Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, February 05, 1976, Page 8, Image 8

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Pag* 8
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Portland Observer
»
i
Thursday. February 5, 1976
Juvenile program falls to budget ax
(Continued from p. 1 col. 3)
On June 30th. 1976. the model
neighborhood will most likely lose a
service for youth and families which has
been operating in the community for the
last three years.
The Case Management Project, an
intensive probation program, has been in
existence since January. 1973.
It is funded by the Law Enforcement
Assistance Administration (L.E.A.A.).
This is part of the High Impact anti-crime
program for which Portland received
approximately twenty million dollars
The service centers are located at four
different sites within the North, North
cast, and Southeast areas of Portland.
These service centers deal with young
people age ten through seventeen
inclusive. Clients are referred through
the Multnomah County Juvenile Court
after admitting, or the Juvenile Court
substantiating, a charge resulting from a
target incident. A target crime includes
burglary, robbery, assault - including
menacing with a weapon - rape and
homicde.
Emphasis is on model caseload sizes
averaging between twenty and twenty-
four clients. Direct client service by staff
is intensive and emphasis is on outreach.
Examples are family services within the
home, intensified school and collateral
contacts, and development of positive
experiences, such as recreation and
employment activities for clientele. De
pending on needs, contacts have ranged
to five times weekly per client. Reports
from school officials and other collateral
agencies, as well as the families them
selves, have been positive.
Unlike the traditional system, services
can be purchased which include psychia
trie, psychological, educational, recrea
tional. and a variety of others that might
meet the child's needs. Basically, the
CMCS project puts into practice most of
the suggestions of the modern correc
tional theory: reduced caseloads, com
munity based approach, and individualiz
ed service on the basis of need. A final
evaluation of the project produced by the
Oregon Law Enforcement Council Impact
Evaluation unit, indicates some highly
positive results. The evaluation com
pares the rereferrals of Case Manage
ment clients with target offenders that
were assigned to regular court super­
vision. The control, or regular court
rases, were chosen randomly from target
offenders that had been referred to the
Juvenile Court. Some of the interesting
findings and recommendations of the
Portland will be the hardest hit.
evaluation are:
In the Northeast and Albina district
offices located at 3807 N.E. Union
• Comparisons among the four Case
Avenue and 5022 N. Vancouver, there are
Management offices indicated the two
a total of eight Cast Managers. Five of
offices in Northeast Portland have the
these are Blacks, two of which are
lowest total in-service offenses for clients
during supervision.
women. These five persons comprise the
project's total minority service delivery
• When a broader cost effective com
staff.
None of the minorities has
parison is made, taking into account the
societal costs of crime based on burglary
seniority with Multnomah County and all
will be laid off. In the traditional system
costs and system costs, it is found that
Court clients costs society $37 more than
(Multnomah County Juvenile Court)
there is only one Black counselor.
a Cast Management client over a two
year period.
Unless the traditional system does a
• "In sum, this program appears to be complete about face in terms of service
one worthy of continued funding, local delivery, the Northwest area will regress
support and incorporation into the to a situation which dates hack a
minimum of fiteen years.
Juvenile Court system."
• “If there mast be a reduction in the
1. No community based juvenile jus
number of neighborhood offices in the tice delivery system.
project's continuation, it is recommended
2. Token service by Blacks for Blacks.
that the Northeast Portland area con
3. For many, clients traveling a
tinue to be served and that minority staff distance of ten miles to obtain counseling
services.
be retained in the service area."
At this point in time, even with a
4. Minimum service in all areas of
positive evaluation, this service delivery delinquency prevention.
5. Because of the present job situation,
approach will be for naught. Federal
funds will not be available and Mult
expertise in treatment and the court
nomah County has no immediate plans for system gained by minority staff wili more
funding the program. Although the total than likely be lost to the Oregon Juvenile
service area will be affected. Northeast Justice system.
Model of the American State Bank branch under construction at 28th and
S.E. Holgate.
Bank tightens security
"We are tired of being robbed," V.F.
