Page 39 - BVT Fact Book 2012

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November 22, 2102
TIMES FACT BOOK
39
341562.111512 FB
WELCOME
DR. JOSEPH B.YOUNG, DMD
Congratulations
Dr. John Chessar
NewPatientsWelcome
King City Professional Building
15405 SW 116th Avenue, Suite 208
King City, Oregon 97224
On Your Retirement
35 Wonderful Years In King City
503-684-0507
Special Consideration
To Seniors
–results were
reported by the
National Newspaper
Association in their
2010 survey of
readership patterns
of community
newspapers.
Beaverton Valley Times and The
Times are committed to being
your best source of local news.
well read
read well
Indian dance, music
An influx of residents from India
share their culture at diversity events
— See SPRING ART GUIDE, Inside
State stars
Metro’s best battle at state tournament
— See SPORTS, A9
THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 2012
• AN EDITION OF THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS • VOLUME 92, NO. 9 •
75 CENTS
PICK A FLICK,
DO SOME GOOD
By GEOFF PURSINGER
OfTimes Newspapers
W
hen people talk about donating to
charity, they don’t normally suggest
i
movie
t
is doing, but we do it in a fashion that
everybody wins?’” Burchett said.
The concept is simple. At $1.50 per
night, the cost is about 25 cents more
expensive than the bigger competition.
“We didn’t have some big creative pric-
i
del We’re about 25 cents more than
oes
GoodMovies offers DVD rentals with a positive twist at New Seasons
By SHANNON O. WELLS
OfTimes Newspapers
A
Walmart Neighborhood Market is bound
for Raleigh Hills this fall, and some neigh-
bors have more on their minds than hunting for
grocery bargains.
Neighbors
packed
the
Denney
Whitford/Raleigh
West
Neighborhood
Association Committee meeting last Thursday
night at Edgewood Downs Retirement Center to
learn about and express concerns about the gro-
cery store planned for the former Zupan’s
Market at 8225 S.W. Apple Way.
Representatives from PacLand Development
Consulting Services, a company representing
Walmart, confirmed the Neighborhood Market
is on track to open in the vacant building near
Beaverton-Hillsdale Highway in October. A
similarWalmart market — the first of its kind on
the West Coast — is set to open on Northwest
Cornell Road this spring.
Neighbors share traffic, noise
concerns for proposed Walmart
See WALMART, A8
By SHANNON O. WELLS
OfTimes Newspapers
T
he long, strange saga involving The
Round at Beaverton Central is tak-
ing yet another twist as the city of
Beaverton considers purchasing a an
office building at the complex and
acquiring a nearby lot considered a key
parcel in its Creekside Development
Plan.
The City Council was briefed during an exec-
utive session Tuesday night on a complex deal
involving the $8.65 million purchase of the South
Office Building from one entity and
the free-and-clear conveyance of the
vacant Lot 3 from another.
The council will consider the trans-
actions at its meeting Monday at 6:30
p.m. in City Hall.
Brokered
by
Community
Development Director Don Mazziotti,
the pending deals with Scanlan
Kemper Bard Companies and LNR
Property LLC fulfill several city goals
involving strategic property acquisition and
City ponders purchase at The Round
LAND DEAL
See LAND, A7
Second act
‘Harvey’ actor George
Herkert has magical past
See LIVING HERE, B1
THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 2012
• AN EDITION OF TIMES NEWSPAPERS • VOLUME 57, NO.10 •
75 CENTS
Grappling with success
Sherwood’s Daniel Leonard battles
to second at state
See SPORTS, A8
By GEOFF PURSINGER
OfTimes Newspapers
W
ashington County deputies have
found a person of interest in the
shooting of a Metzger man last week.
Deputies had been searching for
Cindy Scarlett, 33, since Feb. 23, after
she was seen leaving her home in
Metzger where her ex-boyfriend
Jeffrey Sutton was shot.
According to Sgt. Dave Thompson,
a spokesman with the Washington
County Sheriff ’s office, Scarlett was
found at the Tualatin Fred Meyer,
19200 S.W. Martinazzi Avenue, at
about 11:30 a.m., Wednesday.
Scarlett reportedly required some
type of medical attention and was
transported to a local hospital, where
investigators met with her.
Authorities have not listed Scarlett
as a suspect in the shooting, however a
warrant has been issued for her arrest,
after she failed to report to her parole
officer since the shooting, Thompson
said.
Sgt. Bob Ray, another spokesman
for the Sheriff ’s office, called Scarlett
the “last piece of the puzzle” in deter-
mining what
happened
in
last
Thursday’s attack.
Deputies had searched for Scarlett
since the shooting, and had asked the
public for tips on locating her.
“She is a critical part of this investi-
gation,” Ray told
The Times
on
Monday. “And we need to contact her.”
It is unclear what Scarlett was
doing at the Fred Meyer, and where she
had been since last week’s shooting.
As of press
time Wednesday,
deputies had yet to speak to Scarlett,
who was being treated for unspecified
injuries at a local hospital.
So far, little information has been
released about the shooting, and
authorities are keeping mum about
possible motive, the extent of Sutton’s
injuries and what type of gun was used.
Sheriff ’s deputies were called to
Sutton’s home in the 7900 block of
Southwest Taylors Ferry Road at about
10:30 a.m., Feb. 23.
Sutton and Scarlett had recently
MCGREGOR
SCARLETT
Detectives locate ‘last piece of puzzle’
Ex-girlfriend of victim found
in Tualatin nearly a week later
CLEAR CHOICE —
Jeff
Burchett’s new company
GoodMovies at New
Seasons Market donates a
portion of each rental to the
Oregon Good Bank.
JAIME VALDEZ
/ TheTimes
Movie
kiosk
does
good
See SHOOTING, A3
METZGER SHOOTING
402977.101112 FB
73% of adults read
community newspapers
each week.