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Friday, July 7, 2017

No McMinnville Turkey Rama sit-down turkey meals in 2017!





The July 4, 2017, print edition of the McMinnville N-R/News-Register reports on page one the 57th Turkey Rama, “McMinnville’s signature summer bash,” July 7-8, 2017.
Subheading headline to the story reads,
“One of the changes: BBQ turkeys, but no meals at Wortman Park this year.”

The story says Saturday’s (July 8, 2017) signature event, the World’s Largest Turkey BBQ at Wortman Park, a “mouth-watering nod to the county’s former status as the state’s largest turkey producer” will “not offer sit-down meals this year. Organizers framed those as cost-cutting moves.”

No McMinnville Turkey Rama sit-down turkey meals in 2017!

No matter the location of Turkey Rama – it used to be held in downtown McMinnville with turkeys grilled on Third Street – sit-down turkey meals always went hand-in-hand with the grilling of turkey.

No McMinnville Turkey Rama sit-down turkey meals in 2017!

The subhead should have read:

“Turkey Rama goes ‘cold turkey,’ axes sit-down meals!”



If the time honored, historic sit-down meals of Turkey Rama had to be put in the dustbin of history, couldn’t 2017 Turkey Rama have done it differently? Turkey Rama could have had and promoted sit-down turkey meals at 2017 Turkey Rama as the final, historic not to be missed finale. Could have charged a higher  price for those final sit-down meals, too.

No McMinnville Turkey Rama sit-down turkey meals in 2017!

Postscript - Yes, turkey halves will be barbecued and sold in 2017. But, no McMinnville Turkey Rama sit-down turkey meals in 2017!

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Wednesday, May 3, 2017

MARY MARTIN: Stopping By: ‘Bridge across a divide’






















Story by Starla Pointer,McMinnville News-Register/N-R, 5/2/2017. Photo by “Mac News,” which is not affiliated with the N-R.


Mary Martin will tell you she’s no angel, no goody two-shoes.

She’ll say, in her very straightforward manner, that the positive things she’s done in McMinnville aren’t that special. They’re just things that needed doing and she was available.


Many others would disagree with her humble appraisal, including those who chose Martin as this year’s Woman of the Year. She was honored Monday night at the annual Distinguished Service Awards banquet.

Also recognized were Man of the Year Rocky Wade, Junior Citizen Chelsey Nichol, Outstanding Educator Kelly Carlson and Outstanding Farmers Christine and Jared Anderson.

“Being named Woman of the Year is humbling,” said Martin, who admitted having a rare moment of speechlessness when informed. “It’s truly an honor when I see the women who received the award before me,” she said.


They would return that compliment. In fact, they did when they opted to nominate her for this year’s award.

At Monday’s banquet, presenters noted Martin’s professional accomplishments in business and real estate and her extensive community service, which ranges from supporting the library to helping the less fortunate.

“The unique combination of Mary’s day-to-day involvement in the immediate concerns of life on the streets, and her community stature from years in real estate, make her an enormously effective bridge across a cultural divide,” according to the past women of the year who nominated her for this year’s award.

Martin grew up near Langlois, on the Southern Oregon Coast.

She remembers her parents helping people — her mother feeding homeless men who came to their yard and her father finding them jobs to do. They set an example by which she lives today.


“If we saw a need, we were able to fill it,” said Martin, who as an adult would often host people, such as Linfield College international students, in her home.

“It was our pleasure,” she said. “And we received 10 times what we gave.”

Married young, she and her husband, the late Noel Martin, came to McMinnville so he could attend Linfield. Both had some relatives in the area, including Noel’s uncle, a Linfield professor.

She took care of their two sons. Soon, they would have a daughter and another son, as well.

They were poor, she said. “This town and our church took care of us,” she said.

“If someone had an extra box of pears from the tree in their yard, it ended up on our porch. Friends traded us clothes. The ladies of the church taught me how to rear the children right. It was a good place for us to land.”

After graduating, her husband joined the nascent Linfield Research Institute. She stayed home with the kids: Noel Paul, now living in Hillsboro; John, now living in Colorado; and Stacy and Robert, both still making their homes in McMinnville.

When the youngest was about 8, Martin joined Lois Gilmore, Marilyn Crousser, Beverly Trenneman and Rosemary Moore to buy a bookstore, which they called The Book Shop. It was located in the 300 block of Third Street.


US Bank offered the five women a loan, letting them sign for it themselves, rather than requiring their husband’s signatures. For the early 1970s, that was an important victory.


 “It was very unusual then, and a very fine thing,” Martin said of the all-female venture.

Customers proved supportive. “The people of McMinnville wanted a bookstore, and we filled a need,” she said.

She recalled one couple who drove to Portland to look for books to give as Christmas gifts. They made a list, then returned to McMinnville to order the volumes from The Book Shop.


“This town was good to us,” she said.

Each Book Shop partner had a day on which she was responsible for the business, plus a day to serve as the assistant. Each had a specialty, such as ordering stock.

“We took care of each others’ kids and supported each other,” said Martin, a lifelong book lover. “It was very fun. How I miss those women!”

She enjoyed working with her co-owners and enjoyed the business. But she had always dreamed of a career selling houses. “I love people,” she said, explaining that a career in real estate would bring her into contact with people and give her a chance to guide and help them.


She loved looking at homes, as well. “I wanted a home in the country,” she recalled.