Booker, President of the American Stale
Bank said following two robberies last
Friday. The first robbery attempt was
foiled when Booker shot lh«- man after
pleading with him to stop The second
robbery, later the same day. was
successful.
American State Bank has been roblu-d
Drugs in Oregon
(Continued from p. 1 col. 61
years "Good weed at cheap prices" but
also maintains “any form of drug
zombifies people." Powers agrees that
ritalin (or 'fast ones' - which sell illegally
for about $4.00 a pill) is probably the main
drug used by methadone addicts to get
over the block the methadone produces.
“A month or so ago the FBI went through
the files - there are psychological profiles
on all the 'clients' -- what do you think
they were looking for?” Powers asks.
Heroin
Bill Freeman, head of the Portland
office of the Drug Enforcement Agency,
says that heroin sells for between $65 and
$100 a gram, and is about three percent
pure. Freeman's guess is that there are
between three and ten thousand heroin
addicts in the city. In the last three years
about $150,000 was collected in drug
busts. If the money 'assessed' is under
$1.000, it is absorbed by the DEA. If over
thousand, it is turned over to the IRS.
Critics maintain that money gotten in this
way is used to pay a plethora of agents
and informers (shared with other gov­
ernment agencies like the FBI and LEAA
funded or controlled agencies) who in
turn offer a virtual license to the agents
to commit crime (see, for example, Louis
Tackwood's LEAA LAPD covered crim­
inal activity in The Glass House Tapes or
U.S. Labor Party's exposure of the
^ S W cW v’Itii-s d f W W n
In the past six months there have
reportedly been four methadone deaths
(illegal methadone), according to Powers.
Joe Feurey, a writer for the New York
Post, estimates that methadone deaths in
New York City occur at the rate of one
per day. Methadone sells for about $30
on the street (Portland). Persons with no
serious drug history ran be killed on 50
mg. of methadone the drug can also be
legal when mixed - it can 'potentiate', for
example, with alcohol: "one and one can
equal ten.” The primary area of Portland
for heroin is in the southeast, followed by
the northeast. Portland is probably fifth
in heroin traffic on the west coast.
A methadone counselor who wished
not to be identified said that Dr. Robert
Dupont, who is known as Mr. Purse
strings', ran the "most corrupt of the
methadone maintenance centers -- in
Washington. D.C. He was notorious for
the amount of graft he encouraged:
selling jobs, maintaining heroin habits of
the counselors, pimping for prostitutes
who were on the maintenance program,
and the like. During Dupont's tenure
there were 22 maintenance centers in
D.C. (now there are twelve or thirteen).
And now Dupont is the head of NIDA
(the Drug .Agency under the Health, Ed
ucation and Welfare Department). “Good
people aren't staying (counselors)...lower
Ipvel publicans are heavily screened at
the top...there's no criticism allowed."
Tektronix
Opportunities
Programmer Analyst
Background of two to three years experi­
ence with large scale computers utilizing
BAL. COBOL, OS, JCL, IMS The position
is in our data processing center.
Technical Instructor
Experience or education in electrical en­
gineering and industrial sales. The position
will be to develop training packages, provide
technical assistance, assist in new product
introduction, and field engineer training.
Accountant
Education or experience requirements are
degree in accounting or business admin­
istration. Position is an entry opening in
corporate accounting group.
Software Evaluator
Experience or training with FORTRAN,
BASIC or assembly language on a time­
sharing system is desirable. The position
will evaluate software products for accuracy,
function, use and completeness.
Direct-Mail
Applications Supervisor
Direct mail, media evaluation, automated
systems applications and supervisory
experience required. Position in advertising
developing and evaluating direct mail
programs.
Product Analyst
College work in manufacturing planning
and math. Knowledge of M.R.P., order
processing and scheduling. Involves devel­
opment of production plan, analysis of
output versus demand and coordinate
information for Master schedule changes.
SEC./RECEPTIONIST
RNII
LINE DISPATCHER
$529 per mo. Temp. Feb.
