Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, February 27, 1991, Page 6, Image 6

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Page 6—The Portland Observer—February 27,
1991
Vice President Quayle to Play in Bryant
Gumbel/Walt Disney World Pro-Am
Tournament for United Negro College Fund
“I need a diet that can
shift gears when I do.”
?4wten¿c¿M,
You live a hectic life. Wouldn't it be
k
Introducing the
m .?
'C f i \ c
I ILn
PERSONAL CHOICE
P R O
G
R A
great to have a weight loss plan that tells
you what to eat. and when to eat it? Now
you can— with the new Personal Choice
Program from Weight Watchers.
New Personal Choice gives you your
M
choice of three easy-to-follow food plans
that range from structured to flexible— whatever s right for you. It's designed to
adapt to your lifestyle, so you can lose weight at your own comfortable pace.
What's more. Personal Choice allows you to eat the foods you want. Even
in a restaurant. From the first week on.
If you’re looking for a diet program that fits the way you live, now the
choice ts yours. New Personal Choice Call Weight Watchers and ask about this
exciting program today.
Safe, sensible weight loss for 27 years.
JOIN BY MARCH 2ND AND SAVE
(Pay $8 Weekly Fee until May 4th)
"May wc ail wor^to
tnafe íiis dream
a reality. "
Martin Luther King, Jr.
620-9431
Waverly Davis
Through March 2nd
After March 2nd
Registration
$17
Registration
Weekly Fee
$8
Weekly Fee
Total
$25
Total
(No increase in registration fee)
This offer good in participating areas only
$17
$9
$26
President
For Information Call (collect) weekdays
8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
'Unity in the Community'
Place your advertisement In the
? Portland Observer
(
Office# c<503> 288-0033
Fax# (503) 288-0015
Oregon Art Institute
Pacific Northwest College of Art
(5 0 3 )2 9 7 -1 0 2 1
New members please Arrive 20 minutes early
NORTHEAST PORTLAND
NORTH PORTLAND
Maranatlia Church
Rivergate Community Church
4 2 2 2 N .E . 12th
4 737 N . L o m b a rd St.
(E n te r on S kid m o re )
Tues.
Sat
U n iv e r s ity o f P o r tla n d
Tilamook Park Bldg.
5 000 N. W illa m e tte B lv d .
C o lu m b ia H a ll
2 1 0 8 N .E . 4 1 st A ve .
M on.
7:00 p.m .
(E n te r fro m P o rtsm o u th )
Tues.
7:0 0 p.m .
W ed.
W ed.
9 :3 0 a.m .
Fri.
5 :0 0 p.m .
5 :0 0 p.m .
,
7 :0 0 p.m .
T hu rs.
Á u c tiu m n
7 :0 0 p.m .
9:30 a.m.
9 :3 0 a.m.
(T o le
Temple Baptist Church
1319 N .E . 7th
F ire sid e R oom
Tuesday
1 2 :1 5 p m
(Brown Bag Lunch Class)
Weight Watchers is a registered trademark ot WEIGHT WATCHERS INTERNATIONA!.,
INC. copyright 1990 WEIGHT WATCHERS INTERNATIONAL. INC.
Scientology Prishioners
Donate Books To 19
Portland Libraries
Autum n Coleman
The Pacific Northwest College of
.Art Extension Program awarded eight
art scholarships to students from
W hitaker Middle School and Joseph
M eek School. The scholarships are
aw arded through the Anna B. Crocker
Program for children and young adults.
T he criteria for cligiblity are: need, and
artistic ability and/or promise. The Pa-
ciftc Northwest College o f A rt is the
oldest fulltime independent college of
art in the Northwest, and is the only full
accredited independent professional art
school in the region.
Students selected from W hitaker
are Tom M cCarthy, Antonio Chaney,
Lyron Cox, Toby Dominguez, Desaugi
Ford, Marcus Sims, and Tyrone Bials
for the spring term.
Autumne Colem an, third grader at
Joseph Meek School was also selected
for the spring term.
