on how to
    reduce the dropout rate. Here is one idea. Studies show that 8th
    graders going on to 9th grade are more likely to excel academically if
    they get workplace experience during their summer vacation.

    So let’s help our students get the experience they need. Let’s create
    the Portland Youth Corps. For the summer of 2009, just five months
    away, the Portland Youth Corp would need 250 adults to volunteer as
    coaches. These coaches will partner with employers to welcome young
    people to the workplace. You will be asked.

    Schools make the American Dream possible. We need our families and
    teachers to educate our students to first class standards so all our
    children can soar. Yes, education costs money. Ignorance costs more.
    Let’s invest now.

    Sustainability

    My third priority is sustainability.

    Sustainability means meeting our needs without compromising our
    children’s ability to thrive. It means economic, social and
    environmental justice.

    We all know which bad habits that contribute to this planet’s
    potential environmental doom. We rely on a dwindling supply of fossil
    fuels. Burning them poisons our atmosphere. Our climate is changing
    faster than experts expected.

    Here’s a silver lining to this toxic cloud: Portland is the ideal
    starting place for this nation to get serious about environmental
    sustainability. We can show what’s possible, setting an example the
    rest of the world can follow. And we can prove sustainability pays
    off. Our economy benefits from an estimated $2.6 billion annual green
    dividend. Portlanders get money back into their pockets through the
    automobile miles not driven, worse congestion not experienced and
    pollution not breathed. Our green dividend grew from public
    investments in transit and land-use planning.

    Portland may be the greenest city in the country. That’s no longer
    good enough. We aim to be the greenest city on earth. We can do this
    with thoughtful planning that integrates Portland’s value of
    sustainability into everything we do. I want to see this philosophy
    put into action with the completion of the Portland Plan, a blueprint
    for the next 30 years.

    The Portland Plan will put density where density belongs and shape our
    city so that the necessities of a good life, like grocery stores, are
    a 20-minute walk from home.

    But we need more than planning. We need more sustainable “doing,”
    too.

    So, I am thrilled today to join the Governor and the Oregon University
    System to announce the proposed Oregon Sustainability Center, to be
    located in the Portland State University district. Governor
    Kulongoski has included $80 million of state bonds in his proposed
    budget to help pay for it. Thank you, Governor.

    A green revolution is about to bloom across America. Let’s make
    Portland the hub.

    Better Together

    In closing, I want to repeat a quote that I used on the campaign
    trail:

    The Scottish writer Alasdair Gray once wrote, “Work as if we are
    living in the early days of a better nation.”

    To me, this means working with a young nation spirit of belonging to
    something you can believe in. Even in the toughest of times,
    Portlanders never let our “young nation’’ spirit die. At our best,
    Portlanders do more than just push back on problems. We push ahead.
    If we can channel our collective energy for the common good, there’s
    no stopping us, no problem we can’t solve, no opportunity we cannot
    seize.

    In the coming days, the City Council will announce an initiative that
    will make it easier for Portlanders to pitch in. Imagine a Portland
    with more people like Matt Todd, a city maintenance worker I met in
    December during a late-night ride-a-long on a city plow.

    Matt volunteers as a groundskeeper for Jefferson High School. Nobody
    asked him to, but every summer, he mows and edges the sports fields.
    He keeps the school’s outdated irrigation system functioning. He
    spends many, many hours making the fields look better. Matt has
    respect, appreciation and fulfillment that come with improving a piece
    of Portland. Thank you, Matt.

    I will work hard as your mayor to make Portland even better. And I ask
    that you work at it, too: because Portland is better together, and the
    responsibility for its care belongs to all of us.

    We need everyone’s help to move Portland forward, so I will close by
    paraphrasing a hero of mine, Harvey Milk, a great city leader, “My
    name is Sam Adams, and I’m here to recruit you!”

    Thank you.

    Mayor Sam Adams

    posted Jan 6, 04:14 PM ~

  10. busy cuts Mrs. Dash ain't married writes:

    item post character limits [?]

    posted Jan 7, 02:06 PM ~

 

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