» •« ♦ •O ff » ó ♦ O f 9 ♦ * * A '/< **V 9 f * < f » December 30, 1992.. The Portland Observer...Page 7 City Council To Vote On New Nuisance Law The City Council will voted on a new ordinance aimed at people whose disruptive behavior becomes a chronic nuisance to their neighbors. The draft law will allow the city to take legal action against property where three or more incidents of harassm en t, intimidation, disorderly conduct or gun discharges occur within 30 days. Pos­ sible penalties include civil fines and a court order excluding people from a property for up to six months. The new ordinance was proposed by City Comm issioner Earl Blumenauer and an inter-agency task force as part of a nine-point plan to improve drug house enforcem ent. The Council is expected to add an emergency clause so that the measure would take effect immediately. Last Chance To Register for Winter Classes At OMSI There is still time to register for winter day camps and classes at the Oregon Museum of Science and Indus­ try. This year camps and classes are being held at the new museum and a O M SI’s Education Resource Center in W ashington Park. The classes are de­ signed to offer youngsters, age two through 13, opportunities to learn more about science and the world around them. Illustrate your ideas with anim a­ tion, graphics, sound and special ef­ fects! HyperCard, a class designed for kids 5th through 8th grade, teaches students how to construct m ultimedia com puter programs. Students can also discover w hat’s “way down under” in a four day rock adventure. Create crystal gardens and make your own volcano in “Can You Dig it?” First and second graders will ajso participate in rock hunts and put together rock collections to take home. All winter classes have limited en­ rollment. For more information contact the O M SI’s Registrar’s office (503) 797-4501. Unsure If You Can Afford To Buy A Home? Then you will want to attend a series o f free seminars concerning home buy ing and home ownership. The sem i­ nars will provide an overview of the home buying process, explain m ort­ gage financing in general terms and assist with a household budgeting plan. Specific mortgage programs, designed to assist low to moderate income house­ holds will also be discussed. Some specific questions that will be addressed include the following: How much house can I afford? Sales price? Mortgage amount? Loan eligibility? W hat would hiy monthly payment be? How much down payment would I need to have? W hat if I have bad credit, or no credit at all? W hat about inspections, assess­ ments, building codes, home m ainte­ Il is a problem no parent should ha ve to face. A nd m i 11 ions eac h y ear are having to face it. One way or another, parents fre­ quently are shocked to discover that their youngster is using illegal drugs. How a parent discovers this doesn’t much matter. Perhaps you find som e­ thing in the youngster’s room. Perhaps you learn about it from another parent. Perhaps the child or teenager admits it: “ So I just tried a bit of marijuana. No big deal,” he or she might say. You might even learn about your child’s drug use from the school principal or the police. The big question is what do you do now? t Ignoring the situation or shrugging it off certainly isn’t the answer. Even if one tried smoking a little marijuana back in one’s own youth, as so many millions of Americans did, these are very different times. The fact that you didn’t get heavily involved with drugs doesn’t mean your child w on’t. At the same time, it isn’t the end of the world cither. Perhaps the best thing you can do is take the time to have a real “heart-to- heart” talk with your child. O r a number o f talks. This isn’t alw ays as easy. But real communication about the situation isn’t going to hurt. And it can help trem en­ dously. There are things you should under­ stand about drug use. On the surface, there may appear to be a lot of different reasons a person might take drugs. There is always talk about peer pressure, for instance. But the bottom line is that people take drugs because they make them feel better in some way. And there is nothing wrong with wanting to feel better. But this good feeling is not only short-lived but results in self-destruc­ lion. So this is something you can talk to your child about. W hat is making him feel bad or miserable or depressed? Is he ju st bored/ W hat problems does he have? Get these out in the open as much as you can. Then go over how much of a solu- New Hud Secretary Believes Discrimination Can Be Overcome Henry Cisneros Recalls Personal Experience With Prejudice Henry G. Cisneros, who President­ elect Bill Clinton has named to the Cabinet post o f Secretary o f Housing and Urban Development, has person­ ally experienced prejudice but firmly believes it can be overcome. “D on’tbackdow n,’’Cisneros urged those who are faced with discrim ina­ tion in an interview with the Sunday Parade m agazine. “G et an education. Beat them with hard work. This is a good country. Its