Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, October 17, 1990, Page 4, Image 4

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Page 4— 1 he Portland Observer- October 17, 199(1
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Portland Observer
ENTERTAINMENT
KOOL SKOOL
LOCAL COLOR
tiiner
institute
Return to a part of Oregon that is less than proud-
her history of civil rights ...
1990 LECTURE SERIES
Or. Constance W. Rice
First La dy o f Seattle, W A , educator, con­
sultant, entrepreneur, and businesswoman.
F o rm er K ellogg F o und ation Fellow, first
Black w om an to receive a P h .D . fro m
College o f E duca tion, D epartm ent o f
H igher E ducation and M .P .A . fro m
G raduate School o f P ublic A d m in is tra tio n ,
U niversity o f W ashington. O w ner and
President o f C W R , Inco rpo rate d, a public-
relations and management consulting firm .
C orp ora te d ire c to r on the boards o f
U.S. W E S T C om m unications-W ashington
State and the Security P acific Bank-
W ashington, Ida ho & Alaska.
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Thursday
November 1, 1990
7:30 p.m.
Admission - $15.00
K OOL SKOOL is in session so take
scrupulous notes. Required study m ate­
rials include your favorite dancing shoes
and Kool Skool’s gutsy, spontaneous
self-titled debut. Produced by Jesse
Johnson and Keith Lewis and recorded
at M inneapolis’ funky Jungle Love Stu­
dios, the new sextet’s party album fea­
tures such R&B-meets-hip-house tracks
as “ My G irl,” “ You C an’t Buy My
L o v e” and “ W aste My tim e.” One o f
the A BCs o f Kool Skool is:
CHEM ISTRY
“ It’s a kool black sound with a taste
o f hip-house, pop and traditional R & B ,”
L im ite d seating. Tickets available in advance o r at the door. Reservations recom ­
mended to insure admission. C all 293-8221 fo r m ore in fo rm a tio n .
Thursday at
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STATION
FITS
A
ll
OPB
dj-tvX-Xiix-x-X'&vX-.vX
MRS C’S WIGS
CH:
WHOLESALE & RETAIL
«
BETTY
T U IS-SA T
11130 -6 rOO
*
BEAUTICIAN
4 STUDENT
7lh & FREMONT (707 N.E. FREMONT)
BRAIDING
WEAVHG
S a lu r d a y
The First Annual MUSICIANS BALL will showcase 42 outstanding
bands at 8 premier nightclubs on Friday and Saturday, November 9th
and 10th. Clubs participating in support of local original music: KEY
LARGO, SATYRICON, DAKOTA CAFE, DAY FOR NIGHT,
ERICK SO N ’S SALOON, BLUE GALLERY, CISCO & PO N CH O ’S and UFO
CAFE.
By multi-centering the Ball, the Portland Music association will be able to
showcase the vast spectrum styles and genres that make up Portland’s nationally
recognized musical base. Record industry representatives have been invited to
be a part o f this ground-breaking event.
Club-goers will be able to choose from either a S 10.00 CLOTH PASS good
for all-club access o f Friday or Saturday, or a SI 7.50 souvenir LAM INATE for
all-club access both nights (S7.50 for those under 21).
As a special added attraction, a RO CK IN ’ AUCTION will be held on Friday
at E sickson’ Saloon, admission free, proceeds going to the Portland Music
Association to further its work on behalf o f the entire music community.
The jew el in the crown o f the event takes place Saturday evening at
Erickson’s. The very first PORTLAND MUSIC AWARDS will recognize
outstanding Portland musicians in 22 categories with local celebrities presenting
the honors to the cream o f Portland’s musical talent. For both players and
audience, this will truly be a night to remember.
Tickets for all events on sale now at G I Joes/Ticketmaster outlets.
TITLE LABLE & NUMBER
ONE
Samuelle
Guy
Ralph Tresvant
Levert
àgio Lfceth-zí
Pebbles
Doc Box a.
B. Fresh
N.W. A
Father M.C.
B ernadette
Cooper
Too Short
RECORDS
1 61 5 N E Killingaworth
P o rtla n d , O reg o n
<_____
.
ARTIST
So You Like What You See
Atlantic 4-87864
I Wanna g et With U (new)
MCA 53931
S e n sitiv ity (new)
MCA 53933
Rope
Dope Style (new)
Atlantic 4 87828
G iving You th e B enefit
MCA 53891
H eaven Knows
Virgin 4 96467
1OO M iles and runnln
R uthless 57224
I’ll Do 4 U (new)
MCA 53914
I Look Good
MCA 15825
The G h etto (new)
Jive 4 1 3 9 7
A
1 ?