June 30th, 1976. Typing plus
1 yrs. exp. in an office
situation as a receptionist.
Resumes accepted to Feb. 6,
1976. Send to 4-C, 1530 S.W.
Taylor, Portland, Ore. 97205.
$1,008 $1,113.
Performs
responsible prof, nursing ac
tivities in the public health
field. MIN QUALS: Grad
from school of nursing meet
ing req. set by Oregon State
la w plus possess current
Oregon RN license plus 2
yrs. nursing exp. as an RN.
APPLY: By Feb. 11. Mult.
Co. Personnel, 426 S.W.
Stark, 7th Floor, Portland,
Or. 97204.
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
Major carrier has opening
for line dispatcher at Port
land terminal, must meet the
following minimum require
ments. High School grad or
equivalent, good work re
cord, no felony conviction,
minimum of 3 yrs. supervi
sory exp. and bondable.
Contact: ETMF Freight Sy­
stems. 2825 N.W. Yeon.
Portland.
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
PBX in perm, part-time,
16 hr. per week, between 9
a.m. to 4 p.m.
Private
branch exchange, must have
exp. with multiple position
board card and jack type,
vacation benefit on a accrual
¡basis. Address replies to
P .0. Box 3137, Portland,
Ore. 97208.
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
RN NURSING
SUPERVISOR
National nursing service
wishes RN supervisor for
field employees. Req. Ba
chelors degree, prefer per
son with 3 to 5 yrs. exp. in
public health nursing. Du
ties include interviewing,
evaluation, training program
& other adnflnistrative func­
tions.
Call Miss Wetzel,
Homemakers Upjohn 224
7833. Apply by February
10th
An Equal Opportunity
Employer '
SECRETARY/
RECEPTIONIST
Service Component Planner
Scheduling, planning and modification pro­
cessing management experience. Capability
of managing a planning and scheduling
group. Develops capacity plan and track*
output against plan.
Benefits include liberal insurance and
retirement programs, educational support
and a profit sharing plan.
Call 644-0161 — Extension 6198 or write
to Tektronix, Inc., P. O. Box 500-P,
Beaverton, OR 97077.
An equal opportunity employer.
T R O N IX
«• c s s k b « oscombsco
Sue Miller, who is 26, has been on and particular is pur|>oscfully used for social
off heroin since she was 21. says "I've control..." Adequate detoxification pro
been off heroin several times
it’s not cedures and a programatic scenario to
hard to cold turkey but I was lonely. I stop the international flow of drugs
didn’t know anybody outside the drug (broadly understood to be CIA con
scene.
I just went bark in out of trolled) is the subject matter of the 'Drug
loneliness..."
Detoxification Act of 1975' of the U.S.
labor Party.
What's the Alternative
The most common by administrators is
“well, it's (methadone) a last resort kind
Bill, the hemophiliac methadone addict
of thing - it works for some, but not for quoted earlier, has been addicted to hard
others...what's your alternative?''
As
narcotics from age three, due to hospital
with most social problems, the question is
treatment of hemophilia and related
posed as a Reesian choice, with the given
medical problems. Previously he was
being the necessary adjustment to a able to obtain methadone legally through
general economic and social collapse-.
hospital prescription, but the use of the
The Drug Abuse Council notes that the
drug for heroin control (1969) forced him
overwhelming response of the news
to use the maintenance center: “I resent
media is to protect methadone mainte
being treated like a criminal...but one of
nance from criticism.
Quoting Post
the things that sickens me the most is the
reporter Feurey, the Council says
prostitution. Pimps use heroin to collect
"newspapers have bought the idea of
women: 'Hey, honey - I've got some
methadone maintenance so completely
really good stuff.
