Portland Center for the Performing Arts 25th Anniversary

Portland Center for the Performing Arts 25th Anniversary

Portland, September 16th. Julie Vigeland, PCPA Foundation member, Gary Maffei, PCPA Foundation board chair and Jeanne Newmark, donor and namesake of PCPA’s Newmark Theatre, celebrated Portland Center for the Performing Arts 25th Anniversary. Opened in 1987, Portland Center for the Performing Arts launched with the “New Theatre Building”, renamed Antoinette Hatfield Hall in 2008. Developed as a public/private partnership to create much-needed performance spaces in Portland, the building houses three distinct theatres—Newmark Theatre, Dolores Winningstad Theatre and Brunish Theatre.

There were live performances on Main Street and in the Antoinette Hatfield Hall Rotunda.

There were live performances on Main Street and in the Antoinette Hatfield Hall Rotunda.

 

For the 25th Anniversary celebration, PCPA hosted an afternoon filled with free, family-friendly activities open to the public. The day included live performances by Portland Taiko, Tears of Joy Puppet Theatre, Festival Brass and Portland Opera To Go! Visitors were also able to visit with PCPA’s resident arts groups, and take behind-the-scenes tours of the theatres.

From the PCPA Foundation:

The Portland Center for the Performing Arts Foundation is the nonprofit organization that helps PCPA maintain high-quality theaters that attract premier performances to our community. The PCPA Foundation raises capital funds and supports PCPA through region-wide community outreach and advocacy.

 

Nonprofit Association of Oregon Appoints Jim White as Executive Director

Nonprofit Association of Oregon Appoints Jim White as Executive Director

Portland, September 13, 2012. The Nonprofit Association of Oregon (NAO) reports that Jim White, White, who officially begins on October 8, is deeply committed to social change and has worked in the nonprofit sector both domestically and internationally for more than 17 years. He has a passion for affecting systemic change in the way that the public, private, and nonprofit sectors work together to support and strengthen civil society. Throughout his career, White has worked on some of the most difficult humanitarian and development challenges of our times, in countries like Afghanistan, Iraq, Sudan, and North Korea. He is specifically skilled on working to build alliances and partnerships so that communities and organizations have a voice in the issues that are most important to them.

The Nonprofit Association of Oregon (NAO) is pleased to announce the appointment of Jim White as Executive Director.

The Nonprofit Association of Oregon (NAO) is pleased to announce the appointment of Jim White as Executive Director.

(NAO) is an independent 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that has served the nonprofit sector since 1977 providing training, consulting, and advocacy to enhance the capacity of nonprofits to fulfill their missions. Each year we serve over 8,000 nonprofit professionals from across the state.
When asked what drew him to join NAO, White responded, “Oregon is a unique state where we celebrate diverse ideas and diverse cultures. We have one of the most stunning and varied natural environments in the country. We have an engaged and passionate population; people who want to get involved in their community life. I am excited to bring what I have learned in the international context to the concerns, needs, and desires of the people of Oregon. I recognize that NAO is the organization that strengthens those voices and provides the kind of capacity building and leadership training that can have systemic change across the sector and beyond. That is something that I want to be involved with!”
Before joining NAO, White worked for Mercy Corps for over 14 years, most recently as the Vice President of Operations. He has also worked for the International Organization for Migration and the American Red Cross. White earned a BS in Engineering Technology from Temple University and an MA in Central Eurasian Area Studies from Indiana University. The Board selected White at the end of a rigorous national search that generated a very large pool of outstanding candidates. Board Chair Rick Nitti says, “We are pleased to have found such a qualified leader and believe that Jim has the vision and skills to enable NAO to become a stronger voice for the sector and advance our work supporting and serving nonprofits statewide.”

The Nonprofit Association of Oregon works in partnership with nonprofits, policy makers, philanthropists, and government agencies to ensure nonprofit success. Through training, consulting, executive transition services, and advocacy, the Nonprofit Association of Oregon helps build strong nonprofits which help build strong and vibrant communities.

Information submitted by
Carrie Kaufman, Director of Communications
Nonprofit Association of Oregon

For additional information visit:
www.nonprofitoregon.org

Nike’s Phil and Penny Knight Donate $125 Million to OHSU for Cardiovascular Institute

Nike’s Phil and Penny Knight Donate $125 Million to OHSU for Cardiovascular Institute

Portland, September 17th. Oregon Health & Science University announced a transformational gift of $125 million from Nike co-founder and Chairman Phil Knight and his wife Penny to advance OHSU’s world-class programs in cardiovascular medicine and research.

The gift is the largest in OHSU history and may likely be the largest private contribution ever made by living donors to benefit a single Oregon organization. It is the Knights’ second landmark gift to OHSU, following a 2008 pledge of $100 million that advanced the OHSU Knight Cancer Institute. Led by Albert Starr, M.D., and Sanjiv Kaul, M.D., the institute will bring clinicians and researchers together to translate laboratory discoveries into new and better treatments for the world’s No. 1 killer.

