Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, July 19, 1973, Page 5, Image 5

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    Portland/Observer
get act/ m
(o usU u rtion Equipment
O perator*
Men operation construction
equipment IJCTay are earning
more money than ever be
fore in history! Even though
many new men are getting
into the field, the demand
not only in the United States,
but all over the world con
tinues to grow!
In many
areas men are earning lie
tween $8.00 to $12.00 per
hour depending on wage
scale. No experience necea
»ary. If you are tired of a
low paying job without a
promising future, write Pied -
mont Crane and Equipment
S erv ices, 3969 M eadows
Drive. Suite L 2. Indiana
polis. Indiana 46205. or call
317 635 926.3,
APPRENTICESHIP
ZONING ASSISTANT III
INFORMATION <'OOKDINATOK
FOR CITY OF PORTLAND
Applications are being ac­
cepted for 4 year apprentice
ship in carpentry at the
A pprenticeship Information
Center. 1030 N.E. Couch,
Portland.
Applicant* com
pleting the necessary paper
work on or before July 31,
1973 will be tested and inter
viewed starting in August.
Accepts complaints from the public; determines actions or
referrals; makes personal investigations; develops pro
gram* or procedures to assist municipal units to deal with
complaint* in an improved fashion; makes determinations
for corrective changes in complaint system; reports to
President of the City Council.
Position requires a
baccalaureate degree plus at least 3 years experience in
public contact including lime in administrative or super
visory position. Additional experience can substitute for
degree. Salary $15,018. Send letter of application with
resume and references to City Auditor, City Hall, 97204
by July 27.
A pplications are accepted
without regard to race, sex,
creed, color or national origin.
Albina Family and
Community Service
73 N.E. Morris, 2869145.
Personal Counseling, Mar
nage Counseling, Hot Line
Crisis.
!■■■■■■■■■■■■■«
J D IA L-A -JO B !
?
■
y
D
22 7-5828
POWER
SEWING
MACHINE
OPERATORS
2
■
aiseh - permanente «
<■■■■■■■■■■■■■*
M AUTO PARTS
♦ Complete Automotive Parti
and Accessories
For your complete automotive parts and accessories
needs, shop D & M Auto Parts. Now open from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. on Sunday.
Don M cA uley
r
Experienced on tingle or
Double needle Good
Fringe Benefit» Retire­
ment progrom ond Free
Poritmg focilitie»
PORTLAND
GLASS CO.
Fhan4 H S - S S ll
710 N I . KIIIIng.wwHl R
FsrtlanU, Orsgan »7111
O GLASS
re ie t »N vl*»M H l t H I O«
» • * '• » • » K t u » t r t i t y | » «
•
»ee
»«»?■•<
Apptr
HTish
’H tom
> iPuttate’i
• • H
ekirm iM
* tee
P»r«<>ntwi 0»poptn5»nt
a u » iiPuciMtan
WHITE STAG
101 HOMO « IUILDISSI
M IS S U S . « rS A M C S
lO C S 'K a i s a m i l C i t i l a / _
la o s
PB>I’S BOTTLE SH O P
Let PEPI’e-BOTTLE SHOP be your lieadtgisrters for
champagne, wines, mixers . . . at tlie lowest prices In
town.
M anufacturing Co.
m a i . m i . , .
5100 SE MoriWy Or...
ie'wwn 8 n«d 11 30
dr
’
838-6964
Lloyd Center — Next to die
Liquor Store. PEPI’s one
,a and only store. Open 9:30
a jn . to 9:00 pjn.
Daily.
.Sundays: Noon to 4:00 pjn.
Community Services
CLEAN
281-2731
FOR BARGAINS
Complete poliah and clean
up. Ixrcated inside Port
land Auto Auction, 5035
N.E. 82nd, Portland.
VISIT
RUNY AN’S 88< STORE
3716 NE UNION AVE.
PORTLAND
C L E A N IN G W O R K S
Booker Taylor. Mgr.
255-2615
Dean's lx»ck A Key
NORTH & N.E. PORTLAND
O N E D A Y SERVICE
STORE
5627 N.E. Union.
KNIT BLOCKING
OUR SPECIALTY
Complete lock servie*
PORTLAND THRIFT
287-0917
Clothing, funiture. etc,
at give -a-w ay prices
We Give
All work guaranteed
Tm your key in time of neec
Bus. 284 5030
Res. 236 5232
3519 N .E . Union Ave.
MINOS H F A M S -N O CHARGE
PICK UP 4 MlIYEXV
282-8161
Mine. Lumber and
Eireplace wood
CALL
288-0555
Baldwin Sanitation
O R IIN
OTEARA
3954 N. W ILLIA M S
"You’ve Tried The Rett, Now Try The Best"
N. Alexander, Proprietor
VOLUNTEER
Driver* needed to deliver
meal* to shut ins. Hour* to
meet your schedule.
