Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, December 12, 1974, Page 3, Image 3

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    P o rtlan d O b server
Seattle provides minority jobs
U nder
an
a g re e m e n t
m ediated by th e C om m unity
Ite lalio n a S ervice, buainea*
le.id, r-, i i i
<< attic*.
Wash
ington w ill provide 50 jobs
for m ino rities by D ecem ber
liilh as the firs t step in an
e ffo rt to reduce the high
unem ploym ent ra te among
racial and ethnic groups
C ltS D ire c to r Men Holm an
said the ag reem ent eslab
lishea a program that w ill lie
e a rn , I out cooperatively by
business,
state
and
local
go vernm en t,
and
m ino rity
com m unity leaders.
T h e agreem ent was an
nounerd in S eattle by the
S eattle C ham ber of Coni
m e rre , the S e a ttle
M e tro
N atio n a l A lliance of Musi
nessmen.
the
W ashington
S la te D e p a rtm e n t of Em
ploym ent S ecu rity, and the
P eople’s E m p lo y m e n t
Cuali
tion
an organization of
m ore than 30 in ner city
groups rep rese n tin g Seattle's
m inorities.
I t cornea a fte r m onths of
controversy o ver alleged dis
crim in atio n
in
h irin g and
in aen aitiv ity to th e p light of
m in o r it ie s r e s u ltin g fro m
high unem ploym ent.
I j i a t A ug ust, the C ham ber
of C om m erce asked Mobert
I-am b , D ire c to r of the CMS
N o rth w e s t Megional Office in
S e a ttle , to assist in resolving
the dispute.
M r.
Iaim b
m ediated
negotiations
and
w ill continue m eeting w ith
the parties to th e agreem ent
as th ey im p le m en t th e pro
gram .
Mureau of lu ib o r Statistics
figures show S eattle's un
em plo ym ent
the highest
ra te is among
in the nation.
H L 8 figures also show a
higher unem ploym ent ra te
for
rtu-
nation's
m in o rity
youth than for an y o ther
group.
U n d er th e S eattle agree
m ent,
the
business
com
m u n ity w ill re p o rt jo b open
ings to D e p a rtm e n t of E m
ploym en t S ecu rity personnel
stationed at the
N ational
A lliance
of
Businessmen's
office to m slch w ith sppli
Annual Miss Mlaek Teenage
W orld Pagent.
P U I is the
non p r o f it p ro d u c in g com
pany „1 the P ageant th at
brings to gether Mlaek teen
a g r r s 15 to 17 years old from
around th< W o rld
T h e 1975
Pageant w ill lx- held during
the month o f A ugust in a yet
to 1 m - named site
A pplication forms are tie
log
m ailed
to
te en a g e's
throughout the W o rld
The
com petition is divided into
four segm ent
S po rtsw ear,
C re a tiv e Expression. T a le n t
and E vem n g w e.tr P rojection
Teenagers n ay e n te r the
Pageant e ith e r as a w inner
of an official S tate Pageant
or as an A t la trg e C ontestant
from those S tates w h ere no
S la te P ageant is produced.
P U I points out th a t the Miss
Mlaek Teenage W o rld Page
ant la not a ffilia te d w ith
any o th er group or P ageant.
Th e m ajor em phasis of the
M M T W P ageant is on ta len t,
poise, charm , artic u latio n and
c re a tiv ity . One highlight of
the week long P ageant is the
Personal D evelop m ent Sem
m ar w h ere th e contestants
are ex,M>sed to th e social
graces, m odeling and per
sons I hygiene necessary in a
well rounded life.
T h e c u rre n t Miss Mlaek
Teenage
W n r l d , M is s
Chauncey Douglas of Golds
boro, N o rth C arolin a
w ill
(»•rfortn du rin g the Pageant.
Persons in terested in en
te rin g , before th e June 1,
[»tabhthm l 1912
QUALITY DRY CLEANING
REASONABLE RATES
•SAM i DAY SHAT SERVO
• ; HOUR C lf AhNNC.
iATUtilAYS UNTIL N tXJN
"COMPUTI AUNOtV
SERVICE
R
R
m
A
b R
u
m *
W 1 4 N K ULM
4
1014 N K«U N OfW O «TH
4 Blech* («•< •« iMecatoH«
2 8 9 -9 3 5 7
b a n k in g
SEIF SERVICE
0 4Y C L E A N IN G
AVAUABU
D o H T o * x w 4<
Aztd Sov. U
X
$3 50
P O S I PAID
f o r I In*
iio ii-b n iik c r
l»v Don A lexander
At r o i l l t (IN G tR T lP S t V f g y l H I N G VOU W A N I IO K N O W
ABOUT M O W TO G IT A BANK IO A N IT G IV tS YOU AN
UNOtRST A N O IN G O l B ANKtRS IA N G U A G I
I R Vick«'»
2 4 2 5 N f IJtHh
Portion,, O*4QOn
2 5 5 -2 7 8 0
P E P I’S B O TTLE S H O P
Ix*t I ’epi's M otile Shop be your h e adq uarters fo r cham
pagnr. wines, m ixers
at the lowest prices in tow n
Lloyd C e n te r
N e x t to the
Liquo r S tore I ’rp i's one and
only store.
