Committed to Cultural Diversity ZlT o nun n nt to I e n b a r www.Dortland Crisis Team members move in on School Board A Day at the Fair T he L eadership Developm ent program at Portland State U niversity, in partnership w ith organizations such as the Black United Fund, A lbina Ministerial Alliance, Center forC om m unity Mental Health, and th e U rb an L ea g u e, is o rg a n iz in g a c o m m u n ity f a ir to b rin g to g e th e r P ortland’s N orth/N ortheast residents and connect them with nonprofit organizations that help to build healthy and successful futures. T he event will be on June 3, from 10 am .- 2 pm. at the M att D ishm an Community Center, located at 77 NE Knott. Call 503/282-7973. “ g Serving Up Youth Tennis in the Parks o < 5 x t 2 | 2 The w hack o f a racquet against a tennis ball is a special sound o f sum m er - especially w hen m ade by kids and teens p a r tic ip a tin g in P o rtla n d P ark & R ecreation’s Junior Tennis in the Parks program. T hree 2-w eek sessions will be offered starting June 26 and ending A ugust 3. Lessons take place M onday- Thursday for one hour. Call 823-3189. Frem ont/M L K V ision Committee Meeting The next tw o m eetings o f the Frem ont/ M LKVisionCommitteewillbeonTuesday, M ay 30, at 6 pm. at O A M E Plaza, 4134 N. V ancouver and then on Tuesday, June 13, at the sam e tim e and location. All o f the w orking C om m ittee m eetings are open to the public and include a public com m ent tim e. D epending upon the progress o f the com m ittee, they anticipate that the next com m unity-w ide presentation to solicit com m ents on vision study alternatives will occur in July, although no firm date has been set. Additional information about this and other PDC projects is on-line at w w w .portlanddev.org/develop. T heater about the Local A rtist Show case on Friday, June 23,2000. The Palace and Collections of a Russian Noble Family Art lovers have a few m ore days to see the StroganofT: The Palace and Col lections o f a Russian Noble Family at the Portland Art Museum. This acclaimed exhibition, which has garnered international press attention clo se s on W ed n esd ay , M ay 3 1 .T he exhibition features icons and antiquities, gold and silver decorative arts, palace furnishings all arrayed as they w ere in the S troganotf Palace, one o f the grandest 18lh century buildings on St. P etersburg’s principal thoroughfare. Try Acupuncture, Herbal Remedies at Free Seminars A re you healthy as you w ant to be, could be? C om plem entary m edicine can give you a new outlook on your health. Now, you can check it out in a safe, educational forum. The O regon C ollege o f Oriental M edicine (O C O M ), 10525 SE Cherry Blossom Dr.. Portland, is sponsoring free sem inars on June 10, 17 and 24. Each Saturday sem inar starts at 10 am. and lasts about 90m inutes. Call 503/253-3443. E n vironm en tal Ju stice Action Group Meeting T he Environm ental Justice Action Group (EJA G ) will be having a m eeting on W ednesday, June 7, from 6-8 pm. in the King N eighborhood facility. T he focusof the meeting is to review results o f a recent E JA G c a n v a s s in N o rth /N o rth e a s t Portland around air pollution and asthm a issues conducted in conjunction with Portland State U niversity students. The o r g a n iz a tio n is d e d ic a te d to environm entalism in the inner city. » * T he N ew Party is urging the school district and board to immediately implement the Crisis = Team proposals and provide sufficient high 5 quality m aterial sm aller class sizes, student “■ and teacher mentors and tutors to im plem ent changes. T he party is confident that voters w ill pass the sch o o l b o n d m e asu re in N ovem ber, w hich can provide the needed funds. The Crisis Team has proposed hiring “achievem ent czars” for each o f the low- achieving schools, and allowing them to make final decisions on classroom instruction policies. Instead, the school district should put its best and brightest principals in those sc h o o ls , an d m a k e it fin a n c ia lly an d professionally w orthw hile for them to stay in place and turn them around. T he Crisis Team is right: T h ere’sn o m ore tim eto waste. Every year that this gap persists sentences another group o f kids to a sub-par education. f Tony H opson, p resid en t o f S e lf Enhancem ent Inc. a n d Ron Herndon, co-chair o f the B lack U nited F ront a n d h ead o f the A lbina H ead Start program , explain their reason f o r m arching on the sch o o l board m eeting on M ay 22. CONTRIBUTEPSTORV "W e're w orking on it.” That was the Portland Public S chools’ answ er to those w ho dem anded action to close the ap p allin g gap in s tu d e n t’s ach iev em en t between minority and w hite kids 30 years ago. It was the answ er 20 years ago. And 10 years ago. And it is the d istrict’s answ er today. M eanw hile, the racial achievem ent gap is still there - ju st as large, ju st as ugly, ju st as Attention Unsigned Artists! A pproxim ately 10 artists and bands, encom passing all styles o f m usic, will be chosen to perform at the Black Music Artist Show case on June 23rd. T op 3 perform ers will have a chance o f w inning great prizes like $1,000. T he deadline is M ay 26. Send a 2-song cassette, bio, picture if possible, any press m aterial and com plete contact inform ation w ith non- refundable application fee o f $25 for a single artist and $75 for group by the deadline date. C ontact the R oseland T hey’ve been waiting, som eofthem , forthree long decades. T hey w o n ’t w ait - they shouldn’t w ait— any longer. The Educational Crisis Team had set a May 12 deadline for the school district to respond to its dem ands for action, it failed to m eet the deadline, so the