values are good. It can change. It has proved that.” Cisneros, who is of Mexican d e ­ scent, recalled an early experience with prejudice thataffected him profoundly. W hile a student at Texas A&M, he qualified for a leadership position in the Corps of Cadets. An adult sponsor didn ’ t want him because he was Hispanic, 66 however, and recommended a white student who was Cisneros’ best friend. “ No, I’m not the most qualified person,” his friend said. “ Henry is.” Cisneros w asespecially moved because his friend came fromacommunity where there was tremendous discrim ination against Mexicans. “ And yes,” Cisneros recalled, “he insisted I was the guy who deserved it. I came out of that with a sense of that, though discrim ination exists, there are decent people.” Em phasizing that immense d is­ crimination still exists, Cisneros said, “I know many Latinos who live in settings that are just patently unfair. They are the m ajority, but people have conspired against their having voting rights, for example. It continues to ex- ist. Portland Copwatch” Line Begins Taking Calls 3 2 1 - 5 1 2 0 A group of concerned citizens has inaugurated “ Portland Copwatch” (321 - 5120), a special telephone number d e­ signed to help the people of Portland monitor their police. Any person who wishes to report a negative or positive encounter with the pplice is asked to call and describe the event in as much detail as possible. The result will be the only com prehensive record of police conduct m aintained independent of the Portland Police Bureau. The phone line is sponsored by the People Overseeing Police Study G roup (POPSG), residents o f Portland com ­ mitted to increasing the role civilians play in police training, policy making and in investigations o f police conduct. All calls to Portland Copwatch will be held in the strictest confidence. Any special requests made by callers in re­ gard to use o f the information will be respected. Callers willing to leave their names and numbers will be contacted only by a m ember o f POPSG. Again, POPSG places high priority on the con­ fidentiality of the information offered on the Portland Copw atch line. POPSG intends to use the incidents reported --positive and negative —for statistical purposes. These statistics will provide Portlanders with belter infor­ mation as they decide whether there is sufficicntcivilian involvement in polic­ ing. For example POPSG is concerned that thccurrentcom m unily policing plan provides no adequate avenue for civil­ ians seeking a fair hearing of their com ­ plaints against the police. It is important that people under­ stand the Portland Copwatch number is Not a crisis number. People with em er­ gency medical needs should call an ap­ propriate crisis line, such as Metro C ri­ sis. Nonetheless, it is critical that civil­ ians report their experiences to Portland Copwatch. No other adequate m echa­ nism for documenting police conduct exists outside the police departm ent it­ self. Portland Copwatch is a project of the People O verseeing Police Study Group, 2600 NE Martin Luther King Boulevard, Box 106, Portland, O r9 7 2 12. tion to these problem drugs really arc. For that is always the kicker. The truth is that drugs do give a temporary relief from unwanted feelings and em otions like anger, sadness or even hopeless­ ness. They do make a person feel better for a short while. But then the person feels worse. Crack cocaine, for instance, is par­ ticularly addictive. Not only does it give intense feelings of well-being and Uses Drugs B y J ohn D uff Part 1 Of A Series euphoria for a short while, but this is then followed by such a crash, such severe depression, that the person will sometimes do alm ost anything to get some more. Even casual drug use can be quite devastating. The person will feel worse and worse. One answer he has to this is to do more drugs. That factually is how addiction develops. Your child needs to really under­ stand the harm that drugs do to him. This is something w ecover extensively in NARCONON drug education lec­ tures, not as scare tactics, but rather so that students are adequately informed about what they are doing to them selves if they even casually use drugs For one thing, as American author L. Ron Hubbard discovered, drugs ¡tre not fully eliminated from the system. Drug residuals of even organic drugs like marijuana lodge in the fatty tissue o f the body and remain títere for years and even decades. lítese residuals make a person feel bad, they adversely affect his mental abilitiesand clarity ol thought, and reduce his intelligence and his abil ily to learn and retain data. I hey can even adversely alter his personality. In the NARCONON drug rehabili tation program, a unique method is used to get these residuals out of the body. This is called the New Life Detoxifica tion Program. It is a rigorous program that takes a number of weeks and is actually the only known method to get these residuals out of the body. So what do you tell your child? Trying to tell him that