OHSU leaders said the gift will establish the OHSU Cardiovascular Institute, an integrated center for translational research, clinical care, professional training and outreach in all aspects of heart and vascular disease. The institute’s mission: to accelerate new prevention, diagnostic and treatment strategies being developed in the laboratory and transition them into patient care clinics as rapidly as possible. Under the umbrella of a multidisciplinary institute, OHSU will pair researchers and clinicians together on projects while also building strategic partnerships with pharmaceutical and medical device developers who can extend OHSU’s unique expertise to more patients through the global commercial marketplace.

“Phil and Penny Knight have made a gift to all Oregonians,” said OHSU President Joe Robertson, M.D., M.B.A. “OHSU is proud to have once again earned their trust as a partner in creating a healthier Oregon and a healthier world. Phil and Penny share our confidence that we can finally reduce the many, many preventable deaths each year due to cardiovascular disease by innovating, collaborating and educating.”

CARDIOVASCULAR INSTITUTE LEADERS
Legendary Oregon heart surgeon and Lasker Award winner Albert Starr, M.D., will co-direct the OHSU Cardiovascular Institute with cardiovascular imaging pioneer Sanjiv Kaul, M.D., head of OHSU’s Division of Cardiovascular Medicine. The gift will give Starr and Kaul immediate leverage in recruiting and retaining additional national/international-caliber faculty in high-impact areas. It will also assist them in acquiring new scientific capabilities that will drive discovery in cardiovascular health as well as stroke, cancer, neurological disorders, immunodeficiency, diabetes and other diseases.

Originally arriving at OHSU in 1958, Starr performed Oregon’s first open-heart surgeries and performed the state’s first heart transplant. He is best known internationally for co-inventing and implanting the world’s first artificial human heart valve in 1960. His innovation with engineer Lowell Edwards transformed the treatment of valvular heart disease. It also changed the landscape of the medical device industry, giving rise to an entirely new product niche for valve replacement products.

Kaul, who joined OHSU from the University of Virginia in 2005, led the development of microbubble-based myocardial contrast echocardiography (MCE), an emerging imaging technique. MCE can diagnose heart attacks with new levels of precision and reduce unnecessary hospitalizations by distinguishing life-threatening cardiac events from false alarms. He received the 2012 Distinguished Scientist Award from the American College of Cardiology for his innovations.

“Penny and I are pleased to help upgrade cardiovascular health in Oregon and around the world. Drs. Starr and Kaul have built a great program in research, care and outreach, and we are excited about what it can contribute to the fight against these deadly diseases,” said Phil Knight.

As a high-level collaboration between a heart surgeon and a cardiologist, the leadership duo of Starr and Kaul is emblematic of the Institute’s mandate to break down barriers to success. “We don’t aspire to be the largest Cardiovascular Institute in the nation,” said Kaul. “We are in a perfect position to become what we do want to be: the world’s premier translational cardiovascular research institute.”

Starr said such an institute would help to close what he calls the “translational gap” in cardiovascular innovation. “We know from personal experience that the most meaningful innovations happen when clinicians and researchers work together across disciplines to solve big problems. That idea will be hard-wired into the culture of this institute.”

With the Knights’ support, Starr and Kaul will be able to move forward on a vision they have been crafting together for more than a year. The goal is to build a comprehensive assault on cardiovascular disease that spans the entire health care spectrum – from prevention to transplantation to tissue regeneration – and encompasses the full continuum of biomedical science – from basic discovery to clinical research to drug and device development. The directors are working closely with Robertson and other university leaders to prioritize programs and develop an initial institute strategic plan.

“With this gift, together with their historic support of the OHSU Knight Cancer Institute, the Knights are changing the game against the two deadliest and most intractable public health problems of our time. We are grateful for this opportunity to team up with these incredible champions of human health,” said Constance French, interim president of the OHSU Foundation.

ABOUT OHSU

Oregon Health & Science University is a nationally prominent research university and Oregon’s only public academic health center. It serves patients throughout the region with a Level 1 trauma center and nationally recognized Doernbecher Children’s Hospital. OHSU operates dental, medical, nursing and pharmacy schools that rank high both in research funding and in fulfilling the university’s social mission. OHSU’s Knight Cancer Institute helped pioneer personalized medicine through a discovery that identified how to shut down cells that enable cancer to grow without harming healthy ones. Research through the OHSU Brain Institute ranks fourth in the country for National Institutes of Health funding in the neurosciences. OHSU’s Casey Eye Institute is ranked second in NIH funding for eye research and is a global leader in ophthalmic imaging and in clinical trials related to eye disease.

ABOUT THE OHSU FOUNDATION

The OHSU Foundation is a 501(c)(3) organization that exists to secure private philanthropic support to advance Oregon Health & Science University’s vital missions, and to invest and manage gifts responsibly to honor donors’ wishes. The foundation raises funds from individuals, companies, foundations and organizations, and invests and manages gifts in accordance with donors’ wishes.