I can get you an
that they go out of their way to protect
unending supply of this stuff. I've got
it...others have a vested interest in connections...' Then, mysteriously, the
continuing it. including public officials,
source runs out. and the pimp sees to it
program administrators, grant recipients
that his prostitute gets on the methadone
and pharmaceutical companies."
program. It’s fear that keeps her tied to
Critics of the use of methadone insist
him, to the pimp. Fear of withdrawal.
that the narcotics crisis is a part of the
Destroying these young women, that's
social crisis which can only be reversed
what sickens me the most."
by exposing the environment which
In addition to the use of ritalin, valium
tolerates massive drugging and destruc
is especially 'used by the methadone
tion of the population. Drug use is a addicts. "An austere kind of 'family
“Symptom of social decay...methadone in atmosphere' is developed, predicated on
For N.E. child care
agency. Type 45 wpm, some
bookkeeping, $475-1575 per
mo. Send resume to: 1425
N.E. Dekum 98211 by Feb
uary 3rd or call 289 8821.
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
DIAL-A-JOB
MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION
SPECIALIST
$1,103 per mo
Temp
Feb June 30th, 1976. BA
and graduate work in Infor
mation System* designs (or
related exp.) plus 2 yrs. exp.
in Social Service Systems,
Research and Data Collec
tion. Resumes accepted to
Feb. 9th, 1976. Send to 4-C
1530 S.W. Taylor, Portland,
Ore. 97205.
LICENSED PRACTICAL
NURSE
Immediate vacancies in
State Institution. An Equal
Opportunity Employer with
lib e r a l fr in g e b e n e f its .
Starting salary $634 per
mo. plus $30 per mo. dif­
ferential for night shift.
Contact Fairview Hospital
and Training Center, 2250
Strong Rd., SE, Salem, OR.
97310. Phone 378 5369.
SALES
ENGINEER
Bee Line fashions has an
attractive opportunity for
stylist to sell our new line.
No investment. Earn ward
robe.
No collecting or
delivering. Car necessary.
Call 285 9929
Assistant Outside Plant
Engineer needed for perm,
position with large indepen
dent telephone co. in central
Wa.
Must have previous
telephone exp. in the prep
aration and implementation
of estimates and work orders
covering all aspects of plant
additions and rearrange
ments. Good benefit pr'o-
gram. Reply to P .0. Box
3137. Portland. OR 97208.
An Equal Opportunity
Employer M/F
FISCAL SECRETARY
$545 per mo.
Temp.
Feb. June 30th, 1976. Typ­
ing, correspondence and fis
cal reports, 10 key ability,
filing and related clerical
work for child care admini
stration agency.
Resumes
accepted to Feb. 6th, 1976.
Send to 4 C, 1530 S.W.
Taylor, Portland. Ore. 97205.
227 - 5828
Kaiser - Permanente
M e d ic a l C a re Program
A b Equal Opportunity Employer
E xperienced saw mill
Planner Foreman tor St. He­
lens mill. Monthly salary,
exc. fringe benefits. Apply
Boise Cascade Inc., P.O. Box
127, Independent, Oregon
97351
838 1610.
An Equal Opportunity
Employer •/
th<- common drug orientation addicts
have: 'Here's some valium to help you
down
Now when the man comes down,
he owes a friend a favor
maybe it's
women, or drugs, or money, or..." Bill has
been on the program for three years. He’s
watched addicts literally burn their
brains out: "the oxygen is cut off from the
brain, killing brain cells, all sorts of
experiments' are tried: airplane glue,
talcum powder, last week it was peanut
butter...I don't know how it's supposed to
work It probably doesn't. Glue doesn't
show up in urinalysis."
