* V w K p Page 16—The Portland Observer- June 5, 1991 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES: MINORITY ENTREPRENEURSHIP T h e office of Minority, Women and Emerging Small Business (OMWESB) offers an assortment of free services for minority or women owned business that are interested in participating governmental procurement. THE OFFICE OF MINORITY, WOMEN AND EMERGING SMALL BUSINESS SUPPORTS MINORITY OWNED BUSINESSES IN OREGON STATE OF OREGON OFFICE OF MINORITY, WOMEN AND EMERGING SMALL BUSINESS EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT, 155 COTTAGE STREET NE SALEM, OREGON 97310 (503)378-5651 ♦Certification for participation in the Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (D B E ) Program and for the Emerging Small Business (E S B ) Program. ♦ Publishes a directory of certified D B E s and E S b s that is distributed throughout the public and private sectors. ♦ Provides technical assistance for businesses interested in bidding on governmental construction, service, trade and personal/professional service contracts. ♦Advocates on behalf of D B E s and E S B s. ♦ Provides educational workshops to companies and individuals regarding the certification process. To learn more about how the Office of Minority, Women and Emerging Small Business can help you or your company, please call (5 0 3 ) 3 7 8 - 5651. OMWESB , in coordination with the Oregon Economic Development Department and Oregon Department of Transportation, encourages the use of a Toll-Free Hotline to answer questions about setting-up and running a small business, the Hotline may be accessed by dialing 1 -8 0 0 -4 4 2 -8 2 7 5 Fred Carter Certified Public Accountant Fred Carter Fred Carter graduated from Jeffer­ son H igh School and from PSU w ith a Business Adm inistration degree. Fred has w orked for M arw ick Peat, M itchell Laventhol & Horwath. He has been self-employed since 1987. M r. Carter passed the CPA exam in 1978 and became one o f the firs t black C P A ’s in Oregon. Bom and raised in Portland, he is a divorcee w ith four children. M r. Carter also is a member o f several organiza­ tions. To list a few: The Peninsula Kwianis, Oregon Association o f M in o r­ ity Entrepreneurs (0 A M E ), Center For Community Mental Health, Occupational Advisory Committee For Portland Pub­ lic Schools (chairperson), and Multnomah County A u dit Committee. Although Fred has a wide variety o f clients, his specialty is Tax. His busi­ ness location is 4550 S.W. Kruse Way, Suite 345, Lake Oswego, OR 97035 Fred has a special message for our young people. “ To our precious youth: Sometimes the pathway to what we feel is success may seem tough, but i f you keep yourself focused on that path­ way, always keeping God as the center o f your life and remembering where you came from , you can achieve that suc­ cess.” FINISH YOUR BACHELOR'S DEGREE WHILE W ORKING! Complete your Bachelor of Science Degree in Business Administration in the Degree Completion Program Finish your Bachelor's Degree while continuing to work! Working adults may complete an accredited bachelor's degree program in as little as seventeen months — while continuing to work full time! This Business Administration degree combines credit for life experiences with the opportunity to develop new management skills If you have two years of college credit, you may qualify. WARNER PACIFIC COLLEGE.. . • uses the expertise o f its REGULAR academic faculty - meets TRADITIONAL standards with a MODERN delivery system - gives credit for PRIOR experience equivalent to classroom learning • prepares you for OPPORTUNITY with a Bachelor's Degree in Business Administration w Call 7 7 5 -4 3 6 6 for more details on this exciting program It might be your ticket to a better jo b 1 To Be Young, Gifted And Encouraged Continued from page 15 G ifted) program now includes 117 o f the school’ s 1400 students. As soon as they arrive at Tilden students are taught “ critica l th inking ,” a Cass that Oat­ man developed in collaboration w ith experts from the U niversity o f N orth­ ern Colorado. “ We need to teach our children how to th in k ,” T ild e n ’ s prin­ cipal, Dr. Hazel Steward, explains. “ It’s not that they are not well-equipped mentally. They can achieve as w ell as students anywhere.” For many o f these students, the T A G program came as a not-necessar- ily-pleasant surprise. “ 1 said, ‘ Y o u ’ ve got the wrong g ir l,” ’ recalls Tashsa, 16. “ I thought, “ T hey’ ll get our hopes up, and then what i f we can’ t do what they want us to do?” ’ M any o f those chosen fo r T A G -on the basis o f grades, test scores or j ust ambi tion-m ight have looked unpromising. Some are teen­ age mothers or fathers; some are gang members, or have been. “ I f they’ re gang members, I go after them w ith a vengeance to turn them around,” Oatman says. “ I go out on the street and call them over and take them right out o f the gang i f I have too.” Last year, she got one teenage mother into college. This year, she in ­ tends to place many more. “ I find schools that can accept young m oth­ ers,” Oatman says. “ They have day care, and some have facilities so that babies can live w ith their mothers.” Principal Steward even worked to ar­ range a scholarship fo r a top-ranked