This is the third time that Autumne
has been selected to receive the schol­
arship. Autume a very talented artist,
had her work selected by the Oregonian
new spaper and was published in their
W ednesday’s childrens “ Art B reak’’,
Decem ber 19, 1990 issue.
Autume the daughter o f Mrs.
H eather Baker and Glenn W illiams was
recently selected to be in Portland Public
Schools TAG program.
Congratulations
man
Whitaker
Midale School Award ies
Parishioners of the Church o f Sci­
entology are engaged in a project to
provide Portland libraries with refer­
ence books on the aopplied philosophy
of Scientology and other non-fiction
works o f acclaim ed author L. Ron
Hubbard. The writings are valued at
over $2,700.
A total o f 19 libraries are sched­
uled to receive the books by the end of
h 's time for a new school board. The
'February 4th school boycott and (he
board’s refusal to adopt ihe community's
'education plan have created a crisis of
confidence in the current board. Parents
and other citizens have no reason to be­
lieve that the present board will berespon
sive to their concerns. This crisis presents
the opportunity for some highly qualified,
committed community activists for make
a run for the all-volunteer board.
(The Portland Rainbow Coalition finds
these candidates supportive of the
¡community s education plan and commit
ted to citizen empowerment in creating
schools of excellence. We recommend
that voters mark their balloLs for all the
following candidates.
BOBER! 0 REYES-COLON- zone Hl
•Tom McCarthy
•Antonie Chaney
•Lyron Cox
Toby Dominguez
Desaugi Ford
•Marcus Sims
Tyrone Burns
With the slogan “Education lor the
Global Village", Reyes-Colon would
bring fifteen years ofcxperience as an
educator and civil/human rights ad­
vocate to the school board. A Puerto
Rican educated in New York and
Portland, his work in creating bi-lin-
gual school programs, as a fair hous-
ng specialist, administering immi­
gration assistance, and as a congres­
sional aide promise active commu­
nity representation.
'.
8 •
Lake Buena Vista, FL—Vice President tee off are Johnny Miller, Ken Green,
Dan Quayle leads a blue-ribbon list of
celebrity golfers participating in the sec­
ond Bryant Gumbel/Walt Disney World
Pro-Am Tournament to benefit the forty-
one-member schools of the United Negro
College Fund.
With a goal of surpassing the inaugural
event’s two hundred thousand dollars
($200.000) raised for UNCF, Gumbel and
the Vice President will be joined by such
notables as baseball Hall-of-Famer Joe
DiMaggio, NBA greats Oscar Robertson
and Julius Erving, tennis superstar Arthur
Ashe, Congressman Dan Rostenkowski
(chairman of the House Ways and Means
Committee), entertainer Glen Campbell
and NBC News colleagues Tom Brokaw
and Joe Garagiola.
O ther celebrities on the Bryant
Gumbel/Walt Disney World Pro-Am
roster include such well-known sportsmen
and good sports as former NBA star Bob
Lanier, Olympic hockey-gold-medalist
Mike Eruzione, former New York Mets
manager Davey Johnson, entertainer B. J.
Thomas, former Miami Dolphin Dick
Anderson and Harlem Globetrotter alum­
nus Curly Neal.
This year’s event has expanded to two
days of play with a field of one hundred
forty players, including twenty-six PGA
Tour pros plus celebrities and golf afi­
cionados. Among the PGA pros slated to
Calvin Peete, Mark McCumber, Billy An­
drade, Jim Carter, and Mark O ’Meara.
Delta Air Lines will provide transporta­
tion for celebrity participants.
The three-day spectacular kicks off Fri­
day, October 19, with practice rounds and
the pairing party. Celebrities will match
up with their amateur partners for the first
round of play on the par-72 Lake Buena
Vista course, one of Walt Disney World’s
three championship golf courses. Each
group for the championship pro-am will
be a five-some with one celebrity, one
PGA Tour professional and three
amateurs.
