Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, July 08, 1992, Page 5, Image 5

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July 8, !992...The Portland Observer...Page 5
“ Back To School” In Style At
Sears Kids & More
“ Back to school” for kids means
summer is over, a time for new friend­
ships, annual physical and eye exams,
studying and showing off new fall ward­
robes. For Sears Kids & More, “back to
school” is a fashion event that will earn
kids high marks and fit mom’s and
dad’s budget.
The classic look for kids will be
important this fall, but there will be
some fresh and updated interpretations
to make the grade as bold and lively
colors lead the class, said John Duvic,
Sears national merchandising manager
of children’s apparel.
“Important themes for fall include
plaids, hearts, flowers and bears, Clan
plaids and appliques update traditional
looks. Hearts and flowers are updated
with trims and colors, but remain a
constant favorite for young ladies,
whether young enough to still crawl or
old enough to ‘strut their stuff,” ’ said
Duvic.
All of Scars back-to-school ap­
parel is covered under the KidVantage
Frequent Purchase and WearOut War­
ranty program, which was introduced a
year ago. The wear-out warranty pro­
vides replacement of childrcn’sclothes
if the child wears it out while he/she is
in the same size. The frequent purchase
card earns discounts toward future pur­
chases.
Origins And Nordstrom
To Co-Sponsor Walk
To Benefit The
Elephant Program At
Metro Zoo
Portland, Or.--Do the Elephant
Walk, Saturday, July 11 and spend an
important and fun-packed day walking
with supporters of conservation and the
environment.
The Elephant Walk is a 5.5 mile
walking event through the streets of
Pordand and the trails p f Hoyt Arbore­
tum. The walk commences at 9:00 a.m.
in the courtyard at Nordstrom Lloyd
Center and ends when you arrive at the
Metro Washington Park Zoo.
Fora $15.00donation, walkers will
receive a souvenir Elephant Walk T-
shirt, button, Metro Zoo admission, food
and refreshments. Origins will also pro­
vide apples and a card fora sample of a
sensory therapy product. A shuttle ser­
vice will be provided from 12:00 noon
to 3:00 p.m. from the Zoo back to the
Nordstrom Lloyd Center Courtyard.
Walkers can pick up walk bro­
chures or register in Customer Service
at all Nordstrom stores June 22-July 10.
The Elephant Walk will benefit the
Elephant program at the Metro Wash­
ington Park Zoo. The Zoo’s Elephant
program has been a source of pride for
Pordanders since 1962, when the first
Asian elephant to be born in the western
hemisphere in 44 years was born here.
For further information call the Zoo at
226-1561.
City Seeks Accelerated Renovation
of Fred Meyer Building For New
North Police Precinct
In an effort to move forward with
revitalization efforts in North/North-
east Portland the City has been granted
a Multnomah County Court hearing on
July 10 seeking the accelerated renova­
tion of the vacant Fred Meyer market at
the comer of N.E. MLK Jr. Blvd. and
Killingsworth. In January, City Coun­
cil authorized condemnation of the prop­
erty since a property purchase price
could not be negotiated. The law allows
S e r v in g
Y ou
early occupancy (and renovation) if its
is in the public interest.
City officials and the police are
eage to begin the renovation process
which includes relocation of North Pre­
cinct headquarters to the Fred Meyer
location from its current location in St.
Johns. The Portland Development Com­
mission will support the project by en­
couraging housing and businessaciti vity
in and around the site.
S in c e
The Hills are Alive with
the Sound of Music
Molten hot blues and the classy
sounds of jazz wdl be flowing from the
volcano’s stage at Ml. Tabor Park, lo-
catcdoffofSE69th and Yamhill streets,
every Tuesday evening this July.
for the fifth year, Portland General
Electric Co. (PGE) and the Portland
City Parks Bureau will be sponsoring
four weekly two-hour concerts at the
volcano, July 7-28. The series will fea­
ture some of the area’s best know jazz
and blues musicians.
Kicking off the scries on the first
Tuesday of July will be Back Porch
Blues, a band known for its down-home
Chicago-stylc blues.
Janice Scroggins & Friends will hit
the stage July 14 with a blend of rhythm
and blues, blues and gospel.
Portland’s premier jazz vocalist,
Shirley Nanette, will perform with her
trio on July 21.
