Just out. (Portland, OR) 1983-2013, January 01, 1988, Page 6, Image 6

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    just news
“Move on up to Professionals 100
. . . You deserve the best."
Community Notes
Enchanted Blue Wave Ltd.
Designs for life; Big Sisters;
Community Dinner; Winter Dance Party
“A M agical O ceanfront R etreat”
A Bed and Breakfast For W om en
BY
O cea n V iew Rooms ■ O u tdoor Spa
Fitness and G a m e Rcx)ms
Kathy Tysinger
287-8989
P. O . Box ¡4 7
(2 0 6 ) 6 4 2 -4 9 0 0
Seaview, W A 9 8 6 4 4
Winter Weekday Special — Three nights
for two, holidays excluded
665-2936
• Residential, HUD Properties,
Business Opportunities/Commercial.
• Free consultation: The Buying
Process, Earnest Money Agreements,
Competitive Market Analysis,
Financing.
A L - N A J
J A R
chairman o f the Brinker Fund.
The Brinker Fund was named after Chester
Designs for life
Brinker, a Portland tailor who died in 1984, and
was founded as a service to members o f the gay
esign an ad campaign and save a life. The
community. For almost four years it has pro­
Cascade AIDS Project invites anyone
who is at least 18 years old to participate in vided financial aid and support to people who
have been diagnosed with life-threatening
creating an AIDS-prevention campaign directed
diseases such as AIDS.
specifically to gay men.
The event will feature guest star Thelma
The competition calls for the design of an
AIDS-prevention ad or series of ads (poster,
Houston and the musical group Salmon Dave,
with a special appearance by Snow White and
billboard, mass-transit, newspaper, and/or
magazine formats) targeting gay men in Ore­
her seven dwarfs.
gon. The design must be adaptable to at least
The party begins at 7:30 p.m . in the Atrium
one of these types o f media and should combine
o f Montgomery Park, 2701 N W Vaughn St.
words and pictures.
There will be a complimentary champagne bar
Layouts should be submitted with a detailed
and hors d ’oeuvres. Admission is $20 per
illustration or photo in place and to size or to
person; for tickets or more information, call
scale; each layout should be mounted on a piece
223-1679.
o f mat board no larger than 32 inches high by 20
inches wide and should be suitable for public
Big Sisters
exhibition.
any lesbian mothers in the community
Each entry must be accompanied by a one-
would like to find a Big Sister to
page written narrative describing how the
develop a relationship with their child. This
design concept is to be used. More than one
could be a way to add to a mother’s support
design may be submitted. All entries become
network or to give her a break from the routine
the property of the Cascade AIDS Project.
o
f work and childrearing. Children will also
A cash prize of $500 will be awarded to the
benefit; for them this could be an opportunity to
winner o f the competition; the winning design
experience
a continuing relationship with
will be regarded as a contribution to the
grown-ups other than their mothers.
Cascades AIDS Project. The winner must
Mothers interested in finding a Big Sister
attend a press conference at which the winning
need
to fill out an application which provides
design will be announced and exhibited, and the
information about the child, including times
winner’s name will accompany all publicity
most convenient for a Big Sister to visit, the
associated with the competition as well as with
child’s favorite activities, and so on.
the production and display of the AIDS-
Prospective Big Sisters may review the entire
prevention ad.
file
or the part for children of a certain age. Big
Submissions will be judged using these
Sisters may then arrange to meet with the
guidelines: The ad design must be of superior
mother and child, and decide together whether
creative quality; be adaptable to billboard, mass
they
wish to proceed further.
transit, newspaper, poster and/or magazine
Interested mothers and Big Sisters may call
format; be non-judgmental about sexual
282-1529,
or may come to a buffet brunch from
orientation; convey a message which promotes
10a.m . to 1 p . m , Sunday, Jan. 17, lower level,
mutual support and consensus among gay men
Northwest Service Center, 1819 N.W. Everett St.
for behavior change; avoid associating sex with
disease and death; avoid negative stereotypes of
gay men; provoke thought about the subject of
Dignity's annual community
AIDS prevention; and convey a message of
dinner
hope. The deadline is midnight, March l, 1988.
ignity will hold its fifth-annual
For entry forms and more information, con­
community
dinner on Saturday, Feb. 6. for
tact the Cascades AIDS Project at 223-5907.
gay, lesbian and related organizations to
network and share organizational materials.
Winter Dance Party
The dinner will take place at St. Francis
ebruary 13 will kick off this winter’s best
Parish Center, Southeast 12th Avenue and Pine
all-out dance party. The party will benefit
Street. Music and beverages at 7:45 p.m. will
the Right-to-Privacy PAC and the Brinker
be followed by a full-course dinner at 8:15.
Fund. It will also be in celebration of Sandy
All organizations are invited to attend. For
D irector's 50th birthday. Director is vice­
more information, call 295-4868.
•
D
\
PAMPER YOURSELF
or that special someone
• Buying or Selling.
• City or Country.
M
"Professional and Quality Service
for your special needs."
(momiomu' too)
Professionals 100 Inc. Realtors
2100 N.E. Broadway Suite 2-A
Portland, Oregon 97232
287-8989
K A M I L A
639-4177
Ask for Laura
11573 SW PACIFIC HIGHWAY
TIGARD, OR 9 7 2 2 3
THE OPEN DOOR NEW AGE CENTER
books • new age music • incense
subliminal tapes • greeting cards
.rystals • jewelry • and more
Meditation and Chat
with Ishvara
Sunday, 10 a. m.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m .
Private Chats (reading)
by appointment
Ishvara appears on Channel 11,
Portland, Sundays at 9 p.m.
(503) 994-2488 • 1644 NE Highway 101 • Lincoln City, OR 97367
D
F
WE MAKE IT EASIER!
F
E
R
G
U
S
O
N
AUTOBODY & PAINT
PRECISION COLLISION REPAIR/ssra-
UNIBODY SPECIALISTS
/f . ^
FRAME STRAIGHTENING
(l
I
TOWING ARRANGED
QUALITY WORK AT A FAIR PRICE
232*3600
Crisis hotline offers
training classes
Charter Member
A un >/>< idy Craf tsman
Association
2454 E. Burnside
Family Owned & Operated Since 1952
Just Out • 6 • J jnuorv I4HX
MEMBER
begins on January 9. Volunteer counselors who
successfully complete the training may work at
either the downtown Portland or Hillsboro
offices o f the agency.
Metro Crisis Intervention Service was
etro Crisis Intervention Service, the
founded in 1978. The agency is staffed by
Portland metropolitan area's 24-hour
trained volunteers under the supervision of a
telephone hotline, receives more than 4.500 mental-health professional. The service is free
calls each month from people with a wide vari­
and confidential, and callers may remain
ety ot problems. To handle the increasinn vol­
anonymous.
ume of calls, the agency is offering training
Metro Crisis Intervention Service receives
sessions to volunteers who are willing to be­
funding from Multnomah and Washington
come crisis counselors. Volunteers will receive
counties and United Way. For more information
4.'» hours ot classroom training in basic counsel
about the volunteer program, call 226-3099.
ing theory and technique, suicide, alcohol and
The 24-hour crisis number is 223-6161. or
drugs, and domestic violence. The training
681-7020 in Washington County.
M