Open 9:30 a m
to 9:00 p in. daily. Sundays:
Nnnn to LOO p m.
2 8 1 -2 7 3 1
1975 contestant deadline may
w r ite P U I. P .0 . Box 1139.
D a n v ille , V a.. U .S .A . 24531.
Persons in terested in p r o
du rin g a S ta te P ageant may
also w r ite before the Jan
ua ry 15. 1975 deadline.
Th e producers noted th at
in
excess
of
$58,000
in
C o lle g e S c h o la rs h ip s and
P rizes w ere aw ard ed in 1974,
w ith plans to top this in *75.
OMSI
shows
science
D u rin g this year's longer
than usual C hristm as vara
lion for P o rtlan d area school
children, the Oregon M useum
C L I A N M t A L A U M D IR M S
7
¡H E L P F U L
of
Science
and
In d u s try
has scheduled tw o special
‘ Science P otp ou rris".
A
M ini p o u rri" on Mon
day.
D ecem ber
30 th ,
at
O M S I w ill offer activities tor
children ages 6 to 8.
C h il­
d ren w ill be able to choose
any tw o subjects of study
from a list including creative
clay w o rk , kitchen ch em istry,
m yste rie s and puzzles, and
"m icro m onsters". A special
prog ram in O M S I's K endall
P la n e ta riu m
w ill
also
be
shown to the youngsters.
A c tiv itie s w ill la k e
place
b e tw ee n 9:45 a m . and 1:00
p m., and the cost is $2.50 for
O M S I m em bers and $3.00 for
non m em bers.
P re re g is lra
tion is necessary and ends at
noon on D ecem ber 27th.
On F rid a y , Ja n u a ry 3rd. a
Science P o tp o u rri for chil
d ren ages 9 to 13 w ill be held
at O M S I from 9:45 a.m . to
2:30 p in.
Youngsters may
choose any tw o subjects from
tmong m any areas of study,
n c lu d in g p la n e ta r iu m as
ro n o m y ,
"m ake yo u r own"
h e m is try ,
com puters
and
calculators, exotic animals,
b a ske try , e le c tric ity , and hot
a ir balloons.
T h e cost is
$3.50 for O M S I m em bers and
$4 (Hl for non m em ber»
Stu
dents must be reg is tered by
Tuesday. D ecem ber 31.
Class en ro llm en t for both
days is lim ited and regia
(ra tio n may close before the
stated deadlines, so reg is ter
ea rly by calling O M S I at
248 5900.
F E R N 'S P O T P O U R R I
T r y using the little w ired
Iw is ties to m atch and hang
C hristm as tre e ornam ents.
F e rn H anks
S A FE TY SCHEDULE
H ere is a system to help
you keep yo ur car in lo p
co nd ition and reduce the
chance o f m echanical failure
that could cause an accident.
It is easy to forget to
perform the ro u tin e main
tenance your
o il on tim e
<*nd
having
your brakes
checked regularly as routine
as paying the rent.
Y o u r ow ner's m anual tell*
you the period o f tim e or
mileage interval at which you
should have th e tires ro­
tated. brake linings inspected,
and various o th e r parts lu ­
bricated and checked b y a
good mechanic.
A ll you d o is m ake a
schedule, a car care calendar
o f specific dates o f mileages
when these jobs should be
done.
^^^Rr
M a y o r G oldschm idt uroclaim s D ecem b er 10th as H um an R igh ts D ay In P ortland. W itn essing
signatures are, left to rig h t:
V e rn S um m ers, D ire c to r. M e tro p o lita n H um an Relations Com
mission; E llis Casson, P re sid e n t, N A A C P , P o rtla n d Branch; Phil M c L a u rin , a d m in is tra tiv e
assistant to the M ayor; R everend John Jackson, P resident, A lbina M in is te ria l A lliance; and
Jam es O. Brooks, E xec u tiv e D ire c to r, U rb a n le a g u e of P ortland.
Educational Center
schedules courses
The
P o rtlan d
S ta te
U ni
ve rs ity E ducational C en ter
w ill offer a v a rie ty o f in
te res tin g and useful courses
W in te r T e rm
Th e C e n te r s ta ff are nearly
all volunteers w ith va ryin g
rares and backgrounds. Each
is an e x p e rt in his field.
