Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, August 18, 1993, Page 13, Image 13

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T he P ortland O bserver • A ugust 18, 1993
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P A Y O U T TO
ÄAIGRÄNT WORKERS
Restaurant
Outstanding Management Opportunities
W endy’s is growing in the Pacific Northwest! W e’re seeking
entry-level and experienced managers to join our teams in
the Portland/Vancouver area.
Starting salaries are based on experience:
Assistant $18,000 - $22,800
Co Mgr
$19,800 - $25,000
General M gr$26,900 - $34,000
To qualified candidates, with at least two years of successful
restaurant supervisory experience, W endy's offers:
•
Excellent Training
• Comprehensive Benefits
• Stock Option Plan
If you’re interested in growing with one of the most exciting
restaurant chains in the nation, w e’d like to talk to you!
Please send us your resume or call us between 9-5,
Monday-Friday at:
W endy’s International, Inc.
4000 Kruse Way Place Bldg 3 Ste 255
Lake Oswego, OR 97035
(503) 635-8875
W endy’s Is an equal opportunity em ployer
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Bureau of Labor and Industries’ checks during the next 10 days,
officials are supervising a payout of their money will be forwarded to
ov er $ 19,000 in back vv ages to at least th em ”
The laborers were employed by
28 illegal aliens w ho were working in
two local forest labor con-
the Bend area. The
------------ tracto rs,
V aughn
workers, who were ap-
W ommack o f Umqua
prehended by federal W e w a n t t o
Valley Forestry, Inc. and
Immigration and Natu­
Tim Justice of Agony
ralization Service (INS)
s u r e
Gulch, Inc. Each owed
earlier this week, have
been given 10 days to ff- jQ W O T k e T S their workers more than
10 days wages at an aver­
return voluntarily to
Mexico. After the INS h a v e b e e n
age hourly rate of $ 11.40
per hour So far, 19 checks
raid at their job site in
. . .
the Deschutes National p a i C J f a i r l y
totalling $12,220 have
been issued to employees
Forest, state labor offi­
ofUmqua Valley forestry .
cials mov ed in quickly
Approximately 11 em-
to ensure that all the
ployees
of
Agony Gulch anticipate
workers received paychecks before
receiv
ing
their
checks on August 12,
they left the country.
1993
"We want to make sure the
In addition to supervising the
workers have been paid fairly," said
pay
out
of wages, the bureau is also
Labor Commissioner Mary Wendy
investigating
both Wommack and
R oberts. “By su p erv isin g the
Justice
for
possible
forest labor con­
payout, we can ensure that even if the
tracting
violations.
workers don’t receive their pay-
Career Opportunity
44
FAIR EMPLOYMENT
We Are:
A national marketing organization-The largest in
our industry-expanding and looking for people
who are willing to work their way into executive
positions.
We have:
Effective training...competitive products that most
consumers need-a unique sales process that you
won’t find anywhere else.
Candidates should:
Want to earn excellent money-Be willing to work
hard-Like to work with a team-Be mature-Have
the desire to be a winner
Send resume in confidence to:
Dick Halvorson
Regional Vice President
3600 Main Street, Suite B2
Vancouver, WA 98663-2236
There are many temporary em­
ployment opportunities during the
annual Oregon State Fair. The food
concessionaires, carnival, exhibitors
and other fair activities hire the ma­
jority of their employees during the
month of August.
To assist employers, the Oregon
Employment Department will have
an employ ment trailer at the Oregon
State Fairgrounds beginning August
12. The trailer will be in the Oak
Grove, which is located on the west
side of 17th street across form the
Green Gate. The trailer will be open
from 12 noon til 6 pm, Monday to
Friday until August 26 The trailer
will also be open 9 am til 6 pm during
the Fair. August 26 through Septem­
ber 6 (including weekends)
Applicants under 18 years of age
must furnish a valid work permit.
Rate of pay varies according to jobs.
For more information contact the
Oregon State Fair at 378-3247 or the
Oregon Employ ment Department at
378-1701 (after August 12).
D O N ’T
U P YOUP
The John & Yvonne Garlington Multicultural Fellowship at
W arner Pacific College provides up to $3,500 a year in
financial assistance for students from diverse cultural back­
grounds. More than 100 Warner students have benefited
from this program, which is intended to enrich
the cultural diversity of the Warner Pacific
College community. Funds are still available
for Fall Semester! Contact Delores Dillard,
1 9
'
m ulticultual coordinator, for details on how
you might qualify for this award, as well as
and State financial
I)
Delores Dillard
other Federal and
financial did
aid nrOPraiTIS.
programs.
«
I
The dream is alive at
2219 SE 68th Ave.
Portland, OR 97215
503/775 4366 or 800/582 7885 (toll free)
/oo*
Women who would like to make
a difference for young girls in crisis
can provide friendship support and
carin g through V olunteers of
America’s Big Sister Program Vol­
unteers spend about 10 hours per
month participating in activ ities with
the at-risk youth.
' This is a great way to inv est in
the future,” said Louise Langley , Big
Sister Coordinator. "Being a positiv e
role model is a very important task,
and it is also very rewarding.” All
participants are trained by staff. To
register, call VOA’s Kletzer Hall at
234-9211.
Marylhurst College is invited
media representatives, corporate spon-
sors and government officiais to at-
tend an August 3 open house
showcasing Marylhurst’s first-of-its
kind Head Start science training pro­
gram.