A nother highlight of the Bryant
Gumbel/Walt Disney World Pro-Am is the
celebrity gala featuring dinner and top
entertainers performing at Disney’s Con­
temporary Resort. Last year’s gala includ­
ed appearances by 1990 Miss America
Debbye Turner, singer Jimmy Buffett,
R&B duo Ashford and Simpson and com­
edian Elayne Boosler.
Playing spots in this year's 36-hole tour­
nament, including overnight accommoda­
tions, celebrity dinner show, pairings
party', awards luncheon, and gallery view­
ing of final play in the $1 million-Walt
Disney World/Oldsmobile G olf Classic
were available for a $2,500 contribution
of UNCF.
PORTLAND SCHOOL BOARD - WE NEED NEW BLOOD ! DIVERSITY ! POWER !
Congratulations
;
February according to church spokes­
person, Angie Johnson, and are being
purchased through parishioner dona­
tions.
“ The fruits of wisdom are tradi­
tionally found in religion and this is our
contribution to making our libraries
complete resources for evryone,’ ’ stated
Johnson. “ W e’re very proud to make
this contribution.'’
THUMBS UP FOR CHARITY DRIVE—NBC-Ncws “ Today” anchor Bryant Gumbel has a
excellent “driver” in Vice President Dan Quayle, who will again contribute his golfing pro­
wess to the second Bryant Gumbel/VVhlt Disney World Pro-Am, a fund raiser “ par excellence”
for the United Negro College Fund. Now a two-day event, October 20-21, the tourney hopes
to surpass last year’s $200,000 total with help from such celebrity golfers as baseball Ilall-of-
Famcr Joe DiMaggio, NBC-Ncws anchor Tom Brokaw, NBA legends Oscar Robertson and
Julius Erving, and entertainer Glen Campbell. (Copyright 1990, The Walt Disney Co.)
w .
ROBY ROBERTS - zone #2
As a former teacher, congressional
aide, union representative and stu­
dent mentor, Roberts brings a particu­
lar concern for quality education for
all children. His program of reform
would focus on the needs of low-
income and minority children, elimi­
nate tracking, establish building
management teams, treat parents as
partners, reduce classroom size, and
expand involvem ent o f business,
higher education and government in
mentoring and curriculum develop­
ment.
based organizations, Phillips is past
President of the Portland NAACP,
chair of O regon’s Association of B lack
Social W orkers, and is currently the
a ffirm a tiv e a c tio n o f fic e r for
Multnomah County. He has served on
the Tri-county Literacy Council and
helped establish the N AACP’s H um ­
boldt School mentorship program.
“Portland needs an honest, open and
responsive school board that is com ­
mitted to eliminating academic dif­
ferences between children as well as
being committed to involving parents
directly intheirchildren’seducalion,”
says Phillips.
JOSEPH TAM - zone #7
Advocating excellence, diversity, and pan
nership, Tam has experience as a civil
rights investigator, as presidentof"Advo-
cates for Language learning" and as chair
of his local school advisory committee. A
native of Hong Kong, he emphasizes that
the "new basics” for the 21st century
workplace include world languages,
multicultural awareness, critical thinking,
computer literacy, arts, science, music as
well as readme, writme and math.
STEVEN LOEWEN - zone #6
ROBERT PHILLIPS - zone #4
Coming to this race with a broad
range of experience in community
A former director of Portland’s Child
Care Coordinating Council, Loewcn
has served on local school advisory
councils, budget council, Schools for
the City and the Echo Theater board.
He believes the “current school board
members have displayed an incred­
ible disregard and arrogance for pub­
lic input on all issues.” Loewcn advo-
catesa return to neighborhood schools
and reduced classroom sizes.
db?.* t?
COMMUNITY COLLEGE - zone »2
Currently chair of the Coalition of Black
Men, Williams is a businessman and a
college instructor in political science. He
has been affirmative action director for
the State of Oregon. Early in his career,
Williams organized and directed a store­
front campus for Portland State Univer
sity.
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