Page 14 Crackdown on Problem Bars check cashing for one low fee Enjoy this and other benefits at select KeyBank Plus® branches. • • • • Low 1.5% fee' No hidden charges No account required ChexSystems welcome c o n t i n u e d f r o m page 3 • Every fifth check is free- • Fee-free money orders3 when you cash your check What should I bring with me? • Your payroll, government and/or income tax checks • One form of photo ID, such as a driver’s license, State ID card, or Matricula Consular4 go to key.com/keybankplus call 800-539-2968 KeyBank O tt Unlock your possibilities 'A check-cashing fee of 1.5% of the face value of the check applies (there is a minimum fee of $5.00 and a maximum fee of $25.00) Maximum check amount $5.000. Maximum fee does not apply to income tax refund checks Only available when you cash your payroll or government checks See a KeyBank branch office representative for more details. Fee-free money oiders available to KeyBank Plus members only. Limit of 5 fee-free money orders per check cashed Additional money orders are subject to the standard money order fee. •Other forms of photo ID accepted. Check with your KeyBank Plus branch. tsi lender February 23. 2011 Portland Observer Black History Month Key.com is a federally registered service mark of KeyCorp. ©2011 KeyCorp. KeyBank is M em ber FDIC. sored HB 3201 in 2009. The bill proposed similar restrictions and passed the House, but died in the Senate. A sticking point with that bill, Kotek said, was that it didn't define the benchmarks for a problem bar clearly enough. “This bill does a much better job of putting clarity on what defines a problem bar,’’ she said. “Currently, it’s not very clear and can keep the OLCC from stepping in because of the long process involved. “We think this kind of clarity is also going to help those busi­ nesses better understand their situation with law enforcement and the OLCC.” Kotek said the bill is most likely to be introduced on the House floor next month. Officials said bars that attract police attention and appear most likely to fall within its bench- marks are those involved in the adult entertainment industry. Portland Police, for example, have petitioned the OLCC to revoke the license of Cabaret, a strip club located on the corner of Fifth and West Burnside, be­ cause of its history of 36 inci­ dents of violence or criminal activity in 26 months. The OLCC granted the petition in 2009, but Cabaret won a stay and remains open. The proposed bill is part of a larger civic effort to combat the problems that come from alco­ hol sales at convenience stores as well as bars and restaurants. The OLCC recently approved a petition to study establish of an “Alcohol Impact Area” in down­ town Portland that would re­ strict bulk sales of alcoholic bev­ erages as well as the sale of beverages with alcohol content above certain levels for both beer and wine. ADL2787 G Black H istory M onth events at REED COLLEGE www . reed . edu / bhm / index . html -lì •J Events are free and open to the public. Reed Celebrates Black History Month 2011 Annette Gordon-Reed LECTURE: FEBRUARY 19, 7 :3 0 P.M. KAUL AUDITORIUM Annette Gordon-Reed, professor of law and history and Carol K. Pforzheimer Professor at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University, Is the recipient of a 2010 MacArthur Fellowship, the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for history, and a National Book Award. Gordon-Reed Is recognized for dramatically changing the course of Jeffersonian scholarship. iiruKr^iftat^aMrnnBKitiinngfrmtrr.aíaiiataitfíKUMtBftffM/ur/íi immfiK/ruunMmasr^inHiMmuBiurBr un^^M^umaKn-iinnuanruiiu JtnasraRauiiVHMnnKJHi Manning Marable WHAT WOULD YOU DO WITH? GRAMO PRIZE WINNER ID RECEIVETHEFOLLOWIIID: lamarstimnmi LECTURE: FEBRUARY 2 6 , 8 P.M., KAUL AUDITORIUM Manning Marable is the M. Moran Weston and Black Alumni Council Professor of African-American Studies and professor of history and public affairs at Columbia University. He was founding director of African American Studies at Columbia from 1993 to 2003. Since 2002, he has directed Columbia’s Center for Contemporary Black History. ip/nmsimfífar i/HOPiiJF m am m c sm [O H PinFUiKm BïPài/iHim lOBÍBlBPPOfflffS 1000 POSÏÏMD Sift flVFPS 5500(03* anaacís g x x rhe ichool <■- \ Unrtl.inî» •bbsrrufr » ►!»>! 2 I1 Í T T T : REED COLLEGE 3 2 0 3 SE WOODSTOCK BLVD. | EVENTS LINE: 5 0 3 /7 7 7 -7 7 5 3 BARRACUDA ** ,'*î 4 Cffl/CM 5dJ À-i SM WfW 3Ï7ÍGMWWCú'W CMf rr» siKnounai uni : jk W ' * m » ■-’«WW iKi nui