Page 6 Portland Observer Thursday, July 27, 1978
Portland wrestlers champions
This house was rehabilitated for Portland Development Commission by
VETS of Oregon Inc., as a training protect. The house, located at 4206 N.E.
Garfieid, will now be sold
Rehabilitated boose for sale
Portland Development Commis
sion is offering for sale a house that
has been completely rehabilitated
under a pilot project.
The house, which was an aban
doned house in poor condition was
purchased by PDC and rehabilitated
by VETS of Oregon, Inc., a non
profit veteran’s group. The ten Viet
nam veterans who were trained on
the project through a M u lt-
nomah/Washington County Consor
tium C E T A grant have all gone to
union jobs in construction.
The rehabilitation, which included
new construction, complete remodel
ing o f the interior, a new heat
ing system, and new wiring,
siding and roof, is completed and the
house is ready for sale.
The purchase price of the three
bedroom house, which is at 4206
N .E. Garfield, is $32,000, with a five
percent downpayment. Financing
will be twenty years at 6 to percent.
To be eligible, the purchaser must
meet income guidelines ($16,900 for
a family of four), meet audit stan
dards and live in the house. Priority
will be given to a family.
Persons who wish to purchase
must take their applications to
Mariam Scott, 34 N .E . Killingsworth
by 5:00 p.m., July 31st (288-8131).
The purchaser will be selected by a
random drawing on August 3rd at
4206 N .E . Garfield. The Finance
Section of PDC will process the ap
plications.
An open house will be held on July
30th from noon to 4:00 p.m.
Anthony Amado, Jr., and Marc
Sprague, Jr., of Portland have won
positions on the U .S . W o rld
Wrestling Team by defeating the op
ponents at the National Champions
in Lincoln, Nebraska. Anthony, fif
teen, and a freshman at Benson, won
the National Championship in the
Advanced Class.
Marc Sprague. Jr., thirteen, and a
graduating Whitaker Middle School,
won second in the 90-pound event
but won a place on the World Team
American State Bank
2737 N.E. Union
282-2216
Prince H all G rand C hapter,
O .E .S . State o f Oregon and it's
Jurisdiction, recently held its Seven
teenth Annual Communication at
the Lloyd Center Sheraton M otor
Inn. Principle Officers elected for
1978-79 were: G rand W o rth y
Matron, Loyola Brown; Grand Wor
thy Patron, William B. Odom, Jr.;
Grand Associate Matron, E. Jean
Dillard; Grand Associate Patron,
James Gist.
Grand Conductress, Pristina Gist;
Grand Associate Conductress, Helen
Riley; Grand Treasurer, Vethel Hall;
Grand Secretary, Louise West;
Grand Assistant Secretary, Margaret
Isaacs; and Grand C hairm an o f
Trustees, Earnestine Wiseman.
The Friend ly T a v e rn
SEE SPORTS O N G IA N T SCREEN T V
Owner
Joeeph Beniamin
1(01 NE Albert«
288 8788
BAR - B - Q - RIB DINNER
GRAND OPENING
SPECIAL
10 FREE DINNERS TO BE GIVEN A W A Y
Grand W orthy Matron Loyola
Brown and Grand W orthy Patron
W . B. Odom, Jr.
Physicist warns nuclear risk
• Technical issues relating to
selection o f disposal m edium ,
specific sites, and repository designs
require objective research to resolve.
• Early demonstration of geologic
disposal of a limited number of spent
fuel assemblies is recommended.
• Interim storage facilities away
from nuclear sites will be required.
• The 1985 target date for
operation o f a national waste
disposal will not be met.
• The federal government should
take over all permanent waste
disposal facilities including the six
current commercial low-level waste
burial grounds.
Bridenbaugh told the Council that
enough technological progress has
been made to show that there are
problems. Among the unsolved dif
ficulties are geological issues — the
behavior of salt material, hydrology,
and the stability of geologic struc
tures where waste materials might be
buried. He said that safe storage of
radioactive wastes for a reasonable
period of time would not be of con
cern, but to insure that a storage
facility will be safe for hundreds or
thousands of years is difficult.
He warned that the entire
procedure fo r disposal must be
studied, not just what happens after
storage. One concern is sloppy han
dling by employees during removal
and transportation.
Bridenbaugh added that the
Volunteer*
needed
JOE’S PLACE
Andre Taylor, took first place in
the Junior 79-pound class. Andre,
who is eleven, is too young for the
World Team. O f seventeen wrestlers
participating in the National Cham
pionships from Portland, there were
fourteen medals won.