Educational Crisis Team demonstrate. Yet the Educational Crisis Tearn is right to insist on a sense o f urgency. This cannot be allow ed to go on - this clucking over a system that enables som e children to achieve, but not others. O f course, this isn ’t ju st Portland’s problem - the m inority achievem ent gap is evident in urban schools all over this county. And it’s not ju st a school problem , either. Too many students get little or no help at home; too m any show up at school unprepared to learn. Y et it’s possible to close the achievem ent gap. O thers have done it. A grow ing num ber o f urban school serving m ostly m inority and poor kids are bringing high percentages o f their students to grade level in math and reading. If they can, so can Portland. unconscionable, as ever. The Portland school district is w orking to close the gap. Superintendent Ben Canada calls it his highest personal priority, and a m ajor effort to close the gap is part o f a new strategic plan to be approved by the school board in June. Yet the district is m aking a m istake by failing to im m ediately take up the proposals o f a com m unity coalition that has produced its own plan for boosting lagging achievem ent at 14 schools with m ostly poor and m inority stu d en ts. T he coal i tion, known as the "Education Crisis Team ," is made upofm ainly African American and Latino leaders. It’s the w rong group for the district to kiss o ff w ith a w e're-w o rk in g - on-it, leave-it-to-us" approach. These people, theses parents, these graduates o f the Portland schools them selves, have seen and heard it all before. T h ey 'v e been told before to wait for the new plan, the new effort, the new approach to fix these schools that keep failing kids. ———————————— ---------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------i— 2000 Oregon salute to small business i o h T iie P ortland O bsekx lh Each year for the past 37 years, the President o f the United States has issued a proclamation calling for the celebration o f Small business W eek. This year. N ational Small Business W eek, w hich is sponsored by the U.S. Small Business A dm inistration (SBA), was held from May 21-27,2000. The celebration honored the estim ated 25 m illion small businesses in Am erica that em ploy more than h alf the country’s private work force, create tw o o f every three new jobs, and generate a m ajority o f A m erican innovations. Small Business Week recognizes outstanding small business ow ners for their personal ac h ie v em e n ts an d c o n trib u tio n s to our n a tio n ’s e c o n o m y . O n e o u ts ta n d in g entrepreneur is named to represent each state, the District o f Colum bia, Puerto Rico and G uam as the state Small Business Person o f the Year. From this group, the national mall Business Person o f the Y ear is chosen. Trade associations, cham bers o f com m erce an d b u sin e ss o rg a n iz a tio n s fre q u e n tly sponsor candidates. Sponsors subm it a nomination package to the nearest SBA district office for review and selection by each district's S m a ll B u s in e s s A d v is o ry C o u n c il. Nomination packages are then sent to regional SBA offices and prepared for transm ittal to the SBA O ffice o f A dvisory Councils for review. The national Small Business Person o f the Year, as well as tw o runners-up, are selected by the SBA A dm inistrator based on th e re c o m m e n d a tio n s o f th e N atio n al Advisory Council and are announced during Small Business W eek. This years' aw ard cerem ony w as held at the Benson Hotel May 17,2000 Ken Boddie, for the third year in a row, was chosen to be M aster o f Cerem ony. "W hen a quarterback finds a play that works, why change it?" said Phil Gentry, District Director, SBA Portland, speaking o f the job he gets form Ken Boddie each year without fail. at > x X (Top) Ken B oddie draws d u ty as M aster o f Ceremony. X (Right) Phyllis S. Gaines o f Vessels Í accepts aw ard f o r the Sm all Business s A dvocate o f the Year. Phil Gentry, also introduced the new Regional Administrator. Region X, SBA, Joann Francis, w ho took over the awards cerem ony with a m oving talk about her em ergence into her current position. Joann preceded to introduce the keynote speaker, Joan Hartley. Business Development C oach, Speaker & Author w ho brought tools and toys to m ove the audience to looking at d o in g b u s in e s s from m a n y d if fe r e n t perspectives, using everyone as a part o f the team. Small Business Advocalesand Special Award Winners A small business advocate is an individual who has used his or her professional expertise o r p e r s o n a l ta le n ts to f u r th e r th e u n d ersta n d in g an d a w a re n e ss o f sm all business. These individuals have also taken an active role in creating opportunities for small business. The fol lowing smal 1 busi ness advocate awards w ere presented: A ccountant A dvocate o f the Year . ..Bryan P. Fitzsimmons, CPA- F in a n c ia l S e r v ic e s A d v o c a te o f th e Y ear..... Cherie Folkens, Jam es M ackinnon& K elly M ears O regon C ertified B usiness D evelopm ent Corporation M inority Small Business A dvocate o f the y ear.......... Phyllis S. G aines- V essels W om en in Business A dvocate o f the Year ......M ary O ’K ief Southern O regon W om en's Access to Capital (SO W A C ) V eteran Small Business A dvocaate o f the Y e a r.. .C arl W h a le y -S a le m 's V ete ran Center M edia A dvocate o f the Y ear. . .Stephen R W oodw ard & Jacuelinc S. Love- O regonian O reg o n S m all B u sin ess P erson o f the Y ear John R. Bendit-U pscale Automotive Region X and Oregon Small Business Exporter o f the Y e a r.. JohnC . H agler-Classic Trolley. Inc.