Call
le a v es and Fishes, 288X151
M.J. Evers Tvping Ser­
vice. Call 287 7380
A tte n tio n A ll F is h e rm a n
(G o o d N e w s )
Ellis Cleaners
RENEW THE BEAUTY OF
YOUR GARMENTS
P AIG E’S PHARMACY
2701 NE 7th
284-4656
FOR A KING SIZE CATCH USE
P re s c rip tio n s our
Specialty
AFRICAN GIANTS NIGHT CRAWLERS
Expert Tailoring
Phone
281-3652
3300 N . W ILLIA M S AVE.
John H . E llis
No Rrferation Needed
Withstands Summer Heat
Picked Freah Every Day
SMART - STYLISH
25< per doz
Open 4 p.m. to 9 p.m.
3813 N .E . Union
K in g ’s W o r m F orm
RINGS
w t thing these ring* are really »eying tome-
thin». 1» you don't agree, »end ’em back —
tor * full refund. No q u eitlo n t atkad.............
B IR T H S T O N E R IN G S !
Le d ie t B ici h«I e n e R in «
W i l d » t e d in « »ihrer
e .d ttL
IM I
U
Men*« B irth »Io ne R in «
R e el lO C e re t G e ld
lie d - N o .4 1 I M » J «8
«
Y o u r b e « in n ln e on eerth he« e «peclet B lrth -
«tone
tto n e o f th a
at t tim e . G o ld Me del bring» you
yo
m en-m ede «tone« «o «tu n n in g w ith «uch <
ill n « co lo r th a t y o u m u»t be th r ille d o r you r
m o n ey beck. A ll »tone« ere «pectelly Im p o r
te d And p r o fe tn o n a iiy «et by h an d in to «olid
tte r lln e silver fo r w o m en . Reel 10 caret gold
fille d fo r m e n ....... ...........................................................
‘
7^
A
A
Model Cities Child Care Centers
are taking applications for summer
enrollment. Call . . . .
METRO AREA 4-C COUNCIL
POINT of INFORMATION & REFERRAL
jesús
on U k
CROSS
Solid
Starling
Silver
No.
«4»
I I daarly and vividly m ow n In
tn ii quality C R U C IF IX R IN G
The w orkm anihlp 1» so good
you w ill ba proud to
wear It and »how 1» for
y ear i , ................. .......
F L A IN * A N O -1 0 K t.
Gold Filled thin wed­
ding bend alway» In
good ta ils ...... .
No.*10 - » , »•
FR C -C N Q A G C M C N T
R IN G - Tiny twin »lm
ulated diamond» »at
Into a dainty »weet
•olid »terllng »liver
ring.N o.S SI - » « .» •
FO R B IR T H S T O N E RINGS:
Plena give montn you were born...................
P lena check L A D IE S ( ) or M E N 'S | I
Y O U R R IN G S IZ E IS ............................................
W rite for F R E E 1973 C A T A L O G filled with
New Wlga.Jewelry,Girdle» and Bra»,Hair and
Skln Aid»
>icn etc..........
r -
GOLD MEDAL PRODUCTS
Dept 4 , Inwood. L.I..N.Y.11696
Classified
Ads
Are
Measured
By
Results!
Selling
Renting
Buying
Trading
Hiring
Salads and summer go to­
gether naturally, but when
the salads are made with
/laky, tender cod fillets
they are super salads. Cod
Salad Plate is the specialty
of the day and provides a
change of pace that buoys
the spirits, stimulates the
taste buds and revives appe
tites.
Enjoy this summer
speciality often. It's so easy!
The fillets, poached in a
flavorful bouillon, are flaked,
mixed with chopped celery
and crunchy peanuts, and
tossed with a mayonnaise
sour cream mixture that is
highlighted with lemon,
grated onion, and celery
seed.
Chill until serving
time and arrange on crisp
greens, surround with deviled
eggs, green onions, and to­
matoes and this satisfying
salad is ready to enjoy.
We’ll wager that this Cod
Salad Plate entree will be a
favorite
so keep the re­
cipe handy for ready refer
ence.
