Hi»#«; io pu, ,|an(j (Jbe»erver Black History Month February 28, 1 999 BIDS/SUB-BIDS/LEGAL NOTICES NURSING PO RTLAND STATE UNIVERSITY PO RTLA N D , OREGON COMMUNITY HEALTH DIVISION DIRECTOR 2 TENURE TRACK FACULTY POSITIONS Director community health program for Douglas County Health & So­ cial Services Dept. Programs w- clude; communicable disease con­ trol, parent & child health, school health, adult health, family plan­ ning and W1C. Position develops and implements policies and pro­ cedures, budgets and grants. Salary $2435-53110 per month plus full family benefits. Requires BA/S in nursing with course work emphasis in public health plus 5 years in public health setting which includes 2 years management/supervision experience. At time of appointment, candidate must have current Ore­ gon Registered Nurse license and valid ODL. For more information and application, contact Douglas C o u n ty P e rs o n n e l, Courthouse .Room 322, Roseburg OR 974, in Oregon 1-800-452-0991, Ext. 405. Assistant Professor, Tenure Track, K- 12 Teacher Education. Dept. of Curriculum and Instruction. Respon­ sibilities include teaching, coordi­ nating field experience, supervis­ ing student teachers, and conduct­ ing research in an appropriate field. Doctorate with potential for or record of research and scholarship; evi­ dence of experience of at least 3 years successful public school K- 12 teaching; evidence of appropri­ ate experience in urban, multicul­ tural settings. Strong preference will be given to candidates with the ability to relate to an ethnically diverse student population. EDUCATION FOUNDATIONS/ SOCIAL SCIENCE Teaching to include such courses as social and cultural foundations of education, social studies methods. Other ¡possible assignments include; multicultural education, and/or classroom management. Teaching strengths in the social and cultural foundations with a specialty in the social sciences is preferred. MATH,SCIENCE/ TEACHER EDUCATION Teaching to include such courses as elementary math and science meth­ ods, middle school math methods, secondary math methods, and sec­ ondary science methods; other possible assignments include teach­ ing ano learning, integrated ele­ mental methods, multicultural educauon, mstruction/tcchnology. Strong background in teaching and learning preferred. Submit detailed letter of application, curriculum vita, and 3 professional references to Chair, Search Com­ mittee, Curriculum and Instruction, Portland State University, PO Box 751, Portland, OR 97207, Applica- ’ tion review begins March 9, 1990 and will continue until position is filled. PSU is committed to increasing the ethnic and cultural diversity o f the faculty. PSU is an AA/EEO employer. The Private Industry Council is recruit­ ing for a Trainer for the Northeast Employment and Training Program office. This position is responsible for training participants in effec­ tive job search and personal skill building techniques,testing and interviewing individuals with employment barriers to assist them in selecting vocational goals, and placing individuals in appropriate training programs. P referred requirem ents: Bachelors degree with major course work in education, counseling, or closely related field; two years work expe­ rience in classroom instruction, employment interviewing, counsel­ ing, vocational guidance and/or curriculum planning; knowledge of vocational testing; experience working with economically disad­ vantaged populations. Qualifying experience may be substituted for education. Salary range: $18,263 to $27,831 plus excellent benefit package. Closing date 5 PM, Monday, March 12,1990. Applications available at The Private Industry Council, 520 SW 6th Ave.jSuite 400, Portland, OR 97204. INFORM ATIONAL ADVERTISEM ENT ADVERTISEMENT FOR BID CALL FOR BIDS W IEGAND HALL REROOFING DEPARTM ENT O F TRANSPORTATION • HIGHW AY DIVISION Sealed bids will be received until 9 am on March 15, 1990, for the projects listed below: Sealed bids for the Wiegand Hall Reroofing, Areas B & C project will be received by the Oregon State Board of Higher Education until 2:00 P.M., local lime, March 27,1990. Additional information may be obtained by contacting the OSU Physi­ cal Plant, Adams HaH. Corvallis, Oregon 97331-2001 or telephone (503) 737-4921. SUB-BIDS REQUESTED M etro South Station Modification Bid Date: W ednesday, M arch 14, 1990 at 3:00 P.M. County Multnomah Swift Intchng./Delta Park Sec. of Pacific Hwy. (1-5) in Portland. Grading, Pave, Struc., Signing, Ilium. & Signals. DBEGoal. Malheur Lake Vale Rock Prod. Project, John Day Hwy., 35 mi. NW of Vale. Lakeview Rock Prod. Project, Klamath Falls- Lakeview Hwy. W of Lakeview. Clatsop & Tillamook Necanicum R.