All Carpet
$6.00 and under
2716 N .E . M artin L u th er K in g Jr. B lvd.
(5 0 3 ) 2 8 4 -2 4 3 5
288-0878
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■ i j s e w ?
mm *« * '. m -,
•
L0 - 5 :3 0 p m
Near Lloyd Center
JKV
(iVA'y/MWAV.V..............
ONE S T O P TOP 10 SINGLES
28
M o n - F r . L0 a .m . - 6 p .m .
Musicians Ball 1990
' L p ’lZ i.S J lh i.
Good T i m e
13
Synthetic & H um an Hair
For Braiding & Weeving
&
Portland Music Association
A
•
DISCOUNTS
100% HUMAN HAB
2Jnc.
A Good
10
E va G abor
N aomi S ims
R enee of P aris
EVERYTW1G FROM CURRENT STYLES TO SPECIALTY W ES
UNBUE HAB ORNAMENTS
FOR
E n Í E .x h a in J n s n i
S u p p o rt
•
One of the Northwest Largest Wig Displays
Wigs and Hairpieces For all Nationalities
ANO OTHER NAME BRANDS
2 8 1 -6 5 2 5
255-6722
Cause And Have
7
Wigland
(V
C A B IN E
P R O P R IE T O R
2URI COSMETES
Don't Let Someone Tell You About it, Be There!I
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N A O M I SIMS • BORNFREE
• M IC H A E L WEEKS
HAB BEADS Ä BEAUTY SUPPLIES
MRS. CS EBONY ESSENCE COSMETES
$10 per person, $18 per couple (semi formal)
Advanced Purchase Suggested Limited Tlcketsll
E.E. Inc. will be donating to Special Olympics
3
H U N D RED S OF WIGS
FOR YOUR EVERCHANGING LIFESTYLES
2E
October 27th, 7pm to 11pm
Nendel’s At the Airport
8:00
O
»UU 1 PM
IVI
Underwritten in part by a grant from Soloflex
summarizes Dee Dee. “ W e’re turned on
to a lot of styles and have a variety of
specialties, so that’s why our album is so
much more than just a couple o f hit
songs. We want people to be entertained
all the way through.”
“ The band m em bers have a lot of
different musical tastes,” explains
Johnson, “ and they’re naturals at bring­
ing it all together. This is the kind o f
recording that you can listen to from
beginning to end a thousand times and
pick up on new things to experience each
tim e.”
Halloween Party &
Fashion Show
A
. . . as told by those
who were there.
N o rth w e s t N a tu r a l G a s B u ild in g , 22 0 N .W . S e c o n d , 4 th F lo o r
KOOL SKOOL-Dion Craig lead voice, Bryan Tate keyboards & backing
voice, Edgar Hinton bass, key bass & backing voice, Dee Dee James
guitars backing voice, Gabriel Acevedo tubs & shouting, The Prime
Minister of Love rap & tables
■
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282-1664
1105
N.E. Broadway
k e y
lar
31 NW FIRST
223-9919
O ctob er
W ed. 17
M ODERN
E N G L ISH
I burs. 18
BRYDGE
Eri. 19 & Sat. 20
C U R T IS
SALG ADO
& THE
S T IL E T T O S
Sun. 21
(T .B.A .)
M on. 22
H EA R T OE
D A R K N E SS
lu e s. 23
L IT T L E
W OM EN
SKYVIEW TERRACES
TO BE COMPLETED
AT OREGON
CONVENTION CENTER
Skyview terrace lounges offering i
view o f downtown Portland will soon b<
a part of the Oregon Convention Center
The Metro Council Thursday (Octobei
11) night unanimously authorized spend­
ing $600,000 from an unspent construc­
tion balance to com plete the lounges
which arc located in the bases o f the
C enter’s glass towers.
The lounges were part o f the origi­
nal construction plans in 1987, but were
deleted in 1988 due to fears o f cosl
overruns. In 1989 however, the Metro
Council gave completion of the terraces
highest budget priority after resolution
ol construction claims. W hen construc­
tion of the Oregon Convention Center
was completed, there was an estim ated
$2.2 million surplus in the capital fund
due to highcr-than-anticipatcd interest
earnings.
The 7,(XX) square-foot skyview ter­
races consist of two semi-circles joined
by a long comdor. Design drawings feature
bars against the back walls o f the sem i­
circles and tables along the perimeter.
Total occupancy is about 175. The de­
sign team envisioned the lounges as a
place that would “ Attract and hold dele­
gates within the Center as long as pos­
sible to increase the likelihood o f all ex ­
hibits being seen...smaller scale lounge-
retreat seating should be provided where
delegates can ‘close the million-dollar
deal’ in sem i-privacy.”
( onstruction of the lounges will begin
in January 1991, with completion antici­
pated by late spring.