Guests had the opportunity to see
Mary lhurst’s unique Summer Science
Institute in action. The model pro­
gram , held in cooperation with
Portland’s Albina Head Start Program,
is designed to encourage low income
and disadvantaged children to develop
a love for science at an early age
Twenty Albina Head Start teach­
ers were selected to participate in the
program and receivee four weeks of
intensive science training that in­
cluded classroom instructnjn. hands-
on experimentation and field trips
, A A A A « f
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
24 Hour Job Hot Line
CALL
(503)464-7441
Listings Are Updated Daily
Equal Opportunity Employer
M-F-D-Vets
Volunteers Wanted
Bread and Roses is a weekly forum of women's vocies working toward social
change by educating, informing, and entertaining. We are a collective of
women volunteering our time at KBOO 9 0 .7RM radio. We are looking for
new members. If you are interested, please call KBOO AT 231-8032
between 9am and 5pm and leave a message for Pamela Pegg.
Beginning this September, the
teachers will apply vv hat they learn in
the classroom, passing on their own
curiosity about science to three-four-
and five-year-old Head Start students.
“The program demystifies sci­
ence,” said Ron Herndon, director of
the Albina Head Start Program "The
teachers have an opportunity to de­
velop specific lesson plans that they
can put to work in their classrooms. It
gives them confidence that they never
would have had."
The program, in its second sum­
mer at Mary lhurst. is being funded by
grants from 41 corporations, founda­
tions and indiv idual donors. Among
the donations are a grant from the
O regon C om m unity Foundation
Summerville Fund and a grant from
the Bav Foundation. Hewlett-Packard
Company and the Challenge Founda
tion both donated to the program
Each of the participating 20
teachers received a stipend, five units
of science credit and a certificate of
completion at the end of the program
A graduation ceremony took place
The program was first proposed
bv Nancy Wilgenbusch, Marylhurst
President and Barbara Brunkow. Vice
President for College Relations in the
hopes that it will serve as a model for
other Head Start programs through­
out the country, most of which do not
have a strong science component.
“Children have a natural curios­
ity about the world around them,”
Wilgenbusch said. "They needtohave
that curiosity nurtured and transformed
into learning about science at an early
age.”
C ollege Inform ation
Night At PSU
CA BLI TV
FOR YOUR
FUTURE.
OIT CONNICTID TO A
OROWINO COMPANY AND
OIT A O1A1 HCTUW OF
YOU« FUTURI.
DIRECT
SALES
REPRESENTATIVES
Come join the Paragon soles
team as a Residential Soles
Represe1 itotive TODAY!
Poragon is one of the
largest, fastest growing
cable companies in Portlond
and we are looking for you
We offer gnod commissions,
paid training and excellent
benefits Don't miss out on
this opportunity to become a
part of the dynamic industry
of cable television Qualified
applicants need to possess o
high school diploma or
equivalent, own reliable
transportation, and possess
a good driving record If this
sparks on interest in you,
■<ot3075NE
come and apply
i
Sandy Blvd, Portlond. A
pie-employment drug test is
required
CABLE
* * • Y4
Portland General Electric
ln Celebration Model Head Start Program
PARAG O N
s TJjàu*1-* *,*■*•♦*
PGE
M arylhurst College Held Open House
our t5 acre campus on Southeast D m s n n o n me soum slope ig ML labor.
Ask about out evening Degree Completion Program and how you can earn
a Bachelors' Degree in Business Administration or Human Development in
approximately 18 months, one evening a week, call David Mathews, c x l 507.
A
At Risk Teenage Girls
Need “Big Sisters”
SAU*
Financial Aid opportunities are
still a vailable for Fall Semester
j
Equal Opportunity AO* Im ploy.r
CM * * •
Project P L U S /Educational
Project P L U S (Pieparing
Talent
Search. Portland State Uni­
and Learning for University
versity.
will host a Student/Parent
Studies) is a federally funded
program which encourages low- College Information Night on
income students in middle and Thursday, Aug. 26, from6 to 7,45
high schools to stay in school, p.m. at the Campus Ministry at
graduate, and eventually enroll PSU (633 SW Montgomery). In­
in a community college, college, formation and assistance will be
or university At no cost, the provided with college admissions,
project prov ides services that financial aid and scholarship ap­
include assistance with college plications.
“We hope, in particular, to
admission and financial aid ap­
plications, career awareness attract Port land and Hillsboro high
workshops, campus and busi­ school students and their parents,
ness visitations: counseling in although any interested person
motivation, self-understanding, under age 27 will find this help­
decision making and study skills, ful," says peggy Adams, interim
and referrals to other commu­ director of Project P L U S. For
information call: 725-4458.
nity sen ice agencies
Assistance For
Army Nurses
The Army has disclosed four
financial educational programs
available to nurses w ho are mem­
bers of the Army reserve These
programs include Tuition As­
sistance, Health Professional
Loan Payment. Reserve G.I.
Rills, and New Specialized
Training Assistance Program
Army Reserve Nurse Corps
Officers have the opportunity to
perfect nursing, teaching, super­
visory. and administrative skills,
and learn new methods in mili­
tary nursing
* *• V * * ' V t * t ‘M - V » » x • ♦ x » |,«kfx.»vx X » » •
Army Reserve nurses earn
additional pay to supplement then
monthly income. Army Reserve
nurses earn a day's pay for each
four hour period of unit training,
and two weeks of full pay and
allowances during annual train­
ing
Interested nurses should con­
tact Sgt 1st Class Sjolin, Army
Nurse Recruiter 503-252-2678,
and receive up-to-the-minute in­
formation on financial and cdu
cational incentives available in
the Armv Reserve
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