-I St. (Nehalem) Sec. of the Oregon Coast Hwy. (U.S. Rt. 101), 2 units bet. Cannon Beach Jet. & Nehalem. Paving. 18407 S.W. Boones F erry Rd. • P.O. Box 949 Tualatin, OR 97062 (503) 620-7652 FAX: (503) 620-6825 C.C.B. #53384 We are an equal opportunity employer and request sub-bids from small business, minority and women-owned business and disadvantage busi­ ness enterprises. Lane Rattlesnake Creek-Wheeler Rd. Sec. of Willamette Hwy. (Rt. OR58) near Dexter. Grading & Paving. Washington Murray Blvd.-Jefferson/Columbia Sec. of the Sunset Hwy. (U.S. Rt. 26). Ramp Control Signal Instal. DBE G o al Benton Corvallis ECL-NW Rondo St. Sec. of the Albany-Corval lis Hwy. (U.S. Rt. 20) start, at E. city lim. o f Corvallis. Paving. CITY OF PORTLAND Baker Middle Bridge Rd.-Powder River Sec. of the Baker- Copperfield Hwy. (Rt. 86) beg. approx. 17 mi. E. of Baker. Overlay. Tillamook Old Condor Br.-Pacific City Rd. Sec. of the Oregon Coast Hwy. (US Rt. 101) start. 2 mi. N. of Hebo. Paving. TODD CONSTRUCTION, INC. INVITATION FOR PROPOSALS Equal Opportunity Employer TRAINER OREGON STATE BOARD O F H IG H ER EDUCATION DUE 2:00 P.M. ON VARIOUS DATES Sealed Proposals will be received at the Bureau of Purchases and Stores, Room 1313, Portland Building, 1120 SW Fifth Ave., Portland, OR 97204 for the (Projects) detailed below until 2:00 P.M. on the dates indicated. Plans and Specifications may be obtained at the above address. For additional information telephone Buyer at number listed. Unless otherwise stated in the individual proposals listed herein, no proposal or bid will be considered unless accompanied by a bid surety for an amount not less than ten percent (10%) of the aggregate amount of the proposal. The City encourages bidding by MBE’s and FBE’s and will assist such firms to understand and participate in formal bidding process. NON-DISCRIMINATION: No proposal or bid will be considered unless the bidder is certified as an EOE Affirmative Action Employer as prescribed by Chapter 3.100 of the Code of the City of Portland. EfiUEUSAL NO. 68 71 80 81 An Affirmative Action! Equal Opportunity Employer OPENING DATE NE MLK Blvd. Overlay, Glisan to Multnomah. Call Michele Ackerman, *796-6854. Prequalification in Class 2-Street Improvements Required. 3/13/90 Columbia Blvd. Treatment Plant Maintenance/Stores Facility. Call Bill Frazier, 796-6855 Prequalification in Class 19-Building Construction Required. 3/27/90 Boat Ramp Repair at Cathedral Park. Call Carlton Chayer, 796-6855. Prequalification in Class 6-Dredging & Pile Driving Required. 3/13/90 Asbestos Removal at Various Locations. Call Carlton Chayer, 796-6855. Prequalification in Class 36-Special (Buildings) Required. 3/13/90 DESCRIPTION Clackamus & Pacific Hwy.-Clackamus Hwy. Sec of the E. Portland Washington Freeway (1-205) beg. near the jet. of 1-5 & 1-205. Signing. DBEGoal. Washington & Marion Walnut S t (Hillsboro)-SL Paul ECL Sec. of the Hillsboro- Silverton Hwy. (S l Rt. 219), 2 units bet. Hillsboro & St. Paul. Paving. Union Hot Lake-Union Sec. of the LaGrande-Baker Hwy. (Rt. 203), beg. approx. 11 mi. SE of LaGrande. Overlay. Malheur Idaho State Line-Jordan Valley Sec. of the I.O.N. Hwy. (U.S. Rt. 95) start, at the Idaho State Line. Recycle, Overlay & Chip Seal. Plans, specifications, and bid documents may be obtained in Rm. 10, Transportation Building, Salem, OR 97310. Prime contractors must be prequalified ten days prior to the bid opening day. For additional infor­ mation, please contact Commission Services at 348-6526. If your business is not certified as a Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (DBE) or a Women Business Enterprise (WBE), please contact the Office of Minority, Women, and Emerging Small Business at 155 Cottage, Salem, OR 97310, phone (503) 378-5651. A DBE Prebid Workshop will be held beginning at 9 am on March 8, 1990, at the AGC Center, 9450 SW Commerce Circle, Salem, OR 97310, phone (503) 378-5651. B lack H istory M onth • F ebruary 1 9 9 0 Black Civil Servants Charles Richard