Paga 10 Portland Observer April 30. 1961
DRUG THERAPIST
MSW or better with 2 16 or 3 years experience
treating drug addicted persons of ethnic cultural
backgrounds. Must have complete knowledge
of illicit/licit drugs, usage, and effects.
Primary Responsibilities
Diagnosing and Implementation of Treatment
Plans, reco rd /re p o rt progress reports for
program effectiveness and federal guidelines.
To include individual counseling and group
theiapy.
Knowledge of Legal aspects to court
procedures helpful.
Contact Rosalie J. Boothe, Executive Director,
for interview Salary negotiable.
E
X
O
D
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S
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1639 N E A lb e rta
PORtLAND OREGON 9 /2 11
294 7997
PUBLIC
WASHINGTON
INFORMATION
COUNTY
SPECIALIST
ASSISTANT
$17,665 - $21,396 plus
PLANNER
excellent M etro paid $1283 $1560 per month.
benefits fo r employee College level training in
and dependents Under planning, architecture,
general direction plans, geography, or related
develops, and im p le field, and experience in
ments a promotion, edu City or county planning;
cation, and inform ation or equivalent co m bina
program in support of tio n o f experience and
solid waste a ctivitie s, training. Basic planning
including making public and zoning duties.
speaking appearances;
ASSOCIATE
provide inform ation for
C O M M U N ITY
development of depart
PLANNER
m ental budget and $1485 $1806 per month,
m onitoring m arketing/ college level training in
promotion expenditures
p la n n in g , e con om ics,
Requires equivalent of urban studies, architec
graduation from a four- ture, geography, or re-
year college or university f lated fields and re
w ith major coursework sponsible experience in
in journalism, mass com m unicipal, co un ty or
munications, marketing regional planning; e x
or related field, and three perience w orking w ith
years of progressively re citizen groups or any
sponsible experience in equivalent combination
p u b lic in f o r m a t io n , of experience and train
m arketing, prom otions ing. WCO applications
or other journalistic ac 1 only resumes not a c
tiv itie s , including ex cepted. Last filing date,
perience of a supervisory May 8, 1981. Apply:
or administrative-nature.
WASHINGTON
S h o u ld
p o s s e s s COUNTY PERSONNEL
thorough knowledge of
Room 305
communications, public
150 N. First Avenue
re la tio n s , a d v e rtis in g
Hillsboro, OR 97123
principles, m arketin g/
1503)648 8606
p ro m o tio n techniques
An Equal Opportunity
and graphic design
Employer
and layout principles. All
SOCIAL WORKER
applicants w ill be re
Social worker to provide
quired to subm it a sup
assement and case
plem ental application;
management to elderly
details may be obtained
plus supervision to
at the Metro Personnel
homemakers. M ust be
Office. Apply:
able to work w ith c o m
METROPOLITAN
m unity and have good
SERVICE DISTRICT
c o m m un icatio n skills.
527 S.W. Hall
B A in social w ork or
Portland, OR 97201
related field and 2 years
By F 'day, May 1, 1981,
experience in service to
at 5:00p.m., 221 1646.
elderly, or special tra in
zlrr Equal Opportunity
ing in Geriatic, social
Employer
w ork and 3 years e x
perience. $10,000
12,000 depending on
OPENING
good
Interested in opening e x p e r ie n c e ,
at Emanuel Hospital? benefits. Resumes only
Call 280 4727, 7 days a by 5:00 p.m., 5 8 81 to:
METROPOLITAN
week, 24 hours a day.
FAMILY SERVICE
EMANUEL HOSPITAL
2281 N.W. Everett
2801 N Gantenbein
Portland, OR 97201
Portland, OR 97227
.47i Equal O pportunity/
,4 zi Equal Opportunity
.4f f i r motive Action
Employer m-f-h
Employer
ASSEMBLY
ELECTRONIC
ASSEMBLERS
As a manufacturer of kidney dialysis equipment,
we are seeking experienced Electronic Assem
blers Applicants should be able to solder to
GMP standards and understand simple
schematics. Starting wage is $4.29/hour.
B D DRAKE WILLOCK offers a liberal benefit
package, in c lu d in g :' com petitive salary,
medical/dental/life insurance, savings Incentive
Plan, educational reim bursement, and
progressive retirement plan.
To apply, please contact our Human Resources
Department:
mDrakeWillock
13250 SE Pheasant Court
Portland, Oregon 97222
1503)659 3355
A n Equal Opportunity Employer m-f-h
METRO WASHINGTON
PARK ZOO
EMPLOYMENT
Sum mer tim e is just
around the corner and
M e tr o 's W a s h in g to n
Park Zoo is ready to
begin hiring fo r the
sum m er season. Posi
tio ns are available in
Food Service, Retail
Outlets, and Ticket o u t
lets, and Ticket Sales.
