>•» SSvs- - » • •-• - .. Volume X X V I, Number 16 ' s. ¡^ l îni * j îi * a »?• ' » ¿ J r » , s » . . x / , .:**».. Committed to cultural diversity. A p ril 17, 1996 B ULhe ^ o rtla n ò C^bseruer NMNHMBMJBMMMM Ut Ut u n i t u a Ie ttò a v From Welfare To Work Step By Step Low-Income Energy Assistance Funds Funds are still available through the Albina Ministerial Alliance a for residents of inner-North and Northeast Portland who need help paying their energy or water j bills. Low-income people who have not recieved energy-assistant funds since Oct. I, 1995 or think they might qualify for a discount on water bills call 240-0828. PCC Offers Grants The Portland Community College Foun­ dation is offering scholarships to students who will attend P C C during the 1996-97 academic year. Criteria for scholarships vary, but most require students have at­ tended P C C for one term before applying. Funds are designated by student, field of study,age geographical residence and oth­ er factors. Last year the foundation granted 165 scholarships totaling $122,500. Ap­ plications are available at PCC financial aid offices. Deadline for applications is May 1. Call 977-4385 for more details. Urban League Annual Meeting The Urban League of Portland will hold its annual membership meeting Wednes­ day, April 24 from 6:80 to 8:30 p in. in the Amphitheater at Providence Medical Cen- ter4805 NEGIisan. The event will include the installation of new officers, presenta­ tion o f the annual report and a awards presentation. Those who plan to attend are encouraged to R S V P at 280-2600. Steps staff members Lelia Lomax, Georgiana McElheny and Bill Miller confer. Program Coordinator Gary Coleman By C C Jackson Down a long corridor in an old church school building is the path more than 5000 people have taken to get from welfare into the Young African American Men Honored The Distinguished Youth Gala Celebra­ tion of Academic Achievement will be held Sunday, May 19at 3 p.m. at the Red Lion Inn at the Quay. The event salutes distinguished African American Young Men in Portland area high schools. Anthony “Tony” Melson of Jefferson High School is the event’s dis­ tinguished Scholar of the year. Relatives of Diabetics Sought For Research Legacy Emanual Childrens Diabetes Center is looking for relatives of diabetes for free screening as part of a research project. Individuals 3 to 45 years old and are siblings, parents, or children of people with type one diabetes or individuals 3 to 20 years old and are an aunt, uncle, niece, nephew, grandchild, half-sibling or cousin of persons with type one diabetes. Call 4 13-3288 for more details on the program. Spring Schedule For Forest Friends Forest Friends, a classroom series for preschoolers age 3 to 5 begins April 23 at the World Forestry Center. Ihe classes feature stories, music, crafts and nature games. The series includes three parent- child classes that will teach about the life, habits, and ecology of forest creatures featured in the classes. Call 228-1367 for further information Hospice Volunteers Needed Volunteers are needed to provide emo­ tional support and physical care for Kaiser Permenente hospice patients and their fam­ ilies. Volunteers commit to eight hours a month for six months. Free training is held at 3704 N. Interstate Ave. Thursdays and Tuesdays from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. from April 25 to May 28. C A II 499-5285 or (360) 694-2210 (Washington state) for more information. Conference To Build Garden For Childrens Hospital Home is Where the Habitat is, a week­ end environmental conference will build a natural garden to attract wildlife to the Children's Garden at Legacy Emanual Childrens Hospital, 2801 N. Gatenbein. The workshop, April 20-21, is sponsored by the National Wildlife Federation. Sara Stein author of “Noah’s Garden” is the keynote speaker. Registration is at 8:15. SU B M ISSIO N S: Community Calendar information will he given priority if dated two weeks before the event date. • * 5* /•- workforce. From Oct 1990 Steps to Success North has worked to provide welfare clients — mostly women, mostly single and all parents oise Neighborhood Considers Pub by L ee P earlman overabundance of liquor outlets. The Bu­ he fate of the proposed Easy reau of Licenses tends to frown on new Street Pub and Grill at 915 N. liquor licenses in such areas for establish­ Shaver St. may be decided at ments that emphasize the sale of liquor as a special meeting at 7 p.m. April opposed 22 at to providing it in conjunction with the Albina Youth Opportunity School, food, unless there are unusual circumstanc­ 37 1 0 N. Mississippi Ave. es involved or a strong show of community According Larry Jacobson of the Ore­ support gon Liquor Control Commission, and M ike So far, Jacobson and Sanderson have Sanderson of the Portland Bureau of L i­ received 14 letters opposing Easy Street’s censes, both agencies are waiting to hear license application. They have also received from the Boise Neighborhood Association eight letters of support, all of them form before making their recommendations on letters with identical language produced by the license application. the same printer, and in four cases without Boise discussed the issue at its April an accompanying address. general meeting, bu, declined to take any Housing Our Families plans to build a action because interested neighbors were nine-unit low-income housing project on a not notified that it would be on the agenda. vacant lot across the street, and the pub Instead, the association’s officers decided abutts more housing to the north. Other to call a special meeting, and notify all opponents cite past problems with alcohol residents and property owners within two sales in the area. blocks of the establishment. Leah Van Horton, owner of a recently The property is within the city’s North- renovated historic building on North Northeast Liquor Mississippi Avenue, wrote, “Given the his Impact Zone, where the city believes ▼ there are alcohol-related problems and an Continued to page A6 T -- with the tools necessary to get jobs and keep them. The program, staffed by Portland Com­ munity College under a subcontract from Mt Hood Community College, works from a vision of a strong community and a mission to empower its clients All Adult and Family Service clients and applicants for