Volume XXVII, Number 6 Committed to cultural diversity. February 5, 1997 ^ o rtla n b (©bsertwr or o m m u n itg -a I c n h a r MHCC Industrial Technology open house Mt. Hood Community College’s Engi­ neering and Industrial Technology divi­ sion is hosting an open house for its M achine Tool T echnology, W elding Technology and Mechanical Engineer­ ing Technology programs, on Monday, February 17,6:30-9:30 p.m. in the Indus­ trial Technology Building. The college is located at 26000 S.E. Stark St. in G re­ sham. For more information call Lynne Wolters at (503) 669-6930. Cascade Mountain Overnight Snow -Camp Trip Mt. HoodCommunity College's Wilde Side Outdoor Program is offering an over­ night camping trip in the snow drifts of the Cascade Mountains February 15-16. Caves, igloos and tents are all possible shelters for the adventures enjoying this winter outing. The cost is $42. No expe­ rience is necessary and transportation is provided. A mandatory pre-trip meeting is scheduled for February 1 1 at 5:30 p.m. in the College Center Information Desk at (503) 667-7277. Juvenile Justice: Where do we go from here? The League of Women Voters of Port­ land and East Multnomah County invite the public to attend a forum on Juvenile Justice in Multnomah County. The forum will take place on Tuesday, March II, 1997 at 7:15 p.m. at W estminster Presby­ terian Church, 1624 N.E. Hancock Street in Portland. Meeting charge is $1.50. The panel will include Elyse Clawson, Director o f Juvenile Justice Services, M ultnom ah C ounty, Kevin M annix, former Oregon State Representative and author of Measure 11, and Helen Smith, Chief Deputy District Attorney for Mult­ nomah County. The discussion will focus on current issues in the Juvenile Justice field including the changes brought about by the implementation of Measure 11. The League of Women Voters of Port­ land and East Multnomah County present: Juvenile Justice Forum, Tuesday, March I I . 1997, W estm inster Presbyterian Church, 1624 N.E. Hancock Street. Port­ land, Oregon, $1.50. Young Women invited to expand horizons “Expanding Your Horizons." a con­ ference designed to increase awareness and interest in a wide variety of career options for young women in grades seven though 10, will be held on Saturday, February 15, 9 a.m. 3 p.m. at Mt. Hood Community College. Preregistration is required and the cost is only $5, including lunch. For more information call Sara at (503) 492-1942. Help Kick-Off a Penny Drive for Make-A-Wish Foundation. -G oal of 4 million pennies- The Kick-Off Event will be held Mon­ day, February 3. between 12 :00-1 :(X)p.m The “Make A Million for Make-A-W ish” annual penny drive continues through February 12 at U.S. Bank branches or any participating J.C. Penny Store in KI03 FM ’s listening area. U.S. Bank Tower lobby, 111 S.W. Fifth, Portland. SUBMISSIONS: Community Calendar information will be given priority if dated two weeks before the event date. B Bridging Heaven and Earth Impressionistic oil paintings on display An exhibit of “Im pressionistic” oil paintings by artist Jeannine Edelblut will be on display February 4-27 in the Col­ lege Center Fireplace Gallery at Mt. Hood Community College. The paintings are a collection called “Energy W aves", and are done on canvas with a focus on nature and biology. Admission to the gallery is free and the public is invited to attend. Gallery hours are Monday-Thursday, 8 a .m - 7 p.m., and Friday 8 a.m .-5:30 p.m. For more information call the College Center at (503) 667-7260. SECTION roducing Fire on the Mountain has long been the dream of Artistic Director and playwright, Reg Bradley. Now the dream of bringing this story of an old fiddler ascending to heaven has become a reality. With a set consisting of four thir­ teen foot scaffold towers connected by metal bridges this is Tears of Joy’s biggest show ever produced in its 24-year history. Despite the magnitude of this production, the story remains close to one, small fiddler. All is well until the m usician’s joyful but boisterous fiddling gets him into trouble with the heavenly order. This universal story reaffirms that music cannot die. The folk tale’s earliest origin is Polish, but because of cultural similarities, Bradley has chosen to place the tale in the Appalachian mountains of the U.S. In the spring of 1992, Bradley did re­ search in Appalachian, visiting and record­ ing folk musicians throughout the hills of West Virginia. One of these musicians, David Morris, is serving as folklorist and provided the central theme song about the "fire on the mountain and the fire in his fiddle." Com ­ poser Leroy Critchner and Jodi Eichelbcrger have adapted and arranged the rest of the show around this theme. Nationally recognized painter and set d e sig n e r, H enk P ander, d e sig n e d the production’s larger-than-life-puppets. The fiddler himself is a 3 foot marionette. The puppet, St. Peter, stands 8 feet tall and is operated with sophisticated controls. Arch­ angel Michael is created as a rod marionette with a wingspan of 12 feet. The fiddler's old hound dog, cupids. an­ gels and mountain people add to the story’s infectious vitality. The intricate engineering of these puppets has been the work of the theatre’s technical director, Lance Woolen. In the spirit of Appalachian, an exhibit featuring folk art will accompany the show. In addition to pottery and baskets, The Clark County Quilters will be providing quilts rich in tradition. Also on display will be some of the origi­ nal character renderings created by acclaimed Portland artist, Henk Pander. These art se­ P 16. Tickets are $8.50 for children and $9.50 for adults, available at Tears o f Joy Box Office 1 360-695 0477; 1-503 248 0557 or at the PCPA. lections will be included in a larger display on the complex process of creating a show of this magnitude. Funding for this production has come in part Irom the Jim Henson Foundation which funds new works for the puppet stage. Tears of Joy is recognized as one of the nation's outstanding