('lasses include:
M an and E n v iro n m e n t II;
H isto ry of Black W om en in
A m e ric a ; S m a ll B u s in es s
O perations II; Personal F i­
nance; S u rvey of Black L it.
II; Personal H ealth . Fund of
M a th L e vel I; F u n d , of M ath
L e vel I I ; In te rm e d ia te Alge
bra; In tro , to Business M ath;
M a th
fo r
E le m e n t a r y
Teachers; E le m e n ts of Statis
tira i M ethods; H um an D e
v e lo p m e n t;
P r o b le m s
of
Youth in U rb a n Societies;
M in o ritie s in Com m unication;
Fu n d am en tals of Speech; and
G E D (classes include m ath,
social studies, en giish, liters
tu re and read in g skills)
R e g is tra tio n is from D e ­
cem ber 30th th ro ug h Jan
uary 16th.
F o r m ore in­
fo rm atio n . call 229 3864
rh
FAMILY^ I >
LAWYER X
the
Foreign M ailer
Foreign matter in your food,
like a pebble in a pie or a task in
a taco, is clearly good grounds for
complaint. I f you suffer injury,
you are entitled to collect damages
from whoever is to blame.
But the court may have a hard
time deciding, in a particular situa­
tion. what matter is foreign and
what is "natural." Take three
actual cases:
TB test for Christmas
C hristm as is a comm only
c e le b r a te d h o lid a y w h e re
children,
filled
w ith
jo y,
aw ait Santa Claus to m ake
his d e liv e ry . T h is y e ar 4 H
and the O regon
N ational
G u ard w ill help to m ake the
season b rig h t by insuring
that a lot of children w ill
enjoy the season in good
physical condition.
On S a tu rd a y ,
D ecem ber
21st, betw een the hours of
8:00 a m . and 5:00 p.m ., the
Oregon N ational G u ard in
vites all parents to b rin g
th e ir children in for a free
physical and T B
skin test.
T h e ir philosophy is to pre
pare
now
for
a
healthy
to m o rrow .
A nd although
most p arents have not been
able to provide these ser
vices because of th e ir w ork
s c h e d u le s ,
th e
N a tio n a l
G uard and 4 H is pleased to
w o rk to g e th e r to fu lfill this
im p o rta n t need.
T h e clinic w ill be held at
the N atio n a l G u ard C en ter,
U
A man bit on a turkey bone in
a dish of roast turkey that he had
ordered in a restaurant.
Another man encountered a
hard grain o f com in a bowl of
oom flakes.
A woman was injured by a
chicken bone in chicken fricassee
In each case a damage claim
was filed by the victim. But each
time, the claim was turned down
because the item in question was
not considered foreign. As the
court in the turkey case put it;
“Bones which are natural to the
type of meat served cannot legiti­
mately be called a foreign sub­
stance. and a customer who eats
meat dishes ought to be on his
guard against the presence of
such bones.”
In recent years, however, courts
have been putting less emphasis
on what is natural and more em­
phasis on what a consumer might
logically expect to find in his
food.
Not long ago a man damaged
a tooth by biting on the olive in
his martini The olive had not
been pitted, although the usual
hole in the end led him to think
It had
O f course, the pit was “natural"
to the olive Nevertheless a court
ruled that the jury could reason­
ably reach a verdict in the man's
favor.
"Because a substance is natural
to a product in one stage of prepa­
ration," said the court, “does not
mean necessarily that it will be
reasonably anticipated by the con
sumer in the final product "
C 1974 American
<$>
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operefed tor th t Pboplo'
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O P 1 N SATURDAY T O tA M -liP M
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__16 AIM P.M
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FM i t L 6 4 RM.
R ltO M O N T BRANCH
Fkl I * A M -* FM
M AIN ORRCC
¡7 17 H L UNION
1 » M L XILUStOCWORTM
2 8 8 -6 5 7 1
2 8 2 -2 2 1 6
Membw Federai Oepowt Inaurane« Corp
D /i.B e w u i
DENTIST
/ t 's Good
to/(now
N O N ! OF MY HLLPFUt
DENTAL HEA LTH
P O L IC IE S H A V I CHANGED
Appointment
C « w e in
It
Ì u u r
( u n \ e n ie n c e
FOR COM PLETE D E N TA L SERVICE
3 C o n v e n ie n t ly L o c a te d D e n t a l Offices
PORTLANO e SALEM e EUG ENI
PRICES QUOTED IN ADVANCE
* —
N o F in a n c e C o m p a n y o r B a n k
to D e a l W ith
AU
Insurance
Accented
e
Wt «ili Asmi Tee
•>t* the faua
Bar Association
DENTAL
R k « .r 2 2 7 - 2 4 2 7
DENTAL
R E P A IR S -
lawrtice
A d e lig h tfu l u n raveling of
this m y s te ry w ill occur on
Sunday, D ecem ber
15 th .
w hen the Oregon M useum of
Science and In d u s try hosts
23 fifth grade students from
W illa m e tte (M id d le ! School
in a playfu l rom p through
the pages of children's liters
tu re .