using drugs is wrong often w on’t cut it. Our whole society is practically hooked on drugs in one form or another. Alcohol, ciga­ rettes, tranquilizers-all of which ate addictive and destroy lives. And he knows it. W hat would be constructive is to share with your child that hiking drugs is wrong simply because they are the wrong solution to the problems they are being used to solve. They are wrong because they solve nothing and because they harm and weaken the individual in the process. Give him the above informa tion concerning the truth about drugs. W hat you also need to do is get the problems your child is facing out into the open. And then try to look at alterna five solutions with him or her. W hat will make him feel better without having r resort to drugs? Find that and you are taking a big step toward curtailing his continued di u> use. For information on NARCONON's drug prevention and education progr ams for youth write N/XRCONON Interna tional, 6381 Holly wood Blvd., Suite 420, Los Angeles, CA 90028 O r t all (800)-468-6933. Saturday, January 10, 1993, 10:00 AM to Noon Zoo Valentine Poetry Contest Deadline Nears The deadline for the seventeenth annual Valentine Poetry contest at Metro W ashington Park Zoo is Jan. 14,1993. T he contest is open to pre-school through high school-age students. To enter the contest, students must write a poem about an animal that lives in a zoo. Each entry must be an original work composed by the student and must include the poet’s name, address, phone, school, teacher and grade, poems may be delivered to the zoo or m ailed to Valentine Poetry Contest, Metro W ash­ ington Park Zoo, 4001 S. W. Canyon Rd., Portland, OR 97221. Entries must be received by the zoo no later than Jan. 14, 1993 (postmarks are not accept­ able.) W inners will be notified by mail. W inning poems will be selected by FEBRUARY IS BLACK HISTORY M ONTH CALL 2 8 8 -0 0 3 3 o r FAX 2 8 8 -0 0 1 5 T O ADVERTISE OR RESERVE Y O U R SPACE a panel of judges drawn from the Oregon State Poetry Association, W ashington Poets A ssociation, O regon W riters Colony and representatives from local colleges and universities. W inners will read their poetry during an awards pro­ gram at the zoo on Friday, Feb. 12,1993 and their work will be published in the 1993 anthology o f Winning Poems. Last year judges selected 60 winning poems from 4,519 entries. Valentine Poetry Contest flyers are available at the zoo, at schools and libraries in Portland and Vancouver metro areas and at schools in Columbia and Clatsop counties. For more infor­ mation, write Metro W ashington Park Z o o ,4001 S. W. Canyon Rd., Portland, OR 97221, or call (503) 220-2454. Mid-life and older women me in vited to the Portland Chapter o f the O lder W om en’s League (O \\ I lam e meeting place: Good Samaritan Hospi tai, 1015 NW 22nd, Conference Room A3,3rd floor.ncxt to Cafeteria. Speaker: Bennett I. Alberts, M.D. Topic: “Op tions For Surgery: Do You Know Uic Alternatives?” The meeting is open to the public. No admission charge Fin- parking is available in structure B on NW Marshall between NW 21st and N W 22N D .T ri-M et isavailableon NW 21st or NW 23rd. Call 245 4271 for directions or information about OWI W ill cancel for snow/ice and hold tol lowing week on 1/17/93. Nobody Does it Better, for Less /------- Ad Prices Good December 30 through Jan. 5,1 99 3 At Safeway. SAFEWAY Town House Green Beans nance? The sem inars will be conducted every month and attendance at the sem i­ nars will be required in order to qualify for certain loan programs. Space is lim ited-reservations will be taken on a first com e, first served basis. Please call the Portland Housing Center at 282- 7744 to reserve your space today. The Home Buying Class will run for 4 W ednesday evenings (all 4 classes must be attended) and will begin on: W ednesday, January 6 thru 27. PCC SE Center, Room C-2 2850 SE 82nd 6:30 - 8:30 pm The Portland Housing Center is a private, non-profit program o f Ecu­ menical M inistries of Oregon, and is supported by a unique partnership of private and public funds. 1 6 -O u n c e , c h o o s e fro m C u t, S lic e d or F re n c h - S ty le g re e n b e a n s . Id e a l fo r a n y m e a l or a d d to c a s s e ro le s a n d ric e d ia h e s . Notice The Oregon Family Support Net­ work parent support group in Portland «m eeting the 2nd and4th Thursdays of ach month from 7:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. l Holladay Park Medical Center, 1225 IE 2nd, Conference Room C, Portland ✓ ith a break occasionally for holidays, 'lease have interested families contact heir local support group facilitator, .inda Reilly at 774-1824 for informa- ion. Nobody does it b etter fo r less. Happy New Year From Safeway Look In The This Week Magazine for your Safeway Shopping Guide for a complete list of specials on sale this week at Safeway! ............................ .................... ' ■•MU 44» * ‘‘ ■ ■ ,. ? • ' . H ; : . ■' , A ‘ -• . • ’ 'T . . - U - • • , • • ' , • • ? 7 F i . - '-