Page 8, Section II, Portland Observer, May 29, 1986 Resources: Where to write for information about colleges and scholarships Because o f the recent cutbacks in the federal financing o f student aid pro­ grams, many except the most diligent, w ill be unable to attend the college o f their choice. In addition, increased competition for limited funds demands that a student not wait until the last minute to seek inform ation or available funds. Start in your sophomore year. Perhaps the first step should be to speak with a guidance counselor at the high school. Be persistent, fo r the "squeaky wheel gets the grease.” D on't accept a "see me tom orrow " and return three days later. Keep asking for leads. After all, this is one o f the areas in which a conviction will be helpful. Ask at your local library for publications that can help lead you to possible sources. Check w ith your parent or guardian — does his jo b have scholarships available for children o f employees? Write to your state Department o f Higher Education for available grants/scholarships. M any Black businesses have foundations that o ffe r scholarships/grants to deserving students. In addition, investigate those corporations that advertise in Black publications — do a little detective work, find their corporate address and send them a letter o f inquiry. P hillip M orris annually publishes A Guide l<> Black Organizations In it are listed almost tw o hundred Black organizations that are interested in progress. A ll do not have financial aid available, but a 22-cent stamp will help you to find out. The address is: P hillip Morris, USA Public A ffairs Department, 120 Park Ave . New York. N Y. 10017. Some other foundations and their addresses are: Bill Robinson foundation, 313-A N orth 2nd St.. Richmond, V A ; Carnegie Corporation o f N Y. 59« Fifth Ave., New Y ork, NY 10018; Ford Foundation, 477 Madison Ave., New York, NY; General Education Board, 111 W 50th St., New York, NY 10019; Harmon Foundation, 140 Nassau St.. New York, NY; Houston Endowment, Inc., P O. Box 1414, Houston, T X ; John Jay Whitney Foundation, 9 Rockefeller Plaza, New York. NY; John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, 90 Park Ave., New York, N Y; McGregor Fund, 2486 First National Bldg . Detroit. M I; National Phillis Wheatley Foundation, The Phillis Wheatley Home, 4450 Cedar Ave., Cleveland, G H ; Phelps - Stokes Fund, 297 Park Ave. South, New York, N Y; The Rocke­ feller Foundation. 111 W. 50th St., New York. NY; Rosenwald Foundation, packard Bklg , Philadelphia, PA; Sachs Foundation, 41« First National Bank Bldg., Colorado Springs, CO; Southern Conference Education Fund, «22 Perido St., New Orleans, L A ; Southern Education Foun­ dation Inc., 913 Cypress St. NE, Atlanta, G A , and Taconic Foundation, 666 Fifth Ave., New York, NY. The Foundation Center, located at 888 Seventh Avenue, has the mose compre­ hensive listing o f foundations under one ro o f. One must go there in person, however, as they do not give assistance by mail or phone. Some large libraries have their Foundation Directory in the reference section. Armed with this limited information to begin your search, don’t forget to ask those you know who they know Networking is important. Good luck! Let Portland Observer classified s work for you I call 283-0090 PCC student Steve Scott (left! get* on the-job training in alcohol end drug counseling at Project for Community Recovery He « working under the aupeviaion of PCR'a lead counselor. Harry Watson (right) From abuser to counselor " A ll the people I knew when I was druggm’ on the streets are dead," says 52-year-old Steve Scott. They died violently, from overdoses, from disease. Scott didn’ t join his friends. Three and one-half years ago, he says, " I got sick and tired o f being sick and tired " He didn't want to end up like the other dealers and abusers he knew A lter IH years o l drug abuse, nine on a methadone program, Scott “ went home and went to bed" and detoxed himself. “ Il took one year,” he adds, but it's not a method he’d recommend to others. He got o ff methadone, but started drinking. and credits Alcoholics and Narcotics Anonymous with helping him stay clean and sober. What Scott recommends now is getting help — and he's learning how to provide that for others H e'll grad uatc from Portland Com m unity C o l­ lege, Cascade campus, June 1986, with an A A degree in alcohol and drug counseling — a new program at Cascade, designed to offer specific training in how to help alcohol and drug abusers. " I'd not been to schixil since 1948," says Scott. " I 'd forgotten every­ thing I started in basic reading, basic w