volume X X V Number 27 Committed to cultural diversity. Jul\ 5, 1995 (Tip' ^ a r tía n h (Db sei* Her KT a 1Ù .111 It i t I V It SECTION House Of Umoja Finds Support L i u b ;t r Jazz To Fill Cathedral Park I The third weekend in July is the time for the Cathedral Park Jazz Festival, an annual event presented by St. John’s area sponsors and produced independently. The festival will be open all day on the lawn under the St. Johns bridge on Saturday and Sunday, July 15 and July 16. program working to pull young men out of the gang- involved lifestyle, has been awarded a $10,000 grant from the Oregon Community Foundation. A Heritage Day For Children The Oregon History Center presents Heritage Day for Children, Sunday, July 30 at Pioneer Courthouse Square. Volun­ teers are needed. To help with children's | activities, call 306-5210. Boozer Golf Tourney Slated The 5th annual James Boozer Memo­ rial G olf Tournament and Dinner will be held Saturday, July 15 atG lendoveerG olf Course. Trophies and prizes, a hole in one contest, door prizes and a silent auction are part o f the activities with donations going to the Coalition o f Black M en’s Omega Boys and Girls Club. For more information call Kimberly Maney at 321 - 5119. B Dave Zudel puts a new computer through a test run with Life Center Executive Director Charles Carter (from left), board chair Richard Rickel, and Larry Novell, president of Columbia-Williamette United Way. The equipment was donated by IBM Corp through the United Way. The Life Center is a low-income emergency relief organization at 2746 N.E. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. Summer Carnival For Kids ll kids ages 4 to 13 who live in north and northeast Portland are invited to join the fun at a free carnival on Sunday from p.m. to 5 p.m., sponsored by Housing Our Families and Portland Parks and A Recreation. Come enjoy free hot dogs, snow cones, cold drinks and other snacks. And d on't miss the great prizes. Fun-loving adults and teens are needed to help supervise the activities. For more information and to volunteer, call 335-0947. The carnival will be held at Unthank Park at the com er ofN orth Shaver and Kerby. 2:30 There will be lots of games, including juggling, a free throw contest, balloon toss, relay races, a limbo contest and much more. The m onies w ill su p p o rt outreach serv ices for H ouse o f U m oja, a p ro ­ gram serving north and northeast P o rt­ land. O p e ra tin g on an “ extended fa m i­ ly” A fro -C en tric m odel, the program offers an a ltern ativ e to gang life w ith a dose o f stro n g perso n al su p p o rt, a c ­ co rd in g to Johnny A. G age, H ouse o f U m oja ex ecutive directo r. O ver 300 g a n g -a ffe c te d young men and th e ir fa m ilie s have been helped by the program since outreach w ork began in 1990. A resid en tial com ponent o f the program opened in F ebruary 1991 and now serv es up to 15 youth at a tim e. T he g ra n t w as m ad e p o s s ib le th ro u g h th e f o u n d a tio n ’s W illiam S w indells Sr. M em orial Fund. Women Rally To Oppose Clinton Act Radical Women hold a summer soup and salad dinner July 20 at 7 p.m. at the Northwest Service Center, 1819 N.W. Everett, to discuss the impact of President C linton's Anti-Terrorism Act. The group opposes the act, being advanced in the wake o f the Oklahoma City bombing, claiming it will clamp down on free speech and assembly rights. Blue Lake Music Series Opens M etro’s Music by Blue Lake summer concert series features a lineup o f national and international acts and local favorites at Blue Lake Regional Park. Concerts are held every Thursday through Aug. 10 with the concert area opening at 5 p.m. and two hour performances beginning at 6:30 p.m. Walk On The Wild Side You are invited to enjoy breakfast and entertainment at the Portland zoo fol­ lowing a five-mile walk through the w iIds o f Washington Park and the West Hills. The event is held Saturday beginning at 8 a.m. at the Washington Park Z oo’s north parking lot. Proceeds from entry fees will benefit the zoo's endangered species pro­ gram. Fair Features Luxurious Clothes If you love animals and have an eye for exquisite clothing made from fine fi­ ber producing animals, then you’ll like what you see at the first ever Alpaca Fiber Fair held this weekend, July 7-9 at the W ashington C ounty F airg ro u n d s in Hillsboro. Teacher Donald Dixon helps prepare high school athletes for college SAT testing. Academics come with the program at a Self Enhancement summer basketball camp. (Photo by Michael Leighton) Area Kids Get Boost At Summer Camps by M ichael L eighton ortland area kids are preparing for life after sports in a series of basketball cam ps this summer. P “This is about life,” explains Tony Hopson, director o f Self Enhancement. Inc. “ Basketball is just the button to push.” SEI sponsors the camps as just one o f many o f its programs to get kids at risk past the obstacles in life and toward success in adulthood. The camps draw some o f the best ath­ letes in the Portland area with the emphasis on basketball fundamentals and the attention they draw from college recruiters. But for ev en basketball to pick up. there is school work to perform. We teach there is life after sports and to understand basketball is a temporary thing," Hopson said The kids learn how athletics can be used as means to get somewhere else, to succeed at school and as an adult. Broken into a daily regiment o f 8 peri­ ods, the camps go through a rotating curric­ ulum o f classroom instruction and basketball practice and competition over a week long period. The classroom instruction includes work on preparing for SAT college testing and career exploration. Hopson said the goal is for all o f the students to go to college. Recent camps at Wh itaker M iddle School drew about 70 high school boys, while a Foodstock Returns To Laurelhurst Saturday, July 22, will be a day o f family fun as Foodstock returns for the third year to Laurelhurst Park in southeast Portland. The benefit for Loaves and Fish­ es begins at 11 a.m. with a free concert in the park featuring local Portland music legends. July Means Pool Fun Days A series o f special Fun Days begin this month at Portland pools. These are popular events with splash contests, pen­ ny dives, water basketball and other aqua- games. For more information call 823- SWIM. SUBMISSIONS: Community Calendar information will be given priority if dated two weeks before the event date. The Habitat Home Building Center is beginning to take a finished look with new siding, windows and a roof. The center at Northeast 15th and Killingsworth will provide office space and room for building materials, a conference room and dormitories. Construction began in March and is scheduled to be completed in mid August. (Photo by Michael Leighton) i 7 * •-. ' 'A - •. ? rl*,, • • ’ ¿3 camp for high school girls was held at Jefferson High School with about 75 partic­ ipants. A camp was also planned for middle school-age children. During a recent high school boys camp, the kids showed a great deal o f enthusiasm during an assembly, cheering for announce­ ments by teachers and introductions to visi­ tors. “ We participate as a group," Hopson said. “ It's a family atmosphere with positive peer pressure."