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About Just out. (Portland, OR) 1983-2013 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1986)
A ll c la sse s start at 7 :30 p.m. Registration is $20.00 ahead of tim e. $25.00 when cla sses start, slid ing scale for unemployed. C ourses run up to eight weeks. For more inform ation, c a ll 230-0488. 16 THURSDAY Sw ing into fall. Dance the Bop and the Jitterbug. Line up for the Bunny Hop and the Stroll. See how low you can go with the Lim bo. The Lesbian A ging Project and the Les b ia n Com m unity Project are co-spon soring an evening of m usic, dance, and no sta lg ia from the '40s and '50s. A warm w elcom e is esp ec ia lly extended to wo men who experienced that era the first tim e around. Women from the '60s are invited to come and find out what it was a ll about. Period dress is encouraged. Don't forget to bring your lucky rabbit's foot for the draw ing! At the Prim ary Domain, 7:30 p.m. $5.00 donation. 21 TUESDAY Partners of Lesbian Mothers, Lesbian Forum, W estm inster Presbyterian Church, 1624 NE Hancock, 7:30 p.m. Free super vised childcare, interpreted for the deaf, w heelchair access (16th street entrance attended 7:00-7:25). $2.00 suggested donation (more or less is O K.) 236-4386. 22 WEDNESDAY Author and hum anist Ursula LeGuin w ill be g iving a talk, A Woman Writing Woman, Jaguar Woman, Star Woman and Flight o f the Seventh Moon, w ill present the topic. Women’s Spirituality Before Stonewall com es The Interna tional Sweethearts of Rhythm: A m erica’s Hottest All-Girl Band. (See re A dm ission is $15. view elsew here in this issue.)* Tonig ht's screenings are the first of eight progra m s running Tuesday and Thursday evenings through Nov. 25. Show s start at 7 p.m. Discount series tickets w ill be sold at A W om an's Place Bookstore, Artichoke M usic, and The C atbird Seat Bookstore. A ll program s w ill be at the Irvington The ater, 1333 NE Broadway. For a com plete festival schedule, w rite Film a , PO . Box 5143, Portland, O R 97215. 2 6 _______ SUNDAY The L.A.B.I.A. potluck is today from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. A ll lesbians interested n lesb ia n m othering issues are welcom e to attend. C a ll M im i at 234-2054 for more inform ation. The Oregon A rt Institute and its N orthw est Film & Video Center, the Je w ish Federation of Portland, the Mtttiem an Jew ish Community Center. 3 1 _________ FRIDAY A guest speaker from the Big Mountain Sup p o rt Group w ill discuss the resistance that forced the U.S. Government to delay their planned July eviction of 11,000 Dine people, who live atop highly coveted m inera l-ric h A rizona trib a l lands. Discuss the present stand-off and strategies to perm anently halt the forced relocation and genocide of the Dine (Navajo) Na tion. Ra d ic a l Women meeting at 6:30 p.m ., Multnom ah County Central Library, 802 SW 10th Ave. A ll are welcome. For m ore inform ation ca ll 249-8067. W heel c h a ir accessible. 1 7 _________ FRIDAY Ladles Against Women bring their consciousness-low ering review to Portland. Ladies Against Women is an aw ard w inning com edy show written and per form ed by San Francisco's Plutonium Pla yers, w ill appear in Portland for a one- night-only benefit tonight at the Northwest Service Center. The lobby of the Service C enter w ill be open at 7 :15 for a pre-show b ake sa le and tea Showtim e is 8 p.m. Tic ke ts are $10 for the show, or $20 for the show and a special reception with the cast in the Comm unity Room from 6:30 to 7 :00 p.m. A ll proceeds w ill be used to benefit the Oregon Taxpayers for Choice ca m paign to defeat ballot measure 6, which would prohibit the use of state funds for abortion. For ticket ordering inform a tion, c a ll 777-8065. 18 SATaRDAY A lix Dobkin p la ys at MCC at 8:30 p.m. Slid in g sc a le: $8,10 and 12 at the door. M CC at 24th & NE Broadway is w heel c ha ir accessible. C a ll 656-8032 for more inform ation. 