student who is the father o f twins, which helps keep father, mother and children o ff the assistance rolls. To prepare them to achieve, Joyce Oatman first must teach her students to think about how they think. * ‘ W e d rill in m ajor higher-order thinking skills, ” she explains. The day I visit, one class is w orking on an exercise o f connect­ ing a set o f dots to form specific pat- tems-say, a triangle, a square and a pentagon-with no dots left over and no dot used twice. That may sound simple, but try form ing eight specified shapes out o f exactly 50 dots and see how easy it is. “ I thought anybody could con­ nect dots,” Tasha says. “ But then the problems got harder and harder, u ntil I was dreaming about dots.” These mental gymnastics help pre­ pare kids to use their minds fo r the hard work they must do to be accepted by first-rate colleges. “ I take biology geometry, history, English and critical thinking,” says Tasha’ s classmate Candice. In Oatman’s program, stu­ dents also must take physics and chem­ istry, as w ell as two years o f a foreign language, and fo ur years o f English and math. They v is it the U niversity o f Iow a’ s Connie Belin National Center for G ifted Education for diagnostic test and counseling and go on weekend retreats w ith teachers to talk about is­ sues that concern them. One group also gives up it lunch hour to train fo r next year’s American Academic Decathlon- a nationwide competition o f talented students. Can this program work? It did for eight kids at Crane .1st year. Already this year at Tilden, students have been admitted to schools like Illin o is Tech and Northeastern. The U niversity o f Iowa has volunteered staff and fa c ili­ ties to help the T A G program develop, and the Flom Foundation has given T ilden a grant to buy computers for a state-of-the-art lab. A fter school, Oat­ man teaches other teachers at Tilden how to deal w ith gifted students. She and Principal Steward are planning to extend those classes to teachers at other inner-city schools next year. You can see the results already, in the form er gang member who says, " I ’ m going to go to law school.” You can see them in the pride in David Philpot’ s eyes when he talks about the changes in his daughter, N icole, 17, since T A G began: “ She came back from the trip to the University o f Iowa w ith a goal, knowing what she wanted and know ing how to get there. She wants to be a psychologist. ’ ’ None o f these chtnges surprises Joyce Oatman, though. A i’.er 34 years o f teaching in some o f the nation’s most neglected schools, she knows exactly what she can expect t o in d in them. ‘ ‘People need to know that th:re are gifted children here,” she says. “ People who live in the inner city, in the barrio or on the reservation need to know that their children are gifted. There’ s too much native raw a b ility going through the cracks. I f a child we lose m ight have had the a b ility to cure cancer but ends up jo in in g a gang ot dealing dope, that’sudpuble loss to th» country.” That is a loss Joyce Oatman is determined to prevent. r MAINTENANCE REPAIRPERSON Telia Pak Is a world leader In pockaglng and distribution systems (or tire liquid lo o d Industry Tetra Pak In the United States consists ot throe manu facturlng facilities and several regional sales office Telia Pak has an Im m ediate opening In Its Vancouver. Washington facility tor a Class A Maintenance Repairperson. This position requires an experienced repairperson with skills and knowl­ e d g e In electrical, hydraulics, m echanical, and lathe and milling. Expe­ rience In a manufacturing environment preferred. Tetra Pak otters excellent wages and benefits. Qualified individuals should send their resume to: Tetra Pak MatWest Inc. Attn: Personnel P.O. Box 1826 Vancouver, WA 98668 There’s no end to the benefits of working for First Interstate Bank First Interstate Bank of Oregon is a great place to start or continue your banking career, whether you have banking experience or not We offer all kinds of opportunities for people with different levels of education and experience. If you are qualified, eager and interested, we have non­ management as well as management positions available We invite you to apply for one of our current openings. First Interstate offers endless opportunities for hardworking employees to develop their skills and gain new or additional work experience at our headquarters in Portland or at branch locations throughout the state Along with competitive salaries, some of the benefits you'll enjoy are o / \ © TETR A ZPAK\ z An Equal Opportunity Employer • Two medical insurance plans • Dental insurance • Life insurance • Prescription drug program • Nine paid holidays • Dependent care account • Vacation time • Banking privileges • Public transportation subsidy To apply in person, visit our Human Resources Department. 13th floor. First Interstate Bank Tower. 1300 SW 5th Ave . Portland, between 10:00 a m. and 4:30 p.m.. Monday through Friday. Or. apply at any branch during banking hours. Job Opportunity Hotline (503) 778-8188 Equal Opportunity Employer We Promote a Drug Free Workplace First Interstate Bank Mprrtber FDIC American Protective Services, Inc. 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