Members of OWS, Occupy DC & Occupy Portland Respond to SOTU
This 2012 “State of the 99%” response to the State of the Union will be delivered by a group of Occupiers assembled outside in a well-lit spot at McPherson Square following the conclusion of the President’s State of the Union address and/or the Tea Party response. The presentation will unfold this way: one participant will begin in the center/front of the group, in the middle of the camera frame, surrounded by the others. That person will deliver the first line of the speech, and will then be echoed by the People’s Mic. That person will then read their second line, and as the People’s Mic echoes the second line, that person will move off to the side and rejoin the group, while another person will step into the center spot to read the next two lines, with each line again echoed by the People’s Mic. This will continue, cycling through the crowd, with each person reading two lines and being echoed by the People’s Mic.
Portland Oregon Camera Stores - News

Portland, Oregon (January 23, 2012) Holden Outerwear is proud to announce our partnership with analog instant photography savior, The Impossible Project. To celebrate 10 years of creative and cutting edge outerwear, Holden is teaming up with Impossible

conclusion of the President's State of the Union address and/or the Tea Party response. The presentation will unfold this way: one participant will begin in the center/front of the group, in the middle of the camera frame, surrounded by the others.

(A person familiar with the case says Harris allegedly placed the camera her bathroom.) Harris, it turns out, is the president of Bi-Mart, the 72-store discount grocery chain (including two in Portland). The employee-owned Bi-Mart is Oregon's
By The Hillsboro Argus PORTLAND -- Portland Community College is bringing activist and civil rights leader Hollis Watkins to its campuses in February. The legendary activist participated in the first Woolworth's lunch counter sit-in in Mississippi,

The Portland Bureau of Transportation has no plans to reopen it anytime soon or to take away the concrete jersey barriers that were put in place to protect two homes. Portland's Bureau of Development Services said the hillside has stopped moving,