1 •.
T he P ortland O bserver • S eptember 7, 1994
Counselor III
New Directions Family
Treatment Center
Three Positions Available
$1,294 - $1,360 Per Month
Plus Benefits
Duties: CODA, Inc., has three
vacancies for mid-level sub
stance-abuse counselors at
our New Directions Family
Treatment Center located on
S o u th e a st
86th
and
Woodstock. Positions diag
nose, evaluate, and treat cli
ents, some of whom may be
pregnant and/or have small
children; conduct individual,
group, and family counseling
and therapy; consult and co
ordinate with CSD, Probation
and Parole Offices, and other
outside agencies; monitor the
milieu; participate in market
ing and promotion activities.
Shifts: Position C3F40 works
Mon - Thur from 9am until
7pm; Positions C3N40 and
C3N41 work a combination of
daytime and evening hours
from Monday through Friday
of each week. To Qualify: A
bachelor’s degree in human
services, discipline and at
least two years' supervised
human-services experience
(ideally with pregnant women
and/or with children) or equiva
lent are required. Knowledge
of chemical dependency and
experience with chemically-
dependent clients are very
strongly preferred. Applicants
must be certified/certif¡able in
CPR and capable of perform
ing CPR for 15 minutes con
tinuously. Individuals currently
under a federal, state, or
county parole or probation are
ineligible for this position.
Candidates must consent to a
criminal background check.
To Apply: submit standard
CODA application form, in
cluding screening question
responses, to the address
below. Application Materi
als Are Available At And
M ust Be R e tu rn e d To:
CODA, Inc., 21 ONE 20th Ave,
Portland, OR 97232; Tele:
(503) 236-2290 Ext. 254.
CODA is an Equal Opportunity/
Affirmative Action Employer.
Mental Health
Child Treatment
Specialist III
Work w/traumatized boys & girls
ages 4-12 In an acute care
shelter program. BA & related
exp p re fe rre d . A pply at
W averly Children’s Home,
3550 SE Woodward, Portland,
OR 97202.
Equal Opportunity Employer
P age B5
Wilshire Park
Grocery Offers
Free Bus Rides
To Customers
Driver
o
Larson Transportation Services, Inc.
• Do you like to help people?
• Get along well with Adults and Senior Citizens?
• Do you like driving? Safe driving Record?
• Can you easily get around Portland with a map?
Larson Transportation Services, Inc., a private provider of trans
portation has driving positions available in the Multnomah Co.
area transporting passengers with special needs. The company
offers:
• Extensive Paid Training
• Day, Evening & Weekend Shift Available
• Competitive Wage and Benefits
LEARN A NEW SKILL
IN A REWARDING OCCUPATION
Please apply in person Tuesday-Friday between the hours of 9am-4pm. Applica
tions must be accompanied by a 6 yr DMV printout of your driving record.
No Phone Calls Please.
925 S.E. Clay
Portland, OR 97214
fh iî)
foods
'
An Employee-Owned Company
W A R E M A R T /C U B FO O D S , o«w of the fa tte n growing reta il grocery companies in the
• C a sh ie r
■ B a k ery
■ F lo r a l
■ M eat
■ V a riety
■ D em o
■ P roduce
■ V ideo
■ M a in te n a n c e
Ei n try level wage S 5.7S-I6.15 an hour with progression» up to 112.40. In addition,
an employer atock own-
Ter an excellent medical and dental benefit» package and a
s offer
iMp plan.
<*
Must be a high school graduate or possess a G E D certificate. Applicants may be
1 F
■ubject to an employer-paid drug screen.
Apply in person at one o f the stores listed below:
I WAREMART
I CUB FOODS
11250 SE 82nd Ave. Clac kama», OR
4750 SW Western Ave. Beaverton. OR
■ CUB FOODS
I CUB FOODS
3025 Cedar Hilla Blvd, Baaverton, OR
7809-A NE Vancouver nasa. Vancouver, WA
CUB FOODS
■ CUB FOODS
9700 NE Hwy 99. Haaokt.il. WA
7500 Dartmouth Rd, Tifarti, OR
WAREMART
■ CUB FOODS
1222 NE 102nd Ave. Portland. OR
Editor Christina Buchmann collected literary essays from 28 writers,
including Fay Weldon, CynthiaQzick, Louise Erdrich, Ursula K LeGuin
and Elizabeth Swadoes to create her new anthology, Out o f the Garden:
Women Writers on the Bible, and she introduces the collection Friday,
Sept. 9 at 7:30 p.m,
1975 SE TV Hwy, Hillsboro, OR
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY employer
Sub-Bids And Material Quotes
Requested
B lo o m in g to n S a n ita r y S e w e r S y s te m # 3 4
B id s t o u s b y 1 0 :0 0 a .m . S e p te m b e r 6 th
(Bide Date Septem ber 6, 1994)
Lon DuQuette presents a talk on the magic o f Aleister Crowley and
reads from his new Crowley primer The MagickofThelema: A Handbook
of the Rituals of Aleister Crowley, in a special afternoon presentation
Sunday, Sept. 11 at 4:30 p.m.
Three African-Americans po
lice officers are joining the Portland
Police Bureau, among five new em
ployees hired. The additional sup
port increases the number o f sworn
officers in the bureau to 963.
Officials said the officers will
be assigned to the department's train-
P.O. Box 30569 Portland, OR 97230
Phone: (503) 252-1180 Fax: (503) 252-1730
CCB #28397
We are an equal opportunity employer and request sub-bids from
disadvantaged, women, and emerging small business enterprises.
Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot - Sept. 15
With her latest book, sociologist Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot employs
her own form of human archaeology to dig into the lives o f six African
American men and women in middle age. I’ve Known Rivers: Lives of
Loss and Liberation is the result o f years o f extensive interviews with her
six subjects, a group experiences a transitional time o f life, and looking
backward as a way of anticipating the future. She reads from this new book,
and discusses the project. Sept. 15 at 7:30 p.m.
Jill Ker Conway - Sept 17
A historian who specializes in the experience o f women in America,
Jill Ker Conway has studied women’s autobiographies extensively and
written a book on the subject. But few American memoirs have received
as much acclaim as her own, The Road From Coorain, a chronicle o f her
childhood on an Australian sheep farm that became an enormous bestseller
when it was published in 1989. Conway now continues her life story with
True North, a memoir that picks up where Road From Coorain left off,
including the years she spent as president of Smith College. She reads from
the book. Sept. 17 at 7:30 p.m.
ing division and will attend the Or
egon Police Academy in Monmouth.
The new hires were identified as Leo
Myron Besner, 31, Timmy Evans,
29, Tonya Renee James, 22, Mark
William Kruger, 26 and Dawn An
gela Wilson, 22.
Kruger, Evans and Besner have
law enforcement experience.
E vans, W ilson and Jam es
were tested through the A frican-
Am erican M inority R ecruitm ent
Program operated by the Police
Personnel Division.
Golden Ripe
Bananas
$
lb s .
Bone-In
Seneca
Smoked Ham
Apple Juice
• 64-0unce
• SAVE UP
T 0 1.16
Lb.
Look In The This Week
Magazine for your
Safeway Shopping
Guide for a complete
list of specials on sale
this week at Safeway!
ThisWèek
M
A
G
A
Z
I N
E
V». » '
•V' -¿r'
»
r
. «A Z ‘ ' A. - -
-.T •' z
Greg Sarris - Sept. 14
“Being half white and half Indian, I’ve been between two worlds and
privy to both and their stories,” said Greg Sarris. “ I know what they say
about each other" Chief of the Coast M iwok tribe, Sarris grew up in Santa
Rosa, Calif, and has named his new fiction collection for the street where
he lived, Grand Avenue. With 10 linked stories, he paints a portrait o f
Native American life in an urban environment and tells his stories through
a variety o f narrators, young and old, who explain their lives in the cultural
centrum o f their town. Sarris reads from this new collection Sept. 14 at 7:30
p.m.
Prices effective Sept. 7 through September 13,1994 at Safeway.
79
K.'
As parents, teachers, and citizens groups continue to challenge the
freedom of written expression, the threat of censorship in America seems
as prevalent today as it was when the St. Louis Public Library burned their
copies o f The Grapes o f Wrath in 1939. More recent examples of
censorship abound: O f Mice and Men, removed from all Knoxville public
schools in 1984; Invisible Man, banned in Butler, Penn, in 1975; The
Merchant o f Venice, banned from classrooms in Midland, Mich., in 1980;
and the Diary of Anne Frank, rejected for classroom use by the Alabama
State Textbook Committee in 1983. For your enjoyment and to celebrate
the achievements of great writers, we present a night of Banned Book
Readings, Sept. 13 at 7:30 p.m., a presentation o f selected excerpts from
some of the best books we’ve ever read.
Safeway LOW Prices
• Cook's,
shank
portion
ham &
water
product
i-
*
Banned Book Readings - Sept. 13
Black Officers Added To Police Force
Moore Excavation, Inc.
;> »,
; *
Lon DuQuette - Sept. 11
The number o f women and mi
norities is growing at the University
of Oregon School o f Law, Eugene,
reflecting a focus on excellence, ac
cording to Dean Chuck O ’Kelley. In
its second week of classes, the law
school’s first-year class is comprised
of 55 percent women and 16 percent
minority students, a three percent
hike from last year.
In addition, the law school is
attracting students with h igher grade
point averages and LSAT scores. In
addition, the law school is attracting
students with higher grade point av
erages and LSAT scores.
“We’re attracting ^jiigher cali
ber of student in large part due to our
focus on excellence, gender equity
and diversity,” said O ’Kelley. “Our
efforts to foster a sense o f commu
nity and cooperation among students
are clearly paying off.”
■ D eli S m o k e h o u s e
■ B ulk F o o d s
■ F reigh t
• z. t *: f ; -
Christina Buchmann - Sept. 9
Minority
Enrollment
Up
GROCERY
Ulareaiart
Foods
The following wifi conduct readings at Powell’s Books, 1005 W.
Burnside, during September.
When Wilshire Park Thriftway
closed August 19, buses shuttled
customers free of charge to nearby
United Grocers.
United Grocers spokesperson
Dave Isom said the buses are being
offered as a courtesy to customers to
thank them for their previous busi
ness and to encourage them to come
back when a new store is built and
opened on an unspecified date.
Passengers will be picked up at
the current store site, 5400 N.E. 33
Ave., and taken to either T.J. Sentry,
4636 N.E. 42 Ave., or E&M Com
m unity
M arket,
900
N.
Killingsworth.
B uses w ill run M onday,
Wednesday, Friday and Saturday
between 9:30 and 10:30 a.m., 12:30
and 1:30 p.m., and 5:30 and 6:30
p.m. The 9:30 and 12:30 buses are
15-passenger handicapped acces
sible vans. The 5:30 bus will hold 35
passengers. Passengers will be
dropped back at the Wilshire Park
parking lot within an hour o f being
picked up to go shopping.
The buses will run indefinitely,
depending upon the number o f rid
ers.
YOU Could be a Driver for
Special Needs Adults!
LIFT PROGRAM
DRIVER
Book Readings
Enjoy Extra Savings With The
New In-Storg’
Safeway Shopping Guide
Aviflabie it voarSafewivstore
?
: •»
¿ » » » ; -
r2v