Drew Constance Berry Newman by Dwayne Boyd From espionage agents to astronauts. Black Americans have a long and distin­ guished history with the federal govern­ ment. Of course, in all areas o f American history, cultural or political, Blacks have established their place in this country's development. But one o f the most visible areas has been in public service. As we reflect on the achievements o f our prede­ cessors this month, let us look at a few civil servants who have paved the way. M ary Elizabeth Bowser The Civil War produced a Black espio­ nage agent long before television invented B ill Cosby’s character on “ I S p y .” B om a slave on th V a n lew plantation outside Richmond Virginia. Mary Elizabeth Bowser was freed after her master John VanLew died in 185' She *- as sent to Philadelphia to be educated by Mrs. VanLew, returning io Kicnmonu alte the Civil War broke out .o hei, iV is V an lew with her espionage work 9i > r w-is sent to the home of Jefferson «avis. President of the Confeder- , as . o. ’he Union army. Working as a ma.d, she in. norized military plans aiidcinnrr .que, an«. -«•layedthemtoMrs. 'ar.Lew • ho in ti'-i gave them to General U iy ssts S. Giant the Union army. Amb-os» C a liver Ambrose Caliver was the senior spe- :ia si ui tin ■■ ,ir m o f Black Americans under • « .«over and Roosevelt for he V S. Office >f Fdti aii.in He served fr ,m 193o to 194« Rom in Saltville, Vir- i,. this former coal miner Attended \ j. , , i- ■ iile College, and received ,, or.iel management from 1«„ - v. si v : was the first B la ci mail u e appouiivd dean o f Fisk Univer- si J ' w f ' ” 930 that he left Fisk to wosit • th« li - -.'I t<.«v fir m e r ' While these he P« »g V When sworn-in on June 12, 1989, Newman became the first Black woman to head the U.S. C ivil Service. Beginning her career as a G S-3 clerk typist at the Depart­ ment o f Interior, Mrs. Newman has held numerous federal positions, including Assistant Secretary o f the Department o f Housing and Urban Development; Director o f VISTA; and Commissioner and Vice- Chairman o f the Consumer Product Safety Commission. In 1985, she received the Secretary o f D efense Medal for Outstand­ ing Public Service. Newman has dedicated herself to im­ proving the status o f women and minorities in the federal workforce. “ There are many potential opportunities for women and minorities at all levels o f governm ent The work is there, the opportunities are there," she says. c The trouble with opportunity L is it j comes disguised as hard work. Henry Ossian Flipper B om into slavery, Henry Flipper and his family were freed when Union forces invaded Georgia in 1865. Four years later, on the recommendation o f Congressman J.C. Freeman, he was admitted to the United States Military Academy at W est Point. In 1877, Flipper became the first Black to graduate from the academy. Commissioned a second lieutenant with the Tenth Cavalry at Fort Sill, it was his regim ent's responsi­ bility to prevent Indians from raiding into Texas. In 1908, he became a consultant to the Sierra Mining Company in M exico. U.S. Senator Albert Hall called on Flipper, as an exparton Mexican politics, for information which was presented to the Congressional Subcommittee on Latin-American Affairs. Flipper continued his service with tlje federal government as a Spanish language ejper, and he w ^¡¡pointed Assistant Secretary o f the Interior in 1919. .v.k.t. .» zj Bom in Washington, D.C., Charles Drew is widely known as a pioneer in the devel­ opment o f blood plasma and helping to establish the first successful blixxl bank. After receiving his doctor o f medical sci­ ence degree from Columbia University in 1940, he became supervisor o f the blood plasma division o f the blood Transfusion Association o f N ew York City. From there he was appointed director o f the Red Cross B lood Bank in N ew York. DuringWorld War II he was appointed Ass istant Director o f the National Research Council, where he was responsible for col­ lecting blood for the U.S. Army and Navy. Drew's experiments led to the develop­ ment o f the first successful blood bank. His key contribution was his presentation of evidence showing the longer life o f plasma rather than whole blood, which often spoiled or was contaminated. The blood banks he helped develop were « ed ited with saving the lives o f many