Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, April 24, 1991, HOMES WANTED, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    h
April 24,1991--The Portland Observer—Page 5
MVP Clyde Drexler Soars For Two Points
MEN’S, WOMEN’S, CHILDREN’S
2 FOR
These & many more
added weekly.
C A aqe
CALL FOR DETAILS
k
>1 W - T
A V IA 7 7 5 W P
WOMEN’S TENNIS
WHITE/
PINK
BoR
QconviRM
Cons® ERX 250 Hi
rit
Oil
••21
281-5819
N.E. 30th & ALBERTA * PORTLAND, OR
Portland Summer
School Registration To
Open May 1
»Ti
n
I•> ‘
•*«
-f
c*
Li
V
■«i •
61
-n
»2
>}
.e ■
V»
h¡
<1:
Photo by Veronica Green
Five Time MVP Clyde Drexler Is On The Way To Scoring Two Points
Against Seattle Sonics Ricky Pierce
Congratulations
Portland Trail Blazers Pacific Division
Clothing Give
Away
Clothing give-a-way at the Chris­
tian Outreach Ministry at the Mallory
Avenue Church of Christ, 3908 N.E.
Mallory Avenue in the adjacent park­
ing lot. April 27th, 1991 at 12:30 p.m.
to 2:30 p.m.
The Blazers finished their season with 63 wins and 19 losses. They begin first
round playoff action in a best of 5 series against the Seattle Supersonics Friday
evening at the Memorial Coliseum.
Playoff Schedule:
Seattle at Portland 7:30pm Friday 4/26
Seattle at Portland 6:30pm
Sunday 4/28
Portland at Seattle 7:00pm Tuesday 4/30
Portland at Seattle 5/2 if necessary
Seattle at Portland
5/4 if necessary
Tiante Tims
Tiante Tims (right end) was all smiles Tuesday April 16th at the Memorial
Coliseum. Tiante got the chance to work as a guest ball boy during the
Blazer's matchup against Houston. Way to go Tiante!
Albertson’s Hearing
Slated For
April 22; Bureau
Amends Charges
The contested case hearing re­
quested by Albertson’s Inc. to defend
itself on charges of violating Oregon
I child labor laws will be held in Portland
on April 22 at 9 a.m. in Room 311 of the
State Office Building, 1400 S.W. Fifth
Avenue.
Albertson’s faces amended charges
proposed by the Oregon Bureau of Labor
and Industries which double the num­
ber of alleeed violations and nearly
doubles the fine.
The amended charges add 69 alle­
gations of failure to procure employ­
ment certificates, and 75 allegations
that Albertson’s allowed minors to work
without work permits. In addition, the
amended document deletes four of the
minors named in the original notice,
adds three, and expressly alleges that
the violations were “ willful and re­
peated.’’ Total assess civil penalties
for the amended charges are $144,500.
The original “ Notice of Intent to
File Civil Penalties” filed by the Wage
and Hour Division of the Oregon Bu­
reau of Labor and Industries cited
Albertson’s for one failure to maintain,
preserve and keep completed employ­
ment certificates available. Penalties
were assessed at $72,500.
The new allegations arc based on
additional investigations conducted June
12 through August 1,1990. The bureau
added charges relating to stores in
Medford, Klamath Falls, Grants Pass,
The Dalles, Pendleton, Portland (NE
122nd, and Cully Blvd.), Baker City
and LaGrande.
The hearing date was originally set
for September 20, 1990, but has been
postponed five times. On April 2 of this
year, the bureau filed the motion to
amend charges which was granted April
10.
Portland Public School s offers en­
richment, academic and remedial courses
in summer-school programs beginning
June 24. The program offered this year
will be the same as last year except for
an increase in fees.
Program information will be mailed
to parents of all Portland School district
students and additional registration
materials will be available May 1 at all
schools. Registration begins May 1.
Elementary programs for students
now enrolled in kindergarten through
Grade 8 will run from June 24 to July 19
at eight sites. Secondary programs for
students now enrolled in Grades 9-12
are schedule from June 24 to August 2
at four sites.
Students residing in the Portland
School District pay $90 for elemen­
tary, $110 for secondary tuition. Non­
residents pay $140 for elementary, $180
for secondary tuition.
Tuition fees are $10 for students
affected by certain economic and aca­
demic guidelines.
Elementary summer-school sites
(and grades levels served) arc Atkinson
Elementary (K-3), Boise/Eliot Ele­
mentary (K-3), Grant High (K-8),
Hosford Middle (4-8), Roosevelt High
(K-8), Tubman Middle (4-8), Whitman
Elementary (K-5) and Wilson High (K-
8).
Secondary sites are Franklin, Lin­
coln and Rosevelt high schools. Jeffer­
son High will host a special perform­
ing-arts program for Grades 6-12.
For More Information, please
contact Chet Edwards, Summer School
Coordinator, 280-5783 or Bill Barbett.
director of public information and
communication.
1991
AFRICAN AMERICAN
FESTIVAL
BUFFET BREAKFAST
Saturday, May 18,1991
8:30 am 9:30 am
AC
LYON’S RESTAURANT
MLK BLVD.
Portland, Oregon
$5.00 per person
SAFEWAY
COPYRIGHT 1978. SAFEWAY INC
*