Page 8 Section III Portland Observer, February 25, 1982
ENTERTAINMENT
HAPPENINGS
entertainment
"B las t T h rough T he P a s t," Black H istory C o stu m e Ball, sponsored
oy the Black Educational Center, on Saturday, February 27, 1983, from 9
pm-1 am at the Cosmopolitan Airtel located at 6221 N .E . 82nd Ave. Come
dressed as your favorite Black History personality or come as you are and
help judge the costumes. Tickets are available at the Talking Drum Book
store, 1634 N .E . Alberta St. For information or costume ideas call 282-9465
or 284-9552. A ll proceeds will benefit the Black Educational Center School.
Donation $5.00.
B en e fit song fa s t and b an q u et for Alpha & Omega Christian Church’s
“ Oolden Eagles Food Bank” Program for senior citizens. 3 pm, Sun., Feb.
28, 5023 N. Michigan Ave.
HAPPENINGS
F rw film * on woman and the labor movamant, 12-1 pm, M ar. 2-5,
Cramer H all 53 (Portland State). Tues., M ar. 2, The Double Day, on work
ing women in Latin America. W ed., M ar. 3. With Babies and Banners, on
the G M sitdown strike in H in t, M ich., 1937. Thurs., M ar. 4, Rosie the Riv
eter, Women shipyard workers during W W I I in P ortland, Oregon. F ri.,
M ar. 5, Union Maids, biographical account o f three women rank and file
organizers o f the ’ 30s and *40s.
M a d ia F o ru m P layara, Jefferson High School G ym , 5210 N . Kerby,
Feb. 27th. Workshop 2-4 pm; Concert 8-10 pm.
PC C S ta g « B and C o n c a rt w ith g u est d ru m m e r Ed S h au g h n essy
from Johnny Carson’s Tonight Show, F ri., M ar. 5. 8 pm, P C C Cascade
campus Auditorium , 705 N. Killings worth. Free.
“ N o -H a n d s ” v o lle y b a ll g a m e a t P C C , P ortland Tim bers vs. PC C
Panthers, F ri., Feb. 26. 3-4 pm, PCC Sylvania, 12000 SW 49th Ave., Gym.
SI admission.
PSU D ep ressio n Film s: F ri., Feb. 26, 7:30 pm. Demagogues and Do-
gooders— N oisy voices o f the depression, a short, and G ab riel Over the
White House. 75 Lincoln H a ll, P S I), SW Broadway and M arket Streets.
Handicapped access on M arket street side o f the building. Free. Call 229-
4454 or 229-4452 for more information.
555 S.W. Alder
224-1336
A
presents
LIGHTS OUT
"Resurgence: The Movement For Equality vs The Ku Klux Kian," a
new documentary, will show Fri. Feb. 26, Rm 53 Cramer H all at Portland
State University, on Sat. Feb. 27 at St. Andrews Church, N .E . 8th and A l
berta, and on Sun. Feb. 28, at the S.E. Neighborhood Center, 3534 S.E.
M ain. Each show will start at 7:30 pm. There will be a S3 admission charge,
$2 for unemployed. Proceeds go to benefit the United Front Bookstore.
R a fu s a to R e g is te r fo r th a D ra ft — R ally to support our beautiful,
brave, noble, patriotic, young Americans who refuse to register. Friday,
Feb. 26, noon-1 pm, U.S. Courthouse, Broadway & M ain downtown. Bring
your own picket signs. Sponsor: Oregon Coalition Against the D raft. For
information call 238-0605.
W o m e n s tre n g th S e lf D e fe n s e W o rk s h o p , put on by the Portland
Police Bureau, Thursday nights, March 4, 11, 18, 6:30-9:30 pm each night.
There will a workshop geared toward teenage girls (ages 13-18) on Satur
days, March 13, 20, and 27th, from 9 am-noon each day, at the Northeast
Cornerstone Project, 4728 N E Union. Both workshops are free, and pre
registration is required. C all the Crime Prevention D etail at 248-4126 on
Tuesday, February 23 beginning at 8 am to sign up.
Career workshop for wom en, to promote access to careers in science
and technology. March 6, 1982 at M t. Hood C C in Gresham, 8:30 am-4:30
pm. Free, including lunch. Call 667-7313 to pre-register. Lim it 75 partici
pants.