Candidates m ust be
at least 16 years of age
and capable of m aking
c o rre ct change (test
w ill be given) and able
to deal pleasantly w ith
the p ublic. Also, they
m ust be available fo r
weekends until Summer.
During summer, must be
available for flexible
hours, including holidays
and weekends th rough
Labor Day. A pply in
person at:
WASHINGTON
PARK ZOO
M eeting Center
4001 S.W. Canyon Road
9:30 a.m . - 12 noon,
Sat., Sun,, May 2 and 3.
,4 7i Equal Opportunity
Employer
Community Calendar Students
The Portland CETA Advisory Council meets Thursday, May 7th, al 3:00
p in , in Room 106, C ity Hall, 1220 SW lif t h . The meeting is open to the
public lor question and comment. The agenda includes the T i l) monthly
performance review.
P a tto n C en tral U nited M e th o d is t W om en hold their annual spring
Rummage Sale from It) a.m., to 4 p.m., Saturday, May 9, in friendship Hall
ol the ( hurch, 5023 N. Michigan Avenue al Alberta St. I or more in fo r
mation call 289 6251.
Special Prayers and Services: May 2nd through May 4th, in honor of
St. Peregrine, O.S.M ., the patron Saint o f those suffering from cancer and
other related diseases, in the Chapel o f Mary, May 2nd and May 4th starting
at 7:30 p.m., and al the first outdoor Mass o f the year which is scheduled for
12 noon, Sunday, May 3rd in the outdoor Grotto.
Blood Pressure Screening: Thursday, May 14, from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00
p in., and every second Thursday o f the month. Physicians and Surgeons
Hospital, 1927 NW I ovejoy Street, Portland - first floor staffroom .
Nicaragua Troubadors: Northwest Service Center, Saturday May 9th at
8 p in. I or additional information: 235-9388.
P o rtla n d W o m e n 's H e a lth C e n te r presents “ Women and Health
Beyond the Speculum,” Saturday May 2, 6-9 p.m., Westminster Church,
1624 Nl Hancock (Marcus Whitman Room) and Sunday May 3rd, 2-5 p.m.,
Portland Slate University, ( ramer Hall, Room 150. $3 donation at door, fo r
more information call 777-7044.
Senior Job Fair: Saturday, May 9, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m ., at frie n d ly
House, 1819 N.W. Everett, Basement Room. Cost is SI and fifty cents for
seniors.
Tennis Classes through Portland Community College start Saturday,
May 2, lo r live weeks at Jackson High School's tennis courts from I -2:30
p m., and the other from 2:30-4 p.m. Cost for either five week class is SI 1.50.
Oregon Legal Assistants Association (OLAA) offers a C LI session on
•Making Sense Out O f Debits and Credits,” Friday, May 15, 1981 from 1:00
to 5:00 p.m., in the auditorium o f the Georgia-Pacific Building at 9(X) SW
f ilt h Avenue, Portland, Oregon, fo r reservations please call Pamela Pendley
at 224 4540.
Pledge M on th The Black Educational Center's “ Pledge M onth” will of-
iciallv begin Triday, May I, with a k ie k -o lf party at A lb in a W omen’ s
i vague North/Northeast Youth Center, located at 8 N.E. Killingsworth. It
begins at 8 pm with free admission and refreshments. The financial goal for
pledge month is $2,500.00. I or more information call the Black Educational
(. enter School at 284-9552.
Among the 50 outstanding
presenters o f the workshops w ill be
health
and
mental
health
professionals and consumers.
Women physicians, dentists, m id
wives, social w orkers, or women
w ith experience in dealing w ith
alcohol problems, hysterectom y.
spinal cord injury and more.
D r.
Shirley
P h illip s ,
m icro b io lo g ist from Emanuel
H o sp ita l, w ill speak on “ Toxic
Shock Syndrome, What next?”
Juretta
Webb
RNP
WHC
(Registered Nurse P ractioner,
Women’ s Health Care), will discuss
“ A ffo rd a b le , Preventive Health
Care for Nurse Practitioners.” She
is the co-founder o f Nurse Prac
titioner Community Health Clinic.
Anya H offm an, M A (Counseling)
will speak on "New Roles, New Str-
stress, New “ Women and Dental
H e a lth " w ill be presented by
Beverly Cutler, DDS; and Cynthia
sought
METROPOLITAN
PUBLIC DEFENDER
Full-tim e trial assistant
openings. We are look-
[ ing fo r someone w ith
good verbal and w riting
FIELD
skills to assist our law-
M AINTENANCE
i yers and representing
WORKER 1
indigent people charged
(Unified Sewerage
with crimes. 225-9100.
