I Committed to cultural diversity. http://www.portlandobserver.net Volume X X V II. Number 6b April S. 199S (Ddie ^ o rtía n h (Ohserrirr o m m u n í tu a te n ú a r Öl PCC And HAP Opening Skill Center Welfare To Work Friends of Trees W hat do R ejuvenation, inc.. T he Bike G allery and Z efiro R estaurant and Bar have in com m on? T hese businesses (plus others) are team ing up to support Friends o f T re e s’ com m unity tree planting pro ­ gram in A pril. F riends o f T re es’ 2nd A n­ nual Springw ood event, a celebration o f our trees and com m unities, is slated for April 18 through A pril 25. T here w ill be live m usic by Point o f D eparture, great food, beer from W idm er B rew ing and a w onderful silent auction. Call 282-8846. Alberta Street Fair T he first A lberta Street fair “ W elcom e T o O u r N eighborhood” is taking place S aturday, M ay 2 from 11 AM to 6 PM. O rganizers w ant to encourage NE Port­ land residents to com e have fun and cel­ ebrate the changes taking place on NE A lberta Street. T he fair w ill feature a horse draw n trolley and great raffle prizes. Call 287-3496. Co-Housing C om m unity and privacy - the best o f both w orlds! C om e find out about Co- H ousing, a lifestyle popular throughout E urope and now available in Portland! Individual residences are clustered around green spaces w hile additional am enities p r o v id e fo r o p tio n a l sh a re d m e a ls, ch ild ren ’s play spaces, shared w orkshops and more! A free video screening will be show n on T hursday, M ay 7th at 7:30 PM at 2901 SE Steele. C all 650-7169. Infant and Child CPR T he Red C ross w ill offer Infant and C hild C P R at A m erican Red C ross, O r­ egon T rail C hapter, 3131 N. V ancouver, Portland. T he class w ill be held on T u es­ day & T hursday, A pril 14 and 16, from 6 to 9 PM. Infant and C hild C PR , a 6-hour course, teaches how to care for an infant or child w ho stops breathing or is choking, give C P R , reduce the risk o f injury, and use the em ergency m edical services (EM S) system effectively. Call 280-1440. From Left To Right: Vanessa Williams, Gretchen Quay, Eric Nichols, Richard Boland, Jacob Fox, and Kathryn Beebe. he grand opening o f the Goalpost was held Monday April 6, at 8932 N. Woolsey. Welfare to Work program is mandatory for participants with children three months or older. The Goldpost has partnered with many other organizations to help participants with the transi­ T tion. Some o f the partners are: Adult and Family Services (St. John ’ s Fami ly Center): The mission o f AFS is to help families become self-supporting while assisting them in meeting their basic needs. Center for Community Mental Health/PCR: They havebeen doingalcohol and Drug programs atColumbia Villa for6years, and plan tocontinue. They offercounselingservicesandsupport groups. Columbia Villa/Tamaraek Resident Associa­ tion: The Resident Association will provide re­ ception and janitorial services. They will use the reception and janitorial programs as training for residents. Consumer Credit Counseling: This is a non­ profit community advocate that helps people deal with credit debt. They have a strong educational focus to help keep people out o f debt. They offer money management classes, and classes on how to buy a car or home. B y N eii . H eilpern Steve Lehi and C huck Rollins will present a slide program on the history, com m unities and structures along the H is­ to ric C o lu m b ia R iv er H ighw ay from T routdale to T he D alles. Steve has a large collection o f slides, pictures and post­ cards o f the area. Steve and C huck will narrate the presentation w ith stories they h av ecollected from old-tim ers. T hese pre­ sentations are free and open to the public. H andicap accessible. Packy’s Birthday Party H elp P ortland’s fam ous elephant cel­ ebrate his 36th birthday. W ear floppy elephant ears, sing “ H appy B irthday” and w atch Packy eat his cake. G am es and b irthday cake for all. T he event will be held at T he M etro W ashington Park Z oo on April 18th from 10 A M to 4 PM. Call the event info, line on 220-3687. Ace Hayes Fight Hunger! R e m e m b e r to h e lp O re g o n F ood B a n k a n d y o u r L e tte r C a r r ie r fig h t h u n g e