Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, June 26, 1996, Page 4, Image 4

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P or i land O bserver
College Students Going Global In Ghana
Education in West Africa is very
different from education in the Unit­
ed States. Four students from West­
ern Oregon State college will soon
find out why.
Charla Pierson, Denyse Moore,
Dan Dugan and Hanisi Everett will
work for three months as interns at
Cape Coast University in Ghana, one
o f the best-known universities in
Africa and former home to such fa­
mous personalities as writer Toni
Morrison and poet Maya Angelou.
The internships are part o f a $4
million federally funded program
called "Global Graduates”, in which
students combine hands-on work
experience with immersion in a for­
eign language and culture. "Interna­
tional trade is growing rapidly,” said
Duncan Wyse, Executive Director
of the Oregon Business Council.
"This program will help prepare O r­
egonians for the global market.”
W estern is developing G lobal
Graduates around its pre-existing
intern programs and the strengths of
the college, said Assistant Sociology
Professor Maureen Dolan, who is
coordinating the internships. By fo­
cusing W estern’s Ghana practicums
in a university setting, we are tailor­
ing them to meet each student’s edu­
cational needs, she explained.
One o f the students participating
is senior Education major, Everett.
"Travel opens your mind to all the
possibilities” she said.
WOSC Global Graduates: (Back row t-r) Maureen Dolan, Charla Pierson, Dan Dugan, Hal Werner:
(Front row l-r) Hanisi Everett, Denyse Moore.
Everett, who is from Bend, inher­
ited her fascination for international
travel from her father, a photogra­
pher for N ational G eographic.
Everett is already establishing a pen
pal exchange between the pupils she
student-teaches at McNary High
School and her future students in
Ghana. She also will serve as a liai­
son between the YMCAs in Oregon
and Ghana.
Everett and Dugan, a senior Edu­
cation major originally from Aloha,
will use their experience teaching at
the university in their future careers
as teachers. “ I was first interested in
Africa when I heard the old names -
- the Gold Coast, the Ivory Coast. It
Readings At Powell’s
Literature in Performance,
Monday, July 15th, 7:30 pm
Kim Sandström reads from A Tree
Grows bi Brooklyn by Betty Smith.
Marcy Houle,
Tuesday, July 16th, 7:30 pm
Situated in the hills west o f the
city. Forest Park contributes to Port­
land’s renowned livability by offer­
ing close-in recreational opportuni­
ties. Forest Park's 5.000 acres make
it the nation's premiere urban forest,
providing miles o f trails and the
chance to see native plants and ani­
mals in their natural habitat. One
C ity's Wilderness (Oregon Histori­
cal Society Press) serves as a history
and resource to this remarkable trea­
sure. Author Marcy Houle explains
why the land comprising the park
remained untouched by developers
for so long. She tells o f the efforts o f
those dedicated citizens who estab­
lished this city park and o f those who
are protecting it for future use. This
updated edition provides directions
to twenty hikes o f varying length,
difficulty and scenery, with a map
accompanying each hike, illustrat­
ing it in greater detail.
Deirdre Bair,
Wednesday, July 17th, 7:30
Deirdre Bair, renowned for her
biographies o f Samuel Beckett and
Simone de Beauvior, has now writ­
ten the definitive biography o f the
complex and controversial Anais
Nin. With exclusive and unprece­
dented access to all o f N in’s unpub­
lished archives, including more than
250,000 handwritten diary pages,
Bair paints a startlingly different
portrait o f Nin, hitherto best known
for her sexual peccadilloes and es­
pecially her affair with Henry Mill­
er. In Anais Nin: a Biography (Pen­
guin), Bair reveals N in’s lifelong
struggle to become a respected writ­
er, to position herself at the right
hand o f the intellectual elite, and to
construct a way o f life so complicat­
ed that it verged at times on incom­
prehensibility, even to herself. For
more information, please contact
Alison Koop o f Penguin Publicity at
212/366-2274.
Carolyn Kizer,
Thursday, July 18th 7:30 pm
Her career as a poet has caused
readers, students, friends, and critics
to think o f Carolyn Kizer as one o f
the nation’s finest virtuosos in the
difficult art o f poetry—giving the
passions o f her time and place a
permanent voice. Throughout her ca­
reer, however, K izer has also spoken
out in prose on a great many topics,
not only on the concerns o f women
and the art o f poetry but also her
lifelong studies in Asian literature,
her involvement in a broad range o f
contemporary literary and political
mises-en-scenes, and her Sapphic
impatience with the tawdry and the
unworthy.
For more information, please con­
tact Powell’s Publicity at 503/228-
4651.
was intriguing, so I started studying
the continent, "said Dugan. "I want
to learn more and dispel some o f the
myths about Africa.”
Dugan explains the common mis­
conception o f Africa as a small entity
in w hich disease and war in one coun­
try- distort the entire continent’s im­
age. “some people think (the dis­
ease) Ebola is all over,” he said
Dispelling myths is just one way
students and their communities in
both the U.S. and Africa will benefit.