The concert scries will wrap up
July 28 with the soul and blues sounds
of the No Delay Band featuring Linda
Hornbuckle.
Families are encouraged to bring
picnic goods to the concerts. Blanket
scaling is permitted on the grass. Seat­
ing will also be available on park
benches.
Each concert will run from 6:30 to
8:30 p.m. Admission is free.
For more information, call the Port­
land Parks Bureau at 796-5193.
Portland Art Museum
Northwest Film Center
Presents Film History
Of Bluegrass
For information leading to the arrest and conviction
of the murderer of my wife, Jamie Brock, who was
killed in her tavern at 1313 NE Fremont, Portland
on 11-24-91.
Call Detective Joe Goodale at 796-3479
Bill Brock
Interested In Buying A Home?
&
Home Buying Fair
Children’s Festival
1 9 8 0
Music....Door Prizes....Food!!
How:
New or Transfer Prescriptions
; *2°° off !
S a y you saw it in the Portland Observer
Who:
Where:
When:
Talk to housing professionals and find out how
you can buy a house.
Local bankers, real estate agents, neighborhood
housing developers, and housing counselors.
Redeemer Lutheran Church NE 20th &
Killingsworth
July 18, Saturday 1:00 to 4:00 p.m.
CHILDREN’S FESTIVAL
Come see the Dragons Dancers, and meet Chuck E. Cheese, McDonald s
ch a ra c te rs, an d one of the Teenage M u tan t N inja T urtles! Face
painting...sports activities...games...live music...prizes...food... FUN!
O p e n M on. - F r i. 9 :0 0 a m - 6 :0 0 p m • S a t. 9 :0 0 a m - 5 :0 0 p m
1 7 1 9
N E
1 6 th
We will provide supervised activities for your children while you attend the
Home Buying Fair. The Children’s Festival will be held at Alberta Park, across
the street from Redeemer Luthem Church.
A v e n u e
For more information call 282-7744
JERRY DUCKETT'S
H A IR S A LO N
The Portland Housing Center, a program of Ecumenical Ministries of
Oregon, provides information, education and counseling on home owner­
ship for low and moderate income households of all cultures and back­
grounds in the City of Portland.
Public Notice
Wholesale to the Public 35% to 50% off
100% Human Hair 16" from $15.95
braiding and weaving
Wigs and Beauty Supplies
We will meet or beat
anyone’s prices.
Sales and Promotional items excluded.
FOR THE BEST IN
Lesure Curl & Standard Hair Cuts
Stop by and see us.
4835 NE Martin Luther King Blvd.
287-3885
%
Mrs. C’s Wigs and Beauty Supply
707 N.E. Fremont
Portland, Oregon 97212
(503) 281-6525
Open: 11:30 - 6:00 Tues thru Saturday
The Portland Art Museum North­
west Film Center will screen Rachael
Liebling’s HIGH LONESOME, a lively,
comprehensive look at bluegrass mu­
sic, on Friday and Saturday, July 24 &
25 at 7 & 9 p.m., and on Sunday, July 26
at 2 & 7 p.m.
A highlight of this year’s Reel
Music series, the film is a living history
of the striking bluegrass sound which
emerged in the 1940’s as a fusion of
Southern folk, gospel, blues, and the
modem sounds of jazz and swing.
Through performances and the recol­
lection of pioneers and younger musi­
cians who carry on the legacy. Liebling
mixes rare archival film and contempo­
rary concert footage to create an in-
depth protrait of this vibrant musical
style. Among the many musicians in­
cluded are “the father of bluegrass,”
Bill Monroe, Lester Flatt, Earl Scruggs,
Ralph Stanley, Mac Wiseman, Jimmy
Martin, Jim and Jesse, the Osborne
Brothers, the Seldom Scene, Allison
Krauss, Sam Bush, and the Nashville
Bluegrass Band.
The film will be shown at the Port­
land Art Museum’s Berg Swann Audi­
torium, 1219 SW Park Avenue. Admis­
sion is $5 general; $4 museum mem­
bers and seniors; Sunday matinee: all
seats $3.
For more information, call the Film
Center at 221-1156.
—
v.•• V. .w
Annis Alston Named
Regional Vice
President
For McDonald’s
Corporation
McDonald’s corporation has pro­
moted Annis Alston to regional vice
president of thecompany’s Bloomfield,
New Jersey Region.