The World Championships will be
held August 3rd through 5th in
Albuquerque, New Mexico.
OES elects state leaders
(Continued from Page 1 Column 3)
C urrent plans are for nuclear
wastes to be buried underground in
salt beds or other areas where the
geologic structure is believed to be
oi isolating the nuciear
materials.
Bridenbaugh said the Department
of Energy report showed a number
o f deficiencies in waste disposal
technology:
Mike Fieter and Dallas Tornado player heatedly battle for control of the ball
during Tueeday night 2-1 victory for the Portland Timbers Timbers next
challenge will be to stay alive in the playoffs,
by defeating the Champion in a
"wrestle-off.”
Volunteers are needed at the
Washington Park Zoo fo r the
education programs. The programs
include: Zoo Days, a program where
volunteers go to schools in the Tri-
C ounty
area
(M u ltn o m a h ,
Clackamas, and Washington coun
ties) to give live animal demon
strations and slide shows; zoo tours
for school and other groups; free
days at the zoo for senior citizens,
handicapped persons and children.
Any adult over the age of eighteen
may join the program. Fall orien
tation will begin with a social day,
zoo tour and potluck lunch on Sep
tember 7th, at 9:30 a.m. The rest of
the orientation classes will be held on
Tuesdays and Thursdays during Sep
tember, from 9:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
Make your plans for the fall now!
Join a lively, active group, learn
about the Washington Park Zoo and
meet the animals who reside there.
Call for your application now (or
come to the zoo for a visit and pick
up your application while you are
there). Applications will be accepted
until August 31, 1978.
For more inform ation call the
Washington Park Zoo education of
fice at 228-0758 or 226-1561. Be a
ZO O G U ID E !!!
method of decommissioning nuclear
plants now preferred by utility com
panies — covering the entire plant
with dirt then uncovering it at a later
date — is not acceptable according to
current rules which say the site must
be returned to its natural state in a
reasonable period o f time.
He said discrepancies in PG E’s
application include: 1) no iden
tification of unresolved problems of
waste disposal; 2) representation that
waste disposal technology is
available; 3) im plication that
problems are political; 4) implication
that decommissioning technology is
now available; 5) implication that
low-level waste disposal problems
have been solved.
Deficiencies are that no contin
gency plan for waste disposal and
decommissioning are included and
no assessment of cost. There is no
plan for other supplies of electricity
in case the plant is closed for a long
period.
Since leaving General Electric
Bridenbaugh has been a consultant
for national governments, states and
environmental groups. He has been a
consultant for the Swedish govern
ment; the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, the State of California
Energy Commission, the State of
New York, and the State of Illinois.
GREYHOUND
RACING
IS FUN...
YOU CAN
BET ON IT!
TONIGHT AT
730
Luxurious Dining on
4th lloor Club Skyview
Air Conditioned
Buttet Dining on 3rd floor
Fairview Terrace
Post time 7 30 p m
Monday thru Saturday
For information
and reservations
__________ call 665 2191
Sorry no Sunday racing
and no children
______________ under 12
At Fairview Park
NE 223rd and Halsey St
east out Freeway Bantield
(I-80N)
Interested in current books
about African Liberation?
Visit:
JOHN REED BOOK STORE
In the Dekum Building
519 S W 3rd Avenue
Sixth Floor
TO WIN: Print your Name, Phon* Number, and Address In the space
below. Cut out thia ad and drop In box at Pig-on-the-PIt. Drawing
will ba on Auguet 6th, you don't have to ba present to win.
PIG-ON-THE-PIT - BAR-B-Q
4011 N.E. U N IO N AVE. PORTLAND,ORE.
W IN I
Free rib dinner for one.
SAT. AUG . 5th .
GRAND
OPENING
P h on e » -
111 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. — Monday-Thursday; Friday ft Saturday - 24 hours
Sunday — 11 a.m. -11 p.m.
See It Today!
h o m e fu r n is h in g s
bïïïï
©a© oro wob
Whirlpool
12.9 CU. FT.
REFRIGERATOR
There's lots of storage room packed into a little space with this big-
value model. 11.14 cu. ft. fresh food storage is topped with stor
age for 1.76 cu. ft. of frozen foods. Come in today;
we give you m o r e ___
227 2902
EASY TERMS
MITHS
hom e fu rn ish in gs
30th and S.E. Division
Or call:
3
E
234-9351
Shop 9 to 0 Tuesday thru Friday
Saturday 9 to 6
(Not O pen Sunday or M onday)