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon white pepper
6 deviled eggs
Green onions
Tomatoes
Salad greens
Combine all ingredients ex
cept eggs, green onions, to­
matoes and salad greens.
Chill. Arrange fish mixture,
eggs, onions, and tomatoes
Canning requries
clean jars
2) a man »ho called no warn­
ing to a neighbor’s child whom
he saw hammering on a tube of
gunpowder;
3) a man who failed to remove
a rock from the roadway, even
though he knew it was a menace
to traffic.
In each ease the moral duty
was plain enough. Hut the courts
all agreed that moral duties were
a matter o f conscience, not law.
In recent years, however, the
law has been requiring people to
lend a hand in an increasing
number of situations -notably,
when there is a special relation­
ship between the parties.
Thus, courts have imposevl an
affirm ative duty on a host
toward his guest, on a store
toward its customer, on a hotel
toward its patron, on a railroad
toward its passengers.
legislators, too. may create a
duty to act in specific circum ­
stances. Under hit-and-run stat­
utes, for instance, a motorist
may be required to give aid to
accident victims regardless of
whether he was legally Io blame
for the accident.
This kind of responsibility is
based neither on fault nor on any
special relationship. Rather, it is
biased on a humanitarian feeling
that when the moral duty is so
clear, the law ought to put mus­
cle behind it.
V p u b lic service fe a tu re o f th e
km eric a n B a r A ssociation and
the O re g o n S ta le lia r . W r itte n
by W ill B e rn a rd .
c 1973 American Bar Association
Pane 5
Fish salad, a summer meal
$1032 1198.
Supervise* &
p articipates in application
processing of zone change* &
variance request*, conduct*
studies & prepares zoning
report*, etc.
MIN QI’AL:
Grad, from college with major
course work in subjects re­
lated to planning or public
adminis. plus 1 yr. exper. in
land use planning A zoning
OB completion of 2 yrs.
college work with major
course work in subjects re
laled to planning or public
admini*. plus 3 yr*, exper. in
. land use planning A zoning
OK Master’s degree in urban
planning or closely related
field OR graduation from
high school or G.E.D. plus 5
yr*, exper. in land use plan
ning A zoning OK 6 yr*,
exper. in land use planning A
zoning. EXAM: Date to be
announced. APPLY: Before
5 pm August 6, 1973. Mult
nomah County Civil Service
COD SALAD PLATE
Commission, 510 SE Mont
3 cups poached, flaked cod
gom ery, P ortland, Oregon
1/2 cup chopped celery
97201.
1/4 cup peanuts
2 tablespoons mayonnaise or
salad dressing
2 tablespoons sour cream
Motorcycle Mechanics
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 tablespoon grated onion
M otorcycle M echanics are 1/2 teaspoon celery seed
asking for and getting top
wages! In many areas men
are earning $200 to $300 per
week doing something they
enjoy doing. The demand for
qualified "bike” mechanic*
continues to increase, how
ever, due to the industry's
sales and growth! If you like
‘‘b ik es’’ and have som e
mechanical ability, call 317
639-4111, or write: National
When home canned foods
Motorcycle Enterprises, P.O.
Box 1271, Indianapolis, In­ spoil, the most common rea
son is faulty or improper
diana 46206.
seals, says Tod Hamilton,
B
H
Multnomah County Exten­
sion Home Economist.
Sometimes the jars them
se lv e s are the problem.
There may be nicks around
the rim that prevent the seal
from being air tight. Some
times people can in jars not
meant for home canning. In
this case. lids and caps may
not "seat" properly on the
jar rim.
If small particles of food
Do-Nothing-Ism
are left on the jar rim? they
In some modern minds, the may keep the lid from sealing
Be sure to wipe
legendary Confucian advice to properly.
"see no evil, hear no evil, speak rims clean before putting on
no e vil" has been translated into lids.
one simple rule "D o n 't get in­
Air bubbles in the food can
vo lve d " Do nothing, says this destroy the seal, too. That's
rule, and you won't get into
why it is important to "knife
trouble
To a considerable degree, do- out" air bubbles before put
nothing-ism has been sanctioned ting lids on.
bv the common law. Traditionally
Just plain failure to follow-
vve have been reluctant to impose directions in filling and seal­
any legal penalty for the mere ing jars may result in im­
failure to be helpful.