Bill observed the open trading of drugs
"in the hall, in the bathrooms. Counselors
aren't going to move to stop it. They
don't want to bo policemen. They figure
if they can save six or seven people,
they're doing good I think so too." Bill
maintains that the counselors have "no
real notion of what it is to be human in
fart, they assume the addicts are like
cows, most of whom will graze on the
drug scene until they die; they just hope
to get some of them out of the pasture ...a
sickening place. A lot of people just come
in to the methadone center and hang
around: pimps looking for new girls,
people selling dope. A lot of dope comes
up from California
addicts bring up
some stuff, getting on the methadone
program, hustling their dope while
they're here. Insane." v
A boiled or baked medium-
sized potato provide* approx­
imately the seme amount of
calorie* as a large apple,
CLKANM S « L A U N D M IR ■»
S
f*r»ófc«Aorf t 9 / 2
QUAUTY M Y CUANING
RIASONABU RATIS
PUC TRANSPORTATION
COST ANALYST
The State Of Oregon Pub
lie Utility Commissioner has
an opening for-a Transpor
tation Cost Analyst in Sa
lem. Position is in Kail/Air
/Marine Program and in
volves analyzing and pre
paring detailed cost and
financial studies; supervis
ing and performing the in
vestigation of accounting re
cords and practices of rail
roads and air carriers; and
preparing other accounting
and statistical studies and
reports of regulated car
riers. Requires Bachelor's
Degree and four years ex
[H-rience in financial analysis
and revenue need deter
mination with regulatory
agency or transportation
companies & working know
ledge of Rail Cost Form A;
or a satisfactory equivalent
combination of experience
and training. We are parti
cularly interested in affir
mative action candidates.
Send resume to Public Uti
lity Commissioner of Ore
gon, David J. Astle, Assis
tant Commissioner, 418 La
bor and Industries Building,
Salem, Oregon 97310.
ten times in the last three years, all but
the last two robberies oecuring at the
Piedmont Branch
All but one of the
suspects have been apprehended "The
FBI does a competent job and most hank
robbers are caught," Booker said The
incedi-nce of bank robbery has risen sixty
percent in the last year.
The bank has hired armed guards and
will install bullet proof glass and other
precautionary measures. "This is an
expens«- that a new business should not
have to incur." Booker said "We had
believed that we could operate a business
in the Black community without resorting
to armed guards We were wrong and
now we have had to admit it and hire the
guards."
Of additional concern to Booker is the
fact that all of the individuals who have
robbed or attempted to rob the American
State Bank, a Black owned bank, are
Black. "We are here to serve a need in
the Black community, yet it Is Blacks who
are attempting to steal from us.”
The losses in bank robberies must be
absorbed by the bank and limit the
amount that ran be paid to the
shareholders as profit or be used for
development in the community.
The accounts of individuals are insured
by FDIC, so there is no danger of loss to
the banks customers.
Several persons have even expressed
an opinion that if the robbers are Black,
they should not In- apprehended
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1014 N KltUNOIWOTTH
4 Mod» le d e( InSersSeSe
2S9-9357
Hughes Child Cure Center
KATHRYN McWILl.lAMS
DIRECTOR
PROPERTY OWNERS
Section 8 is a Federally
funded program for renters
and is now available in the
Portland area. The program
aids landlords by guaran
teeing a portion of the
monthly rent and reduces
vacancy loss by repairing a
lease and by paying eighty
percent of the rent for 60
days in the event of a skip.
No fee for listing. For info
call 249 5534, 249 5533 or
249 5532.
We have girls complaining
they're not getting calls on
our dating program.
Call
Diana or Andrea 232 4695. •
Announces rotes for private paying parents
Hourly rates. Dally rates
Weekly rale* (36.00 in advance.
Hughes Day Care Center is located on the corner of N.E. Rodney
and Failing, housed in the basement of the Hughes Memorial United
Methodist Church. The Center opens at 7:00 a.m. Monday through
Friday and closes at 5:30 p.m. The children that arrive early may
receive breakfast. During the day, children are served a mid morning
snack, hot lunch and an afternoon snack.
Hughes has an outstanding child development program for children
three years old through kindergarten. The staff would like to point
out that Hughes is a day care center and not a school. Here children
learn and develop in many different areas such as social skill« aa well
as academic development. One of the most important goala at Hughes
ia for children to develop a positive self image and feel good about
themselves.
Visitors and interested parents are welcome to come by at any
time, or you may call 288 4373 and ask for Kathryn McWilliams for
further information. ‘
J
288-4373
Bereon Child Care Center 281-2332