Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, September 11, 1975, Page 6, Image 6

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    Portland Observer
Thursday. Sentein ber 11. 1975
Center shows hand-tinted photos Wright achieves sorority office
There is a new attraction
at the Western Forestry
Center in Portland which
should prove interesting for
visitors of all ages, particu
larly anyone interested in
forests.
It's a new hand colored
giant photo mural of a
forest scene, measuring se­
ven by twelve feet.
The
scene is of red alder, a
native hardwood.
The
picture was taken near an
old logging road on Saddle
back mountain on Crown
Zellerbach land in Clatsop
county.
This large photo is the
fourteenth and final mural,
showing trees of the West
ern forests, and completes a
p ro ject costing $12.000.
The first mural went up
eighteen months ago. Like
others, it is located in the
central rotunda and helps
surround the "talking tree."
Visitors will fund that the
fourteen murals will help
give them the effect of
being in a forest.
John L. Blackwell, execu­
tie director of the Western
Forestry Center, says the
A $12.000 hand-colored photo mural project has been
fourteen murals have been
completed at the Western
Forestry
Center,
with
designated as "The Gallery
installation
of
the
fourteenth
giant
mural,
measuring
seven
of Trees." This is what the
by twelve feet.
old F o re s try
B uilding,
which was erected for the
Lewis and Clark fair in 1905
up to a seven by twelve-
stepladder.
and destroyed by fire in
foot black and white mural.
The large non profit six
1964. was called.
The artist used cotton
million dollar Western For
Other scenes in the Gal
swabs as oil paint applies
estry Center is a comfort
lerv. all hand colored, are of
tors, beginning at the top
able short round-trip for
Western
hemlock.
Coast
and
working
downward.
anyone in the Portland
redwood. S itk a spruce.
The result is a dramatic
area. It can be found easily
Western red cedar. Pon
color fast, life-like photo­
from well marked exits off
derosa pine and Douglas fir.
graph of the forest. It was
Southwest Canyon road.
This last giant mural was
pointed out that on an
hand-colored at the Center
enlarged color mural, the
The Center is open seven
{or the benefit of visitors.
colors would fade in a year
days weekly, from 10:00
Artist Jan Mauger of Port
or two.
a.m. to 5:00 p.m. There's a
land did the other thirteen
This is the reason oils are
seventy-five cent charge for
in her studio. Rare photo­
used by the artist.
This
adults; fifty cents for senior
graphic equipment has al­
final photo blends in with
citizens and tw e n ty five
lowed the enlargement of a
all the others. The artist
cents for students. Parking
four by five-inch black and
works from a specially
is free: time is unlimited,
white negative to be blown
constructed aluminum type
and there is lots of room.
■■■A m .
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Plenty of
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TRADE-IN WELCOME
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EASY
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SAT T il « Id o w e Sun J
234-9351
by the Hoard and provides
assistance to the Board in
its annual evaluation J the
organizations delivery of
youth and community ser
vice programs.
The o rg an izatio n s na­
tional headquarters staff
includes Gloria W. Hadley,
Executive Director of Sig
ma Gamma Rho. and Rutha
W yatt. Membership Secre
tary, W ith the help of paid
clerical assistants and vo­
lunteer program coordina
tors,
they
oversee
the
activities of 25,000 members
in the organizations 225
alumnae and undergraduate
chapters in the
United
States, Africa and Ber
muda.
During 1975 76, Sigma
Gamma Rho will provide
direct services to the com
munity through a ten point
plan: An eye saver project,
vocational guidance and
o th e r y o u th p r o je c ts ,
achievements and awards
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Unibed W äy
o f th e C o lu m b ia W illa m e tte
Perhaps o ne w a y Io m a k e d in n er seem m ore
satisfyin g is Io servo it on a s m a lle r plate.
It’s o n e o l m a n y Ideas in c lu d ed In the n ew
Persona! A ction P lan "m o d ules ” yo u 'll re ce iv e
re g u la rly at W e ig h t W a lc h e rs * m eetings.