puppet com panies l ouring throughout the U.S and abroad, the theatre performs for over a quarter of a million people each year. Three ol the theatre's productions have received American puppetry 's highest award, the Citation ol Excellence in the Art of Puppetry Three Famous African Sons of France by P rof , M ckinley Bt ri ineteenth-Century France was distinguished by the world-re­ nowned genius of three of that nation's black citizens-all of them bear­ ing the name, Alexander Dumas. The first member of this family Io come upon our lively and ebullient stage is Gen­ eral Alexander Dumas, who was Napoleon's leading and most daring general -- until they finally parted ways after a series of rancor­ ous quarrels It is interesting to note that Napoleon Bonaparte had 12 black generals in all, formidable warriors and tacticians who ensured the success of so many of his famed conquests (Mention omitted in Ameri­ Alexander Dumas Pits, can texts, see J.A. Rogers,. Naploeon's Greatest General Like General Dumas, who was born to an African woman on the island of Haiti, a c o u ra g e o u s black g e n e ra l, T ou ssain t French colony a the time, most of these black Louverature, a Haitian freedom fighter, de­ generals were from Haiti or Santo Domingo feated every army Napoleon sent to maintain which adjoined the first country. Santo control over the colonies. These facts are Domingo is now known as "The Dominican cited in Napoleon's letters. Republic." It is an irony of history that It may seem impossible, but the son of Napoleon was forced to yield to Thomas General Dumas (known as Dumas Pere to Jefferson and sell all of France's Western distinguish him in turn from his son, Dumas Hemisphere colonies to America (The Loui­ fils) achieved even greater national and in­ siana Purchase) - because the tierce and ternational acclaim than the general In the N (2) Alexander Dumas Pere, "If the baby has wooly hair, it is m ine." field of letters and in the art of the bon vivant (good lining, his career is almost unparal­ leled in history. Dumas' active literary career covered a period of approximately forty years In the course of those forty years he wrote sixty- seven plays, published in’ twenty-five vol­ umes and produced at seventeen theatres', ninety-two novels published in one hundred and seventy-eight volumes, thirty-two his­ torical works published in thirty-six vol­ umes. eighteen books ol travel published in thirty-five volumes, anil fourteen m iscella­ neous works published in twenty-six vol­ umes -a total of two hundred and thirteen books published in three hundred volumes. Dumas pere produced such lasting liter­ ary gems as "The Count ol Monte Cristo -- The Three Musketeers The Man In The Iron Mask - The Viscount of Bragelonne.” Two-hundred times his novels and plays have been made into movies and television specaculars. He is said to have captured the very essence of human drams and adventure -- in a manner not accomplished before or since. The fascinating story ol this enthusiastic patron of life itself (bonvivant) -- sw ords­ man. lover, traveller, gourmet -- is as excit­ ing as any of his novels or plays. When an adoring public and public authorities built an "Alexander Dumas Theatre” to highlight his works, he, in turn, built him self a m ag­ nificent estate and small castle in which to entertain his continent-w ide coterie o f friends The French government has pre- ▼ Continued to page A3 School days are numbered for kids without immunizations n Monday, February 17, 1997, Church, located al 4244 SE 91st Avenue, to according to law. children who immunize pre-school and school-aged chil are not up-to-date with their dren. These immunizations are free and avail immunization schedule will be excluded able to the public from all elementary schools and certi­ Parents will receive a letter in early Feb fied daycare centers (pre-school, Head ruary Irom Oregon's county health depart Start, pre-kindergarten). ments if their children have not been ad Students will be unable to attend school equalely immunized They will then have until they receive their shots. If non-complaint two weeks to update immunization records children until a parent picks them up. These before their children are asked to leave school. children may not enroll in another school. To The intent of Oregon Immunization I aw help parents beat “Exclusion Day", volunteer (OR 4.33.235 through 433 280) is to protect nurses from (he Oregon Nurses Association Oregon children from the dangers ol these (ONA) will host two immunization clinics on disease such as whooping cough which are Saturday, February I and February 15, from preventable by immunizations The immu 10 a m. to 2 p.m. a, the Pilgram Lutheran mzalion rale in Oregon is presently ranked O 48th in the united Stales, with many of the childhood diseases preventable by immuni­ zations still occurring. “ In the past, up to 9(X) children have been sent home because of inadequate immuniza tions," said Peggy Hillman, immunization coordinator for Multnomah County Health Department. "About 25 of those children never go back to school for that year then parents don't know where to go for immuni­ zations or believe they are loo expensive." ONA in a partnership with Multnomah County Health Department and the Pilgram Lutheran Church, hosts the Lents Clinic which provides immunizations for the at risk infants and children living in this area with particularly low immunization rates the first Saturday ol every month "Each year, hundreds of children are sent home from school because they have not been properly immunized," ONA A dm inis­ trator of Business Services Sandy Marron says, "the Oregon Nurses Association is provided a free and convenient way to help prevent life threatening diseases and dis­ missal from school." Volunteer nurses have given over 1.500 immunizations to children and infants since the Lents Clinic began in 1995 ONA has received the "livery Child By Two Im m uni­ zation Partners Award" for its outstanding efforts.