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Thursday nights rock in Dallas during the summer concert series
Carson Langford wins double gold at Pan Am Championships See B1
See A3
Wednesday July 03, 2024 | Volume 148, Issue 26
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Complaint alleges congressional candidate withheld financial information Mike Erickson self-funded his three prior unsuccessful campaigns By JULIA SHUMWAY Oregon Capital Chronicle
The head of a campaign finance watchdog group called on the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate Oregon Republican congressional
nominee Mike Erickson, saying his financial disclosure reports are among âthe most egregious cases of intentional withholding of informationâ the group has ever seen. A complaint submitted by End Citizens United President Tiffany Muller alleges that the personal financial disclosure reports Erickson filed as a candidate in 2022 and 2024 donât provide enough information about more than $100 million in assets, violating federal law and U.S. House ethics rules and preventing
Oregon voters from being able to assess whether his financial interests conflict with the responsibilities he would have as a member of Congress. âGiven the scope of the finances in question â which totals at least $105 million â this is one of the most egregious cases of intentional withholding of information we have ever seen,â Muller said in a statement to the Capital Chronicle. âThis is not a mere oversight. Itâs a brazen and calculated move to keep voters
in the dark, especially considering that he filed these same exact forms accurately in two of his previous runs for office.â Erickson is running against first-term Democratic U.S. Rep. Andrea Salinas in Oregonâs 6th Congressional District, one of the most competitive in the country. This is Ericksonâs fourth run for Congress, after losing in 2006, 2008 and 2022. His most recent 2.4-point loss to Salinas was the closest, with a candidate from the Constitution
MIKE ERICKSON
See ERICKSON, page A6
âWild Womenâ art show juried no more By LANCE MASTERSON For The Itemizer-Observer
Bogginâ down the competition
PHOTO BY DAVID HAYES
Two vehicles compete in the modified mud drags June 29 at Willaminaâs annual Mud Drags, Side by Sides and Boggsraces. For results, see page B1.
Mama Gorditaâs Kitchen introduces Dallas to family tradition By DAVID HAYES Itemizer-Observer
Hector Zertuche recalls his family has always had a passion for cooking. A lot of his family recipes originate from down south in the Gulf of Mexico. Using signature spices, fruits, plantains, his grandmother showed his mother how to make everything. âWhen I was kid, when I want to eat, my grandma would come with a huge plate. âGrandma! Weâre not going to be able to eat that much.ââ he recalled telling her. ââYou better eat it. I already served it for you.â We never got to say no.â He ticked off the family staples sopas, gorditas, empanadas, tamales. âMy momâs been selling tamales since I can remember. Sheâd load up a van with tortas and coffee and
sell at Yamhill County Mushrooms,â Zertuche said. âWe still get people from there canât believe we opened a restaurant.â That would be Mama Gorditaâs Kitchen here in Dallas. Named after his motherâs childhood nickname, Zertucheâs family took over former Mi Ranchito Restaurant when chef Eduardo Aguilera got burned out. âI talked to Eduardo, who loved what he was doing,â Zertuche said, âbut it took him too much away from his kids.â Heâs never been to Dallas before talking to Aguilera. âIt was my first time coming PHOTO BY DAVID HAYES around and seeing everything. It The staff of Mama Gorditaâs Kitchen are (from left) Victor reminded me of downtown Mac Honerato, Jaquelin Meza, Hector Zertuche, Deyanira Honerato, Natalia Marquez (on phone with customer order), and Valume Honerato. See MAMA, page A8
IN THIS ISSUE Voices Corrections Obituaries Puzzle Solutions Social Public Records Classifieds Puzzles
A4 A4 A6 B2 B2 B3 B6 B7
A River Gallery tradition returns soon to downtown Independence. The Wild Women art show - with this yearâs theme, âCelebrating Women!â - runs Friday through July 30. This is the showâs 20th year. Not bad for a show with rather humble beginnings. âI think they wanted to do a show, and they were sitting around chatting and decided (Wild Women) would be a fun show to do,â said Pam Serra-Wenz, abstract painter and gallery partner, on the showâs genesis. âFrom then, it just took off. Right before COVID, in 2020, we had like 150 people in here, or more. It was packed.â The show is open to all artists, regardless of gender, but each piece, as the theme states, âmust celebrate the creative spirit of women,â said Chris Hannegan, portrait painter and partner. âA lot of people have wives, daughters, sisters, cousins. Itâs kind of a culmination of all the people in an artistâs life that are female, and the roles they play. If theyâre an artist, theyâre going to take that and put it into their art piece.â Themes change each year, providing artists with an imaginative spark, if not a framework, from which to create. âWeâve had all kinds of different (themes) in the past. People will just focus on that and then that will become a part of what theyâre doing for whatever art piece they bring in,â Serra-Wenz said. Artists begin planning their piece as soon as the theme for the next Wild Women show is announced. Surprises are probable. Given that entries were not juried this year, the show is open to a larger pool of artists. How many take advantage of this opportunity, and what their art looks like, are unknown variables. âItâs always been a very eclectic show. But this yearâs show will be especially eclectic because weâre not jurying it,â Hannegan added. âWeâve never tried this before. Thatâs part of the beauty of it.â See ART, page A8
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