riting.” Right now, thougn, Scott is com­ pleting his first practicum, getting on- the-job experience under the super­ vision o f counselors at Project for Com m unity Recovery (PCR), located at 735 N orth Alberta PCR opened in July 1984, as a jo in t project o f the Center fo r Community Mental Health and De Paul Center, Inc. Scott says such a center was badly needed in N orth Portland because it's m ulticultural. The staff there knows, he says, "th a t you have to deal with a person's culture. Most treatment centers are designed for middle-class, white males. Blacks' needs are not always the same." " It 's not a different style o f treat­ m ent," says PC R Director Bernard Ings. “ Il's being sensitive to cultural background." “ The concept is new ," Ings adds "W e 're fortunate to be developing m ulticultural treatment here There isn't anybody in the country that has a real handle on it . " M ulticultural treatment starts with a m ulticultural staff. PCR has six counselors — one white, one H aw ai­ ian, four Black The number includes two women. Some, like Scott, are recovering alcoholics or abusers. Others are not. According lt> PCR's lead counse­ lor, Harry Watson, that kind o f staff helps prevent a feeling often created by white-male oriented centers: "O n some level," he says,"people don't fed they belong there. They know those centers weren't made for them ." Scott says cultural differences a f­ fect counseling techniques at limes, things like eye contact or the methods used to get a client to talk about his feelings. He says out-patient treat­ ment is often necessary since people worry about what " to do with the kids and w ho'll pay the bills” if they're treated as in-patients. PCR counselors don't just help a person get clean and sober. They help with housing, relationships, children, employment — whatever is needed to treat the whole person. Scon believes one o f the biggest things he has to offer as a counselor is his experience: " A t 52, I was out there a long time. I've got a lot o f experience o f street life. I ’ve been in and out o f institutions. I can tell people what that kind o f life is like and how dangerous it is. A lot ot people don’ t live to get treatm ent." Life has lurried around for Scott. His wife is a recovering alcoholic and addict, enrolled at Marylhurst with plans to be a therapist. His three girls, ages 20, 18. and 14, aren't in­ volved with "drugs or alcohol yet. I got my fingers crossed.” Sant says, " I know I don't have to dnnk or use. I d o n 't.” "H e 's bea u tifu l," Ings says. "W e hope he’ ll hang a ro u n d " after he graduates." Fees for services at PCR are on a sliding scale. No one is denied services because o f inability to pay. For more inform ation, call 281-2804. For more inform ation about PCC- Cascade's Alcohol and Drug Counsel­ ing Program, call program director Susan Garber at 283-2541, ext. 395 There w ill be an introductory course offered this summer. Law school hosts students National University School o f Law, San Diego, invites all prospective law schixil students and other interested individuals to an orientation o f the NU Law Schixil Saturday, June 8, trom 2 to 6 p.m. at the Portland H ilton, 921 S.W. Sixth Ave. National University’s l aw Schixil provides exceptional support for individual growth and development for the beginning law student. Focus is directed toward organizational, intellectual and communication skills as well as conventional subjects in law. National stresses quality, indi­ vidualized instruction to an extent not customarily found at other law schools. National University Schixil o f Law is accredited by the Committee o f Bar Examiners o f the Stac o f C ali­ fornia. Support the (O) M arch of Dimes r THE BANK THAT INTEGRATION BUILT I i i I G(X)d banking is more than just a black and white way of doing things. .At American State Bank, it’s people of all colors and nationalities working together to offer you greater flexibility and more personal consideration than you’d expect to get anywhere. In fact, we’ve earned a reputation for making an extra effort to help businesses which, like ours, were started by individuals with more determination than money. Chinese restaurants. A tennis club in Portland. A Vancouver Plush Pippin owned by a Hawaiian. A Portland construction equipment sales firm. With a reputation like that, it isn’t surprising that American State Bank is getting bigger every day. And so are our customers. American State Bank 2nd A la m h ill Branch M ain Office 2737 \ E l mon Ave Portland 1 »R 97212 282 2216 204 S * Yam M I Portland < *K 97204 241 1937 J ■ • , *■ V '• ’ KV A ’ • J ' » - •.