Vanguard November 5, 2010

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VOLLEYBALL ON THE ROAD AT EASTERN WASHINGTON

H&M OPENS ITS DOORS IN DOWNTOWN PORTLAND

Vikings and Eagles continue Dam Cup rivalry

Designer Drugs is set to blow out a venue you’ve never heard of

SPORTS: PAGE 12

ARTS: PAGE 8

INDEX NEWS OPINION ARTS SPORTS

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OHSU and PSU enter strategic alliance Task force says formal collaboration would improve quality, competitive drive of both universities CORIE CHARNLEY VANGUARD STAFF

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hough they have collaborated in the past, Oregon Health and Science University and Portland State University have developed a formal alliance to meet the growing demands of the Portland region. On Tuesday, the Strategic Partnership Task Force—formed by PSU President Wim Wiewel and OHSU President Joe Robertson—heard testimony on its recommendations for partnership from faculty, students, elected officials and community members. For the most part, it received a positive response and the process of formalizing the alliance will move forward. “I firmly believe that the strategic alliance and the steering committee you envision will allow us to expand the educational research and collaboration between the two institutions,” said Kevin Reynolds, a PSU chemistry professor and vice provost for academic fiscal strategies and planning. The alliance will include joint faculty appointments, using shared facilities and collaborating on research endeavors to build a research portfolio of more than $450 million per year. The universities also plan to establish a joint School of Public Health. “This is a process that’s already started, that is ongoing,” said PSU Foundation board member Susan Alterman. In the past, OHSU and PSU have collaborated on numerous projects, including the construction of a life sciences complex to be built near the south waterfront. Additionally, when OHSU’s Advanced Imaging Research Center needed a chemist, it hired an individual that could fill positions at both universities. “I think we’re doing the right thing, at the right time, for the right reasons,” Robertson said.

Viking wins golf tourney Schoning takes individual title at Turtle Bay ROBERT BRITT VANGUARD STAFF

Portland State junior Tiffany Schoning came from behind in the final round to win individual honors at the Turtle Bay Collegiate Golf Invitational yesterday. Schoning shot a three-under par 69 in the third round to jump from sixth place to first place at the three-day tournament in Kahuku, Hawaii. Her 218-stroke total (73-76-69) was two strokes ahead of the nearest competitor and made her the first PSU golfer to win an individual title since 2008. Out of seven teams, Portland State finished second with 900 strokes (299-304-297), just three shots above tournament-winning Princeton. Schoning’s single-round 69 ties for a career-best and the second-best round in program history.

ADAM WICKHAM/VANGUARD STAFF

Collaborative efforts: David Yaden (left) and Wim Wiewel (right) at the public hearing on Tuesday. Wiewel addressed concerns about which resources could be used to fund the initiative.

ASPSU President Katie Markey commended the task force for its work, but raised questions about the funding for the initiative. She cited page 19 of the report, which states that the initial investment for staffing, facilities and new projects would come from existing resources. In addition, Markey said the task force’s report read more like a “marketing plan” that lacked detail and substance. In response, Wiewel said that the report is not

“I think we’re doing the right thing, at the right time, for the right reasons" OHSU PRESIDENT JOE ROBERTSON

ALLIANCE

ASPSU addresses college homelessness ASPSU senators attempt to track student homelessness and film a documentary ALISON BARNWELL VANGUARD STAFF

Josiah Raglian volunteers at the ASPSU office every day, coming to campus from the homeless shelter or the doorway where he sleeps. Raglian discovered the resources of ASPSU when a voter registration campaigner recruited him to help. Raglian, who goes by “Si,” has been involved with ASPSU for about two weeks. He is also the kind of youth that ASPSU senator Josh Hyrkas is trying to reach with a new initiative that will help homeless people transition into higher education. Hyrkas, an upperclassman at Portland State, is no stranger to the streets himself, having been

intended to be a final product, but the first step in forming the alliance. As the report states, the next step is to create a steering committee— comprised of representatives from both universities and community members—that will oversee the alliance and ensure that the details are worked out. According to the report, the steering committee will also establish a timeline for completion and propose partnership initiatives.

homeless in Portland for about nine years before moving in with his family and then renting an apartment from his father. He remembers losing his apartment two weeks before finals at the community college he was attending in Washington. “I was thinking about survival, not school,” he said. After transferring from Mount Hood Community College to PSU, Hykras took a statistics class and realized that a count of the youth in college who are homeless or have experienced homelessness is missing. He decided to broaden his class project. In an e-mail to the Barbara Duffield, the policy director at the National Association for the Education of Homeless Children and Youth, he wrote, “I realized that without numbers, it would be almost impossible to convince univer

HOMELESSNESS

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County vows to guide students from the cradle to career PSU hosts forum for community to discuss student success in Multnomah County ERIN MCINTYRE AND SIERRA PANNABECKER VANGUARD STAFF

Yesterday, community leaders gathered at Portland State for a forum on student success. The morning session acted as a debriefing of the state of education in Multnomah County. The afternoon was an open-table discussion between leaders, such as Mayor Sam Adams, educators and community members.

CAREER

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