public assistance with a child one-year-old and up must be in the JO B S program. They must participate in 40 hours ofclient activities that may include job search, daily networking and attending Steps mod­ ules that teach skills such as resume writing, interview techniques and stress management. Everyone goes to Pod on Fridays where outside speakers address subjects like how to file for earned income credit and what to do about a criminal record. Those who have found employment are acknowledged and hot job leads are announced Once in the Steps Program clients are put on tracks toward self-sufficiency. Each track -- employability, career focus, life planning and A B E/G ED - is geared toward individual needs. Those with low-level learning abilities like dyslexics and illiterates are placed on the employability track, that combines job search, basic skills and self-esteem building. For ten weeks clients are helped to get a new star, with a fresh look at their skills and how to apply them. The career focus track is an intensive two week version of the modules with regular coaching and support. Those with no employment experience at all -- usually single mothers -- find them­ selves spending five weeks in life planning. It ▼ Continued to page A6 Ebony Fashion Fair he 38th annual Ebony fashion fair “The Power of Color” will appear in Portland at the Ore­ gon Convention Center ballroom on Fri­ day, April 19th, 1996, at 8:00 p.m. The world's largest traveling fashion show is produced by Ebony Magazine and Is sponsored by The Portland Chapter of the Links, Inc., for the benefit of The Links educational and scholarship fund. T Mrs. Eunice W. Johnson, producer and director of the show, personally selects fash­ ions from the exclusive collection o f famed designers such as Yves Saint Laurent, Oscar De La Renta, Valentino, Bob Mackie, Giorgio Sant’Angelo, Fabrice and Biuce Oldfield. Proceeds from previous shows made it possible to contribute to many local charities such as: PO IC, N A A C P (Lo cally and nation­ ally), St. Vincent DepaulChild Development Center, Volunteers of America Fund, Port­ land State University, Multnomah Associa­ tion for Retarded Children, United Negro College Fund (Locally and nationally), Amer­ ican Cancer Society-Oregon Division, K id ­ ney Association of Oregon, U .N .I.C .F Ethi­ opian Aid (Africare.lnc.), American Heart Association of Oregon. Head Start, Peninsu­ la Little League, and many other groups and organizations. The classic casual wear from Louis Ferand Red Jumpsuit, yellow coat and green suede vest with yellow suit and red coat. Both outfits with red fur hats. Community Service Award Nominations Sought he Oregon Community Founda­ teer service in the greater Portland area. tion is requesting nominations Nom inees should demonstrate lead­ for the George A. Russili Com­ ership, vision and initiative as well as munity Service Awards, a $2 ,0 0 0 award service. Candidates for public office and given to an individual who has performed holders o f public office are not eligible, exceptionally useful and effective volun- Aw ards are not made posthumously. T The George A R u ssill Award was established in 1978 by the friends of George R u ssill, a Portland attorney who was an active volunteer in city and state politics. Nomination forms for the George A R u ssill award are available through The Oregon Community Foundation, 6 2 1 SW Morrison Street, Suite 725, Portland, Oregon, 9 7 2 2 5 ,(5 0 3 ) 227-6846. Dead­ line for nominations are A p ril 18, 1996 at 5 p.m. Chefs’ Night Out Benefits Local Hunger-Relief ancy and Rick, struggling to rants, Oregon Food Bank will be able to help support 10 month old twins on local liuugci relief pauliies and agencies get Rick’s $6-per-hour job at a local food to hungry families, including Nancy and grocery store, recently received a stag­ R ic k ’s. gering blow. The grocery store has The ninth annual C h e fs Night Out will be closed and Rick's out of a job. They from 6 to 9 p.m. Monday, April 22 at the were barely making it before; now they Portland Center forthe Performing Arts, 1111 need help. The family has turned to St. S.W . Broadway. Participants will offer Francis Catholic Church in Sherwood, delectables from at least 30 restaurants, many an Oregon Food Bank network food pan­ Oregon wineries, microbreweries, coffee try. They’ve received a food box, but brewers and mineral water purveyors. T ic k ­ especially appreciate baby formula, ets are $50 per person and are available from which Nancy estimates would cost them center’s box office or from Fred Meyer Fastixx $100 to $ 1 5 0 a month. “St. Francis has outlets. been an unbelievable help,” Nancy says. Organizers hope to raise at least $45,000 N As a beneficiary o f Chefs’ Night Out, the annual fundraiser which invites local food lovers to sample the creations of local restau­ from the event. Oregon Food Bank will share 80 percent of Chefs’ Night Out pro­ ceeds with: Foodtrain.aSt. Vincent de Paul program that “rescues" prepared and perish­ able foods; Sisters of the koad Cate, a nonprofit restaurant in Northwest Portland that serves low-income and homeless people; and Klam ath/Lake County Food Bank, an Oregon Food Bank network agency in K la ­ math Falls. C h e fs’ Night Out is Portland’s ver­ sion o f a nationwide event, Taste o f the Nation, organized by Share Our Strength, a Washington, D C.-based anti-hunger reliefagency. The rem aining 20 percent o f the event’ s proceeds w ill go to Share Our Strength to help international re lie f efforts. "We appreciate our partnership with Share Our Strength and the local community in implementing C h e f s Night Out," said Rach- el Bristol Little, Oregon Food Bank’s exec­ utive director "We are blessed with wonder­ ful restaurants, planners and volunteers who make our event a success each year The ongoing support provided by Share Our Strength fosters greater awareness of hunger in our communities and support for our fight against hunger.” As Oregon Food Bank copes with drastic cuts in federal emergency food assistance, funds such as those raised from Chefs' Night Out will be used to make up for these losses by targeting new sources of food For every dollar received, Oregon Food Bank distrib­ utes 9 pounds of food. For more information about Oregon Food Bank's and Chefs’ Night Out, call (503)282- 0555.