Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, July 28, 1999, Page 18, Image 18

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July 28, 1999
YZK PREPAREDNESS BOOKS
izen’s Action Guide Where There Is No Doctor
(Lens Publishing; 1998)
U tne R eader
.
, ,,
An excerpt: By the time you read this there will be little more than a year to prepare for what 1
have come to believe will be the social equivalent of a worldwide earthquake. The exact date an
time of this earthquake is already known
- the stroke of midnight, December 31,
1999. What we don’t know is where the
earthquake will fall on the Richter scale.
Will it just be a little hiccup, barely no­
ticeable as the world wakes up on the
morning of January 1, 2000, as some
knowledgeable people of goodwill pre­
dict? Or will it be cataclysmic, causing
genuine hardship to millions around the
world, as increasing numbers of others
are now saying?
This guide hopes for the best while plan­
ning for the worst. The Y2K's Citizen s
Action Guide doesn’t engage in the debate
over whether or not to be ocncerned about
Y2K. The following pages focuses instead
on what you can do to prepare for possible
disruptions; as a public citizen, as a mem­
ber of a neighborhood, as a householder,
I and as an individual. The guide is filled
with checklists and inventories to help you
take stock of your assets and your liabilities,
the skills and supplies you have, and those
that you need, to help you and others get
through a crisis. And it offers ideas and
guidelines for communicating with public
officials and others who need to be address­
ing Y2K in their spheres of influence. The
operative watchwords are: “Be prepared.“
by
I
A Village Health
Care Handbook
Hesperian Foundation; 1977)
D avid W erner
Where There Is No Doctor is more than a book
on first aid. It covers a wide range of things that affect
the health of the villager - from diarrhea to tubercu­
losis, from helpful and harmful home remedies to
the cautious use of certain modern medicines. Spe­
cial importance is place on cleanliness, a health diet,
and vaccinations. The book also covers in detail both
childbirth and family planning. Not only does it help
the reader realize what he can do for himself, but it
helps him recognize which problems need the atten­
tion of an experienced health worker.
by
EDY SCHO qi
KE»H JfleMenamins
1 S ummer E vents |
F la tla n d s
Thursday, July 15
T h eresa D em erest & Good C om pany
Thursday, July 22
S o n g w riters in th e R ound w ith C raig C arothers
Sunday, July 25 at 7:30pm • $7.00 admission
The Encyclopedia of
Country Living
The J a c k M cM ahon B and
Thursday, July 29
T he J e s s ie S a m sel B and
Thursday, August 5 at 7pm
R etta & th e Sm art F ella s
More than 300,000 sold
Thursday, August 12
( Sasquatch Books; 1994)
UNCF F u n d ra iser w ith Tom G rant
by
C arla E mery
This book is the essential resource! No
home is complete without this one-of-a-
kind encyclopedia! For more than twenty
years, people have relied on the hundreds
of recipes, detailed instructions, and per­
sonal advice provided in this definitive
classic. You won’t fond a more complete
source of step-by-step information about
growing, processing, cooking, and preserv­
ing every kind of food - from the garden,
the orchard, the field, or the barnyard.
Carla Emery’s Encyclopedia of Country
Living is so basic, so thorough, so reliable,
it deserves a place in every home - whether
in the country, the city, or somewhere in
between.
Learn how to sew a quilt, save seeds,
breed rabbits, make cheese, forage for wild
food, and much much more!
Tuesday, August 17
I& I
Thursday, August 19
McMcnamins Kennedy School
5736 NE 33rd • Portland, Oregon • (505) 249-3983