19 SUNDAY C ow kid s Country M usic at the Prim ary Domain, 1033 NW 19th. Just Out, O ctober 198Ó Tham i Sindelo, A frican National C ongress of South A frica international representative, based in Lusaka, Za m b ia , sp ea ks on South A frica 's situation and the U.S. A nti-Apartheid Movement, 7:30 p.m., Mt. O livet Baptist Church, 116 NE Schuyler. M em bers of Plutonium Players portray Ladies Against Women (LAW) with their spiritual advisor, Jerry Fallout. LAW w ill be in Portland Friday, October 17. today at 12:00 noon in Lincoln Hall Au ditorium Room 175. Follow ing her talk, there w ill be a tim e for questions and answ ers along with an inform al reception. The event is free and open to the public. For more inform ation, please contact PSU W om en's Studies at 229-3516 or PSU W om en's Union at 229 4452, ext. 13, sponsors of the event. Susan Arrow & The Quivers at the Prim a ry Doman, $3 cover, to benefit the and the Oregon Holocaust Resource C e nter have joined together to present Shoah (which means "a n n ih ila tio n " in Hebrew), a film unlike any other event m ade about the Holocaust. Shoah w ill m ake its Oregon prem iere in the Art Insti tute auditorium with show ings October 27 through November 9. the theater is located at 1219 SW Park Avenue between Jefferson and M adison Streets in Portland. W EB newspaper. Show starts at 8 p.m. 30 25 SATURDAY Kate Clinton, "fu m e rist" (fem inst hum orist) does two shows tonight at 8 p.m. 8c 10:30 p.m. M aster of irreverent humor, C linton keeps an audience ro llin g with laughter. The H o llis Taylor Band opens the show at the Pine Stre e t Theater. Tickets $10 a va ila b le at A W om an's Place Bookstore, M usic M illenium , and G l Joe's. Lynn Andrews w ill speak from 2 p.m. to 4 :3 0 p.m ., NW Service Center, 1819 NW Everett. Andrews, the author of Medicine THURSDAY The fifth annual Woman’s Eye View Film Festiva l opens tonigth with three Portland prem ieres. Women of Summer te lls the story of a controversial and insp ired educational experim ent known as the Bryn Mawr Sum m er School for wo men workers. From 1921 to 1938,1700 blue collar women participated in the program. W hen alum ni gather for their 50-year reunion. Holly Near & Roni G ilbert are on hand to celebrate The Flapper Story offers a live ly exam ination of the social phenom enon of the "fla p p e r," the provo cative "N ew W om an" ideal of A m erica's Roaring Twenties. And from the m akers of Dust off your favorite costume or create your fantasy character for the Halloween costum e dance beginning at 8 p.m. at Echo Theatre, 1515 SE 37th, sponsored by the Lesbian/G ay Pride Committee Tickets are $5 and w ill be available in advance. Dance to DJ m usic, win a p rize, and p la y gam es for fun and p rize s at this com m unity dance to support and raise funds for this upcom ing year's celebration. Also, if you re interested in decorating, soliciting donations for p rizes, m a iling flyer invita tions, or helping to develop gam es and fun for the evening, com e join the party by attending a planning m eeting W ednes day, O ctober 8 at 7 p.m. at the downtown M ultnom ah County Library. Hallow een party at the Prim ary Domain, with p rize s for sexiest and most o rig in a l costumes. $2 cover includes one free draft or soft drink with costume. 1 NOVEMBER KBO O 90.7 FM , Portland's only indepen dent, listener-supported com m unity radio station w ill hold its Fifth Annual Boo Ball, at Union train Station. The Ball has become Po rtla nd 's prem ier Hallow een M asque rade Party and this year w ill be no excep tion. The Boo Ba ll begins at 8 p.m. and ends at 2 :0 0 a.m.. the featured band w ill be C ool'R. O pening for C ool'R w ill be Roaddah X and the X-C entrics. Prizes w ill be aw arded for the best costumes. Each year over 1300 costum ed revelers join in at the fe stivitie s of The Boo Ball. Tickets are lim ite d so purchase yours early. Tickets are $10.00 for KBO O m em bers, $11.00 for the general p ub lic and can be purchased at KBO O (20 SE I8th), M usic M illenium and Downtown Budget Tapes and Records. If there are tickets left the price w ill be $13 00 at the door. For m ore inform ation p le a se c a ll 213-3032. 13