Each "m o d u le" Is p la n n e d to h elp y o u put
e a tin g problem s undor control You m ight
e v e n turn Into a re a l dish!
loin us now w h e n w e 'v e got so m uch m ore
to h elp yo u roach yo u r g oal.
Classes at Emanuel HoaoHat
Hall, and Maranatna
'
classes begin
September 29
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There's a whole new
world of excitement waiting
for local boys who are
seven or eight years old
this year and who “join up”
in the Cub Scouts during
“School
Night
for Cub
.Scouting” Wednesday, Sep
tember 17th, 1975.
An estimated 500 schools
throughout the Columbia
Pacific Council, Boy Scouts
of America, are expected to
participate in the School
Night programs, according
to Hal Broughton, Council
"School
Night
for Cub
Scouts” chairman.
Doors will open at 7:30
p.m. for the programs, to
which both boys and their
parents are invited. Adults
interested in serving as
volunteer leaders and po
tential Cub Pack sponsors
are also invited to attend.
Special e x c ite m e n t is
planned for all Scouting
divisions during the 1975 76
Bicentennial year, Brough
ton said, with a wide range
of special youth activities
planned to recognize the
nation's 200th birthday.
A n o th e r
bonus
fo r
youngsters who join Cub
Scouts during School Night
will be a free ice cream
sundae provided by Far
rell's Ice Cream Parlour
Restaurants.
Each Cub
Scout who recruits a new
member on that evening
will also get a free sundae
How to help shrink your shape E>y
shrinking the -size of your plate
education
programs
in your
community
Jefferson High School's
Department of Interpretive
Arts will add an additional
full time instructor of dance
to its faculty for the 1975-76
school year.
Lowell Smith, a dance
instructor from Memphis.
Tennessee, will join the
staff at Jefferson to teach
all ballet classes and begin­
ning and intermediate Jazz
and Modern Dance classes.
He will also choreograph for
the stu d en t p e rfo rm in g
groups and for musical
theater productions at the
school.
He is a former dancer
with Ballet South in Ten
nessee and the Metropolitan
Opera Ballet in New York
He trained wiht the Joef
frey Ballet and the New
V ork City Ballet company.
M r. S m ith 's t h e a t r ic a l
background also includes
two years training at North
Carolina School of the Arts.
Jefferson High School has
a unique program in dance
and the performing arts
open to students from all
areas of the Portland school
district.
Cub Scouts
recruit
members
WEICHT
programs, leadership train
ing. continuing education
projecta. literary contests,
publit-.*<ons. scholarships
and „rants.
In addition, five cities
currently operate the SGR
Project (Sigmas Give Rea
surance P ro je c t! which
started
last
year
with
sponsorship by Sigma Gam
ma Rho and the National
Foundation March of Dimes
Through Project Reas
surance. Sigma Gamma Rho
members are fighting birth
defects (for example, sickle
cell anemia research) and
responding to a major high
risk health problem
teen
age pregnancies.
Sigmas give reassurance |
(SGR! to young mothers by
(1) assisting them in plan
mng for family living, (2)
acquainting them with com
munity health and social
resources, and (31 providing
them with guidance or ad
justing to parenthood.
W EIG HT WATCHERS®
Smith joins
Jeff staff
o
___
30th and S. P DIVISION
Marjorie W right, an as­
sistant professor in the
U n iv e rs ity of O regon's
School of Community Ser
vice and Public Affairs, has
been elected Personnel
Committee Chairwoman of
Sigma Gamma Rho So­
rority.
The Personnel Committee
is one of four administrative
committees recently estab
lished by the national board
of directors of Sigma Gam
ma Rho during its Interim
Board Meeting in Jackson.
Mississippi.
Ms. W right, a Campus
C o o rd in ato r
for
Sigm a
Gamma Rho. represents the
Western Region on the
national board of directors.
The Personnel Commit
tee's duties include deter
mining job positions and
establishing job descrip
tions. salary ranges, per
sonnel policies, and annual
evaluations, for all paid
employees at Sigma Gamma
Rhos national headquarters
in Chicago.
The Committee also pre
pares recommended post
tions and changes for action
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p u t th e class es in fo rm a tio n on a
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P o rtla n d C o m m u n ity C ollege
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