Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, November 26, 1970, Image 8

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    PORTLAND/OBSEKVER No». 26, 1970
S C O U tS SCß B U C kaT O O S
14
Bowling
T O E P C K T L / iN b C b S E K V t h
Top Keglers
DAWSON’S
TONSORIAL PARLOR
C O U R lIO V t •
K m e iC N T
■ « *•» < •
H A I R R R O C B R R IN O A • R B C IA U T V
AMORBW V
H O U tT O N . L IO N
N l M I N . . C k l O T U * 0X 1 4«
P h O N I 2 (4
* •2 4
M ack
By CASSIE JENKINS
ISLAND
DAIRY, COSMO
League first round CHAMPS.
First round standing:
W'on Lost
Island Dairy
22 11
20 13
Tooth Aches
19 14
J e rry 's "66"
Hi Fashions
18*á 14*2
Lov-Lee Ladee
17 16
Beauty Mart
17 16
14 19
Coast Janitorial
12*2 20‘s
Jenkins Auto
Walnut Park
11 22
Sundowners L e a g u e , Grand
Central Lanes. Nellie Alexander
paced her team to a 3-0 sweep,
with a 227 game and 548 series.
This was Nellie’s first Sanction
200 also first 500 series.
B e f r o r d Bombs 834 (4)
gamer, 247-267 games included,
In Jantzen Friday Classic.
Clinton Clobbers 237 game.
Frances Clinton in TWO Grand
league Amato lanes fell one pin
short of league high game of 238
held by Viviane Barnett.
-o-
Women 500 Series
Alzena DeDeleveaux...........589
Hazel P o lk ........................... 575
Minnie B row n.............. 563-570
Maxine Dyton.......................... 568
Frances C linton........... 505-566
Nellie A lexander................ 548
Viviane B arn ett........... 537-546
Elenora F ie ld e r...................... 544
Edna P o r te r ........................ 537
Wanda B a rn e s ......................... 534
Evelyn R ain es......................... 502
Women 200 game
Frances C linton......................237
Minnie B row n.............. 223-227
Nellie A lexander................ 227
Hazel P o lk ........................... 210
Viviane B arn ett................... 206
Evelyn R ain es...................... 204
Maxine Dyton.......................... 202
Elenora F ie ld e r......................202
Wanda B a rn e s......................... 200
Men 555 Series
Bob Bedford (4) gamer . . . 834
Bob B edford................... 573
Andy M ott......................... 570
Leonard H ill.................... 560
Eddie T odd....................... 558
Men 225 game
Bob B ed ro rd ............ 247-267
Andy M ott.........................235
Head of Jantzen
’ 71 UGN chairman
Robert W. Roth, president of
J a n t z e n , Inc., has been ap­
p o in te d 1971 United Good
Neighbors general campaign
chairman.
Frank M. Warren, president
of UGN, made the announce­
ment naming Roth to the top
UGN volunteer campaign posi­
tion, at the UGN Victory Ban­
quet, Friday, Nov. 13, at the
Sheraton Motor Inn, in Port­
land.
Roth, who resides at 1957
SW Egan Way, Lake Oswego,
has been active in UGN as ad­
vance gifts associate chairman
in the 1969 drive, and as ad­
vance gifts chairman in the
1970 campaign.
for each new boy who is regis­
tered with the Council Service
Center. One ticket for the boy
and one ticket for the boy who
recruited. You may arrive at
Starting now until Dec. 4th the Portland Coliseum at 6:30
they will give two complimen­ p.m. Game time will be about
tary reserve tickets to troops 2 hours.
Atlanta's Andrew Young be­
came the first black to win a
major party's nomination for
Congress in the South in modern
tim es, but he lost to the Repub­
lican incumbent in the general
election. Dr. Cashin, NDPA
candidate for governor, had to
settle for 14 per cent of the Ala.
vote. Thomas Broadwater, write
in candidate for governor in
South Carolina, and William
Richard Thompson, independent
opponent of Mississippi Sen.
John Stennis, got only a small
share of the votes.
The nations' largest voter
registration organization, was
i n a c t i v e during the first five
months of this year because of
the Tax Reform Law of 1969.
Two million eligible blacks re­
main unregistered in the South,
but in many communities these
are the hard-core "hold-outs"-
those to whom the importance of
registration must be patiently
and tediously explained before
they will agree to make the trip
to the historically forbidding
courthouse.
And, as the Young campaign
illustrates, black turnouts are
beginning to diminish as more
and more blacks lose their en­
th u s ia s m
for the political
process.
The victories haven’t come as
easily as some thought they
would. And the more than 600
victories that have occurred
have not altered life in the South
to the extent that some hoped
they would. A growing number,
especially among young blacks,
have lost faith in the political
road to change and progress.
Such events as the Young defeat
are bound to increase the ranks
of Southern blacks who have
WEIMER'S
Tiaedwate S p e d a ti Ató
U N IO N
PO RTLAND. OREGON
PKONE 281 1217
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given up on the political ap­
proach.
Reapportionment
resulting
from the 1970 census, along
with the 18 year old vote, could
give black politics a much-
needed lift. But even with these
developments must come re­
newed interest in voter registra­
tion. Black candidates, who al­
most never have the sort of fi­
nancial resources available to
white campaigners, will have to
find new means to get their sup­
porters to the polls.
Z
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For the quick engine response you
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A M E R IC A N
A M E R IC A N
B
One-third is the approximate
black strength in the Ga. 5th
Dist., where the Rev. Mr. Young
ran. His hope-buoyed campaign
foundered when the black turn­
out fell below expectations (less
than 55 per cent) and he got
fewer than one of every five
white votes cast. It should be
explained that the Ga. 5th Dist.
does not coincide with the city
of Atlanta, which last year
elected a black vice-mayor).
Young lost by 20,000 votes. Last
summer, for the first time in
this decade, black registration
failed to gain in relation to
white registration in the South.
Plenty of Heat from the in­
stant radiant ribbon heating
element. Automatic thermo­
stat. T ip over safety switch.
Aluminum G rill. Efficient
and attractive. 1320 watts.
# 2 2 0 T Value $15.50
E
ron
Black Politicians
MARKEL
N
D aw
8 4 7 4
VANCO UV1R A V I . PO RTLAND
The "Portland Buckaroos,"
the Western Hockey League
have designated December 6th
game as "Boy Scout Night."
R A D IA N T
HEATER
3846
C.
N
SAVE $2.00
Regular *9 .9 9
Crissy Has “Growing” Hair
For Every Fashion Style
From a brief bob to sweeping
floor-length, it’s fun to create hair
styles for Crissy. Her “growing”
hair is rooted for easy combing
and setting. She wears a fashion­
able lacy dress-up outfit, has her
own styling brush.
High Fashion Outfits for
Crissy, variety of smart styles
49
3
ea.
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SHOP A T SEARS
A N D RAVE
Sears
•B A M , MOUUCX AND CO.
Grand Ave. At Lloyd Blvd.
Phone 234-3311, Park Free
— fU