Alston, who will oversee the op­
erations o f more than 190 McDonald’s
restaurants in New Jersey, New York
and Northeast Pennsylvania, was named
to her new position after serving six
months as senior regional manager. S he
began her McDonald’s career 20 years
ago as a crew member in Washington,
D.C. Alston held various restaurant and
management positions at Hambuiger
University in September 1976.
In 1978, Alston returned to Wash­
ington and served as an area supervisor
through October 1979, when she be­
came a field consultant. In 1982, she
was promoted to field service manager,
a position she held through September
1983, when she returned to Oak Brook
to serve as a staff director.
Alston moved to Los Angeles in
1986 and held positions as director of
operations and district manager. In
Bloomfield, N.J., she was promoted to
regional manager and later senior re­
gional manager in 1991, a position she
held prior to moving to her recent pro­
motion.
McDonald’s is the world’s largest
quick service organization with more
than 12,400 restaurants serving cus­
tomers in 61 countries. About eighty
percent of McDonald’s restaurant busi­
nesses are owned and operated by inde­
pendent entrepreneurs.
Portland Art Museum
Film Center Screens Works By Women
the Portland Art useum Northwest
Film Center is pleased to present five
programs of films and videos by women
artists in July and August. Three pro­
grams feature The Films of Yoko Ono
and include documentaries, experimen­
tal works, and music videos. The series
IMAGES OF OURSELVES: NEW
WORKS BY WOMEN is highlighted
by the premiere of DYKEOTOMY, an
experimental video by Deborah Fort,
and BLO O D STORY: W OM EN
BREACKING GROUND, a collection
of short films.
Thursday, July 9. - TEN FOR TWO:
SISTER, O SISTERS (1972), BED-IN
(1 9 6 9 ), W OM AN (1981) and
GOODBYE SADNESS (1982) - 7:30
p.m.
Documenting Yoko O no’s perfor­
mance at a rally, TEN FOR TWO in­
cludes appearances by Allen Ginsberg,
Stevie Wonder and Bob Seger. BED-
IN traces the week that John and Yoko
spent in a hotel bed in Montreal to
protest the war in Vietnam. WOMAN
and GOODBYE SADNESS are both
m usic videos from the couple s
DOUBLEFANTASY album .(71 min).
Thursday, July 23, - ERECTION
(1971) and RAPE (1969) - 7:3Qp.m.
Conceived by John Lennon and
shot over an 18 month period, EREC­
TION is a pixillatcd film following the
construction of a building. Ono in-
structcdacameraman to pursue a woman
. persistently in RAPE, a statement about
film-as-voyeurism. (97 min.)
Thursday, August 6 - IMAGINE
(1 9 7 1 )-7 & 8:45 p.m.
One of their most personal and inti­
mate filsm, IMAGINE isa loving reflec­
tion of John and Yoko’s relationship set
to the music ofLcnnon’sjust completed
IMAGINE and Ono’s FLY album. (76
min.)
Thursday, July 16 - IMAGES OF
OURSELVES: NEW W ORKS BY
WOMEN - 7:30 p.m. Deborah Fort vis­
its from Ithaca, New York to screen her
avant-garde video DYK EOTOM Y
(1992), which uses found footage, text
and staged experiences to examine per­
sonal issues of assimilation and identity.
Also showing arc Su Friedrich’s FIRST
COMES LOVE (1992), and Lynn
Kirby’s SHARON AND THE BIRDS
ON THE WAY TO THE WEDDING
(1987). (90 min.)
Thursday, July 30 - IMAGES OF
OURSELVES: NEW W ORKS BY
WOMEN - 8 p.m. BLOOD STORY:
WOMEN B REA K IN G G R O U N D
(1990-1991) is a program of eight films
curated by PMS: Post Modem Sisters, a
group of San Francisco filmmakers.
Tackling such issues as mothcr/daugh-
ter relationships, racism, and body im­
age, these works will be introduced by
filmmaker Pat Baum, whose piece THE
CLEANSING MACHINE is included.
(80 min.)
All screenings are held in the Port­
land Art Muscum’sBergSwann Audito­
rium, 1219 SW Park Ave. Admission is
$5 general, $4 for members and seniors.
For more information, please call
221-1156.