r o n S a tu rd a y , M ay 9. J u s t p la c e a b ag o f n o n - p e r is h a b le fo o d by y o u r m a ilb o x in th e m o rn in g ! Y o u r L e tte r C a r r ie r w ill ta k e th e fo o d to y o u r lo c a l p o s t o f fic e , in c lu d in g H o lla d a y P a rk , K e n to n , P ie d m o n t, R o se C ity P a rk , an d St. J o h n s s ta tio n s , w h e re it w ill b e b o x e d u p b y v o lu n te e r s an d d e liv e r e d to O re g o n F o o d B a n k fo r d is trib u tio n to h u n g e r - r e lie f a g e n c ie s a ro u n d P o rtla n d . C a ll 2 8 2 -0 5 5 5 . families currently living in Low Rent Public Housing and Section 8 housing. It offers job training, access to programs, budget assistance and computer learning to help individuals be­ come self sufficient. PCC Literacy tutoring: PCC received a grant to tutor people in literacy. Sharon Simovec from PCC will coordinate volunteers and learners, who can meet at the Goalpost. Sharon will schedule regular weekly hours for assessment, and pair learners with tutors for individual sessions. Above arejust a few ofthe many orga­ nizations to partner with Goalpost to make the participants transition happen. Jefferson High To ecome Three Schools Historic Columbia River A c e H a y e s w a s a w e ll-k n o w n p o ­ litic a l r e s e a r c h e r /a n a ly s t/te a c h e r in o u r c o m m u n ity , w h o d ie d on F e b r u ­ a ry 13. H e d e d ic a te d h is life to u n ­ c o v e r in g lie s a n d c o r r u p tio n a n d , u s ­ in g h is v a s t k n o w le d g e o f h is to ry , p h i lo s o p h y , r e li g io n a n d s c ie n c e , h e lp e d th e re s t o f us u n d e r s ta n d w h a t w a s r e a lly g o in g o n . H is M e m o ria l w ill b e o n S a tu r d a y , A p ril 18, w ith s c h e d u le d a c tiv itie s s ta rtin g at 3 an d e n d in g at 7 P M , a t th e D a n c e P a v ilio n at O a k s P ark . Delauney Family o f Services: Services in­ clude; individual, couple and family counseling, domestic violence program, support groups, group therapy. They will offer evening programs, usu­ ally after 3 p.m. Employment Department, N. Portland: The program at Columbia Villa is focused on drug and alcohol issues. It is a voluntary program, aimed at getting individuals in treatment back to work. Assistance with resumes, career planning, inter­ viewing and individualized services. They would like to offer job search classes at the Goalpost. Goals Program: the self-sufficiency program ofthe 1 lousing A uthori ty ofPort land, € ioals serves (Photo M. Washington) Jefferson High School, Three School's in one. (Photo by M. Washington) Jefferson High School will split into three separate schools next year, with various specialties taught at each school. Instead o f one principal and three vice principals, the re-organized Jefferson will have three principals with separate support staffs, according to Portland School District spokesm an Lew Frederick. T he action, he said, is being taken in hopes o f upgrading program quality, creat­ ing a sense o f belonging by allow ing faculty and students to ge, to know one another better, and regaining students lost to other schools b e c au seo f Jefferson’s low academic- ratings and disciplinary problem s. O ne school would contain the Ninth Grade- Preparatory A cadem y, designed to initially assess how w ell students are perform ing in math, history, art and science. Frederick indicated m ore individual at­ tention will be given students as a result o f the new format. This will also be a tim e when the ninth graders survey a handful o f career paths, as they decide w hat the rest o f their high school curriculum will look like. “ By the end o f the year they will be at the level w here they need to be,” said Frederick. “ If it m eans three extra classes in algebra a w eek, then they will get that.” T he arts and com m unications academ y will be com bined into a second school, with the health sciences/biotechnology academ y, he noted. T he third independent program would contain the business, finance services and technology academ y. A transition sum m er school program will concentrate on reading and m ath for grades nine and ten. Frederick cited success “al 1 over the coun­ try w here they are experim enting on schools w ithin schools.” C ontinued T o P age A10 Former Bloods Member Turns Playwright story ... use their thought processors. ..find out w hat is going on in this story and the raduation from Bloods gang m em ­ character, not ju st K w ik’s life.” bership to active roles as student- W hen family com munications broke down p la y w rig h t-d ire c to r-a c to r has for suc­ Jones at age 13, he joined the Bloods gang show n W illiam C leveland Jones he can in a search for a neighborhood level of family. cessfully w rite the rem aining acts o f his own Unlikehis production, he did not havea younger life’s play. brother w ho fell victim to gang violence. K now n as “ K w ik” Jones, for his speed as “ I’m, so proud o f him g etting out o f that a Jefferson High School track star, the 23- and turning h im self around,” said his m other, year-old Portland playw right on Friday inter­ A zzie Jones. “ W hen they are in the gang you tw ined personal life history with a w ide range c a n ’t talk to them because they think they o f em otional responses o f a fictitious gang know everything. You just have to have faith ” m em ber’s loss o f a little brother. She recalled the night “so m e young men T he rear view m irror depiction o f a pathos threw a bottle through our w in d o w ,” and how journey m ay prove to be the healing portal of Jones “decided if his involvem ent in gangs recognition o f truth through w hich this young w as putting m y life in danger, he w ould get man becom es the conscious author o f a new o u t.” adventure called “the rest o f his life.” His one-m an theatrical production, “C o n ­ But. W as this Jo n es’ life story unfolding v ersations,” w as perform ed at B onneville on the stage? How much w as draw n from his Pow er A dm inistration B uilding A uditorium . ow n experience and how m uch a result o f his T his w ork o f hindsight, m ixed with a dose developing skills as a w riter? o f creative fiction, resulted in m any insights “ N obody w ould ever k n o w ,” he told T he -- for the playw right and, hopefully, fo rm em ­ Portland O bserver. “ 1 w ant people to find the B y N eil H eilpern G bers o f his audience. D row ning in a bottle after the funeral, his character bem oans an inability to prevent violence, intensely expresses guilt, wildly displays anger tow ards an absent father who had not prepared him to be “the man o f th e house,” and sadly w ishes his m other had spent as m uch tim e listening to him as she did going to church. His m onologue and visual expressions painted a plethora o f w ord and sight im ages — the fu n e ra l... m em ories o f the kid b ro th er's athletic ach ie v em e n ts... thoughts o f revenge ... frustration at his inability to share sorrow with his m other. W ith experience, Jones will be even m ore effective as he learns to project and enunciate clearly, alternate the pacing to keep the au d i­ ence interested, and create m ore variety in tone, direction and hand gestures. Jones is quick to point out that his gang m em bership helped him deal w ith a lot o f “em otional scars that needed to be filled," as he related with others w ho “w anted to be part o f som ething." He expressed concern for people w ho still cling to the negative side o f gang life. “ I d o n ’t look dow n on them for it, but 1 do understand it.” M oved by the b elief that “ E verybody has a story and ev ery b o d y ’s story is w orth hear­ ing,” Jones has taken theatrical arts classes at Portland C om m unity College, Eastern O r­ egon State C ollege and V erm ont’s G oddard C ollege before returning to Portland w here he is finishing studies at Mt. H ood C om m u­ nity College. “ You only ge, so m any chances at life, he said. “Y ou turn this w heel so m any tim es, bu, soon that w heel gets rusty and you get old. You have to do som ething w ith y o u rself and that w heel to m ake i, better. Oil it up or change it. If you oil i, up it m ay still get rusty. I changed the w heel!” “ I’m on a new direction,” Jo n es added. “ I never w anted to be ju st anybody, bu, alw ays w anted to be the cream o f the crop o f w hat­ ever, som ebody that leaves his m ark on the world that affects everybody else.”