*
featuring
Tony Collins and Dennis Springer
of
PLEASURE
A
I
I
EVERY MONDAY & TUESDAY
in March
O NE D O LLA R OFF W IT H T H IS C O U P O N
I
V
PRODUCTIONS
C h ild A b u se W o rk s h o p M a r. 5, 6, at the OSU Foundation Center in
C o rvallis. $85 tu itio n for this 2-day short course. T o register call Jim
Schupp, 754-2678.
Presents
q
night out with
Stephanie M ill* is glowing and looking better than ever because
now she feels greet about herself.
Stephanie Mills: Happy to be herself
For the first time in a long time Stephanie Mills feels happy about life and
happy about herself. Ms. Mills credits her former husband, Jeffrey Daniel
o f Shalamar, with her new, positive self-image.
Ms. Mills says she used to feel intimidated by female entertainers that fit
society’s image o f beauty: “ that tall-prettv-girl-with-long-hair.” The 4 '8 "
Mills says Daniel helped her get rid o f her inferiority complex because “ he
never stopped telling me he loved me the way I was.’’
Pressures from both sides o f family and friends, plus Daniel’s “ immatur
ity ,” caused M ills to file for divorce last September. The 25-year-old star
confessesw that she still loves Daniel. She’s also hoping for a reconciliation
with the only man who she says she has ever slept w ith. See February’ s
Ebony for more informations.
»
*
*
Collaboration
Columbia recording artist M ax Roach (right), always considered in the
front line of jazz innovators for more than three decades, welcomed one of
rock music's most forward-thinking characters to a gig recently, Robert
Fripp (left). The scene was New York C ity ’s 7th Avenue South, where the
M ax Roach Quartet— M ax on drums, tenor saxophonist Odean P odc , Cecil
Bridgewater on trumpet, and bassist Calvin H ill— was completing a four-
city November tour, including stops at the University o f Massachusetts/
Amherst, Santa Fe, and the University o f Houston. M a x ’s career has seen
him move from pioneering bebop in the late 1940s with Miles, Diz and Bird,
to working in the hard bop idiom o f the '50s, to the free improvisational
format o f the '60s and ’70s, culminating his own all-percussion orchestra
known as M ’ Boom, with their analog and digital album configurations for
Colum bia. M a x ’s current album with the quartet is Chattahoochie Red,
highlighted by “ The D re a m /It’s Tim e,” in which M a x ’s drums underscore
Rev. M artin Luther King J r.’s famous “ I Have a Dream ” speech. A full
professor o f music at Amherst, Jazz H all o f Famer M ax Roach is also the
founder o f the Open Forum for American Music, a foundation dedicated to
the performance o f all music by American composers in every genre.
Supergroup:
The Jacksons
&23
thru
Sun.
28
FEB.
PORTLAND MEMORIAL COLISEUM
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J » M » T N M • U.M OFF A lt IIC W T S
AVAILAMi AT K ltC T E O FREO RIETERS
TIC K E TS ON SALE:
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K K » I r« « M
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F O R I N F O R M A T IO N
CALL: (503) 239-4422
FM CNSF UTtS CALL (Mil 222-01IS
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AMTOAKAMCH
LOS A N G ELES— The epic super
group, The Jacksons, grossed an es
timated $5.5 million on its recent 39-
city tour o f the U.S.
The tour, completely sold out, be
gan July 9 in Memphis, Tennessee,
and ended with a record-breaking,
four-night sellout o f the Los Angel
es Forum. The tour drew an esti
mated 600,000 persons.
The Jacksons, whose worldwide
record sales are currently estimated
at 96 million units, became the first
group to sell out four nights at the
Los Angeles Forum this year. Only
Queen and the Eagles in 1980 re
corded sellouts for four nights at the
huge venue.
In Ix>s Angeles and New York,
where the group performed at M adi
son Square Garden, personalities
the likes o f Katherine Hepburn,
Andy Warhol, Jane Fonda, Margot
Kidder, Dan Aykroyd, Steven Spiel
berg, Victoria Principal, Andy
Gibb, Quincy Jones, Cher, Magic
Johnson, Tatum O ’ Neal, Lesley
Gore, Jamie Lee Curtis and Kristy
McNichol turned out to see the five
brothers perform.
S H E R A T O N - A IR P O R T
(CohJTTlbluii D»ilir5orn)
SdtttndcUf -
Tftancl 6tfi. /9 Z 2
lim e ; 9:00 P.M. UNTIL
: $5.00 (4 .0 0 uiith button)
Outlet; HOUSE OF SOUNDS RECORDS
Must Be 21 - I.D. Required