Agency)
1234 S.W. M orriso n
$1175 per m onth, w ith
A n Equal Opportunity
periodic step increases,
Employer
I know ledge and ex
perience in methods and
AD D TO YOUR
j materials used to main-
INCOME
1 tain and construct sewer
lines, safely operate Caring foster parents are
maintenance equipment, needed fo r m u ltip ly
| m ust read and u nd er handicapped yo uth . A
rewarding and challeng
s ta n d
b lu e p r in t s ,
physical co n d itio n for ing experience, earning
o u t- o f- d o o r s m a n u a l
$250 to $600 of supple
work, or equivalent com mental income per m on
th. Only M ultnom ah
bination of experience
r e s id e n ts
and tra in in g . WCO a p C o u n t y
plications only. Resumes apply. Call:
CHILDREN'S
not accepted. Apply:
SERVICES DIVISION
W ASHINGTON
238 8426
COUNTY PERSONNEL
Ask for Annette.
_
Room 305
150 N. First Avenue
JOB OPENING
Hillsboro, OR
R eceptionist: 40 hour
(503) 648 8606
w eek. Typing skills
An Equal Opportunity
necessary.
Employer
777 7044
We have im m ediate needs for
experienced D ata E n try O perators.
R equires keypunch train in g , plus
m inim um of six m onths recent
experience with key to disc operating
system IBM 129, Inforex
Sw ing an d graveyard positions are
available on a five day week (M onday
through Friday).
B enefits include insurance, profit
sh a rin g and educational program s.
A pplications will he accepted
M onday, Tuesday and W ednesday,
8:30am to 4:(X)pm at our B eaverton
E m ploym ent Office, 12901 S.W Je n k in s
Koad. If unable to apply in person, call
G reg Jones, 627-8123. or send resum e to
T ektronix. Inc., Y6-054, I’.O. Box .»00,
B eaverton, OK 97077.
An equal opportunity
em ployer m f he.
Tektronix
( lM M Ittfl) i o h u i i i m i
CIRCULATION
PERSON
Commission Sales. Call:
283-2486
Stop
excusing
vourlife
away.
PAPER DRIVE
So w h a t is yo u r excuse?
Today you have a new, simple,
practical way of providing
y o u r doctor w ith a stool
Everyone has an excuse
for not seeing th e ir doctor
about colorectal cancer How
ever, every ye a r 52.000 men
and women die of colorectal
cancer in th is co un try alone
Two out of three of these
people might be saved by
specimen on w hich he can
perform the guaiac test This
can detect signs of colorectal
cancer in its early stages
before symptoms appear
While two out of three people
can be saved Ask y o u r doctor
about a guaiac test, and stop
early detection and treatm ent
excusing yo u r life away
Two out of three
H um boldt School, 491 5 N. Gantenbein, May
5th through May 8th - 1981. Lose newspaper
only. Money will benefit student activities.
(Continued from page 1 col. 4)
great deal more than the story o f
successful professionals, and in
fact, the attention accorded to these
most visible tokens o f success ob
scures the enormity o f the challenge
facing the vast m a jo rity o f Black
women in Am erica. “ We begin to
see tw o Black nations: one, the
Black poor; and the other, doing in
creasingly w e ll,” explains Eleanor
Holmes N o rto n . “ Black male-
female households under age 40 are
at econom ic p a rity w ith whites.
These are m ostly people w ith
educations. H ow ever, the Black
com m unity income as a whole has
decreased. The reason has been the
grow th o f Black female-headed
households.”
Confronted with the need to raise
c h ild re n alone, themselves often
barely more than teenagers who
became pregnant in high school and
dropped out, these mothers must do
the best (hey can in a d iffic u lt
situation. And if many o f them are
“ emerging” in the process, it is not
as lawyers or politicians or artists -
but as clerical workers.
“ In a single g e n e ra tio n ,” says
N o rto n , “ the m a jo rity Black
women’ s occupation has changed
from dom estic w orker to clerical
w o rk e r.” For many Blacks, she
adds, " i t ’ s a big step up from rural
area or a city ghetto not to have to
go in to som ebody’ s kitchen to
w ork.”
A search has begun to find three
local high school students willing to
participate in a m in o rity research
apprentice program this summer at
Portland State University.
The program is sponsored by the
Office of Naval Research, according
to D r. Herman J. M id lio re ,
Associate Professor o f Mechanical
Engineering at PSU.
Plans are to allo w the three
students to work fu ll time on cam
pus during the summer on projects
being conducted by Dr. M ig lio re ,
l)r. W illia m Savery, M echanical
Engineering department head, and
Dr. Franz Rad, C iv il Engineering
department head.