American and British servicemen during the war. Today's federal service also has its share o f Blacks who are making history. A growing number o f * 'firsts’ ’ are still being scored in the federal personnel system. Looking Toward The Future According to N ewm an’s O ffice of Personnel Management, since 1982 the number o f Blacks employed by the federal government has increased from 1 5 5 per­ cent io 16.3 percent, with the greatest gains coming in the middle ranks. This is more than 50 percent higher than Black partici­ pation in the overall national workforce By the year 2000, the federal work force is expected to include even more minorities. “ As Director o f the Office of Personnel Management, I can tell you the opportunities are really going to be there for Black Americans between now and the year 200©.“ Sty» Newman. “ As our work Force and work place change so rapidly, the real chnllnagr «(¿y Ç & fiadum gqpie l,jr dur job«, not jobs for our people.” Pennsylvania Supreme Court Gives Green Light to Execute Black Journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has pushed Black journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal a step closer to the electric chair. On Febru­ ary 2 the court denied Jamal’s petition to reargue his appeal - -the second time in less than a year that court turned down his legal challenge to the racist witchhunt which condemned him to die. N o legal barrier today stands between Jamal and the Gover­ nor's signing a death warrant. Jamal, convicted o f the 1981 killing o f a Philadelphia policeman, was a well-known journalist at the time o f his arrest. President o f the Philadelphia chapter of the A ssocia­ tion o f Black Journalists, and prominent supporter o f the MOVE organization. His regular column from death row appears in numerous newspapers around the country. “ It says plenty about the racist death pen­ alty in America that as millions celebrate Black History Month, the court has given the green light to snuff out the life o f one o f the most eloquent, insightful and com pas­ sionate spokesmen on the Black condition in print today' ’ said Linda Thurston o f the Partisan D efense Committee. Jamal wrote last March, “ don’t tell me about the ‘valley o f the shadow o f death. ’ I live there.” As a former Black Panther Party spokesman and outspoken MOVE supporter, Jamal has been in the cross hairs o f Philadelphia’s racist killer cops for over 20 years. At the sentencing hearing in 1982, the prosecutor got the death penalty by arguing that Jamal’s membership in the Black Panther Party showed he was a committed cop killer. The prosecutor cited a 12-year-old interview in the Philadelphia Inquirer in which Jamal used the Panther slogan, “ All power to the people!” The} prosecutor told the jury that a death sen-J tence would never be carried out, that Jamal! would have “ appeal after appeal after» appeal.” For years the Pennsylvania S u ­ preme Court held that this obviously false} argument required automatic reversal of} the death sentence. At Jamal's oral argu-} ment last March C hief Judge Robert Nix warned the} prosecution to not even try to justify it. Yet} the court disregarded its own precedent to} silence the man known as Philadelphia's} “ voice o f the voiceless.” SCHOLARSHIP DEADLINE High school students w ho are Interested In applying for $1,000 college scholarships should request applications by M arch 16,1990 for E d u cation al C om m u n ication s Scholarship Foundation, 721 N. M cK inley Road, Lake Forest. Illi­ nois 60045. To receive an applica­ tion, students should send a note stating their nam e, address, city, state and zip code, approxim ate grade point average and year o f graduation. Slxty-flve winners will be selected on the basis o f aca­ dem ic perform ance, Involvement in extra-curricular activities and need for financial aid. TULTEX GIVES TO KING CENTER--Tultex Corporation contributed $1,250 to the Salute to G reatness Dinner held in Jan u a ry by the M artin Luther King, J r . C enter for Nonviolent Social Change. The dinner is the annual fundraising event for the center. Tultex produces fleeced knit actisew ear and leisure clothing, and operates yarn and ap parel m anufacturing plants in Virginia and North Carolina. Robert Brown presents the check on behalf of Tultex Corporation to M rs. C oretta Scott King. r ■ -