ABOUT CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE AND STROKE

(Source: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)

  • In 2008, more than 616,000 people died of heart disease. Heart disease caused almost 25 percent of deaths—almost one in every four—in the United States.
  • Heart disease is the leading cause of death for both men and women. More than half of the deaths due to heart disease in 2008 were in men.
  • Coronary heart disease is the most common type of heart disease. In 2008, 405,309 people died from coronary heart disease.
  • Every year about 785,000 Americans have a first coronary attack. Another 470,000 who have already had one or more coronary attacks have another attack.
  • In 2010, coronary heart disease alone was projected to cost the United States $108.9 billion. This total includes the cost of health care services, medications, and lost productivity.
  • Someone in the United States has a stroke every 40 seconds. Every four minutes someone dies of stroke.
  • Every year, about 795,000 people in the United States have a stroke. About 610,000 of these are first or new strokes. About 185,000 people who survive a stroke go on to have another.
  • Ischemic strokes, which occur when blood clots block the blood vessels to the brain, are the most common type of stroke, representing about 87 percent of all strokes.
  • In 2010, stroke cost the United States an estimated $53.9 billion. This total includes the cost of health care services, medications, and missed days of work.
  • Stroke is a leading cause of serious long-term disability.
Portland Nonprofits Mark September 11th as the National Day of Service and Remembrance

Portland Nonprofits Mark September 11th as the National Day of Service and Remembrance

Portland, September 11th, 2012. Thousands of volunteers joined forces to help local charities including the Oregon Food Bank. 175 volunteers repacked 49,376 pounds of food at OFB on the Day of Service. It was the eleventh anniversary of 9/11/2001 and volunteer groups honored the victims, survivors, and the many who rose in service in response to the tragedy, including first responders, recovery workers, volunteers, public safety officers and members of our military.

Rocky Norris repacks food at the Oregon Food Bank’s Maybelle Clark Macdonald Volunteer Action Center

Rocky Norris repacks food at the Oregon Food Bank’s Maybelle Clark Macdonald Volunteer Action Center

Desiree Davenhill pitches in.

Desiree Davenhill pitches in.

Volunteers were urged by Hands on Greater Portland to, “Pay tribute to the victims, survivors, and heroes of 9/11 by engaging with friends, family, and neighbors in volunteer service to communities across the region.” The organization has year-round volunteer opportunities at over 300 different nonprofits. “Whether you are working, parenting, in school or retired, Hands On Greater Portland offers you a variety of ways to get involved while meeting your schedule and interests. Volunteer for a one-time project. Volunteer for a few weeks. Volunteer after work or on the weekends. Volunteer alone, with family, friends or co-workers,” they explain.

The City of Portland Parks Bureau's Community garden was another place to volunteer.

The City of Portland Parks Bureau’s Community garden was another place to volunteer.

Some volunteer projects provide opportunities to come together and serve local community needs, side by side. Here’s a video with more information on how to volunteer with Hands on Greater Portland.


Mount Angel Oktoberfest Infuses Millions into Local Nonprofits

Mount Angel Oktoberfest Infuses Millions into Local Nonprofits

Mt. Angel, September 8th. Lederhosen and Dirndls were all the rage at the kick-off party for the 47th annual Oktoberfest. The party launched the four day celebration for rural community, 40 miles south of Portland; Oktoberfest runs through Sunday, September 16th.

Steven and Laura Miller and Nick and Imelda Wavra - members of the Kleinstadtler Dancers who performed at the Kick Off Dinner and are saving a special new dance for Mount Angel's 2012 Oktoberfest.

Steven and Laura Miller and Nick and Imelda Wavra – members of the Kleinstadtler Dancers who performed at the Kick Off Dinner and are saving a special new dance for Mount Angel’s 2012 Oktoberfest.

Michele Fennimore - Oktoberfest Director

Michele Fennimore – Oktoberfest Director

Over the past 47 years ago, the Oktoberfest organization has donated over three million dollars to Mount Angel schools, churches, civic organizations, youth activities, senior services, hospitals, and scores of other worthwhile causes. Additionally, civic and non-profit organizations also earn money by manning food booths. Last year these grossed $616,000.00. For many, Oktoberfest is their major fund raising activity of the year.

Ted Schacher, Nick Splonski and Bill Bischoff join S-Bahn in singing

Ted Schacher, Nick Splonski and Bill Bischoff join S-Bahn in singing

Dean and Molly Westbrook have a polka moment

Dean and Molly Westbrook have a polka moment

Jim Hoke - Oktoberfest Sponsor

Jim Hoke – Oktoberfest Sponsor

Oregon’s oldest and longest running Oktoberfest began in 1966, following a tradition of over 125 years of harvest festivals under various names and formats. The community founded by German pioneers in 1867, with its surrounding agricultural countryside bears a striking resemblance to rural Bavaria, making an Oktoberfest a natural choice. Organizers expect 350,000 people to come to Mount Angel and soak in the Bavarian charm.

At the festival you’ll find over 50 little food chalets with Bavarian treats; a large arts and crafts show; a new Bavarian Biergarten, family Weingarten and interactive family Alpinegarten. There is free entertainment on the village bandstand featuring the sounds of the alpine country and a free Kindergarten on Saturday and Sunday. Enjoy a sports program that includes golf and volleyball tournaments and a high school football classic, a 200-vehicle cruz-n car show and more.

For more information, visit Oktoberfest  http://www.oktoberfest.org or call toll free 1-855-899-6338.