The
W illa m e tte
fif th
grad ers firs t put to gether
this o rig inal production of a
play by children's author
B everly C lea ry in celebration
of C hildren's Book W eek,
N o v em b er
11 17,
and
it
proved so successful th at
O M S I asked th em to present
a special show ing for M useum
visitors du rin g the holiday
z ? /z ?
you
w
casts a lte rn a tin g for the 1:15
and 3:15 p.m. showings at
O M S I. and lib ra ria n Elsie
L e w is
served
as
general
coordinator.
T h e children
created th e ir own props and
costumes.
"The Sausage On the E nd
of th e Nose" w ill show at
1:15 and 3:15 p.m. on Sun
day,
D ecem b er
15th,
In
O M S I’s
M ain
A u d ito riu m .
T h e re
w ill
be
no e x tra
charge,
a fte r
the
reg u lar
O M S I admission.
I X p e w /ta
D B N T I8 T
5 1 5
sw
Ave
b u r r i 414» t W n h itflta
Moving?
Need c^ctricity
turned on?
Got questions?
Better jot
down...
o w
T H A T T H E M O D E R N C AT
IS A D E S C tF N D A N T O F T H E
A F R IC A N W I L D C A T ’
THE LATTER WAS A
C O M B IN A T IO N O F T H E
C IV E T ANO TH E S A B E R -
TO O TH E D T IG E R A NO
l
THE DO­
M E S T IC S H O R T H A I R O F \
TO O AV,
Pacific Powers New Portland Phone Numbers
Effective 5:30 p.m Wednesday, November 27, Pacific Power < Portland district will have
the following new telephone numbers:
KSSBMB ED
FACTORY DIRECT
DISCOUNT PI
DOORS - WINDOWS - MILLWORK
CUT RATE PLYWOOD PRICES
-G LA SS 6 L A Z IN 4 -
Customer Office, 7(X) N.E. Multnomah St.
New Service. Moves and Changes .
Bill Information............................................................
Credit and Past Due Bills..............................................
238-2811
238 2811
238 2831
Emergencies and Outages........................................
Portland District Manager.........................................
Energy Use Consultants...................................
Corporate Headquarters. 920 S.W 6th Ave
238
238
238
243
2851
2881
2886
1122
OPEN MOM. THRU S A T . . M
Every
S aturday
10 am
5 pm
f/
NW 2 td & 0A U IS
RAIN" SHINE
The People at Pacific Power
2G 9S592
1M G N.
« 4 5444
15123 S I
I
.
10000 N .E . 33rd
A venue,
betw een N .E . M a n n e D riv e
an d C o lu m b ia B o u le v a rd ,
phone 280 6816.
F o r m ore in form atio n, con
ta rt 4 H at 229 4840.
season. T h e play is both an
e n te rta in in g and an educa
tional look at books, and
brings to life several popular
l i t e r a r y c h a r a c te r s , fro m
B ookw orm to M a ry Popping.
W illa m e tte teach er H e rb e rt
L in k e r
d ir e c te d
th e
23
players w h o m ake up tw o
1
P ro m p t
Students present play
W h at is "The Sausage On
the End of th e Nose", and
w hy is it at O M S I?
Page 3
"The Bank WHh a Purpoee"
■ ■■
Portland
A SATURO ^.
WARKBr
safety hints -]
Hy E lizab eth S tim ley
P lym o u th S afety W riter
c a n ts
re fe rre d
by
th e
People's E m p lo y m en t Cuali
tion.
T h e C om m u nity Relations
S ervice was created by th e
1964 C iv il Mights A ct to
resolve conflicts stem m ing
from racial and ethnic dis
crim ination .
The
agency
m ediates
when
disru p tin g
p a rties feel th a t negotiation
is m ore likely to lead to
se ttlin g th e ir differences.
Miss Black Teenage World sought
1975 w ill m ark th e F ifth
A n n iv e r s a r y o f P a g e a n ts
U n lim ited In,- and the T h ird
W OM EN
o n W h e e ls
T h ursd ay, D ecem b er 12, 1974
0
0T J
N lW - J
« «U-- ,