"It will be a cultural and work ex­
change. in which the students w ill fit
into the work settin g ,’’said Hal
Wei ner, a track and Held coach who
has lived in Ghana and will advise
the students throughout their intern­
ship. “ T hey'll establish personal
links, meet families; they will reach
beyond what they can glean from
news, films and tourists, “ he said.
Another student participating is
Pierson, who grew up in Salem. The
senior Health major plans to bring
back new information about the ways
in which people in Africa deal with
tropical illnesses. "This experience
will give me a work view of health,
said Pierson, who will work with
health educators at the university.
Pierson chose to work in Africa part­
ly to learn how people are dealing
with illnesses that are unique to that
continent.
She and Moore expressed a vest­
ed interest in their work in Africa that
goes beyond travel and new experi­
ences Moore, a senior Speech Com­
munications major originally from
North Portland, is W estern's student
body president-elect and plans to
someday become a college presi­
dent.
For her and Pierson, this is a return
to their roots, a chance to research
family history and pick up some of
the missing links. "It will be an in­
tense experience, being able to step
back into ancestral grounds," said
Moore
Moore will work with the admin­
istration o f the university and plans
to do a comparative study o f the
university in Ghana and Oregon. “ I’m
focussing on what I can bring back to
the school and the multicultural stu­
dent union, and what will help the
college where 1 become a president,”
she said.
The students’ internships represent
a culmination o f life-long dreams
and a launch pad for their future
careers. They recognize the impor­
tance o f this project as a precedent
for interns to come. "W e are the first
interns, so we have to pave the way
for students coming after us,” said
Everett.
h J
Spike Lee Teams With Budweiser, Edwin Moses For UNCF Commercial: Film maker Spike Lee
(center) is shown on the campus of Morehouse College in Atlanta with members o f the Budweiser
brand team and Olympic hero Edwin Moses (left) following final shots o f a commercial on behalf of
The College Fund/UNCF. The 30-second spot, which will be shown in prime-time and late night slots,
shows a young Edwin Moses running and jumping over any and everything as part o f his track and
field training while a student at Morehouse. The commercial, which also will be shown during the
Centennial Olympic Games, concludes with Moses on campus, with students extolling the value of
education at historically-black colleges and universities. Congratulating Lee and Moses on their work
(from right) are Danny Scott, Manager o f Ethnic Marketing for Anheuser-Busch Inc., John Quigley,
Budweiser Brand Manager, and Alex Ruelas, Senior Manager, Ethnic Marketing.
My American Journey
By Colin Powell With Joseph E. Persico
M ine is the sto ry o f a black kid
o f no early p rom ise from an im ­
m igrant fam ily o f lim ited m eans
who w as raised in the S o u th
Bronx and som ehow rose to b e­
com e the N ational S ecu rity Ad-
v is o r to th e P resid en t o f the U n it­
ed S tates and then C hairm an o f
the Jo in t C hiefs o f Staff.
School Boost
For Parents
Parents across the greater Port­
land area will be more involved in
their schools thanks to 10 grants
supplied by Hand in Hand, a coali­
tion o f parents and school and com­
munity leaders, who have come to­
gether to develop and promote pro­
grams that benefit children.
Hand in Hand supplied $5,000
total to 10 sites in several school
districts, including Portland, Bea­
verton, Gresham-Barlow, Sandy and
North Plains More than 90 schools
applied for the grants
Winners were selected for their
innovation and for their commit­
ment to increase parent involvement
in schools.
“The process showed a tremen­
dous commitment to volunteerism
in schools throughout the Portland
area There were dozens o f programs
that deserved our support. Selecting
the grant winners was very diffi­
cult," said Gary Dombroff, Co-Chair
o f the Hand-in-Hand Coalition.
I
It is a story o f hard work and good
luck, o f occasional rough times, but
mostly good times. It is a story of
service and soldiering. It is a story
about the people who helped make
me what I am. It is a story o f my
benefiting from opportunities creat­
ed by the sacrifice ofthose who went
before me and maybe my benefiting
those who will follow. It is a story of
faith—faith in myself, and faith in
America. Above all, it’s a love story:
love o f family, o f friends, o f the
Army, and o f my country.
It is a story that could only have
happened in America.
From the preface to M y Ameri­
can Journey
Maybe we can’t make Northeast Portland a
perfect place to live. But we’re making
hundreds of improvements.
New & used books on
Business, Music, &
African-American Studies
POWELL'S
CITY OF BOOKS
Portland General Electric’s Employees Seed the Future.
9 AM - 11 PM Monday through Saturday
9 AM - 9 PM Sundays
Used books bought every day till 8:30 PM
On the #20 Bus Line • One hour free parking
1005 West Burnside Street
“Seed the Future” is a five year partnership with Friends of Trees to
plant 144,000 trees and seedlings around Portland. Those trees will help
beautify neighborhoods and purify our air. At PGE, we think a power
company can do more than make a profit. It can make a difference.
228-4651
Portland General Electric