When she decided to change careers, she talked with her friend Marilyn Dell Worrix, then an agent and later an agent and broker at Willamette West. With her friend’s guidance, Martin earned her real estate license and joined the firm.

She spent the next four decades at Willamette West. After she became an agent herself, she mentored others, including her daughter, Stacy. “Then she was the Realtor and I was the flunky,” said Martin, who treasured the mother-daughter teamwork.


Martin was named Realtor of the Year in 1995. The award was one of many high points in what Martin called “a very satisfying career.”


“I enjoyed real estate, especially helping first-time buyers,” she said. She noted that people buying their first homes have a lot to learn, but also bring a great deal of enthusiasm to the process.

If they were new to McMinnville, as well as house buying, she relished getting to tell them about the “wonderful place” that would be their new home.


For Martin, the city’s wonders include its beauty and also its residents.


“The trees, the care people exhibit, the education system ... it’s been my joy to live in McMinnville,” she said. “I love this city.”

McMinnville isn’t perfect, she said, “but it’s still the very best I’ve ever seen.”

After Martin lost her husband and retired from Willamette West, she decided to spend more time helping her community. In particular, she said, “The plight of the homeless touched me.”


She became involved with First Baptist’s twice-weekly breakfast program.

She recalled the first meals only attracted half a dozen people. Now, they often draw 35 and sometimes 75.

First Baptist has since added a clothing program, along with showers, lockers and a portable rest room funded by the city but maintained by the church. Martin has contributed a table with such necessities as toothbrushes, razors, rubber bands, antibiotics and personal hygiene items, which she calls “the stuff of life.”

She advocates for homeless people, as well. Homelessness is an issue that should concern everyone, she said, not just churches and service clubs, but city officials and others.

Martin sees the need for advocating for the less fortunate; volunteering in existing programs and finding new ways to assist; creating safe places for street people to sleep and store their possessions; providing clean, safe public restrooms and showers. In addition, she said, she sees a special need for providing more mental health counseling instead of warehousing people in jail.

“We care about these people,” she said. “They are the people of McMinnville, too. I challenge everyone to help them.” 

Wednesday, March 29, 2017

ADA accessible doors at McMinnville Public Library



































Funding for ADA accessible doors and their installation at McMinnville Public Library came through part of a bequest to the Friends of McMinnville Public Library from the William F. and Rosadele J. Dickman Trust. Technicians Mike Wood and Jim McDonough of Pedestrian Door Solutions ASSA ABLOY Entrance Systems in Portland are the installers with Dave Franey of McMinnville doing electrical work. Installation dates: Exterior doors installation March 27, 2017. April 3, 2017, for interior doors.


Photo info:
--Jenny Berg, McMinnville Public Library director, walks through exterior ADA accessible automatic doors on March 27, 2017.

--Installation work on March 27, 2017, by (left to right) technicians Jim McDonough and Mike Wood.


Slideshow:

Thursday, December 15, 2016

McMinnville Public Library getting ADA-compliant automatic doors thanks to Friends of the McMinnville Library


U.S. Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)-compliant doors will soon be installed in the McMinnville Public Library’s main entryway thanks to the Friends of the McMinnville Library.

At its evening meeting on Dec. 13, the McMinnville City Council approved a resolution authorizing the city manager or its designee to enter into and manage a contract for the ADA doors with ASSA ABLOY Entrance Systems US. The meeting was held in McMinnville Civic Center.

ASSA ABOLOY Entrance Systems US was the lone bidder for the doors. Its bid was accepted by the Friends’ board of directors during a Dec. 13 afternoon meeting on the basis of price, aesthetics, and timing of installation. That meeting was in the library.

Preliminary estimate is that the doors and installation of them will cost about $15,000.

According to its literature, ASSA ABLOY, a Swedish firm, is the “global leader in door opening solutions.”

To be installed will be Besam SL500 T67 telescoping doors. See photo posted with this story.

The bid was submitted by the Portland-based branch manager of Pedestrian Door Solutions ASSA ABLOY Entrance Systems.

Each of the two motion-detected quietly-operating Besam SL500 T67 telescoping sliding doors has six panels that open in the middle, with three each sliding into each other on the right and three on the left. Literature says the door offers “optimal energy efficiency, including insulated glass, magnetic catches and Besam EcoDoor seals which can reduce air infiltration by as much as 40%.”

Funding for the project will be from part of a bequest to the Friends, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, from the William F. and Rosadele J. Dickman Trust, said Duane Bond, Friends president.

“When I first learned of the Dickman gift, I was quite overwhelmed by the generosity of it,” said Bond.

Jenny Berg, Library director, said the doors will be installed as soon as possible on a Monday, a day the library is always closed.

“The new ADA-friendly entrance to the library is a benefit for all library users. We are grateful for the generosity of the donor and the Friends for continuing to make the entrance of the library a welcoming place for all,” Berg said.

The library is located at 225 NW Adams St., at the corner of Adams and Third Streets.

Source: News release of 12/13/2016 from Friends of McMinnville Public Library. Contact:  Duane Bond, Friends president. 503-435-1053

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Work party before McMinnville 1st Christian Church 'City Outreach' 2016 Christmas toy giveaway


Work party helping Roz Turner and assistants with McMinnville 1st Christian Church ‘City Outreach’ prior to its 2016 Christmas toy giveaway. Mac News photos/video 12/14/2016.