For example, courts have properly canoed foods. Fol
turned down damage claims low specific directions for
putting on lids, and always
against the following individuals
1) a man who watched impas­ leave the re co m m en d e d
sively while a young woman amount of headspace between
drowned, even though he could
the food and the rim of the
easily have gone to her aid;
jar.
Vnderprocessing may mean
a seal won't hold, too. Al­
ways use recommended times
and temperatures when pro­
cessing vegetables and fruits.
There are ways to test the
seal on heme canned foods
before you store them. That
way. if a seal is faulty, you
THE
‘J
FAMILYÄ «
LAWYER X
Thursday. July 19. 1973
can either refrigerate the jar
and use the food immediately,
or reprocess for the entire
time if you can correct the
problem.
To test the seal, wait until
the processed jars have
cooled. Then tilt each jar to
see if it leaks. Next, tap the
metal lid with a spoon. If
the jar has a true vacuum
inside, there will be a clear,
ringing sound. A dull sound
may mean a poor seal, or
food touching the lid.
Petett
(Continued from pg. 1, col. 2)
which makes planning and
additional financial assistance
available to Portland from
State and Federal levels.
Freddye Petett, 29. has a
Bachelors Degree in Business
Administration from Port
land State University. She
also attended Southern Uni
v er sity in Baton Rouge,
Louisiana and Portland Com
munity College.
She will leave her position
as director of O peration
STEP-UP, a program of Nero
Industries.
Her previous
work ex p erien ce includes
being a Data Systems Spe
cialist for the Portland Model
Cities Program, and Com
puter Programmer for Port
land Community College.
on salad greens.
servings.
Makes 6
POACHED COD
1-1/2 pounds cod fillets, (or
other fish fillets) fresh or
frozen
1-1/2 cups boiling water__
1/4 cup lemon juice
1 small onion, thinly sliced
3/4 teaspoon salt
3 peppercorns
2 sprigs parsley
1 bay leaf
Thaw frozen fillets.
Re­
move skin Fillets. Place fish
in a well greased 10-inch fry-
pan.
Add remaining in­
gredients. Cover and simmer
5 to 10 minutes or until fish
flakes easily when tested
with a fork. Drain and flake.
Makes approximately 3 cups
flaked fish.
Wyatt poll
favors war end
Residents of Oregon's First
Congressional district have
strongly supported newsmen
shield laws, favored federal
controls on pollution, and
expressed a desire to limit
the President's war powers.
Results of these and other
issues in a poll of district
residents by Representative
Wendell Wyatt, R-Ore., were
announced recently by Wyatt.
More than 35,000 persons
responded to the question­
naire.
Wyatt said that he was
"grateful" for the number of
responses, and for the many-
additional com m ents and
letters.
Sixty-four percent of those
responding felt that members
of the press should be pro­
tected by law from having to
d isclo se their information
sources. Only 23% believed
that new sm en should be
forced to d isclo se new s
sources.
Fifty percent favored sub­
stantial federal incentives and
controls on pollution, even if
it might result in higher
taxes, while 23% were op­
posed.
Amnesty for deserters or
draft evaders were disap­
proved by 42%.
Twenty-
eight percent indicated that
equivalent service was the
best alternative.
Close to
17% supported amnesty now.
Three to one were in favor
of limiting the President's
power to commit U.S. troops
outside the United States to
hostile actions. On this war
powers issue. 59% limited
the President to committing
troops to hostile action for
only 60 days unless specifi­
cally approved by Congress.
No change in the present
powers of the President was
approved by 21%.
There was a close split on
the question of whether the
President should be able to
impound federal m onies
which the U.S. Congress has
already approved for spend­
ing. Thirty-eight percent of
those polled opposed Presi­
dential im poundm ent and
35% approved of such action.
R esp ond en ts o v erw h el­
mingly rejected any move to
absorb Social Security tax
into the the Federal Income
tax structure. In answer to
the question, should access
to and use of marijuana be
treated in the law much the
same as alcohol now is, 52%
said no, and 39% responded
yes.
Federal medical insurance
for all Americans, even if it
meant higher taxes, was op­
posed by 46% of those par
ticipating. Thirty nine per
cent supported the program.
In order to slow inflation,
46% advocated the reduction
of F ederal exp en d itu res,
while only 9% wanted to
continue the Administration's
Phase II program of wage
and price controls. Twenty-
th ree p ercent felt that
stronger controls should be
placed on wages to curb
inflation.
Six percent ap­
proved of stronger controls
on prices and 3% wanted
more controls on profits.
KGAR
1550
The Soul o f the
N o rth w e s t