M ig lio re ’ s w ork involves com
puter graphics and expanding the
problem solving capabilities o f the
Engineering
D ivisio n
newly-
acquired computer. Savery and Red
are investigating other engineering
phenomena using experim ental
techniques.
The student interns w ill be paid a
salary while they are at PSU. A p
plications w ill be accepted through
F rid ay, May I. For more in f o r
m atio n, contact Dr. M ilg ilo re at
229-4281 or 229-4631.
But that may not necessarily
mean great progress. "T h e clerical
area is now the m ajor area o f
d is c rim in a tio n ,” according to
N o rto n , whose term at EEOC
brought significant reform s in the
discrim ination com plaint process.
“ In many cases,” she says, “ women
could get more money sweeping
flo o rs . Black women have a
disp ro p ortion ate stake in clerical
w ork, because they often have no
other options...”
For a tim e, it looked as though
the w om en’ s movement m ight
provide an answer, but many Black
women have reached the same con
Hodge, DDS.
Am ong other topics w ill be:
Herbs; Natural alternatives; cancer
risks and a lterna tive treatm ent;
pregnancy/postpartum; women and
depression; n u tritio n ; herpes con
tro l; m iscarriage and a b o rtio n ;
menopause and hysterectomy; vic
tim personality - self defense and
your health, and women’s weight.
The fee for each day w ill be $5, or
$8 for both days, according to Anne
Eraser Bagwell, d ire c to r o f the
YW CA Women’ s Resource Center
and in charge o f arrangements for
the conference.
•f
TEACHING POSITION
Immaculate Heart Com
m un ity
School A n
nounces one opening for
teaching position: M ulti
age room o f 9, 10, 11
year olds. Apply:
Sister M ary Breiling
26 NE Morris
287-2332
Keypunch
Operators
American
Cancer Society
Black women build the community
Y sponsors women's health conference
Portland YW CA w ill sponsor a
Women's Health ta re Conference
on May 2 and 3 at the dow ntow n
YWCA. From 9 a.m., to 4 p.m., on
Saturday, emphasis will be for con
sumers o f health services. Sunday’ s
workshop from 10:30 to 3:30 p.m.,
will have a provider emphasis.
OPENING
St. Andrew Community
S chool. Teachers fo r
grades 1-2 and 4-5.
Qualifications: Valid ele
mentary teachers certifi
cate
(O regon), re f
erences, m in o rity p re
ferred. Contact:
Sister Kathleen Stupfel
PRINCIPAL
4919 N.E. 9th
Portland, OR 97211
284 1620
nW
clusion as Jan Douglass: The
coalition just doesn’ t w ork. “ The
sexist behavior in the Black com
munity is coining out o f powerless
ness, not powerfulness,” she obser
ves. “ The fundamental difference is
that Black women are not poor and
oppressed because o f Black men.
Attorney Alfreida Harrell argues
that the involvement with feminism
may have actually been divisive for
Blacks. “ W hite women have
enough resources. O ur e ffo rts
should be directed towards Black
people. We aren’ t able to split our
selves among different causes.”
The Federal government is
backing away. W hite women have
utterly d ifferen t problems. A pat
tern begins to emerge: I f Black
women are m aking it somehow,
they are, as Norton put it, “ doing it
alone.”
And nowhere is th eir aloneness
more apparent than in their
separation from Black men.
“ You look around in the com
m unity today,” says Mae Jackson,
a Black playwright and counselor at
B ro o k ly n ’ s F am ily C ouret, “ and
there are only women and children -
- no men, yet we grew up assuming
we w ould get m arried and have
ch ild re n . None o f us thought o f
ourselves without a Black man.”
“ The whole male-female relation
ship is in flu x ” says C arrie Perry,
Executive D ire c to r o f Am isted
House, a group home fo r troubled
teenagers in Hartford, Connecticut.
“ It’ s an awkward time for the girls,
when you take the diminished Black
male population — the young men
who are le ft a fte r the numbers in
prison , in the service, k ille d , on
drugs or homosexual - the girls
have to decide how much they are
w illin g to give up when the com
petition is so great...These attitudes
are part o f a long term process.”
A nd yet -- w ith o u t the govern
ment, without leaders, without allies
and without even their men - Black
women are somehow enduring.
They are raising th e ir ch ild re n,
opening and closing the community
center, taking those firs t d iffic u lt
steps into unglarnorous clerical jobs
— honoring the old woman with the
hoe.
“ Black women have always been
the keepers o f the c o m m u n ity ,”
says Jan Douglass. “ We are going
to have to keep the com m unity
together again.”
COPYRIGHT 1981 Pacific News Service
You can
touch him
lives ol many more
children and men
and women who
have handicaps by
giving to
Easter Seals
w
u
J